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The Dawn of the Arab Uprisings: End of an Old Order?
The Dawn of the Arab Uprisings: End of an Old Order?
The Dawn of the Arab Uprisings: End of an Old Order?
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The Dawn of the Arab Uprisings: End of an Old Order?

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This is a one-stop introduction to the multifaceted phenomenon of the 'Arab Spring', from the writers of Jadaliyya.

Covering the full range of issues involved in these historic events, from political economy and the role of social media, to international politics, gender, labour and the impact on culture, these firsthand accounts explore the inspirational uprisings in a way unavailable through mainstream Western and Arab media.

Covering all the major centres of disruption, including Tunisia, Egypt, Syria, Libya and Bahrain, the writers also look further afield, to Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Palestine, and Iraq. The Dawn of the Arab Uprisings is the best place to start for anyone wanting to understand and interpret these dramatic events.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherPluto Press
Release dateOct 5, 2012
ISBN9781849647991
The Dawn of the Arab Uprisings: End of an Old Order?
Author

Roger Owen

Roger Owen is A. J. Meyer Professor of Middle East History at Harvard University.

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    The Dawn of the Arab Uprisings - Bassam Haddad

    The Dawn of the Arab Uprisings

    "In the last few years, Jadaliyya has established itself as an indispensable source dealing with the contemporary Arab world. This collection of its pieces on the Arab uprisings is perhaps the best introduction to the political movements that have shaken that region since January 2011. It offers a set of intelligent commentaries on revolutionary events in almost every Arab country, and their repercussions in the area and beyond. Dawn of the Arab Uprisings is essential reading for anyone wanting to understand the possible future developments of our uncertain world."

    Talal Asad, City University of New York

    As contemporary reflections, these writings capture the unfolding of revolutionary events as they happened and convey the uncertainties, hopes and disappointments of collective worlds being remade. As the work of scholars and activists with a rich knowledge of the region’s histories and political aspirations, the essays offer lasting insights into the forces shaping a new moment in world history.

    Timothy Mitchell, Columbia University

    "The outburst of the Arab Revolutions demands imaginative and novel perspectives on the Arab world, and Jadaliyya has managed to provide a unique forum covering the region with a fresh approach to its issues and problems. Its talented contributors, from the Arab world and beyond, combine objectivity with a progressive, humanistic engagement, and never shy away from sometimes explosive topics such as the world of oil and its despotic monarchies. Necessary reading on an Arab world in the throes of change."

    Fawwaz Traboulsi, author of A History of Modern Lebanon

    "Not since struggles for independence has the Middle East witnessed the kind of mass mobilization characteristic of recent Arab uprisings. The online journal Jadaliyya has been at the forefront of intelligent commentary, capturing the immediacy of current events with uncommon thoughtfulness. With an appreciation for the various genres expressive of politics, the journal has placed public intellectuals, activists, journalists, artists, and academics in conversation, enabling contentious debates and divergent analyses to reach multiple, global publics. A primer of importance not only to students of the ‘Arab Spring,’ but also to those concerned with protest more generally, this collection represents relevant writings from the early months of the uprisings. Registering both the exhilarating optimism and crushing disappointment of contemporary political life, this volume is recommended for anyone interested in the interrelationships among domestic, regional, and international affairs; it gives voice to some of the possibilities for and impasses to political transformation."

    Lisa Wedeen, Mary R. Morton Professor of Political Science and the College, University of Chicago

    "During the Arab uprisings, my first port of call every day was Jadaliyya to understand and interpret the events. The articles collected here are a very rare combination—scholarly but also accessible for a broad public. This book will be a much-treasured volume for undergraduate students, and its sophistication will also benefit postgraduates and academics. More importantly, an intelligent lay reader will also find the book immediately useful."

