Four Leading Arab Cities in Flames. By Rami G. Khouri.
A bad day for four leading Arab cities. By Rami G. Khouri. The Daily Star (Lebanon), August 17, 2013.
Khouri:
Thursday
of this week was a bad day in modern Arab history. The four leading Arab cities
of recent eras – Baghdad, Damascus, Beirut and Cairo – were simultaneously
engulfed in bombings or urban warfare, mostly carried out with brutal savagery
and cruelty against civilians in urban settings. Even more problematic is that
the carnage was predominantly the work of Arabs, not foreign invaders. Our four
greatest modern Arab cities are now routinely depicted around the world with
scenes of bomb craters, flames and rows of dead bodies. Other Arab lands, such
as Libya, Yemen, Palestine, Tunisia, Bahrain, Algeria and Sudan, are only
slightly less chaotic. This is a dramatic and telling moment, but a moment that
tells us what, exactly? Have we collectively failed the test of statehood?
Modernity? Civility? Democracy? Independence? Sovereignty? Secularism?
It is
important at this moment of reckoning to avoid the temptation that engulfs so
many analysts and writers around the world, which is to make definitive and
cosmic historical judgments about the meaning of this moment, like The End of
History, the End of Islamism, the End of Arab Liberalism, or the End of the
Arab Spring.
So my
humble suggestion is that when you run into a phrase or headline describing the
current Arab situation that starts with “the end of . . . ,” you should not
bother to finish reading it, because it will probably tell you more about the
psychology of the writer than about any significant trends within the Arab
region. We have had few real endings in this region in the past 6,000 years of
urban life, but only perpetual transformations and reconfigurations of how
identity, power and governance mesh together and evolve slowly year after year.
For
those who do like neat historical markers, though, Thursday could easily be
seen as a symbolic moment that marked a serious pause, a slight shift and a
momentary regression in the uprisings and transformations that began in
December 2010 in Tunisia, but really had started a generation earlier. The old
autocratic Arab order that had prevailed since the mid-20th century started to
fray at the edges and atrophy in its center in the 1970s, as ruling elites
turned into security regimes, and nationalist and developmental states turned
into showcases of consumerism and corruption.
The
overthrow or challenge of former regimes have not led to smooth transitions to
democratic and pluralistic societies governed by the rule of law in any Arab
country – yet. The moment of hope for a series of simultaneous Arab democratic
transformations remains unfulfilled, due to different conditions in each
country. This transitional phase will give way in due course to renewed efforts
to build stable constitutional democracies that will reflect local values; but
this will only happen after we get through this nation-building rite of
passage.
The
most important lesson we can learn from our messy transitions – this is the
meaning of the suicide bombings or snipers’ bullets Thursday in Baghdad,
Damascus, Beirut and Cairo – is that the six dominant regional phenomena that
have defined the modern Arab world are totally inappropriate for creating
modern pluralistic democracies. These six are religion (mainly Islamism), armed
forces, resistance, sectarianism, Arabism and tribalism. These powerful shapers
of personal identity and immensely effective instruments for mass mobilization
and street activism are also utter failures as entry points into stable
democratic states.
Egypt’s
striking lesson today is that its two most powerful, organized and trusted
groups – the Muslim Brotherhood and the armed forces – both proved to be
incompetent in the business of governance. This is not because they do not have
capable individuals and smart and rational supporters; they have plenty of
those. It is rather because the ways of soldiers and spirituality are designed
for worlds other than governance and equitably providing services and
opportunities for millions of people from different religions, ideologies and
ethnicities.
Our
societies probably must pass through these moments of seeing military,
religious, tribal and other groups try their hand at governing, and then also
fight each other politically and militarily. They must do this and fail, as the
military and the Muslim Brothers are doing in Egypt, in order to confirm over
and over again that none of them are qualified to govern, or, more importantly,
mandated by a majority of their citizens to rule on their own. The lack of
other organized and credible indigenous groups of citizens that can engage in
the political process and shape new constitutional systems is largely a
consequence of how military officers, members of tribes, and religious zealots
have dominated Arab public life for decades.
So it
is no surprise that Egypt and other Arab lands have moved very quickly from
revolutionary moments to civil wars. From these events, new and more rational
political actors ultimately will emerge who can shape more stable governing
orders – after entire societies are frightened, embarrassed and then humbled by
the experience of their homegrown killing sprees and political immaturity.