West Asia
A New American Grand Strategy in the Middle East

1. Auflage November 2025
224 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
At the end of the 20th century, the United States birthed a new Middle East order built on realpolitik and a stable balance of power. Three decades later that order has been destroyed. America's disastrous invasion of Iraq along with the failed Arab Spring created a vacuum that has allowed revisionist powers to extend their influence across the region.
In this groundbreaking work, renowned global strategist Mohammed Soliman argues that it is time for the United States to move beyond unsuccessful nation-building and get back to the business of order-building. To do so will require zooming out, in both geographical and historical terms, to build a new regional order across "West Asia" - from the Middle East to South Asia, connecting Europe to the Indo-Pacific via the Mediterranean and Red Seas. Working with India, France, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and the United Arab Emirates, among others, he shows how the U.S. could lock in a new balance of power in the Eurasian supercontinent to offset China and Russia's efforts to disrupt the status quo and create a rival system. But this will require a fundamental shift in U.S. grand strategy with "West Asia" at its core.
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Preface
Introduction
Part I Strategic Framing
Chapter 1 America and the End of the Middle East
Part II Rise of West Asia
Chapter 2 The Rise of the Arabian Gulf
Chapter 3 The Arabs, Israel, and a New Formula for West Asia
Part III Redefining the Middle East
Chapter 4 India, the Old Middle East, and the Remaking of West Asia
Chapter 5 The Suez Corridor
Chapter 6 The Indo-Islamic Axis
Chapter 7 The Return of the Indo-Abrahamic World
Chapter 8 The Eurasian Entente
Part IV Order-Building in West Asia
Chapter 9 Geostrategic Coalition
Chapter 10 Security/Hard Power Coalition
Chapter 11 Techo-Economic Coalition
Conclusion
Notes
Index