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Power, Faith, and Fantasy: America in the Middle East: 1776 to the Present
by Michael Oren
How America Met the Mideast
A review by Robert Kagan
We often hear that
Americans know little about other nations; a bigger problem is that we
know too little about ourselves, our history and our national
character. When it comes to U.S. foreign policy, in particular, we were
all born yesterday, unaware of how present policies and attitudes fit
into persistent historical patterns. So when a brilliant, lucid
historian such as Michael B. Oren does bring the past back to life for
us, revealing both what has changed and what has stayed the same, it is
a shaft of light in a dark sky. Today, the conventional view is
that George W. Bush took the United States on a radical departure when
he declared a policy to transform the Middle East and that, as soon as
he leaves office, U.S. policy will return to an alleged tradition of
realism, rooted in the hard-headed pursuit of tangible national
interests. This is both bad history and bad prophecy, as Oren shows in Power, Faith, and Fantasy,
a series of fascinating and beautifully written stories about
individual Americans over the past four centuries and their contact
with Middle Eastern cultures. As a historian, Oren is more
storyteller than grand theorist, so as a study of the complex and
contradictory motives of American behavior, his book is a bit thin.
Nevertheless, three powerful themes emerge from his tales: that from
the Founders onward, Americans have repeatedly tried to transform Arab
and Muslim peoples -- politically, spiritually and economically -- to
conform to liberal and Christian principles; that since the days of the
Puritans, many Americans have been obsessed with the idea of
"restoring" Palestine to the Jews; and that from the colonial era to
the present, many (and perhaps most) Americans have regarded Islam as a
barbaric, violent and despotic religion. Whether these purposes and
perceptions have been intelligent or misguided, based on reality or
fantasy, Oren shows that they have been the dominant features of our
foreign policy tradition in the Middle East. Oren demonstrates
that suspicion and hostility toward Islam are almost as old as the
nation. John Quincy Adams called it a "fanatic and fraudulent"
religion, founded on "the natural hatred of Mussulmen towards the
infidel." This was partly religious prejudice, of course, but
that prejudice was reinforced by unfortunate experience. In the
perilous early years of the republic, the Muslim Barbary powers preyed
on American shipping and captured, tortured and enslaved hundreds of
innocent men and women. When John Adams and Thomas Jefferson implored
the pasha of Tripoli to stop, Oren recounts, the pasha's emissary
insisted that the Koran made it the "right and duty" of Muslims "to
make war upon" whichever infidels "they could find and to make Slaves
of all they could take as prisoners." George Washington raged, "Would
to Heaven we had a navy to reform those enemies to mankind, or crush
them into non-existence." And Congress did create a navy in the 1790s
primarily to crush the Barbary powers and protect American traders and
missionaries. President Jefferson -- so often mislabeled as an
idealist, pacifist and isolationist -- eagerly launched the war and
ordered the permanent stationing of U.S. naval forces thousands of
miles from the nation's shores. As Oren relates, the modest
number of 19th-century Americans who lived in the Middle East largely
considered Islam -- in the words of a former Confederate officer hired
to improve the Egyptian army -- a religion "born of the sword," one
that was "opposed to enlightenment" and crushed "all independence of
thought and action." They found the oppression of Muslim women
appalling. Being Americans, they thought the best antidote was a
thorough transformation of culture and society. Protestant missionaries
utterly failed to convert Muslims to Christianity, but they did work to
spread the "gospel of Americanism": liberalism, technology and
democracy. Over the next century, American politicians and
policymakers repeatedly imagined they could liberalize a people who
seemed to them bursting with "democratic aspirations," as one New
Dealer put it in 1943. This may have been hubris, but if so, it was an
enduring hubris. Oren quotes a mid-19th-century Arab guide warning a
missionary: "You Americans think that you can do everything...that
money can buy or that strength can accomplish. But you cannot conquer
Almighty God." Yet a century later, Harry S. Truman insisted, "God has
created us and brought us to our present position of power...for
some great purpose....It is given to us to defend the spiritual
values...against the vast forces of evil that seek to destroy them." No
act of international social engineering was more audacious than
American support for the establishment of a Jewish state in the middle
of an implacably hostile Arab world. But this idea, too, had deep
roots. The earliest members of the "Israel lobby" were the Puritan
settlers, who even before they reached America had petitioned the Dutch
government to "transport Izraell's sons and daughters...to the Land
promised their forefathers...for an everlasting Inheritance." Their
prominent heirs included John Adams, who imagined "a hundred thousand
Israelites" conquering Palestine; Lincoln's secretary of state, William
Henry Seward; and, a century later, Woodrow Wilson, who delighted in
the thought that he might "be able to help restore the Holy Land to its
people." Thus, President Truman felt a deep sense of historical and
religious destiny when he recognized the newly created state of Israel
in May 1948, comparing himself to the ancient Persian king who also had
repatriated the Jewish exiles and helped rebuild a Judean state. "I am
Cyrus," Truman crowed. "I am Cyrus!" Few acts in the history of
U.S. foreign policy have been less in accord with "realist" principles.
Oren, an Israeli historian whose previous book was the bestselling Six Days of War,
shows that U.S. backing for the establishment of Israel was rooted in
religious convictions going back more than four centuries. Americans'
response to the enormity of the Holocaust helped transform old Puritan
dreams into reality. But even so, the essential element here was the
rise of the United States to global predominance; it is doubtful that
any other country -- including Great Britain, which ruled Palestine
after World War I -- would have placed religious conviction and moral
sentiment above selfish and practical interests.
Critics from
World War I onward warned that American support for a Jewish state
would produce unending war, severely damage America's otherwise
amicable relations with the Muslim world and, after the discovery of
massive deposits of Middle Eastern oil in the 1930s, endanger access to
this vital commodity. Saudi Arabia's pro-American first king, Abdul
Aziz ibn Saud, flatly warned Franklin D. Roosevelt that the "Jews have
no right to Palestine" and that Arabs would die fighting to resist a
Jewish state. When the typically American president spoke of the
horrors of the Holocaust, the typically Arab king questioned the
fairness of making "the innocent bystander," Palestine's Arabs, pay for
the crimes of others. If 3 million Jews had been murdered in Poland,
ibn Saud reasoned, then there was now room there for 3 million more.
Many Muslims' sentiments have not changed over the past six decades. And
neither have those of many Americans. Despite all the crises of the
past years, including the present war in Iraq, Oren predicts that the
United States will continue "to pursue the traditional patterns of its
Middle East involvement." Policymakers "will press on with their civic
mission as mediators and liberators in the area and strive for a pax Americana."
American "churches and evangelist groups will still seek to save the
region spiritually." And Americans will regard the region as both
"mysterious" and "menacing," as they have for centuries, and will seek
to transform it in their own image. Many today may want to disagree,
but they will have to wrestle first with the long history of American
behavior that Oren has so luminously portrayed.
Robert
Kagan, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, writes a monthly column for the Washington Post. He is the
author of Dangerous Nation and Of Paradise and Power.
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