America and the Yemens: A Complex and Tragic Encounter

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Product Details
Price
$32.40
Publisher
Brookings Institution Press
Publish Date
Pages
104
Dimensions
5.7 X 8.6 X 0.5 inches | 0.52 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780815740131

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About the Author
Bruce Riedel is a Senior Fellow in the Foreign Policy Studies program at the Brookings Institution where he specializes in the Middle East and South Asia. His previous books include Kings and Presidents: Saudi Arabia and the United States Since FDR, Beirut 1958: How America's Wars in the Middle East Began, and Jordan and America: An Enduring Friendship. He resides in Chestertown, Maryland.
Reviews

America and the Yemens: A Tragic Encounter is a masterful account by one of America's foremost intelligence and national security analysts of a country cursed in its geography and history. Bruce Riedel weaves this narrative from his vast experience in the White House, CIA and Pentagon under four Presidents as they tried to navigate the perilous territory of the Middle East and the Persian Gulf - both during the rise of al-Qaeda, and after indigenous rivalries were further radicalized by the American invasion of Iraq. Riedel is an omnipresent narrator with unique first-person knowledge of the roots of Yemen's tragic civil war. This book is must reading for anyone fascinated by the causes of a tragedy and American relations that are now catastrophic.


Bruce Riedel draws on his firsthand experience to give an insightful look at the U.S.'s complicated relationship with Yemen. It is a necessary read to balance the many conflicting narratives on the tragedy that this ancient country has become. Once again, Bruce's writing style makes history easy to read and shows its centrality to our present.


Combining his deep historical knowledge with the fascinating anecdotes of an insider, Bruce Riedel demonstrates how contemporary U.S. involvement in Yemen echoes decades of U.S. Yemen policy. The pattern of U.S. support for Saudi interests in Yemen goes back to the Kennedy administration, while the pernicious effects of foreign meddling in Yemeni affairs bears striking similarity to the dynamics of the current civil war. A must-read for those hoping to understand the roots of contemporary pathologies in the U.S.-Yemen relationship, as well as a means of overcoming them.