Incredible Power of Nonviolent Protest
by Michael Schwartz
Memo to President Obama: Given the
absence of intelligent intelligence and the
inadequacy
of your advisers’ advice, it’s not surprising that your handling of the
Egyptian uprising has set new standards for foreign policy incoherence
and incompetence.
Perhaps a primer on how to judge the power that can
be wielded by mass protest will prepare you better for the next round
of political upheavals.
Remember the uprising in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 1989? That
was also a huge, peaceful protest for democracy, but it was crushed with
savage violence. Maybe the memory of that event convinced you and
your team that, as Secretary of State Clinton
announced when the protests began
, the
Mubarak regime was “stable” and in “no danger of falling.”
Or maybe
your confidence rested on the fact that it featured a disciplined modern
army trained and supplied by the USA.
But it fell, and you should have known that it was in grave danger.
You should have known that the prognosis for this uprising was far
better than the one that ended in a massacre in Tiananmen Square; that
it was more likely to follow the pattern of people power in Tunisia,
where only weeks before another autocrat had been driven from power, or
Iran in 1979 and Poland in 1989.
Tomgram: Michael Schwartz, Weapons of Mass Disruption
[Note for TomDispatch Readers: Here’s a book recommendation for this Egyptian moment. Get your hands on Jonathan Schell’s The Unconquerable World: Power, Nonviolence, and the Will of the People.
You won’t find a word about the events of the last few weeks. Little
wonder, since it was published in 2003, at the height of American
hubris over the use of force in Iraq, and just happened to be about
eight years ahead of its time. Nonetheless, its look at the history of
violence in the context of the great nonviolent uprisings of the
twentieth century remains eye-opening and, better yet, Schell got it
right. The Obama administration should have ditched all its
intelligence and read his book!
And by the way, keep in mind that if you use a TomDispatch link
or book-cover image to go to Amazon and buy this book or anything else
whatsoever, TD gets a modest cut of your purchase. It’s a fine way to
contribute regularly to this site at no extra cost to you. Tom]
Here’s the truth of it: You don’t need an $80-billion-plus budget and a morass of 17 intelligence agencies
to look at the world and draw a few intelligent conclusions. Nor do
you need $80 billion-plus and that same set of agencies to be caught
off-guard by developments on our sometimes amazing planet.
Last Thursday, Leon Panetta, director of the CIA, assured
a House Intelligence panel that he had “received reports” that Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak was likely leavin’ town on the next train for
Yuma. When that didn’t happen, the Agency clarified the situation. Those “reports” hadn’t, in fact, been secret intelligence updates, but “news accounts.”
In other words, billions of bucks later, Panetta was undoubtedly
watching Al Jazeera (or the equivalent) just like the rest of us
peasants.
After 30 years as Washington’s eyes and ears in Cairo, it turns out
that the CIA didn’t have an insider’s clue about Mubarak’s psychology.
No wonder our fabulous “community” of intelligence analysts and
operatives was napping when history came calling. And maybe it’s
fortunate for us that the future can’t be bought, that no matter how much money a declining superpower
puts on the barrelhead, it’s as likely to be surprised as any of us; in
fact, deeply entrenched in the stalest of Washington thinking, our
intelligence agencies may have been even more surprised
than most of us by what the future had in store. In our startlingly
brain-dead American world, that realization in itself should have felt
like a breath of fresh air as one startling Egyptian event after another
unfolded.
Here’s the truth of it (part 2): You don’t need to spend a dollar
these days to get clued in on the winds of change sweeping the Middle
East. Anyone can stream Al Jazeera English on a home computer and be a jump ahead of the CIA any day of the week.
In other words, next time around, President Obama, remember that the
U.S. Intelligence Community stands between you and common sense, so just start looking. You can do it all by yourself. It’s free and it’s better than any of those confabs
you were eternally huddled in with your national security crew after
which you issued confused, cautious, ill-timed, ill-coordinated
statements which, until the last hypocritical seconds, left the U.S. on the side of an Egyptian klepto-autocrat.
Of course, your vice president, Joe Biden, pitched in by assuring the PBS News Hour audience that Mubarak was no dictator
and so didn’t have to go down. Meanwhile, your ace secretary of state,
Hillary Clinton, with her own set of crack advisors and a top-notch
intelligence crew, having watched Tunisian ruler Zene Ben Ali go down
the tubes, launched Washington’s reactions to Egyptian events by
assuring one and all that the Mubarak regime was “stable.” She then reassured the world that Mubarak and his wife were “friends of my family.” Yikes! With friends like that...
