The EU and the Arab Spring

Authors

  • Author

  • Bichara Khader

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12816/0000436

Keywords:

European Union, Arab Spring, Egypt, Tunisia

Abstract

The wave of democracy, peaceful or violent, has up till now dispelled many of the illusions prevalent in the West, in Europe especially, including so-called "Arab exceptionalism"—that is the notion that Arabs are not interested in democracy, are indifferent to whether it is present in their lives or not, and are basically not ready for it. A second dismantled illusion is that of the "good dictator" that is based on the claim that dictators loyal to the West are a better bet than the Islamist alternative. A third illusion concerns the idea that the Arab world is itself a construct and that the attractiveness of a supranational Arab identity has gone. The Arab revolutions, however, have proved the above theories wrong. It is not a coincidence that the wave for change broke out in a number of Arab states at the same time and in the same fashion with more or less the same slogans shouted out in the same language, and were able in a very short time to bring down four regimes. The Arab revolutions took academic circles by surprise and made some academics claim that understanding the future of Middle East politics required that academics carry out a serious reassessment of the restored importance of Pan-Arab identity.

Author Biography

  • Bichara Khader
    http://www.conciliumeuropa.eu/eudocs/cms 20 Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network, EU-Israeli: Promoting and Ensuring Respect for International Law (Brussels: 2012), p. 61. 21 Nathalie Tocci, “The Conflict and EU-Israeli Relations,” in Esra Bulut Aymat (ed.), European Involvement , p. 62. 22 Hélène Pfeil, “The EU and the Arab Spring,” Open Democracy , July 20, 2011, at: http://www.opendemocracy.net 23 Eduard Soler and Elina Viilup, “European Neighbourhood Policy Review: The Forgotten East,” 27/6/2011, at:http://www.easternpartnership. org/community/debate/european-neighbourhood-policy-review-forgotten- 24 Thomas Schumacher, “The EU and the Arab Spring: Between Spectatorship and Actorship,” Insight Turkey , no. 3 (October 2011), p. 110. 25 Richard Youngs, “Lo que no se debe hacer en Medio Oriente y el Norte de Africa,” Policy Brief (Madrid: Fride, March 2011), p. 6. 26 Stephen Calleya, “The EU’s Relations with the Mediterranean Neighborhood in a Regional Perspective,” in Stephen Calleya and Monika east Wohlfeld (eds.), Change and Opportunities in the Emerging Mediterranean (Malta: MEDAC, 2012), p. 397-413. 27 Massimo d’Alema, Europe’s World (Autumn 2011), p. 106

Published

2013-05-01

Issue

Section

Articles