BRIAN WHITAKER was Middle East editor at the Guardian for seven years and is currently an editor for the newspapers Comment is Free website. He is the author of Unspeakable Love: Gay and Lesbian Life in the Middle East (Saqi Books, 2006). His website, www.al-bab.com, is devoted to Arab culture and politics.
Whitaker writes with insight and clarity about the many ills that afflict Arab society [This is a] lively, highly readable and illuminating survey of the countless things that are wrong with the Middle East today. Avi Shlaim, Guardian
Whitaker lays bare almost every aspect of Arab culture, society and politics Whats Really Wrong with the Middle East is principled and direct, not hesitating to criticize the Arab world at large for its failings A call to arms for Arab citizens International Affairs
This is a writer willing to rattle a few cages Detailed and well-documented Huffington Post
Offers a colourful, distinctive and well-informed take on subjects not often broached by western writers when considering the future of the region Northeastern Univeristy Political Review
An interesting and informative book, and a passionate attack on the corrosive effects of inequality. New Statesman
[Should] be required reading by Arab elites from the Atlantic to the Gulf It is one of the most ambitious attempts in recent years by a western writer to analyse what is really wrong with the Middle East. Patrick Seale, Al Hayat
A well-informed book that is sympathetic to its subject without being indulgent towards it. At its heart, [this book] attempts the difficult task of tackling socio-cultural causes of some of the Arab worlds problems while skirting the trap of cultural essentialism Middle East International
Brian Whitaker
Whats Really Wrong with the
Middle East
SAQI
EBOOK ISBN 978-0-86356-469-7
First published by Saqi Books in 2009
This updated ebook edition published in 2011
Copyright Brian Whitaker, 2009 and 2011
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Contents
Acknowledgments
My thanks, in alphabetical order, to those who found time to talk to me specifically for this book: Mahmoud Alhourani, Hossam Bahgat, Kholoud Bidak, Aida Saif al-Dawla, Khaled Diab, Gamal Eid, Kareem Elbayar, Magda Abu Fadil, Hossam el-Hamalawy, Nadim Houry, Ghada Kabesh, Amina Khairy, Jamal Khatib, Ghassan Makarem, Karim Makdisi, Nesrine Malik, Jehad al-Omari, Salam Pax, Basem Sakijha, Abdellah Taia and Nasr Abu Zayd.
For reading early drafts and making helpful comments, I am particulary grateful to Khaled Diab, Nesrine Malik, Ann Elizabeth Mayer, David Shariatmadari and Martin Woollacott plus, of course, my patient editor at Saqi Books, Anna Wilson.
***
Since the main object of this book is to stimulate debate, readers can find further discussion on the relevant section of my website, www.al-bab.com/whatsreallywrong. The footnotes are also available there in an online version which provides easy access to web pages mentioned in the text.
Introduction
AS THE YEAR 2011 arrived, Tunisia was in the midst of a popular uprising. What had begun with a small confrontation between the authorities and an unlicensed fruit seller in a provincial city culminated four weeks later with President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali fleeing the country after twenty-three years of increasingly authoritarian rule.
The overthrow of Ben Ali sent shock waves throughout the Middle East, stirring speculation about which of the regions long-entrenched regimes would be next. An answer came very swiftly as the streets of Egypt also exploded against the twenty-nine-year presidency of Hosni Mubarak. Tunisia inspired other protests too in Algeria, Jordan, Libya and Yemen as Arab leaders anxiously reconsidered their survival prospects.
The events in Tunisia came as a surprise especially the speed of Ben Alis fall but they were not entirely unforeseen. The warning signs had been around for a long time: the resentment of Arab youth over jobs and stifled aspirations, and the anger over corruption and favouritism, over repression and government attempts to control the minutiae of peoples lives. Above all, there was a widening gulf between governments and those governed and a sense that nothing would change unless people took matters into their own hands. Sooner or later, the long pent-up frustrations were going to reach boiling point.
These were among the problems that I sought to highlight when Whats Really Wrong with the Middle East was first published in 2009. They are as relevant today as they were then if not more so and they are not going to be resolved simply by changing a few old faces at the top (though that may help).
To bring real freedom to the Arab countries, political change has to be accompanied by social change, too; they go hand in hand. That was one of the mistakes of former president George W. Bush in his calls for democracy and regime change in the Middle East calls that were directed mainly against the regimes deemed hostile towards the United States. But we have only to look at the mess in Iraq following Saddam Husseins overthrow to see the folly of pinning too many hopes on toppling tyrants: change in the Middle East is a lot more complicated than that.
Governments are products of the societies they govern, and in Arab countries, it is often society as much as the government itself that stands in the way of progress. In Kuwait, for instance, it was not the hereditary Emir who resisted granting votes to women but reactionary elements in the elected parliament and there are plenty of similar examples.
Social discrimination is the greatest of all ailments facing Arab societies today, Hussein Shobokshi, a board member of the Mecca Chamber of Commerce, observed during a TV debate. It creates government in its own image but it also poisons the mentality for reform and definitely for democracy While governments have been introducing little windows of opportunity to reform, there has been great popular resistance against equality based on gender and race from the people.
Khaled Diab, an Egyptian-born journalist, summed up the problem more pithily when he told me: Egypt has a million Mubaraks. In other words, the Mubarak way of doing things is not confined to the countrys president; it is found throughout Egyptian society, in business and even within families.
In order to understand what is really wrong with the Middle East we have to look beyond the regimes to society as a whole and this instantly shifts our perspective. The problem is no longer a simplistic one of good versus evil, or tyrants versus the rest. Instead, we see people who are not only oppressed and denied rights by their rulers but who also, to varying degrees, are participants in a system of oppression and denial of rights. Thus, the oppressed often become oppressors themselves, victims become victimisers too, and acknowledging that fact is the first step towards a solution.