    Dr Laleh Khalili, SOAS, University of London

    First published 2012 by Pluto Press

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    Distributed in the United States of America exclusively by

    Palgrave Macmillan, a division of St. Martin’s Press LLC,

    175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010

    Copyright © Bassam Haddad, Rosie Bsheer and Ziad Abu-Rish 2012

    The right of the individual contributors to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

    British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

    A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

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    Contents

    Acknowledgments

    Foreword

    Jadaliyya: Archiving the Revolution

    Roger Owen

    Introduction

    Bassam Haddad, Rosie Bsheer, and Ziad Abu-Rish

    SECTION I: OPENING ARTICLES

    1. Impromptu: A Word

    Sinan Antoon

    2. Preliminary Historical Observations on the Arab Revolutions of 2011

    Rashid Khalidi

    3. Awakening, Cataclysm, or Just a Series of Events? Reflections on the Current Wave of Protest in the Arab World

    Michael Hudson

    4. Paradoxes of Arab Refo-lutions

    Asef Bayat

    5. The Year of the Citizen

    Mouin Rabbani

    6. Three Powerfully Wrong—and Wrongfully Powerful—American Narratives about the Arab Spring

    Jillian Schwedler, Joshua Stacher, and Stacey Philbrick Yadav

    SECTION II: TUNISIA

    7. The Tunisian Revolution: Initial Reflections

    Mohammed Bamyeh

    8. Tunisia’s Glorious Revolution and its Implications

    Noureddine Jebnoun

    9. Let’s Not Forget about Tunisia

    Nouri Gana

    10. The Battle for Tunisia

    Nouri Gana

    SECTION III: EGYPT

    11. The Poetry of Revolt

    Elliott Colla

    12. Why Mubarak is Out

    Paul Amar

    13. Egypt’s Revolution 2.0: The Facebook Factor

    Linda Herrera

    14. Egypt’s Three Revolutions: The Force of History Behind this Popular Uprising

    Omnia El Shakry

    15. The Architects of the Egyptian Uprising and the Challenges Ahead

    Saba Mahmood

    16. The Revolution Against Neoliberalism

    Walter Armbrust

    17. Egypt’s Orderly Transition: International Aid and the Rush to Structural Adjustment

    Adam Hanieh

    SECTION IV: LIBYA

    18. The Arabs in Africa

    Callie Maidhof

    19. Tribes of Libya as the Third Front: Myths and Realities of Non-State Actors in the Long Battle for Misrata

    Jamila Benkato

    20. Solidarity and Intervention in Libya

    Asli Ü Bâli and Ziad Abu-Rish

    SECTION V: BAHRAIN

    21. Let’s Talk about Sect

    Tahiyya Lulu

    22. Distortions of Dialogue

    Tahiyya Lulu

    23. When Petro-Dictators Unite: The Bahraini Opposition’s Struggle for Survival

    Rosie Bsheer and Ziad Abu-Rish

    SECTION VI: YEMEN

    24. Yemen’s Turn: An Overview

    Lara Aryani

    25. How it Started in Yemen: From Tahrir to Taghyir

    Nir Rosen

    26. Saleh Defiant

    Ziad Abu-Rish

    SECTION VII: SYRIA

    27. Why Syria is Not Next...So Far

    Bassam Haddad

    28. Fear of Arrest

    Hani Sayed

    29. Syrian Hope: A Journal

    Amal Hanano

    SECTION VIII: REGIONAL REVERBERATIONS OF THE ARAB UPRISINGS

    30. The Political Status Quo, Economic Development, and Protests in Jordan

    Ziad Abu-Rish

    31. Dissent and its Discontents: Protesting the Saudi State

    Rosie Bsheer

    32. The Never Ending Story: Protests and Constitutions in Morocco

    Emanuela Dalmasso and Francesco Cavatorta

    33. Emergencies and Economics: Algeria and the Politics of Memory

    Muriam Haleh Davis

    34. Iraq and its Tahrir Square

    Zainab Saleh

    35. Tahrir’s Other Sky

    Noura Erakat and Sherene Seikaly

    36. What is [the] Left?

    Maya Mikdashi

    Epilogue: Parting Thoughts

    Madawi Al-Rasheed

    Notes

    Index

    Acknowledgments

    We would first like to extend our appreciation to the authors whose articles make up the bulk of these pages. Their willingness to share their research, experiences, and reflections vis-à-vis the Middle East in general and the Arab uprisings more specifically was central to Jadaliyya’s role in shaping academic and non-academic discourses alike. We would also like to thank Jadaliyya’s co-editors, contributing editors, and our many dedicated interns. They were all part of the solicitation, submission, review, editing, and posting processes that initially brought these articles to light.

