http://rt.com/news/middle-east-unrests-usa-interests/
Published: 15 February, 2011, 20:31
Edited: 16 February, 2011, 11:40
  
The US is defending its own interests in the region and that is  impossible without pretending to support the democratic process  prevailing in the region, says Middle East expert Barah Mikhail from  Islamabad.
In the wake of the Egyptian revolution, activists in the Middle East are turning up the heat on their governments.
Riots  have broken out across the region. Two demonstrators were killed in  Bahrain on Monday. An activist was also shot dead by police in the  Iranian capital. The protest in Tehran took place just a day after the  US State Department began inspiring Iran's opposition with Twitter  messages. It's the first such riot in the country in over a year. 
On  Tuesday, Iranian MPs called for opposition leaders to be tried and  executed. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says Washington "clearly  and directly" supports the protesters.
Hillary Clinton called the  Iranian regime “hypocritical.” She said that President Mahmoud  Ahmadinejad rallied behind the protesters on the streets of Egypt, but  now that he is witnessing protests in his own country, he is using harsh  violence against the demonstrators. What to do with Iran is a big  concern for the US.
At the same time, the US is very nervous after  watching events unfold in Egypt, where it supported President Mubarak  for 30 years. The US now has to redefine its role there and also send  out a message to other allies in the region that it will not leave them  out in the cold – as it did, many say, to Mubarak.
Mikhail argues  that over the last decade US policy in the region has been based on  support for authoritative governments, and that now it is trying to play  both sides of the fence. 
“For example, at the beginning of  riots in Egypt they did not really support the public,” he said. “But  when they noticed that they could not do anything against the revolution  which was taking place, then they decided to conform with public  opinion and tell them they were in favor of the democratic process.”
Egypt is gripped by labor strikes, where interim power is now in the hands of the military which is reworking the constitution.
Professor  Robert Springborg of the Naval Postgraduate School believes that with  ideological splits in the military, the army leadership has more to  worry about than US interference.
“They will not want the  military to be subject to civilian political control,” he said, adding  that the primary concern of Egypt’s defense minister is business, not  the military, but there are “officers who are professional and who think  the business of the military should be the military, not the business  itself.”
Author and researcher Adrian Salbuchi from Argentina says that US  policy in the Middle East might work against national interests.
“The  US is trying to achieve a way to promote change in a way which will  facilitate things for them,” Salbuchi said. “The global power structure  which is entrenched inside the US might not be working in the national  interest of the people of the United States. It has other, very specific  interests which might even go against the national interest of the  United States of America.”
Courtesy : RT
