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The Arab
Muslim Revolution: Democratic But not Liberal?
February
21, 2011
Aref
Assaf
The New
York Times’ s Roger Cohen said recently, “The Arab world
has embarked on a very long road to enfranchisement. It
will be tempestuous but the direction taken is
irreversible.” The Muslim world, from North Africa to
Iran, has experienced a wave of instability in the last
few weeks. No regimes have been overthrown yet, although
as of this writing, Libya was teetering on the brink.
There
have been moments in history where revolution spread in
a region or around the world as if it were a wildfire.
These moments do not come often. Those that come to mind
include 1848, where a rising in France engulfed Europe.
There was also 1968, where the demonstrations of what we
might call the New Left swept the world: Mexico City,
Paris, New York and hundreds of other towns saw anti-war
revolutions staged by Marxists and other radicals.
Prague saw the Soviets smash a New Leftist government.
Even China’s Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution
could, by a stretch, be included. In 1989, a wave of
unrest, triggered by East Germans wanting to get to the
West, generated an uprising in Eastern Europe that
overthrew Soviet rule.
Each had
a basic theme. The 1848 uprisings attempted to establish
liberal democracies in nations that had been submerged
in the reaction to Napoleon. 1968 was about radical
reform in capitalist society. 1989 was about the
overthrow of communism. They were all more complex than
that, varying from country to country. But in the end,
the reasons behind them could reasonably be condensed
into a sentence or two.
Some of
these revolutions had great impact. 1989 changed the
global balance of power. 1848 ended in failure at the
time — France reverted to a monarchy within four years —
but set the stage for later
political
changes. 1968 produced little that was lasting. The key
is that in each country where they took place, there
were significant differences in the details — but they
shared core principles at a time when other countries
were open to those principles, at least to some extent.
In
looking at the current rising, the geographic area is
clear: The Muslim countries of North Africa and the
Arabian Peninsula have been the prime focus of these
risings, and in particular North Africa where Egypt,
Tunisia and now Libya have had profound crises. Of
course, many other Muslim countries also had
revolutionary events that have not, at least until now,
escalated into events that threaten regimes or even
ruling personalities. There have been hints of such
events elsewhere. There were small demonstrations in
China, and of course Wisconsin is in turmoil over budget
cuts. But these don’t really connect to what is
happening in the Middle East. The first was small and
the second is not taking inspiration from Cairo. So what
we have is a rising in the Arab world that has not
spread beyond there for the time being.
The key
principle that appears to be driving the risings is a
feeling that the regimes, or a group of individuals
within the regimes, has deprived the public of political
and, more important, economic rights — in short, that
they enriched themselves beyond what good taste
permitted. This has expressed itself in different ways.
In Bahrain, for example, the rising was of the primarily
Shiite population against a predominantly Sunni royal
family. In Egypt, it was against the person of Hosni
Mubarak. In Libya, it is against the regime and person
of Moammar Gadhafi and his family, and is driven by
tribal hostility.
Why has
it come together now? One reason is that there was a
tremendous amount of regime change in the region from
the 1950s through the early 1970s, as the Muslim
countries created regimes to replace foreign imperial
powers and were buffeted by the Cold War. Since the
early 1970s, the region has, with the exception of Iran
in 1979, been fairly stable in the sense that the
regimes — and even the personalities who rose up in the
unstable phase — stabilized their countries and imposed
regimes that could not easily be moved. Gadhafi, for
example, overthrew the Libyan monarchy in 1969 and has
governed continually for 42 years since then.
Any
regime dominated by a small group of people over time
will see that group use their position to enrich
themselves. There are few who can resist for 40 years.
It is important to recognize that Gadhafi, for example,
was once a genuine, pro-Soviet revolutionary. But over
time, revolutionary zeal declines and avarice emerges
along with the arrogance of extended power. And in the
areas of the region where
there had
not been regime changes since after World War I, this
principle stays true as well, although interestingly,
over time, the regimes seem to learn to spread the
wealth a bit.
Thus,
what emerged throughout the region were regimes and
individuals who were classic kleptocrats. More than
anything, if we want to define this wave of unrest,
particularly in North Africa, it is a rising against
regimes — and particularly individuals — who have been
in place for extraordinarily long periods of time. And
we can add to this that they are people who were
planning to maintain family power and money by
installing sons as their political heirs. The same
process, with variations, is under way in the Arabian
Peninsula. This is a rising against the revolutionaries
of previous generations.
