Find This Book
"An encyclopedic account of the ongoing military and diplomatic conflict
between the United States and Iran. Since the fall of the shah in 1979,
Iran and the United States have been thorns in each other's sides. Iran
seeks recognition as a regional power and as a champion of Shia Muslims
throughout the Middle East, but its policy toward America has often been
driven by a "paranoia that the real goal behind U.S. actions was the
overthrow of the Islamic Republic." America, for its part, has
consistently "helped perpetuate the animosity [by displaying] a callous
disregard for Iranian grievances and security concerns." The result has
been an ongoing "shadow war" in which each side has inflicted grievous
casualties on the other without quite falling into open belligerence,
while missing numerous opportunities for rapprochement. In a monumental
debut, senior government historian Crist presents a comprehensive
narrative of this conflict from the ascendancy of the Ayatollah Khomeini
to the present day. Drawing on extensive access to American government
leaders and documents, Crist surveys his topic in thorough, if sometimes
ponderous, detail, including coverage of the bombing of the Marine base
in Beirut, the Iran/Iraq war, the arms-for-hostages scandal, the naval
battles of the "tanker wars," Iran's involvement in post-Hussein Iraq
and its present pursuit of nuclear ambitions. Completely in command of
the competing interests and personalities at the highest levels of
American policymaking, Crist has an equally impressive grasp of the ebb
and flow of diverse viewpoints in Iranian religious, political and
military councils. The battle scenes are edge-of-the-seat gripping, and
the author is keenly insightful on the Byzantine diplomatic maneuvers,
by turns farcical and dismaying, and the motivations of the politicians,
clerics, Cold Warriors and con artists who have stoked the ongoing
tensions between the two nations in spite of important common interests.
Some casual readers may be turned off by the page count, but this is
likely to be the authoritative history of the origins and progress of
the Iranian policy morass for years to come." (Kirkus Reviews)
Current Affairs
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment