Content from the Brookings Doha Center is now archived. In September 2021, after 14 years of impactful partnership, Brookings and the Brookings Doha Center announced that they were ending their affiliation. The Brookings Doha Center is now the Middle East Council on Global Affairs, a separate public policy institution based in Qatar.
Editor’s Note: This was originally published by Foreign Policy as “It Ain’t Just a River in Egypt.”
When Defense Secretary Leon Panetta pulls up to the U.S. Embassy in Cairo this week, he will see a protest outside its walls. Just steps away from Tahrir Square, supporters of Omar Abdel Rahman have been staging a sit-in for nearly a year to protest the imprisonment of the man known as the “Blind Sheikh,” who is serving a life sentence in a North Carolina prison for planning terrorist attacks on American soil.
Upon Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s visit just weeks before, these protesters were joined on the embassy’s doorstep by a group often seen as more sympathetic to U.S. values and policies: Egypt’s liberals. This time, they had lost some of that sympathy.
The protests, by themselves, weren’t entirely unexpected — after all, no one in Egypt these days seems to have much praise for President Barack Obama’s administration. And liberals, due to their perceived closeness to the West, have often had to overcompensate to shore up their nationalist bona fides. After all, it wasn’t the Muslim Brotherhood but, rather, liberal standard-bearer Amr Hamzawy who refused to meet in February with Sen. John McCain due to his “biased positions in favor of Israel and his support for invading Iraq and attacking Iran.”
Commentary
Op-edThe Rise of Egypt’s “Undemocratic Liberals”
July 30, 2012