The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

At Large

Wintry Spring

Recent Arab revolutions have been marked by the same old politics with the same old characters.

The Arab Spring certainly has not blossomed into an Arab Summer. The "democratic transition" heralded by Western journalists and politicians is moving at a snail's pace in Tunisia and Egypt -- if at all. Yemen really never was about democracy and Bahrain's demonstrations for freedom began to fizzle once the Sunni monarchy ordered brutal  attacks on the primarily Shia protesters and then did what Bahrainis do best -- financially satisfied the deal makers after jailing top Shia leaders. Of course it didn't hurt to have a Saudi Army contingent roll across the causeway separating the two countries in support of the ruling Khalifa family's security forces.

Libya and Syria have presented very different issues, even though both have death and destruction as a characteristic. The Assad family has been on alert for a Sunni-driven uprising for years. They had practiced their planned reaction in the past by killing tens of thousands led by the Muslim Brotherhood in Hama in 1982. Qaddafi has had to keep a lid on Cyrenaica (the eastern portion of Libya) ever since his overthrow of King Idris in 1969. The King's family came from that part of the country and tribalism once again has become a major factor in national politics. Key Cyrenaican politicians always were strategically placed in Qaddafi's governments to limit regional dissent and add balance to the Tripolitanian dominance. To add further confusion, Libyan recruits for al Qaeda disproportionately came from Cyrenaica.

Though Tunisia was the site of the first popular uprising, it was Egypt and the many thousands of people cramming Tahrir Square that really signaled the political upheaval that was characterized as a new era in Arab governance. Within the numerous anti-Mubarak factions that rushed to protests in the street was the long restricted -- but still widely followed -- Muslim Brotherhood. These disciplined elements were the ones on which the military kept the closest watch.

What evolved in Egypt was always going to be the key to uprisings elsewhere. The continued dominance of the Egyptian military -- which has ultimately controlled the nation since Nasser -- marked the immediate post-demonstration period. In the past two weeks, however, crowds have returned to Tahrir Square demanding trials for many of the Mubarak politicians and security force personnel. This represents essentially a challenge to the current military administration and shows that a volatile civilian atmosphere continues to exist. The Muslim Brotherhood has so far stayed out of the fray.

While most analysts concede a close relationship between the Assad regime in Syria and the clerical leadership in Iran, the working relationship between the Egyptian and Syrian military goes back many years. The bond leans heavily on their shared antagonism toward the Muslim Brotherhood, though the reasons for this enmity are different. It's been known for some time that Damascus and Cairo maintained and utilized backdoors to each other's mutual military and intelligence interests.

Even though the United States has been the principal source of aid to the Egyptian military, the British have continued to be an important conduit of Egyptian interests in Europe. This has been true also of the Syrians, who would have been expected from their history to be closer to the French. The sending of Bashar al-Assad to Britain for further medical schooling by his father, Hafez al-Assad, was a carefully-made political decision. The Assad family holds its London connections even today in the highest regard. (Conspicuously, when pro-Assad mobs attacked the U.S. and French embassies a short while ago, the U.K. embassy was spared.)

It is this sort of connectivity and behind-the-scenes intrigue that holds a traditional role in all Arab affairs. The people in the street may courageously demonstrate for freedoms taken for granted in the West, but in the end the deals are made among the privileged few. This is particularly true in Yemen, where the extended family of President Ali Abdullah Saleh hold controlling positions on both sides of the current upheaval.

Similarly, military and political power positions held by the Assads' Alawite clan and their Shia allies are under threat by the majority Sunni populace favored by Wahhabist Sunni Saudis. On a personal basis, the Saudi ruler, King Abdullah, always has been unhappy with the efforts of the Assads to curry favor with Iran. The West looks for and encourages democratic yearnings, while the Middle East in general and Arabs in particular manipulate and are manipulated by various traditional interests both religious and political.

