Home Page - Gulf in the Media
HomePoliticsEconomy                               Set Gulfinthemedia.com as home page
 Print  Send This Page
Save Listen to this Article
Post-revolutionary blues   

Arab News - 20 June, 2012
Author: Fawaz Turki

Ah, the challenges of modernity! Arabs have struggled, and then struggled some more, over the last six decades to catch up with the rest of the world and to find for themselves a dignified place in the global dialogue of cultures. And it’s been an uphill battle ever since.
From the early 1950s to the late 1960s, the hope was “Arab nationalism,” a movement that sought to unite the Arab world by one ideology within a single territorial homeland. Its putative leader, Jamal Abdul Nasser, did not, like Martin Luther, nail his reformist theses to the door of a cathedral, but he did build on a catchy slogan responsive to the Arab people’s sensibility and that had the trumpet blast of a call to arms: One united nation with one eternal message. That, sadly, was left by the wayside after the defeat Arabs suffered in the June War of 1967.
Then this was followed by the Islamist revival, a movement whose leaders, leaving hollow and worthless secular ideologies behind, sought a return to the one faith that had grown out of the very bosom of the Arab people’s culture and history, where no question remains unanswered and no answer is in doubt. Except these Islamists, who went on the rampage killing civilians all the way from New York to Madrid, and from Bali to London, either did not understand Islam, or for some perverse reason, were not above subverting it. Arabs again turned away in bleak despair.
Then came the Arab Spring, a moment of awakening whose goal was to bring the common man and woman in society their dues as free citizens, with their leaders subject to a social contract between ruler and ruled, checks and balances, accountability. Well over a year after its advent as a popular movement across much of the Arab world — a movement that Arabs felt collectively imbued with and exhilarated by — the Arab Sprng is now teetering and hope for its future has sharply diminished.
There’s chaos and political polarization in Tunisia that are threatening the country’s democratic transition. In Libya, rival militants, armed with heavy weapons, continue to fight each other in pitched battles months after the ouster of Muammar Qaddafi. In Yemen, government forces loyal to President Abed Rabbo Hadi, are simultaneously in confrontation with militants linked to Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula in the southern regions, and in the capital with portions of the military still loyal to the family of the ousted head of state Ali Abdullah Saleh. In Syria, where the regime has ratcheted up its brutal crackdown on the opposition by using Russian-supplied helicopter gunships to fire on rebel-held enclaves, the conflict is showing clear signs that it is mutating into a full-fledged civil war. In Iraq, sectarian mayhem continues to occur daily (in one day alone last week 66 Iraqi civilians were slain, and more than 200 wounded, in car bombings across the country) against a backdrop of political divisions that remain in place long after US troops withdrew in December.
And in Egypt, a pivotal state in the Arab world, advocates of a return to the status quo ante, who are loyal to the ousted octogenarian autocrat Hosni Mubarak, appear to have had their day, and the reformers their eclipse, after the military establishment last week dissolved Parliament and, in the wake of the victory that the Muslim Brotherhood candidate scored in the presidential elections, gave the armed forces sweeping powers and degraded the presidency to a subservient role — in effect, mounting a counterrevolution.
And so it goes. For who said that the Arab Spring would not falter, decline and die? History tells us otherwise.
The movement that we have come to call the Arab Spring is not unique. A movement almost identical to it, in ambition and in name, emerged as equally spontaneously in Europe 164 years ago, only to die on the vine.
The European revolutions of 1848, known to contemporary historians and to those who participated in them as the Spring of Nations or the Spring of the People, were a series of political upheavals throughout the continent that began in France, in February that year, and immediately spread to most of Europe. As happened at the outset of the Arab Spring, no coordination or cooperation existed among the revolutionaries in the Spring of Nations, but all appeared to share the same widespread dissatisfaction with the political leadership, the same demand for more equitable government, and the same craving for individual freedoms.
The uprisings in each country were led by shaky coalitions of reformers, the middle classes and workers. They did not, however, hold together. That’s when the reactionary forces, allied with the existing ruling elite, land owners and the aristocracy — forces too entrenched to topple — regrouped and mounted a counterrevolution. The uprisings finally collapsed. They failed uniformly everywhere, except in France. In some countries, the old guard introduced cosmetic changes and stole the liberals’ thunder, but in the post-revolutionary decade after 1948, little had visibly changed. (The uprisings never reached Britain, Spain, Sweden and Portugal, that for some reason remained immune to the revolutionary contagion.)
The Spring of Nations, a cautionary tale about what might await the Arab Spring and a morbid thought about its future, cost those communities that participate in it tens of thousands of lives. Sound familiar?

