By
Shahid Javed Burki
December
13, 2020
The term
‘globalisation’ gained currency in the 1980s. It described the flow of ideas,
finance, trade — even people — across national frontiers without too many
restrictions. Among the ideas that went from developed to developing countries
was the notion that the system of governance that had worked in rich nations
for centuries was the right choice the developing world should also be making
for itself. The basic idea that became the preferred option in Europe and the
United States was that people should have a voice in the way they were
governed. Also, there were human rights that governments should define and
protect. However, some of these beliefs have been challenged by leadership in
many parts of the developing world. This is because of the way Donald Trump
governed for four years after moving into the White House in January 2017.
When this
article appears in The Express Tribune on December 14, 2020, the change in
America’s leadership will still be 37 days away. President Trump has refused to
accept the result of the elections. He and those close to him refuse to call
Joe Biden the President-elect. On December 8, the Supreme Court refused to consider
the case filed by Trump’s lawyers challenging the result of the poll in the
state of Pennsylvania. The fact that all 50 states that make up the American
federation formally certified in early December that Biden was the winner in
the electoral contest didn’t prevent Trump and his followers from maintaining
that the election of November 3 was not fair. According to Trump and his
associates, the election was marked by fraud in many states, in particular in
those in which Biden had won convincingly. Trump’s post-election behaviour is a
test of the strength of the American democracy. There are many in the US who
worry about the direction of political change in the country.
Among those
who are concerned about the country’s future is Richard Hanania, a research
fellow at the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace at Columbia University. He
wrote an article that appeared in The Washington Post two days before the
Americans went to the polls not only to elect their president but also
thousands of officials at the state and county levels. Hanania quoted a number
of other scholars who also worry about the fragility of the American political
system. For instance, David Kilkullen, an Australian scholar who has worked as
adviser to the US Army, describes America close to the point of “incipient
insurgency”. Peter Turchin, a Russian-American scholar who specialises in
mathematical modeling and statistical analysis of the dynamics of societies,
was pessimistic about America’s future. According to him the American society
is “getting awfully close to the point where a civil war or revolution becomes
probable”. Thomas Friedman, a New York Times columnist, says that the situation
in the US reminds him of the time he spent in Lebanon where in the mid-1970s,
street clashes between sectarian militias erupted into multifaceted strife that
lasted a decade and a half.
Reviewing
these assessments, Hanania reached a depressing conclusion about the state of
American political affairs. “The logic underlying most of these predictions is
consistent and straightforward. Americans are more divided on social and
political issues than in previous decades, and they hate each other more than
in previous decades, and they hate each other more.” he wrote. “Violence is
boiling over: Armed right-wing militants travelled to the sites of left-wing
protests this summer, supposedly to enforce order, and deadly clashes occurred.
If tensions continue to grow, these isolated incidents could become more common
and the United States might follow the path of other nations that have
experienced full-blown armed conflict in recent decades.”
The rapid
deterioration in the socio-political affairs in the US was encouraged by
President Trump who had been put into office by disaffected groups. They had
deep grievances about the way the elite in the country had treated them. What
happens in this country affects the world outside. Instability in America
begets instability in the world. At the time of this writing, Pakistan’s still
evolving political system was under stress and was being challenged by some of
the groups that lost in the 2018 elections. Acceptance of election results is
one of the important indications of the working of a successful representative
system. Imran Khan and his party refused to accept the results of the 2013
elections. When he and his party won five years later in 2018, the opposition
took the same stance. They called him “selected” rather than elected Prime
Minister, suggesting that his electoral victory was the result of meddling by
the military establishment.
Islamabad
is one of the few developing country capitals that resisted the temptation to
opt for authoritarianism encouraged by the government headed by Trump. After
four years of coddling dictators around the world, the US soon to be under president
Biden is likely to encourage a participatory system of governance. The
President-elect has promised to host a gathering of the world’s democracies to
demonstrate his commitment to democratic values both abroad and at home. To
convince those who will be watching his time in office, he might make an
example of Egypt, a Muslim nation that has drifted towards authoritarian rule
more confining than the one practiced by Hosni Mubarak. It was the highly
constrained system of governance that did not permit popular participation
under Mubarak that led to what came to be called the “Arab Spring of 2011.” The
youth rose and challenged the system Mubarak had founded. Their rebellion
against the system led to the fall of the military dictator in Cairo.
After a brief
interlude that lasted about a year, the military in Egypt came back, this time
under President/General Abdel Fattah El Sisi who attacked the few remaining
structures of independent civil society in the country. The military dictator
was secure in the knowledge that he could act with impunity but it may not be
right in the way it is reading the situation. Some experts who study the Muslim
world have suggested that Biden, once in office, should make Egypt a test case
of his resolve to promote democracy in the world. “It’s basically unheard-of
for Washington to undertake a major reassessment of a long time partnership
like the one with Egypt,” wrote Michael Wahid Hanna who is senior fellow at the
Century Foundation. Moving against the current trends in Egypt “would send a
powerful signal not just in the Middle East but would be a necessary first step
in resetting the terms of America’s relationship in a region that still
represents a disproportionate focus of American policy.” Interpreting broadly
the geographic meaning of the Middle East would include Pakistan, a country
critical for American interests in the area. Washington should encourage the
development of representative democracy in what is the largest Muslim country
in the region. Pakistan could serve as a model for the restive nations in the
larger Middle East.
Original
Headline: A push for democracy in the Muslim world
Source: The Express Tribune
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-west/europe-united-states-people-muslim/d/123746
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