This article over at Family Security Matters draws a good parallel between what is happening in the Arab and islamic world right now with what we saw happening in southeast Asia back in the 1950's. Today, we see Arab governments in Tunisia and Egypt on the verge of collapse and spiraling into the control of radical islamists ...much like President Eisenhower saw the Communist takeover of SE Asia countries decades ago.
We can talk about Egypt and Tunisia and even look back at Iran but we also have to see that this has now happened in Lebanon and could very easily happen also in Jordan and Algeria. Oh wait, isn't this exactly what we saw in Sudan and Somalia? Hmmm...hold on a second...isn't this the same thing that is currently threatening Turkey? Are you seeing any sort of pattern here?
And I still have to wonder what is the policy of the Obama administration to meet this huge threat head on? If we actually saw the transition to radical islamic regimes in each of those countries I listed above, the end result would be a world disaster never seen before by Man. It would undoubtedly end up in war. So where is the United States of America right now in all of this? Where is the American brokering with more stable Arab nations to try and stabilize all of this? Where is the summit with European nations to form a common message? We have seen the threat posed against the world by one country undergoing this transformation - Iran...doesn't Barack Hussein Obama see the rammifications of half a dozen countries going through the same transformation?
Well, maybe he does. And maybe that's why he isn't doing a damn thing.
Playing Arabian Dominos
Today in the Arab world, we witness a theory in action first articulated almost 57 years earlier by a US president who raised its applicability to a different part of the world. In an April 1954 news conference, with France on the verge of devastating defeat by communist Viet Minh forces in Vietnam, President Dwight D. Eisenhower expressed concerns communism could spread throughout the region. He introduced the “Domino Theory” with the following comment: “You have broader considerations that might follow what you would call the ‘falling domino’ principle. You have a row of dominos set up, you knock over the first one, and what will happen to the last one is the certainty that it will go over very quickly. So you could have a beginning of a disintegration that would have the most profound influences.”
Twenty-one years later, the US war effort to preserve South Vietnam failed as communist North Vietnamese troops entered Saigon. The bad news was the US had lost that war. The good news—although not recognized until decades later—was by fighting it, the US had bought time for other countries in the region, empowering them with a means to deny communism a foothold. The Domino Theory had wings relevant to communism in 1954 but, by 1975, had lost them—the fall of Saigon marking communism’s last big hurrah.
It was the absence of a primary factor in Southeast Asia that, by 1975, made the Domino Theory outdated; it is that factor’s existence now in the Arab world giving the theory new life. We have watched a brush fire in Tunisia rage into a forest fire as President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali—who ruled for 23 years—was forced on January 14th to flee to Saudi Arabia. Within ten days, the fire had spread to Egypt, where President Hosni Mubarak—whose rule is nearly 30 years—is desperately trying to put it out. Two days later, the fire reached Yemen, where President Ali Abdullah Saleh—32 years in power—seeks to contain it as well.
Lee Kwan Yew of Singapore was the world’s longest serving prime minister before voluntarily stepping down from power in 1990. His 25 year tenure started as the US buildup in Vietnam was underway and continued through the fall of Saigon, thus providing him with tremendous insights into regional geopolitics. In 1970, Yew made the observation, history would prove America’s entry into Vietnam bought time for countries like Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand to strengthen their economies, thus denying the seed of communism the fertile soil needed to take root.
As we watch the fires of discontent rage in the Middle East today, we see a soil that is fertile—not for the seed of communism to take root but for one of change to do so.
This soil is fertile for the same reasons that first gave wings to the Domino Theory. Wherever economies are stagnant or unproductive lies dormant a volcano of discontent capable of erupting from nowhere. In Tunisia, it came when a young vegetable vendor immolated himself to protest low wages and job shortages after police confiscated his cart. As news of this spread via social networks, so too did the riots.
The soil for change in the Arab world is fertilized by stagnant economies suffering from a lack of innovation to make them more robust; from rampant corruption; and from governmental authority abuse. But the soil is also fertilized by a factor in the Arab world today that historically contributes to violence.
The 2005 riots on the Arab street triggered by a Danish newspaper’s cartoon depiction of Mohammad prompted a journalist to observe, “Islam… embraces vast numbers of very angry men…Why?”
Such anger by young Muslims is attributed to what Population Action International calls a “youth bulge.” More than half the Arab world is under twenty. Whenever a country has a high percentage of young men, the tendency is to turn to violence. It is their discontent with unemployment, corruption and governmental abuse that is a powder keg only in need of a triggering spark to ignite.
The danger of violent revolution as a vehicle for change is in not knowing who, ultimately, will end up steering it. The popular 1979 revolution in Iran to topple the Shah and push for human rights was hijacked by Islamist extremists who have proven to be far more brutal on the people than was the Shah. In Tunisia, the leader of the main Islamist organization, Ennahda, absent for 22 years, is returning. In Egypt, the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood is maneuvering to get into the driver’s seat. In wishing for revolution for change, one need be careful for what one wishes.
Unfortunately for the US, all three Arab countries in turmoil are allies in the war against Islamist extremists. Whether these revolutions open doors through which Islamists will now pass remains to be seen. But once again, the people of all three countries need to be careful for what they wish.
1 comment:
If these countries were against Al Qaeda ,I doubt U.S. and E.U. will intervene their methods in stopping the protest.
U.S. is known to support strong men and dictators. There motto is "the enemy of their enemy is always their friend.. Even if that friend committed grave human right abuses.
Anyway they are with the dictator’s side until the last minute and change side so fast when the person they supported get toppled.
Also the Al Queda attack Western democracies.
I don’t understand what they're up to.
Whether they don’t like democratic government or just envy how western countries maintain their democracy.
Or because they are use to their countries run by dictators. Most Arabs countries run by dictators. Maybe they can't show their anger in their own country because they surely die in the presence of a small suspicion.
And now that's its their noble time for them to show their good intention for their Arab brothers they're so quiet with these issue.Their objective as a group is highly questionable.
Is there a law from MUHAMAD not to declare Jihad to their own oppressive Muslim Governments and dictators.
If they wish to change western countries they should start changing their own corrupt governments.
I praise those young Arabs not even waging arms now on peaceful protest against their corrupt government facing armed police and soldier.
If the Islamic Faith is true? These are the kind of people we need to honor ,THESE ARE THE REAL NOBLE ISLAMS those in the street fighting democracy in BARE arms.
This action will enlightens terror group that government cant be easily toppled by a small group with-out clear intentions.
Countries will fall down with even 1 person protesting with REAL AND NOBLE CAUSE.
Leonzu
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