Turn the countries involved in the Arab spring into either democracies or theocracies

The Arab spring ravaged the Arab world during the early 2010s, which of the countries involved were more likely to become more democratic and which countries had a real possibility of descending into theocratic rules?
The aim of this thread should be to have the least amount of Baathist dictatorships and Absolute monarchies (but more Constitutional monarchies are ok) and the largest amount of democracies and theocracies.
Another thing we should discuss is the effects of these profound changes abroad
 

Attachments

  • 1580px-Arab_Spring_and_Regional_Conflict_Map.svg.png
    1580px-Arab_Spring_and_Regional_Conflict_Map.svg.png
    233.8 KB · Views: 120
Isil or the Iranian islamic regime for example
ISIL is a highly sectarian, apocalyptic Sunni movement with a penchant for rejecting any kind of peace with its enemies. The Iranian regime is a nationalist republic with a parliament regulated by a Shia clerical council. The two are not similar at all.
 
ISIL is a highly sectarian, apocalyptic Sunni movement with a penchant for rejecting any kind of peace with its enemies. The Iranian regime is a nationalist republic with a parliament regulated by a Shia clerical council. The two are not similar at all.
They are both theocracies, which is the point
 
They are both theocracies, which is the point
They are both political phenomena with varying degrees of theocratic inspiration, yes, but they arose from different political, economic, sectarian and societal circumstances, and it is these factors that define what sort of shape, scope and modus operandi every similar movement shall take.
 
Top