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Conversions, Coalitions and Transnational Memorization: Non State-Actors\' Strategies after the American Intervention in Iraq. The Cases of Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria
Abstract
In November 2003, the leader of the Iraq Survey Group, publicly recognized the absence of WMDs in Iraq before stepping down from his position. Before this date, the Middle East democratization imperative was, once again, sacrificed. The American administration needed the logistic cooperation of its Arab allies during its military operation in Iraq. One month after the fall of Baghdad, in May 2003, President Bush had praised the leaders of Saudi Arabia and Egypt since “with efforts of leaders like President Mubarak and Crown Prince Abdullah, the hope of peace is renewed”. However, Bush’s war motives were reorganized in his public discourses post-November 2003. Democracy, Human Rights and Freedom are once again the soul of his “mission” in the Middle East as was the case in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. Despite the unpopularity of the missionary, the mission was long awaited for in this region. Since 2001, American governmental and non-governmental civil society projects provoked some active reactions from non-religious Arab civil society actors. Political developments inside Iraq further encouraged these actors to seize the political impasse of their rulers. However, the organized mobilization of these actors testifies of more than just a response to the American call for freedom. The close observation of their mobilization from 2003, with a look back to 2001, reveals different appropriation strategies of the American project. While all actors relied on American pressure on Arab regimes, the internalization process of this external pressure followed independent domestic trajectories that sometimes contradicted American initial plans. In my paper, I expose the strategies of non state actors and follow them in three of the region’s key state players: Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria. In doing so, I will rely on political sociology theories as well as on empirical data personally collected from the three fields. The paper starts by presenting the immediate popular mobilization against the war with special emphasis on Arab transnational anti-war networks. I then expose what I call the second space of mobilization, that is the space of domestic civil societies. The paper ends with a brief evaluation of the reasons behind the inability of non-state actors to influence regime policies in the region.
Discipline
Political Science
Geographic Area
Egypt
Saudi Arabia
Syria
Sub Area
Arab Studies