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According to Davidson this indicates that the military and Islamist parties have reached “some sort of agreement as to how the future of Egypt is going to go.” He adds that the liberal element is “the most adamant” when it comes to the handover of power from the ruling military to a civilian government. Generally, he believes, the Egyptian military are not going to give full control to civilian rulers. “My guess is that the Islamic groups have somehow made an accommodation with that present reality”, he said. The mistake of the revolution that toppled Hosni Mubarak was that the focus was on one man rather than on a system, he underlines.
But now “the demonstrators have learned the lesson that it’s the system they have to go after”, Lawrence states. The problem, however, for the ongoing protest movement is that the rest of Egypt, including the business sector, the rural population and the Islamists “don’t seem ready to back the protest to the point of destroying the system and building a new one”, he concludes.
(RT)
Mildly edited by Enticing FuryPakistan Cyber Force