The false promise of Arab liberals.
Alterman, Jon B.
IN THE MONTHS and years since September 11, the idea that the
United States should be more active in promoting democracy in the Arab
world has become commonplace. President Bush dedicated an entire speech
to the subject on November 6, 2003 after raising the theme for almost a
year. The president's embrace of the idea followed months of
pronouncements by senior U.S. government officials that addressed the
need for political change in the Arab world--for American interests as
well as those of the people in the region--and the need for the U.S.
government to play an active role promoting such change.
It is not to dispute the desirability of democratization and reform
in the Arab world to point out that the U.S. government is going about
it the wrong way. The U.S. strategy, as it has been executed, is based
on building out from a core of like-minded liberal reformers in the Arab
world. In many ways, it is an obvious way to start. As a group, such
reformers are intelligent, congenial, well-educated, and
English-speaking. Americans are comfortable with them, and they are
comfortable with Americans.
But if we are honest with ourselves, we need to recognize that, as
a group, such liberals are increasingly aging, increasingly isolated,
and diminishing in number. These liberals are losing a battle for the
hearts and minds of their countries, and populations are increasingly
driven toward younger and more disaffected personalities.
America's problems do not stop there, however. The United
States faces a paradox. Liberal reformers in much of the Arab world are
already seen as clients of foreign powers and as collaborators in a
Western effort to weaken and dominate the Arab world. Focusing attention
and resources on these reformers runs the risk of isolating them still
further, driving a deeper wedge between them and the societies we (and
they) seek to affect. In such an event, U.S. efforts are not only
ineffectual; they are counterproductive.
U.S. efforts to promote political openness and change in the Arab
world would be far more effective if they stopped trying to coax the
disparate sparks of comfortable liberal thought into a flame and instead
concentrated on two targets: regional governments and mass publics. The
U.S. also needs to be willing to work multilaterally to promote reform
in a way it has been unwilling to do up to now. If the stakes were
lower, the U.S. could afford the luxury of taking an easier and less
effective approach to political change in the Arab world. In
today's environment, it isn't nearly sufficient.
The Eastern European example
IN CURRENT TALK about efforts to reform political life in the
Middle East, the Eastern European example looms large. Not only did
Eastern European communism crumble after almost decades of Western
effort, but the end of the Soviet Union spelled the diminution, if not
the end, of what had been the primary strategic threat facing the United
States for a half-century.
At its core, the Eastern European experience is thought of this
way: Communist tyranny spread while Western nations kept alive a
flickering hope of freedom through overt radio broadcasting, covert
support for oppositionists and "prisoners of conscience," and
constant government-to-government pressure on human rights and political
freedom. A robust policy of public diplomacy and cultural exchanges
revealed the obvious: that communist lies about poverty in the West were
just that, and the communist world was falling farther and farther
behind a rapidly industrializing West.
On the governmental level, the Soviet quagmire in Afghanistan
combined with the Reagan administration's stepped-up military
spending to provoke an internal crisis. On the public level, a series of
initiatives to support non-governmental groups hastened the collapse of
corroded and crumbling governments in country after country.
Veteran Cold Warriors view their victory as the product of
determination and vision. Unwilling to accommodate authoritarianism,
they insisted on a policy of tireless confrontation with the Soviet
Union and its clients. Unwilling to accept the inevitability of
autocracy, they imagined a future for Eastern Europe that would be
capitalist and free. The names of many of the most dedicated of these
warriors are familiar today: Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Elliott
Abrams.
But what of the Middle East? After September 11, 2001, strategic
thinkers proclaimed millennial Islamist terrorism to be the preeminent
strategic threat facing the United States. But while the Cold War
represented a confrontation between governments, this new battle was one
brought on by the failure of governments. As President Bush explained in
London in November 2003, "In democratic and successful societies,
men and women do not swear their allegiance to malcontents and
murderers, they turn their hearts and labor to building better
lives." He continued, "By advancing freedom in the greater
Middle East, we help end a cycle of dictatorship and radicalism that
brings millions of people to misery and brings danger to our own
people." The tools imagined are much the same as those used in the
Cold War: pressure on governments and fanning the flames of freedom,
liberalism, and democracy throughout the Middle East.
While it is obvious to say that the Middle East is not Eastern
Europe, it is unsettling to consider just how different the two
environments are and how little these differences are acknowledged.
The role of elites
IT IS USEFUL to start, perhaps, by thinking about the roles of
elites vis-a-vis governments. Elites play many roles, but one of the
most important for the purposes of the present discussion is their role
of mediation. Elites often serve as a lubricant between foreign and
domestic systems, using commonalities in travel, education, and language
to bridge national divisions. The period of Western imperialism in the
Middle East spanned most of the first half of the twentieth century, and
in many countries it merely followed four centuries of Ottoman imperial
rule. Throughout, elites played an important collaborative function.
