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Extracted Text (OCR)
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Hezbollah is a political party with a militia. That’s a big problem.
Israel’s ultra-Orthodox Shas party has an outsized influence over
Israel because of coalition politics. That’s a problem. The Muslim
Brotherhood will loom large in a free Egypt because it has an
organizational head start. That may be a problem. Turkey’s ruling
Justice and Development Party is a brilliant political machine with a
ruthless bent. That’s a problem, too.
These are problems of different sizes. But give me all these problems
so long as they present themselves within open (or opening) systems.
They are far preferable to the cowed conformity common to the
terrorized societies of the now doomed Arab Jurassic Park, where
despots do their worst.
It’s over: Enough of the nameless graves that whisper of horror,
enough of the 20th-century police states in the 21st-century. Yes, it’s
over for Ben Ali and for Mubarak. It’s over for Qaddafi, yes it is.
How far it’s over for the other Arab despots and autocrats, whether of
the oxymoronic “republics” or the royals, will depend on how far
they can get out in front of their citizens’ demand to be heard.
You see, you can’t do Hama any more. You can’t do the Iraqi
marshes. Perhaps you can kill dozens, but not tens of thousands.
These despots relied on the limitlessness of their terror. It had to be
as absolute as their contempt for the law.
But now people know. They communicate through the clampdowns.
They are Facebook-nimble. The despots gaze into their gilded mirrors
and, to their horror, see not themselves but the people who will be
silenced no longer. They wonder then if their own myriad agents can
be trusted. They are caught in their own web. They flail; they have
gone too far to turn back but cannot go forward.
Bashar al-Assad, the embattled Syrian president, was about to say
something Sunday, before deciding not to. He was trained in west
London as an eye doctor. He’d better stop thinking Hama — where
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