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Every Uprising is Different: Obama And Mubarak - Play-acting Is Part Of The Game
07 February 2011 By Philip J Cunningham
Every uprising is different. But given shared human
strengths and weaknesses, the dynamics of crowd
behavior, crowd control, and crowd chaos play out in
ways that strike a common chord. Having written about
popular protest, cultural clashes and street marches
in East Asia for two decades now, there are certain
commonalities that come to fore as the events in
Cairo, as reported by Al Jazeera and other Internet
sources, unfold in real time on my computer screen.
-Truth is an early casualty of any conflict, and the
media comes under pressure almost immediately.
Competing media narratives diverge wildly, usually the
storytelling of the government pitted against the
storytelling of the protesters. Distortions to the
truth range from outright lies and censorship, to
mudslinging, misdirection and deliberate
prevarications. There is obfuscation and startling
clarity. There are also moments of heartfelt
expression, courageous calls for change and sometimes
shocking clandestine reports from the frontlines of
the conflict.
-Television stations are a coveted resource for those
seeking political control. State television, even when
it is reduced to producing propaganda, is such an
effective transmitter of information, (including mis-information,
mid-direction and gaping silences) in regards to an
escalating crisis that it can inadvertently help fan
the flames of nationwide protest. Even when the
details of a mass incident in progress are garbled or
distorted by heavy-handed censorship, the fingerprints
of the heavy-handedness are visible for all to see.
The odd, Orwellian quality of manipulated news, what
with its revved up nationalistic fervor, glaring
contradictions, threatening reassurances and a rather
too loud pleading of innocence, is politically charged
enough to betray meta-truths about the abject nature
of the regime.
-Journalists are at risk. Be it for their
truth-telling capacity or simply a vengeful way of
blaming the messenger, journalists often get roughed
up as public disturbances unfold. Journalists are
detained and denied access to key locations, often in
the name of safety. Western journalists are especially
easy to find as they tend to hole up in luxury hotels
where they are subject to surveillance, harassment,
and confiscation of film, memory chips, cameras, etc.
-Al Jazeera TV. The upstart TV station based in Qatar
has come of age, although it observes, like every news
service on the earth, certain ground rules and avoids
certain sensitive topics. Although largely ignored by
US cable TV providers, Al Jazeera Internet streaming
can reach a truly global audience, providing a service
to viewers whose television and cable service is
tilted in favor of the national agendas of the
traditional media giants such as CNN, BBC and ABC. In
what might be understood as a backhanded compliment,
Al Jazeera has been accused of meddling by the
Egyptian government.
-The Internet. Online news services, specialist blogs,
Twitter and social networking tools have helped get
the story out as well. Advanced information
technologies, and the costly, complex devices required
to view the news on, are convenient when they work
well, and they work especially well across borders at
global distances, but remain largely out of the reach
of the poor and can be rendered momentarily worthless
when the plug gets pulled, as was the case in Egypt
when the Internet was turned off. The technology
itself is neutral, and there are various ingenious
ways to get around blocking, but despite the freedom
of expression hype, modern tools are no different from
the printing press or radio in the sense that they can
be used to further things good and bad and can be used
to promote the cause of either side through skillful
public relations and information control.
-Word of mouth. Fortunately, the information ecosystem
is full of diverse platforms and incidental
redundancies; if one technology fails, or is blocked,
other ways of transmitting information remain. This
includes everything from hardy, traditional
technologies such as landline telephones and fax
machines to hand-painted banners, chants, slogans and
word of mouth.
-Rumors. Rightly or wrongly, rumors take the place of
reliable information when reliable information is hard
to come by. Rumors serve to excite people to action.
The more severe information control at home, the more
likely agitated citizens are to turn to the latest
gossip on the street.
-Crowd dynamics. When a large crowd manages to gather
and assemble, especially in an environment where
political gatherings are generally banned and
ruthlessly suppressed, success breeds success. If ten,
a hundred, a thousand brave individuals get away with
the impossible, it inspires others to follow.
-Something in the air. When a large crowd asserts
itself in public space and coalesces on symbolic
ground, a window is opened to possible political
change, an opportunity not normally evident. An
indefinable “something in the air,” combined with
concrete opportunities for assembly, adequate channels
for expression and a broad consensus that change is
desirable if not necessary, helps kick-start a major
public uprising. When this takes the form of staking
out contested ground in the heart of the capital its
significance is magnified in a way that enables a
crowd to grow exponentially. Under the natural
evolution of such circumstances, the crowd is likely
to be diverse and composed of people from all walks of
life.
