Efraim Karsh is professor of political studies at Bar-Ilan University and professor emeritus of Middle East and Mediterranean Studies at King's College London. A former director of the Middle East Forum, a Philadelphia think tank, he is editor of the Middle East Quarterly and Israel Affairs, and is writing A History of the Jewish People, to be published by Bloomsbury in 2018.
Efraim Karsh is Professor of Political Studies at Bar-Ilan University and Professor Emeritus of Middle East and Mediterranean Studies at King's College London. A former director of the Middle East Forum, he is editor of Middle East Quarterly and Israel Affairs, and is writing A History of the Jewish People, published by Bloomsbury in 2018.
The Tail Wags the Dog: International Politics and the Middle East
by Efraim Karsh
eBook
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ISBN-13:
9781632861191
- Publisher: Bloomsbury USA
- Publication date: 08/11/2015
- Sold by: Barnes & Noble
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 256
- File size: 914 KB
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The continuing crisis in Syria has raised questions over the common perception of Middle Eastern affairs as an offshoot of global power politics. To Western intellectuals, foreign policy experts, and politicians, "empire” and "imperialism” are categories that apply exclusively to Europe and more recently to the United States of America. As they see it, Middle Eastern history is the product of its unhappy interaction with these powers. Forming the basis of President Obama's much ballyhooed "new beginning between the United States and Muslims around the world,” this outlook is continuing to shape crucial foreign policy among Western governments, but in these pages, Efraim Karsh propounds a radically different interpretation of Middle Eastern experience. He argues that the Western view of Muslims and Arabs as hapless victims is absurd. On the contrary, modern Middle Eastern history has been the culmination of long-existing indigenous trends. Great power influences, however potent, have played a secondary role constituting neither the primary force behind the region's political development nor the main cause of its notorious volatility.
Karsh argues it is only when Middle Eastern people disown their victimization mentality and take responsibility for their actions and their Western champions drop their condescending approach to Arabs and Muslims, that the region can at long last look forward to a real "spring.”
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Popular consensus about conflict in the Middle East since the end of WWI puts much of the blame on interference by the West, especially the U.S. and the U.K. Middle East Quarterly editor Karsh vehemently disagrees, particularly in light of the Arab Spring (which he sees as having disappointing results) and the rise of ISIS. In this illuminating new history, he implicates the nations of the Middle East themselves, claiming they proved perfectly capable of blocking and manipulating seemingly more powerful countries during the Cold War and into the present. As two examples of this, he offers the toppling of the Shah of Iran in 1979, which blindsided the Carter administration; and the Soviet Union’s failure to prevent its allies Egypt and Syria from attacking Israel in October 1973. Moreover, during Western interventions into Iraq in the early 2000s and in Libya more recently, superior military might could not prevent mission creep, “greater savagery, higher death toll, and pervasive anarchy.” The tendency of Middle Eastern nations to get the better of the West, Karsh argues, has reached its zenith with the muddled and delusional foreign policy of the Obama administration. This contrarian take on modern geopolitics will be enthralling and eye-opening for foreign policy devotees. (Aug.)
"[F]ast-paced . . . Mr. Karsh’s account deserves credit for granting Middle Easterners their own agency . . . the author’s perspective is refreshing." The Wall Street Journal
“[A] compact view of the traditionalist perspective on Middle Eastern geopolitics up to today.” Library Journal
An Israeli scholar offers a pessimistic rehashing of what he sees as the "endemic malaise" of the Arab states in spite of—or because of—Western acquiescence and retreat. From the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire to the recent savagery of the Islamic State group, Middle East Quarterly and Israel Affairs editor Karsh (Political Studies/Bar-Ilan Univ.) lays the blame for regional instability and chronic war squarely on the willful intransigence and violent "rejectionism" of the "Middle Eastern actors" themselves—i.e., the Arabs and the new crop of Islamist extremists. For all their talk of democracy and self-determination, from Western leaders ranging from President Woodrow Wilson to President Barack Obama, Karsh sees little to show for it, especially when "the spring that never was" (Arab Spring of 2010-2011) has yielded little in the way of true democracy and rather an all-too-familiar return to what he calls Islam's "imperialist ambitions." Arab violence induced the British to renege on the mandate system (promising a homeland in Palestine for the Jews), while the lure of Arab oil deposits almost derailed the American embrace of the nascent Jewish state. (Karsh ignores Israel's own accomplished network of terrorism.) "Innocents Abroad," aka the Americans, failed to see the great Islamic tide coming, from the rise of the Ayatollah Khomeini to the real threat of Saddam Hussein in Kuwait. While Karsh also excoriates the Soviet Union ("the Cautious Bear") for being played by the Syrians and Afghanis, he saves his bitterest vitriol for the policy of well-intentioned, humble Obama, whose "wishful thinking" in hastily withdrawing from Iraq left the actors to turn viciously on each other, strengthening Iran's hand and alienating important ally Turkey. Karsh sees the Arabs mired in chronic "internecine strife," greed, and global expansionism, yet he offers no alternate reality save the status quo. A strong dose of familiar anger and bitterness without solutions.