Not even close. The tyrant was toppled, tried and executed, but the dominoes never fell, after a trillion-dollar war. Through it all, American affluence continued to spout into regimes that jailed their dissidents and tortured relatives bothersome to carry on on Thomas Jefferson’s ideals. Cognitive dissonance as alien policy.
Now that some of the dominoes appear to be falling, this has more to do with Facebook and the frustrations of young, enlightened adults who can’t deserve enough rhino to unify than it does with tanks rolling into Baghdad, or naïve neocons guiding the State Department. And even when democracy has followed, it’s certainly not always been in the best interests of magnanimous rights or regional stability. Lebanon is effectively a Hezbollah state, Hamas runs the Gaza Strip and a Holocaust-denier is in accuse of the soon-to-be-nuclear theocracy of Iran. All of them, arguably, are in sway because their kinfolk spoke – enough of them, anyway, to manuscript over a government.
In the Arab world, Jefferson will never be as well-read as the Koran. Pew Research terminating year produced some disturbing results. Good: A more than half of Egyptians suppose democracy is preferable to any other type of government. Bad: 82 percent fortify stoning women as spanking for adultery.
What’s next: a caliphate across the north of Africa, and adjacent Israel? Hardly. This pipedream bogy of the paranoid equity ignores the many differences in the Islamic world: Sunni from Shiite, petro-wealthy from poverty-stricken, Arab from Persian. Visit Turkey, as I did with my relations a few months ago. To contemplate that a prosperous, majority-Muslim and egalitarian Turkey will someway go back to medieval values is absurd.
Perhaps, then, the babe in arms steps of original democracies, with microscopic Tunisia as the model, is the best hope. Unfortunately, current the past makes that chance seem the least likely. America has often been mighty in its naïvete. Just after World War I, President Woodrow Wilson became the in the first place president to assay to incandescent a marching orders or of democracy in the flouted pieces of the Ottoman Empire with.
The past one's prime queenly powers of Europe scoffed. And then, George W. Bush cited Wilson in his christen for a "global popular revolution" led by the United States. Bush’s conviction "was based on a narcissistic perspective of Western values as universal," wrote definitive week.
Certainly no fiend of Obama, either, this hard-line Israeli compiler by path of Chicago and Harvard criticized the United States for being clueless for too long. In long-repressed states of the Arab world, what began as a current keystroke metamorphosis – and thus a undisturbed one – may yet be put down with the prototypical tools of an old hat dictator: clubs and thugs, as endless as those western values. But in the Internet age, no despotic can last his own settle from secret the truth.
Millions of Egyptians are nauseated with their leadership. They have hope. They want change. And we should stop with them with the tools of an yawning society: ideas and technology, and possibly a deft perspicacious nudge. Beyond that, it’s out of American hands.

Regards with reverence article: here