-Safety in numbers. When the numbers soar to the
hundred of thousands, not only do individual members
of the crowd begin to feel uncannily safe –however
illusory that protective aura might be – but it gives
rise to a sense that a historic turning point is at
hand. Suddenly, due to a confluence of rising
frustration, mutual reinforcement, strength in numbers
and chance developments, there’s a perception that an
unprecedented and largely unexpected overhaul to the
status quo just might be possible. It’s a bid to hit
society’s reset button.
-The art of the unexpected. If a protest takes root
without much advance warning in a challenging
environment, it has succeeded so swiftly and against
such odds as to not be taken seriously at first.
Rather it is treated like a fluke, something to be
haughtily dismissed by men accustomed to the
privileges of extreme wealth and supreme power.
-Play-acting is part of the game. Regimes under siege
will resort to all sorts of cagey strategies;
everything from arrogant claims of noblesse oblige, to
lying about their true aims and intentions in order to
buy time with which to restore power and sweep up the
opposition. “Your demands have been answered,” newly
named Vice President Omar Suleiman pre-emptively
announced as a clearly unplacated crowd began to
gather in earnest on Tahrir Square in Cairo on
February 3, 2011.
-Offers of superficial change. Powerful figures will
feign ignorance, sympathy, offer up partial apologies
and assume a quasi-humble posture in hopes of buying
time to regain power. Hosni Mubarak could make a
fiction of stepping down by appointing a loyal flunky
to act in his stead. Even political theatre that went
so far as to appoint an unknown to power, or even a
moderate opposition figure would not necessarily be
evidence of serious systemic change so long as the
levers of control and the powers behind the curtain
remained the same.
-Insincere concessions. All sorts of promises might be
made with the aim of diffusing popular rage rather
than truly negotiating or acceding to popular demands.
Then, once the crowd was dispersed and the security
forces regained the upper hand, a purge of the
opposition would follow. Then the powers that be could
quietly re-impose something close to the old, unjust
status quo, with the rich as rich as ever, and the
police-security elite as powerful as before.
-Blatant intimidation. “Police brutality is… a daily
occurrence,” but hidden, according to a US State
Department cable made available by Wikileaks. The sort
of abuse that was once hidden in police stations,
Interior Ministry facilities, and black sites used for
extraordinary renditions at the behest of the US
during “peaceful” times is now out in the open.
Increasingly, callous tactics and shocking abuses of
power are taking place in the streets for all to see.
Speeding security vans knocking people off their feet
have been caught on camera, Molotov cocktails have
been thrown at protesters by regime-supporting thugs,
while agents-provocateur infiltrate the crowd posters
of Mubarak, knives, clubs, even have resorted to using
horses and camels to intimidate.
-Crowd solidarity. Crowds look unitary but are in fact
a diverse mix. Some are strident believers in a cause,
others vaguely sympathetic, some are opportunistic,
others just curious, some full of rage, others full of
joy, while others still are just hapless commuters and
bystanders who get in the way.
-Crowd leadership. When the names and faces of leaders
of an uprising are not evident, the confusion makes
the movement vulnerable to manipulation or
dissolution, even as it lends strength to the
impression that the gathering is truly a spontaneous
mass movement. When not a scripted disciplined,
partisan effort, or a expertly directed demonstration,
a crowd is near impossible to control. But a large
diverse crowd, even if innocent by its very lack of
organization, is vulnerable to being hijacked by
better organized, and perhaps more ruthless elements
within.
-Popular demands. In the tentative, early stages,
crowd demands are likely to focus on a simple,
simplistic plea, such as calling for dialogue or
removal of a single leader. As tensions rise and the
impasse grows, and as violent reprisals further
energize the mob, crowd demands are likely to escalate
and bifurcate, with incipient divisions within the
crowd coming to the fore. Who shall lead? Shall
violence be met with passive resistance or violent
action? Shall the extremists or moderates be allowed
to win the day? Who are the real patriots? Factions
will be portrayed as insufficiently moderate or
insufficiently radical.
-Every crowd is different. As demonstration-weary
denizens of Bangkok know all too well, crowds can be
uplifting and crowds can be menacing, sometimes both
at the same time. When popular protests split into
competing groups, and take on “colors” as happened in
Thailand in recent years with competing red shirts and
yellow shirts and blue shirts and black shirts, the
pretence of unity is gone and something akin to gang
warfare takes its place.
-Provinces take cues from the metropole. Big
demonstrations in a nation’s capital take on a
symbolic importance that reverberates to the
hinterland. The student-led protests in Beijing in
1989 inspired sympathetic protests in many cities
across China, most prominently in Shanghai and Chengdu.
-Who speaks for the crowd? A crowd divided amongst its
own, cannot articulate demands, respond to dialogue
and react to concessions in a coherent way. The very
definition of what the crowd wants shifts and
fractures. If dialogue is taking place, it is unlikely
to be fruitful in the face of rising expectations for
success on the side with the upper hand.
