Theorizing Islam [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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The knowledge that accumulated between
1981 and 2001 never intersected the world of policy because it was
never integrated into an overall vision of Middle Eastern/Islamic
politics of sufficient persuasiveness to unseat the long-standing
assumptions that had guided most policy decisions since World War
II. It has long been a commonplace that U.S. policies over that
period reflected a calculation of national interest that had three
components: security for the state of Israel, maintenance of a
steady flow of petroleum at reasonable prices, and denial of
opportunities for the Soviet Union to secure footholds in the
region. In addition, several theoretical assumptions derived from
modernization theory channeled the ways in which policy makers
sought to ensure these national interests: 1) In the process of
modernization, economic development normally precedes
democratization, which can go awry if it is not based on mass
education, and a solid and prosperous middle class. 2) The process
of modernization is necessarily accompanied by a growth of
secularism and a retreat of religion from the public stage to the
arena of private observance. 3) Strong guidance"preferably by
academy-trained military officers, western-educated technocrats, or
monarchs willing to collaborate with western powers"is needed to
channel resources efficiently and rein in immature or demagogic
advocates of democratization.

These several assumptions,
which were well articulated by the scholars who laid the theoretical
foundation for the field of Middle East studies in the late 1950s,
resulted in a fairly consistent and bipartisan policy outlook for
half a century. Moreover, they seemed to work. Instability in the
early postwar decades gave way in the 1970s to authoritarian
regimes, some military and some monarchical, that sought to develop
their economies, educate their young people along modern and often
secular lines, and exclude from the political arena anyone who
advocated placing communism or Islam at the center of political
life. The United States agonized over Israel’s unexpected
vulnerability in the Ramadan war of 1973, suffered through the oil
crisis that came out of the war, and worried continuously about
Soviet expansion. Islamic politics, however, never reached the
threshold of visibility on the worry list, despite the fact that the
writings of Sayyid Qutb, Ayatollah Khomeini, and many others were
achieving broad circulation and stimulating their readers to dream
about different social and political orders.

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