http://www.arabnews.com/columns/arab-spring-what-has-changed-and-what-has-not
The Arab Spring: What has changed and what has not
BY: Talmiz Ahmad

Tuesday 15 May 2012

The dramatic developments across the Middle East over the last year, which have 
witnessed the toppling of four longstanding Arab regimes, ongoing civil strife 
in Syria, and heightened regional and international concerns pertaining to 
Iran, affirm that some very significant changes are taking place across the 
Middle East. However, a closer scrutiny would suggest that in the present 
scenarios there is more continuity than significant breaks with the past.
Expressions of popular dissatisfaction with the existing political order across 
the Middle East have been an ongoing phenomenon over the last 100 years, when 
people in several parts of the Arab world have robustly articulated a rejection 
of the political and economic malaise pervasive in their polities. However, 
till recently, most of these agitations took place within a specific Middle 
Eastern context, through military-led coups, local ideological upsurges such as 
Arab socialism and Baathism, and over the last 20 years, through the violence 
of radical Islamism.
What is new now is not the anger and despair of the people but the fact that 
their articulations have gone well beyond the specific regional context and, 
with demands for the universal rights of democracy, freedom and personal 
dignity, are in fact truly global in character.’


In light of these universal aspirations, it would at first glance appear 
surprising that the recent electoral victories in Tunisia and Egypt have gone 
to Islamist groups. However, given that Islam forms the basis of the Middle 
East cultural ethos, the triumph of Islamist groups should not be surprising. 
Still, it should be noted that what is now sought across the Middle East is not 
the establishment of Islamic states but societies upholding traditional values 
while functioning within a democratic political framework. The Islamist groups 
in power will still have to consolidate their popular base not so much on the 
basis of appeal to Islam but through successfully meeting challenges such as 
good governance, economic development and the rights of women and minority 
groups. In due course, as political consciousness evolves, the traditionalist 
democrats are likely to be challenged by more liberal, secular-minded political 
organizations.


As in expressions of dissent in the past, the Arab spring is a rejection of 
Western domination across the Middle East which was enshrined in the Versailles 
arrangements after the World War I, and consolidated over decades through 
mutually beneficial collaborations between the West and local potentates, both 
traditional and revolutionary. Though Western countries were taken by surprise 
by events in Tunisia and Egypt, they now appear to have reorganized themselves 
and remain committed to ensuring their continued hegemony across the Middle 
East through support to local pro-West elements and direct military 
interventions, when necessary.
Similarly, in spite of popular ferment within its national borders and in its 
neighborhood, Israel seems incapable of coming up with fresh ideas to respond 
to the challenge of the Arab Spring. It continues to expand settlements, retard 
all attempts to revive the peace process, and harp on the Iranian threat, even 
as it continues to manipulate the American political system in support of its 
maximalist agenda. It shows little interest in responding to the political and 
economic aspirations at its people, whose own “Spring” was extinguished by 
their leaders by whipping up national frenzy on the enduring “threats” to their 
country.


The situation relating to Iran, too, remains remarkably similar to that 
prevailing before the Spring: Israel and the West continue to mouth dire 
threats of war and destruction, while Iranian leaders retaliate in kind, thus 
setting the stage for confrontation, and possibly armed conflict. The 
difference now is that the GCC countries, which had earlier made a valiant 
effort to engage with Iran and seek to moderate its policies, are now deeply 
concerned about Iranian interference in their domestic affairs, and have 
rallied together to confront with Iran across the Middle East.


In a larger historic perspective, the Middle East has been the traditional 
arena for cooperation and competition amongst the Jews, the Arabs, the 
Persians, the Turks and the peoples of the West (starting with the Greeks and 
Roman) for at least two millennia. While, from time to time, allies and enemies 
have changed, the larger interplay amongst them for space and power has 
remained the recurring motif of the history of the region. Even now, these 
peoples continue their contentions, swapping friend and foe to suit immediate 
interests. In that sense, at least, not much has changed in the region in the 
midst of the Arab Spring.

The author is the former Indian ambassador to Saudi Arabia.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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