"Collaboration" here is not meant pejoratively, but rather in
the way suggested by that great historian of British imperialism, Ronald
Robinson, who writes of "two interconnecting sets of linkages ...
one consisting of arrangements between the agents of industrial society
and the indigenous elites drawn into cooperation with them; and the
other connecting these elites to the rigidities of local interests and
institutions." (1)
Early twentieth-century Levantine elites were a worldly bunch,
often multilingual and tolerant if often also a bit corrupt. Under their
guidance, parliaments arose throughout the region, often unifying on the
need to end European colonial rule. But as we know, in the Middle East
many of the stories of the elites ended badly. Tales of self-indulgence
and profligate spending on their part only sharpened dismay at the Arab
world's continued subjugation to European powers. Collaboration did
take on a negative coloration as the elites were seen as too feckless to
win true independence. The elites' sins, in the eyes of many, were
exemplified by the creation of the state of Israel, widely seen to be a
solution to a European problem on the back of a weak and divided Arab
nation.
When nationalist revolutions swept the Arab world in the 1950s,
those revolutions were a repudiation of that weakness. Elites were
tossed out as foreign fops, and new indigenous elites--Manfred
Halpern's much-vaunted "new middle class"--set about
defining a new and "truly authentic" form of Arabism.
In truth, traditional Arab elites have never recovered the high
ground. Widely perceived to be agents of foreign interests--however one
construes "foreign" in an Arab context--the old families have
clawed their way back to influence but have done so largely on the terms
of their tormentors. Liberalism remains suspect, part of a Western plot
to weaken and subjugate rather than strengthen and liberate. Elite
messengers and their messages remain besmirched. Compare this to Eastern
Europe, where it was the communists whose utilitarian socialist
universalism was a foreign import. While one cannot quite point to a
golden democratic past, there was not a sense in Eastern Europe that the
patrimony of liberal thinking was weakness and foreign domination.
In addition, the role that elites play in any society is changing,
driven by communications technology and a surge in popular culture. One
need not accept the idea of a single global village to appreciate the
familiarity--or at least perceived familiarity--many people feel with
societies half a world away from them. Whereas the old elites
transcended the local through their travel and knowledge of foreign
languages, newly emergent elites participate in a global culture or at
least regional cultures that may have little to do with dominant
European-derived paradigms. The collaborative role that traditional
elites have played is less mysterious, and the interests of foreign
powers are more obvious to local audiences.
The rise of an increasingly independent popular culture has an
important effect on our discussion. Elites have lost much of the
agenda-setting role they enjoyed in years past. What matters most in
attracting an audience now is having a message, not merely having an
outlet. Stolid state-run broadcasters have seen their audiences desert
them, and they have had to change what they do. Audiences now control
what they pay attention to, not information bureaucrats. The broadcaster
with his finger on the pulse of the public mood, not the one with the
ear of the information minister, plays the primary agenda-setting role
in modern Arab societies. Such communication is increasingly unmediated as television brings arguments and rebuttals straight into the living
rooms of its viewers.
In an environment overflowing with clashing ideas that easily cross
borders, it has long seemed that much of Arab discourse is centering
around an idea of defining what is "authentically Arab." For
years, part of such an identity involved support for the Palestinian
cause; but in recent years, the explosion of communication from the
grass roots has created competing notions of everything from music and
style to religious practice, all of which affect people's daily
lives. The Arab world is no more likely to arrive at a single conclusion
about what it is to be an Arab than Americans are to arrive at a
conclusion about what it is to be an American. Yet just as an effort to
define what it is to be a "true American" simultaneously
creates categories of people and behaviors that are considered by many
to be "un-American," a similar process in the Arab world
creates definitions of what is "un-Arab." Because of the
legacy suggested above, old liberal elite views of a just Arab society
often fall outside the bounds of Arabs' imagined common future.
Many heirs to the liberal elite tradition in the Arab world live
and work in Washington, DC. They often fill posts in the World Bank and
other international institutions, work for the U.S. government, or labor
in academia. They despair of the misdirection of the Arab world, and
they speak movingly of the need for change. We notice their accents when
they speak English, and we hail them as authentic voices for change in
the Middle East. But what Washington doesn't hear is that many of
these people have accents when they speak Arabic as well. Their speech
marks them as Arabs who have left, who have fundamentally compromised or
been compromised. One colleague used the evocative phrase "native
aliens" to describe them; their most valuable commodity is that
they simultaneously hold Western ideas and non-Western passports. (2)
In academic circles in the early 1990s, it was hard not to hear of
Nawal al-Saadawi, the prominent Egyptian feminist, novelist, and
physician who fled her own country under death threats. But I will never
forget the words of one of my Egyptian professors, a prominent female
professional in her own right. At the mere mention of Saadawi's
name, my professor practically spit in disgust saying (in Arabic),
"She doesn't belong to us. She belongs to you."