    The transformation of a disparate set of articles published on Jadaliyya into a coherent edited volume encapsulating the initial period of the Arab uprisings involved several individuals. Roger Owen’s Foreword and Madawi Al-Rasheed’s Epilogue are testaments of their commitment to supporting new projects and advancing critical interventions related to the production of knowledge on and solidarity networks in the Arab world. Thomas Sullivan was an invaluable resource in preparing the format and layout of the manuscript for submission. We are grateful for his copy-editing work and that of Adam Gallagher. Finally, we offer our appreciation to David Shulman and his colleagues at Pluto Press, both for their initial excitement about the project as well as their diligence in seeing it through to completion.

    We dedicate this volume to Mohamed Bouazizi and the countless others who have given their lives in the struggle for dignity, justice, and freedom.

    Foreword

    Jadaliyya: Archiving the Revolution

    The uprisings in the Arab world in the early part of 2011 clearly constitute a world historical event. Although the actual word revolution is somewhat imprecise, it has the great value of linking them to a long line of revolutionary activity, including the violent overthrow of the old orders in Paris beginning in 1789, as well as to the more peaceful Velvet revolutions in Eastern Europe following the withdrawal of the Soviet military forces in 1989–90. In the Middle East’s own version of these mighty events, not only were a series of tyrants toppled but the strength of popular feeling, and the stubborn willingness of the demonstrators to sustain their challenge to those who remained, also sent shockwaves across the Arab world from Morocco to Kuwait.

    The result: a return of the separate parts of the Arab region to the mainstream of world history after decades in which they had been largely sidelined by oppressive and inflexible regimes, some ruled by kings, others by presidents who acted like kings in their desire to perpetuate a stifling family rule at all costs. Whatever else may happen, it is pretty obvious that the old era of presidents-for-life ruling over a fearful people is now gone for good—even if the shape of the new, post-revolutionary political order still remains quite extraordinarily difficult to make out.

    It is a natural human desire to want to record these remarkable events, to keep the experience of them alive, and to make the memory of the excitement they generated and the hopes they raised widely available to Arabs and non-Arabs alike. Hence the number of archival projects which have already sprung into existence. Some, like those run by the Egyptian Committee to Document the 25 January Revolution or the American University in Cairo’s University on the Square initiative are concerned largely with just one country; others, like the Jadaliyya electronic archive, include the whole Arab world. In each case the task appears to be to collect as much as possible, of as great a variety of different official, editorial, and popular expressions as possible, and then to organize and to digitize it so as to make it easily available to the largest possible number of people around the world.

    Similar projects have, of course, taken place with respect to previous revolutionary outbursts. It is thanks to them that we know so much about what it was like, for example, in the streets of Paris after the fall of the Bastille in July 1789. There is also much to be learned from similar efforts to collect objects, pictures, and other memorabilia connected with other great events like wars, on the one hand, and the everyday life of people living in more ordinary times, on the other. Each has its purpose, its own logic, and its own method for engaging the interest and the sensibilities of its putative audience.

    Each of us knows, from our own particular experience, what it is we want from such collections and displays, and what it is that speaks to us most vividly about the lives and experiences of those whose activities are on display. For most, I suspect, it is the sense of the immediacy of a particular historical moment that we respond to the most directly, whether by hearing a song like Midan al-Tahrir’s "Sawt al-Hurriya"¹ (Voice of Freedom) that captures the essence of a people tasting freedom for the first time, or looking at a picture of a man holding up a placard saying, I used to be afraid. I became an Egyptian. We feel ourselves right in the square with the excited crowds, just as we recognize, what the demonstrators themselves could not know at the time: how ephemeral all such moments must prove to be.

