by Mordechai Kedar
What happened this year?
This  year six Arab countries experienced severe shocks that brought about  the fall of some rulers or serious threat to their rule. The process  began at the end of 2010, and continues until today.
The First: Tunisia
In the beginning of 2011 a wave of  optimism washed over the Arab world, and a feeling of the dawning of a  new day began to beat in the hearts of the people, among the simple  folk, the intellectuals and the media as well. Tunisia, a country that  is not usually at the center of the news, was in turmoil as a result of  the tragic events that happened on December seventeenth 2010, when  Mohamed Bouazizi, an  unemployed college graduate who supported himself by selling vegetables  in the market of Sidi Bou Sa'id immolated himself because of an argument with a policewoman who subsequently slapped him in the face.  When he went to complain about her to her superiors she called over to  him scornfully: "Get lost". This event sparked a local demonstration,  which the police broke up with characteristic violence. But then a wave  of rage brought masses of Tunisians out into the streets with the cry "Get lost"  against the corrupt president, Zin Abedine Ben Ali, who ruled Tunisia  with an iron hand for 23 years and always "won" a majority of more than  ninety percent (in elections). Ben Ali fought for his seat for almost a  month at the cost of hundreds of dead, but on January 14 he was forced  to flee to Saudi Arabia. And the whole Arab world cheered the Tunisians  because for the first time in modern Arab history the Arab people proved  themselves capable of removing a dictator by themselves. In the weeks  after Boazizi's suicide 37 more people immolated themselves throughout  the Arab and Islamic world as a protest against the political, social  and economic situation in their countries. The elections that took place  in Tunisia in October brought the Islamist movement "Al-Nahda" to power  with more than forty percent of the seats of parliament, and new  Tunisia - with at least twenty percent unemployed - is now trying to find its way  between Islam and modernity.
In February, everyone cheered the heroism, strength, spirit and  determination of the Tunisians and asked "who will be next in line?".  Because it was clear to everyone that the president of Tunisia, his wife  and cronies were not the only corrupt rulers who rule their citizens  with cruelty and without a shred of legitimacy.
The Second: Egypt
The Egyptians were next in line: on  the 25th of January thousands of secular, restless Egyptian youth arose  (men and women together), and with a series of demonstrations under the  heading "Get lost" they succeeded to cause the Minister of Defense, Mohammed Hussein Tantawi, to join in and say to Mubarak: "Get lost", and he did "get lost" on February 11th.
The army suspended the constitution and gave the government six  months, until August, to stabilize the country and to hand the power  over to a council of selected citizens, but that "half year" was cut  short. The army appointed a government of experts through whose hands  the power was supposed to pass in an orderly way, to a democracy by  means of elections for a parliament and president. These elections  should be finished by June 2012, but until then the military rules with  an iron fist, partly in order to ensure that the new constitution will  leave its status intact, above civilian rule and not subordinate to it.  But the results of the (relatively) free and fair elections bore out  what many cautioned against: the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood. By  manipulating the elections, Mubarak made sure that the "Brotherhood"  would not be able to reach the seat of power, even with a ten foot pole.  The real surprise of the elections is the Salafis, those ardent fanatics, whose aim is to bring Egyptian Muslim society back to the  seventh century, to the life-style characteristic of when Islam first  emerged. Although this is the first time that their name appeared in the  public arena, they won about one third of the seats in parliament.  Undoubtedly, Egypt will find itself very far from the hopes of the youth  of Al-Tahrir in January.
In 2011, tourism ceased and foreign investment in Egypt has totally  stopped. Unemployment is rising and tens of millions of Egyptians are  destitute. This situation is widespread and the pressure is evident in  the demonstrations and in the violence that the military uses to  disperse them.
The economic crisis in Egypt will force many Africans who are now in Egypt to cross Sinai, towards Israel.
