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      After Egypt: Arab Voices Matter  
	By James Zogby 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 15, 2011 
	  
	
		
			
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	 If one lesson is to be learned from the remarkable events unfolding 
	in Egypt, it is that Arab public opinion matters. For too long Arab voices 
	have not been listened to, nor have Arab sensibilities or aspirations been 
	respected. The Egyptian people have not only risen up, demanding to be 
	heard, they have challenged other Arabs and the West to pay attention to 
	what they are saying.
  On Thursday night I watched a remarkable scene 
	unfolding on television. As my dinner partner, Patrick Seale, and I sat 
	transfixed watching the BBC, there, on one half of a split screen, was 
	President Hosni Mubarak making a last ditch effort to save his rule. On the 
	other half screen were throngs in Tahrir Square. The disconnect was so real. 
	Mubarak was talking, but he simply wasn't listening. He played every card at 
	his disposal: the caring father, the patriot, the xenophobe, the reformer 
	and more. Maybe, I thought, he was reaching out beyond the Square to those 
	he thought might also be listening. But if his imagined and hoped for 
	audience was there, they were not responding. The crowd in the Square was 
	listening and his lack of responsiveness to their concerns only served to 
	inflame them and deepen their resolve.
  It was the immovable object 
	squaring off against the irresistible force. In the end, the force won. The 
	protesters rejected Mubarak's promises and his appeals as "too little, too 
	late," and began to pour out beyond the Square to take new space and 
	demonstrate their discontent.   Now the president is gone. The throngs 
	have won this round and they are empowered to seek more change. It is not 
	the end, just the beginning of a process, the outcome of which is still 
	uncertain. With the military in charge, it will now be up to them to listen. 
	Questions remain. Will the military cede space and open the political 
	process to real reform? Will they be more responsive to the growing 
	aspirations of their young who are demanding: jobs in an expanding economy 
	where wealth is shared; an opportunity to participate in the shaping of the 
	future of their country; and the freedom to express their discontent with 
	and seek to change policies they find deplorable, without fear of 
	repression? 
  In some ways, after February 11th, much has changed. In 
	other ways, the struggle remains the same. A movement that has won a round 
	now becomes a potentially formidable force. But a regime that fears losing 
	control is also a force which must be reckoned with. In the weeks and months 
	ahead we will see this drama play out in the streets and in negotiations. 
	The constitution must be changed. President Mubarak has promised as much. 
	The concerns of the demonstrators have been acknowledged by the military, 
	who have said they are listening. Now we will see if they, in fact, were. 
	 The problem of not listening to Arab voices is not only a problem for 
	those Presidents who have fallen or those who are still at risk; it is a 
	problem for the West, as well. For too long, the U.S., Great Britain, and 
	others have ignored the concerns and sensibilities of Arab people. Arabs 
	have been treated as if they were pawns to be moved about on the board. 
	While we paid attention to our own needs and politics, Arabs were left to 
	make do or accommodate themselves to realities we created for them, as we 
	sought to protect our interests, not theirs.   
  This is not a 
	new phenomenon. The cavalier dismissal of Arab voices began with Lord 
	Balfour who famously rejected the first survey of Arab opinion, conducted 
	for U.S. President Woodrow Wilson at the end of World War I. While the 
	survey found Arabs overwhelming rejecting the European powers' plans to 
	carve up the Arab East into British and French mandatory entities, and the 
	creation of a Jewish National Home in Palestine, Balfour balked saying "we 
	do not propose even to go through the form of consulting the wishes of the 
	present inhabitants of the country... Zionism, be it right or wrong, good or 
	bad...is of far greater import than the desire and prejudices of the Arabs 
	who now inhabit that ancient land.”
  As blatant as that rejection was, 
	this practice of ignoring Arab concerns did not end. Until this day, all too 
	often the West has acted across the Middle East as if Arabs were objects 
	without sensibilities or concerns. We invaded Iraq without understanding the 
	impact this might have on Arab opinion. We have continued to ignore 
	Palestinian suffering and aspirations (recall Condolezza Rice's dismissal of 
	the plight and rights of Palestinian refugees with a casual "bad things 
	happen in history"). And we have engaged in wide-spread profiling and other 
	forms of deplorable treatment of Arabs and Muslims, paying no attention to 
	the toll that these and other wildly unpopular policies were having on the 
	legitimacy of Arab governments who were our friends and allies.    
	 Now all this must of necessity change. When the Egyptian people 
	organized themselves demanding to be heard they introduced a new and 
	potentially transformative factor into the political equation of the region. 
	It will no longer be possible to operate as if Arab public opinion doesn't 
	matter. It will no longer possible to act as if policies can be imposed and 
	blindly accepted. No longer will we be able to consider only the Israeli 
	internal debate or the consequences on Israeli opinion in our calculations. 
	Arabs have been inspired by Egypt and empowered to believe that their voices 
	must be heard and respected. It will make life more complicated for Western 
	and some Arab policy makers. But if this complication is a good thing and it 
	represents change, that has been a long time coming. As President Obama 
	said, this is just the beginning and after today, nothing will be same. The 
	reality is that this transformation will not only affect Egypt. The change 
	that is coming will be bigger than any of us can imagine.
  
       
       
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