
	
	
	by Ron Nixon
	April 14, 2011
	
	from
	
	NYTimes Website
 
	
	
	WASHINGTON
	
	
	Even as the United States poured billions of 
	dollars into foreign military programs and anti-terrorism campaigns, a small 
	core of American government-financed organizations were promoting democracy 
	in authoritarian Arab states.
	
	The money spent on these programs was minute compared with efforts led by 
	the Pentagon. 
	
	 
	
	But as American officials and others look back at the 
	uprisings of the Arab Spring, they are seeing that the United States’ 
	democracy-building campaigns played a bigger role in fomenting protests than 
	was previously known, with key leaders of the movements having been trained 
	by the Americans in campaigning, organizing through new media tools and 
	monitoring elections.
	
	A number of the groups and individuals directly involved in the revolts and 
	reforms sweeping the region, including the April 6 Youth Movement in Egypt, 
	the Bahrain Center for Human Rights and grass-roots activists like Entsar 
	Qadhi, a youth leader in Yemen, received training and financing from groups 
	like the International Republican Institute (IRI), the 
	National Democratic 
	Institute (NDI) and 
	
	Freedom House, a nonprofit human rights organization based in 
	Washington, according to interviews in recent weeks and American diplomatic 
	cables obtained by 
	WikiLeaks.
	
	The work of these groups often provoked tensions between the United States 
	and many Middle Eastern leaders, who frequently complained that their 
	leadership was being undermined, according to the cables.
	
	The Republican and Democratic institutes are loosely affiliated with the 
	Republican and Democratic Parties. 
	
	 
	
	They were created by Congress and are 
	financed through the 
	National Endowment for Democracy, which was set up in 
	1983 to channel grants for promoting democracy in developing nations. The 
	National Endowment receives about $100 million annually from Congress. 
	Freedom House also gets the bulk of its money from the American government, 
	mainly from the State Department.
	
	No one doubts that the Arab uprisings are home grown, rather than resulting 
	from “foreign influence,” as alleged by some Middle Eastern leaders.
	
		
		“We didn’t fund them to start protests, but 
		we did help support their development of skills and networking,” said 
		Stephen McInerney, executive director of the 
		
		Project on Middle East 
		Democracy, a Washington-based advocacy and research group. 
		
		 
		
		“That 
		training did play a role in what ultimately happened, but it was their 
		revolution. We didn’t start it.”
	
	
	Some Egyptian youth leaders attended 
	
	a 2008 
	technology meeting in New York, where they were taught to use social 
	networking and mobile technologies to promote democracy. 
	
	 
	
	Among those 
	sponsoring the meeting were
	
	Facebook, 
	Google, 
	
	MTV, Columbia Law School and 
	the State Department.
	
		
		“We learned how to organize and build 
		coalitions,” said Bashem Fathy, a founder of the youth movement that 
		ultimately drove the Egyptian uprisings. 
	
	
	Mr. Fathy, who attended 
		training with Freedom House, said,
	
		
		“This certainly helped during the 
		revolution.”
	
	
	Ms. Qadhi, the Yemeni youth activist, attended 
	American training sessions in Yemen.
	
		
		“It helped me very much because I used to 
		think that change only takes place by force and by weapons,” she said.
	
	
	But now, she said, it is clear that results can 
	be achieved with peaceful protests and other nonviolent means.
	
	But some members of the activist groups complained in interviews that the 
	United States was hypocritical for helping them at the same time that it was 
	supporting the governments they sought to change.
	
		
		“While we appreciated the training we 
		received through the NGOs sponsored by the U.S. government, and it did 
		help us in our struggles, we are also aware that the same government 
		also trained the state security investigative service, which was 
		responsible for the harassment and jailing of many of us,” said Mr. 
		Fathy, the Egyptian activist.
	
	
	Interviews with officials of the nongovernmental 
	groups and a review of 
	
	diplomatic cables obtained by WikiLeaks show that the 
	democracy programs were constant sources of tension between the United 
	States and many Arab governments.
	
