ID | 115086 |
Title Proper | History resumes |
Other Title Information | sectarianism's unlearned lessons |
Language | ENG |
Author | Rieff, David |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The influence of sectarianism in politics is about as welcome a topic among policymakers as the drunken uncle or the drug addict son is at the family dinner table. Indeed, a strong case can be made that it is because policymakers in powerful countries, above all in the United States and Western Europe, within the UN system, especially in the departments of political affairs and peacekeeping, and at the World Bank and the IMF, tend to craft their strategies and make their decisions as if sectarianism were a minor concern rather than the central one that it has always been in most parts of the world, that, like a sort of Philosopher's Stone in reverse, it has turned so many supposed geostrategic sure things into either disappointments or outright failures. |
`In' analytical Note | World Affairs US Vol. 175, No.2; Jul-Aug 2012: p.29-38 |
Journal Source | World Affairs US Vol. 175, No.2; Jul-Aug 2012: p.29-38 |
Key Words | Sectarianism ; Afghanistan ; Soviets Thought ; Pashtun ; Tribalism ; NATO ; Capitalism |