View original postIt actually makes a great deal of sense, as well... the Western Shift from Tribal to National thinking didn't happen overnight, either, and if the reality is that it NEVER really happened here, then it's hard to imagine how to end the struggle.
In Egypt or Turkey, tribes ceased to be of any real importance a very long time ago. Don't think they're much of a factor in of Lebanon or (most of) Syria anymore, either - religious factions, yes, but not tribes. But in Libya they're a huge part of the problem, and in Iraq, Jordan and many Gulf countries - not coincidentally the desert countries - they're also still a big factor.
View original postIf anything, the Sunni-Shia division adds another, third force competing for the identity of the people, one capable of replacing tribalism but still not entirely compatible with nationalism.
Yeah. Though of course it's not as if there's just those two denominations in Islam - both are split into so many groups, I don't think Assad's Alevi Shi'ites in Syria really identified with Iran's Twelver Shi'ites in any meaningful way until politics forced them to become allies. That's one of the reasons why, despite what Tom's friend says, I think most of the Sunni-Shia enmity in any generation is politically motivated more than religiously. But then again, they have been fighting or repressing each other due to these political factors for a rather large part of the last 1400 years, and their leaders have every interest in continuing to stress the religious factor in looking back at their history - so that certainly adds to the tension.
View original postShort Version, if this is right, these people will never be a Western Style nation. The road there is one we don't let leaders take anymore, and for good reasons. Our peacemaking might be exactly the thing preventing real nationalism from forming.
It's funny to be arguing that nationalism would be a good thing - all those corrupt dictators were plenty nationalistic, after all, and if you look at the sickening way in which Egyptians for instance admire and take pride in the Egyptian army while it represses them and curtails their freedom, you'd certainly not be inclined to call that a good thing. Same for Algerians, Turks (the Atatürk-worship of many secular Turks is truly scary) and various other countries. But yeah, compared to tribal and/or factional infighting, it's certainly a step up.
As for peacemaking, in fairness, most of today's problems ultimately go back to Western interference in a time when peacemaking really wasn't the primary concern.
View original postMy head hurts.
It does look particularly nasty and hopeless right now, yeah...
Al-Qaeda-linked force captures Fallujah
05/01/2014 04:36:48 AM
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Does "caring" always have to mean sending in troops/firing weapons?
05/01/2014 09:17:43 AM
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Watch it burn. It was going to happen sooner or later anyway. *NM*
06/01/2014 02:09:22 PM
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Things are certainly becoming, er, interesting.
06/01/2014 06:22:58 PM
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I doubt John Kerry has the capability to effect any cohesive strategy.
06/01/2014 09:55:04 PM
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I'm with you on Kerry. But don't you think the Sunni-Shia thing is an effect, not a cause?
06/01/2014 11:27:04 PM
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You know, I'll tell you what a Lebanese friend in Dubai told me
07/01/2014 05:08:37 AM
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You know, I hadn't thought of that... the struggle between Tribalism and Nationalism.
07/01/2014 05:14:08 AM
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It depends on the country, of course.
07/01/2014 06:46:54 AM
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