Don't blame the Arab Spring
From that radical organization, RAND:
The current unrest in Syria, and elsewhere in the Middle East, is
mistakenly being blamed on the Arab Spring. Even before the recent
violence, many observers were quick to declare that spring had rapidly
turned to winter in the Arab world. Here at home, and just before the
presidential debate on foreign policy tonight, a Pew Research Center
poll showed that Americans are increasingly skeptical that the Arab
Spring will lead to lasting change. The survey, released last week,
found that 57% of Americans (up from 43% in April 2011) do not believe
that the uprisings will improve the lives of people in those countries.
But the roots of the unrest are not in the desire to cast off
authoritarian regimes that took expression in Arab Spring protests. The
roots came before the uprisings, and progress will take longer than we
wish.
Weak and corrupt government institutions, underdeveloped civil society, a
lack of means and habits of peaceful expression, repressed resentments,
and the absence of free news media are all legacies of the previous
regimes, and still characterize those countries where governments remain
authoritarian.
Blame the autocrats, not the Arab Spring.
What's the implication for U.S. foreign policy of hand-wringing over
whether the Arab Spring was a good thing after all? That the U.S. should
have worked to suppress the uprisings? Opposing the possibility of
democracy — in the face of overwhelming popular support — would have
further eroded U.S. influence in the region. The Arab Spring has
discredited the idea that the secular authoritarian regimes were
fundamentally stable; the turbulent dynamics we now see in play were
their creations.
Disparagement of the Arab Spring has been accompanied by criticism in
some quarters of the Obama administration's support for it and in others
of the administration's failure to ensure greater progress toward
democracy. Some have suggested that unrest in the region is a
consequence of U.S. support for political change.
These critics wrongly suggest the U.S. has much more leverage to create
democracies than is realistic. Even where U.S. leverage was not
compromised by a history of propping up or tolerating dictators, our
country's ability to affect the course of post-authoritarian transitions
was generally at the margins. Internal forces drive political
transitions, not outside ones.
Read the whole thing.
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