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The Mirage of Arab Democracy
Last updated: April 2010
Arab democracy is fantasy. Democratic ideology cannot defeat Islamic theology
Notwithstanding that Arab rule is tribal, corrupt, and mired in
favoritism and nepotism it is significant that Arab rulers typically
stay in office until death, be it natural or resulting from a military
coup. No Arab king or president, however, spares an opportunity, to
display the loyalty of his subjects. While the presidents conduct
stage-managed referendums in which they consistently manage to achieve
near 100% approvals, the monarchs draw mile-long queues of
happy-looking men on every national and religious occasion to
demonstrate their people’s allegiance.
Regardless of the contrived appearance of these demonstrations, a
degree of real support for Arab rulers does exist. It is impossible to
falsify every ballot and force every subject to hail the king. When the
presidents of Egypt and Yemen allowed contested presidential elections
on September 7, 2005 and September 20, 2006; respectively, the former
gained a fifth term with 88.6% of the votes cast, hardly different from
his four previous uncontested referendums, and the latter won 77.2%
majority, after 28 years of rule.
Representative democracy is not a natural choice for most Arabs.
Obedience to hierarchical Islamic authority is. Obedience is at the
heart of ulama’s teaching. In the Arab home, school, mosque, work
place, and the nation at large a culture of blind obedience to
autocracy prevails. Poverty, illiteracy, and ill health, together with
a fatalistic belief in predestination make the masses politically
quietist, save for small minorities of Jihadists on the one hand and
Western influenced professional activists on the other. It should be
noted that the Shiite partisans of Ali have been rebellious against the
religious and temporal order of Sunni rulers since the early Islamic
state. Obedience here, therefore, refers to the obedience of the
adherents of a specific sect to the rulers of their own sect.
Curiously, Muslim, but non-Arab countries such as Bangladesh,
Indonesia, Pakistan, and Turkey, together representing almost two
thirds of world Muslims, conduct democratic elections and allow female
prime ministers and presidents. Obviously, these non-Arab Muslims have
a more relaxed attitude towards Islamic dogma than Arabs do. Why is the
political persona of the Arab masses quietist?
First, the masses fear the security forces.
Secondly, the masses worry that change could result in a worse ruler.
Thirdly, the influence of Islam is strong on the Arab peoples. The
Quran describes them as the “best nation evolved to mankind” (3:110).
The Prophet, His Companions, the Quran, and the Sanctuaries in Mecca,
Medina, and Jerusalem are all Arabic. Arabs feel they are the guardians
of an Arabic religion. Additionally, political frustrations during the
past half-century over U.S. policies in the Middle East and Israeli
humiliation have been drawing Arabs closer to Islam.
Obedience to authority is the hallmark of Islam’s political theory.
In the harsh environment of the Arabian Desert, disobedience and strife
could waste scarce water and staples. Islam is a way of life guided by
the Quran and the Prophet’s actions and words in the Hadith. To be a
good Muslim one must abide strictly by the rules of the Quran and the
Hadith. The Prophet Muhammad, a product of desert living, enshrined
obedience to authority into the Islamic Creed. In 4:59, the Quran
orders: “Obey God and obey God’s messenger and obey those of authority
among you.” The Prophet has also reportedly said: “Hear and obey the
emir, even if your back is whipped and your property is taken; hear and
obey.”
Belief in predestination makes tyrannical rulers seem as if they were ordained by God’s will.
Many eminent Islamic jurists opine that in the name of societal
peace, years of unjust ruler are better that a day of societal strife.
Today, Arab rulers exploit Islam to prolong their dictatorships.
Egypt’s president and the Saudi king declared on February 24, 2004:
“The Western model of democracy does not necessarily fit a region
largely driven by Islamic teaching.” Pandering ulama to Arab kings and
presidents preach that obedience to Muslim authority is a form of
piety. Unless the historicity of the Quran and the Hadith are allowed
to be examined, freely, rationally, and philosophically and without
the fear of persecution under blasphemy laws and ulama intimidation
genuine Arab democratic reforms will not evolve for generations, if
ever.
Fourthly, in the Arab home, poverty drives the father to transform
his children into a ‘security blanket’ for old age. Fear of destitution
makes the father into what Nobel Laureate Najib Mahfouz calls the
“central agent of repression,” constantly threatening his children with
the wrath of God if they disobey him. At school, corporal punishment
terrorizes students into blind obedience in classrooms. The manager at
work, a product of the Arab milieu, demands obsequiousness from
subordinates. In the thin Arab labor markets, the employee finds that
blind obedience averts financial catastrophe.
Islamist democracy is no Western democracy
Lately, leaders of the Arab World’s best known Islamist movement,
the Muslim Brothers, have been supporting free parliamentary elections.
Is Islamist parliamentary democracy consistent with Western
democracy? The answer is no. The parliament in an Islamist democracy is
not the final authority in lawmaking. Sovereignty in Islamist democracy
is to God whereas sovereignty under Western democracy is to the people.
Islamist parliamentary democracy superimposes an Islamist
constitutional court; composed of unelected clerics, on top of an
elected parliament to ensure that man’s laws comply with God’s laws, a
structure similar to Iran’s Council of Guardians.
Is the Islamist constitutional court similar to Western
constitutional courts? Again, the answer is no. While the former
adjudicates according to the ulama’s interpretation of Islamic law, the
latter adjudicates according to parliamentary laws.
The failure of Washington’s Arab democratization project
Washington has been supporting Arab dictators in order to keep the
Islamists at bay. The advances that the Islamists made in every one of
the Arab countries that held elections in 2005 and early 2006 at the
instigation of the Bush administration indicate that the foray into
Arab elections is over.
In the occupied Palestinian territories, the Islamist Hamas won 74
of the 132 seats. Iraq’s January 30, 2005 elections were expedited, if
not forced, by the leader of the country’s Shiite majority, Grand
Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani. His candidates won 140 of the 275
parliamentary seats: In the December 15, 2005 elections, they won 128
seats. In Saudi Arabia, the 2005 municipal council elections were
theatrics. Women were excluded altogether. One-half of the councilors
were government appointed and the councils have no power, merely a
local advisory role. In Egypt, democratic reforms meant many
restrictions on the opposition and a fifth term for the incumbent.
Finally, the cause of democracy was certainly not enhanced when Colonel
Qaddafi, the Libyan dictator, capitulated to U.S. pressure without an
ounce of change in his tyrannical rule.
The U.S. “War on Terrorism” has also delayed Arab democratic
reforms. Since Arab rulers’ cooperation is needed to eliminate the
local Jihadists, Washington cannot seriously pressure its dictator
friends to become democrats, because of the fear that democracy could
usher more Islamists into city halls. Furthermore, the enormity of the
damage inflicted upon Iraq since 2003 by the American occupation in the
name of democracy has repelled the Arab masses from democratic reforms.
Arab kings and presidents are delighted!
What is the solution?
Since democratic governance is unlikely to grow in Arab soil, an
alternative would be benevolent dictatorship. Except for its
non-representative nature, benevolent dictatorship could deliver
participatory rule, ensure justice for all, fight corruption, nepotism,
sectarianism and tribalism. Such traits would also defuse the anger
that breeds and inflames the Jihadists.
How likely is it that benevolent dictatorships might replace Arab
rulers’ tyranny? The answer is that since benevolent dictatorship does
not evolve institutionally there is no predictable pattern to discern
here. There might be a coup d’état by a benevolent dictator tomorrow;
or, there might not be one, ever.
Arab democracy is sheer fantasy.
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