http://www.todayszaman.com/columnistDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=235530

   
                  Columnists  14 February 2011, Monday    2  1  0  0   
           
           
                 Ă–MER TASPINAR
                  o.taspi...@todayszaman.com  
           
           
            The end of Arab exceptionalism
           
           
            Since the end of the Cold War, political scientists who focus on 
democratization spoke of the Arab exception when they referred to global 
dynamics ending authoritarian regimes. After all, of all the 22 members of the 
Arab League, only Lebanon qualified as a democracy, according to the standard 
definition of the term -- based on multiple alterations of political power 
through free and fair elections. 
              
            But Lebanon was always too fragile and chronically prone to chaos 
to challenge the gloomy state of affairs dominating the Arab world. It was 
hardly a success story that could lead the way for the rest of the 300 million 
Arabs. Experts knew that there was only one country that had the strategic 
resonance to become a regional pace setter for Arabs. If Egypt went democratic, 
everything could change rapidly in the region.

            It may still be too early to call Egypt a democracy. The military 
is now in charge. But such sobriety should not diminish the historical 
importance of what the world has just witnessed in the Middle East. The 
Egyptian autocracy came to an end, not thanks to a military intervention. It 
was nothing less than a genuine peoples' revolution that achieved this 
monumental outcome. I'm tempted to call this grass roots people's revolution a 
first in the Arab world, but a few weeks before Egypt, everything started in 
tiny Tunisia. Tunisians should be proud for giving 80 million Egyptians the 
hope that they could do the same. Today, the Arab world is finally converging 
with the democratic dynamics that swept the world since the collapse of the 
Berlin Wall almost 20 years ago. What we are witnessing in Cairo is not just 
history in its most exciting form. What happened last Friday also put an end to 
a century of Arab exceptionalism. We should cherish this moment and appreciate 
its historical significance before asking the unavoidable question that now 
permeates in the West: What's next?

            Not surprisingly, the global punditry is sharply divided between 
those who believe that there is a high risk of Islamization and those who see 
the birth pangs of genuine democracy. Whatever happens next in Egypt, the West 
should start by learning from its own mistakes. For too long Europe and the 
United States naively believed that the only alternative to Mubarak was the 
Muslim Brotherhood. They blindly supported the devil they knew because of their 
fear of the alternative. To those Westerners who complained about human rights 
abuses in Egypt, Mubarak could always say, "If you don't like me, just look 
around Cairo and tell me if you are ready for the Islamists to take over." 
This, of course, was exactly what Mubarak wanted them to believe.

            In reality, there was always a democratic, liberal, relatively 
secular and pro-Western alternative to radical Islam in Egypt, but Mubarak did 
his best to crush this third alternative with his repressive regime and police 
state. The autocratic leader of Egypt always complained about American or 
European human rights groups trying to promote basic freedoms in his country, 
mainly on the grounds that democracy cannot be exported from the outside. In 
the meantime, he excelled in undermining democracy from the inside.

            Now that the old regime is gone, it is time for a third alternative 
to emerge. Those who still fear political Islam's ascendance should put their 
concern in perspective. What gave the Muslim Brotherhood its broad appeal was 
the authoritarian nature of the political regime in Egypt. From now on life 
will be much more difficult for Islamists in Egypt. They will no longer be able 
to rely on their narrative of victimhood and their facile slogan "Islam is the 
solution." Now, they will have to compete with other political parties in a 
democratic environment. The mosque will no longer be the only place in the 
country where people are able to come together to discuss alternatives to the 
repressive regime. Political Islam will be only one movement among many 
contending to rule Egypt. With the end of Arab exceptionalism and the winds of 
democratization blowing in the Arab world, we may very well be witnessing the 
weakening of political Islam in the Middle East.
           
     


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