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The Arab Spring. IAFS 1000. Outline. Tunisian Trigger Misconception re Status Quo Ante Spread of Arab Spring Role of Social Media Implications for Syria Conclusions. Origins. 17 Dec 2010: Mohammed Bouazizi , Tunisian fruit-seller, self-immolated to protest abuse
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The Arab Spring IAFS 1000
Outline • Tunisian Trigger • Misconception re Status Quo Ante • Spread of Arab Spring • Role of Social Media • Implications for Syria • Conclusions
Origins • 17 Dec 2010: Mohammed Bouazizi, Tunisian fruit-seller, self-immolated to protest abuse • Protests spread throughout Tunisia • 14 Jan 2011: President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali forced into exile
Tunisian Themes • Focus on economic issues • Mass uprisings spontaneous • Young people central to protests • Uprising successful in driving Ben Ali from office
Misconceptions aboutPre-Rising Status Quo • Autocrats’ tight control of military > varied widely from state to state • Autocrats’ ability to use oil money to buy off disgruntled citizens > yes, except in Libya • Weakness of Pan-Arabism > leaderless revolts won broad Arab following
Spread of Unrest • Egypt (Jan-Feb 2011): Mubarak handed power to military • Muhammad Morsi (Muslim Bros) to power • Yemen (Feb 2011-ongoing): Saleh handed power over to crony VP al-Hadi • Bahrain (Feb 2011-ongoing): protests put down by Saudi forces
Spread of Unrest • Libya (Feb-Oct 2011): Gaddafi killed • Jul 2012: parliamentary elections • Syria (Mar 2011-ongoing): military response from government • Jul 2011: emergence of Free Syrian Army (FSA) ~ Nov 2011: civil war
Role of Social Media • Calls to protest on Facebook • Social media a primary news source • Egyptian efforts to limit internet backfired • WaelGhonim (Google): “We Are All Khalid Said”
Social Media Young Egyptians post videos of events in Tahrir Square, 7 Feb 2011) http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2011/12/25/sunday-review/25YIP_ARABSPRING-4.html
Social Media http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2011-07/how-pentagon-program-and-hacker-assisted-revolution
Social Media Images: Mandy Terc, “The Arab Spring and Social Media Research” 10 Mar 2012 PPT
Appropriating Well Known Images Images: Mandy Terc, “The Arab Spring and Social Media Research” 10 Mar 2012 PPT http://npgportraits.si.edu/
Social Media “We are all Khalid Said”
Social Media Images: Mandy Terc, “The Arab Spring and Social Media Research” 10 Mar 2012 PPT
Social Media http://www.buzzfeed.com/mjs538/translated-egyptian-protest-signs
Social Media Antigovernment protesters in Bahrain’s Pearl Square Feb. 20. http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2011/12/25/sunday-review/25YIP_ARABSPRING-8.html
Social Media Challenges • Anonymity • “Gay Girl in Damascus” hoax • Social media dominated by US private companies • Result of clash of business or national interests?
Arab Spring’s Impact on Syria • Military conflict • Entire country disintegrating • Assad’s Alawite regime supported by China, Russia, and especially Iran > hope to preserve “Shiite Crescent”? new-middle-east.blogspot.com/2012/03/making-sense-of-arab-spring-7-syria-and.html
Arab Spring’s Impact on Syria • Assad opposed by US, Saudi Arabia • Possible proxy war? • Syria at heart of multiple conflicts: • Arab-Israel • Saudi-Iran • US-Russia • Hezbolah-Israel
Conclusions • Complicated events, varying results • Arab Spring not over yet, esp. in Syria • US relations with new Islamist governments? • HaythamBahoora: watch for ongoing conflicts to be coopted by a range of interests for their own purposes