One hundred years after the division of the Middle East, the effects of the Sykes-Picot agreement are still playing out across the region.
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- Joseph Bahout,
- Steven Cook,
- Shadi Hamid,
- Rachel Havrelock,
- Emad Shahin,
- Galip Dalay
One hundred years after the division of the Middle East, the effects of the Sykes-Picot agreement are still playing out across the region.
Many people in non-Western countries say that they want a democratic system of governance—but just not Western-style democracy. Yet what is meant by non-Western democracy often remains unclear, and at times is merely a cover for non-democratic practices.
In a March 15th interview, ABC's Peter Jennings asked King Abdullah II if Jordan would ever become a constitutional monarchy. “Absolutely,” the king said. When Abdullah came to power in 1999, there was widespread speculation that this young, charismatic Sandhurst and Georgetown-educated leader—and other young monarchs in the region—would be willing to embark on reforms and gradually share power.