As a start, Mr. President, you can save the American taxpayer tons of
money by slashing to the bone the ridiculous labyrinth of
organizations which pass for “intelligence” in Washington. As a former
community organizer, all you have to do is keep an eye out for
communities organizing themselves. After all, in these last weeks
Egypt may have been transformed into one of the largest organized
communities in history. Under the circumstances, it shouldn’t have
been quite so hard to figure out what side U.S. “interests” were really
on.
Wouldn’t it be great, the next time around, if Washington came down
on the right side of history even 30 seconds before history banged it on
the head? Whatever now happens in Egypt (and it’s no easy trick
putting a mobilized people back to sleep), we’re on a new planet and
you’ll adjust better with less “intelligence.”
As for stability? Honestly, is that what you want in one of the
repressively creepy zones on the planet? If you’d like a quick
explanation that goes to the heart of the matter when it comes to just
how people power outwitted and out-organized “stability,” listen to TomDispatch regular and author of War Without End, Michael Schwartz. While you’re at it, keep in mind that old Bill Clinton mantra:
it’s the economy, stupid! (To catch Timothy MacBain's latest TomCast
audio interview in which Michael Schwartz discusses the Egyptian
revolution and the power of nonviolent disruption, click here, or download it to your iPod here.) Tom
Why Mubarak Fell: The (Sometimes)
Incredible Power of Nonviolent Protest
by Michael Schwartz
Since your intelligence people, including the CIA, obviously didn’t
tell you, let me offer you an explanation for why the Egyptian
protesters proved so much more successful in fighting off the threat and
reality of violence than their Chinese compatriots, and why they were
so much better equipped to deter an attack by a standing army. Most
importantly, let me fill you in on why, by simply staying in the streets
and adhering to their commitment to nonviolence, they were able to
topple a tyrant with 30 years seniority and the backing of the United
States from the pinnacle of power, sweeping him into the dustbin of
history.
When Does an Army Choose to Be Nonviolent?
One possible answer -- a subtext of mainstream media coverage -- is
that the Egyptian military, unlike its Chinese counterpart, decided not
to crush the rebellion, and that this forbearance enabled the protest to
succeed. However, this apparently reasonable argument actually
explains nothing unless we can answer two intertwined questions that
flow from it.
The first is: Why was the military so restrained this time around, when for 50 years,
“it has stood at the core of a repressive police state”? The second
is: Why couldn’t the government, even without a military ready to turn
its guns on the demonstrators, endure a few more days, weeks, or months
of protest, while waiting for the uprising to exhaust itself, and -- as
the BBC put it -- “have the whole thing fizzle out”?
The
answer to both questions lies in the remarkable impact that the protest
had on the Egyptian economy. Mubarak and his cohort (as well as the
military, which is the country’s economic powerhouse) were alarmed
that the business “paralysis induced by the protests” was “having a
huge impact on the creaking economy” of Egypt. As Finance Minister
Samir Radwin said
two weeks into the uprising, the economic situation was “very serious”
and that “the longer the stalemate continues, the more damaging it is.”
From their inception, the huge protests threatened the billions of
dollars that the leaders and chief beneficiaries of the Mubarak regime
had acquired during their 30 year reign of terror, corruption, and
accumulation. To the generals in particular, it was surely apparent
that the massive acts of brutality necessary to suppress the uprising
would have caused perhaps irreparable harm, threatening its vast economic interests.
In other words, either trying to outwait the revolutionaries or
imposing the Tiananmen solution risked the downfall of the economic
empires of Egypt’s ruling groups.
But why would either of those responses destroy the economy?
Squeezing the Life Out of the Mubarak Regime
Put simply, from the beginning, the Egyptian uprising had the effect
of a general strike. Starting on January 25th, the first day of the
protest, tourism -- the largest industry in the country, which had just
begun its high season -- went into free fall. After two weeks, the industry had simply “ground to a halt,”
leaving a significant portion of the two million workers it supported
with reduced wages or none at all, and the few remaining tourists
rattling around empty hotels, catching the pyramids, if at all, on
television.
