Project on Middle East Democracy

Project on Middle East Democracy
The POMED Wire


Cook: Democracy Promotion Programs in Egypt Are “Futile”

May 26th, 2009 by Eoghan

Steven Cook writes in Newsweek that America’s democracy promotion programs in Egypt are doing more harm than good and that the Obama Administration should focus on fostering economic development and alleviating poverty instead. Initiatives such as conferences on political reform for Egyptian governors are “futile,” Cook argues, and he laments that the increase in democracy promotion funding under Bush came at the expense of development programs such as aid to poor farmers.

Cook notes that after an initial period of liberalization in the middle of the decade, the Mubarak regime quickly returned to its old repressive ways, suggesting that Bush’s Freedom Agenda did little to promote democracy. Of course, some have argued that Cairo’s authoritarian backsliding was a result of the Bush administration easing up on its initial pressure for reform.


Posted in Democracy Promotion, Egypt, Foreign Aid, US foreign policy |

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2 Responses to “Cook: Democracy Promotion Programs in Egypt Are “Futile””

  1. Welcome | Project on Middle East Democracy Says:

    […] at Harvard blog, Scott Carpenter and Tamara Cofman Wittes take umbrage at Steven Cook’s suggestion that democracy and good governance programs in Egypt are not […]

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