Divide and Perish.
Mattox, Henry E.
Divide and Perish
Reviewed by Henry E. Mattox
Curtis F. Jones, Divide and Perish: The Geopolitics of the Middle
East, 2nd Edition, AuthorHouse, Bloomington, Indiana, 2010,
ISBN-1449009034, 542 pp.
This is a second, revised edition of Jones' comprehensive and
thoughtful, if sometimes controversial, work on the Middle East. The
book was first published in 2007. In that regard, one can do worse than
to read or reread Norville DeAtkine's thoughtful earlier review in
this journal at: http://www.unc.edu/depts/diplomat/item/2007/0709/book/book_deatkine.html
DeAtkine essentially faults the author for his negativity
concerning Arab--mainly Palestinian--policies and actions in the area,
while at the same time citing little in the way of positive actions on
the part of Israel. It is, in Jones' view and interpretation, a
win-lose, lose-win confrontation, geographically and policy-wise, in the
region.
The author does not simply lay out criticism of the actions
undertaken over the decades by regional regimes or by foreign
interests--the United States, principally. Jones, a retired Foreign
Service specialist in the Middle East and a scholar of the region since
returning to residence in the United States, finds fault that can be
apportioned to various sides of regional conflicts of interest. The
United States figures prominently in Jones' apportionment of blame
for the seemingly constant deadly turmoil in the region. And, while
blaming Washington and Tel Aviv for much of the conflict, Jones spares
no one involved in the Middle East. It is an area of turmoil that has
sufficient blame to go around to all regional actors. In the
writer's effort to cite the names of American officials who died at
the hands of anti-American organizations, he failed to include Lt. Col.
William Buckley, Station Chief in Beirut, who was abducted by Hezbollah
in 1984 and "executed" by Islamic Jihad on November 22, 1985.
After recovery of his remains, American authorities concluded he had
died from illness and torture.
The Middle East is a constantly troubled part of the globe, one
that he describes with authority, having spent much of a lifetime either
stationed there or studying the region, or both. It is, then, a troubled
part of the globe that in his view merits explicitly the title of his
study. The divisions in the region in question have not led to anyone
conquering anyone else definitively, clearly not the United States'
involvement militarily in recent years. No, in Jones'
interpretation, the political and military divisions have led far more
to death and destruction: no conquests but much collapse of political
systems.
Thus the author's underlying thesis in a capsule. And whether
or not fully convincing to all, the reader need not accept or agree with
it to find the volume useful as a source of information not readily
available under one cover to the interested reader or scholar.