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Egypt's Rising Tide of Islam
| Article
# : |
10857 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
7 / 1986 |
2,084 Words |
| Author
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Shireen Hunter Shireen Hunter is deputy director of the Middle East Project
at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in
Washington, D.C. |
Since a young Muslim militant assassinated President Anwar al-Sadat in October 1981, the West has been concerned that Egypt, like Iran, might be swept away by a wave of revolutionary Islam. Egypt's latest political and economic problems, the strength of the Islamzing trend, and the growing influence of militant Muslims have intensified these fears.
Indeed, these are justified concerns. Egypt is of enormous geo-political, historical, and cultural importance in the Arab world. Whatever happens in Egypt will affect the rest of the Arab world to a much greater degree than the Iranian revolution ever could.
Certainly Egypt's turn in the direction of revolutionary Islam would negatively impact U.S. - Egyptian relations, given the militants' anti-American feelings, and thus would drastically erode the U.S. position throughout the region. However, it would be a mistake to view Islam as the only challenge to the current political establishment in Egypt and to the continuation of close U.S. - Egyptian relations. An equally grave mistake would be to seek the roots of the Islamic challenge in anything other than Egypt's socioeconomic problems and certain aspects of regional politics, including U.S. policy in the Middle East.
It is no news that Egypt has long-standing and enormous socioeconomic problems ranging from overpopulation and a lack of adequate housing to an inefficient bureaucracy and an economically distorted price system.
During the 1970s these problems were blamed on then-President Abdul Nasser's socialist policies and the war with
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