The
revolutions have been coming for a long time. The rising
in Tunisia, particularly when it proved successful,
caused it to spread. As in 1848, 1968 and 1989, similar
social and cultural conditions generate similar events
and are triggered by the example of one country and then
spread more broadly. That has happened in 2011 and is
continuing.
It is,
however, happening in a region that is uniquely
sensitive at the moment. The U.S.-jihadist war means
that, as with previous revolutionary waves, there are
broader potential geopolitical implications. 1989 meant
the end of the Soviet empire, for example. In this case,
the question of greatest importance is not why these
revolutions are taking place, but who will take
advantage of them. We do not see these revolutions as a
vast conspiracy by radical Islamists to take control of
the region. A conspiracy that vast is easily detected,
and the security forces of the individual countries
would have destroyed the conspiracies quickly. No one
organized the previous waves, although there have been
conspiracy theories about them as well. They arose from
certain conditions, following the example of one
incident.
But particular groups certainly tried, with greater and
lesser success, to take advantage of them.
In this
case, whatever the cause of the risings, there is no
question that radical Islamists will attempt to take
advantage and control of them. Why wouldn’t they? It is
a rational and logical course for them.
Whether
they will be able to do so is a more complex and
important question, but that they would want to and are
trying to do so is obvious. They are a broad,
transnational and disparate group brought up in
conspiratorial methods. This is their opportunity to
create a broad international coalition. Thus, as with
traditional communists and the New Left in the 1960s,
they did not create the rising but they would be fools
not to try to take advantage of it. I would add that
there is little question but that the United States and
other Western countries are trying to influence the
direction of the uprisings. For both sides, this is a
difficult game to play, but it is particularly difficult
for the United States as outsiders to play this game
compared to native Islamists who know their country.
But while
there is no question that Islamists would like to take
control of the revolution, that does not mean that they
will, nor does it mean that these revolutions will be
successful. Recall that 1848 and 1968 were failures and
those who tried to take advantage of them had no vehicle
to ride. Also recall that taking control of a revolution
is no easy thing. But as we saw in Russia in 1917, it is
not necessarily the more popular group that wins, but
the best organized. And you frequently don’t find out
who is best organized until afterwards.
Democratic revolutions have two phases. The first is the
establishment of democracy. The second is the election
of governments. The example of Hitler is useful as a
caution on what kind of governments a young democracy
can produce, since he came to power through democratic
and constitutional means — and then abolished democracy
to cheering crowds. So there are three crosscurrents
here. The first is the reaction against corrupt regimes.
The second is the election itself.
And the
third? The United States needs to remember, as it
applauds the rise of democracy, that the elected
government may not be what one expected.
In any
event, the real issue is whether these revolutions will
succeed in replacing existing regimes. Let’s consider
the process of revolution for the moment, beginning by
distinguishing a demonstration from an uprising. A
demonstration is merely the massing of people making
speeches. This can unsettle the regime and set the stage
for more serious events, but by itself, it is not
significant. Unless the demonstrations are large enough
to paralyze a city, they are symbolic events. There have
been many demonstrations in the Muslim world that have
led nowhere; consider Iran.
It is
interesting here to note that the young frequently
dominate revolutions like 1848, 1969 and 1989 at first.
This is normal. Adults with families and maturity rarely
go out on the streets to face guns and tanks. It takes
young people to have the courage or lack of judgment to
risk their lives in what might be a hopeless cause.
However,
to succeed, it is vital that at some point other classes
of society join them. In Iran, one of the key moments of
the 1979 revolution was when the shopkeepers joined
young people in the street.
A
revolution only of the young, as we saw in 1968 for
example, rarely succeeds. A revolution requires a
broader base than that, and it must go beyond
demonstrations. The moment it goes beyond the
demonstration is when it confronts troops and police. If
the demonstrators disperse, there is no revolution. If
they confront the troops and police, and if they carry
on even after they are fired on, then you are in a
revolutionary phase. Thus, pictures of peaceful
demonstrators are not nearly as significant as the media
will have you believe, but pictures of demonstrators
continuing to hold their ground after being fired on is
very significant.
This
leads to the key event in the revolution. The
revolutionaries cannot defeat armed men. But if those
armed men, in whole or part, come over to the
revolutionary side, victory is possible. And this is the
key event. In Bahrain, the troops fired on demonstrators
and killed some. The demonstrators dispersed and then
were allowed to demonstrate — with memories of the
gunfire fresh. This was a revolution contained. In
Egypt, the military and police opposed each other and
the military sided with the demonstrators, for complex
reasons obviously. Personnel change, if not regime
change, was inevitable. In Libya, the military has split
wide open.
