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Interventions:
A Middle East Report Online Feature
Once
More Into the Breach
Ussama Makdisi
December 2009
(Ussama
Makdisi is professor of Middle East history at Rice University.)
Rashid
Khalidi, Sowing Crisis: The Cold War and American Dominance
in the Middle East (Boston: Beacon Press, 2009)
Patrick
Tyler, A World of Trouble: America in the Middle East (London:
Portobello Books, 2009)
The first
decade of the twenty-first century may well be remembered as
the biggest boom time ever for Middle East studies. Jobs in the
field were abundant, and publishers, after fretting for much
of the 1990s about the future of the monograph, were suddenly
in the midst of unanticipated demand for things Arab and Muslim.
Hanging over these developments, however, were both a tragedy
and a debacle. The tragedy, of course, was the attacks of September
11, 2001. The debacle was the presidency of George W. Bush, which
claimed to have found its purpose in the attacks’ aftermath.
The results spoke for themselves: two foreign countries occupied;
countless innocents dead; torture embraced; American credibility
at historic lows; and, for the first time in living memory, a
Middle East policy openly bleeding American taxpayers. A Manichean
view of the world appeared to have overcome America: Good was
said to be ranged against evil; crusades were needed to defeat
jihads; and despite the platitudes emanating from the White House
about how Islam as a religion was not the enemy, there was a
very clear sense that “the West” was besieged by dangerously
fanatical Muslims.
As a corollary
to this view, or rather as one of its many expressions, was the
recrimination lurking at the heart of the plethora of accounts
that vied with each other to explain the nature of America’s
relationship to the Middle East. The contest of narratives is
unresolved. Who is to blame for the Arab-Israeli conflict, and
for the blight of Islamic fundamentalism? Who is to blame for
the illiberality that holds the Arab world in a vise-like grip?
And who, ultimately, is to blame for the scourge of terrorism
that culminated in the September 11, 2001 hijackings? Pundits,
novelists, journalists, comedians and bloggers -- from Salman
Rushdie to Glenn Beck -- hold forth constantly on the problems
of Islam, the Middle East and the Arabs. They have offered a
variety of prescriptions for what America should do next in this
“troubled” region of the world, from bombing it to reforming
Islam. The vast majority of these commentators do not seriously
engage with Middle Eastern perspectives.
In this landscape
of apparently universal expertise, scholars working on the modern
Middle East face a conundrum. On the one hand, they perceive
that the general public is eager for information about the region
they cover -- something that cannot necessarily be said about
their colleagues who teach about Europe or many other parts of
the world. On the other hand, they are confronted with a prejudice
against Arabs and Muslims that pervades contemporary American
political culture. There is an urgent need for their knowledge,
but theirs is certainly not the most accessible form of knowledge
about the Middle East. For every scholar who ventures forth to
interpret this or that part of the region, there is a Thomas
Friedman or an Irshad Manji to provide a shallow, but invariably
more widely circulating alternative explanation focusing on the
region’s ills.
There is no
unanimity among scholars of the Middle East about America’s relationship
with the region they study. But discomfort with representations
of the region has been widespread among scholars at least since
the publication of Edward Said’s enormously influential book Orientalism in
1978. Said attacked what he described as the Orientalist dogma
that perpetuated notions of the rational, advanced West and the
backward, inferior East, grotesque generalizations about the
timeless, monolithic nature of Islam or “the Muslim,” and, above
all, reliance on “classical” texts rather than modern realities
to make arguments about contemporary Arab or Muslim societies.[1] Said’s pillorying of the Orientalists,
chief among them the Princeton historian Bernard Lewis, signaled
a revolution in the manner in which many, if not most, academics
viewed and studied the Middle East. The influence of Lewis endures,
to be sure, but Said’s insistence on self-awareness and self-criticism
in place of Orientalist omniscience has had a deep academic impact.
