REFLECTIONS
The Arab Gulf's Tall Task to Transform the Populace
Mar 15, 2019 | 10:00 GMT

Saudi men unfurl a giant Saudi national flag during a ceremony to raise the highest flag in the country in the eastern city of Dammam on June 17, 2008. The 6-by-9-meter flag was raised on a huge flag pole in the eastern coastal city to a height of 60 meters making it the highest flying flag in the state of Saudi Arabia.
(AFP/Getty Images)
Highlights
- Much like the USSR's failure to create a New Soviet Man, the Arab Gulf states' attempts to cultivate transformed, economically productive citizens are likely to founder due to a lack of local support.
- As Gulf Arab states encounter public resistance to their policies of economic reform, they are likely to fall back upon traditional means of pacifying their populations, such as massive public subsidies.
- At the same time, growing nationalism that the Gulf's royals houses cannot control could create more conflict in the region.
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