It appears that Michael in his previous post was also sufficiently baffled by Edward Luttwak's somewhat bizarre and not-very-well argued piece on "Why the Middle East Doesn't Matter," an admittedly provocative title which, one would think, would bear promise of, at the very least, a mildly interesting 10-minute read. I should have known better. When I first saw this gropingly contrarian title on the bookshelf at Borders, I glanced over with interest. I thought it weird that someone who wasn't a Middle East expert would write an article, which states, in the very first sentence no less, that Middle East experts have been so "unfailingly wrong." It is rather tiresome when articles begin with what is so evidently a straw-man argument. Which Middle East experts is he talking about exactly? The ones in academia, or the ones in the State Department, or those at Washington, DC think-tanks? The Saidists or the neo-culturalists? The "apologists for empire" or the "anti-imperialists?"
And, now, a fisking is deserved. Luttwak tell us that
The first mistake is "five minutes to midnight" catastrophism. The late
King Hussein of Jordan was the undisputed master of this genre. Wearing
his gravest aspect, he would warn us that with patience finally
exhausted the Arab-Israeli conflict was about to explode, that all past
conflicts would be dwarfed by what was about to happen unless, unless…
So Luttwak thinks that this supposed "catastrophism" has been unwarranted. I suppose his threshold is a bit higher than the rest of us, who have been sufficiently daunted by September 11th, a war in Iraq and the resulting sectarian bloodshed (also known as a civil war), a deteriorating Israeli-Palestinian situation, a rising Iran which seeks to acquire nuclear weapons, an empowered Hezbollah, emboldened Arab autocrats brutalizing their own populations, a dire constitutional crisis in Turkey, and, if you count Sudan as part of the Middle East, the Darfur genocide, and, if you count spillover effects from the region, then radicalized, disenfranchised Muslim minorities in Europe. I suppose Luttwak wants for more catastrophe to justify paying attention to this, or any other, region.
He then goes on to
say, as if to goad us into thinking that he is not quite with it: "Strategically, the Arab-Israeli conflict has been almost irrelevant since the end of the cold war." It would be one thing if he tried to explain how this could be. Instead he delves into some rather incoherent discussion on declining global dependence on oil. I will spare you that.