Following Said, scholars in American studies, literature, history,
art history and, most clearly, Middle East studies, have so systematically
deconstructed Western assumptions about the East that criticism
of Orientalist bias has long since ceased to be original. Despite
continuous, posthumous sniping at Said, despite even the many
serious and substantive criticisms of Orientalism, his
intervention has become academic common sense.[2] Representations of all cultures must be interrogated, and not
taken at face value. Even the most conservative type of history
-- US diplomatic history, which has traditionally eschewed serious
cultural analysis -- has belatedly embraced facets of Said’s
thesis. The best historical work on the US and the Middle East
clearly acknowledges that both American and Middle Eastern understandings
of self and other fluctuate, rather than adhering to basic, unchanging
civilizational tropes. Rather than assuming American benevolence
toward the East, or accepting nationalist assumptions about what
America is or who Americans are, these new studies underscore
complexity and contingency.[3]
Said’s influence
within the academy notwithstanding, his work has been unable
to stem the tide of ignorant, caricature-like representations
of the Arab world and Iran that swamps the non-academic discussion
of the modern Middle East in the United States, even in highly
educated circles. Academics publish at a glacial pace and tend
to speak to a specialized audience of fellow practitioners. There
is a serial disconnect between informed academic knowledge and
public discourse on the subject. Every terrorist strike against
Western targets widens the gap, and none more so than the attacks
of September 11, 2001.
The spectacular
nature of these attacks, and the subsequent invasion and occupation
of Afghanistan and Iraq, however, awakened Americans to their
historical entanglement in the region. It alerted them to the
intense anti-American sentiment abroad. There was a world out
there that seemed to matter. There was also an opportunity for
critical scholars of the modern Middle East to reclaim a public
role. Their work became directly relevant to public affairs.
The failures
of US policy in both Afghanistan and Iraq -- indeed, the sheer
cost of the occupation of both countries -- opened, moreover,
a significant breach in the wall of Orientalism in the Bush years.
Although Edward Said himself passed away in September 2003, although
the field of Middle East studies came under concerted assault
by pro-Israel operatives such as Daniel Pipes and Martin Kramer,
and although the aging Bernard Lewis and the like-minded Fouad
Ajami had the ear of Vice President Dick Cheney, the breach was
real, and it was soon entered by critical scholars like Rashid
Khalidi, Juan Cole and Mahmood Mamdani. Their collective foray
into the public realm brought with it two fundamental questions.
How were these scholars to balance academic work with the general
public’s demand for accessible knowledge, and how were they to
navigate the politics of patriotism so as to give their criticism
a wide hearing?
Empire
Unmasked
Rashid Khalidi’s Sowing
Crisis is an effort to do both. Khalidi is, appropriately
enough, the Edward Said Chair of Arab Studies at Columbia University.
Long before becoming the object of a smear campaign in the
dying days of John McCain’s presidential run, Khalidi had established
himself as a leading historian of the modern Middle East. The
author of several scholarly monographs that delved into international
diplomacy and the question of Palestine as well as the origins
and nature of Palestinian national identity, Khalidi is a man
at home in American academia. He has trained graduate students
over a generation; he has worked in archives; he has been president
of the Middle East Studies Association and, of course, he has
a deep familiarity with the history of the region he covers,
including its Ottoman past. And he has become, since the events
of September 11, and especially since Said’s death, the leading
Palestinian-American academic voice in the United States. His
trilogy with Beacon Press -- Resurrecting Empire, The
Iron Cage and Sowing Crisis -- has been published
in less than a decade, and has been aimed squarely at a general
readership.
It is instructive
to read Sowing Crisis with A World of Trouble,
a book covering similar ground but written by an author with
a rather different professional background. Patrick Tyler is
a journalist, not a historian; he was based in Cairo as the Washington
Post’s Middle East bureau chief; he worked in Baghdad for
the New York Times “up to the start” of the 1990 Gulf
war, as the dust jacket puts it; then he covered China and Russia
before returning to Baghdad in 2003. He exhibits familiarity
with the Middle East’s major players and an engaging writing
style; he knows his audience well, and unlike Khalidi, Tyler
does not have to make the transition between a career in academic
publishing and writing to meet the demands of the general public.