The Third: Syria
On  January 26th, one day after demonstrations broke out in Egypt,  demonstrations began in Syria. During the first phase it was the  mosque-goers who, after Friday prayers, joined the spontaneous  demonstrations, which were broken up by the regime in a typically  violent way. The funerals of those who were killed were held the next  day, Saturday, and they too turned into protest demonstrations that were  broken up forcefully. Things calmed down during the week, but flared up  again on subsequent Fridays. During the first phase, the demonstrations  were centered around the southern border city of Dar'a, a city whose  Bedouin residents have connections to their brothers in Jordan, from  whom they get the light arms that they need in order to defend  themselves from Asad's armored tanks. Hundreds residents of Dar'a and  its environs were killed, but the demonstrations only intensified and  spread to the northern border towns of Adlab, Jisr Al-Shu'ara and the  cave of Al-Na'aman, near Aleppo. Afterwards, the demonstrations came to  the secondary cities - Homs, Latakia and Deira - Suhr  -- and spread to  the provincial towns that surround the capital, Damascus.
Thousands of Syrian refugees fled to Lebanon and Turkey, which  watches the ongoing events in the back yard of its southern neighbor  with great concern for several reasons: a.The Turkish Islamic regime  cannot watch with equanimity as Alawites - who, according to Islam are  infidels - slaughter Muslims. b. The Syrian turmoil might cause the  country to disintegrate into separate parts, and Turkey will find itself  trying to cope with another Kurdish country, this time built upon the  ruins of Syria, in addition to the Kurdish problem that exists in Iraq.  c. In recent months several events have occurred in Turkey where Muslims  have murdered Alawites in revenge for what they are doing in Alawite  Syria to the Muslims.
Erdogan doesn't want an internal religious Muslim-Alawite conflict on top of the internal Turkish-Kurdish ethnic conflict.
In  order to "convince" Asad to stop slaughtering his Muslim citizens,  Turkey concentrated its military forces on the southern border with  Syria, but then Iran reacted and started sending messages to Turkey,  that if Turkey dares to interfere in Syria, Iran will attack it.  Apparently this threat worked, because up until now, the Turks have not  done to Asad what they want so much to do to him.
Meanwhile, the Arab League has also awakened and in the month of  September it began to threaten Asad with bringing the matter before the  UN, with a clear reference to the Libyan scenario, which involved  outside intervention. Three months of bloodshed passed until the  solution was found that allows the Arab League to send overseers into  Syria, and it's still not clear if they will truly be able to bring  about peace between Asad and his opposition.
By the end of December the number of known fatalities has reached  almost 6000, and to this number about sixty thousand prisoners must be  added, and the fate of these prisoners is unknown.
The world must  keep a very watchful eye on the Syrian military storehouses, so that  weapons - especially chemical and biological weapons - will not find  their way to terror organizations like Hizbullah, Hamas and Islamic  Jihad.
The Fourth: Yemen
On the 27th of January, two days  after the demonstrations broke out in Egypt, and one day after they  broke out in Syria, large demonstrations began against President Ali  Abdullah Saleh, who ruled Yemen for 33 years. He and other members of  his tribe make all of the decisions in Yemen. The military has split up  between units that supported the president and those who opposed him,  however there were never open hostilities between the two sides. Yemen  experienced a year in which there was a long series of demonstrations,  which the regime tried to break up very violently, and hundreds of  people lost their lives in these demonstrations. In the beginning of  June the palace of Saleh was attacked by missiles, Saleh was wounded and  suffered moderate burns and went for about four months of medical  treatment in Saudi Arabia. During these months the situation in the  country calmed down somewhat, but the flames returrned to the city  streets when Saleh returned to Yemen in late September.
The main objection to Saleh centered around the South of the  country, in the cities of Taez, Ave and Aden, where many of the southern  tribes want to re-establish the independent country that they used to  have, South Yemen, until twenty years ago. A group of Gulf states  intervened and suggested a compromise to Saleh to resign from his post  without being held legally responsible for killing his citizens.
On the 21st of October the Security Council of the UN demanded that  Saleh resign. On the 23rd of November he transferred authority to his  deputy, however the situation did not ease. The South continued to  demand independence, and the Sa'da area in the North, which is ruled by a  group of Iranian-leaning Shi'ites also demands to secede from the  country.
