http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2012\06\01\story_1-6-2012_pg3_6
Friday, June 01, 2012
VIEW: Our foreign policy gap — I — Professor Farakh A Khan

Many Arab countries saw monarchs fall only to be replaced by lifelong 
repressive dictatorships with no change in the lives of the people

What is Pakistan’s foreign policy regarding the Middle East following one year 
of the Arab Spring? Firstly, we have to define what is the Middle East. Some 
people consider the Arabic-speaking people, including the countries of North 
Africa, as the Middle East. The Arabic-speaking people of North Africa claim to 
be the descendants of the Pharaohs in Egypt while others claim to be the 
descendants of Berbers. Some also include Turkey, Iran and Afghanistan as part 
of the Middle East. For this article, let us take the Arabic-speaking area as 
the Middle East.

The Arab Spring starting in Tunisia one year ago shook the traditional 
long-standing dictators/kings in the Arabic-speaking world. The movement was 
peaceful in some countries while it was an all-out war in others (Libya, Yemen 
and Syria). In all cases, the transition from dictatorship to democracy will 
not be easy and one year on, people and former rulers are finding the new 
system difficult to digest. What is common is that many of these states are 
falling back on Islam for an ill-defined system of governance. There are also 
strong tribal links in many Arab countries and that is anti-democracy. Many 
Arab countries saw monarchs fall only to be replaced by lifelong repressive 
dictatorships with no change in the lives of the people. Led by the Egyptian 
Muslim Brotherhood, the Arab Spring is now resurfacing in many Arab countries. 
Let us hope the present change does not lapse into a new form of dictatorship 
based on religion.

Operation Unified Protector launched air attacks in Libya to ‘protect 
civilians’ threatened by Gaddafi’s army on March 27, 2011 by 14 countries under 
the NATO umbrella. For the US, the cost was $ 1.1 billion. It is significant to 
note that NATO did not lose a single soldier in the campaign where aircraft and 
drones were used (Daalder, Ivo H and Stavidis, James, ‘NATO’s victory in 
Libya’, Foreign Affairs, March/April, 2012). This may be the future of warfare. 
After more than a year of the removal of Gaddafi, Libya is drifting into chaos. 
Tribalism and warlords have not allowed federalism to take root (Pack, Jason, 
‘Federalism in Libya: tried and failed’, Cutting Edge, April 26-May 2, 2012).

It has been claimed that Qaddafi fed many of our past and present leaders with 
dollars. Perhaps this is the reason why we still have Gaddafi Stadium in 
Lahore. Pakistan’s interest in Libya is more than oil. During the upheaval of 
the anti-Gaddafi movement, we were told that hundreds of Pakistani workers were 
uprooted. We need new job opportunities under the new Libyan government.

Tunisia has the al Nahda Islamic party in the governing coalition after the 
ouster of Zine el-Abidine Bin Ali. However, the Salafi group is out to use 
force to get power. In Yemen, Ali Abdullah Saleh was removed from power and the 
country is presently facing al Qaeda attacks. In Libya, Muammar al-Gaddafi was 
killed. In Bahrain, the House of Khalifa is under threat (Ajami, Fouad, ‘The 
Arab Spring at one’, Foreign Affairs, March/April, 2012).

The Egyptian spring managed to get Hosni Mubarak out but his military is still 
in command; their spring is still not at an end and the gestation period is 
continuing. Meanwhile, the Muslim Brotherhood, Salafi groups and other pressure 
groups are jostling for power. The Egyptian army (Supreme Council of the Armed 
Forces) is the most powerful group, used to ruling the country, and it is not 
going to give up easily its powerful hold. The army has built a huge commercial 
empire and needs to keep it intact (Mousa, Sarah, ‘The return of Tahrir?’ 
Cutting Edge, May 3-9, 2012). After the first free presidential elections (May 
24-26) in Egyptian history, two candidates have emerged. The run-off 
presidential election is now between the Mubarak-era prime minister, former air 
marshal Ahmed Shafiq, and the Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohammad Morsi. The 
final outcome is hotly debated. Many feel the two candidates are unacceptable 
since one is a Mubarak man and the other wants to impose an Islamic government 
in a multi-religious society. There are also cries of foul by losing 
candidates. Behind the scenes, the army is still all-powerful, ruling through 
the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces. Although the catalyst for change was 
the uprising of the people of Egypt, it was an army coup that finally removed 
Hosni Mubarak. In Syria, only an army coup can remove President Bashar 
al-Assad’s regime, but by now, the opposition has been militarised and a lot 
more bloodshed is expected. We can only speculate what form of democracy shall 
finally emerge in a Middle East used to kings and dictators. The core issues of 
unemployment, corruption and soaring prices have been lost in the din of the 
Arab Spring.

The Arabic-speaking world has a long history of oppressive kingdoms, which are 
still continuing in some countries. In 1516, the Turks created the Ottoman 
Empire. At the turn of the 20th century, the Middle East experienced the Great 
Arab Revolt against the Turks followed by ‘liberation’ under kings. In the late 
19th century, Jamaluddin Afghani declared kingship as un-Islamic. For that, he 
was kicked out of India and proceeded to Egypt from where he was again deported 
to Turkey with the same result. He finally ended up in France, and eventually 
in Russia. In recent times, a book by a non-Muslim, George Antonins’ The Arab 
awakening, published in 1938, has been a source of inspiration. More recently, 
a book by Gene Sharp, From dictatorship to democracy, first published in 1993, 
has had an impact on the Arabic-speaking world even though the setting is in a 
non-Arabic world. Sharp has recommended in detail non-violent means to topple 
dictators.

(To be continued)

The writer can be reached at [email protected]


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