    Other signs are suggestive of a more complex political reality, like the indictment painted in white on the side of a burned out Syrian car, "anta fi Banyas la fi Israel, (You are in Banyas not in Israel) observed in April 2011; one piece in the jigsaw puzzle of a larger picture of sectional and sectarian struggle, the outlines of which we are even now only dimly aware. Here too, as elsewhere, we can also observe the spirited play on words directed toward those seeking to repress them: a request to the Syrian authorities for silmiyah (with the ‘m’ underlined) mou silahiya" (peaceful, not armed); or a message to President Husni Mubarak in hieroglyphs as the only language a Pharaoh can understand.

    That said, collection and dissemination, exciting though they may be, are just one aspect of the archival project. In what follows I would like to turn to the equally important questions of organization, definition, purpose, and use.

    DEFINITION AND USE

    Let me start with a simple proposition: archives such as that of the Jadaliyya project, must be conceived of, first and foremost, as constituting a vast data bank, many of the uses of which cannot be known in advance. Indeed, it might even be argued that there should not be too much conscious anticipation of what such uses might be, on the grounds that this might place limits on fruitful future possibilities. To take just one contemporary example: who could have imagined that the photos and artefacts collected by Berlin’s Deutsches Historisches Museum about life during the Second World War—from busts of Hitler to the original clothes worn by concentration camp victims—would one day be used as the basis for a contemporary 2011 exhibition called Hitler and the Germans—Nation and Crime, with the specific aim of addressing the question of how the Nazis came to power and how they achieved such power and influence over German people? Nor how the exhibits themselves might actually be one day presented, for instance by allowing curious visitors to access the pages of the Daily Visitor’s Book of Hitler’s Chancellery with the click of a mouse—and so turning it into a living indictment of the heads of state and other visiting dignitaries who continued to pay court to Hitler himself until well into 1944?

    Nevertheless, some preliminary definitions are necessary in terms of scope and time. First, does the remit to collect everything actually mean everything? And where to draw the line in a world, particularly the Arab world, where everything is so closely interconnected with everything else? Also, how to do justice to events right across the Arab region where some regimes have fallen, others are engaged in armed resistance to the people’s uprisings, and others again, as in often-overlooked Oman, have been trying, with some success, to find a way to disarm criticism without any surrender of real power?

    Second, what to do about the information released by the revolutionary events as they relate to the practices of government—their use of force and fear, their cronyism and corruption—which not only characterized the previous era but were also in large measure responsible for the revolutionary challenges all came to face? When to do so immediately invites a detailed examination not just of the whole pre-history of Arab politics since independence but also of possible futures as well.

    And then, third, there is the question of the time-span of the revolutionary process itself. In Egypt and Tunisia, for example, the holding of free elections and the drawing up of a new constitution may be considered to constitute the beginning of a new, post-revolutionary, political order. But revolutionary events elsewhere, in Syria and Yemen, in Morocco and Algeria, will surely continue to rumble on for many years, making the task of collecting data about day-to-day developments in those countries so much more onerous.

    Lastly, how to maintain interest in the collections over time? History moves on, while collections have a way of reducing their once vibrant artefacts and memorabilia into a discrete set of lifeless objects once the context that produced and sustained them has disappeared. True, this is not quite the same challenge as that facing a conventional museum with its large cellars full of rarely displayed objects. But there are other pressing problems concerning their continued immediacy and relevance such as the challenge posed, for example, by Egypt’s Mohamed Hassanein Heikal in May 2011 to the effect that the new political actors must get over the excitement of overthrowing, and then punishing, the Mubarak regime in the interests of confronting the insistent challenge of building a new economic and political order. In Heikal’s case this would mean leaving judgment of the Mubaraks and their cronies to the elected politicians. It would also, so it seems to me, create a situation in which the day-to-day documentation of the revolutionary moment would all too easily be thrust aside by novelists, social historians, memoir-writers, collectors of photographs, and others determined, like a de Tocqueville or a Stendhal, to stamp their own personal and inevitably simplified vision on these large events.

