Tag: Bahrain

Implosions, more and less advanced

While the rest of the world catches up with the question of “how does Libya end,” which I dealt with yesterday, let’s take a look ahead.  Today’s big news was not the explosions in Libya, but rather the implosion in Yemen, where President Saleh is now facing an opposition strengthened by defections from his army, government, parliament and diplomatic corps.  He is appealing for “mediation” by the Saudis, which is being interpreted in some circles as a plea for Saudi guarantees if he agrees to step down in six months.  He had already agreed to step down at the end of his present term in 2013.

It very much looks as if Washington may lose its spear carrier in the fight against Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).  This is a problem, since no one–including Saleh–seems to think AQAP is a serious threat to Yemen, which it uses as haven and launching pad.  No one in his right mind would want to try to govern it.

Washington will have to convince whoever takes over–the betting seems to be on General Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, but these things are inherently uncertain–that AQAP merits his attention.   This will be difficult:  Yemen is a place with a lot of problems.  Water and oil are running out, there are more or less perennial rebellions both north and south, the population is high half the day on qat, and the authority of the government barely extends to the outskirts of Sanaa, the capital.

In Syria, the process of popular protest is far less advanced, but firing on demonstrators by the security forces has reaped an increase in demonstrations in the south.  No telling whether the Syrians have the stomach to go all the way to revolution, and Bashar al Assad is a clever autocrat.  But he too is lacking resources and tied to Iran in ways that make it difficult for him to do what most Syrians want:  an opening to the West and foreign investment, which necessarily entails reducing ties to Iran and Hizbollah and settling up somehow with Israel.  Syria also has ethnic and sectarian issues:  Kurdish citizens treated as second class and a Sunni majority governed by an Alawhite (more or less Shia) but secular majority.

Bahrain, now under Gulf Cooperation Council protection, seems to be doing its best to turn its rebellion into sectarian strife, which is not how it began.  It is hard to believe that is in the interests of the (Sunni) Khalifa monarchy, which governs a less than prosperous Shia majority.  But when Saudi Arabia decides to embrace you, I guess you have to hug back.

It has already been an extraordinary few weeks in North Africa.  While the monarchies in Jordan, Morocco and Saudi Arabia seem to be learning how to keep the lid on, the pot is boiling over in Yemen and may still do so in Syria and Bahrain.  It would be nice if the heat rose under the Iranian pot, but that does not appear to be happening, no matter how often the Secretary of State and the President wish it so.

 

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Bad gets worse

Think things couldn’t get worse?  Think again:

  • One or more of Japan’s nuclear plants now looks sure to melt down, with at least one breaching the reactor containment vessel and spewing radioactive material.  How much attention do we think Arab revolutions will get after that happens?
  • Gaddafi’s forces are at the outskirts of Benghazi.  We can hope that the rebels will succeed in cutting his now long supply lines, but I wouldn’t bet on it.
  • The crackdown has gotten brutal in Bahrain, with the Saudi and UAE forces seeming to remain in the background guarding the royals while the King’s forces enforce martial law with tanks and machine guns.
  • Yemen is at least as bad, with firing on demonstrators and no sign of serious negotiations yet.

Yes, they are still discussing a no fly zone at the Security Council, thus preventing anything else meaningful from getting through that august body.

Also notable:  the European Union, freshly equipped with reforms that were supposed to unify its foreign policy, has rarely sounded less coherent or less effective:  UK and France want a no fly zone, Germany doesn’t and Italy does and doesn’t.

Nor are the Americans sounding much more coherent and effective.  Still in listening mode, which means not ready to do anything.

Don’t forget:  Egypt votes on constitutional amendments Saturday.  If they approve, a good deal of the old regime can hope to survive; if they don’t, things will again be up in the air.  I might vote for up in the air, but I don’t live in Cairo.

I know you all prefer it when I post those funny videos, but this morning is hard to take lightly.  I’ll look for some this afternoon.

PS:  I should have mentioned it earlier but forgot:  one of the consequences of Saudi/UAE intervention in Bahrain is a sharp rise in sectarian tensions, reflected in statements by Iraq’s Prime Minister Maliki and Grand Ayatollah Sistani but also felt in Iran.  That does not bode well.

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Doom and gloom

A world that was looking hopeful two weeks ago has taken a sharp turn southwards:

  • The earthquake in Japan has not only caused upwards of 10,000 deaths and untold destruction, it has also put in doubt nuclear programs worldwide, not to mention what the prospect of further radiation leaks will do to stock markets today and the economic recovery in the future.
  • Counter revolution is on the march in Libya, Bahrain and Yemen–in all three countries repression is winning the day, with the help of hesitation in Europe and the U.S. and Saudi and UAE security forces in Manama.
  • Egypt votes in a constitutional referendum Saturday to either approve amendments prepared behind closed doors that would leave its regime largely intact, or disapprove, sending the country into uncertainty once again.
  • Violence in Sudan is rising, with local south/south conflicts and tension in Abyei overshadowed for the moment by the Sudan Peoples’ Liberation Movement claim that the north is planning a coup intended to prevent independence in July.
  • Iran is succeeding in repressing its Green Movement opposition and in neutering anyone else who might dare to challenge President Ahmedinejad.
  • Kurdish and Arab leaders in Iraq are competing to see who can claim Kirkuk is their Jerusalem most convincingly, while their respective military forces face off in the contested town.

It is telling that today’s testimony in Congress by General Petraeus on the situation in Afghanistan, which is expected to be relatively upbeat, is the only good news, though experienced wags will see it as just the latest in a long string of turning points in a war that has never turned.

