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Past Event

A Foreign Policy and Saban Center for Middle East Policy Event

A Grand Strategy for America in the Middle East

Middle East, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon


Event Summary

On September 5, the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at Brookings hosted Senior Fellow Kenneth Pollack for a discussion of his book A Path Out of the Desert: A Grand Strategy for America in the Middle East (Random House, 2008). In his book, Pollack offers a long-term strategy to improve the political, economic and social problems that underlie the region’s many crises. He examines each of the region’s most contested areas, including Iraq, Iran, Syria and Lebanon, as well as the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, and explains how the U.S. can address each through mutually reinforcing policies.

Event Information

When

Friday, September 05, 2008
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

To discuss his new book, Pollack was joined by David Brooks, New York Times columnist and commentator on The Newshour with Jim Lehrer, and Dr. Marwan Muasher, former foreign minister of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.

Saban Center Director Martin Indyk provided introductory remarks and moderated the discussion.

Transcript

KEN POLLACK: I would love to be able to tell other Americans that we can just forget about the Middle East, that it's really not that important, that we really don't face meaningful threats from the region, and that those that we do face threaten us only because we've tried to do too much there. Such an argument would be especially popular after our tragic experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan which seem to have reinforced many Americans' desires to just forget about the Middle East. The problem is that turning our backs on the Middle East now is neither possible nor wise.

One of the main reasons why America's problems in region seem to get worse and worse is that our inclination has always been to try to have as little to do with this confused and confusing part of the world as we could. As a result, we have consistently tried to do things on the cheap. Even when we have taken on Herculean tasks like invading, occupying, and rebuilding Iraq, Washington's inclination has been to try to do it with too few troops, too few resources, too few allies, and too little time. As in Iraq, the result of this shortsighted approach has always been to prolong our involvement and make it more costly than it needed to be even if it were always going to be more costly than we wanted to admit.

Consequently, the principal theme of this book is that to secure America's interests in the Middle East over the long term, the United States must embrace a long-term commitment to encourage and enable the countries of the Middle East to pursue a gradual process of political, economic, and social reform; one that grows from within rather than being imposed from without, one that reflects the values, traditions, history, and aspirations of the people of the region themselves, not a Western guess at them; one that recognizes that reform and stability are not mutually exclusive, but mutually reinforcing and ultimately mutually essential. As I readily and acknowledge and discuss at some length, this is a difficult undertaking but I believe it is ultimately the only good path that we can follow.

Participants

Introduction and Moderator

Martin S. Indyk

Director, Saban Center for Middle East Policy

Panelists

Kenneth M. Pollack

Director of Research, Saban Center for Middle East Policy

David Brooks

Columnist, The New York Times

Marwan Muasher

Author, The Arab Center: The Promise of Moderation
Former Foreign Minister, Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan


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