	The cables, in particular, show how leaders in the Middle East and North 
	Africa viewed these groups with deep suspicion, and tried to weaken them. 
	
	
	 
	
	Today the work of these groups is among the reasons that governments in 
	turmoil claim that Western meddling was behind the uprisings, with some 
	officials noting that leaders like Ms. Qadhi were trained and financed by 
	the United States.
	
	Diplomatic cables report how American officials frequently assured skeptical 
	governments that the training was aimed at reform, not promoting 
	revolutions.
	
	Last year, for example, a few months before national elections in Bahrain, 
	officials there barred a representative of the National Democratic Institute 
	from entering the country.
	
	In Bahrain, officials worried that the group’s political training 
	“disproportionately benefited the opposition,” 
	
	according to a January 2010 
	cable.
	
	In Yemen, where the United States has been spending millions on an 
	anti-terrorism program, officials complained that American efforts to 
	promote democracy amounted to “interference in internal Yemeni affairs.”
	
	But nowhere was the opposition to the American groups stronger than in 
	Egypt.
	
	Egypt, whose government receives $1.5 billion annually in military and 
	economic aid from the United States, viewed efforts to promote political 
	change with deep suspicion, even outrage.
	
	
	
	Hosni Mubarak, then Egypt’s president, was,
	
		
		“deeply skeptical of the U.S. role in 
		democracy promotion,” 
		
		said a diplomatic cable from the United States 
		Embassy in Cairo dated Oct. 9, 2007.
	
	
	At one time the United States financed political 
	reform groups by channeling money through the Egyptian government.
	
	But in 2005, under a 
	Bush administration initiative, local groups were given 
	direct grants, much to the chagrin of Egyptian officials. 
	
	According to a September 2006 cable, Mahmoud Nayel, an official with the 
	Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, complained to American Embassy 
	officials about the United States government’s,
	
		
		“arrogant tactics in 
	promoting reform in Egypt.” 
	
	
	The main targets of the Egyptian complaints were the Republican and 
	Democratic institutes. Diplomatic cables show that Egyptian officials 
	complained that the United States was providing support for “illegal 
	organizations.”
	
	Gamal Mubarak, the former president’s son, is described in
	
	an Oct. 20, 2008 
	cable as,
	
		
		“irritable about direct U.S. democracy and governance funding of 
	Egyptian NGOs.”
	
	
	The Egyptian government even appealed to groups like Freedom House to stop 
	working with local political activists and human rights groups.
	
		
		“They were constantly saying: ‘Why are you 
		working with those groups, they are nothing. All they have are slogans,’ 
		” said Sherif Mansour, an Egyptian activist and a senior program officer 
		for the Middle East and North Africa at Freedom House.
	
	
	When their appeals to the United States 
	government failed, the Egyptian authorities reacted by restricting the 
	activities of the American nonprofit organizations.
	
	Hotels that were to host training sessions were closed for renovations. 
	Staff members of the groups were followed, and local activists were 
	intimidated and jailed. State-owned newspapers accused activists of 
	receiving money from American intelligence agencies.
	
	Affiliating themselves with the American organizations may have tainted 
	leaders within their own groups. 
	
	 
	
	According to one diplomatic cable, leaders 
	of the April 6 Youth Movement in Egypt told the American Embassy in 2009 
	that some members of the group had accused Ahmed Maher, a leader of the 
	January uprising, and other leaders of “treason” in a mock trial related to 
	their association with Freedom House, which more militant members of the 
	movement described as a “Zionist organization.”
	
	A prominent blogger, according to a cable, threatened to post the 
	information about the movement leaders’ links to Freedom House on his blog.
	
	There is no evidence that this ever happened, and a later cable shows that 
	the group ousted the members who were complaining about Mr. Maher and other 
	leaders.
	
	In the face of government opposition, some groups moved their training 
	sessions to friendlier countries like Jordan or Morocco. 
	
	 
	
	They also sent activists to the United States 
	for training...