And yet, to give his book a certain historiographical heft, Tyler
has spent time at both the Woodrow Wilson International Center
for Scholars and the National Security Archive at George Washington
University, and asserts that his book is a “comprehensive” history
of US Middle East policy. Tyler wants his book to be taken seriously.
He is what you might call a Washington insider -- comfortable
with the men of power (and it is men of power that he covers
almost exclusively in this book) who make up the various presidential
administrations that he investigates to the extent that he identifies
with them.
Both Khalidi
and Tyler offer damning assessments of US policy in the Middle
East. The Americans, as Khalidi’s title aptly puts it, sow crisis
in the region; Tyler’s account reinforces this conclusion with
a narrative of American incompetence that culminates in the figure
of President George W. Bush. It is hard, after all, to investigate
any aspect of recent US-Arab or US-Iranian relations and not
be struck by how dismal the overall picture appears. On this
point, the two books fit together nicely, the historian and the
journalist amplifying one another’s pleas that the new Obama
administration take a hard, honest look at the less than edifying
legacy of its predecessors.
Khalidi’s
book highlights some essential points necessary for an understanding
of the US relationship to the Middle East. The first, and most
obvious, is oil. The United States became interested in the region
because of its strategic significance, which itself was largely
a function of Saudi Arabia’s oil reserves. During the Cold War,
therefore, the US formed the basis of its domination of the region.
It did not so much compete with the Soviets as it did exert extraordinary
negative influence over the area. Here Khalidi reverses a theme
of American diplomatic history that has taken for granted: US
policymakers’ obsession with containing the spread of Soviet
influence, as if US imperial interests in the region were themselves
defensive or a reflection of the natural order of things. While
Khalidi does not deny a Cold War US struggle against the Soviets,
or Soviet designs on the Middle East, he does point out that
American imperial designs shaped the modern Middle East. The
Soviet Union was revealed as a “paper tiger” that played second
fiddle. The Americans, moreover, took over the mantle of the
leading great power from the British Empire, and nurtured, as
the British had done, an approach to the region that promoted
quiescent, undemocratic regimes as auxiliaries of their imperial
hegemony.
In the process,
Khalidi contends that the US not only laid the foundations upon
which George W. Bush built his neo-conservative enterprise to
reshape the map of the Middle East; it also laid the foundations
of the crises the region witnesses today, including its lack
of democracy, the growth of Iranian influence and the emergence
of non-state organizations such as Hizballah and Hamas, all of
which are inimical to US interests and to a secular vision of
the Middle East. According to Khalidi, the US sowed crisis on
several levels: Its Cold War confrontation with the Soviets subverted
political development in the region because of America’s opposition
to secular Iranian and Arab nationalism (most infamously exemplified
in the US overthrow of Iran’s elected Mossadeq government in
1953) and its promotion of the autocracy of the Saudis and the
Shah; and, with the exception of failed attempts of the Carter
and first Bush administrations, its quest for Cold War dominance
relegated the resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict to secondary
importance. US rivalry with the Soviets exacerbated not only
the Arab-Israeli conflict, but also the civil war in Lebanon
and the Iran-Iraq war. The US bypassed and weakened the UN when
it came to Israel; and it engendered the emergence of radical
movements without appreciating the degree to which these movements
responded to local conditions and to US Cold War machinations,
as opposed to Soviet troublemaking. According to Khalidi, the
United States, is a Machiavellian, yet often a shortsighted,
great power.
“There was,
of course,” Khalidi writes, “a price attached to this Cold War-drive
approach, not least in terms of the ideals and principles that
Americans like to believe their foreign policy is based on.”
