The Middle East is very important to the US. Many events have happened since our involvement with the Middle East such as the Cold War, the OPEC oil embargo, the Camp David Accords, the Persian Gulf War, and the 9/11 attacks. Over time, the US has went from focusing on containment to natural resources and then defense and safety in the Middle East and America. During the 1950s the US wanted to contain communism by using media to combat Soviet propaganda. Document A says, “To demonstrate through
the Middle East began to lose influence over the area. In 1946, France and Great Britain were forced to withdrawal from their colonized states by the United Nation Security Council when a delegation of the Middle Eastern countries called for the removal the colonial mandates on Middle East, specifically in Palestine (Department of Public Information). While Britain and France did not completely abandon their influence over the area, the removal of their direct influence over the Middle East left
A Turning point in America’s Perception of the Middle East The Iranian nuclear program has been one of the most challenging issues in the world for more than a decade. The struggle was mainly between Iran and six of the world’s most powerful countries, which included China, the U.S.A, the U.K, France, Germany and Russia. What’s really worth noting is that this controversy was not solely about Iran 's willingness to have a nuclear program, which to its own merits was completely peaceful, but it was
Saudi Arabia is a country that is known to attract religious visitors from around the world to take part in the yearly pilgrimage of Hajj or Umrah. The Middle East Respiratory Syndrome is a new infectious disease that is creating an uproar in the world because of the yearly gathering of around 3 to 4 million muslims to participate in Hajj and the year-long influx of pilgrims partaking in Umrah (Lessler et al., 2014). According to the European Centre of Disease Prevention and Control (2014), the first
A profound transformation is occurring in the Middle East over the past few months. Since January of this year the region has seen the overthrow of two long standing regimes, that of Ben Ali in Tunisia and Hussein Mubarak in Egypt. Nearly every other country in the region has seen protests of varying severity and outright bloodshed in Libya. The upheaval appears to have been unforeseen by much of the international community. How America and its allies react to this situation may well determine
Often called “The Crossroads of the World”, the Middle East stands between three continents: Asia, Africa, and Europe. Over thousands of years, migrating traders and conquerors crossed this region and spread the ideas, inventions, and achievements of many civilizations. It is an incredibly important part of the world with rich history, important resources, and deep religious and cultural traditions. However, in the past decades up to today, the Middle East has been consumed by conflict and chaos. Although
The Middle East is known for its natural beauty and majestic architecture. Aside from the breathtaking scenery the Middle East offers, people from the Middle East live restrictively in contrast from the people’s lives in the Western countries. In countries such as Egypt, Iran, and Israel, people face constant fear of violence from wars, gender equality and women’s rights are ignored, and the people face poverty. Gender equality and women’s rights in Middle Eastern countries are nowhere to be seen
Women in the Middle East, more precisely in Lebanon are not perceived as equal to men. Westerners are told that Middle Eastern women are passive, weak, and always veiled. That is why it is often assumed that the severe conditions in Saudi Arabia where women are not even allowed to drive cars represent the norm for women throughout the Middle East. However, this ideology is wrong, it is a stereotype. Feminism in the Middle East is not apparent and understood, as it is in America and empowered more
military headquarters, coming in close contact with Washington D.C. The last plane, United Airlines flight 93, was crash landed in an open field in the middle of Pennsylvania. Such a devastating act of terrorism led to public outrage across the nation. It came as no surprise that the government had to respond to its people's distress
In the Middle East, European colonialism obliterated Arab sovereignty through its political and economic takeover. After gaining independence, the epicenter of perceived encroachment of Arab autonomy by the West was found in the Jewish state of Israel. Furthermore, the United States’ military support of Israel was also seen as an extension of colonialism. The colonial legacy of the British and the French occupations in the Middle East led to the belief that Israel was another imperial force that