MURFREESBORO — An
MTSU history professor is not surprised at the recent turn of events in Egypt.
In fact, earlier this year, before the ouster of President Mohammed Morsi, Dr.
Sean Foley wrote about the likelihood that it would happen.
In a paper titled “When Life Imitates Art: The Arab Spring,
the Middle East and the Modern World,” Foley wrote:
“In the long run, if social discontent among Arab youth
merges again with a renewed political consciousness among soldiers and junior
officers, then Egypt and other states may face a more dangerous revolutionary
situation than it did in 2011 in which the present system will be ‘smashed.’”
Foley, an expert on the Middle East who currently is in
Saudi Arabia on a fellowship to write a book, says Egyptian political activist
Mohamed Abo Elgheit foreshadowed the overthrow of Morsi in a Facebook post
during debate over a new constitution for Egypt.
In that post, Elgheit characterized several politicians
aligned with the Muslim Brotherhood, the guiding force behind Morsi’s rise to
power, as “old, weak and unable to relate to the youth.”
Foley wrote, “Unlike young Egyptians, these leaders had not
shouted in public for the fall of military rule. They had not experienced the
sensation of being alongside their friends at the forefront of mass protests,
responding to bullets with stones. Nor had they felt the transformation of
their fear of death into anger and great fury at the old regime.”
Several top officials of the Morsi regime were taken into
custody July 4 after the military ousted Morsi and installed Adly Mansour, the
head of Egypt’s High Constitutional Court, as president on July 3.
In his paper, Foley compares the upheaval in Egypt to the
Russian Revolution of 1917, which he noted was “a series of revolutions,” not
just one.
“Given the Arab World and the globe’s political and
socioeconomic dynamics, it is increasingly likely that the Arab Spring may also
be viewed in the near future as the precursor to a far larger revolutionary
event as significant as the one in Russia which ‘shook the world’ in 10 days in
October 1917,” Foley wrote.
Foley’s paper is set to be published in the September 2013
issue of The Journal of Turkish Politics.
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