Egyptians and All Arabs Must Beware of 'Global Ruling Class'
Does it make any sense for
Iran's regime to encourage 'people power' uprisings across the Arab world, only
months after a its own sham election and the suppression of its people? Sensible or
not, this article from Iran's state-controlled Tehran Times encourages Arabs
in Egypt and elsewhere to continue to rise up against their oppressive rulers, but
warns them not to play into the hands of the West's global manipulators.
TEHRAN: The dominoes are
beginning to fall in the Arab world, and it all began in Tunisia. In December 2010
and January 2010, a series of street protests led to the ouster of Tunisia’s
former president, Zine
El Abidine Ben Ali, who fled to Saudi Arabia January 14.
The events in Tunisia have
set off a chain reaction across the entire Arab world, with citizens inspired
by Tunisia's people power movement. Major demonstrations have been held in
Yemen, Egypt, Algeria, and Jordan, and there have been smaller demonstrations
and minor incidents in Saudi Arabia, Mauritania, Oman, Sudan, and Libya.
At one demonstration in
Jordan on January 14, protesters demanded that Prime Minister Samir Rifai and
his cabinet step down. After demonstrations in Yemen on January 23, President Ali Abdullah Saleh
announced that he would step down when his current term expires in 2013.
Every day over the past week,
demonstrations in Egypt have gained steam, and it appears that President Hosni
Mubarak may have to step down.
The situation has been
compared to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, which led to the collapse of
communism in Eastern Europe's Soviet satellite states.
But there are major
differences between the events of 1989 and the Arab awakening of 2011.
The present confrontation in
the Arab world isn't between authoritarian regimes and the forces of democracy.
The era of the authoritarian regimes is over. It may take a little longer for
some to fall, but eventually they'll all be gone. Even their patrons in the
West are abandoning Arab dictators, as evidenced by Ben Ali’s hasty departure.
The powers that be who run
the Western world have decided that it's no longer in their interests to
support puppet Arab rulers running authoritarian regimes. So they've turned to Plan
B, which may have been prepared decades ago and put on the shelf until needed.
In Plan B, the Western powers
allow the Arab world's authoritarian regimes to collapse in an attempt to
replace them with sham democracies run by puppet rulers beholden to their
masters in the West.
Thus the current
confrontation in the Arab world is actually between the forces of true
democracy, who want independent states, and the forces of sham democracy, who seek
to establish regimes run by friendly natives - which would be the same old
neocolonialism with a new face.
Posted by WORLDMEETS.US
The forces of true democracy
in the Arab world must be very careful choosing their new leaders, since the
global ruling class doesn't want them to have independent governments and will
do all in their power to prevent such a turn of events. And the globalists are
adept at setting up governments that have all the trappings of democracy, but
which are actually client states with their vassals in charge.
Everything is in flux in the
Arab world, which is a good thing since it provides an opportunity for change
and progress after so many years of stagnation. But there is also great danger,
since the Machiavellian manipulators of the global ruling class are skilled at
using chaos and plan decades ahead for such eventualities.
The dominoes are truly
falling in the Arab world, but it still isn't clear which direction they're
falling in.