Khalidi takes aim not only at actual American policies that have
been instrumental in shaping an illiberal Middle East, but also
at American popular passivity regarding those policies: the support
for the Shah’s dictatorship that led to the Islamic Revolution
in Iran and for the mujahideen in Afghanistan, whose war against
the Soviets galvanized extremist Islamist movements.
For Khalidi’s
intended audience of general readers, the evaluation of US policies
in the region will be informative. For instance, he sketches
out the history of Zionist colonization of Palestine, which is
largely unknown in the United States; he also points out the
“deep flaws” of Palestinian leadership of the time, as he did
in his previous book The Iron Cage. His concern in Sowing
Crisis, however, is what he sees as a consistent failure
of US leadership during and after the Cold War. Despite the anemic
attempt of President Jimmy Carter to resolve the Palestinian
question, successive US administrations have exacerbated the
Arab-Israeli conflict by tilting heavily toward Israel. Since
at least the Reagan era, administrations have adopted what Khalidi
calls an Israeli view of the Palestinians, centered on the “mindless
shibboleth of terrorism,” rather than seeking a comprehensive
and genuine understanding of the region. This “poisoned legacy,”
he insists, has made for “disastrously superficial approaches
to a broad range of complex issues in the Middle East.” Khalidi
is correct in his assessment. But what remains unclear is why
an Israel-centric “peace process” -- rather than a just resolution
of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict -- is not an American interest,
especially given the fact that many, indeed most, Arab states
have thrown in the towel and sued for peace with Israel despite
Israel’s ongoing and flagrant oppression of the Palestinians.
At his best,
Khalidi is able to synthesize a vast historiography on the US
in the Cold War in order to elucidate larger themes of a conservative
anti-Soviet, anti-nationalist and anti-democratic US stance in
the Middle East. The role of Arab and Iranian actors in the unfolding
of US policy is, however, barely treated at all. There are moments
in the book, moreover, that need elaboration as information pushed
into endnotes might have helped a general reader make sense of
what Khalidi describes as the “many flaws in the Madrid process,”
or what he calls “the myth of Israel’s ‘humane occupation,’”
or the “ubiquitous” presence in Palestinian-Israeli negotiations
of Dennis Ross. Ross is an alumnus of the pro-Israel Washington
Institute on Near East Policy (WINEP) who served in the first
Bush and Clinton administrations and now works in the Obama White
House. At its moment of greatest leverage in the Middle East
in the aftermath of the successful (from a US standpoint) Gulf
war, with Arab nationalism effectively crushed, and UN resolutions
aggressively enforced with regard to Iraq, the United States
failed (yet again) to enforce UN resolutions regarding the Arab-Israeli
conflict despite paying lip service to them at Madrid in 1991.
The opportunity to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict was there,
Khalidi contends, but it was not grasped.
Empire
Unnamed
This same
history of missed opportunities is evident in Patrick Tyler’s A
World of Trouble. Unlike the scholarly Khalidi, Tyler offers
an account studded with vignettes to carry the reader through
several hundred pages of text. One of the major thrusts of the
book comes across clearly: that the Palestinian question is at
the heart of America’s problems in the region and that US policy
in the Middle East has been hijacked by a pro-Israel orientation.
“Somewhere,” Tyler writes, “a line had been crossed in America’s
relationship with Israel.” As with Steven Walt and John Mearsheimer’s The
Israel Lobby, Tyler’s book gives evidence that the taboo
on open and critical discussion of Israel in the mainstream may
finally be lifting.
