The Lure and Peril of Arab Presidential Dynasties

by Daniel Pipes
June 15, 2011
Cross-posted from National Review Online

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Arab leaders in their glory, at an Arab League meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in 2007.

The outsized role of the ruler’s families provides a commonality in many of the Middle Eastern countries experiencing upheavals in 2011. In Tunisia, the dictator’s wife and her brood inspired much anger. But in most cases, rulers wanting sons to succeed them shakes their rule:

  • Egypt: The military men who ruling in Cairo since 1952 took it askance when Hosni Mubarak prepared the way for his banker son Galal, to succeed him.
  • Yemen: Ali Abdullah Saleh filled the government with relatives and wanted his son Ahmed to succeed him, an aspiration that aroused opposition, especially from the tribes.
  • Libya: Mu’ammar al-Qaddafi’s seven sons, some of which hoped to follow him, feuded among themselves and exacerbated hatred for the regime.
  • Syria: Hafez al-Assad did succeed to have his opthamologist son Bashar succeed him, only for Bashar’s ineptitude to prompt the regime’s worst crisis ever.

In addition, Saddam Hussein of Iraq worked assiduously to have his sons succeed him, which contributed to his vanity, misrule, and ultimate demise.

Source material can be found at this site.

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