My Books
Oil and God - Sustainable Energy Will Defeat Wahhabi Terror Available on:
Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk, Barnes and Noble, Waterstones
Religious
extremism in the Middle East surfaced after the dismemberment of the Ottoman
Empire in 1918. What caused the transformation from a tolerant Sunni Hanafi
empire to the ferocious religious wars which now plague the Middle East?
Oil and God is an unabashed
realpolitik study of the culprits. It analyses the complex relationships between and among the different
players in Middle Eastern affairs and the stake each has in the region’s sectarian wars. The book explores the roots of the current jihadist movements, Saudi Arabia’s Wahhabi
culture, the Arab Israeli conflict, The Alawite regime in Syria, the
Khomeini Shi’ite revolution, the 9/11 terror attacks, and the Shi’ite/Sunni wars.
Oil and God examines the tensions that fuel events
such as the Arab Spring and the different histories, cultural values, and
religious priorities that underlie the level of success each country has had on
its trajectory to democracy with the credibility of an insider.
Oil and God relates US oil
geopolitics to Saudi Arabia’s symbiotic union with Wahhabism. The book investigates why
President G.W. Bush occupied Iraq, not Saudi Arabia, why and how Tehran dominated Baghdad, why President Obama handed Syria to Iran, and why Mr. Trump has fundamentally followed
the Bush and Obama strategies on the Middle East since he became president on January 20, 2017.
Oil and God contends that hegemony over oil exports is world
hegemony and that US control over
Saudi oil is a non-lethal weapon of mass destruction. The book holds that national security concerns of the big oil importers in Asia and Europe will drive renewable energy
development to end oil imports. When that happens, US protection of Riyadh will
wane, Saudi cash will dwindle, Wahhabi terror will diminish, and democracy will
have a chance to take root in Arab lands.
The Islamic Shield -Arab Resistance to Democratic and Religious Reforms
Available on: Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk, Barnes & Noble, Waterstones
The Islamic Shield examines the interaction between political Islam and world politics. Washington’s "War on Terrorism" has used democratization of the Arab World as a justification and a weapon. The Islamic Shield contends that genuine religious and political reforms in the Arab World are sheer fantasy: Democratic ideology cannot defeat Islamic theology. A culture of blind obedience to autocratic authority at home, school, mosque, and work place has become a form of piety.
The Islamic shield analyzes the likely causes behind 9/11 and the consequences of Arab resistance to political and religious reforms on the Middle East and beyond, especially the Arab-Israeli conflict. The book examines the factors, which might prompt young, sometimes affluent and educated men and women to self-annihilate. In addition to a deficit of freedom, extremist indoctrination as well as domestic and foreign political factors are identified. The book concludes that politically expedient solutions will fail to defeat jihadism and terrorism.
The Islamic Shield examines why democratic institutions are a mirage in two profoundly different countries: Saudi Arabia, an Islamist monarchy, and Syria, a quasi-secular republic. Although the two countries differ in governance, ideologies, natural resources, and climate they share in common non-representative, non-participatory dictatorial regimes. The two countries approximate socio-political models found in other Arab monarchies and republics.
The Islamic Shield considers such questions as: How likely is it that a future Arab Martin Luther, or a Kemal Ataturk might emerge? Why do non-Arab Islamic countries elect women as prime ministers and presidents while Arab ulama treat women as lesser beings and condemn democracy as un-Islamic? Is benevolent dictatorship a viable alternative to democracy? Who shapes the Islamic persona? Is Islamic law changeable? If yes, who may change it? What might the legacy of the George W. Bush administration be in the Muslim world? What might be the eventual outcome of the "War on Terrorism"?
Experiments in Achieving Water and Food Self-Sufficiency in the Middle East -
The Consequences of Contrasting Endowments, Ideologies, and Investment Policies in Saudi Arabia and Syria
Available on: Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk, Barnes & Noble, Waterstones
This book is my Ph.D. research, conducted between 2002 and 2005 at London University's School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS). Experiments... aims to quantify and analyze how two water scarce but ideologically different Middle Eastern political economies, Saudi Arabia and Syria, addressed water sector investment between 1980 and 2000. The study examines how narrow-coalitions of decision-makers obsessed by impossible-to-achieve food self-sufficiency goals, lacking environmental consideration, and safe political processes led to unsustainable water policies and massive waste of their scarce natural resources.
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