    QUESTIONS OF ORGANIZATION

    Everyone will agree that archives should be well-curated, that is, organized in such a way that they are usable in terms of both accessibility and of revealing exactly what they possess via a comprehensible system of classification and cross-reference in terms of subject, time, place, and content. Fortunately there are many proven systems involving links, search engines, and key words to do the job. But this does not obviate the fact that the curators themselves have to choose what categories and what sub-categories they want in the first place—a difficult task. How to impose some order, for example, on the mountains of material generated by the intense national debates that broke out in Egypt and Tunisia concerning the political timetable as it related to elections—both popular and presidential—and to the mechanism for drawing up a new social contract enshrined in a new constitution? Or how to catalog the vast amount of rumors which revolutionary events generate? Or what to make of the evidence of popular recourse to what were often the wildest and most improbable conspiracy theories?

    Then there is the question of finance. As a rule such collections get started as a result of the initiative of an enthusiastic organizer, or group of organizers, aided by a staff of equally enthusiastic but usually unpaid volunteers. Yet, if the effort is to be sustained, it can only be by finding money for a more permanent professional staff working in a permanent home, either by fund-raising or by marketing some of its collection for money.

    Other important questions include how to publicize the archive beyond the confines of academia; how to cooperate with other, similar archives—particularly in the Middle East itself; and how to make the best use of the lessons to be learned from previous archival projects like that of the Iraq Memory Foundation with its aim of making knowledge of the crimes of the Saddam Hussein regime available to all the people of Iraq.

    Last, but certainly not least, there is the need to be clear about the history of the archive itself: how was it conceived; how were the objects in it collected; how were criticisms met; and how were the various problems it faced addressed. Given that one of its most powerful aims must surely be to criticize the secrecy and the hypocrisy of the previous Arab information regimes, then it must obviously make sure that its own processes, its own logic and modus operandi, are freely on display.

    QUESTIONS OF CONTESTATION

    All great revolutionary events excite counter-revolutions from both inside and outside, and the Arab revolutions have proved no exception. Attempts have been made to contain, to resist or to undermine them by forces loyal to the ancien régime, sometimes in alliance with other Arab regimes (and their foreign allies) fearful that the demonstration effect might affect their own restive people. And this, in turn, has produced its own set of counter-discourses, as well as, on occasions, a set of practices ranging from outright armed contestation as in Libya, Syria, and Yemen, or armed intervention as in Bahrain, to more covert forms of repression and cross-border interference.

    The collection of data relating to such a wide variety of counter-revolutionary activity all across the Arab world produces many extra archival problems, the more so as much of it is, and was, conducted in secret and can only be known via rumor or at second or third hand. Take, for example, the activities of the Syrian regime to confront its enemies both inside Syria and across its borders. Or, for instance, the situation in Tripoli, Libya where a special combination of confused speeches by members of the Qaddafi family and the direct but covert action taken against the rebels makes it necessary to collect information not only about the speeches and actions themselves but also about the various attempts by outsiders, exiles, and others to understand and interpret them as well. None of this data can in any way be described as neutral; most can only be understood in context and in terms of the reliability of whoever produced it in the first place.

    Clearly, some preliminary guidelines are necessary, even if they are found to need amendment as time and experience goes by. At first sight, revolution and counter-revolution seem useful categories. But can they be separated, conceptually, for the purposes of classification? And can data classified as the latter itself be further classified in terms of its sources, its putative reliability, so on and so forth? Then, perhaps most important of all, can all this be done in such a way as to preserve both the revolutionary spirit of the whole archival project while preventing it from coming under serious attack from those who are threatened by the whole enterprise and who see it as an essential part of the war against them, their beliefs, and their place in the world?

    A final thought: what about the lives of people affected by the great revolutionary events taking place in the Arab world but who remain either ambivalent about, or not directly concerned with, their outcome? Feelings of this type can range all the way from confusion and indifference, on the one hand, to opportunism and a kind of wait-and-see-ism, on the other. Not to speak of those who view politics in quite other terms: as a form of fitna (sedition) or a questioning of God’s Holy law. Are their voices to be included in the archival project? Or excluded on the grounds of irrelevance?

