More than two years after the Arab Spring, the Middle East has descended into a chilly fall. Early success stories like Libya and Tunisia are still plagued by internecine violence, Syria’s full-scale civil war threatens to drag the entire region into chaos, and Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous country, has returned to military rule.
In “Egypt in Crisis,” a documentary airing Tuesday night on PBS, FRONTLINE and Globalpost document the military’s violent crackdown on protesters following this year’s July 3 military takeover.
The military violently suppressed followers of deposed–and democratically elected–Muslim Brotherhood Leader Mohamed Morsi. On Sept. 5, terrorists based in the Sinai Peninsula failed in an attempted assassination of Egypt’s interior minister, General Mohamed Ibrahim, according to Reuters. Reports also allege that a gunmen killed an Egyptian military officer and wounded three others in an attack northeast of Cairo Tuesday, raising concerns that the Islamist insurgency is spreading beyond the Sinai. According to medical officials, clashes along the Israeli border have claimed 121 lives in recent weeks, including 69 military and police personnel.
But elsewhere, the interim government has made gains. This week, military forces recaptured an Islamist-held town where former Morsi supporters had been targeting Christian minorities. The Muslim Brotherhood’s leadership has either been jailed or killed and protests in Cairo have subsided. Unlike the protests of 2011, the majority of Egyptians had lost faith in Morsi’s Freedom and Justice Party and the electoral process.