Tyler’s depiction
of Israel as a belligerent power that has chosen colonization
of Arab lands over peace with the Palestinians is at times incisive;
he portrays, for example, the dilemmas of Yasser Arafat during
the years after the 1993 Oslo accords empathetically. Arafat
was a flawed leader, Tyler declares, but he was stymied by Israeli
arrogance and settlement building and by American complicity
in both. Tyler’s portrayal of the Palestinian leader is quite
different from that in the mainstream US media, where he was
vilified as the man who rejected peace. This is Tyler at his
most readable, a journalist able to draw on his experience in
the Middle East, and willing to pierce the armor of the formidable
Israeli propaganda apparatus that has repeatedly demonized the
Palestinians and their leaders.
To his credit,
Tyler incorporates primary materials from the declassified National
Security Archive at George Washington University, the Lyndon
B. Johnson Library in Austin, Texas and the National Archives
in College Park, Maryland. But his promise to tell a fuller story
of America in the Middle East is seriously undermined by his
resort to Orientalist themes and phrases. In Tyler’s case, this
tendency comes not from reliance upon “classical” texts in Arabic,
Persian and Ottoman Turkish, but from near exclusive reliance
on sources in English. Tyler employed an Israeli research assistant
to examine material in Hebrew, but did not ask an Arab to sift
through the many Arabic sources he could have consulted, such
as memoirs or newspapers. Perhaps this is why Tyler describes
Zionism as an outgrowth of “Hebrew nationalism” dating back to
biblical times; the Arabs don’t seem to have a significant history
in his account.
In the crucial
chapters laying out the origins of the Arab-Israeli conflict,
for instance, Tyler generally portrays Zionist leaders positively.
The clichés in his description of Golda Meir -- a tough lady
with “grandmotherly looks” -- contrast with those in his description
of Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser as the son of a postal
clerk from Upper Egypt, “known for producing male offspring who
were generally taller, darker and intellectually fiercer than
the more languid Egyptians of the Nile Delta.” Tyler admits that
Arabs have legitimate grievances against Israel and the US, but
he gives the impression that these grievances are driven by negative
and reactionary impulses -- one of which, of course, is “hate.”
Arabs seem, in Tyler’s hands, unable to articulate a positive
view of themselves, their rights or their history. And Westerners,
including apparently Tyler himself, come face to face with a
civilizational chasm that separates them from the Arabs. He writes
that Egypt, for example, was in the grip of a “somnolent decrepitude”
before Napoleon invaded “carrying the Age of Reason.” The chasm
has not been bridged to this day. The “Arab mind,” Tyler claims,
as if there were such a thing, “still seemed like terra incognita
for American leaders, perhaps because the Judeo-Christian experience
was a boundary of history that had rendered the Islamic experience
remote.” He provides no evidence for this assertion or for others
that emanate from his understanding of the Middle East as “a
region of Oriental complexity whose leaders felt a deep nostalgia
for a triumphal Islamic past.”
The problem
with such descriptions is not simply that they are journalistic
shorthand that mystifies the history of the Middle East; they
reflect Tyler’s view of a monolithic Islam that supposedly rages
against a modernizing West. A World of Trouble recalls
the approach of ex-CIA man Michael Scheuer, whose own rebuke
of American failures in the Middle East, Imperial Hubris,
similarly depends on an ahistorical and deeply Orientalist understanding
derived explicitly from Bernard Lewis’ idea of Islam as a primordial
loyalty “that transcends all others.”[4] Tyler acknowledges no debt to Lewis, but reproduces unhelpful
and tired descriptions of Saddam Hussein as “a wounded and angry
predator” and misleading labeling of Hizballah alongside al-Qaeda
as a purveyor of “transnational extremism.” Not all Islamists
are the same -- Hizballah has a domestic Lebanese agenda, for
the most part, not the “transnational” one that al-Qaeda aspires
to -- but these major differences are elided in A World of
Trouble.
