Protest,
Democracy, and Violence in the New Middle East
by Steven
Cook
A sweeping narrative account of the past five years, offering a timely argument of how and why the Arab uprisings were failed revolutions that have instead produced violence and renewed state repression
Half a decade after Arabs across the Middle East poured into the streets to demand change, hopes for democracy have disappeared in a maelstrom of violence and renewed state repression. Egypt remains an authoritarian state, Syria and Yemen are in the midst of devastating civil wars, Libya has descended into anarchy, and the self-declared Islamic State rules a large swath of territory. Even Turkey, which also experienced large-scale protests, has abandoned its earlier shift toward openness and democracy and now more closely resembles an autocracy.
How did things go so wrong so quickly across a wide range of regimes? In False Dawn, noted
After taking stock of how and why the uprisings failed to produce lasting change, Cook considers the role of the United States in the region. What Washington cannot do, Cook argues, is shape the politics of the Middle East going forward. While many in the policymaking community believe that the United States must "get the Middle East right," American influence is actually quite limited; the future of the region lies in the hands of the people who live there. Authoritative and powerfully argued, False Dawn promises to be a major work on one of the most important historical events of the past quarter century.
Steven Cook is is Hasib J. Sabbagh Senior Fellow for Middle Eastern Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations and author of The Struggle for Egypt and Ruling But Not Governing.
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