| Mark Silverberg | ||||
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Revolution in Tunisia - What Next? Feb 17, 2011 (GMT-5) Poverty alone does not cause revolutions. They are caused by thousands of accumulated injustices that, in their totality, push a society to its breaking point. When that point is reached, even the smallest of incidents can ignite the firestorm. In What began as the desperate act of a frustrated, humiliated young man in mid-December has electrified the Arab world: “I am travelling, mother; blame is pointless. I am lost on a road not of our making. Forgive me for disobeying you. Blame the times, not me. I am leaving, and there is no return.” These were the final words posted on a Facebook page by Tarek (Mohamed) Bouazizi, an impoverished, young unemployed street vendor from the tiny central Tunisian town of Sidi Bouzid who had been denied a local permit to run a small fruit and vegetable stall unless he paid officials “baksheesh” (a bribe). It was his sole source of income. In his despair, he set fire to himself ultimately succumbing to his injuries. His tragic final act of defiance sparked massive demonstrations and rioting throughout the country and eventually brought down the 23-year dictatorship of Tunisian President Ben Ali on January 4th. Today, Bouazizi is a hero, and not just to his nation, but to millions of long-abused Arabs in the Under his successor, Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, however, Tunisians became fed up with official corruption and the rapacious lifestyle of Ben Ali’s family (colorfully described in recent WikiLeak disclosures); unemployment hovering at 20% (which included an estimated 52% unemployment rate among the country’s university graduates); legions of impoverished workers, trade unionists, lawyers and human rights activists; endemic poverty in the rural areas; rising food prices; insufficient investment in the public sector, and one of the most repressive regimes in the region - to which both the EU and the US conveniently turned a blind eye. When the Tunisian police began wearing red armbands in solidarity with the dissidents, and the army refused to fire on them or to seize power for themselves choosing instead to surround the Presidential Palace and the airport, Ben Ali knew it was time to pack his bags. When despots fall, the rest of the club takes notice. His ouster has sparked fear among Arab autocrats in almost every kingdom, emirate, republic or territory that his demise may be the harbinger of things to come given the rising tide of popular dissatisfaction with illiberal, unreformed authoritarian rule in the other Arab autocracies that line the south shore of the While the near-silence of Arab leaders speaks volumes about their fears, there is little doubt that the region's dictators are praying for chaos and collapse in Until this event, the rulers in the region considered themselves unassailable. Now, the aging Arab dictators of the The concern in Egypt, Jordan, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Libya, Morocco and Algeria has been heightened even further by the knowledge that thousands of messages from ordinary Tunisians supporting the revolution flooded the Internet on Twitter and Facebook by a young generation of Arabs who used their iPhones and blogs to coordinate rallies and protests across their country, took photos of what was happening as it happened, and posted them on Facebook and YouTube. Statistically speaking, Tunisians have greater access to cell phones and the Internet than do residents of Lebanon, Jordan or Syria (estimates are as high as 30% of Tunisia’s population), and this access allowed them to coordinate their activities and disseminate information to the Arab world instantly. For this reason, Ben Ali tried to censor the Internet by blocking political and social media websites. Video-sharing sites were a special target of his censors as Tunisian activists frequently released provocative online videos including one documenting the first lady's frequent shopping trips to Europe using the presidential jet, a beachfront compound decorated with Roman artifacts; ice cream and frozen yogurt flown from St. Tropez, France; a Bangladeshi butler and South African nanny; and a pet tiger in a cage. As a result, the moment President Ben Ali boarded the plane that carried him into exile, dozens of Egyptian activists began dancing outside the Tunisian Embassy in Demonstrators were told not to show up with opposition party slogans or flags, or to invoke the names of presidential candidates. The leaders of these movements were asked not to appear on the front lines and even to refrain from participating, so as not to give the authorities an excuse to write off the protests as being merely factional. In effect, a generation of Arabs that grew up without a political voice now found one on the web. As a result, the revolt spread like wildfire and became unstoppable. As Marlyn Tadros writes: “We all watched Ben Ali’s forces clashing with people, saw disturbing YouTube videos of loss of life, watched as Ben Ali’s airplane left