n This article is exclusive to Arab News
 
Syria takes centre stage at QRC meeting
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-06-19
Representatives of Norwegian and German Red Cross societies have recently visited Qatar Red Crescent (QRC) to discuss ways of cooperation and access to QRC's humanitarian efforts in Syria....
Hassan Rowhani's surprise victory
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-06-19
It is too early to say if this week's stunning victory by politically moderate cleric Hassan Rowhani in the Iranian presidential elections will have any drastic effect on the Islamic...
Saudi role in Syria driven by fear of Shi'ite 'full moon'
Source : Reuters  
Date : 2013-06-19
Saudi Arabia's former intelligence chief, Prince Muqrin, once told American diplomats the Middle East's so-called Shi'ite Crescent where the Muslim sect holds sway was "becoming a full moon" as Iranian...
G8 calls for urgent Syria peace talks despite Russia split
Source : Khaleej Times  
Date : 2013-06-19
G8 leaders called for a peace conference on Syria to be held as soon as possible but deep divisions remained as Russia stood by its embattled Middle East ally....
No headway to end Syrian conflict
Source : Gulf Today  
Date : 2013-06-19
US President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Puttin were staying in adjacent cottages as they attended the Group of Eight (G8) in Northern Ireland, but they could not be...
Lebanon minister accuses Syria of 'ethnic cleansing' of Sunnis
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-06-19
Syrian President Bashar Assad's forces have begun ethnically cleansing Sunnis and deliberately pushing refugees across the border into Lebanon, the Lebanese caretaker minister for social affairs said yesterday....
UN likely to expand Golan peacekeeping force
Source : Khaleej Times  
Date : 2013-06-19
The Security Council president says the UN is likely to expand its peacekeeping force in the disputed Golan Heights with more troops and heavy weapons....
Rockets fired from Syria hit Lebanon's Bekaa: security
Source : Khaleej Times  
Date : 2013-06-19
Four rockets fired from across the border inside Syria hit a majority Shiite area of eastern Lebanon on Wednesday, a Lebanese security official told AFP....
Battle intensifies around Damascus
Source : Gulf Today  
Date : 2013-06-19
Troops loyal to Syrian President Bashar Al Assad pushed forward a bid to crush rebel bastions near the capital Damascus on Tuesday, a monitoring group and activists said....
US cohabitation with Hezbollah terror
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-06-19
In mid-December 2012, President Obama in an interview with ABC's Barbara Walters tried to explain US policy toward the Syrian revolution, saying "Not everybody who's participating on the ground in...
Assad says Europe would 'pay price' for arming rebels
Source : Khaleej Times  
Date : 2013-06-18
Syrian President Bashar Al Assad warned on Monday that European powers would "pay the price" if they sent weapons to rebel forces seeking to topple him....
Saudi King: Interference by some countries destabilizes region
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-06-18
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah yesterday warned against the consequences of adventurism by some countries and their interference in others' internal affairs, saying it would increase tension...
No Saudi bank accounts to support Syrian fighters
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-06-18
A senior Saudi official has categorically denied the existence of bank accounts in the Kingdom to collect donations for Syrian fighters. Reports to that effect were recently being circulated on...
Seeking a Syria consensus despite US-Russia divide
Source : Khaleej Times  
Date : 2013-06-18
Hunting for a glimmer of common ground, the leaders of major economic powers are declaring themselves dedicated to a political solution to Syria's bloody civil war, even as President Barack...
Syria and WMD: Deepening Uncertainty
Source : Center for defense information  
Date : 2013-06-18
This brief looks at how certain governments have reacted to the charges that Syrian forces recently used chemical weapons against their opponents. The US, for example, has tempered its response...
Has the International Battle to Topple Bashar Started?!
Source : Al Hayat  
Date : 2013-06-18
The situations are changing, the positions are shifting, and most of the signs are confirming the occurrence of alterations at the level of the international positions towards the Syrian crisis...
Change in Syria Following Rohani's Victory and Obama's Action?
Source : Al Hayat  
Date : 2013-06-18
The Syrian crisis has taken a drastic turn due to a series of developments. The first was the fall of the city of Qussayr, which revealed the extent of Iran’s...
Total 426 Results in 26 Pages
1 
For more news, views and reports about this topic, please subscribe
to GRC website: www.grc.ae
Wed Jun 19, 2013| 10-شعبان-1434هـ
G8 calls for urgent Syria peace talks despite Russia split
Saudi Arabia tops Arab world with $ 12.2 bn FDI inflow
Iran ready to stop 20% enrichment
Abu Dhabi livestock and dairy show growth signs, says Scad
Suicide attacks kill 31 in Iraq
QCB move draws flak from investors
Ummah Party demands new Kuwaiti constitution
Oman central bank or fiscal reforms
US officials to hold talks with Taliban in Doha
NBK, VIVA sign USD 270 mln financing agreement
Interior Ministry seeks Interpol help against attacks by hackers
Saudi Arabia spends 5.6% of GDP on education
Urgent plan to control sewage overflows urged
AMF to provide $ 144m loan to Yemen on reform
Saudi role in Syria driven by fear of Shi'ite 'full moon'
EU says informal contacts on trade accord with GCC continues
    Newspaper Editorials
Afghan progress
A disturbing opinion poll
More>>  
    Opinions
US cohabitation with Hezbollah terror
What happened to the Arab superpowers?
More>>  
    GCC Press Agencies
Day's main stories from the GCC Press Agencies
    Reports
Syria and WMD: Deepening Uncertainty
Iraq Ten Years On
More>>  
    Bank Reports
GCC Cement Sector Quarterly – 1Q13
GCC Real Estate Quarterly – 1Q13
More>>  
    GRC Analysis
Building a Strong Saudi-Japan Relationship
Poor Gulf: Inequality and the Lack of Statistics
Whither GCC-US Relations?
    GRC Commentary
On Relations between Rulers and Citizens: The Need for a New Social/Political Contract in the GCC States
Key Issue Facing the Saudi Ruling House.
    GRC Book Review
Beyond Regionalism? Regional Cooperation, Regionalism and Regionalization in the Middle East
India, GCC and the Global Energy Regime: Exploring Interdependence and Outlook for Collaboration.
    GRC Press Release
Gulf Research Center press releases to the media
    GRC Publications
The Uneasy Balance: Potential and Challenges of the West's Relations with the Gulf States
Asia-Gulf Economic Relations in the 21st Century: The Local to Global Transformation
Assessment of the Security Situation in Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Syria and the Arab Gulf States
    GRC Newsletters/Bulletins

Enter your email to get the Newsletter
Go
      
Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | About Us |
Weather | Qibla Directions | Hijri Date Conversion Tool
Full Page :total time:4  |   30-- 34 Middle Page :0  --   | Right : 34 - 34--en--sess-enreq-en-coming