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Posted in Egypt, Non-Violent Direct Action by gowans on February 16, 2011 By Stephen Gowans
Samuel P. Jacobs' Valentine's Day article in The Daily Beast has a catchy title: "Gene Sharp, the 83 year old who toppled Egypt." Sharp is a scholar who has spent much of his life developing ideas on how to overthrow authoritarian governments using nonviolence.
While Jacobs' title is eye-catching, it's also nonsense. Attributing the toppling of Mubarak to Sharp is like attributing the toppling of the Tsar to Karl Marx. Sure, their ideas may have inspired some of the people who sought the downfall of tyrants, but the connection stops there.
Did an octagenarian nonviolence scholar remotely mobilize millions of Egyptians to bring down Mubarak? If he did we've been misled about Clark Kent. He isn't Superman. Gene Sharp is. A more realistic description of the nonviolence advocate is provided in the headline of a September 13, 2008 Wall Street Journal article: "Quiet Boston Scholar Inspires Rebels Around the World." But even this goes too far. Sharp's techniques of nonviolent direct action may inspire rebels to choose nonviolence, but not to rebel.
The confusion around Sharp is a confusion of means and ends. Sharp and the scholars who work to develop and disseminate his ideas are concerned with means: How to challenge and seize state power. True, the Boston scholar and many other nonviolence advocates appear to embrace liberal democracy as their ideal system, but their work isn't about singing the praises of regular multi-party elections, the rule of law, and civil and political liberties. Instead, it's about how to move challenges to the state off a playing field the state has an enormous advantage on: the use of violence.
True, too, the advocates of Sharp's ideas--and Sharp himself-are often involved in imparting the scholar's techniques to rebels who are working to bring down governments Washington opposes. And the same rebels often receive generous aid from the US government to facilitate the application of Sharp's techniques. Still, his ideas are as accessible to Marxists and anarchists looking to overthrow capitalist governments as they are to US-backed street rebels.
Whether Sharp's ideas played a decisive role in the Tahrir Square uprising, however, is an open question. These days it's practically impossible for anyone who is seriously interested in challenging the state not to have at least a passing acquaintance with Sharp's work. It's just out there. If some people who were active in trying to organize the uprising were Sharp-literate, we shouldn't be greatly surprised. But what role did they play in shaping the uprising's actions?
Protestors did not hew strictly to the nonviolent line (they battled violently with police and Mubarak's thugs when attacked) and the otherwise peaceful nature of the uprising may have had little to do with any conscious commitment to model tactics on Sharp's advice and more with self-survival. After all, who's going to storm parliament or the president's office with the army deployed nearby?
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