Reforms the Arab monarchies cannot avoid25 April, 2011

  

 

 Dr. Abdulaziz Sager
Chairman
Gulf Research Center

(Originally Published in The Washington Post, Sunday, April 24, 2011)
 

In recent decades, the six Gulf Cooperation Council states have been a pillar of stability in a dangerous neighborhood. But the political change sweeping the Middle East has left its mark, as the situations in Bahrain and Oman underscore. The other GCC nations - Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar - have been affected. The Gulf monarchies must come to understand the repercussions of the "Arab Spring."

So far, protests in GCC states have largely been limited to calls for reform from within, not for regime change. The Arab Gulf monarchies understandably enjoy a high degree of legitimacy: Ruling families have guided their populations through such tumultuous events as the discovery of oil and the subsequent economic transformation, the end of colonialism, and the advent of globalization and its social impact. Crises in the region, meanwhile, included the Iranian Revolution, the eight-year Iran-Iraq war, the invasion of Kuwait and the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq. The ruling families that were able to bring their societies into the modern age deserve credit. 

It would be folly, however, to think that the arrangements of the past can last indefinitely. The Arab Spring has opened the door for a new era of political relations in the Middle East from which the GCC states cannot separate themselves. The social contract that has long defined the relationship between rulers and citizens - the unspoken trade-off of economic wealth for political power - is coming to an end. Similarly, the tribal traditions that had served the GCC states well are no longer applicable. With their legitimate demands for greater political rights and participation, the people of the Gulf are setting the stage for a fundamental reevaluation of the relationship between rulers and subjects. 

If the ruling families of the Gulf want to maintain their legitimacy, they need to adapt quickly to the changing times and enact substantive political reform that reflects their people's aspirations. Time is no longer on their side. If they wait too long, their rule cannot be assured.  

Past efforts to expand political participation in GCC states have been inadequate. Shura councils or parliaments have been created by ruling families, but with the intention of solidifying the rulers' power and representing their interests. Apart from, to some degree, the Kuwait experiment - where the parliament has taken a functional role in governing - other cosmetic steps toward reform that have been implemented have not been endorsed by the public. The guiding principle has been selection, not real election by the people. Similarly, key positions of power, from prime minister to the main ministries, remain under the ruling families' control. Political power stays concentrated in the hands of a few. 

Gulf citizens today are financially rich but politically poor. The economic incentives that governments have unveiled since the protests began this year will ultimately prove ineffectual. Those financial packages in no way tackle the Gulf economies' structural problems: They will not lower chronically high levels of unemployment or narrow the wealth inequities that have grown in past decades. Many in the Gulf are satisfied economically with their state support, and new handouts do not address the real demand: greater political participation.  

Gulf monarchies that hope to endure should recognize, in writing, the people's demands for active participation in their governance, transparency and accountability. Vague, spoken promises of reform are no longer sufficient. The monarchies must craft constitutional mechanisms guaranteeing the people's right to freedom of expression, the rule of law, and expanded political participation. In the immediate future, this means empowering legislative institutions. Other possible steps include naming as the head of government, or prime minister, a person from outside the ruling family.  

The Arab monarchies should consider forward-looking and progressive political reforms both because their people demand them and because the GCC governments are ultimately not equipped to handle a widespread popular uprising. Rulers' priority so far has been to protect themselves from a possible military coup; they have been largely successful, with relatives in charge of the various security services. But the region's governments are not immune, and the role that security and military forces played in Egypt and Tunisia is instructive. The fact is, the threat now is of a people's coup - not a military coup.    

It should also be noted that now that the genie is out of the bottle, the United States will, in the end, support the aspirations of the people. U.S. principles and interests require recognition of political reform as necessary and unavoidable. Although Washington may have adopted a wait-and-see approach, the Gulf's ruling families can no longer trust that they have a permanent American insurance policy should their populations become restive. Gulf monarchies must heed the clear message: Real reform can no longer be postponed. 

For comments click here.

Printer-friendly version Printer-friendly version Printer-friendly version Printer-friendly version
Gulf-Maghreb Relations
20th May 2013
Abstract: The Gulf and Maghreb countries share a common heritage and are members of the Arab League, yet the record of their economic and political relations is mixed. Limited exchange in physical goods is juxtaposed with pronounced investment activities in tourism and real estate that are at times ......
Read More
Building a Strong Saudi-Japan Relationship
29th April 2013
Abstract: On April 30, 2013, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will pay a visit to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The visit could not come at a more opportune time given the many geopolitical issues that the Gulf region faces and the rising role of East Asian countries in the GCC's overall foreign policy ......
Read More
Poor Gulf: Inequality and the Lack of Statistics
11th April 2013
Abstract: Marx didn't like it and recently The Economist ran a special issue on it: Inequality is inseparable from capitalism, yet it can hurt it at the same time. ......
Read More
Whither GCC-US Relations?
29th March 2013
Abstract: The US-GCC relationship appears to be at a crossroads. Despite a long history of relations and a clear common and mutual interest in the stability and security of the Gulf region, the GCC states and the United States look as if they are growing apart on an almost daily basis. ......
Read More
The Role of Renewable Energies in GCC-Japan Relations
24th March 2013
Abstract: The Riyadh Economic Summit held on 24th January, 2013 included as one of its key agenda points the launching of the "borderless energy initiative" as part of the "Arab Strategy for developing renewable energy applications: 2010-2030." ......
Read More
Oil, the US and the GCC
21st March 2013
Abstract: The surge in liquids production in North America, and especially the United States, is now in the spotlight. According to the Petroleum Intelligence Weekly, in February 2013 US oil production increased by 855,000 barrels per day over the previous month, and Canada's by 347,000 b/d, for a total of 1.1 ......
Read More
GCC Macro-Outlook: Great in the Mid-Term, but What about the Long Run?
5th March 2013
Abstract: No other rich region in the world has grown as fast as the GCC in recent years and none has as rosy an outlook for the near future: IMF estimates of real GDP growth for 2012 range from 2 percent (Bahrain) to 6.3 percent (Saudi Arabia), with a regional average of 4.9 percent. Average growth for 2013 is ......
Read More
Failure to Launch? Gulf Food Security Initiatives
5th February 2013
Abstract: Gulf countries are food secure, yet they constantly worry about food security, which they erroneously equate with food self-sufficiency. Their most salient food-related challenge pertains to an abundance of calories not lack thereof: their obesity rates are among the highest in the world. ......
Read More
Jordan between economic crisis and the GCC Responses
23rd January 2013
Abstract: Under the impact of the Arab Spring, Jordan today is facing mounting security and political pressures. Combined with a serious economic crisis, this potentially poses a threat to the stability and future of the state, which in turn could have a considerable impact on the entire region and on the ......
Read More
A Union in Danger: Where the GCC is Headed is Increasingly Questionable
10th December 2012
Abstract: ...
Read More
Previous 12 3 4 5
Total Pages: 6
Page 1 of 6
Total page generation time: 0.128 Seconds