Middle East Forum

Other MEF Websites:   Campus Watch   |   Daniel Pipes   |   Islamist Watch

Middle East Forum

 

 

 

 

 

 

  1. Assessing English Translations of the Qur'an
  2. Iran's Revolutionary Guards - A Rogue Outfit?
  3. The Middle East's Tribal DNA
  4. Beheading in the Name of Islam
  5. Ahmadinejad and the Mahdi

 

  1. Iran's Revolutionary Guards - A Rogue Outfit?
  2. Obama or McCain, Iran stance won't change
  3. The Middle East's Tribal DNA
  4. Ahmadinejad and the Mahdi
  5. Does Islam Justify Honor Killings?

JUNE 1994 • VOLUME I: NUMBER 2

Subscribe   |    Archive   |    Submit Manuscript   |    Board of Editors   |    Contact Editor   |   

Iraq's Road to War

Edited by Amatzia Baram and Barry Rubin. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1993. 304 pp.

Reviewed by Daniel Pipes

Middle East Quarterly
June 1994

Print Send RSS

The American and European scholarly contribution to understanding the Kuwait war tended to be limited to military analysis, polemical arguments, and abstract interpretations; and these have mostly petered out as interest in the war has declined. Accordingly, the important task of interpreting that conflict has been left largely to Israelis, who have done an outstanding job fulfilling it.

In the present study, a mostly Israeli cast of authors looks at the Iraqi decision to go to war and the consequences of that decision. Baram draws on his unique knowledge of Iraqi politics to take on that most difficult of tasks, probing Saddam Husayn's mind. Mark A. Heller explains why the Iraqi army regularly performs poorly. Ofra Bengio looks at the balance of power within Iraq's ethnic communities. Patrick Clawson points out the subtle economic impact of the sanctions against Iraq, while Robert J. Lieber argues that Saddam Husayn's adventurism could easily have deeply harmed the world economy.

A host of authors-including Rubin, Shaul Bakhash, Joseph Nevo, David Kushner, and the late Avner Yaniv-then look at Iraq's foreign relations through the 1990-91 crisis and war. But perhaps most interesting is the chapter by Joseph Kostiner on the much-neglected Kuwaiti angle. He establishes the basic percepts of that country's foreign policy-essentially, neutralism and good Arab citizenship-and then shows how these guidelines were maintained throughout the crisis leading up to August 2, 1990. He finds the thesis that Kuwaitis provoked Iraq to war not at all convincing.

Related Topics: Iraq

To receive articles regularly by email, join the MEF News mailing list.
To receive the full, printed version of the Middle East Quarterly, please see details about an affordable subscription.

Related Items

©1994-2008 The Middle East Forum • 1500 Walnut St. • Suite 1050 • Philadelphia, PA 19102 • Tel: 215-546-5406 • Fax: 215-546-5409 • E-mail: info@meforum.org