When that
happens, you have reached a branch in the road. If the
split in the military is roughly equal and deep, this
could lead to civil war. Indeed, one way for a
revolution to succeed is to proceed to civil war,
turning the demonstrators into an army, so to speak.
That’s what Mao did in China. Far more common is for the
military to split.
If the
split creates an overwhelming anti-regime force, this
leads to the revolution’s success. Always, the point to
look for is thus the police joining with the
demonstrators. This happened widely in 1989 but hardly
at all in 1968. It happened occasionally in 1848, but
the balance was always on the side of the state. Hence,
that revolution failed.
It is
this act, the military and police coming over to the
side of the demonstrators that makes or breaks a
revolution. Therefore, to return to the earlier theme,
the most important question on the role of radical
Islamists is not their presence in the crowd, but their
penetration of the military and police. If there were a
conspiracy, it would focus on joining the military,
waiting for demonstrations and then striking.
Those who
argue that these risings have nothing to do with radical
Islam may be correct in the sense that the demonstrators
in the streets may well be students enamored with
democracy. But they miss the point that the students, by
themselves, can’t win. They can only win if the regime
wants them to, as in Egypt, or if other classes and at
least some of the police or military — people armed with
guns who know how to use them — join them. Therefore,
looking at the students on TV tells you little. Watching
the soldiers tells you much more.
The
problem with revolutions is that the people who start
them rarely finish them. The idealist democrats around
Alexander Kerensky in Russia were not the ones who
finished the revolution. The thuggish Bolsheviks did. In
these Muslim countries, the focus on the young
demonstrators misses the point just as it did in
Tiananmen Square. It wasn’t the demonstrators that
mattered, but the soldiers. If they carried out orders,
there would be no revolution.
I don’t
know the degree of Islamist penetration of the military
in Libya, to pick one example of the unrest. I suspect
that tribalism is far more important than theology. In
Egypt, I suspect the regime has saved itself by buying
time. Bahrain was more about Iranian influence on the
Shiite population than Sunni jihadists at work. But just
as the Iranians are trying to latch on to the process,
so will the Sunni jihadists.
I suspect
some regimes will fall, mostly reducing the country in
question to chaos. The problem, as we are seeing in
Tunisia, is that frequently there is no one on the
revolutionaries’ side equipped to take power. The
Bolsheviks had an organized party. In these revolutions,
the parties are trying to organize themselves during the
revolution, which is another way to say that the
revolutionaries are in no position to govern. The danger
is not radical Islam, but chaos, followed either by
civil war, the military taking control simply to
stabilize the situation or the emergence of a radical
Islamic party to take control — simply because they are
the only ones in the crowd with a plan and an
organization. That’s how minorities take control of
revolutions.
All of
this is speculation. What we do know is that this is not
the first wave of revolution in the world, and most
waves fail, with their effects seen decades later in new
regimes and political cultures. Only in the case of
Eastern Europe do we see broad revolutionary success,
but that was against an empire in collapse, so few
lessons can be drawn from that for the Muslim world.
In the
meantime, as you watch the region, remember not to watch
the demonstrators. Watch the men with the guns. If they
stand their ground for the state, the demonstrators have
failed. If some come over, there is some chance of
victory. And if victory comes, and democracy is
declared, do not assume that what follows will in any
way please the West — democracy and pro-Western
political culture do not mean the same thing.
The
situation remains fluid, and there are no broad
certainties. It is a country-by-country matter now, with
most regimes managing to stay in power to this point.
There are three possibilities. One is that this is like
1848, a broad rising that will fail for lack of
organization and coherence, but that will resonate for
decades. The second is 1968, a revolution that overthrew
no regime even temporarily and left some cultural
remnants of minimal historical importance. The third is
1989, a revolution that overthrew the political order in
an entire region, and created a new order in its place.
If I were
to guess at this point, I would guess that we are facing
1848. The Muslim world will not experience massive
regime change as in 1989, but neither will the effects
be as ephemeral as 1968. Like 1848, this revolution will
fail to transform the Muslim world or even just the Arab
world. But it will plant seeds that will germinate in
the coming decades. I think those seeds will be
democratic, but not necessarily liberal. In other words,
the democracies that eventually arise will produce
regimes that will take their bearings and rightfully so
from their own culture, which means Islam.
The West
celebrates democracy. It should be careful what it hopes
for: It might get it.
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