Egypt’s Blood, America’s Complicity
CAIRO FOR millions of Egyptians still reeling from the shock of Wednesdays state-led massacre, which killed at least 600 peaceful protesters and possibly many more, the questions are now very basic: How do you reconcile with people who are prepared to kill you, and how do you stop them from killing again?
I represent an alliance of Egyptians who oppose the military coup that overthrew President Mohamed Morsi in July. Over the last two weeks, we have met with foreign diplomats, including Bernardino León, the European Union envoy, and William J. Burns, the American deputy secretary of state, who were invited by the coups leaders to mediate. We respectfully listened, honestly communicated our assessment of the situation and emphasized our desire to find a peaceful solution.
But those efforts were doomed by the bad faith of Gen. Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi, Egypts military ruler. It was he, not the alliance, who rejected the mediators proposals.
The mediation efforts have been problematic. Diplomats and journalists continue to speak about negotiating only with the Muslim Brotherhood, even though the protesters come from all over the political spectrum; 69 percent of the country opposed the coup, one Egyptian poll showed.
Worse, shocking and irresponsible rhetoric from the State Department in Washington and from other Western diplomats calling on the Brotherhood and demonstrators to renounce or avoid violence (even when also condemning the states violence) has given the junta cover to perpetrate heinous crimes in the name of confronting violence. The protest sites have been teeming with foreign correspondents for the last several weeks, and there has not been a shred of evidence suggesting the presence of weapons, or of violence initiated by protesters.
The mediators most disastrous error was their choice to put pressure on the victims. In their eyes, we were the cause of the crisis, not the illegal putsch that suspended the Constitution and kidnapped the president.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/16/opinion/egypts-blood-americas-complicity.html?_r=0