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After Saddam - American Foreign Policy and the Destruction of Secularism in the Middle East (Hardcover)
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After Saddam - American Foreign Policy and the Destruction of Secularism in the Middle East (Hardcover)
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After Saddam: American Foreign Policy and the Destruction of
Secularism in the Middle East investigates the manner in which
American foreign policy in Iraq artificially shifted the balance of
power in the region and brought religious identities to the
foreground. Deposing Saddam Hussein resulted in a new regional
order that diminished the strength of secular nationalism, elevated
Iran and Saudi Arabia as regional rivals, and by implication,
established a new ideological paradigm that privileged competing
religious factions over secular ideals. The trend first manifested
itself in Iraq during the American occupation with Iranian-backed
Shiites fighting Saudi-supported Sunnis. A similar dynamic is
evident in current regional wars in Syria and Yemen. By elevating
particular groups through rhetorical, financial, and military
support, civil conflicts in the Middle East reflect the ideologies
behind the Saudi-Iranian rivalry. This book therefore looks beyond
popular narratives of intractable, long-standing Sunni-Shia
conflict to explain the source of current sectarian tension as a
product of balance of power dynamics. It also helps to explain the
fracturing of the region that created a ripe environment for groups
like the Islamic State to capitalize on sectarian grievances. This
book relies and builds on balance of power theorizing by looking at
the way that traditional competition for power between states and
nonstate actors shapes ideological competition. For example, during
the Cold War, the two major world powers-the U.S. and the Soviet
Union-helped to shape international conflicts so that the narrative
of "capitalism vs. communism" played a prominent role in civil and
international conflicts-such as in Korea, Nicaragua, or Angola. By
meddling in the internal affairs of states, arming rebel groups,
and lending support to competing factions, the U.S. and U.S.S.R.
shaped not only outcomes, but also the ideas underpinning
conflicts. Today, a similar dynamic can be discerned in the Middle
East.
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