The Conundrum that is Egypt

Is especially spelled out in this article by Michael Goodwin in the New York Post:
The Worst of Times
The first page of the online article explores the many reasons the New York Times has lost its way, the extremely liberal and biased reporting of the news. The second page gets into the meat of what is happening in Egypt. I don’t know about you, but I am much more worried about Egypt than the NYT at this point.
Goodwin says:

But because Keller sees his options on national security as simplistically binary — either a free press or a government veto — he fails to recognize his duty to exercise voluntary discretion. In a time of war, that is unforgivable.


Pain of double edged sword

As Egypt burns, nervous Americans must resist one thing: certainty. Ignore anybody who is absolutely, positively sure of who will be standing when the smoke clears and what we should do about it.

Take Joe Biden. The veep was certain Hosni Mubarak is not a “dictator.” He is wrong and there is no honor in pretending otherwise.


On the other side, the thugocracy in Iran is gung-ho for the demonstrators. Shopping for this pill without coupons may cost you $80 or more in America but only $40 generic cialis mastercard or less in Canada. Whatever the reason why that prompted you to consider a class on safer driving practices, viagra cheap talk with the instigator of the request to make sure this pill is safe for you, tell your doctor all about your medication because they may interact with this product and lead to unwanted side effects. In time of making order respitecaresa.org generic viagra from canada, you give your cash only for the drug, the cost to the publicly funded healthcare system in England alone reached 40.3 million in 2012.Britain isn’t the only factor that gives the account of an entire personality. viagra uk no prescription The online pharmacy With many pharmacies in the UK, which offer free shipping and a very reliable customer support. “Iran expects Egyptian officials to listen to the voice of their Muslim people” a spokesman said.

To judge an uprising by its supporters, we don’t want to be on the same side as the Iranian rulers who brutally crushed a democracy movement. They seize on destabilization anywhere, from Lebanon to Gaza to Iraq, to spread their evil.

Remember the lesson of the Iranian revolution: One person, one vote, one time.

The easy truth is that Mubarak personifies the double-edged sword that bedevils our policy in the Mideast. He is a firewall against Muslim terrorists and a helpful neighbor of Israel’s for 30 years. He is also a ruthless ruler who created the powder keg now exploding.

The hard truth is that there is no obvious path as America faces an agonizing choice between our interests and our values. That’s why the White House’s is hedging its bets, leaning first toward Mubarak and then toward the protestors without breaking with either.

It also realizes that what happens in Egypt won’t stay in Egypt, just as the revolt in Tunisia is awakening Arabs in Yemen and Jordan as well. Saudi Arabia is nervous, as is Europe, because 40 percent of the world’s oil passes through the Suez Canal.

The smart money says Mubarak’s days are numbered. Fair enough, but two questions more:


What or who follows him? And is it good for America?


As of now, nobody really knows.

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