In place of
serious work that attempts to understand a range of Arabs in
their own terms, through their own writings and in their own
language, Tyler offers warmed-over stereotypes: a triad consisting
of Orientalized Arabs, brutal but somewhat more complex Israelis,
and essentially good Americans (with notable exceptions such
as Bill Clinton, whom Tyler describes as an opportunist overseeing
serial derelictions of duty). The mediating figures for Tyler
are Arabs such as Anwar al-Sadat, who embraced the US vision
of the region and made a separate peace with Israel, and the
Saudi Prince Bandar bin Sultan, one of his main sources, whose
notoriety and reactionary role in Middle Eastern politics he
barely touches on.
Tyler does,
however, point to the elephant in the room that few Americans
will openly discuss for fear of being labeled anti-Semitic. He
highlights the saliency of Israel for several American Jews who
have been in influential US government positions, from ex-Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger to Dennis Ross, and he criticizes what
he sees as the conflation of Israeli and American interests that
has alienated Arabs and Muslims from the US. Tyler’s description
of Kissinger is startlingly blunt: “He was an American, ambitious
to succeed in the Nixon administration. But he was also a Jew
and one not indifferent to Israel.” Ross and Martin Indyk, another
WINEP man in the Clinton administration, were “both scions of
the Jewish political establishment in Washington,” Tyler continues,
and because of their ardent Zionism, they were fundamentally
unfit to promote an even-handed US approach to the Arab-Israeli
conflict. Undoubtedly, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee,
or AIPAC, and other Jewish lobbying groups wield enormous influence
in Washington. Tyler deftly captures this reality when he describes
how the right-wing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
ran roughshod over President Bill Clinton and “swept through
Washington like a bodybuilder, flexing the political muscle of
the pro-Israeli bloc in Congress.” The problem is not in this
statement of facts, but that Tyler does not comment similarly
on the agenda, religion and business interests of men like Warren
Christopher or George H. W. Bush -- the latter “a decent man,”
in Tyler’s opinion.
Tyler ends
his account with reflections on the reign of George W. Bush.
He recognizes that Bush was incompetent -- albeit in the rather
generous formulation, “He is not a detail man” -- and that the
former president exploited the terrible events of September 11
to further a radical agenda. Tyler’s treatment of the September
11 attacks, however, is framed by the same Orientalist conceit
repeated at the time by the American media. The United States
was targeted because it could be “credibly defamed” (notice the
ambiguous diction) as an “offender of pious Muslims struggling
against the intrusion of modernity.” Again, as per Lewis, Muslims
(and not just the al-Qaeda extremists) are cast as being driven
primarily by religion and as living in the past. And, though
he allows that Arabs and Muslims’ “humiliations” are many, Tyler
reassures his readers that America “was not really responsible”
for the debacle that is the modern Middle East.
Who, then,
is responsible? The Arabs and Israelis surely must shoulder their
part of the blame for the militarism of the Middle East. So,
too, must Britain and France, for their role in undermining what
the historian Albert Hourani famously referred to as the Arab
world’s “liberal age” in the first half of the twentieth century.
But what of the United States that Rashid Khalidi criticizes
in his Sowing Crisis? Tyler underlines the American arrogance,
malfeasance, incompetence and outright aggression that has shaped
the Middle East; he openly criticizes US presidents for their
repeated failures of leadership and diplomacy; he bluntly condemns
the “built-in bias” toward Israel that has distorted US policies;
he indicts Reagan, excoriates Clinton and admonishes George W.
Bush; and yet he concludes by writing that “America’s destiny
in international relations is to play the role of a just, magnanimous
and stabilizing power” and by hoping that “generations of young
Muslims” will recognize the “fallacy of Islamic imperialism.”
This conclusion is remarkable, if for no other reason than that
Tyler’s book is not about “Islamic imperialism.” Rather, it is
about US imperialism, though he does not use the term. A World
of Trouble is about the long-standing determination of the
US to control Middle Eastern oil, its hostility to secular Arab
and Iranian nationalism, and its now almost axiomatic support
for Israel despite the latter’s brutalization of the Palestinians.
