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The Economist’s Review of The Struggle for Egypt

economist-review

By experts and staff

Published
  • Steven A. CookCFR Expert
    Eni Enrico Mattei Senior Fellow for Middle East and Africa Studies

The following review of my book The Struggle for Egypt: From Nasser to Tahrir Square appeared in The Economist on February 25th, 2012. Please click here to read the full text. 

The thrall of Hosni Mubarak’s dramatic exit has dissolved into a lingering, indeterminate and far less telegenic denouement. But at least the breathless eyewitness reporting can now be replaced by a more considered approach. Two highly readable books stand out from the inevitable instant accounts of Egypt’s revolution. They serve not only to fill in enlightening detail, but to place the current turmoil within the broader context of Egypt’s past—and to suggest what may lie in its future.

Much of the early reporting on the unrest framed the surge to oust Mr Mubarak in overly personal terms, as a specific reaction to abuses of power during his three-decade-long reign. Steven Cook, a scholar at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, DC, takes a usefully corrective view. His book, “The Struggle For Egypt”, is a timely, well-researched and lucid political history that sweeps back to the origins of the praetorian dynasty that has ruled Egypt since the 1952 military coup.

Mr Cook shows that whereas grievances against Mr Mubarak certainly accumulated during his long tenure, and dramatically so towards its end