The most remarkable aspect of the Egyptian regime is that it  has managed peace with Israel and relations with the United States for a  quarter of a century without allowing either one of them to meddle in  Egyptian internal affairs. Yes, the Egyptian intelligence cooperated  with CIA-run torture programmes known as ‘rendition’ after 9/11. But  despite being the second largest recipient of American aid after Israel,  for three decades Egypt under Hosni Mubarak and its military foiled  American efforts to reshape Egyptian politics and refused to oblige the  Americans on plans to turn the Egyptian army into a glorified regional  police force for the US military.
The only leverage the Egyptians had over the US was their knowledge  that Washington needs Egypt to protect Israel’s western flank, and to  meet Israel’s domestic energy needs from Sinai’s oil and gas reserves at  preferential rates. Egypt delivered on this count, took the aid money  but thwarted every American effort to establish itself inside Cairo’s  power corridors. This is a remarkable achievement. For two decades,  Pakistan has been unable to match this. American aid to Pakistan has  been far below what the country has lost just in the past eight years –  up to US$ 64 billion in revenue and opportunity losses, not to account  for the price paid by Pakistan for America’s Afghan jihad. And yet  Pakistan’s political and military ruling elites have felt they are  obliged to allow Washington to shape Pakistan’s political governments  and policy options. The biggest example of this is the 2007 deal that  gave birth to the incumbent coalition government in Islamabad.
Mubarak is supposed to be a bigger foreign stooge than our own  variety and yet, he never allowed foreign meddling in his country, not  even in his defeat, declining all ideas and plans for him to move to  Germany or Saudi Arabia. He moved to a house in the Egyptian Red Sea  resort of Sharm el-Sheikh. So far, he has stuck to his vow that he will  die and be buried in Egypt and that he won’t escape for safety in some  haven in Jeddah, Dubai, London or New York.
For Pakistan’s ruling elite, these cities have become alternate capitals of Pakistan.
Egypt was taking American aid but refused to accept American  meddling. In 2008, then US Central Command Chief David Petraeus pressed  the Egyptian army to transform itself into a counterterrorism force so  the US could use it for firefighting in the region. The new Egyptian  strongman Field Marshal Hussain Tantawi along with Mubarak and other  generals refused to play ball. Despite massive corruption, the Egyptian  ruling elite never produced proxies who serve Washington and then escape  to greener pastures on the American lecture circuit.
When President George W. Bush rolled out his democracy agenda in the  Middle East after 9/11, Mubarak was instrumental in failing it (along  with the Saudis). He just won’t have it. Mubarak refused to allow the  Americans to establish direct contact with Egyptian politicians or  engineer any kind of internal change.
Egypt made peace with Israel but only because Egyptian nationalists  were disappointed at what they saw as stabs in the back by Arabs and  Muslims (for example, rich Arabs refused to bail out the Egyptian  economy enough despite the fact that Egypt fought Israel in four wars on  behalf of all Arabs. Egypt was also shocked to see Pakistan in 1956  supporting the British-French-Israeli invasion of Egypt, and harbored  similar grievances against Turkey and Iran.) All of this shaped the  psyche of the Egyptian ruling-elite and intelligentsia and helped push  Egypt toward peace with Israel under American guarantees.
There were many occasions when there were frictions between Cairo and  Washington over one thing or the other and the mainstream US media was  unleashed – as usual – to ridicule, harass or intimidate Mubarak and  Egypt. But Mubarak won’t have any of it. The point is not to glorify  Mubarak. The point is to highlight the Egyptian elite’s sense of  independence and pride even when they were corrupt and seen by their own  people as pro-Israel touts.
Compare that to Pakistan. Every regime, from Benazir Bhutto to Nawaz  Sharif to Pervez Musharraf to Asif Zardari, has handed over Pakistani  citizens to foreign governments without an iota of national pride.
Some of them moved to Jeddah, Dubai, London and New York. Most of  them have their wealth and properties abroad. Mr Musharraf introduced a  new element to this shameful history when he launched Pakistan’s first  political party on foreign soil, in London and Dubai. And now, most  Pakistani politicians consider it kosher to conduct important political  meetings outside Pakistan. Mr Zardari has introduced another first:  high-level meetings with foreign governments that relevant Pakistani  government departments, like the Foreign Office, know nothing about. We  have ambassadors and national security advisers who are appointed to  protect the interests of foreign governments.
Hosni Mubarak and the Egyptian regime made peace with Israel but  never allowed any foreign power to come and abuse Egyptians or bomb them  using CIA drones. This honour exclusively belongs to Pakistan’s ruling  elite.