Many of Saleh's tribe continue to command military units and parts  of the government, therefore it's very likely that the civil disquiet  will continue.
The Fifth: Bahrain
Three days after  Mubarak resigned, demonstrations began in the island of Bahrain, which  is near the coast of Saudi Arabia. This island is populated mainly by a  majority of Persian-speaking Shi'ites who are ruled by a minority of  Sunni Arabs, the Al-Khalifa tribe, who emigrated from the continent to  the island of Bahrain about two hundred years ago, and rule over it by  the grace of the British, Americans and the Saudis until today.  A  series of demonstrations with tents in the central square of the capital  Manama, "The Pearl Square", was dispersed violently, but the biggest  change occurred when the Saudi military invaded Bahrain in the middle of  March, conquered the country by the request of the King and did with it  whatever was suitable in his eyes. The revolution in Bahrain failed,  however the tension between the controlled Shi'ite majority and the  Sunni minority that rules over them continues and from time to time  breaks out as a street demonstration.
It's important to note that regarding Bahrain, the partially hidden  player is Iran, which claims that the island of Bahrain belongs to it  historically. Iran also claims that because the population is Shi'ite it  is also responsible for their welfare and security. Claims such as  these make the Saudis, the bitter rivals of the Iranians, shudder  because the island of Bahrain is only 28 kilometers (about 17 miles)  from the coast of Saudi Arabia, and if it falls into Iranian hands then  Iran will be able to control of the Saudi coast and the many sources of  oil in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.
Another important matter regarding Bahrain is the fact that the main  port of the United States military is located on this Gulf, island and  this is why it is strategically important in the balance of power for  the Western forces stationed in the Gulf opposite Iran. This is what  explains the international agreement and the Iranian rage about the  conquering of Bahrain by Saudi Arabia.
The Sixth: Libya
Four days after Mubarak's  resignation, on the 15th of February, demonstrations began against  Qadhaffi, and he, as is his way, responded with great cruelty, killing  thousands of citizens. The military disintegrated quickly into its  tribal components, and whole units, with their heavy equipment and arms,  turned their cannons and tanks on Qadhaffi. The world hesitated,  stumbled, issued condemnations and finally interfered by means of aerial  attacks on the Libyan forces, meaning the tribes, who continued to be  loyal to Qadhaffi. The area of Cyrenaica and its capital Benghazi were  the center of the revolution against Qadhaffi. There was an ethnic  component here too, because Barbary tribes joined in the fight against  the Libyan military. Qadhaffi was aided by African mercenaries from Sa'ad  and Manizer as well as Syrian soldiers that Bishar Asad sent to help  and fight alongside Qadhaffi's forces. But all of this could not stand  against the European war machine that took advantage of the vague  decision of the Security Council to defend the Libyan people in order to  try to harm Qadhaffi personally. He survived until the 20th of October,  when he was captured and executed by the rebels, but not before they  abused him in the most humiliating way.
After this, his sons were captured as well, and control passed into  the hands of the coalition of tribes that manage the country by force.  Since Qadhaffi was overthrown many disputes have arisen between the  tribes about the division of power among them. Weapons from the military  storehouses, especially anti-aircraft missiles, have been scattered  throughout the Middle East, and some of them have turned up in Gaza.
It's important to note that since the beginning of the year there  have been large demonstrations in more of the countries in the area -  Algeria, Morocco, Jordan, Iraq, and Iran, which is not Arab - but they  were taken care of by normative police action. These countries still  operate as they operated before 2011. In Morocco the king introduced  changes in the constitution so that now there are wide margins of  legitimate political action in the kingdom.
Seeds of Destruction
These developments began in the  Middle East in the previous decade: in April 2003 an international  coalition headed by the United States overthrew the ruler of Iraq,  Saddam Hussein. Since the fall of his regime this important question has  arisen in Arabic public discourse: "Why do we members of the Arab  nation, need foreign forces in order to overthrow the dictators? Why  don't we do what any society does when it's under oppression? Why do the Ukrainian, Czechoslovakian and Romanian masses go out into the streets  in order to win their independence by their own hands while we behave  like obedient sheep"? Since 2003 these questions have been exhaustively  discussed in the Arab media and intensified the desire of many Arabs to  free themselves from their rulers.
