Why couldn't they wait until next elections to get rid of MB like in the proper countries? Could it be an attempt the change of demographics of the country as MB would still get big chunk of votes despite some were discontent with their actions. I mean, kill required amount of people without causing too much attention unlike Assad, encourage the rest of the protestors to use guns against you, have a good cause to crush them with your tanks.. Then you don't need to deal with them anymore in upcoming elections.
Do you think all this revolution thing could be a bull$#@! as Mubarak was just a puppet and sacrificed to content angry crowds but army is the true insurance of regime and you will never become a proper state unless the economic and political influence they hold taken from them?
''you might be surprised by how big a portion of Egyptians support Al Qaeda and idolize the likes of Bin Laden.''
I would be surprised if they don't get radicalized even more as their army keep telling them how their vote doesn't count and they have to take what is theirs with power.
excellent point and it is exactly my fear. I have already seen some moderates within my circle becoming more radical since the ouster. Whoever is elected in 9 months will have a tough security job and a tougher reconciliation project to do.
You asked why didn't we wait for 3 more years like normal democracies do. That was Morsy's own work not the military's. His blatant disregard to the economy and his placement of higher priority on political gains (like having his own prosecutor general, his own judges, his own constitution etc..) made our fragile economy collapse at an alarming rate. It didnt help that he promised to fix all the problems within the 1st 100 days of his reign and that he has a project that is almost divinely inspired. He later denied making those claims when the collapse began and his government said that they are following the plans instilled by the Mubarak regime and that there is no such project (the one his whole campaign was supposed to be built on).
To the average Egyptian, he felt cheated and lied to and worse of all he was starving worse than ever before. Democratic process and such "fancy" talk means squat to the average Egyptian whose quality of life has been decreasing since 2011 and more significantly since Morsy took over. They also realized that he did not do anything with regards to his promises for applying Shari'a law (most egyptians are for that).
The division he caused by his poltical policies and the anger he caused by his failing economic policies coupled with the Islamists' attitude and propaganda that claimed everything is fine and dandy made people favor an instant change over a one in 3 years. The collapse and anger happened too fast basically and people took to the streets and went on general strike. The Islamists who were still cheering on Morsy went to Raba'a and at this point all types of Egyptians were on the streets (the people against morsy and the people for morsy) at the same time. So the army stepped in supposedly to avoid a horrible clash between civilians (one of those clashes happened already during Morsy's reign and people starting thinking of civil war).
In my opinion what is currently happening is the only chance that people who did the 25th of Jan revolution can come to power come election time. The two monsters (The Army and the MB) are having a go at each other and the public support for both will diminish making the young folks from 2011 look pretty good. Whoever will be president will share power with the military. Morsy had vast power when he came into office he even kicked out all top level generals from the army and everyone cheered. It is only when the economy failed that people sided with the army.
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Haven't said you're making $#@! up but it's the consequences of war. The war they have declared by ousting the elected president and arresting many, using disproportionate force against protestors.
I posted it just in case. But its good to know you slightly shifted from saying they are peaceful protesters to militias with a just cause.