The End of the Arab Dream

Muammar al-Qaddafi's fall won't just mark the close of an awful dictatorship -- it will end the Arab world's disastrous half-century-long affair with utopian governing fantasies.

BY JAMES TRAUB | FEBRUARY 25, 2011

Qaddafi did in fact succeed in destroying Libya's political and economic institutions -- though only, of course, to remove obstacles to his own brand of despotism. Arab elites came to view him as a loose cannon and a dangerous crank. And yet his revolutionary language and his open support for violence against Israel and the West made him for a time a popular hero in the Arab world. In A History of Modern Libya, Dirk Vandewalle writes that "to many in Libya and within the region, there was something riveting and audacious about his analyses and his proposed solutions." Qaddafi "spoke the unpalatable truths that others" -- those elites -- "did not dare to articulate." Libya's hero offered deeply satisfying answers to the growing Arab sense of failure.

The revolutionary ideology was the opiate of the Arab world, distracting citizens from the manifest failure of their rulers. In The Dream Palace of the Arabs, Fouad Ajami describes how an older cosmopolitanism, in tension with the West but assimilating its influences, began to give way in the 1950s to both sectarianism and totalitarian designs. Pan-Arabism broke on the shoals of the 1967 fiasco -- even if Qaddafi didn't get the message -- but Palestinian radicalism offered itself as an alternative unifying ideology. The militants argued, as Ajami writes, "that 'guerrilla warfare' or 'wars of national liberation' or 'revolution' would deliver Arab society from its superstitions and weaknesses." That, too, of course, turned out to be a hollow fantasy, though hatred toward Israel remains an instrument of solidarity and mobilization in the Arab world.

The terrain of the Middle East is littered with these Ozymandian shards: pan-Arabism, Palestinian militancy, the "secular socialism" of the Baath Party in Iraq, the Islamic revival of Sudan (now facing the threat of disintegration), and finally the Jamahiriya. The ferocity and swift spread of the uprisings across the Middle East and North Africa have demonstrated the bankruptcy of these ideologies and highlighted the disgust of citizens who know all too well they've been sold a bill of goods. The rage in Libya, a relatively affluent and well-educated state by Arab standards, has been especially shocking; Qaddafi's citizens obviously view him not as a crank but a monster.

The statues are crashing to earth. This is the Arab world's exit into history -- an exit from a sterile, walled-off place into a land of painful and consequential choices. The protesters assure journalists, and one another, that they are prepared for the burdens of citizenship, even if their experience of citizenship is only a few days old. They ought to be fully inoculated by now against glittering schemes that direct their attention away from their own well-being toward some remote good or distant enemy.

But are they? The vacuum created by the collapse, not only of regimes but of belief systems, no matter how decrepit, could all too easily be filled by other all-encompassing systems -- thus the fear that Islamic radicals will hijack the revolution in Egypt, or that Bahraini Shiites will topple that country's Sunni regime and then profess their fealty to Tehran. History provides plenty of analogies: It took barely a decade for Russians to throw off the yoke of Communism, tire of their messy experiment with freedom, and embrace Vladimir Putin's soft authoritarianism.

Libya is the country most likely to replace one totem with another. By eliminating all rival institutions, Qaddafi has ensured that there is nothing, and no one, to take his place. And should the country descend into chaos, the homegrown jihadists known as the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, supposedly "rehabilitated" by a foundation run by the dictator's son, Saif al-Islam al-Qaddafi, might well make a bid for power, or at least seek to reorganize themselves. A post-Qaddafi Libya is likely to need outside help. Perhaps the Arab League should view the country as its first exercise in state-building.

As for the others -- which at this point means Tunisia and Egypt -- it's possible, and maybe even likely, that on balance their new regimes will be less hospitable to the United States and Israel than were their predecessors. But those regimes will almost certainly be better for their citizens themselves -- more accountable to the public, more focused on human development, less ideological and bombastic. And if they're not, the voters can throw them out and try someone else.

In his inaugural address, U.S. President John F. Kennedy said of the new countries of the developing world, "We shall not always expect to find them supporting our view. But we shall always hope to find them strongly supporting their own freedom." This was not just inaugural hot air. Whatever its foreign policy, a government whose legitimacy depends on delivering the goods to its citizens rather than on demonizing outsiders -- including the West -- will ultimately be a better partner for the United States.

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James Traub is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and author of, most recently, The Freedom Agenda. "Terms of Engagement," his column for ForeignPolicy.com, runs weekly.

USAMA2

2:31 AM ET

February 27, 2011

Pathetic. Nonsensical. It

Pathetic. Nonsensical.
It sounds like Traub is afraid and is spouting hot air to compensate for his shrivelling gonads.

The Arab world has been subjugated through tyranny and repression on behalf of the West and now that shroud of fear is lifted. Qaddafi is part of a long list of rulers who's significance has been in repressing his own people well enough so Western interests can peacefully advance in his country.

For the time, the fear of one's entire family and tribe being killed is lifted. And Libyans know its better for 10s of 1000s to fight and go their deaths to oust Qaddafi rather than millions have to endure another 40 years of subjugation.

Arabs and Muslims know who is behind Qaddafi and his lot. Qaddafi was trained at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst where Mi6 recruited him and staged a coup around him. The Arab League was created in Cairo in 1945 when the British were still controlling Egypt and most of the rest of the region.

The world is getting smaller and the fear is being lifted.

 

ABURAIHI

3:37 AM ET

February 27, 2011

Very nice.

