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Saturday, 25 June 2011 - Analysis: Do leaderless revolts contain seeds of own failure? |
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    Edition: U.S. Article Comments (1) Editor's Choice Asia moves to tap oil reserves Exclusive: Citi skimps on "standard" customer monitoring Stocks to post 11 percent gain in 2011: Reuters poll Analysis: Do "leaderless" revolts contain seeds of own failure? EU appoints Draghi to ECB Exclusive: Deutsche's firing of top trader sparks probe China accounting scandals put Big Four auditors on red MuniLand: The infrastructure bank as political cover Video: Greek deal eases risk aversion Slideshow: The cost of war Follow Reuters Facebook Twitter RSS YouTube Read Casey Anthony's brother says family mum on her pregnancy 2:41pm EDT Data points to underlying factory strength | 3:13pm EDT Loss of Libya oil bigger disruption than Katrina: IEA 9:28am EDT Sarkozy says Europeans "doing the work" in Libya | 9:55am EDT Oil dives to 4-month low as emergency stocks unleashed | 23 Jun 2011 Discussed 206 Biden deficit-cut talks hit impasse: Rep. 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Tweet Share this Email Print Related News Bahrain opposition figures given life sentences Wed, Jun 22 2011 Seven protesters killed in Syria during rallies Tue, Jun 21 2011 Assad blames unrest on saboteurs, pledges reforms Mon, Jun 20 2011 Syria forces shoot dead 16 in protests: activists Fri, Jun 17 2011 Bin Laden deputy Zawahri to lead al Qaeda Thu, Jun 16 2011 Analysis & Opinion Mideast Christians struggle to hope in Arab Spring, some see no spring at all An interview with New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller Related Topics World » Politics » Demonstrators lift their arms as they protest against the handling of the economic crisis near the Spanish parliament in Madrid June 22, 2011. The sign reads: ''We are not filthy, we are indignant''. Credit: Reuters/Juan Medina By Peter Apps, Political Risk Correspondent LONDON | Fri Jun 24, 2011 3:02pm EDT LONDON (Reuters) - From the streets of Cairo and Madrid to online forums and social media sites, "leaderless" protests are on the rise. But the very qualities that led to their short-term success may condemn them to failure in the long run. Activists in Egypt, Tunisia and elsewhere say the lack of top-down management has been an important element in their recent success in rallying crowds disillusioned with the ruling establishment, using social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook. Anti-austerity protesters in Europe have used similar tactics to organize mass street protests they hope will put pressure on governments to rethink spending cuts. It's not all online. In street demonstrations, sit-ins and meetings in Cairo, Athens, Madrid and London, loosely organized protesters hold public meetings and votes on immediate logistical issues and wider political aims, trying to build agreement and consensus. "Our revolution did not have a head but it did have a body, a heart and a soul," Egyptian-British psychiatrist Sally Moore, one of the protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square, told a Thomson Reuters Foundation event this month on the "Arab spring." Disparate protest groups around the world say they are learning from each other. While in previous decades leaderless groups struggled to build name-recognition and media coverage, social media has allowed them to put huge crowds on the street at speed. It's a model that has proved very appealing to youthful protesters angry at her the way they believe an older generation -- whether the leaders of the Arab world or West's bankers and politicians -- have stolen their future. POWER TO THE PEOPLE "You will still have a core group of several dozen or more people who will provide a lot of direction, but the rhetoric is very much against the emergence of traditional power structures," says Tim Hardy, author of the UK-based blog Beyond Clicktivism. "Social media is a part of it, definitely, but it goes beyond that." But the model has its limits. In Egypt and Tunisia, where protesters successfully ousted President Hosni Mubarak and Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, there are already signs the protesters are being sidelined by more established power centers. In elections likely only weeks away, the westernized activists of Tahrir Square may be barely represented as power shifts back to the military -- who remain in control -- and the more organized Muslim Brotherhood. In Libya and Syria, where popular uprisings turned into outright armed intervention and insurgency, initially leaderless rebels found themselves at an immediate disadvantage. Whether at the ballot box or on the battlefield, some experts say that without some form of command and control leaderless groups will simply be outmaneuvered. That might leave them a simple choice: build more coherent leadership structures or join with other organizations that already have them. "If leaderless movements are not wholly self-destructive, they might... fizzle out allowing the pre-existing power elites to take advantage," said Hayat Alvi, lecturer in Middle East politics at the U.S. Naval War College. "They need a general consensus about what they seek in the future." That can prove difficult. One of the strengths of the "leaderless" model, protesters say, is the way it can quickly bring together disparate groups working toward a common goal. But as frustration mounts, so does demand for change. PUSH TO EXTREMES? On Libya's stalemated eastern front, fed-up rebels say they want their commanders to build more unity and better discipline. In Britain, groups of left-wing anti-austerity activists are torn between the idea of joining the opposition Labour party, starting their own to challenge for parliamentary seats or sticking with largely peaceful direct action. Some of Egypt's young protesters are working with Serb activists who ousted Slobodan Milosevic in 2000 to build more coherent strategies, contest elections and build lasting structures to hold authority to account. There are risks that without a formal decision-making structure, the room for error is huge. "There is a danger people will simply focus on one leader and projects all their hopes on to that person or group," says Beyond Clicktivism's Hardy. "You're already seeing membership of nationalist groups pick up." Some are also concerned about the radicalism of emerging cyber entities such as Anonymous and Lulzsec, "hactivist" groups who were behind a string of recent attacks on government and corporate targets. Both groups are believed to have a "leaderless" structure but there are signs that Lulzsec at least is already being undermined by internal feuding [ID:nL6E7HM12C]. Like Islamist networks such as Al Qaeda -- whose central leadership was weakened after September 11 and is now believed to consist largely of semi-independent franchises -- leaderless organizations might sometimes achieve big spectacles but struggle to have a lasting impact. "In general, not having a single leader makes an organization harder to track," said Amichai Shulman, chief technical officer of IT security firm Imperva. "(But) at the same time it reduces the ability... to carry out complex operations." (Editing by Sonya Hepinstall) World Politics Tweet this Link this Share this Digg this Email Reprints   We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/ Comments (1) ActualTaxpayer wrote: you’re kidding, right? These “leaderless revolts” are nothing more than groups of rabble clamoring for what they *think* they’re owed. This isn’t about throwing off the harsh yoke of a dictator or anything else significant. Its a bunch of unable, unintelligent rabble crying for handouts. THOSE are the seeds of failure. The reasons behind it, not its lack of leadership Jun 24, 2011 12:02pm EDT  --  Report as abuse See All Comments » Add Your Comment Social Stream (What's this?) © Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters Editorial Editions: Africa Arabic Argentina Brazil Canada China France Germany India Italy Japan Latin America Mexico Russia Spain United Kingdom United States Reuters Contact Us Advertise With Us Help Journalism Handbook Archive Site Index Video Index Reader Feedback   Mobile Newsletters RSS Podcasts Widgets Your View Analyst Research Thomson Reuters Copyright Disclaimer Privacy Professional Products Professional Products Support Financial Products About Thomson Reuters Careers Online Products Acquisitions Monthly Buyouts Venture Capital Journal International Financing Review Project Finance International PEhub.com PE Week FindLaw Super Lawyers Attorney Rating Service Reuters on Facebook Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests. NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.

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