A second development occurred in January 2006 when the Hamas  movement won the majority of seats in the Palestinian Legislative  Council in the first elections that they ever participated in. The next  phase was in June of 2007, when the Hamas movement took control of Gaza  by armed force, overthrew the security organization of the PA, killed  and wounded many PA people and chased out its remaining members to Judea and Samaria. This was a living example of a civil Islamic  movement, produced by the Muslim Brotherhood, which took over a parcel  of land and set up a stable government. With this, Hamas set an example  to be emulated, that encourages many in the Arab world to follow in  their footsteps.
Islam Attains a Central Position
In a number of  countries this year, Islamic movements attained a political status that  it has never had in the past: in Tunisia the Islamic party won  41  percent of the seats in parliament, in Morocco the Islamic party won a  position of seniority in parliament, and in Egypt a historical triumph  is emerging of the religious parties that will control more than 70  percent of the Egyptian parliament. In Libya the head of the National  Council announced that Libya will be an Islamic country and Shari'a will  be the basis of its legal system. And indeed, the new regime in Libya  cancelled Qadhaffi's prohibition on polygamy.
In addition to these countries, the Gaza Strip must be added as a  country that conducts itself as an Islamic country since June 2007 with  massive Iranian support.
Islam has come to power by democratic  means, despite the fact that democracy is not a form of government that  is consistent with Islam, because the Islamic tradition doesn't easily  accept some of the important components of democracy like equality  between the sexes, rights of religious minorities, freedom of  expression, the rule of law, separation of powers, freedom of religion,  freedom from religion and regime change by means of the ballot box.
We have not yet experienced the situation in which an Islamic party  loses the majority in parliament, and therefore it's difficult to know  how a party such as this will behave if it does lose an election; will  it yield power or hold onto it indefinitely?
Regarding political Islam, it's important to remember what happened  in Iran, which began the Islamic Revolution in the beginning of 1979.  This allowed Hizbullah to take control of Lebanon in gradual steps.
There are researchers who claim that the Muslim Brotherhood represents  pragmatic, moderate Islam, open to and accepting modernity with its many  societal and political components and therefore there is no reason to  be concerned about the Islamic wave that's sweeping the Arab world. And  opposing them, there is a group of researchers who claim that the Muslim  Brotherhood can perhaps be pragmatic, but they do not take action  against groups much more radical than they are, and allow them to act  against the "enemies of Islam" almost freely. They say that Islamic  terror organizations grew out of different places within the ideological  platform of movements like the Muslim Brotherhood.
The true test of the political Islamic movements that come to power  is not one of slogans, but rather of implementation: do they relate to  the population and its distress in a fair way?
Will they stand  by their international commitments made by previous governments?  Regarding Egypt - will the next regime honor the peace agreement with  Israel?
An additional problem that stems from the Islamic political victory  relates to the future of the modernistic, liberal, secular movements  within the Arab world: will the Islamic victory cause them feelings of  demoralization, loss and discouragement, or perhaps it represents a  challenge that, in order to overcome it, they will redouble their  activities, become better organized and improve their tactics so that  they might win the public trust when the time comes.
The answers to these questions and others related to political Islam will become clear in the next few years.
Tribal Awakening
In  a number of countries where the society still has a traditional  character, the tribal component, which is deeply rooted in Middle  Eastern society, plays a key role.The political problems of Iraq, Libya,  Yemen, Sudan and the Palestinian Authority are a political expression  of tribal, ethnic, religious and sectarian factionalism, which  characterizes many societies in the Middle East. It's clear that the  standard conglomerate Arab country, which tried to base its legitimacy  upon a shared national consciousness among all of the citizens in the  country, failed in the experiment to settle in the hearts of the population and to uproot the traditional loyalties to the tribe, the  ethnic group (for example: Kurds, Turkmen, Armenians), the religious  framework (Muslim, Christian, Zoroastrian, etc.), or the sectarian  (Sunni, Shi'ite).
