Essay sample library > Arab Spring: Helping Out the Middle East

Arab Spring: Helping Out the Middle East

2023-08-07 18:47:01

The Domino effect of Muslim countries in the Arab Spring, the Middle East has led to the success of violent and non-violent exercise depending on the countries concerned. It is difficult to understand this overall dilemma from a broad perspective, so for this special reason the focus will be in two countries, one must succeed and the other must use violence to make them successful. Let's be proactive and peaceful. This article compares and contrasts the role of violent and non-violent tactics in the recent so-called "Arab Spring" case.

Let's talk about Arab Spring! The Arab Spring is a series of protests against various governments in the Middle East. Although some revolts succeeded (Tunisia), some revolutions brought a moderate reform (Morocco and Kuwait), but the other revolts completely failed (Bahrain and Saudi Arabia). In fact, the Arab Spring had Syria enter the civil war, bringing the rise of the Islamic state, there was little or no constructive change. The amazing fact is that the story is very different from the stories we were made believed in 2011 when heroically protestors use weapons against evil dictators. However, even if you overthrow evil dictators, the basic problem of institutional failure will not be solved, so the Arab Spring will never be directed towards success. Arab Spring is more complicated and movies are less. Revolutionaries need to resolve the general failure of the system and dismantle the organization under a vulnerable dictatorship system in order to obtain real results.

In this article we will discuss Arab fountains that occurred throughout the Middle East and North Africa, or Arab riots of 2010 to 2011. We study the fundamental causes of Arab democratic uprisings in each country, the events that occurred during this period, and the aftermath of the Middle East / North African protest. We will also study the international relations between the leaders of the Middle East and the world, especially the positions taken by Western leaders during the uprising.

In the Arab Spring, the democratic protests of the Middle East and North Africa and the wave of riots that began in 2010 and 2011 challenged some of the deep-rooted authoritarian regimes in this region. Participants demonstrating political and economic frustration severely oppressed security forces in various countries. Detailed reports on Arab fountains in various countries refer to the Jasmine Revolution (Tunisia), 2011 Egypt Riot, 2011-12 Yemen Riot, 2011 Libya Riot, and 2011-12 Syria Riot.

Returning to the Middle East, the Arab Spring, which began in Tunisia in 2011 and ended there, changed to Arab winter in other Arab countries, and that "wind of change" turned into a nightmare! Egypt, Libya, Yemen, Bahrain and Syria suffered mass killings, genocide, destruction and expulsion and incidental damage to neighboring countries. Turmoil in the Middle East and disruption of growth can be traced back centuries before Zbigniew Brzezinski created the phrase "Curve of Crisis" during the Cold War of 1979 to best represent the facts of this part of the world I will.