Opinion
The shaping of a New World Order
If the revolutions of 2011 succeed, they will force the creation of a very 
different regional and world system.
Mark LeVine Last Modified: 06 Feb 2011 15:07 GMT

I remember the images well, even though I was too young to understand their 
political significance. But they were visceral, those photos in the New York 
Times from Tehran in the midst of its revolutionary moment in late 1978 and 
early 1979. Not merely exuberance jumped from the page, but also anger; anger 
fuelled by an intensity of religious fervour that seemed so alien as to emanate 
from another planet to a "normal" pre-teen American boy being shown the 
newspaper by his father over breakfast.

Many commentators are comparing Egypt to Iran of 32 years ago, mostly to warn 
of the risks of the country descending into some sort of Islamist dictatorship 
that would tear up the peace treaty with Israel, engage in anti-American 
policies, and deprive women and minorities of their rights (as if they had so 
many rights under the Mubarak dictatorship).

I write this on February 2, the precise anniversary of Khomeini's return to 
Tehran from exile. It's clear that, while religion is a crucial foundation of 
Egyptian identity and Mubarak's level of corruption and brutality could give 
the Shah a run for his money, the situations are radically different on the 
ground.

A most modern and insane revolt

The following description, I believe, sums up what Egypt faces today as well 
as, if not better, than most:

"It is not a revolution, not in the literal sense of the term, not a way of 
standing up and straightening things out. It is the insurrection of men with 
bare hands who want to lift the fearful weight, the weight of the entire world 
order that bears down on each of us - but more specifically on them, these ... 
workers and peasants at the frontiers of empires. It is perhaps the first great 
insurrection against global systems, the form of revolt that is the most modern 
and the most insane.

One can understand the difficulties facing the politicians. They outline 
solutions, which are easier to find than people say ... All of them are based 
on the elimination of the [president]. What is it that the people want? Do they 
really want nothing more? Everybody is quite aware that they want something 
completely different. This is why the politicians hesitate to offer them simply 
that, which is why the situation is at an impasse. Indeed, what place can be 
given, within the calculations of politics, to such a movement, to a movement 
through which blows the breath of a religion that speaks less of the hereafter 
than of the transfiguration of this world?"

The thing is, it was offered not by some astute commentator of the current 
moment, but rather by the legendary French philosopher Michel Foucault, after 
his return from Iran, where he witnessed firsthand the intensity of the 
revolution which, in late 1978, before Khomeini's return, really did seem to 
herald the dawn of a new era.

Foucault was roundly criticised by many people after Khomeini hijacked the 
revolution for not seeing the writing on the wall. But the reality was that, in 
those heady days where the shackles of oppression were literally being 
shattered, the writing was not on the wall. Foucault understood that it was 
precisely a form of "insanity" that was necessary to risk everything for 
freedom, not just against one's government, but against the global system that 
has nuzzled him in its bosom for so long.

What was clear, however, was that the powers that most supported the Shah, 
including the US, dawdled on throwing their support behind the masses who were 
toppling him. While this is by no means the principal reason for Khomeini's 
successful hijacking of the revolution, it certainly played an important role 
in the rise of a militantly anti-American government social force, with 
disastrous results.

While Obama's rhetoric moved more quickly towards the Egyptian people than did 
President Carter's towards Iranians three decades ago, his refusal to call for 
Mubarak's immediate resignation raises suspicion that, in the end, the US would 
be satisfied if Mubarak was able to ride out the protests and engineer a 
"democratic" transition that left American interests largely intact.

The breath of religion

Foucault was also right to assign such a powerful role to religion in the 
burgeoning revolutionary moment - and he experienced what he called a 
"political spirituality", But, of course, religion can be defined in so many 
ways. The protestant theologian Paul Tillich wonderfully described it as 
encompassing whatever was of "ultimate concern" to a person or people. And 
today, clearly, most every Egyptian has gotten religion from this perspective.

So many people, including Egypt's leaders, have used the threat of a Muslim 
Brotherhood takeover to justify continued dictatorship, with Iran as the 
historical example to justify such arguments. But the comparison is plagued by 
historical differences. The Brotherhood has no leader of Khomeini's stature  
and foreswore violence decades ago. Nor is there a culture of violent martyrdom 
ready to be actualised by legions of young men, as occurred with the Islamic 
Revolution. Rather than trying to take over the movement, which clearly would 
never have been accepted - even if its leaders wanted to seize the moment, the 
Brotherhood is very much playing catch up with the evolving situation and has 
so far worked within the rather ad hoc leadership of the protests.