Perhaps the current situation in Libya is the best example of Western misperceptions of democracy in action in the region. In fact, several individuals of Cyrenaican background serving in the Qaddafi government (the interior and justice ministers) joined forces with local eastern Libyan political, commercial and tribal power brokers to take advantage of the highly-publicized uprising in neighboring Egypt, actually aiming to organize a similar event in their oil-rich eastern region. No matter how one views this escalating civil war, it is not a revolution for democracy -- rather an attempted coup d'état led by the eastern sector of the country aiming to overthrow the western province-dominated government of a quasi-monarchist ruler pretending to be a democratic socialist.

And lest we forget, the principal military and political allies of the Cyrenaicans are those Western European nations (like the U.S., which provides defense-budget support) that hold the main interests in Libyan oil development and distribution. And this is an Arab Spring?

About the Author

George H. Wittman writes a weekly column on international affairs for The American Spectator online. He was the founding chairman of the National Institute for Public Policy.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (10) | Leave a comment

Ken (Old Texican)| 7.22.11 @ 8:22AM

No George it is not spring.
Muslims are still locked in a thousand year ice age called Islam.
Their assorted kings and dictators are merely the equivalent of the whip-holders on ante bellum southern plantations.
Islam is the slave-owner.

Brubaker| 7.22.11 @ 11:05AM

The so-called "Arab spring" has failed to materialize, and this actually surprises someone?

Dave Williams| 7.22.11 @ 2:23PM

Only the clueless twerps at the State Department. Things are going to get really, REALLY ugly over there. Civilization in the Middle East ends at the bayonet point of the farthest-advanced Israeli soldier...

DaveS| 7.22.11 @ 2:44PM

Results don't matter - only intentions matter.

Occam's Tool| 7.25.11 @ 1:31AM

Thanks, Dave. Correct and elegantly put.

POST American| 7.22.11 @ 10:37PM

"The U.S. has one final task before its
own collapse is consumated and RED China's
brought in as 'model' and 'world enforcer'
---and that's to 'bring in' (ie franhise slums/
porn and EUGENICS) the recalcitrant Middle
East,"
-ALAN WATT

And, as always, BEWARE 'Arab' revolutionists
that speak with Oxford accents.

BTW --WHY no response to the news RED China's
being given 50 square miles of Idaho for their
first of several 'sovereign RED Chinese' eco zones?

What's up? --the rats got your tongue?

john bunny| 7.22.11 @ 11:07PM

Shoehorning a Mideast topic into this thread, the Al Jazeera website tonight reported the Norway massacres with the basic who what and where facts--until the reporter felt free to note that radical Islamists could not have been the culprits, because They would have blown up an Oslo shopping center instead (How did Jazeera know this?) And there was another news essay on the J site opining that Americans are all psychotic because Americans are all being given antipsychotic drugs all the time. No mention in the article about quat addicts in the House of Islam.

nike shoes UK| 8.8.11 @ 4:21AM

is good

Affinity| 8.22.11 @ 5:17PM

could only sit and see what will happen in the Middle East..

mattikallio| 8.22.11 @ 6:31PM

No mention in the article about quat addicts in the House of Islam.

Leave a Comment

N.B. We encourage readers to share and discuss their thoughtful and relevant comments about this Spectator article. Comments are routinely monitored and will be deleted if profane, bigoted, or grossly impolite. Please be respectful. (And don't feed the trolls!) Thank you.

More Articles by George H. Wittman

More Articles From At Large

http://spectator.org/archives/2011/07/22/wintry-spring

ADVERTISEMENT

SPONSORED LINKS

Special Feature

Better that we become a nation of choosers rather than beggars. Our symposium on choice from the May, 2012 issue:

A Time for Choosing

James Piereson

The Road from Serfdom

Stephen Moore and Peter Ferrara

FLASHBACK TO: 1984

Clip of the Day

Most Popular Articles

Meet the Flukes!

F. H. Buckley | 5.25.12

The Wisconsin Turning Point

Peter Ferrara | 5.23.12

In Search of Muhammad

Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi | 5.25.12

Age and Kyl

Quin Hillyer | 5.25.12

Follow Me

Jay D. Homnick | 5.25.12

A Test of National Honor

Hal G.P. Colebatch | 5.25.12

How About the Record of DOE Capital?

William Tucker | 5.25.12

The Great Debate

R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. | 5.24.12

ADVERTISEMENT