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Tunisia's Ben Ali: Act or Be Acted Upon
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14146 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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1 / 1988 |
2,406 Words |
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Smith Hempstone Smith Hempstone, is a nationally syndicated columnist. |
Like many small boys, Ben Ali was always tinkering with things, and his youthful ambition was to grow up to be an electronics engineer. Instead, he recently deposed an Arab nationalist demigod to become, at age 51, Tunisia's second president in 31 years of independence.
Along the way to the top, clean-shaven, darkly handsome Zine Al Abidine Ben Ali scarcely set a foot wrong. Born near Sousse in central Tunisia of middle-class parents, Ben Ali was in his third year of university study for a degree in electronics when Tunisia of middle-class parents, Ben Ali was in his third year of university study for a degree in electronics when Tunisia gained its independence from France in 1956.
Like most Tunisians, Ben Ali was an ardent nationalist who revered the charismatic Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba, founder of the Destourian (Constitutional) Socialist Party and one of the Arab world's best-known leaders. Gripped by the euphoria of the moment, Ben Ali put aside his textbooks, joined the Tunisian army, and was posted to St. Cyr (France's West Point), from which he graduated with honors as a lieutenant.
As a young officer, Ben Ali was assigned to security, intelligence, and field artillery schools in both countries. Fluent in French and English--and, of course, in Arabic--Ben Ali served for 16 years (1958-1974) as director of Tunisia's military security, a counter-intelligence post that made him responsible for tracking and destroying subversion within the army.
Ben Ali, who is married and has three children, soon proved himself to be a skillful
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