Upon this background there is a growing tendency to the break up the  conglomerate as it was demarcated by the colonialists, and divide it up  according to a homogeneous basis:
Sudan has already split into  two countries in July 2011, and it's reasonable to assume that its  partitions (Darfur, Kordofan) will continue to demand independence and  that Northern, Arabic-Islamic Sudan will thus split into tribal units.
Iraq has already actually split into two countries: Kurdistan and  Iraq. The autonomous Kurdish section enjoys its own government, its own  parliament and many symbols of independent governance: a strong  military, effective police, legislature, legal system, administration  and economy. In recent months, and on the background of the  dysfunctional Baghdad government, some of the areas (=tribes) in Arabic  Iraq have declared themselves to be a "climate", i.e. an entity that  conducts its life according to broad autonomy, as a sort of "state"  (like New Jersey and Utah).
In Libya the tribes succeeded in overthrowing Qadhaffi, and now they  are fighting each other over the distribution of power between them.
In  Yemen, many demonstrations in the cities of the South - Aden, Taez, Ave  - are held in order to promote the public demand to split Yemen and  renew the independence that South Yemen had until twenty years ago.
The Palestinian Authority is divided culturally and politically into  Gaza and something that may, perhaps, arise in the future in Judea and Samaria .
Also in Syria, against the background of widespread  rebellion against the Asad regime, there are signs that the country will  disintegrate into a number of homogeneous units.
Modern Communications
We mustn't ignore the role that  satellite communications played in the changes that occurred during the  last year. The Al-Jazeera television channel led the fire of revolution  from place to place, following 15 years of wild and blunt incitement  against the Arab rulers, especially against the United States and Israel  and against the West in General.
The oppressed masses couldn't organize demonstrations by means of  newspapers, radio or television in their countries, therefore the social  networking sites played a central role, by allowing the "Revolutionary  Youth" to organize huge activities against the regime, no matter where  they were.
Video uploading sites like YouTube helped the rebels to publicize  the oppressive actions against the demonstrators to the world. This is  most prominent in Syria and Egypt, where a battle against the military  is carried out almost as a live broadcast. They also broadcast the  oppressive actions of the regime. The modern Arab ruler can no longer  hide his actions from the world. He is exposed and therefore he is  vulnerable, because world opinion is aroused by the bloodshed in the  streets and causes politicians to act.
The Arab League
In the first decade of the current  century, and especially on the background of the Arab failure to act  against Israel during the second intifada, there were many who wrote the  obituary for the Arab League, so much so that one of the prominent  newspapers in Egypt called it "the dead body in the morgue that no one  has the courage to declare as dead".
The League failed in its attempts to get Iraq out of Kuwait in 1990,  failed to convince Syria to stop supporting Iran against Iraq during  the years of the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), failed to halt the genocide  in Darfur, which was carried out by the central Sudanese regime, and  failed to represent the Arab collective on the international arena.
The weakness of the League caused other, multinational bodies to  arise in the Arab world: the Gulf Cooperation Council and the  Organization of North African States, as well as others.
During  the past year, the League received "artificial respiration" from Europe,  because of the seriousness with which NATO took the Arab League's  appeal to the Security Council of the UN to defend the citizens of Libya  from the oppressive steps of the regime. NATO translated this request  into an all-out war against Qadhaffi that caused his ultimate downfall.
These days there are attempts to replay this scenario regarding  Syria: the request of the Arab League to the Security Council will give  international cover to foreign interference in Syria. The Arab League  cannot do anything practical against an Arab ruler who is slaughtering  his own citizens. And it is precisely this weakness which allows it to  turn to strong international bodies for help in fighting the  bloodthirsty Arab dictators.
