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The MB Covers Conference on Egypt's Regional Role

The MB Covers Conference on Egypt's Regional RoleA recent report published on the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt's website takes a look at some of the perceived causes behind Egypt's declining role as a regional player in the Arab world. It features commentary made by political scientists and journalists at an annual conference held by the Egyptian-based think tank the International Center for Future and Strategic Studies. The report suggest that Egypt's declining influence on regional issues – as suggested by the Qatari-led talks on Lebanon and the Turkish-mediated Syrian-Israeli talks – reflects, and is partly the result of, its shortcomings on domestic matters.

A professor from the University of Cairo addressed Egypt's noticeable retreat from the regional stage over the past two decades since the Camp David Accords. He argues that the 1978 peace deal with Israel has effectively enabled Israel and the US to thwart the country from exerting its influence. A director of a research center then goes on to say that the Egyptian government has been slow to adapt to developments in the region, a trend that he states is partly attributable to a ruling elite that lacks interest in fostering Egypt's regional stock. He also suggests that the country's dealings with the US and Egypt have reduced its regional credibility.

Other commentary highlighted in the report focuses on how internal policies may have also played a role in the country's decline as a regional player, albeit in a more figurative sense.

The editor-in-chief of the newspaper Akhbar al-Adeb adds that this decline is a reflection of interior problems, namely the absence of true democracy and dialogue between the regime and its constituents. He links internal problems with the country's regional image by illustrating what he sees as the decline of well-known cultural cornerstones of Egyptian society long revered in the Arab world. The nationalization of traditional institutions like Al-Azhar University, and continued state tampering with the media, in his opinion, have had a negative effect upon Egypt's image a cultural leader in the Arab world. A representative of the press syndicate then demands that the regime cease its heavy handed security measures, perhaps an indirect reference to the arrest of press figures in recent years, and allow free transparent elections.

Given the escalation of tensions between the Brotherhood and the Mubarak regime in recent years, it perhaps comes to no surprise that the group would try to link faults in Egypt's domestic policies – issues that are more relevant to the group's political well-being – with long established critiques of the Arab state as a regional player post-Camp David. The country's relative absence from more recent, and highly publicized, talks on Lebanon and those between Syria and Israel, have perhaps only opened the door for criticism from the regime's opponents on both domestic and regional issues.

 

Author

Pete Ajemian

Pete Ajemian is a New York-based analyst who has written on topics of political violence, terrorism, and Arab media politics. He has conducted research for US law enforcement and recently completed graduate studies at the University of St. Andrews where his dissertation research examined issues dealing with new media, politics and security in the Arab world. His interest in Arab political media developed over the course of his Arabic language studies in Lebanon and the US. He has also written previously on the subject for issues of Arab Media & Society.

Areas of Focus:
New Media; Politics; Security;

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