Three additional points are in order. The first is to make clear
that not all Arab liberals come from elite backgrounds. A good
number--although probably a minority still--come from modest
backgrounds. But the fact remains that support for liberal ideals as
they are promoted and articulated in the West remains almost entirely an
elite province, whether that of those born into elites or those who have
come to pass into such ranks. What we often refer to as
"like-minded individuals" form a distinctive group, and a
decidedly elitist one.
The second point is that as old elites are pushed aside, new elites
are emerging. Such elites come from religious backgrounds, the media,
the military, or some combination. What is important to note here is
that the new elites tend to come from sectors of their societies that
are often illiberal, while old liberal elites are increasingly
marginalized.
The last point has to do with the remarkable passivity of many Arab
liberals, who either throw up their hands or hope that the U.S. will
deliver their countries to them. Conservative groups conduct an active,
creative, and impressive array of activities and services that affect
peoples' daily lives: providing care to the sick, food to the
hungry, and spouses to the unmarried. They seek leadership positions in
professional organizations and civic groups. All too often, Arab
liberals' activity ends when they deliver copy to their editors.
A world apart
WHAT IS HAPPENING in the Arab world today smacks a bit of what the
sociologist William Julius Wilson described as happening in black
neighborhoods in Chicago in the 1960s and 1970s. Whereas segregation had
created all-black communities that had both rich and poor, desegregation created black communities that were uniformly poor and had far higher
incidences of violence and crime than had obtained heretofore. In the
Arab world, liberal elites cluster ever more closely around Western
embassies in capital cities and work in international institutions while
the bulk of the Arab world grows more angry, more desperate, and more
estranged from those liberal elites with whom Western governments deal
most often.
U.S. government interest in working for political change in the
Middle East is sincere, but there is a severe shortage of ideas as to
how that might be done. Surely it was not lost on anyone in the Arab
world that the president's speech on democratization in the Arab
world was long on vision and remarkably short on implementation. There
was a brief ruffle of excitement in May 2003 when the world went out
that the president was going to announce the culmination of a long
series of NSC meetings on better engaging with the Arab world at a
commencement address at the University of South Carolina. The result was
a modest proposal to work for a Middle East Free Trade Agreement in 10
years--one that, if achieved, would be completed three years after a
similar European initiative is scheduled to conclude. While there is a
desire to do something, exactly what often falls short.
Where we have seen some movement is out of the State Department,
where the year-old, $129 million Middle East Partnership Initiative
(MEPI) is beginning to take root. MEPI has identified economic
cooperation as an initial step toward respect for rule of law,
transparency, and an end to cronyism, but many of the partnership's
first efforts have been in the fields of conferences and training.
Urgency in getting the partnership up and running has meant grasping for
low-hanging fruit, and an overwhelming push for women's empowerment
has helped ensure that participation is limited mostly to capital city
elites. One of the newest programs is, I think, typical. The U.S.
Business Internship for Young Arab Women seeks 40 women between 22 and
30 with high proficiency in English to live in the U.S. for three to six
months. However desirable this may look from a U.S. standpoint, the
number of women with such English skills is quite limited--yet not
nearly as limited as the number whose families, both mothers and
fathers, would consider it appropriate for their daughters to live
independently overseas at such a tender point in their lives. While the
intent is noble, anyone with even a passing knowledge of the Middle East
must recognize what a small segment of Arab society would benefit from
such a program. And there is a chilling statistic: of 24 civil society
organizations listed as "partners" on the MEPI website, only
one wholly Arab organization is among them.
MEPI is, of course, an overlay on other existing aid programs in
the Middle East, run either by USAID, U.S. embassies, or both. In case
after case, such programs are directed toward the activities of what can
only seem to be a client class of Western-educated elites whose
governments permit such activities so long as they remain politically
inert. In Jordan, the embassy supports a panoply of semi-royal charities
like the Noor Al Hussein Foundation, the Royal Society for the
Preservation of Nature, and others. Indeed, Jordan's so-called
nongovernmental organizations are so tightly tied into the government
that they gave rise to the acronym "GONGO," meaning
"government-organized nongovernmental organization." In the
words of one friend in the White House, the typical aid recipient in the
Middle East is the son of an ambassador, with a German mother, who
happens to run an NGO.
A different approach
WHAT IS THE solution? Not more of the same. Doing so is likely to
exacerbate U.S. problems rather than solve them, driving deeper wedges
between those with whom the United States seeks to work and those whose
attitudes it seeks to influence. Liberal elites are not proving to be
successful opinion leaders in their own communities, and closer ties to
the West often serve to estrange them from, rather than embed them in,
such communities. Think about it as a plant: If all of the sun and all
of the nutrients come from one direction, it will not grow tall and
strong--it will be weak and bent, and no amount of food or sunlight will
make it right as long as it all comes from a single direction.
