EBOOK

About
The collapse of Syria into civil war over the past two years has spawned a regional crisis whose reverberations grow louder with each passing month. In this timely account, John McHugo seeks to contextualize the headlines, providing broad historical perspective and a richly layered analysis of a country few in the United States know or understand. McHugo charts the history of Syria from World War I to the tumultuous present, examining the country's thwarted attempts at independence, the French policies that sowed the seeds of internal strife, and the fragility of its foundations as a nation. He then turns to more recent events: religious and sectarian tensions that have riven Syria, the pressures of the Cold War and the Arab-Israeli conflict, and two generations of rule by the Assads. The result is a fresh and rigorous narrative that explains both the creation and unraveling of the current regime and the roots of the broader Middle East conflict. As the Syrian civil war threatens to draw the U.S. military once again into the Middle East, here is a rare and authoritative guide to a complex nation that demands our attention.
Related Subjects
Reviews
"McHugo uncovers uncanny parallels between the pacification strategies of the French in the 1920s and the Bashar al-Assad regime today, exposing the continuous role of violence in the region's (flawed) state formation."
Raymond Hinnebusch, director of the Centre for Syrian Studies, University of St. Andrews
"A fluent introduction to Syria's recent past, this book provides the backstory to the country's collapse into brutal civil conflict."
Andrew Arsan, St. John's College, University of Cambridge
"I'm indebted to a short but enlightening monograph by John McHugo (chair of the Liberal Democrat Friends of Palestine), which points out that in 191920 . . . the separation of Iraq from Greater Syria was still only a division between occupation zones."
Robert Fisk