Al Jazeera on MSNOpinion
The Arab Spring hasn’t ended, and Arab regimes know it
Despite mixed results, observers generally praised the Arab Spring as a revolutionary democratic moment for a region long ...
The National Interest on MSNOpinion
The Arab Spring’s painful lessons
Fifteen years after the Middle East’s largest pro-democracy movement, the West still has not learned that supporting ...
Al Jazeera on MSN
Presidents the Arab Spring toppled, where are they now?
On December 17, 2010, Tunisian vendor Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire, triggering protests across the Arab world.
The revolution in Syria began in March 2011 as the Arab Spring brought hope and uncertainty to the Middle East. What started as peaceful protests turned into a violent conflict, as the Assad regime ...
As Tunisia marks the 15th anniversary of the revolution that provoked the Arab Spring, RFI spoke to exiled former leader ...
The Arab Spring is not a completed event but a process that has fundamentally altered the region’s political landscape… but ...
The National Interest on MSN
How China Turned the Arab Spring to Its Advantage
China’s inroads in the Middle East demonstrate how the region is still a critical front in the era of US-China competition.
The National Interest on MSN
The Arab Spring 15 years later
The pro-democracy movement marked the death knell of Arab nationalism and unintentionally quickened a shift of regional power toward the Gulf States.
Why did Jordan survive the Arab Spring? An account of protests, repression and reforms that helped King Abdullah II contain ...
The ouster of former presidents Omar Al-Bashir in Sudan and Abdel-Aziz Bouteflika in Algeria after a wave of popular protests in both countries has given rise to speculation about the future of these ...
Israel once hoped to be a true economic force in the Middle East, with a path mapped out for a more stable future, including normalization of relationships with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab ...
o discussion of the year 2011 can be complete without a reference to what's been termed Arab Spring. The political phenomenon has the potential to have an extraordinary impact on ARCHAEOLOGY for years ...
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