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MUST READ: "This Is Not a Revolution"
Via FLC
Hussein
Agha and Robert Malley | The New York Review of Books
"... Alliances are topsy-turvy,
defy logic, are unfamiliar and shifting. Theocratic regimes back secularists;
tyrannies promote democracy; the US forms
partnerships with Islamists; Islamists support Western military
intervention. Arab nationalists side with regimes they have long
combated; liberals side with Islamists with whom they then come to blows. Saudi
Arabia backs secularists against the Muslim Brothers and Salafis against
secularists. The US is allied with Iraq, which is allied with Iran, which
supports the Syrian regime, which the US hopes to help topple. The US is also
allied with Qatar, which subsidizes Hamas, and with Saudi Arabia, which funds
the Salafis who inspire jihadists who kill Americans wherever they
can.
In record
time, Turkey evolved from having zero problems with its neighbors to nothing but
problems with them. It has alienated Iran, angered Iraq, and had a row with
Israel. It virtually is at war with Syria. Iraqi Kurds are now Ankara’s allies,
even as it wages war against its own Kurds and even as its policies in Iraq and
Syria embolden secessionist tendencies in Turkey itself.
For years, Iran
opposed Arab regimes, cultivating ties with Islamists with whose religious
outlook it felt it could make common cause. As soon as they take power, the
Islamists seek to reassure their former Saudi and Western foes and distance
themselves from Tehran despite Iran’s courting. The Iranian regime will feel
obliged to diversify its alliances, reach out to non-Islamists who feel
abandoned by the nascent order and appalled by the budding partnership between
Islamists and the US. Iran has experience in such matters: for the past three
decades, it has allied itself with secular Syria even as Damascus suppressed its
Islamists.
When goals converge, motivations differ. The US cooperated with
Gulf Arab monarchies and sheikhdoms in deposing Qaddafi yesterday and in
opposing Assad today. It says it must be on the right side of history. Yet
those regimes do not respect at home the rights they piously pursue abroad.
Their purpose is neither democracy nor open
societies. They are engaged in a struggle for regional domination.
What, other than treasure, can proponents of a self-styled democratic uprising
find in countries whose own system of governance is anathema to the democratic
project they allegedly promote?
The new system of alliances
hinges on too many false assumptions and masks too many deep incongruities.
It is not healthy because it cannot be real. Something is wrong. Something
is unnatural. It cannot end well....media
war that started in Egypt reaches its zenith in Syria. Each side shows only its
own, amplifies the numbers, disregards the rest. In Bahrain, the opposite is
true. No matter how many opponents of the regime turn up, few take notice. It
does not register on the attention scale. Not long ago, footage from Libya
glorified motley fighters with colorful bandanas and triumphant spiel. The real
battles, bloody and often from the skies, raged elsewhere. Casualties were
invisible. ..." (MUST
continue, here)
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