Arabists: The Romance of an American EliteSimon and Schuster, 1995 M07 1 - 368 pages A tight-knit group closely linked by intermarriage as well as class and old school ties, the “Arabists” were men and women who spent much of their lives living and working in the Arab world as diplomats, military attaches, intelligence agents, scholar-adventurers, and teachers. As such, the Arabists exerted considerable influence both as career diplomats and as bureaucrats within the State Department from the early nineteenth century to the present. But over time, as this work shows, the group increasingly lost touch with a rapidly changing American society, growing both more insular and headstrong and showing a marked tendency to assert the Arab point of view. Drawing on interviews, memoirs, and other official and private sources, Kaplan reconstructs the 100-year history of the Arabist elite, demonstrating their profound influence on American attitudes toward the Middle East, and tracing their decline as an influx of ethnic and regional specialists has transformed the State Department and challenged the power of the old elite. |
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... Arab world. One of their sons, Philip, a Princeton graduate like his father before him, met his American bridetobe—a Dartmouth alumna and humanitarian relief worker— in Lebanon after the 197576 civil war. “Three generations, three wars ...
... Arab world. One of their sons, Philip, a Princeton graduate like his father before him, met his American bridetobe—a Dartmouth alumna and humanitarian relief worker— in Lebanon after the 197576 civil war. “Three generations, three wars ...
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... Middle East policy types who appear on talk shows. Arabists are men and women, like Bill, who read and speak Arabic and who have passed many years of their professional lives, with their families, in the Arab world, whether as diplomats ...
... Middle East policy types who appear on talk shows. Arabists are men and women, like Bill, who read and speak Arabic and who have passed many years of their professional lives, with their families, in the Arab world, whether as diplomats ...
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... world wars, Anne's bloodandsoil Protestant background was entirely typical, as was her exotic sense of national identity. Anne grew up “speaking a mixture of English, Arabic, and French.” At the family table breakfast was American, tea ...
... world wars, Anne's bloodandsoil Protestant background was entirely typical, as was her exotic sense of national identity. Anne grew up “speaking a mixture of English, Arabic, and French.” At the family table breakfast was American, tea ...
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... World, best exemplified, they felt, by the fact that the new United States was the “only Christian nation, which has never persecuted the descendants of Israel.” AntiSemitism would one day become a critical issue for Americans in the Arab ...
... World, best exemplified, they felt, by the fact that the new United States was the “only Christian nation, which has never persecuted the descendants of Israel.” AntiSemitism would one day become a critical issue for Americans in the Arab ...
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... Arab Bureau in Cairo during World War I, accumulated three hundred books on Arab subjects during the course of the war. *While the French Mandate of 1920 had given Lebanon a separate legal identity, until the present Syrian state came ...
... Arab Bureau in Cairo during World War I, accumulated three hundred books on Arab subjects during the course of the war. *While the French Mandate of 1920 had given Lebanon a separate legal identity, until the present Syrian state came ...
Contents
Aggrieved Area Experts | |
Mugged by Reality | |
Horan of Arabia | |
Indiana Jones | |
Debacle | |
The Icy Eyes That Had Contemplated Nineveh | |
Cowering in a Dark Alley | |
Hostages to Idealism | |
Reality | |
Mr Foreign Service | |
Old Hands | |
Never a Dull Moment | |
Redemption | |
A New Species? | |
Bibliography | |
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Akins American missionaries antiSemitism April Glaspie Arab country Arab nationalism Arab world ArabIsraeli Arabists Aviv Baghdad became Beirut Bill Stoltzfus Bliss British cables Cairo career Christian Cluverius colleagues College Congregationalist Coon Crane culture Custis Damascus David Department Department’s desert Doughty Eagleton Eastern Egypt Eli Smith expatriates Falashas Feisal Foreign Service French FSOs Glaspie’s going Hermann Eilts Hume Horan Iran Iraq Iraq’s Iraqi Islam Israel Israeli Jerry Weaver Jerusalem Jewish Jews Jidda Kelly Khartoum Killgore Kissinger Kissinger’s knew Kuwait language Lawrence Lawrence’s learn Arabic Lebanon lived Loy Henderson Maronites Mesopotamia Middle East military mission Moslem NEA assistant secretary never officer Operation Moses Palestine Palestinian Parker peace Philby political president Protestant Roy Atherton Sadat Saddam Saudi Arabia says Seelye’s Shiite Sisco SixDay Soviet Sterner Sudan Sudanese Syria Talcott Seelye U.S. ambassador U.S. diplomats U.S. embassy United University Veliotes Washington Western Wiley William Yemen