But it is equally clear that religion is a crucial component of the unfolding 
dynamic. Indeed, perhaps the iconic photo of the revolution is one of throngs 
of people in Tahrir Square bowed in prayers, literally surrounding a group of 
tanks sent there to assert the government's authority.

This is a radically different image of Islam than most people - in the Muslim 
world as much as in the West - are used to seeing: Islam taking on state 
violence through militant peaceful protest; peaceful jihad (although it is one 
that has occurred innumerable times around the Muslim world, just at a smaller 
scale and without the world's press there to capture it).

Such imagery, and its significance, is a natural extension of the symbolism of 
Mohamed Bouazizi's self-immolation, an act of jihad that profoundly challenges 
the extroverted violence of the jihadis and militants who for decades, and 
especially since 9/11, have dominated the public perception of Islam as a form 
of political spirituality.

Needless to say, the latest images - of civil war inside Tahrir Square - will 
immediately displace these other images. Moreover, if the violence continues 
and some Egyptian protesters lose their discipline and start engaging in their 
own premeditated violence against the regime and its many tentacles, there is 
little doubt their doing so will be offered as "proof" that the protests are 
both violent and organised by the Muslim Brotherhood or other "Islamists".

A greater threat than al-Qa'eda

As this dynamic of nonviolent resistance against entrenched regime violence 
plays out, it is worth noting that so far, Osama bin Laden and his Egyptian 
deputy, Ayman Al-Zawahiri, have had little - if anything - of substance to say 
about the revolution in Egypt. What they've failed to ignite with an ideology 
of a return to a mythical and pure beginning - and a strategy of human bombs, 
IEDs, and planes turned into missiles - a disciplined, forward-thinking yet 
amorphous group of young activists and their more experienced comrades, 
"secular" and "religious" together (to the extent these terms are even relevant 
anymore), have succeeded in setting a fire with a universal discourse of 
freedom, democracy and human values - and a strategy of increasingly calibrated 
chaos aimed at uprooting one of the world's longest serving dictators.

As one chant in Egypt put it succinctly, playing on the longstanding chants of 
Islamists that "Islam is the solution", with protesters shouting: "Tunisia is 
the solution."

For those who don't understand why President Obama and his European allies are 
having such a hard time siding with Egypt's forces of democracy, the reason is 
that the amalgam of social and political forces behind the revolutions in 
Tunisia, Egypt today - and who knows where tomorrow - actually constitute a far 
greater threat to the "global system" al-Qa'eda has pledged to destroy than the 
jihadis roaming the badlands of Afghanistan, Pakistan, or Yemen.

Mad as hell

Whether Islamist or secularist, any government of "of the people" will turn 
against the neoliberal economic policies that have enriched regional elites 
while forcing half or more of the population to live below the $2 per day 
poverty line. They will refuse to follow the US or Europe's lead in the war on 
terror if it means the continued large scale presence of foreign troops on the 
region's soil. They will no longer turn a blind eye, or even support, Israel's 
occupation and siege across the Occupied Palestinian territories. They will 
most likely shirk from spending a huge percentage of their national income on 
bloated militaries and weapons systems that serve to enrich western defence 
companies and prop up autocratic governments, rather than bringing stability 
and peace to their countries - and the region as a whole.

They will seek, as China, India and other emerging powers have done, to move 
the centre of global economic gravity towards their region, whose educated and 
cheap work forces will further challenge the more expensive but equally 
stressed workforces of Europe and the United States.

In short, if the revolutions of 2011 succeed, they will force the creation of a 
very different regional and world system than the one that has dominated the 
global political economy for decades, especially since the fall of communism.

This system could bring the peace and relative equality that has so long been 
missing globally - but it will do so in good measure by further eroding the 
position of the United States and other "developed" or "mature" economies. If 
Obama, Sarkozy, Merkel and their colleagues don't figure out a way to live with 
this scenario, while supporting the political and human rights of the peoples 
of the Middle East and North Africa, they will wind up with an adversary far 
more cunning and powerful than al-Qa'eda could ever hope to be: more than 300 
million newly empowered Arabs who are mad as hell and are not going to take it 
any more.

Mark LeVine is a professor of history at UC Irvine and senior visiting 
researcher at the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies at Lund University in 
Sweden. His most recent books are Heavy Metal Islam (Random House) and 
Impossible Peace: Israel/Palestine Since 1989 (Zed Books).

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily 
reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.



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