Since pyramids and other Egyptian sites attract more than a million visitors
a month and account for at least 5% of the Egyptian economy, tourism
alone (given the standard multiplier effect) may account for over 15% of
the country’s cash flow. Not surprisingly, then, news reports soon
began mentioning revenue losses of up to $310 million per day.
In an economy with an annual gross domestic product (GDP) of well over
$200 billion, each day that Mubarak clung to office produced a tangible
and growing decline in it. After two weeks of this ticking time bomb,
Crédit Agricole, the largest banking group in France, lowered its growth
estimate for the country’s economy by 32%.
The initial devastating losses in the tourist, hotel, and travel
sectors of the Egyptian economy hit industries dominated by huge
multinational corporations and major Egyptian business groups dependent
on a constant flow of revenues. When cash flow dies, loan payments must
still be made, hotels heated, airline schedules kept, and many
employees, especially executives, paid. In such a situation, losses
start mounting fast, and even the largest companies can face a crisis
quickly. The situation was especially ominous because it was known that
skittish travelers would be unlikely to return until they were confident
that no further disruptions would occur.
The largest of businesses, local and multinational, are not normally
prone to inactivity. They are the ones likely to move most quickly to
stem a tide of red ink by agitating the government to suppress such a
protest, hopefully yesterday. But the staggering size
of even the early demonstrations, the face of a mobilizing civil
society visibly shedding 30 years of passivity, proved stunning. The
fiercely brave response to police attacks, in which repression was met
by masses of new demonstrators pouring into the streets,
made it clear that brutal suppression would not quickly silence these
protests. Such acts were more likely to prolong the disruptions and
possibly amplify the uprising.
Even if Washington was slow on the uptake, it didn’t take long for
the relentlessly repressive Egyptian ruling clique to grasp the fact
that large-scale, violent suppression was an impossible-to-implement
strategy. Once the demonstrations involved hundreds of thousands, if
not millions, of Egyptians, a huge and bloody suppression guaranteed
long-term economic paralysis and ensured that the tourist trade wasn’t
going to rebound for months or longer.
The paralysis of the tourism industry was, in itself, an economic
time bomb that threatened the viability of the core of the Egyptian
capitalist class, as long as the demonstrations continued. Recovery
could only begin after a “return to normal life,”
a phrase that became synonymous with the end of the protests in the
rhetoric of the government, the military, and the mainstream media. With
so many fortunes at stake, the business classes, foreign and domestic,
soon enough began entertaining the most obvious and least disruptive
solution: Mubarak’s departure.
Strangling the Mubarak Regime
The attack on tourism, however, was just the first blow in what
rapidly became the protestors’ true weapon of mass disruption, its
increasing stranglehold on the economy. The crucial communications and
transportation industries were quickly engulfed in chaos and disrupted
by the demonstrations. The government at first shut down
the Internet and mobile phone service in an effort to deny the
protestors their means of communication and organization, including
Facebook and Twitter. When they were reopened, these services operated
imperfectly, in part because of the increasingly rebellious behavior of
their own employees.
Similar effects were seen in transportation, which became unreliable
and sporadic, either because of government shutdowns aimed at crippling
the protests or because the protests interfered with normal operations.
And such disruptions quickly rippled outward to the many sectors of the
economy, from banking to foreign trade, for which communication and/or transportation was crucial.
As the demonstrations grew,
employees, customers, and suppliers of various businesses were ever
more consumed with preparations for, participation in, or recovery from
the latest protest, or protecting homes from looters and criminals after
the government called the police force off the streets. On Fridays
especially, many people left work to join the protest during noon prayers, abandoning their offices as the country immersed itself in the next big demonstration -- and then the one after.
As long as the protests were sustained, as long as each new crescendo
matched or exceeded the last, the economy continued to die while
business and political elites became ever more desperate for a solution
to the crisis.
The Rats Leave the Sinking Ship of State
After each upsurge in protest, Mubarak and his cronies offered new concessions
aimed at quieting the crowds. These, in turn, were taken as signs of
weakness by the protestors, only convincing them of their strength,
amplifying the movement, and driving it into the heart of the Egyptian
working class and the various professional guilds. By the start of the
third week of demonstrations, protests began to hit critical
institutions directly.