the tarmac, watched him as his plane was denied landing in Malta and France and its final landing in Saudi Arabia. We all listened to Saudi citizens cursing at their leaders for allowing a tyrant on their land; listened attentively to the White House sheepishly offering a weak statement regarding the right of Tunisians to choose their leader. We saw tweets stating clearly that this was the way to win people’s hearts and minds, not through the toppling of a dictator through senseless wars because a real revolution is one that is by the people and for the people rather than a manufactured one.” The implications are ominous. Saudi Arabia has 2.3M registered Facebook users; Bahrain about 220,000, and Oman 160,000. Arab autocrats know that if popular insurrections can succeed in stable, educated and relatively prosperous “The grievances that the Tunisian demonstrators articulated are also widely shared across the entire Arab world, with the possible exception of some of the smaller wealthy countries in the Gulf. These complaints are about rising prices and job shortages, but also about the heavy-handed and condescending manner in which ruling Arab elites treat their citizens and deny them the most basic human rights of expression, credible representation, political participation, holding power accountable, and equitable access to the resources of the state and the opportunities of the free market.” Despite a wealth of resources, the Arab states have seen an economic growth rate of only 0.5% a year between 1980 and 2004 (and no better since then), according to the United Nations Development Program, placing them at the bottom of the world’s growth list. The International Monetary Fund has said that with current unemployment rates in the Arab world already very high, the entire region needs to create close to 100 million new jobs by 2020. But in a situation where budgets are being strained by the soaring cost of imported food and fuel, this will be virtually impossible especially in those Arab countries lacking significant oil reserves. Egypt, the Arab world's most populous country, has problems that dwarf Tunisia's - the population is booming, 60% are under 30, youth unemployment is soaring, at least 20% of its 80 million citizens live on less than $2 a day, and one third of Egyptians are illiterate – prime indicators of popular discontent. About a million babies are born there every nine months. It also lacks the civil and political institutions that are necessary for democracy or any tradition of tolerance or respect for minority rights. During his thirty years in power, Mubarak refused to allow the emergence of a secular, moderate, middle-class-based, pro-democracy opposition. His departure has now left the field to the Supreme Military Council that replaced him and to the only organized opposition in Given that Egypt's new military rulers, within the space of a week, have already authorized two Iranian warships to transit the Suez Canal (the first such authorization in three decades) carrying long-range missiles to Hezbollah, and allowed Sheik Yusuf al-Qaradawi (the MB's supreme religious and ideological authority who has been exiled from Egypt since 1961) to return home and give an anti-Israel victory speech with anti-Semitic overtones to a million-plus crowd in Tahrir Square in Cairo on state television (while denying other Opposition leaders access to the podium), such actions would suggest that the military is preparing to grant significant power in Egypt’s future government and parliament to the Brotherhood. Qaradawi’s sermon had nothing to do with the goals of freedom, rights, reforms or a better life for which the people demonstrated in One has only to study the results of the latest Pew Global Attitudes Project (April-May 2010) to understand the attitude of the "Arab street” in White House rambling over the MB being like an Arab version of the March of Dimes - a moderate, secular, social-oriented group is sheer nonsense but no surprise given that the organization was well-represented at President Obama’s 2009 Cairo speech, at the express invitation of the American government. As Ray Takeyh of the Council on Foreign Relations writes: “Many in the West presume that once Islamist parties are integrated into the political order, the burdens of governance will inevitably lead them to dispense with their ideological past. This does a disservice to the Muslim Brotherhood and its many offspring, denigrating their commitment to their dogma…..The moderation that these groups have exhibited in the past few decades in places such as Egypt was pragmatism born out of compulsion, not some kind of intellectual evolution. Relieved of the constraints of Arab police states, they are free to advance their illiberal, anti-Western agendas.” Regardless of its cultivated image of moderation, the group remains committed to establishing Shari'a law throughout Egypt (and beyond) - the effect of which would be to dehumanize women and relegate non-Muslim religious minorities to second-class status, establish a Sunni theocracy modeled on Iran, repudiate the 