Publishers Weekly
01/30/2023
Hubris regularly begets disaster in this astringent history of American policy in the Middle East since 1980, in which former State Department official Simon (coauthor, The Sixth Crisis) surveys decades of American successes and failures in the region. The latter far outnumber the former and include the Reagan administration’s secret, illegal arms sales to Iran; George W. Bush’s Iraq War, which led to hundreds of thousands of deaths; Donald Trump’s self-defeating repudiation of Obama’s Iran nuclear deal, which ended up accelerating Iran’s nuclear program; and many feckless stabs at an Israeli-Palestinian peace plan. The author highlights persistent dysfunction in U.S. policy, including a tendency to resort to military coercion, policymakers’ rejection of lower-level experts who contradict their theories, and “a superimposition of grand ideas on antithetical Middle Eastern realities.” Stocked with sharply etched portraits of statesmen, Simon’s narrative elucidates complex issues in pithy, biting prose. (On the Iran-Iraq War: “Equally jarring is the idea that both the United States and the Soviet Union were supporting Iraq only because the prom queen—Iran—had spurned them.”) Simon’s insider savvy and bracing honesty make for an illuminating take on America’s vexed relationship with the region. (Apr.)
From the Publisher
Why American foreign policy has been so successful with other democracies in the alliance system across the postwar era, while policy and its execution across the Muslim and developing worlds has been so miserable, is an implicit contrast that this startling policy history portrays. The book provides context for yet another Gaza-Palestinian crisis.” —Financial Times, Reader’s Choice Best Books of the Year
“The author of this critical consideration of four decades of the U.S. government’s dealings in the Middle East has held positions in the State Department and on the National Security Council, across various Administrations . . . embedded with engaging recollections.” —The New Yorker
“A brilliantly written account . . . . At a time when US engagement in the region is declining while that of other actors—Russia and China—is rising, the book is very timely.” —Financial Times
“A comprehensive, even magisterial review . . . This is strong stuff, but Simon does not flinch.” —Foreign Affairs
“An illuminating book, written with exceeding wit and erudition.” —The Washington Post
“Simon brings an insider’s perspective and a broad historical sensibility to his account.” —Shepherd Express
“Stocked with sharply etched portraits of statesmen, Simon’s narrative elucidates complex issues in pithy, biting prose . . . Simon’s insider savvy and bracing honesty make for an illuminating take on America’s vexed relationship with the region.” —Publishers Weekly
“As a frontline player in Middle East policy, Simon provides a sweeping, detailed analysis of failures and successes.” —Kirkus
“This deeply informed memoir-history covering four decades of U.S. policy in the Middle East is laced with grace, wit, and an abundance of fresh insights. To convey a sense of empathy for policymakers in way over their heads while also calling them to account for their blunders is a neat trick—one that Steven Simon pulls off in style.” —Andrew J. Bacevich, author of America's War for the Greater Middle East: A Military History
“Steven Simon’s honest, unsparing insider’s account of America’s half-century of tragic activism in the Middle East weaves riveting eyewitness detail with the sobering judgments of an intellectual outsider—essential reading for anyone who wonders how so many smart, well-intentioned experts in one presidency after another could have gotten it so wrong.” —Steve Coll
“This is a thought-provoking critique of American foreign policy in the Middle East. With unique insight as a policy insider, Steven Simon pulls no punches in this must-read book for anyone interested in America's successes and failures over the past four decades.” —David Crist, author of The Twilight War
“Steven Simon shrewdly dissects four decades of policy failures in the Middle East, giving readers a vivid picture of how decision makers went off the rails and more importantly why. Readers won't find this blend of direct experience and hard analysis anywhere else.” —Adam Entous, Pulitzer Prize winning reporter, The New York Times
“Steven Simon's book is both an excellent analysis and a bracing critique of American policy in the Middle East over the past decades, by someone who was at the center of making that policy. It has the immediacy of an insider's account and the cool detachment of a seasoned observer. It is an excellent teaching book as well.” —F. Gregory Gause III, Texas A&M University
“Grand Delusion is a tour de force—an insightful and powerful telling of the history of US policy in the Middle East. The reader will be left both frustrated and wondering what might have been if better policy choices had been made by multiple administrations.” —Michael Morell, former Acting and Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency
“Steve Simon is an ideal witness to the story of America’s tragic entanglements with the Middle East: deeply experienced in government, erudite, cold-eyed. He was often in the room where the decisions were made, but there is no vanity or self-promotion here. His book is an important corrective to the willful ignorance and misguided idealism that have marred so much American policy. More than that, it is a thoughtful and often lacerating memoir about the delusions that accompany great power. It should be required reading for aspiring diplomats, scholars, and anyone who cares about the risks involved in one country’s efforts to reshape the world beyond its borders.” —Robert F. Worth, author of A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS
June 2023 - AudioFile
Author Steven Simon delivers the preface of this audiobook with a slightly crackly timbre. In it he shares his background, actions as counterterrorism director of the National Security Council during the Clinton administration, and a succinct summary of this work. Narrator Robert Petkoff takes on the rest of this detailed political history of America's involvement in the Middle East from Ronald Reagan's administration to the present. Petkoff adopts a smooth cadence for the political discourse, along with subtle shifts in tone when delivering excerpts from documents and reports. Petkoff's steady narration draws listeners into this complex political history of diplomatic efforts, military engagements, international policies, and presidential decision making. M.B.K. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
Kirkus Reviews
2022-12-29
According to this comprehensive account, when it comes to Middle East policy, good intentions count for nothing.
The entanglement of the U.S. in the Middle East goes back decades. Simon, who has worked in numerous key government roles related to foreign policy in the region, argues that despite the spending of huge amounts of blood and treasure, not much has been achieved. The chapters relate to presidential administrations, but the author often takes informative detours into the deeper history. Every president has started out with great aspirations, but each one has had to change course to accommodate shifting realities. Every country in the region has its own agenda and historic conflicts with neighbors, and their political systems are often dictatorial, unstable, and/or corrupt. For an external player to understand all of the factors involved is like trying to put together a jigsaw in a labyrinth of distorting mirrors. Simon threads his way through the chaos, noting the many agreements and treaties that have been meant to bring stability. Unfortunately, paper burns easily. In fact, American policy has seldom displayed a clear objective. Should the U.S. support Israel? Counter Soviet, and then Russian, influence? Build democratic governments? Tamp down the chronic violence? Protect sources of oil? All of these are relevant, which has meant that none has been very effective, and occasional, conditional successes have been offset by bloody failures. Simon sees the focus of U.S. foreign policy now moving toward Asia, with a growing realization that the idea of imposing a solution on the Middle East is a delusion. “A net assessment suggests that the United States would have been better off today if it had not been so eager to intervene in the Middle East,” says Simon. “Fortunately, America’s era there is drawing to a close, and probably not a moment too soon.”
As a frontline player in Middle East policy, Simon provides a sweeping, detailed analysis of failures and successes.