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Many early warning signs signalled current Arab disarray

Aug 04,2016 - Last updated at Aug 04,2016

Never in modern history has the Arab world experienced such a wide range of jarring political developments as it does today, including fragmenting states, refugee flows, a terrorism export industry and long-running devastating wars.

These conditions did not suddenly emerge overnight. Many early warning signs in recent decades should have been appreciated as signalling structural problems and deep injustices in our political, economic, environmental and social systems. 

Those signs were never grasped by the Arab power structures or the external powers that supported them — the very same powers (US, UK, France, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia) that now actively engage in warfare in several Arab lands.

Here is my list of 10 significant developments across the Arab world since the mid-1970s that should have been seen as early warning signs of problems in our societies.

They raise the question of whether today we acknowledge and act on early warning signs, or just repeat the mistakes of the recent past.

1. The first big sign of widespread Arab citizen discontent was the rapid expansion of support for the Muslim Brotherhood and other non-violent Islamists in the mid-1970s. They were the only locally credible opposition group and they always did well in elections that were held as of the mid-1980s.

2. Because all Arab electoral systems were configured to give the ruling power elite a built-in majority and permanent control of public life, discontent with the inability of the Muslim Brotherhood to actually improve people’s lives led to the birth of some more extreme, small, Islamist groups that used violence against their governments.

Such groups in Algeria, Egypt, Syria and Saudi Arabia were quickly smashed by the state, which nevertheless never addressed the underlying discontent that gave rise to popular resistance in the first place.

3. A tremendous sign of personal discontent and societal dysfunction as of the early 1980s (and continuing today) was the permanent emigration of tens of thousands of the Arab world’s smartest and most dynamic young men and women who found abroad the professional opportunities and political-cultural rights that their societies denied them.

4. By the early 2000s, public opinion polls repeatedly confirmed Arab citizens’ low trust in most of their public institutions. In countries other than wealthy oil producers, half or more of respondents routinely said they had no confidence in their government, courts, media, political parties or parliament.

5. Simultaneously, large numbers of Arab citizens were expressing by the early 2000s pessimism about their future well-being, in terms of material needs (jobs, income, healthcare) or political rights and opportunities for self-improvement. 

Nationals of wealthy oil producers who enjoyed welfare state benefits remained the exception. 

6. These sentiments reflected social and economic polarisation that had started in the 1980s: larger and larger numbers of Arab citizens lived near or below the poverty line, while a small wealthy minority enjoyed luxury and opportunity. 

This led to the slow retreat of the state from some sectors of society, which gave rise to powerful non-state organisations like Hizbollah in Lebanon, various Islamists in Egypt, and assorted ethnic and sectarian groups in Iraq and Yemen. 

It was clear that Arab sovereignty and state legitimacy started to fragment 30 years ago.

7. Alongside this, political violence became a common means of expression for many groups in society. 

After the Cold War, by the early 1990s, political violence was (and remains) practised by the four major actors in our lands: national governments, opposition and sub-state organisations, foreign governments, and small terrorist and criminal groups. 

Along with our polarisation and fragmentation came our militarisation.

8. These trends culminated in the 2010-11 Arab uprisings, the most dramatic sign of mass disconnect in modern Arab history. 

Millions of citizens who had reached breaking point spontaneously rebelled against their ruling elites; yet, those elites today, with their foreign supporters, continue to ignore most of the underlying drivers of the uprisings: discontent and disparity.

9. The birth of Al Qaeda and Daesh are the latest sign of deep distress in our societies. Such violent salafist-takfiri movements did not suddenly emerge from a vacuum; they developed slowly over 25 years, and now find active support among hundreds of thousands of Arabs, and passive support or understanding among millions.

10. Arab governments mostly are unable or unwilling to fight these groups, so we rely on non-state militias and foreign military power to do the job — the same foreign militaries whose involvement in our societies in recent decades contributed to the chaos and massive citizen discontent that helped give birth to Al Qaeda and Daesh in the first place.

Our ruling establishments and their foreign backers consistently ignored these and other glaring signs of social disequilibrium and mass citizen discontent across the Arab region. 

 

Let us hope eyes and minds are more open and active today, as new warning signs continue to emerge and explode all around us.

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