Revolution in the Arab World: Tunisia, Egypt, And the Unmaking of an Era
REVOLUTION: A SPECIAL REPORT FROM FOREIGN POLICY MAGAZINE

"What is the perfect day for Hosni Mubarak? A day when nothing happens." — Egyptian joke, December 2010

"A bunch of incognizant, ineffective young people" — Egyptian Interior Minister Habib al-Adly on the Tahrir Square protesters, Jan. 25, 2011

In just 18 short days, the young protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square upended global politics. Not even three weeks after the peaceful demonstrations began, not even two weeks after pro-government thugs charged into the square on camels and horses to force them out, one of the most entrenched leaders in the Middle East and a longtime U.S. ally, Hosni Mubarak, was gone—and autocratic leaders from Bahrain to Libya were feeling the heat.

Where did this wave of anger come from? Why did it begin in Tunisia, and what does it mean? FP’s special report starts with a revelatory first chapter that shows how the revolutionary rumblings were ignored, dating back to Issandr El Amrani’s prescient warning to Barack Obama in January 2010: Egypt, he wrote, could be the ticking time bomb that overwhelms your international agenda. The coverage also includes a dramatic day-by-day retelling of the battle to hold Tahrir Square, insider accounts of Washington’s flip-flopping and struggle to keep up with events, and some of the world’s leading authors and experts, from James Traub to Gary Sick to Robert D. Kaplan, on where we go from here.

Consider it a guidebook for these revolutionary times.
1113672498
Revolution in the Arab World: Tunisia, Egypt, And the Unmaking of an Era
REVOLUTION: A SPECIAL REPORT FROM FOREIGN POLICY MAGAZINE

"What is the perfect day for Hosni Mubarak? A day when nothing happens." — Egyptian joke, December 2010

"A bunch of incognizant, ineffective young people" — Egyptian Interior Minister Habib al-Adly on the Tahrir Square protesters, Jan. 25, 2011

In just 18 short days, the young protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square upended global politics. Not even three weeks after the peaceful demonstrations began, not even two weeks after pro-government thugs charged into the square on camels and horses to force them out, one of the most entrenched leaders in the Middle East and a longtime U.S. ally, Hosni Mubarak, was gone—and autocratic leaders from Bahrain to Libya were feeling the heat.

Where did this wave of anger come from? Why did it begin in Tunisia, and what does it mean? FP’s special report starts with a revelatory first chapter that shows how the revolutionary rumblings were ignored, dating back to Issandr El Amrani’s prescient warning to Barack Obama in January 2010: Egypt, he wrote, could be the ticking time bomb that overwhelms your international agenda. The coverage also includes a dramatic day-by-day retelling of the battle to hold Tahrir Square, insider accounts of Washington’s flip-flopping and struggle to keep up with events, and some of the world’s leading authors and experts, from James Traub to Gary Sick to Robert D. Kaplan, on where we go from here.

Consider it a guidebook for these revolutionary times.
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Revolution in the Arab World: Tunisia, Egypt, And the Unmaking of an Era

Revolution in the Arab World: Tunisia, Egypt, And the Unmaking of an Era

Revolution in the Arab World: Tunisia, Egypt, And the Unmaking of an Era

Revolution in the Arab World: Tunisia, Egypt, And the Unmaking of an Era

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REVOLUTION: A SPECIAL REPORT FROM FOREIGN POLICY MAGAZINE

"What is the perfect day for Hosni Mubarak? A day when nothing happens." — Egyptian joke, December 2010

"A bunch of incognizant, ineffective young people" — Egyptian Interior Minister Habib al-Adly on the Tahrir Square protesters, Jan. 25, 2011

In just 18 short days, the young protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square upended global politics. Not even three weeks after the peaceful demonstrations began, not even two weeks after pro-government thugs charged into the square on camels and horses to force them out, one of the most entrenched leaders in the Middle East and a longtime U.S. ally, Hosni Mubarak, was gone—and autocratic leaders from Bahrain to Libya were feeling the heat.

Where did this wave of anger come from? Why did it begin in Tunisia, and what does it mean? FP’s special report starts with a revelatory first chapter that shows how the revolutionary rumblings were ignored, dating back to Issandr El Amrani’s prescient warning to Barack Obama in January 2010: Egypt, he wrote, could be the ticking time bomb that overwhelms your international agenda. The coverage also includes a dramatic day-by-day retelling of the battle to hold Tahrir Square, insider accounts of Washington’s flip-flopping and struggle to keep up with events, and some of the world’s leading authors and experts, from James Traub to Gary Sick to Robert D. Kaplan, on where we go from here.

Consider it a guidebook for these revolutionary times.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940012367716
Publisher: Foreign Policy Magazine
Publication date: 02/22/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 931 KB
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