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ID077533
Title ProperEvolving Empire
Other Title InformationAmerica's "Emirates" Strategy in the Persian Gulf
LanguageENG
AuthorO’Reilly, Marc J
Publication2007.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines U.S. policy in the Persian Gulf and juxtaposes American efforts in Iraq with those in the Gulf Cooperation Council states. As the U.S.-led effort to pacify and democratize Iraq continues to founder and with civil war underway in parts of the country, Washington pursues another imperial strategy in the Persian Gulf better suited to American security preferences and more likely to succeed, at least in the short term. In pursuing an "emirates" strategy, Washington seeks to indulge its historic preference for an informal empire in the Gulf that relies on cooperation with pro-American monarchs. While the Bush administration has touted Iraq's potential to remake the Middle East into a democratic haven, America seems prepared to rely on familiar autocrats to help it tackle terrorists in Southwest Asia and preserve Western access to critical supplies of hydrocarbons should Iraq's democratic rehabilitation prove unsuccessful
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Perspectives Vol. 8, No.2; May 2007: p137-151
Journal SourceInternational Studies Perspectives Vol. 8, No.2; May 2007: p137-151
Key WordsUnited States - Foreign Policy ;  Persian Gulf ;  Empire ;  Strategy ;  Bush Administration