Condoleezza Rice said once that we support stability in the middle East, not democracy. The U.S.'s policy was to support the dictatorship in the Middle East. Again and again, the revolution in the Middle East is against our undemocratic regimes and the U.S.'s policy. We this time will decide our fate and destiny.

 

ERIC TREANOR

1:35 PM ET

February 27, 2011

Theater vs. Sacrifice

Conflating the image of Saddam's fallen statue with the collapse of Qaddafi's regime is intellectually disingenuous.

The first "fall" was an act of political theater perpetrated by an occupying army. The second fall, when it occurs, will have been earned by the blood, determination, and sacrifice of the Libyan people.

Pretending by analogy that the two events are even remotely similar destroys a distinction that we must never forget.

 

CHAFAON

2:22 PM ET

February 27, 2011

Contestable!!

A pritty over-loaded "Westcentric" view that appears to try a bit too hard to down-play the role of Islamic Revivalism as a live and moving force in this current wave of Arab Uprising.

I particularly contest the view that "This is the Arab ...world's exit into history...". The writer's insistent reference to Arab violence against Israel is another slopy attempt at hitting hard but on the wrong nail.

But for all it's sloppiness, the article highlights some interesting, but largely obvious, observations concerning the wrotten state of affairs of governance in the Arab World.

 

ZMAN

8:14 PM ET

February 27, 2011

What utter and complete nonsense!

Kudos to James Traub for packing so many falsehoods and non-sequiturs into a single article!

Charlie Sheen called. He wants to know what drugs Traub was on when he wrote this. It was obviously some powerful stuff.

Qadhaffi was never "a popular hero in the Arab world" . He was always seen as a madman and rightfully so. Whatever following he had was bought (or rather rented) with petrodollars and vanished as soon as the payments stopped.

The reason it barely took a decade for Russians to "tire of their messy experiment with freedom, and embrace Vladimir Putin's soft authoritarianism" is that during that decade they got fleeced by the oligarchs with the help and complicity of American financial institutions and consultants.

 

BETTY212

10:06 PM ET

February 27, 2011

clinton fight

Clinton disclosed that the administration is now in communication with some of the opposition groups amid efforts to help minimize bloodshed and ensure an orderly transition. A former Libyan justice minister claimed last week to have established a provisional government in rebel-held Benghazi, but Clinton did not specifically endorse any of the numerous factions that have taken up arms against Gaddafi.
http://www.jbradsblog.com/simple-tips-in-saving-the-forest/

 

MATC

12:15 AM ET

February 28, 2011

What if it is both Islamic and Arabic?

I was thinking, if the new regimes realize that they need to pick up both Islamism and pan-Arab as political doctrines, would they look more powerful? One might argue the fall of dictatoral regimes is a fall of pan-Arab nationalism. Nationalism does not have to be authoritarian. What if the new Islamic Democracies in the Middleast decide to pick up Arab Nationalism as another populist cause and they successfully combine the two neatly into one Islamic Arab Nationalism?

 

BDMNTN

9:47 AM ET

February 28, 2011

wow amazing

amazing how uninformed this writer is. sounds like it was written by an octogenarian who's steady diet of usa today has washed through him like steady milk resulting in an oozing excrement.

too tired to point out the many flaws, but how's this for glaring stupiditiy:

"It took barely a decade for Russians to throw off the yoke of Communism, tire of their messy experiment with freedom, and embrace Vladimir Putin's soft authoritarianism."

tire of their messy experiment with freedom? maybe you're joking? the shock capitalism approach, similar to the one implemented by brener et. al in iraq, maybe considered free in american doublespeak, but was it really free?

free from fear? nope - crime was out of control - free from authoritarianism? no, the greedy and well connected all became billionaires, dictating the lives of ordinary russians through market-prices at least as much as the waning days of the ussr. free to live nihilist lives, perhaps, so yay freedom!

was it 'their' experiment with freedom? most would agree that it was not the russian people's experiment, any more than the ussr was a people's republic. the role outsiders played in bringing about shock capitalism through the imf and other means, however, is totally ignored by this trite statement.

it echoes the stick in the author's eye throughout this whole piece. no wonder this magazine is for america's elite - a nice bubble to feel warm in, those stupid fucking arabs, those stupid russians with their failed freedom, how come they didn't take well to rapid privatization? they're fucking idiots not like us!

 

REDWELL

3:57 PM ET

February 28, 2011

BDMNTN, thanks for elevating

BDMNTN, thanks for elevating the debate here at FP. Democratic dialogue is now a little bit more empowered than it was at 9:46 this morning.

 

PROPHET

7:48 PM ET

February 28, 2011

Utopian Dream Palaces, old, new and old!

Does Traub really believe that Arab dreams of authoritarian utopias are being replaced by democracy? The reality, of course, is that old Islamist utopia will most likely replace the current dictatorships, with new dictatorships like in Iran, and these religious dictatorships will be much worse that what they've removed. Murder, mayhem and martyrdom seem to be synonymous in the Arab street as well as in their dream palaces (read mosques). The general populations of theses Arab nations are brave and desiring a better way of life free from oppression. However, radical Islam will undoubtedly be thinking their time has come, and are working towards deceiving the populaces that Sharia Law and Islamic Republics are the only answer to achieve the Utopias, they've been conditioned to believe in. This is the jihadist's dream come true. But it will be darkness appearing as light, and the nightmare that is about to descend on the middle East is not only prophetic but apocalyptic!