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Article 3.
The Daily Star
What the Arab revolts leave unanswered
Rami G. Khouri
June 25, 2011 -- My pleasure at speaking this week in Ottawa at a
gathering at the International Development Research Center of
Canada was compounded by the very thoughtful questions and
comments that members of the audience offered.
The audience raised new questions in my mind about what is likely or
possibly may occur in the Arab region, as the current citizen revolt
moves into its seventh month. The issues they raised revolved around
the reality that there is no certain outcome to the developments in
assorted Arab countries. While I and many other Arab citizens feel
that the wave of democratic transformations will continue to wash
across most of the region, sweeping away old and young autocrats
and opening the door to new democracies, this is by no means
certain.
Economic pressures, for one, could easily create such immense
stresses on families that many Arabs who celebrated the Tunisian and
Egyptian regime changes may welcome the return of strongmen who
restrict citizens’ powers but provide more jobs. I doubt this will
happen, but we can never rule it out. The demands of children’s
stomachs crying out for food that many families cannot afford to buy
are immensely powerful drivers of political behavior.
Another threat that some audience members raised was related to the
potential break-up of some countries into smaller units that could be
more easily controlled by regional or foreign powers. The first Arab
revolt against the Ottomans around a century ago occurred
simultaneously with the Sykes-Picot accord, by which France and
Great Britain carved up the Arab east into smaller units that were put
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| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_032180.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 1,736 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T17:12:06.473735 |