Available Formats
The East Moves West: India, China, and Asia's Growing Presence in the Middle East
By (Author) Geoffrey Kemp
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Brookings Institution
3rd May 2010
United States
General
Non Fiction
327.5056
Hardback
300
During a period when established Western economies are treading water at best, industry and development are exploding in China and India. The worlds two most populous nations are the biggest reasons for Asias growing footprint on other global regions. The impact of that footprint is especially important in the Middle East, given that regions role as an economic and geopolitical linchpin. In The East Moves West, Geoffrey Kemp details the growing interdependence of the Middle East and Asia and projects the likely ramifications of this evolving relationship.
"Geoffrey Kemp's narrative of Asia's deepening footprints in the Middle East is insightful and provocative. It is a pathbreaking analysis of major significance and originality not a lament about the decline of America or the end of Western ascendancy but, rather, a sober wake-up call to face a new, and maybe enduring, feature of international politics." Hisham Melhem, Washington bureau chief, Al-Arabiya news channel
|"A rising Asia enters the Persian Gulf, with all that that implies. Nowhere is this development analyzed better than in this volume by Geoffrey Kemp. The East Moves West is timely, authoritative, and readable." Shahram Chubin, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
"Geoffrey Kemp has written a book of startling originality. Much is said about a "new" Middle East, and here it is, India and China pushing westward into the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean. This is strategic and political anaylsis of the highest order." Fouad Ajami, Professor and director of Middle East Studies, Johns Hopkins University
Geoffrey Kemp is the director of Regional Strategic Programs at the Nixon Center in Washington, D.C. He served in the White House under Ronald Reagan, as special assistant to the president for National Security Affairs and senior director for Near East and South Asian Affairs on the National Security Council staff. Prior to his current position, he directed the Middle East Arms Control Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He is coauthor of Strategic Geography and the Changing Middle East (Carnegie).