Episode 18

Epilogue Part 2: Decades of American Destruction

How did the Oslo Accords play out through the rest of the 1990s and the years waiting up to the Second Intifada, which began in 2000? And what did the Second Intifada, these years of enormous militant mass uprising, what did that movement expose about the reality of the Zionist project and indigenous resistance to that project in post-Oslo Palestine?

Epilogue Part 2: Decades of American Destruction
Discussion Questions
Reader
Transcript
  • What were the main distinguishing features in the strategies employed by Arafat and Abu Mazin respectively? Why do these figures adopt the positions they do?
  • What would you say is the most important political effect of the second intifada?
  • This episode discusses a few different frames for the War on Terror: Tariq Ali’s the Clash of Fundamentalisms, Samuel Huntington’s Clash of Civilizations, and Dan Denvir’s Crusade Against Jihad. Which of these frames does Abed think is most apt, and why?
  • Why does Iraq play such a large role historically in the security considerations and geopolitical ambitions of so many imperialist and regional powers?
  • How does the US invasion of Iraq come to sectarianize Iraqi politics?
  • There is a fascinating moment that Abed describes in the run up to the Arab spring in which there is a nascent Left-Islamist unity, bound together by programming on Al Jazeera, salons for its realization in the region, etc. How does Abed describe this nascent alliance and what were the challenges to its realization?
  • Syria’s Assad regime was sometimes defended on the basis of its pro-Palestinian or anti-imperialist credentials. After listening to this episode, what do you make of such a characterization?
  • In an earlier episode, the Muslim Brotherhood were described as the ultimate Gramscians - charting a long and winding war of position through Arab civil society, constructing charities and mosques and educational associations, and building up clandestine political organizations often alongside it. How do you, and how does the series, appraise this strategy employed in most countries of the region over the course of decades covered by the show?
  • Arab spring : why do you think it encountered the political limits that it did? What does that suggest needs to be done? Are these limits unique to the Arab world, or features of protest movements elsewhere too?
  • One of the prime stories of the arc of the 20th and 21st centuries in the Mashriq is the shift from the regional balance of power tilting decisively away from Egypt, Syria and Iraq and towards the Gulf States. What accounts for this shift, and what are the consequences of it?
  • In what ways is Qatar anomalous compared to other Gulf States? Why?