Even though I'm fairly liberal as it applies to gun control, the 2nd, and militias in general, I do think compulsory military service out of public education would change America for the better, although it would be impossible to implement now barring some sort of calamity that shifts the unconscious public dialogue, like 9/11 on steroids.
But yeah, I can't help but point and laugh at 2nd amendment fanatics and their contention that the right to bear is their golden ticket for maintaining their freedom and personal liberty. It is the 21st century, the government does not give a fuck about your AR-15 rifle. I don't believe the American armed forces could ever be used as a force of oppression in the way many military and paramilitary forces are, due to those soldiers being American citizens raised to despise such an act, but for precisely the same reason I think the concept of a militia effecting large scale political change hilarious. So they refuse your demands, what is your militia going to do? Start slaughtering American soldiers?
And although I am no expert, almost positive Silas is correct about the Egyptian military. This is exactly the reason why the initial Egyptian revolution did not end up the way Libya, Syria, and Turkey have. The Egyptian army had more at stake with US relations than with the incumbent Egyptian government, and because of this history of relative autonomy, the Egyptian generals are all powerful political figures in their own right. This is not to say that they are bastions of truth and justice, no more than the American military is, but they are perhaps the most progressive fighting force in that region of the world next to perhaps the IDF.