The lesson from the Arab awakening is an uplifting one. Hard-headed students of realpolitik like to think that only they see the world as it truly is, and that those who pursue human rights and democracy have their heads in the clouds. In their world, the Middle East was not ready for democracy, Arabs not interested in human rights, and the strongmen the only bulwark between the region and Islamic revolution. Yet after the wave of secular uprisings, it is the cynics who seem out of touch, and the idealists have turned out to be the realists.
Just occasionally, the power of ordinary people can overturn the certainties of the experts. That is why countries dealing with dictators should never confuse engagement with endorsement and why the West should press for human rights and democracy—even when it is inconvenient, as it is with China and Russia. Just ask those who have summoned up the courage to risk death for a cause on the streets of Tripoli.
My methods are new and are causing surprise: To make the blind see I throw dust in their eyes --The Song of the Cheerful (but slightly Sarcastic) Jesus by Oliver Joseph St John Gogarty
Friday, February 25, 2011
Issandr El Amrani: The Economist on Libya
El Amrani's The Arabist channeling The Economist on Libya,
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