1979 Egyptian-Israeli Peace Treaty, control access to the Suez Canal, promote terrorism throughout the region by supporting Hamas and Hezbollah, sever the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt and annex it to Gaza to establish a new, powerful Hamas-controlled state that would border the Red Sea and work for the annihilation of Israel. The MB hates the West for what it is, not for what it does. It has spawned eleven different Islamist extremist organizations including the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, Hamas, al Qaeda and the Gama'a Islamiya (Islamic Group) ..... and if the Pew studies are correct, it's moment may be rapidly approaching. Should the Egyptian army support a coalition government that would include the MB, what unfolded in Iran in 1979, Gaza in 2006, Lebanon this year, and Turkey in recent years could well be the harbinger of things to come in Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Syria, Libya, Bahrain, Algeria, and the Palestinian Authority. For In Algeria, although the middle class has so far failed to join the anti-government rioting in that country and there is no real backing for the protests from Algeria’s trade unions (both of which were evidenced in Tunisia), with 25% inflation combined with a 35% unemployment rate, a chronic lack of housing, political corruption and widespread poverty, the fear is that Algeria’s population may also being edging towards desperation, especially since 75% of those who are unemployed are under 30 years of age. Four days of rioting over price rises in food staples like cooking oil, milk and sugar have forced the government to use some of its vast $150B in gas export cash reserves to increase food subsidies, but not all Arab countries are so fortunate, and even subsidies, at this point, may not be enough to pacify the Algerians. In Nor is “The average age of the kingdom's trio of ruling princes is 83, yet 60% of Saudis are under 18 years of age. Thanks to satellite television, the Internet and social media, the young now are well aware of government corruption - and that 40% of Saudis live in poverty and nearly 70% can't afford a home. These Saudis are living In Exacerbating the problem is that the royal rulers are old, infirmed and largely out of touch. King Abdullah has been out of the kingdom for three months receiving medical treatment in the Even the Jordanian monarch is concerned. The Jordanian economy saw a record deficit of $2B this year, inflation rising by 1.5% to 6.1% in December 2010, and rampant unemployment and poverty - estimated at 12% and 25% respectively. When news of events in Complicating Failing or failed Arab governance across the arc of countries stretching from "Arab countries are very vulnerable to fluctuations in international commodity markets because they are heavily dependent on imported food. Arab countries are the largest importers of cereal in the world...and most import at least 50% of the food calories they consume." The problem is that the political leadership across the Arab world lacks the will to reform its economic, political or educational infrastructures primarily because they are well aware that reform has rarely if ever assisted despots in retaining their monopoly on power. Instead, they continue to use the West's fear of Islamic terrorism as justification for their repression of all opposition, continuing Western dependence on Arab oil, and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to deflect pressures for modern reforms in their countries that would affect everything from gender to knowledge. These regimes are not inclined to seek out new export markets, or increase their domestic manufacturing, or enhance their competitiveness through education and labor market reforms. Whether this “Jasmine Revolution” (as it is being called) survives longer than the “Cedar Revolution” in In the end, events unfolding in Democracy is a political and voting process, but liberalization, the ultimate goal, is part of a defined value system notably absent in the Arab world. A society is truly democratic only when its population embraces the concepts of tolerance and the protection of minority rights, but a democratic process that only deepens Shari’a in Arab societies will be anything but liberal. We would be foolish to believe that Arab societies emerging from dictatorships, tribalism, economic and political stagnation and massive oppression can liberalize their political systems overnight. To understand the future, we need to understand the past. Under the Truman Doctrine, US presidents used every conceivable instrument available, including massive financial and diplomatic assistance, to convince centrist parties notably in France and Italy to oppose the inclusion of Communists in any government despite the Communists calling for "free elections" under "united fronts." Doing so, allowed these newly-freed countries the time to develop the institutions and political cultures necessary for democratic governance. Today, the primary "
Mark Silverberg
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