-Lack of an exit strategy. Given the emotional
momentum of shared risk, shared dreams and the bonds
of instant comradeship in the midst a sea of
strangers, it becomes increasingly difficult to break
up the party and leave, especially in a spontaneous
gathering that depends on each individual to play a
role. Inside a demonstration, freedom of movement is
proscribed, food and drink depends on kindness of
strangers, sanitation is a mess and living in the open
under the sun and moon takes its toll.
-Crowd momentum. It can be to surprisingly difficult
to convince those who have put their lives on the
line, or those who have been energized by the hypnotic
pull of crowd dynamics, to cede the “holy” ground,
even though they suffer physical discomfort and may be
at personal risk. After giving their all to a cause, a
human whirlwind that is part carnival, part killing
fields, it seems a betrayal, especially if partisan
blood has already been spilled, to yield to the other
side. Even under less tragic conditions, it is hard to
break from the pull of a genial, dedicated crowd and
acknowledge defeat by going home.
-Crowd compliance. Even when the crowd leaders call on
their supporters to leave, compliance is reluctant at
best. Crowds are notoriously fickle and difficult to
rope in. This was especially evident in Bangkok,
Thailand last year when rank and file members of the
red shirt demonstration refused to budge even with
gunfire resounding down the road. There was visible
shock and vocal wails of disappointment on the part of
hard-core red shirt followers -mostly older folk
visiting Bangkok from the provinces who had faithfully
sat in the street for weeks by the red-shirt sound
stage- when their leaders threw in the towel on May
19, 2010 and surrendered to police.
-Follow the money. Crowds crowing for a particular
leader, especially if that leader is a billionaire and
wily political operator, undermine their own
legitimacy as they can be seen to be serving vested
interests, and perhaps even pecuniary self-interest.
-Hijacking the crowd. The positive energy directed at
social injustice can be appropriated and even hijacked
to support one particular faction or ambitious
political leader or a cultural or religious agenda to
the detriment of the stated ideals. For example, while
the pro-Thaksin activists in Bangkok might style their
activities as being “pro-democracy”, and their
rhetoric made ample use of the “D” word, but in terms
of hierarchical loyalties, they nonetheless share
something in common with the pro-Mubarak crowds in
Cairo. Taking money and marching orders from powerful
political figures, or their proxies, erodes the
democratic credentials of a movement.
-Cultural arguments. Culture is distorted and
re-defined, providing a refuge for scoundrels. Whether
it be Japan’s “unique” culture arguments justifying
the interring at Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo the “souls”
of pro-imperial Japan warriors, or phony arguments
about Japan being a whale-meat eating society,
cultural values are invoked to inhibit debate and hide
ulterior motives. In Egypt, Mubarak has apparently
created a cult of Pharonic overtones, making his
identity and that of a proud nation seem like one.
-Family ties. As Egypt intelligence supremo Omar
Suleiman says, “We all respect Mubarak as father.” He
goes on to suggest it is not in the culture of good
Egyptians to revolt. When a politician under fire is
compared to one’s mother or father, the implication is
that the dear leader is in an inviolable position, and
that any resistance would be unfilial, if not futile.
This presumptuous argument is deliberately fostered
and foisted upon the people in order to inculcate the
notion that the people owe their nurturance and very
existence to the exalted leader.
-Foreign meddling. During an uprising, it’s almost
certain there will be allegations of foreign
involvement and hidden plots, and in this
interconnected world it is easy enough to find traces
of foreign involvement, especially on the part of
powerful intelligence services. To make such
accusations is a common enough diversionary tactic for
an unpopular regime under siege, though in the case of
Egypt it’s a nakedly hypocritical complaint. The
Mubarak regime itself is the product of 30 years of
foreign meddling as it has been supported, bolstered
and groomed by Washington to the tune of one or two
billion dollars a year, partly with the aim of
“buying” peace with Israel, courtesy of the US
taxpayer.
-Army neutrality. At such a juncture, the army’s
strength is paradoxically best shown by utter
restraint, strict neutrality and the ability to
restrain violent outbreaks without resorting to
violence. If and when the army draws blood, it becomes
tainted by perceptions of partisanship and weakens its
legitimacy as protector of all citizens. The army is
too blunt an i
nstrument to be used in a crackdown.
-Class cleavages. Even if one knew nothing about the
years of torture, mysterious disappearances and brutal
police controls in Egypt, the obscene corruption of
Mubarak, -personal worth estimated worth 40 billion-
tells you all you need to know why so many people, and
not just the poor, hate him. The gross inequities of
the status quo and corruption of the ruling class
indeed need to be challenged as they are rightfully
being challenged right now.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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