It’s been an exciting week in Egyptian politics. The
charismatic Arab League Secretary-General Amr Mousa has hinted for the first
time that he may throw his hat into the 2011 presidential ring. His recent
refusal to rule himself out as a candidate has elicited a real buzz in the
local press.
For years, the papers have been speculating on the
succession of 81-year-old President Hosni Mubarak highlighting only two viable
successors: the high-profile president’s youngest son Jamal Mubarak and the
lesser-known director of the Egyptian Intelligence Services, Omar Sulaiman. If
Mousa is serious and can garner the support of the ruling National Democratic
Party (NDP), he is in with a real chance.
But there is many a slip between cup and lip, which is
probably why Mousa is hesitant to confirm his candidacy. It may be that he
wants to find out who his likely opponents would be before he makes a
commitment. For one thing, President Mubarak hasn’t responded to questions as
to whether he intends running again, and, for another, his son Jamal is equally
coy concerning his own presidential ambitions. Each time Mubarak is asked about
his son’s aspirations, he responds with “Ask him!” while Mubarak Junior
maintains disinterest in the top job.
The problem is that the majority of Egyptians take these
denials with a huge shovel of salt. Most do not harbour a personal grudge against
46-year-old Jamal Mubarak, who is a business-savvy reformist with an excellent
relationship with Washington. I have yet to meet anyone in Egypt who relishes a
Pakistan/Syrian-style dynastical succession, but he can count on the support of
Prime Minister Ahmad Nazif who recently said, “I think Jamal is an excellent
person. He is knowledgeable. He has been in the political system enough to
understand the issues. He shows vision. He is young.”
As general-secretary of the NDP’s policy committee and as
someone who is familiar with Egypt’s problems, Jamal’s credentials could be
considered impeccable, but he faces three major obstacles besides his surname:
his relative youth and his lack of military background. Both of Jamal Abdul
Nasser’s successors -- Anwar Al Sadat and Hosni Mubarak -- were drawn from the
army and air force respectively. Whether the military would approve a leader
who did not emerge from its ranks is unknown.
One of his biggest detractors is the founder of the Al Ghad
(Tomorrow) Party, Ayman Nour, who has got together with opposition parties to
launch a campaign against the presidency being passed from father to son under
such slogans as “He shall not inherit” and “He shall not rule.”
The influential Egyptian political commentator Mohammad Hassanein
Haikel has also taken up the cudgel against the succession of President Mubarak’s
son. He believes that Jamal should abstain from the race in the same way that a
judge would withdraw from a case involving his own brother.
Too old for the post
Amr Mousa is similarly disadvantaged. In 2011, he will be 75
years old, which some view as being too old for the post and, like Jamal
Mubarak, he is not a military man. From 1984 until 1991, Mousa served his
country as a career diplomat. Following a brief spell as Cairo’s ambassador to
India, he was appointed Egypt’s ambassador to the United Nations.
His tenure as foreign minister from 1991 until 2001, when he
condemned the symbiotic relationship between the US and Israel, brought him to
prominence, and many ordinary Egyptians were saddened when he moved away from
the political frontlines to the Arab League.
Indeed, at one time, he was wildly popular at home and still
is, especially with the older generation. In 2004, a web community petitioned
Mousa to run in the 2005 elections while the Egyptian singer Shaba’an Abdul
Rahim immortalised him in a controversial anti-Israel song. Despite his
reputation for having a quick temper, Time magazine once dubbed him as “perhaps
the most adored public servant in the Arab world.”
I decided to feel the pulse of Egyptian public opinion by
conducting a spontaneous and totally unscientific mini poll. I telephoned 10
acquaintances from all walks of life and asked them whether they would back Amr
Mousa for president.
Eight out of the 10 said they would because he is “honest,
respectable and trustworthy,” as “foreign minister he defended Egypt’s
interests,” “he understands the problems of Egypt and the Arab world,” “he
would work towards Arab unity,” “he is responsible for 22 countries, so he can
easily take responsibility for one.”
One of those who said he wouldn’t vote for him, a policeman,
said he hoped president Mubarak would stay on for another 20 years, while the
other, a factory worker, insisted that the country needed “an iron fist.”
As president Mubarak remains tightlipped concerning his own
future plans and those of his son, speculation is set to grow. In the meantime,
the list of potential successors lengthens with such names as International
Atomic Energy Agency chief Mohammad Al Baradei, Nobel Prize winner Dr Ahmad
Zuweili, and Defence Minister Mohammad Hussain Tantawi having been added. Roll
on 2011! The suspense is killing.
Linda
S. Heard is a British specialist writer on Middle East affairs. She welcomes
feedback and can be contacted by email at heardonthegrapevines@yahoo.co.uk.