Greater tolerance, transparency, and openness in the Middle East
would indeed serve U.S. interests, and it would serve the interests of
the people of the Middle East as well. But to be effective, efforts must
be concentrated in three areas. The first is on the
government-to-government level. As countless U.S. government officials
have recognized, the U.S. government cannot go on doing what it has been
doing, relegating reform issues to the bottom of a long list of agenda
items for bilateral discussions. But in order to implement such a
program effectively, we need to be alert to two dangers. The first is
that it will fall into the trap of excusing repression as a necessary
part of the war on terrorism. Foreign governments know U.S. sensitivity
on this issue, and they will attempt to use it to excuse a range of
abuses. The U.S. government should not take the bait.
The second is that the U.S. government needs to push consistently
and aggressively for greater freedom of association in the Middle East,
even for those whose views it finds despicable. While governments'
sensitivity to U.S. intervention in their domestic politics is
understandable, the veto that some exercise over any nongovernmental
group taking money from overseas is unacceptable.
The second area of work is with broader publics. The U.S.
government needs to have far more modest goals with far broader segments
of the population in the Arab world. The depth and breadth of animus against the U.S. poisons the environment for any values the U.S.
espouses, and merely neutralizing some of this opposition would
represent a significant advance.
In order to pursue such a strategy, the U.S. would need to work
with an array of nontraditional partners. Some may say things the U.S.
government doesn't agree with on issues relating to women, Israel,
or any of a number of other issues. The U.S. government needs to abandon
the idea that cooperation with an individual or group means embracing
their every belief. It need not and should not. In addition, the U.S.
will have to move away from accounting rules that pose an intimidating,
if not impenetrable, barrier to many groups. Fiduciary responsibility is
necessary, but it must be a tool to promote accountability rather than a
barrier to action.
Another area to think about in this regard is stepping up
activities of American organizations that have nothing to do with the
U.S. embassy in a particular country. Corporations, foundations, NGOS,
and a range of other groups could carry out activities successfully
without the imprimatur--or encumbrances--of official U.S. government
endorsement. The U.S. government should vigorously pursue such
strategies on their own merits, as well as to get around some of the
problems mentioned above.
A third area of activity is coordinating more with other countries
and groups of countries, particularly the European Union. Europeans
share a quite similar analysis of trends in the Arab world yet are more
alarmed because they see large expatriate populations in their own
countries threatening domestic security. Despite the deep commonality of
goals between the Middle East Partnership Initiative and the Barcelona
Process, neither side understands the other much. There are at least two
advantages to cooperation with the EU. The first is that the EU
doesn't carry the stigma in the Middle East that U.S. policy does,
making it a less threatening actor on the domestic stages of the region.
Equally important, however, coordinated pressure and incentives stand a
far better change of working than competing ones, diminishing the
possibility that targeted countries would seek to play the United States
and the European Union off against each other and increasing the likely
efficacy of outside efforts.
What should one do with Arab liberals in all of this? None of this
is to argue that the U.S. government should abandon them or cast them
off. They continue to play valuable roles in our society and in their
countries of origin. But Americans need to recognize that such liberals
are insufficient catalysts for the change that all agree is necessary.
Stepped-up U.S. support of them runs the risk of drawing them even
further out from the societies we seek to influence, isolating them and
pulling such societies even further from the directions in which we want
them to go.
Most necessary in all of the U.S. efforts are two things. The first
is a healthy understanding of the limits of U.S. abilities. The second
is remembering how others' over-reliance on our role to promote
change diminishes the likelihood of change in two ways: by
delegitimizing it as inauthentic and by breeding comfort, complacency,
or passivity in those among whom action is most directly needed.
There is another challenge facing the U.S. as well, and that is
remembering that what is important is not how things sound and feel in
Washington, but how they sound and feel in the Middle East. In their
classic book Africa and the Victorians (St. Martin's Press, 1961),
Ronald Robinson and John Gallagher observed that, "In the end it
was the idea and the analysis of African situations in Whitehall, and
not the realities in Africa as such which moved Victorian statesmen to
act or not to act." With so much high-level interest in the Middle
East, the U.S. runs the risk of being guided by conventional wisdom
rather than true knowledge. In that event, the outcomes would almost
certainly be worse than many in Washington agree they need to be.
(1) Ronald Robinson, "Non-European Foundations of European
Imperialism," in Roger Owen and Bob Sutcliffe, eds., Studies in the
Theory of Imperialism (London: Longman, 1972), 121.
(2) I am grateful to Hakan Yavuz at the University of Utah for this
phrase, although I absolve him of any responsibility for the other ideas
expressed here.
Jon B. Alterman is director of the Middle East program at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies.