Thursday, February 03, 2011

The Domino Effect: Tunisia Engulfed. Egypt in Flames. Jordan Teetering. As the Arab World Unravels, Should the West Be Worried?

North Africa and the Middle East. Map: Mail Online

MAIL ONLINE: Egypt was still in utter turmoil last night, despite President Hosni Mubarak’s announcement that he will resign in September.

More than one ­million demonstrators were still on the streets - most of them calling for Mubarak to quit now.

More than a thousand miles further south, growing unrest in Yemen caused the country’s veteran president Ali ­Abdullah Saleh to announce he would not be seeking another term.

Clearly unnerved, he abandoned hopes of ­creating a ruling family dynasty, ­promising not to hand power to his son Ahmed.

Leader after leader in the Arab world has been toppled by one of the most astonishing displays of sustained people power ever witnessed.

It was all sparked by the so-called ­Jasmine Revolution in Tunisia, where two weeks of spontaneous demon­strations last month resulted in the departure of President Ben Ali.

But if revolution can spread from ­Tunisia to Egypt and then to Yemen in a fortnight, where might it take hold next?

Saudi Arabia - ruled by its dynastical royal family - finds itself completely out of step with these calls for democracy.

The House of Saud is too rich and powerful to be swept away any time soon, but it’s terrified by what is happening.

Such unrest is spreading like wildfire through the region. That’s why King Abdullah of Jordan yesterday dismissed his unpopular government and made a lot of noise about reform. He can sense which way the winds are blowing. Read on and comment >>> John R. Bradley | Thursday, February 03, 2011