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The Arab Turmoil: Where Do We Stand?
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 13, 2013
Seasons come and go, yet Arab countries are in ongoing turmoil. They
called it an ‘Arab Spring’, but even if that ‘spring’ had ever existed in
the shape and form that the media portrayed it to be, it never really
lasted. It has now morphed into something far more complex. But it
is not an ‘Islamic winter’ either, a foreboding term favored by Israeli
policymakers and analysts. The Islamic dimension of Arab rebellions - some
of which turned into bloody civil and regional wars - should have been
palpable from the very start to anyone who cares to understand political
reality beyond its usefulness as a propaganda tool. Islam has and will
always be a component in shaping collective cognizance of Arab nations.
Political Islam moved to the heart of the ongoing strife and was a
manifestation of a century-long struggle where Islam was a platform of
political expression, governance and jurisprudence that has fought against
many imported and western-styled trends. Throughout the years, there
has not been one successful union between Islam and Arab ruling classes –
successful in the sense that it contributed to progress, rights, and
prosperity for all. Islamists were either coopted or conflict reigned. The
atrociousness of the results of these conflicts varied depending on how
clever Arab rulers were in their management. In Jordan, low-level discord
has always existed between Islamic opposition parties and the ruling class.
It teetered between partial inclusion of Islamic forces in a parliament that
operated with little authority and occasional spats or political crises of
little consequence. However, not all failed experiments came at a
relatively low cost. In Algeria, an attempt at harmonization went terribly
wrong. The 1991 Algerian civil war lasted for over a decade and resulted in
the death of up to 200,000 people. Things were not meant to be so bloody, as
it had begun with something rather promising: an election. The ruling
National Liberation Front (FLN) canceled elections after the first round,
fearing what seemed like an assured loss at the hands of the Islamic
Salvation Front (FIS). The promise turned into Algeria’s second worst
nightmare, the first being its even bloodier struggle for liberation from
colonial France. All ingredients were in place for a complete disaster.
There was a strong army running the country through a deeply enriched ruling
party, an emboldened political opposition that was about to achieve
political power using the ballot box, and a thoroughly frustrated public
eager to move beyond the tired slogans and economic disenfranchisement.
Additionally, a radicalized generation of youth existed as they had serious
doubts about the sincerity of the ruling class in the first place. The
canceling of the elections was the final straw, and bloodletting seemed as
though it were the only common denominator. Even now, Algeria is still
entrapped by the consequences of that very conflict as it sits at a
political standstill without much of a roadmap to anywhere. Despite
one’s insistence to evade generalizations, knowing how some media tend to
lump all Arabs and Muslims into one convenient discourse, the similarities
between the Algerian and Egyptian experiences are simply uncanny. On
January 25, 2011, Egyptians revolted with the hope that they could finally
break the chokehold of the ruling elites: The National Democratic Party,
with its adjoining business class and the army, which operates its own
massive economy within the larger, haggard, Egyptian economy. But by
extension, the revolution could have targeted the larger regional and
international conglomerate that aided and abetted the Hosni Mubarak regime
and his massively corrupt power apparatus. Indeed, without an elaborate
benefactors’ network, the United States being in the lead, Mubarak would
have never managed to sustain his reign for over three decades. Egyptians
however barely had the time or the resources to develop much of a foreign
policy agenda, as their revolution faced too many obstacles and decided
attempts at sabotage. On one hand the army was still in charge,
although it branded itself as if it were the guardian of the nation and its
revolution by using the same old corrupt media. On the other, there was
never a cohesive structure that would allow Egyptians to translate their
collective aspiration into anything tangible. The only available forum was
that of elections and referendums, and every single one was squarely and
democratically won by Islamic parties. Fair and transparent elections maybe,
but their results allowed the Mubarak regime to resurface. Using its never
dismantled infrastructure, notwithstanding a most corrupt media owned by
powerful businessmen, and with the army playing a dubious role, the old
regime managed to turn the revolution against itself. It cleverly sold the
June 30, 2013 protests as if they were a call to correct the wrong path
taken after the January 25, 2011 revolt. In a strange turn of events,
millions of those who protested against Mubarak were back protesting against
democratically-elected Mohammed Morsi, allying with the very political
forces that wrecked the country for many years, calling on the same army,
and siding with the ‘baltajiya’ – thugs who terrorized protesters merely two
and half years ago. Egypt is now taking its first steps towards
becoming another Algeria during the civil war. Do the coup leaders truly
understand the repercussions of what they have done? Tunisia, that
small nation that inspired the world in Dec. 2010, is not far behind in that
sad saga. A recent assassination, this time of nationalist politician
Mohamed Brahmi, followed an earlier assassination of another high profiled
politician, Chokri Belaid. Tunisia stands divided between those who want to
topple the government, and those who insist on its democratic right to
govern. Either way, there is no doubt that some suspect hands are trying to
push Tunisia into an abyss that is being marketed as Islamists vs.
secularists. Syria has been the most bloody example by far. Although
in the Syrian civil war, the stakes quickly became much higher, and along
with the pertaining discussion, the war rapidly took on a dangerous
sectarian conflict whose implications are felt near and far. In some
sad way, the Arab regimes are making gains. Some are doing so through war,
others through military coups, and some are actively plotting in hopes of
making their move soon. As costly as it has been, one thing is for
sure, the old Middle East paradigm, of powerful elites backed by formidable
allies, oppressing weak, dismissible peoples, is unlikely to be resurrected.
There will be more blood, but a return to the past is surely a thing of the
past. - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is: My Father was A Freedom Fighter:
Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press).
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