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Counter revolution advances, not only in Libya

With the U.S. and Europe hesitating to take action against Gaddafi, the counter-revolution is in full swing, not only in Libya.  The Saudis have prevented any sizable demonstrations and have sent military forces into Bahrain to reinforce its effort to repress the demonstrations, which yesterday focused on Manama’s financial district.  In Yemen, seven were killed over the weekend and many more injured as the government used deadly force against university demonstrators.  Demonstrators and local doctors are also claiming that some sort of illegal poison gas was used:

 

In Libya, Gaddafi’s forces have taken Brega and are headed east towards Benghazi. The once hopeful rebellion appears headed for defeat, if not oblivion. The past several days of inaction have had serious consequences, as Tripoli has used its unchallenged air force and superior fire power to force the rebels out of several key positions. Libyan forces are now approaching Adjabiya. Their long supply lines now represent the last, best hope of the rebellion to prevent the fall of Benghazi.

Will these reversals encourage conservative forces in Tunisia and Egypt to hold on to what positions they can, or even strike back to counter changes already in progress? Are the reversals temporary setbacks, or are we witnessing the end of the (early) Arab spring? Will the protesters find ways of reviving their efforts? Will the regimes turn their backs on protester aspirations or look for ways to offer more meaningful reforms? Lots of questions, few answers.

PS:  Little did I know when I wrote this that Jackson Diehl had already asked similar questions, with a somewhat more pessimistic spin, in this morning’s Washington Post.

 

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What will Friday prayers bring?

Tomorrow is Friday again, and across the “greater” Middle East there will be prayers and restlessness.  The big questions:

  • Saudi Arabia:  intellectuals have been signing petitions in favor of constitutional monarchy, but the experts are still betting that people will not go the street–it is illegal to demonstrate, and socially disapproved.  We’ll see.
  • Libya:  most of the country is liberated already, but will crowds risk turning out in Tripoli?
  • Egypt:  Mubarak’s buddy prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, has stepped down.  El Baradei at least is calling this a turning point.  Will it open the way for real regime change that the military has been resisting?
  • Tunisia:  Ben Ali’s buddy prime minister has already stepped down, opening the way for real change, but the country is burdened with refugees from Libya.  The Brits are at least trying to relieve that burden.
  • Yemen:  President Saleh has said he’ll step down in 2013.  The political party opposition, buoyed by tribal support, is proposing he do it by the end of this year.  Will that be enough to split his opponents and save his tuchas?
  • Bahrain:  formal opposition parties have presented reform demands in an opening bid for negotiations with the monarchy.  Will that split them from the demonstrators?
  • Iraq:  The violent crackdown last weekend amplified what otherwise might have been relatively quiet demonstrations against corruption and for better services.  Has the government learned its lesson?
  • Jordan and Syria:  little noise, as their king who allows demonstrations and president who doesn’t try to feed a reform half loaf to relatively weak oppositions.  Will they succeed?
  • Iran:  crackdown in full swing with the arrest of Green Movement stars Mir Hossein Mousavi, Mehdi Karroubi and their wives.  Ahmedinejad is increasingly dominant and effective against both clerical and lay opponents, inside and outside the regime.  Can he keep it up?

I can’t remember a time I looked forward so much to Friday, with anticipation but also with trepidation.  The world could be looking very different by Sunday.

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So much to keep track of!

So I thought a quick update on the revolutions of 2011 might be in order:

  • Libya:  Gaddafi holding on in Tripoli, where his forces indulge in random killings, but most of the rest of the country seems to be in rebel hands.  Tribes and a hodge-podge of local authorities seem to be the mainstay of law and order, insofar as it exists.  The army is split.  Lots of high level defections.  The Americans have finally imposed unilateral sanctions freezing assets and banning travel.  The UN Security Council is still debating its draft, which may have to lose the referral to the International Criminal Court in order to get past India, China and Russia (none are states parties to the ICC).
  • Yemen:  Protests have grown dramatically with adherence by some important tribes, President Saleh took the Gaddafi vow to fight to the last drop of blood, and the opposition seems intent on continuing despite Saleh’s vows to leave office in 2013 and not install his son.
  • Egypt:  Big demonstration yesterday to keep pressure on the military, force out the prime minister, who is Mubarak’s buddy, and end the state of emergency, which the military has promised to do once order is restored.
  • Bahrain:  Another big demo, but the monarchy clearly committed for the moment to avoiding violence.  An important Bahraini Shiite leader returned to the country from exile and was allowed to speak.
  • Tunisia:  Protesters Friday pressed for faster change.  Pro-Ben Ali youth rioted Saturday.  Violence in both instances.  The good guys should really wear white hats and maintain non-violent discipline, as that will help to distinguish them from the bad guys.
  • Iraq:  At least eight killed around the country in the first big demonstrations, mainly by undisciplined security forces.  The Speaker of Parliament says he supports the demonstrators’ right to protest, Prime Minister Maliki tried to fend off both protests and criticism, and Ayatollah Sistani weighed in on the side of the improved public services and an end to corruption.  Sistani is the one really worth listening to, but he hasn’t got a lot of influence in Kurdistan, where violent demonstrations continue.
  • Jordan:  A big, peaceful demonstration Friday, but big is much smaller (4000) than in other places.  The call is still far more for reform than for regime change.
  • Iran:  The regime still has things  “under control,” mistreating its own people even as it praises the rebellions in Arab countries.  The video at that link, by the way, demonstrates a lack of discipline on both sides of the confrontation, but the text is useful for understanding why demonstrations in Iran have been less than fully successful.
  • Overall: lots of ups and downs this week, but it is clear that few real dictators will survive much longer.  The question of what will replace them is still an open one, but it is looking more and more as if re-imposing autocracies will be nigh on impossible.  The people simply won’t stand for it.  More power to them!

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