With the Ukraine conflict, the construction of accounts to explain a given nation’s interest in particular lands is very much with us. Notions of some form of inherent identity or “deep history” are used by Vladimir Putin to justify his aggressive expansionism in Ukraine. Notions of a greater Europe are deployed in competition. When foreign policy is discussed in the United States, there is also naturally reference to the accumulated weights of the past.
The processes by which such senses are formulated tend to attract insufficient attention, in part because the assessment of international advantage is too often made in terms of immediate interest, as if some mathematical positioning could explain interests and determine policies. That is a fallacy, one of the central problems with treating humans as units in some modernization theory gone mad.
Jonathan Parry’s new handsomely produced book, Promised Lands: The British and the Ottoman Middle East, takes a different tack. It is an account of how interests are developed and expressed, one in which (perish the thought) both ideas and individuals play a role. Of course, there is the Eastern Question, geopolitics, and economics, but Parry, a professor of modern British history at Cambridge, also devotes great attention to the politics of Christianity. In the case of the Middle East, there was rivalry between Britain, France, and Russia, with each supporting different Christian strands, and with those strands having, as Parry shows, considerable distinctions. Yet, while in France and Russia there