    QUESTIONS OF USE

    Finally, there is the question of the multiple uses to which the new archives are to be put. For some they will be seen, primarily, as an important academic tool as far as future teaching and research is concerned. For others, they will be viewed in much more directly political terms, regarded not only as a record of certain kinds of political activity which aimed at, for example, a new kind of inclusivity—men and women, Christian and Muslim, rich and poor—but also as the foundation of a political program which aims to keep alive the hope and enthusiasms generated by each great revolutionary moment. One might propose, for example, that in both Egypt and Tunisia, the rights of certain sections of the population, those of women and of minorities, were perhaps better expanded and protected under the old dictatorships than they threaten to be under the new democracies. And there will be many who will want to return to the Tahrir or Casbah experience to prove this particular proposition wrong.

    Then there is the more expansive project of creating a historical memory, not just for the Arab peoples directly involved, but also for those not yet born or still too young to understand what was going on all around them. Unlike the records of such salient events from the Egyptian popular resistance in Port Said to the Tripartite invasion by Britain, France, and Israel in 1956 or the revolutionary events in Baghdad in July 1958, these will not be locked up in inaccessible government archives but will be made freely available to anyone who wants to see them. Men and women will want to say that this was our finest hour, as Prime Minister Winston Churchill told his British audience as they were about to fight what he called the Battle of Britain in the summer of 1940. Such moments form an essential ingredient of each people’s national story, testimony to the best in them, to something of which they can be endlessly proud.

    But there is still more to it than that. Most people would probably applaud the use of these same archives as a check against future dictatorial regimes, for example, by providing evidence in future trials concerning war crimes and human rights violations. But what if they were also employed, as they surely will be, by militaries to train their recruits in domestic policing and by security forces to identify possible troublemakers or to develop ways of containing and controlling the social media and of discovering how best to avoid international surveillance? Perhaps lawyers will be needed at some stage to guide the curators of these archives through such thickets, perhaps a board of wise men?

    CONCLUSION

    The creation of a new archive to record a set of world historical events is an exciting project, but also one that brings with it great responsibilities. It is the Arab people themselves who, after decades of neglect, took center stage, whether as participants or observers, victims or villains, each with his or her own set of memories, each with a stake in their own experience, each doing or saying something that is open for the later observer to marvel at and, perhaps also, to exploit, to judge or perhaps even to belittle. And it is the same people in whose name the new constitutional regime is being built, whether they took part in the vast, and mostly peaceful, national debate which took place in Tunisia and Egypt after the fall of the Ben Ali and Mubarak regimes, or the more muted ones in Jordan and Morocco—not forgetting the heated and violent exchanges which split the populations of Bahrain, Libya, Syria, and Yemen.

    For those of us who live outside the Middle East, it is usually our lot to act as observers and commentators, not as actors in the events we witness and try to describe. The fact that some Jadaliyya editors are based in the region and most travel extensively back and forth, makes them direct observers and often participants, not just commentators. So it is a particularly exciting moment when a US-based institution with deep roots in the region can become home to such an eminently worthwhile project of collection and public memory as this. I offer it my warmest congratulations and my very best wishes.

    Roger Owen

    Harvard University Fall 2011

    Introduction

    Bassam Haddad, Rosie Bsheer, and Ziad Abu-Rish

    If in early December 2010 one had predicted the fall, in whole or in part, of four heads of Arab states and the prevalence of anti-regime protests across the Arab world, it would have been dismissed as wishful thinking. Indeed, in academic circles, such predictions would have been deemed analytically implausible, if not outright sloppy. Yet, what had seemed utterly improbable less than a year ago has become an enduring reality over a year after Mohamed Bouazizi immolated himself in Tunisia on 17 December 2010. Since then, three Arab countries have experienced fundamental transformation and two are on the brink of major change, or so it seems. The reverberations of the popular movements of the so-called Arab Spring have also been felt across the Arab Middle East and beyond.

