Arab Spring: Death to Humanity. By Abdulateef Al-Mulhim. Arab News, August 28, 2013.
Al-Mulhim:
Since
the start of the Arab Spring, we have seen men, women and children get killed
by stray bullets, tank shells, scud missiles, attack helicopters and fighter
jets.
There
are innocent people in Syria under attack by chemical weapons, regardless of
which side is guilty of using them, and nothing has been done by world
communities. So, what are we waiting for? Are we waiting to see nuclear bombs
used to kill innocents indiscriminately?
The
Arab Spring erupted in many Arab countries, from Tunisia to Libya and from
Egypt to Syria. Yet I have always maintained that the Arab Spring was dead on
arrival although I have the highest respect for people’s demands for better
living standards, social equality, freedom to think and ask questions and to
eradicate corruption.
I also
have no fond sentiment for Tunisia’s Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Egypt’s Hosni
Mubarak and his sons, Yemen’s Ali Abdullah Saleh, Libya’s Muammar Qaddafi and
Syria’s Bashar Assad, but I wasn’t optimistic about the outcome of their
departure.
The
Arab and Western media welcomed the changes, but apparently, many analysts
don’t know the complexity of the Arab world.
When
you talk to a Syrian from Damascus and a Syrian from Aleppo, it is like talking
to two people from two different planets. A Libyan from Benghazi is completely
different to a Libyan from Tripoli. An Egyptian from Cairo would not be welcome
in Egypt’s Sinai. A Yemeni from Sanaa considers a Yemini from Aden his sworn
enemy. The simple fact is that these countries are already divided beyond
imagination.
Ironically,
it was those ousted dictators who held these countries together. Yes,
dictatorship is inexcusable, but this is the reality of the Arab world. Just
look at Iraq after Saddam Hussein. Who would have imagined that many Iraqis now
miss the good old days of Saddam? How can people miss someone who was behind
the death of at least one member of every single Iraqi family, including his
own?
The
answer is easy. Arabs are not ready to be ruled by a democratic system and
dictatorship is the norm. Somehow, the Arab world always enjoys having a leader
with charisma regardless of what he does or doesn’t do for them.
Former
Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s legacy is still lamented [celebrated?]
in Egypt although it was him who made the Arab world as divided as we see it
today and lost every war he dragged Egypt into. Saddam Hussein gassed his own
people and many still regard him as a hero. In other words, if democracy is
good for one place, then so is dictatorship. This is why I thought the quest
for democracy during the Arab Spring was dead on arrival. But, it isn’t only
the Arab Spring that has died. Respect for humanity is dead too.
We now
see chemical weapons being used against innocent men, women and children. What
atrocity can be more ghastly than this?
The sad
story in the Middle East is that we distort reality. Over the past few decades,
the world saw extensive use of chemical weapons on two occasions and not during
a state of war between two enemies, but by governments against their own
people. Iraq used it against the Kurds and Syria used it against Syrians.
And it
is ironic that the area saw many wars, but no chemical weapons were used except
against civilians by their own government, with the exception of Iraq using
such weapons against the Iranians during the eight-year Iran-Iraq war.
So now,
the question is: What would make a dictator stage an all-out war against his
own people? The answer is simple. Because he knows that he can get away with
it.
Everyone
in the area is waiting for the United States Navy and other Western countries
to carry out their routine checks and surveillance and wait for the green light
from the White House. Whatever the outcome of the intervention, we will hear
many voices. If the attack takes place and its results go as planned, many
people will say the United States did it for its own interest.
If the
attacks don’t go as planned, then we will blame Washington and never ourselves.
Isn’t
it ironic that we’re so anti-American and yet the first thing we ask for during
conflict is American intervention?
The
bigger question is: What would happen to Syria and the Syrian people if Bashar
Assad is gone or killed? Who will run the country and who will prevent any
future atrocities when the time for revenge and counter-revenge comes?
There
will be more killings and the dust will not settle for a long time. So, the
question that people in the Arab world have to answer is: What really led to
the Arab Spring and how can civilian death be avoided during times of unrest?
The
Arab world will continue to suffer very unstable conditions unless they
eradicate corruption and promote social equality. We should educate our
children to respect the others and not teach them to hate others. Killing in
the countries of the Arab Spring, including Iraq, is becoming daily news.
The sad
fact is that the killings are carried out in the most gruesome of manners in
the name of religion and the killing is based on sect and ethnicity. Your
identity could be a blessing in one place but could be the reason for a lengthy
interrogation and brutal execution the next.
The
bottom line is that this Arab Spring has exposed how divided the Arabs really
are. The Arabs’ No. 1 enemy is not foreigners but themselves. Indeed, many Arab
countries have been sleeping with the enemy for a long time. The Arab Spring
has taught us that a there is no respect for the human soul.
Finally,
the billion-dollar question. Many in the Arab world want to see the US attack
the Syrian government’s strongholds, but what if the American military has to
use Israeli military data links, intelligence data, air space, radar coverage
and search-and-rescue cooperation to do so?