The discordant
note on which Tyler’s book ends displays the fundamental inadequacy
of Orientalist criticism of US and Israeli policies in the Middle
East. In a sense, Tyler wants to have it both ways. He evinces
a basic sympathy with the Palestinian predicament, yet he also
indulges in the most hackneyed descriptions of the Arab world.
Above all, he criticizes the failures of American decision-making
while remaining quaintly attached to the notion that such decisions
are guided by “traditional American ideals.” In other words,
he refrains from any serious examination of the nature and implications
of US power.
At the
Morass
Both authors
raise profound questions about that power. Has the US long been
an empire that operates through coercion to maintain its interests
in the Middle East, or has it been seduced by supremacy, and
thus lost sight of its ideals, only recently, and especially
since September 11, 2001? Khalidi, and, to a lesser extent, Tyler,
puncture the illusions of liberal Americans who would like to
characterize George W. Bush’s policy as a monstrous deformation
of American traditions by showing that Bush inherited, and did
not invent, a belligerent and anti-democratic US approach to
the Middle East. Yet Khalidi concludes by suggesting that the
Bush administration was indeed extraordinary -- for its manipulation
of the public through the “war on terror” and for its aggrandizement
of the executive and military-industrial complex. He approvingly
quotes Presidents Dwight Eisenhower, George Washington and James
Madison to make the latter point. But the US declared vast spheres
of influence, launched invasions and carried out brutal pacification
campaigns long before the Cold War began, in places such as Haiti
and the Philippines. What, one wonders, is the relationship between
this robust record of US imperialism and the actions recounted
in Sowing Crisis and A World of Trouble?
Khalidi, even
more than Tyler, is keen to anticipate the question that American
readers will undoubtedly want to ask: Where do we go from here?
Despite his reluctance as a historian to predict the future,
he wants to end his story with a way out of the morass. In the
face of systematic manipulation of public ignorance of the Middle
East, Khalidi suggests that the American people might yet “wake
fully from the nightmare illusions fostered by the George W.
Bush administration, and begin to deal pragmatically with real-world
problems instead of responding to exaggerated phantasms and false
images that the US government and its allies in the media have
projected on the region, from Afghanistan to Darfur, most of
them keyed to terrorism.” This pragmatism, of course, is to be
hoped for. Khalidi does not say that it will arise, just that
it must before there can be substantial change in hitherto failed
US Middle East policies. But is it at all to be expected? Khalidi
is appealing to an audience that has been shaped by the very
processes of simplification and obfuscation of the Middle East
that he recounts and condemns.
Endnotes
[1] Edward
W. Said, Orientalism (New York: Vintage, 1979), pp. 300-301.
[2] For
the most cogent summary of the argument and criticisms of Orientalism,
see Zachary Lockman, Contending Visions of the Middle East:
The History and Politics of Orientalism (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2004).
[3] See
Nathan Citino, From Arab Nationalism to OPEC (Bloomington,
IN: Indiana University Press, 2002), pp. 4-17; Melani McAlister, Epic
Encounters: Culture, Media and US Interests in the Middle East,
1945-2000 (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press,
2001); Douglas Little, American Orientalism (Chapel Hill,
NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2002); Salim Yaqub, Containing
Arab Nationalism (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina
Press, 2004); and Brian T. Edwards, Morocco Bound: Disorienting
America’s Maghreb, from Casablanca to the Marrakesh Express (Durham,
NC: Duke University Press, 2005). See also Paul Chamberlain,
“A World Restored: Religion, Counterrevolution, and the Search
for Order in the Middle East,” Diplomatic History 32 (June
2008).
[4] Bernard
Lewis cited in Michael Scheuer, Imperial Hubris: Why the West
Is Losing the War on Terror (Dulles, VA: Potomac Books, 2004),
p. xviii. Scheuer, interestingly, both depends on Lewis and criticizes
his failure to underscore the anti-Israel and anti-colonial dimension
of radical Islamist ideas.

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