    Jadaliyya followed, analyzed, and archived the monumental developments, starting with the Tunisian case. We covered and tried to make legible nearly every dramatic juncture in a play-by-play fashion. We also published daily analysis on significant turning points, and their impacts on the lived experiences of people on the ground as well as on the future of academic and journalistic writings on the region.

    The partial breakdown of regimes that survived well for decades, however, is no small feat. It is impossible to cover all aspects of such transformations, let alone detect all the ramifications, many of which remain to be revealed. As individuals and groups become increasingly more empowered and find avenues to share their experiences, clearer narratives of the anti-regime movements have, and will continue to emerge.

    Analyzing the causes of these transitions, which remain in their very early phases, is less daunting than accounting for the timing of these uprisings, a task that will perhaps remain elusive. Suffice it to say that the wonder is not that these regimes began to crack, because they really did not do so on their own. After all, it was mass protests—and battle in the Libyan case—that compelled change. Rather, the question is how these regimes survived for so long, a more manageable explanatory task that some authors have started to revisit.

    Many challenges remain ahead for people living in and from the region. It is one thing to break the psychological barrier of fear and go onto the streets en masse to demand the fall of a regime. It is another to rebuild more democratic and sustainable institutions that safeguard that which was won amid unending sacrifices. Out of all tasks ahead, the latter is the most germane and critical. The array of factors and forces for change and some form of revolution is matched locally, regionally, and globally by another that seeks either a restoration of the status quo or the mitigation of change. Not only do the popular Arab movements have to mobilize against the entrenched and brutal regimes in power, they also have to resist a multi-pronged, ruthless counter-revolution spearheaded and financed by Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and their allies. Bahrain and Yemen are two cases in point where the uprisings were either quelled or temporarily muted by a cosmetic transfer of power at the very top.

    Yet, we also find that some cases are more complex than others, namely, that of Syria. After more than a year of constant uprisings, notably in the countryside and smaller cities, there seems to be no end in sight. With more than eight thousand dead, and many more who have been arrested or have disappeared, this particular uprising is turning into a battle between the regime and an increasingly militarized opposition, in a charged regional and international context. In fact, whereas some thought that Libya would be the case that would halt further uprisings, we are now witnessing the Syrian case playing that role. Located at the heart of various conflicts and causes, the Syrian case has come to represent far more than itself: beyond similarities with other cases, it represents the battle between the pro-resistance camp and the conservative Arab status quo as well as its Western allies; it also represents a pivotal element in the regional balance of power, with Iran and Hizbollah at its side, opposing most other states in the region. Finally, it also represents a further power-play between the United States and Russia (and China to a lesser extent). Hence, we are likely to witness the continuation of a stalemate for some time to come. At the time of publication, it does not appear that we will witness a flaring up of ubiquitous mass protests in other Arab countries for some time, barring the continuing struggle for capitalizing on the gains of the revolutions elsewhere. However, in countries like Egypt and Libya, the path to realizing the fruits of last year’s transformations is proving far more rocky than expected, with potential for reversals.

    More than a year on, it has become fairly evident that we should avoid addressing the regional protests as a singular unit of analysis. Commonalities exist, but they are limited. The recurring theme across these Arab countries is that they are experiencing (or have experienced) high levels of mass mobilization on a scale hitherto unseen in the Arab Middle East, at least not in unison and certainly not since the struggles for independence from colonial and imperial rule. We have also witnessed a strong affinity among these publics for learning from each other’s experience, creating a domino effect across the Arab countries. This signals the persistent, even if amorphous, historical, cultural, and political dimensions that continue to bind many Arabs in a systemic way—though we should not overstate this affinity as it remains at the level of triggers and signaling, not cooperation and collaboration. Beyond that, the commonality dwindles, and in some cases, stops. It is more productive to focus instead on the significant differences among these polities, in terms of social structure, political-economic, ethnic, regional, social, and sectarian diversity.

    In any case, we, at Jadaliyya, do hope that the forces of change win this battle, and understand that in some cases the situation might be less straightforward than others (for example, Syria and Libya), especially where foreign intervention plays a more prominent role. Moreover, calls for too much caution regarding change and fear of the chaos that might

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