On February 9th, reports of a widening wave of strikes
in major industries around the country began pouring in, as lawyers,
medical workers, and other professionals also took to the streets with
their grievances. In a single day, tens of thousands of employees
in textile factories, newspapers and other media companies, government
agencies (including the post office), sanitation workers and bus
drivers, and -- most significant of all -- workers at the Suez Canal
began demanding economic concessions as well as the departure of Mubarak.
Since the Suez Canal is second only to tourism as a source of income
for the country, a sit-in there, involving up to 6,000 workers, was
particularly ominous. Though the protestors made no effort to close the
canal, the threat to its operation was self-evident.
A shutdown of the canal would have been not just an Egyptian but a
world calamity: a significant proportion of the globe’s oil flows
through that canal, especially critical for energy-starved Europe. A
substantial shipping slowdown, no less a shutdown, threatened a possible
renewal of the worldwide recession of 2008-2009, even as it would choke
off the Egyptian government’s major source of steady income.
As if this weren’t enough, the demonstrators turned their attention to various government institutions, attempting to render them
“nonfunctional.” The day after the president’s third refusal to step
down, protestors claimed that many regional capitals, including Suez,
Mahalla, Mansoura, Ismailia, Port Said, and even Alexandria (the
country’s major Mediterranean port), were “free of the regime” -- purged
of Mubarak officials, state-controlled communications, and the hated
police and security forces. In Cairo, the national capital,
demonstrators began to surround the parliament, the state TV building,
and other centers critical to the national government. Alaa Abd El
Fattah, an activist and well known political blogger in Cairo, told Democracy Now
that the crowd “could continue to escalate, either by claiming more
places or by actually moving inside these buildings, if the need comes.”
With the economy choking to death, the demonstrators were now moving to
put a hammerlock on the government apparatus itself.
At that point, a rats-leaving-a-sinking-ship-of-state phenomenon
burst into public visibility as “several large companies took out
adverts in local newspapers putting distance between themselves and the
regime.” Guardian reporter Jack Shenker affirmed this public display
by quoting informed sources describing widespread “nervousness among
the business community” about the viability of the regime, and that “a
lot of people you might think are in bed with Mubarak have privately
lost patience.”
It was this tightening noose around the neck of the Mubarak regime
that made the remarkable protests of these last weeks so different from
those in Tiananmen Square. In China, the demonstrators had negligible
economic and political leverage. In Egypt, the option of a brutal
military attack, even if “successful” in driving them off the streets,
seemed to all but guarantee the deepening of an already dire economic
crisis, subjecting ever widening realms of the economy -- and so the
wealth of the military -- to the risk of irreparable calamity.
Perhaps Mubarak would have been willing to sacrifice all this to stay
in power. As it happened, a growing crew of movers and shakers,
including the military leadership, major businessmen, foreign investors,
and interested foreign governments saw a far more appealing alternative
solution.
Weil Ziada, head of research for a major Egyptian financial firm, spoke for the business and political class when he told Guardian reporter Jack Shenker on February 11th:
"Anti-government sentiment is not calming down, it is gaining
momentum…This latest wave is putting a lot more pressure on not just the
government but the entire regime; protesters have made their demands
clear and there's no rowing back now. Everything is going down one
route. There are two or three scenarios, but all involve the same thing:
Mubarak stepping down -- and the business community is adjusting its
expectations accordingly."
The next day, President Hosni Mubarak resigned and left Cairo.
President Obama, remember this lesson: If you want to avoid future
foreign policy Obaminations, be aware that nonviolent protest has the
potential to strangle even the most brutal regime, if it can
definitively threaten the viability of its core industries. In these
circumstances, a mass movement equipped with fearsome weapons of mass
disruption can topple a tyrant equipped with fearsome weapons of mass
destruction.
A professor of sociology at Stony Brook State University, Michael Schwartz is the author of War Without End: The Iraq War in Context
(Haymarket Press). Schwartz's work on protest movements, contentious
politics, and the arc of U.S. imperialism has appeared in numerous
academic and popular outlets over the past 40 years. He is a TomDispatch regular. His email address is ms42@optonline.net.
To listen to Timothy MacBain's latest TomCast audio interview in which
Schwartz discusses the Egyptian revolution and the power of nonviolent
disruption, click here, or download it to your iPod here.
Copyright 2011 Michael Schwartz