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Saddam Hussein's Gulf Wars: Ambivalent Stakes in the Middle East

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Saddam Hussein's Gulf Wars: Ambivalent Stakes in the Middle East

Contributors:

By (Author) Miron Rezun

ISBN:

9780275943240

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

30th October 1992

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Middle Eastern history

Dewey:

956.7044

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

164

Description

This text deals extensively with Iraq and Saddam Hussein - his rise to power, his mastery of Iraqi statecraft, his pan-Arab proclivities and his two Gulf Wars: the first against Iran and the second against the US-led multinational coalition in 1990-1991. Israeli sources, as well as materials gathered during a trip to Turkey and the Kurdish refugee areas in northern Iraq, provide additional perspective for the author and his analysis. The book portrays a multidimensional Saddamm Hussein: good and bad, strategic and human. It throws light on the reasons the US went to war against Saddam, and presents an in-depth analysis of the United States' policies, which at one time supported Iraq's cause in the Gulf region. A feature of the book is its detailed discussion of the psychology of Saddam, of the Arabs, the Iranians, the Israelis and the American public before, during, and after the Gulf War. Rezun's conclusions challenge generally accepted views that lay the blame for the war on Saddam Hussein. Although Saddam is a cruel and rapacious demagogue, the author argues that US policymakers are to blame for having supported Saddam for so long. The author also rejects the view that General Norman Schwartzkopf was a great hero of the last war. Contrary to general opinion, Schwartzkopf conducted a no-risk operation in which Saddam Hussein was trapped because of his miscalculation of US intentions. Critical of US policies, Rezun finds them naive and short-sighted. Although disapproving of US policies during the war, Rezun praises the support and sustenance given by the Bush administration to the Kurds in the final hours of the Gulf War. This book is addressed to generalists and academic specialists, and to students of Middle East politics.

Reviews

A well-rounded, contextual portrait of Saddam, who is routinely depicted in the West as a two-dimensional mad villain. This analysis illuminates the numerous issues that fuel the conflict between the West and Islamic Arabs, Iraq--once an ally--in particular. . . . This book will provide researchers with a solid historical foundation for understanding future events.-American Libraries
Rezun's most recent book is a provocative think piece which seeks to explain the Saddam Hussein phenomenon. Gulf Wars presents an excellent discussion of the psychology of all the participants before, during and after the Gulf War. Rezun, serving as a lightning rod, performs a useful service by provoking discussion in this area.-The Friday Review of Defense Literature
"Rezun's most recent book is a provocative think piece which seeks to explain the Saddam Hussein phenomenon. Gulf Wars presents an excellent discussion of the psychology of all the participants before, during and after the Gulf War. Rezun, serving as a lightning rod, performs a useful service by provoking discussion in this area."-The Friday Review of Defense Literature
"A well-rounded, contextual portrait of Saddam, who is routinely depicted in the West as a two-dimensional mad villain. This analysis illuminates the numerous issues that fuel the conflict between the West and Islamic Arabs, Iraq--once an ally--in particular. . . . This book will provide researchers with a solid historical foundation for understanding future events."-American Libraries

Author Bio

MIRON REZUN, born in Israel, is a Professor of Political Science at the University of New Brunswick in Canada. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Geneva, Switzerland, and has published widely on the Middle East and the Soviet Union. His articles have appeared in Etudes Internationales, the International Journal, Queen's Quarterly, and Problems of Communism. He edited the book Iran at the Crossroads: Global Relations in a Turbulent Decade (1990). He has published Post-Khomeini Iran and the New Gulf War (1991) and Intrigue and War in Southwest Asia (Praeger, 1991). Forthcoming is his edited collection: Nationalism and the Breakup of an Empire: Russia and Its Periphery (Praeger, 1992).

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