What nonsense.Qadaffy is a diversion from the "Arab Dream" reflected in the
Koran of the Muslims.

 

That dream of jihad and conquest is being realized, not ended, in the
potential fall of Qadaffy and the other secular regimes.

 

B

 

 

BY JAMES TRAUB | FEBRUARY 25, 2011

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/02/25/the_end_of_the_arab_dream?p
rint=yes
<http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/02/25/the_end_of_the_arab_dream?
print=yes&hidecomments=yes&page=full> &hidecomments=yes&page=full

 

If Muammar al-Qaddafi falls, as seems increasingly likely, he will land with
the rending crash of an immense, rigid object, like the statue of Saddam
Hussein pulled down in Baghdad's Firdos Square. This is not because, despite
his own delusions, Qaddafi mattered to the world remotely as much as Saddam
did. Rather, it's because the Jamahiriya, or stateless society, he fostered
in Libya constitutes the last of the revolutionary fantasies with which Arab
leaders have mesmerized their citizens and justified their ruthless acts of
repression since the establishment of the modern Arab world in the years
after World War II. 

Qaddafi and the other junior officers who overthrew Libya's King Idris in a
bloodless coup in 1969 were inspired by the revolt of the Free Officers in
Egypt, who had similarly deposed an unpopular, pro-Western monarch in 1952.
The Free Officers under Gamal Abdel Nasser declared a new socialist regime,
confiscating the properties and eliminating the privileges of the old elite.
Especially after the Bandung Conference of nonaligned nations in 1955,
Nasser's pan-Arab vision, which would dissolve colonial borders in order to
establish an Arab superstate, became the default ideology of a generation of
young thinkers and activists in the Middle East. 

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The leaders of the Libyan coup also called themselves the Free Officers.
Nasser's own reputation had been destroyed by the disastrous outcome of the
1967 war with Israel, but Qaddafi and his co-conspirators saw themselves as
the new generation of Arab revolutionaries. "Tell President Nasser we made
this revolution for him," Qaddafi said in the aftermath of the coup. "He can
take everything of ours and add it to the rest of the Arab world's resources
to be used for the battle [against Israel, and for Arab unity]." Over the
next few years, Qaddafi would forge pacts with his neighbors, including
Chad, Egypt, and Sudan -- all of them far more populous than Libya -- in a
vain and mostly ludicrous pursuit of Nasser's dream of a pan-Arab state. 

The Libyan leader's ambitions turned out to be yet more grandiose than
Nasser's. Qaddafi's Green Book, first published in 1975, offered a design
for a state ruled directly by its own citizens with none of the usual
mediating institutions -- parties, parliaments, even central government. The
revolution would abolish as well the institutions of private ownership.
"Whoever possesses the house in which you dwell, the vehicle in which you
ride or the income on which you live," Qaddafi wrote, "possesses your
freedom, or part of it." This freedom, however, belonged not to the
individual but to the collective, for "the individual is linked to the
larger family of humankind like a leaf is to a branch or a branch to a tree.
They have no value or life if they are separated." The Green Book was an
exercise, if a daft one, in utopian totalitarianism. 

Qaddafi did in fact succeed in destroying Libya's political and economic
institutions -- though only, of course, to remove obstacles to his own brand
of despotism. Arab elites came to view him as a loose cannon and a dangerous
crank. And yet his revolutionary language and his open support for violence
against Israel and the West made him for a time a popular hero in the Arab
world. In
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0521615542?ie=UTF8&tag=fopo-20&linkCode=as
2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0521615542> A History of Modern
Libya, Dirk Vandewalle writes that "to many in Libya and within the region,
there was something riveting and audacious about his analyses and his
proposed solutions." Qaddafi "spoke the unpalatable truths that others" --
those elites -- "did not dare to articulate." Libya's hero offered deeply
satisfying answers to the growing Arab sense of failure. 

The revolutionary ideology was the opiate of the Arab world, distracting
citizens from the manifest failure of their rulers. In
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0375704744?ie=UTF8&tag=fopo-20&linkCode=as
2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0375704744> The Dream Palace of the
Arabs, Fouad Ajami describes how an older cosmopolitanism, in tension with
the West but assimilating its influences, began to give way in the 1950s to
both sectarianism and totalitarian designs. Pan-Arabism broke on the shoals
of the 1967 fiasco -- even if Qaddafi didn't get the message -- but
Palestinian radicalism offered itself as an alternative unifying ideology.
The militants argued, as Ajami writes, "that 'guerrilla warfare' or 'wars of
national liberation' or 'revolution' would deliver Arab society from its
superstitions and weaknesses." That, too, of course, turned out to be a
hollow fantasy, though hatred toward Israel remains an instrument of
solidarity and mobilization in the Arab world. 

The terrain of the Middle East is littered with these Ozymandian shards:
pan-Arabism, Palestinian militancy, the "secular socialism" of the Baath
Party in Iraq, the Islamic revival of Sudan (now facing the threat of
disintegration), and finally the Jamahiriya. The ferocity and swift spread
of the uprisings across the Middle East and North Africa have demonstrated
the bankruptcy of these ideologies and highlighted the disgust of citizens
who know all too well they've been sold a bill of goods. The rage in Libya,
a relatively affluent and well-educated state by Arab standards, has been
especially shocking; Qaddafi's citizens obviously view him not as a crank
but a monster. 

The statues are crashing to earth. This is the Arab world's exit into
history -- an exit from a sterile, walled-off place into a land of painful
and consequential choices. The protesters assure journalists, and one
another, that they are prepared for the burdens of citizenship, even if
their experience of citizenship is only a few days old. They ought to be
fully inoculated by now against glittering schemes that direct their
attention away from their own well-being toward some remote good or distant
enemy. 

But are they? The vacuum created by the collapse, not only of regimes but of
belief systems, no matter how decrepit, could all too easily be filled by
other all-encompassing systems -- thus the fear that Islamic radicals will
hijack the revolution in Egypt, or that Bahraini Shiites will topple that
country's Sunni regime and then profess their fealty to Tehran. History
provides plenty of analogies: It took barely a decade for Russians to throw
off the yoke of Communism, tire of their messy experiment with freedom, and
embrace Vladimir Putin's soft authoritarianism. 

Libya is the country most likely to replace one totem with another. By
eliminating all rival institutions, Qaddafi has ensured that there is
nothing, and no one, to take his place. And should the country descend into
chaos, the homegrown jihadists known as the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group,
supposedly "rehabilitated" by a foundation run by the dictator's son, Saif
al-Islam al-Qaddafi, might well make a bid for power, or at least seek to
reorganize themselves. A post-Qaddafi Libya is likely to need outside help.
Perhaps the Arab League should view the country as its first exercise in
state-building. 

As for the others -- which at this point means Tunisia and Egypt -- it's
possible, and maybe even likely, that on balance their new regimes will be
less hospitable to the United States and Israel than were their
predecessors. But those regimes will almost certainly be better for their
citizens themselves -- more accountable to the public, more focused on human
development, less ideological and bombastic. And if they're not, the voters
can throw them out and try someone else. 

In his inaugural address, U.S. President John F. Kennedy said of the new
countries of the developing world, "We shall not always expect to find them
supporting our view. But we shall always hope to find them strongly
supporting their own freedom." This was not just inaugural hot air. Whatever
its foreign policy, a government whose legitimacy depends on delivering the
goods to its citizens rather than on demonizing outsiders -- including the
West -- will ultimately be a better partner for the United States. 

 



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