Secret Minister Suleiman

Thursday, August 18, 2011 7:39 AM

I've been thinking about this Egyptian spook Omar Suleiman for months. The most powerful man in Egypt aside from Hosni Mubarak, and yet he just vanishes off the radar screen after Mubarak is driven from office. How odd. Everybody and his grandmother, including Mubarak and his sons, are now on trial for corruption and murder. Yet Suleiman remains the invisible man.


It does not make sense, unless he is being protected by Washington and Tel Aviv. After all, Suleiman was their man. He was in charge of torture and rendition. I think the word has gone out from Hillary Clinton and the White House to the Egyptian military: don't touch Suleiman, otherwise we will cut off aid from the army and from Egypt. Stick with Mubarak and his visible entourage.


Mubarak is a has-been, so he can safely be thrown under the bus. He has outlived his usefulness to the Washington/Tel Aviv axis. But Suleiman could still be useful behind the scenes. Maybe he is actually still running the show to a certain extent. No one really knows who is calling the shots within the junta. Unless and until Suleiman is placed under house arrest, I continue to suspect that the military takeover was a ploy to throttle the revolution for democracy and to maintain control by Washington, which is to say, to maintain Egypt's status as a non-entity, and a facilitator for Pax Israeliana.


My emphasis in red below.

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Behind the Scenes, Still Pulling the Strings?

Egypt's Secret Minister

By THOMAS C. MOUNTAIN [CounterPunch, August 17th, 2011]

Just exactly what influence Omar "The Secret Minister" Suleiman retains over the military junta that rules Egypt is a question of utmost importance for those who live on the banks of the Nile River. With a resume including 20 years as head of Egyptian Intelligence he is not someone anyone of those who helped bring about the downfall of Mubarak can afford to ignore.

He was the CIA's go to man when it came to doing the Agencies dirty work in the Middle East as well as being the liaison with Israel and was reported to be in contact with Mossad on an almost daily basis.

Suleiman is infamous for enforcing the blockade of Gaza, saying he wanted the Palestinians there to "be hungry but not starving" in punishment for supporting Hamas. Hungry as in a 40% level of malnutrition related disability rates amongst Gaza's children.

Mubarak as Egypt's Godfather was as lacking in charisma as any leader in the Arab world and ruled by brute force alone. Omar Suleiman was his consigliere and enforcer combined, and was reputed to having a hands on approach to how his torturers carried out their interrogations.

While Mubarak and Sons lived a very publicly ostentatious lifestyle and were well known for their corrupt and decadent ways, Suleiman "The Secret Minister" always preferred to remain behind the scenes, at least until those last desperate days of the Mubarak regime and his "appointment" to the new position of Vice President of Egypt. It was he who announced to the world that a military coup had been carried out and that Mubarak was officially "retired".

Of course, every member of the Egyptian military junta that overthrew Mubarak had arrived on the Supreme Military Council with his appointment stamped "Approved by Suleiman". While they may hate "The Secret Minister" one could expect that the junta leaders know that if they want to avoid ending their careers standing in a cage in an Egyptian court "they had better hang together or they will all hang separately".

Suleiman put them where they are and who better to keep matters from really disintegrating? And who better to keep them informed about what the CIA will and will not approve of.

Today the whereabouts of Suleiman the Secret remains just that, a secret. The last time he was allegedly heard from was via a letter to Al-Ahram newspaper in which he disavowed any desire to be elected President of Egypt. No, all he wanted to do was "live a quiet life with his family".

Trial by military courts, torture and disappearances, all the hallmarks of Suleiman the Secret are still a part of today's Egypt and those who partied in the streets after the Coup against Mubarak had better be warned. Behind the scene and still pulling the strings, Suleiman the Secret remains a danger whose continued influence will be ignored at the peril of those who rejoiced at Mubarak's downfall.

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Thomas C. Mountain is the only independent western journalist in the Horn of Africa, living and reporting from Eritrea since 2006.