Qatar - The Rising Power
We cannot ignore the central  role that the Principality of Qatar filled during the last decade,  especially during the last year. Qatar, and the Al-Jazeera channel,  which Qatar operates, succeeded to undermine the regime of Ben Ali in  Tunisia, Mubarak in Egypt, Qadhaffi in Libya, Saleh in Yemen, Asad in  Syria and many more rulers of Arab countries. Al Jazeera waged a "media  war" against them without anyone lifting a finger against Qatar. As a  result, the Emir of Qatar has become the strongest man in the Arab  world.
During the past year, Qatar was also involved in the military attack  against Qadhaffi, when Qatari Air Force jets bombed Libyan military  targets, and supplied weapons and ammunition to the rebels. Qatar  participates - together with Turkey - in training deserters from the  Syrian military so that on their return to Syria they will be able to  fight against the Syrian army and Asad's regime.
Qatar hosts, on its territory, the main air force base of the United  States in the Gulf, and it's clear to all that if there is American  action against Iran, it may originate from this base, which is located  at a distance of five minutes flight from the Iranian coast.
The Emir of Qatar and its minister of Foreign Affairs are pressuring  Asad with clear threats to turn to the Security Council of the UN if he  continues to kill his citizens. The verbal attacks on Qatar in the  Syrian media clearly express the official Syrian rage towards the Qatari  Principality, which behaves as if it were a superpower.
Iran
During the past year Iran has watched the events  in the Arab world with much concern.The regime in Syria is rocky, and if  Asad falls, Iran will lose its base in that country. Hamas has turned  into a governmental organization and has suspended the Jihad against  Israel, and even Hizbullah has run into ever-increasing internal  Lebanese conflicts as Asad's situation continues to deteriorate.
Iran is now trying to pull Iraq into the Iranian hegemony, and the  American withdrawal from Iraq in December has accelerated this process.   Therefore, there is now a possibility that Iraq will return to the  Eastern front. Israel must take this into account in all plans related  to  the future of the Jordan Valley.
Iran is committed to its nuclear project and translates that into  military strength, to discourage all who plan to do evil against the  regime of the Ayatollahs, and to regain its regional hegemony. Iran also  aspires to bring the Gulf under its influence and neutralize Turkish  and Israeli power.
Turkey
Turkey, which built its foreign policy in the  previous decade on the principle "Zero Conflicts" is involved today in a  number of complex problems. It is involved in Syria, threatened by  Iran, in contention with Israel because of the flotilla and the gas that  was recently found under the Mediterranean Sea, angry with France  regarding recognition of the Armenian genocide and was at odds with the  United States and Europe, because of its support of Qadhaffi.
The Turkish quickly-developing economy is still the engine from  which it derives its political power, mainly because of the economic  problems that the European Union and the United States are facing.  However, an economic slowdown in Europe might pull Turkey down too, and  cause many of its unemployed nationals to return from Germany, which is  very worrying to the heads of the government.
In Summary
The year 2011 was a stormy year throughout  the Middle East. Its character changes quickly, and sinks into the swamp  of internal conflicts within each country. The economy stumbles from  one failure to another, and many hopes shatter on the hard ground of  reality and its problems. The "Arab Spring" is looking more and more  like an "Islamic and Tribal Winter", and the forecasts of observers and  Western journalists who spoke of "democracy in the Arab world" seem far  from the bitter reality.
Israel appears in this whole scenario as an Island of sanity,  stability and prosperity, and we must guard ourselves from the storm  waves that rock the world around us.
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Dr. Mordechai Kedar (Mordechai.Kedar@biu.ac.il) is an Israeli scholar of Arabic and Islam, a lecturer at Bar-Ilan University and the director of the Center for the Study of the Middle East and Islam (under formation), Bar Ilan University, Israel. He specializes in Islamic ideology and movements, the political discourse of Arab countries, the Arabic mass media, and the
Syrian domestic arena.
Translated from Hebrew by Sally.
Links to Dr. Kedar's previous articles on this blog:
  
- And This is the Gate of Heaven
- In the Shadow of the Rising Islamic Crescent
- Who Stole My Revolution
- The Noose Tightens
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
2 comments:
Good article. Seems a typo in first paragraph of Tunisia: "tens of unemployed" "tens of thousands"?
Thanks - I fixed it.
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