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The Middle East has awoken to democracy
and freedom
By Joschka Fischer
When the democratic revolt in Tunisia successfully ousted the old regime, the
world reacted with amazement. Democracy from below in the Arab world?
After the overthrow of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarakˇ¦s 30-year-old
regime in Egypt, the heartland of the Middle East, amazement has turned into
certainty. The Middle East has awakened and begun to enter the globalized world
of the 21st century. Up to now, the region (excluding Israel and Turkey) had
more or less missed out on the epochal process of worldwide modernization.
Whether the Arab and wider Islamic worldˇ¦s democratic awakening will actually
prevail or produce only change at the top of authoritarian regimes, whether it
will lead to a stable order or sustained chaos and radicalization, still remains
unclear. One thing, however, is already clear: The era when this vast region
slept while others modernized has ended.
The grassroots revolt will, of course, continue. Virtually no country in the
region will escape it, though when and where the next eruption will occur
remains uncertain. Iran, Syria and Saudi Arabia are all candidates, with the
latter probably posing the most difficulties.
Israel, too, would be well advised to prepare for epochal change in the region
and try to reach a peace settlement with the Palestinians and Syria as quickly
as possible. There is, however, little indication that Israelˇ¦s government has
the vision required for such an undertaking.
The problems are the same almost everywhere (with the exception of Israel and
Turkey): political suppression, economic underdevelopment and grinding poverty
(except in the smaller oil states), a lack of education, high unemployment and
huge demographic pressures, owing to a very young and rapidly growing
population.
These problems have been cited, year after year, in the UN Development Programˇ¦s
reports. Moreover, the situation was exacerbated by the incompetence of the
regionˇ¦s authoritarian regimes, which have been unable to provide their young
people with any prospects beyond repression. So it was only a matter of time
until this powder keg was ignited.
The fuses were the new information technologies of the Internet and satellite
television, such as al-Jazeera. Indeed, one historical irony is that it wasnˇ¦t
US hard power ˇX as applied, for example, in the Iraq War ˇX that furthered this
democratic revolution, but rather its soft power ˇX Twitter and Facebook ˇX which
was much maligned under former US president George W. Bush and his neocon
advisers. Silicon Valley, it seems, has more potency than the Pentagon.
These digital tools from the US became the instruments for a
trans-Arabian/Iranian youth revolt for freedom and democracy. And, although many
things in the Middle East are in short supply, there is no dearth of hopeless
young people, whose numbers will continue to grow in the coming years.
Indeed, whatever resemblance events on Cairoˇ¦s Tahrir Square bear to the French
Riots in May 1968 in Paris and the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, it would be
premature to proclaim that freedom has prevailed. Whether it does will depend to
a large degree on how the West responds now, because what is at stake is not
just the ousting of tyrants, but also the profound -transformation and
modernization of entire societies and economies. It is a staggering task.
Moreover, compared to Eastern Europe in 1989, the Middle East in 2011 lacks any
stabilizing external structures, such as NATO and the EU, that could influence
domestic reforms by holding out the prospect of membership. The efforts involved
in this great transformation must come from within these societies and this, in
all likelihood, is asking too much.
Eastern Europeˇ¦s transformation after 1989 took a lot longer and was much more
costly than originally envisaged. There were many people who lost out during
this transformation and the democratic revolutionˇ¦s organizers were not
necessarily those who could push through the democratic and economic
development. And there is the experience of Ukraineˇ¦s ˇ§Orange Revolutionˇ¨ in
2004, which failed a few years later because of the estrangement, incompetence
and corruption of its leaders.
Taken together, these constraints and analogies suggest that the West,
particularly Europe, should focus on long-term assistance for the democratic and
economic development of the Middle Eastˇ¦s reborn countries and also on
partnerships with all forces that support their countriesˇ¦ democratization and
modernization. The West can no longer continue with Realpolitik as usual.
These tasks call for largesse, both financial and otherwise (opportunities to
travel, for example, were of vital importance in locking in the democratic
aspirations of East Europeans after 1989), and they require decades, not years,
of persistence. In other words, success will be expensive ˇX very expensive ˇX
which will be anything but popular in the current economic downturn. However, a
democracy that does not translate into regular dinners is a democracy that is
bound to fail.
Economic aid, the opening of the EU and US markets, strategic energy projects,
legal and constitutional advice, and cooperation between universities are among
the resources that the West must supply if it wants to contribute to the success
of the Middle Eastˇ¦s democratic awakening.
Should this awakening fail, the result will be a radicalization throughout the
region. There can be no return to the status quo ante. The genie is out of the
bottle.
Joschka Fischer was Germanyˇ¦s foreign minister and vice
chancellor from 1998 to 2005 and a leader in the German Green Party for almost
20 years.
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