• This is a political forum that is non-biased/non-partisan and treats every person's position on topics equally. This debate forum is not aligned to any political party. In today's politics, many ideas are split between and even within all the political parties. Often we find ourselves agreeing on one platform but some topics break our mold. We are here to discuss them in a civil political debate. If this is your first visit to our political forums, be sure to check out the RULES. Registering for debate politics is necessary before posting. Register today to participate - it's free!

Egypt’s President Is Crushing Dissent — and Fueling ISIS

Rogue Valley

Lead or get out of the way
DP Veteran
Joined
Apr 18, 2013
Messages
93,583
Reaction score
81,660
Location
Barsoom
Gender
Male
Political Leaning
Independent
Egypt’s President Is Crushing Dissent — and Fueling ISIS

Even if the White House is in denial about al-Sisi’s harm to regional instability, Congress shouldn't be.

defense-large.jpg

Egypt president General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.

4/3/19
On the last day of 1977, President Jimmy Carter called U.S. ally Iran “an island of stability in one of the most troubled areas of the world” and hailed the repressive Shah’s popularity. Within two years Iran’s government collapsed, revolutionaries took dozens of American diplomats hostage, and Carter’s presidency was in tatters. In 2011, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton assured the world that the government of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was “stable.” Three weeks later, he was overthrown by mass street protests. Next week, President Trump will host Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in Washington where, says the White House, they will discuss “Egypt’s longstanding role as a linchpin of regional stability.” Sisi’s stability—like Mubarak’s and the Shah’s—is a false one, based on violent repression and support from the United States. In reality, Sisi’s government is about as stable as a drunk carrying a tray of eggs. Sisi, who took power in a coup in 2013, has cracked down on dissent, imprisoning thousands and stoking anger across the political spectrum. Now he’s in the process of changing Egypt’s constitution so that he can stay president until 2034 and give the military even more power. Rather than criticize Sisi’s abuses, Secretary of State Pompeo visited Egypt in January and thanked him “for his vigorous efforts to combat the ongoing threat of terrorism as well as the radical Islamism that fuels it… Our robust battle against ISIS, al-Qaida, and other terrorist groups will continue.”

In fact, Sisi’s crushing of peaceful dissent is fueling ISIS. I was in Cairo during Pompeo’s visit, researching a report based on interviews with former political prisoners, who told me that ISIS is recruiting tortured detainees across the country’s vast penal system. No one knows how many political prisoners there are in Egypt, though estimates are generally at least 60,000, and many, if not most, face the pain and humiliation of torture. One prisoner, released in November 2018, told me: “In some prisons, like El Netrun, there are hundreds in the ISIS group and they’re really powerful. They control parts of how the prison is run and can identify vulnerable prisoners they want transferred to their cell to radicalize, and the guards do it.” History tells us that dictatorships are time bombs, creating pressure that eventually erupts. Perhaps Trump and his aides go out of their way to describe the Sisi government as stable because they know better and hope that it doesn’t fall apart on their watch. But the rampant human rights abuses of the Sisi dictatorship are slowly cultivating danger and disorder in a strategically important part of the world. Just because the White House is in denial about what Sisi is doing and where it is leading, Congress shouldn’t be. The longer the brutal repression continues, the easier it will be for ISIS to recruit detainees and further destabilize Egypt and the region. “The ones recruited by ISIS attract others,” a former prisoner told me. “It was like a fire in a forest.”

Another brutal dictatorship the Trump administration coddles while ignoring the many troubling signs in the sand.
 
...I must ask, what doesn't "fuel ISIS"?
 
Egypt’s President Is Crushing Dissent — and Fueling ISIS

Even if the White House is in denial about al-Sisi’s harm to regional instability, Congress shouldn't be.

defense-large.jpg

Egypt president General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.



Another brutal dictatorship the Trump administration coddles while ignoring the many troubling signs in the sand.


You do realize Sisi is anti muslim brotherhood, who agrees with isis, hamas, etc.? hes gng after the muslim brotherhood. when they were elected the muslim brotherhood, the brotherhood started outlawing western ideas. today, it is them attacking chruches, tourists, etc. he has no choice but to clamp down. and he must work with a population that wants staunch islam. just a thought for you.
 
You do realize Sisi is anti muslim brotherhood, who agrees with isis, hamas, etc.? hes gng after the muslim brotherhood. when they were elected the muslim brotherhood, the brotherhood started outlawing western ideas. today, it is them attacking chruches, tourists, etc. he has no choice but to clamp down. and he must work with a population that wants staunch islam. just a thought for you.

Does "clamping down" include torture? Assad tried that in 2011. Eight years later Syria is in ruin. Just a thought for you also.
 
Another brutal dictator Trump loves. And, here's why.

Egypt’s El-Sisi, like Trump, puts his country up for sale

General Abdelfattah El-Sisi, the autocratic dictator of Egypt and good friend of Donald Trump, has more in common with the president of the U.S. than his autocratic methods. Like Trump, he has been putting his country’s vital resources and national interests up for sale in order to enrich himself and serve his corporate and foreign benefactors.
 
Back
Top Bottom