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Last chance. The Middle East in the Balance

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As Barack Obama seeks to chart a new course in American foreign policy, David Gardner addresses the controversial but urgent why is the Middle East so dysfunctional? And what can be done about it?Clear-sighted and never flinching from uncomfortable truths, Gardner draws on his acute grasp of history and decades of experience covering the region to look at why conflict, despotism and sectarianism continue to flourish in the Arab world whilst they decline elsewhere. The supposed ‘Middle East exception’ is in fact, he argues, a product of the West’s own making. By supporting tyrants, fuelling the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and demonizing democratically elected Islamist parties, the West has incubated a region inherently resistant to economic and political reform, and suppurating with resentment. Timely and insightful, Gardner makes the case for a foreign policy revolution for ntohing less than a total reappraisal of what realpolitik means.

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Last chance. The Middle East in the Balance, David Gardner

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
2009
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(Hardcover)
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Titel
Last chance. The Middle East in the Balance
Sprache
Englisch
Autor*innen
David Gardner
Erscheinungsdatum
2009
Einband
Hardcover
Seitenzahl
288
ISBN10
1848850417
ISBN13
9781848850415
Reihe
Originaltitel
Last chance
Bewertung
3,5 von 5 Sternen
Beschreibung
As Barack Obama seeks to chart a new course in American foreign policy, David Gardner addresses the controversial but urgent why is the Middle East so dysfunctional? And what can be done about it?Clear-sighted and never flinching from uncomfortable truths, Gardner draws on his acute grasp of history and decades of experience covering the region to look at why conflict, despotism and sectarianism continue to flourish in the Arab world whilst they decline elsewhere. The supposed ‘Middle East exception’ is in fact, he argues, a product of the West’s own making. By supporting tyrants, fuelling the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and demonizing democratically elected Islamist parties, the West has incubated a region inherently resistant to economic and political reform, and suppurating with resentment. Timely and insightful, Gardner makes the case for a foreign policy revolution for ntohing less than a total reappraisal of what realpolitik means.