Quicksand: America's Pursuit Of Power In The Middle East
Описание
An unprecedented history of our involvement in the Middle East that traces our current quandaries there-in Iraq, Israel, Iran, Afghanistan, and elsewhere-back to their roots almost a century ago. Geoffrey Wawro approaches America’s role in the Middle East in a fundamentally new way-by encompassing the last century of the entire region, rather than focusing narrowly on a particular country or era. The result is a definitive and revelatory history whose drama, tragedy, and rich irony he relates with unprecedented verve. Wawro combed archives in the United States and Europe and traveled the Middle East to unearth new insights into the hidden motivations, backroom dealing, and outright espionage that shaped some of the most tumultuous events of the last one hundred years. Wawro offers piercing analysis of iconic events from the birth of Israel to the death of Sadat, from the Suez crisis to the energy crisis, from the Six-Day War to Desert One, from Iran-contra to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the rise of al- Qaeda. Throughout, he draws telling parallels between America’s past mistakes and its current quandaries, proving that we’re in today’s muddle not just because of our old errors, but because we keep repeating those errors. America has juggled multiple commitments and conflicting priorities in the Middle East for nearly a century. Strands of idealism and ruthless practicality have alternated- and sometimes run together-in our policy. "Quicksand" untangles these strands as no history has done before by showing how our strategies unfolded over the entire century and across the entire region. We’ve persistently misread the intentions and motivations of every major player in the region because we’ve insisted on viewing them through the lens of our own culture, hopes, and fears. Most administrations since Eisenhower’s have adopted their own "doctrine" for the Middle East, and almost every doctrine has failed precisely because it’s a doctrine-a template into which events on the ground refuse to fit. Geoffrey Wawro’s peerless and remarkably lively history is key to understanding our errors and the Middle East-at last- on its own terms. *The Jewish population of the U.S. increased from 250,000 to 4.8 million between 1882 and 1945. With 90% of this growing Jewish population concentrated in 9 tightly contested states, both FDR and Truman-as well as all future Presidents-supported a Jewish state in the Middle East despite Arab protests. (pp. 87-89) *In the 1948 presidential election, Thomas Dewey had a stout pro-Israel plank in his platform; Truman felt he could do no less. He pledged "full recognition and development aid" to a Jewish state despite its relatively small numbers-625,000 Jews in Palestine versus 1.3 million Arabs-and tolerated Israel’s brutal expulsion of 75% of Palestine’s Arab inhabitants in 1948, creating the 844,000 Palestinian refugees, a number that has grown to 4.7 million today. (pp. 102, 112, 117-18.) *The 1956 Suez Crisis-which shattered the British and French positions in the Middle East-stemmed from a U.S. provocation: the withdrawal of $400 million of U.S. support for the Aswan High Dam in 1954 to punish Gamal Abdel Nasser’s anti-Western stance. Nasser went to Moscow for money instead; he also nationalized the British and French shares in the Suez Canal Company, provoking a punitive Anglo-French (and Israeli) invasion, which Eisenhower and illogically rolled back. (p. 211.) *U.S. sales of Hawk surface-to-air missile systems to Israel in 1962 "set the precedent that created the US-Israeli strategic relationship: a multimillion dollar business in cutting-edge weaponry supplemented by military-to-military dialogues, joint exercises, and research and development." (p. 249.) *From LBJ on, every president tolerated illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied territories, which Rabin called "redeeming Israel’s narrow hips." (p. 299.) *Nixon and Kissinger lamented Saudi hypocrisy and their covert support of terrorist groups because "they had so little legitimacy." Terrified that Riyadh would go the way of that other Bedouin oil state-Libya, where a pro-U.S. monarchy fell to the Qaddafi coup in ’69-Nixon turned a blind eye to Saudi misdeeds, as every U.S. president has since. (p. 293.) *The Iranian Shah’s close alliance with the U.S. led to surge in anti- Americanism, in a country that was traditionally pro-American. Iranians viewed U.S. arms sales as "pillage." Ayatollah Khomeini, in exile in Iraq and France, damned America: "you have torn up the roots of our independence." (p. 347.) *Well-connected to the Saudi state and dynasty, Osama bin Laden started as a courier for Saudi charities; he traveled to Peshawar in 1981 to distribute funds and build a "services bureau" for foreign fighters that would morph into al-Qaeda. (pp. 384-85.) *Paul Wolfowitz emerged in the Carter administration as an...
Характеристики
author: | Geoffrey Wawro |
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