Slightly over a year ago, Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohammed Morsi
won Egypt's first post-revolution presidential election. Almost 11 months ago, Morsi consolidated power with a
power move that questioned whether his nascent rule would last. 5 months ago, regime opponents
marched in the streets to express disappointment with Morsi's rule to date.
Put succinctly, nobody is quite sure what Egypt will look like by the end of this week. Whatever emerges out of Egypt, however, one thing is near-certain: this will be the year of missed opportunities and regrets, on all sides. Morsi, for example,
issued an edict in November 2012, shielding his decisions from court review until the passage of a new constitution -- a move many perceived as illegitimate and power-grabbing. The opposition, in turn,
walked out of the constitution-drafting assembly, only to next
complain about the lack of their inclusion. Soon thereafter, the opposition showed staggering ineptitude and indecisiveness, waiting until
the week before the constitutional referendum to decide
whether it would even participate in the referendum. The military has largely stayed on the sidelines -- that is, of course, until yesterday's ultimatum. From Morsi's inability to grasp the scope of the populace's discontent to the opposition's ineffectual attempts at political process in general, the common thread throughout Egypt is misunderstanding and miscommunication. One can only hope that these are growing pains, rather than a hint of descent into turmoil.