“The Arab Spring Is Dead & the Arab Street Wants Stability, Not Revolutions”
@sagivsteinberg, CEO of the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs, argues in a new Jerusalem Post article that the Arab world of 2026 is fundamentally different from that of 2011: “Ideology is giving way to pragmatism.” According to Steinberg, Arab publics no longer judge governments by slogans about democracy and revolution, but by their ability to provide security, economic stability, and functioning services. “The Arab Spring did not disappear — it was replaced by a new social contract based on results,” he explains.
Drawing on major regional opinion surveys, Steinberg argues that after years of chaos, civil wars, and state collapse, much of the Middle East now prioritizes stability over ideology. He says this shift is also creating new opportunities for regional alliances and normalization, as the region moves from a “politics of revolution” to a “politics of survival and growth.”