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John R Bradley

ByJohn R Bradley, John R Bradley

Analysis

Morsi keeps theocracy on track with aid of military

December 14, 2012 11:00
Chigwell and Hainault Synagogue's cheder children made cookies for Mitzvah Day
1 min read

With Egypt spiralling ever more wildly into anarchy in the wake of last month’s bold Islamist coup by President Mohammed Morsi, the army has re-emerged from its barracks.

It did so at the request of the president after his palace was surrounded by anti-Muslim Brotherhood activists, who were confronted by the Brotherhood’s own club-wielding storm troopers. In the absence of a credible or trustworthy police force, calling in the elite Republican Guard was Mr Morsi’s only option.

The latter has been lumbered with securing the country’s government institutions and main thoroughfares in the run-up to this weekend’s referendum on a new Islamist-leaning constitution.

The military establishment essentially ran the country from 1952 until Hosni Mubarak’s ouster last year, then for a transitional period before parliamentary elections were held.