Where’s Mubarak? Where’s Hosni?

by YankeeJim | February 11, 2011 at 07:51 am
1024 views | 2 Recommendations | 7 comments

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Where's Hosni?

Where's Hosni?

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Where’s Mubarak?

Where’s Hosni? Where’s Waldo?

If FoxNews was on the scene, they would be chasing him overhead with a copter shot.

“Breaking News Alert: Egyptian President Mubarak leaves Cairo, state television reports 
February 11, 2011 9:38:17 AM

Egyptian state television has reported that President Hosni Mubarak and his wife, Suzanne, have left the capital of Cairo. Their destination was unknown.

http://link.email.washingtonpost.com/...C0Y9/ID/h

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1
Albert Milliron

I went to bed at 2 a.m. woke uo to this Egypt’s Mubarak resigns, Army in Control I was worried about the protesters and glad he is gone... but what comes of them now with the Military in control.  The commander is against reform.   hopefully elections in Sept. go well and a new leader arises out of these ashes

2
t k kidwai

Army's intervention,however undesireable,in such a situation when not a leader of the masses but a puppet of foreign powers refuses to step down was the only solution.Sometime it is self curing disease-the military rule for a very short period.Mubarak is gone.Where?Ask his mentors,US and Israel and expect pet answer:'to hell',we'll discover another Mubarak or Suleiman before elections.Do not get upset,CIA and Mossad are doing their job.

 

 

1
YankeeJim

No doubt the CIA is doing its job and for once they have not Wikied the outcome.

1
Piobar

Also, having the army take power who, excepting perhaps those higher-ups who owe their positions to Mubarak, supportedmost of the protesters' demands, is a benefit. Better a benevolent military dictator than a malevolent, but civilian, oligarchy, at least in the short term. Let things take their course, imposing a form of "Western Democracy" could be just as incendiary in the region....

1
YankeeJim

Most of the generals were trained by the US Military in the USA. A part of that training includes education in democratic principles and respect for civilians.

0
Piobar

That is a program I support whole-heartedly. I wish more nations in the West would offer the opportunity. If more of the "developing" nations had well trained militaries, sworn to serve the people, and protect them, there would be fewer "fallen states" where the military are used to protect the government by brutally repressing the people....

1
YankeeJim

I think the pharaoh is engineering a memorial someplace.

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Albert Milliron
First Flagged at 9:44 AM, Feb 11, 2011 by Albert Milliron
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