Maps can be a powerful tool for understanding
the world, particularly the Middle East, a place in many ways shaped by
changing political borders and demographics. Here are 40 maps crucial
for understanding the Middle East — its history, its present, and some
of the most important stories in the region today.
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1. The fertile crescent, the cradle of civilization
If this area wasn't the birthplace of human civilization, it was
at least a birthplace of human civilization. Called "the fertile
crescent" because of its lush soil, the "crescent" of land mostly
includes modern-day Iraq, Syria, Jordan, and Israel-Palestine. (Some
definitions also include the Nile River valley in Egypt.) People started
farming here in 9000 BC, and by around 2500 BC the Sumerians formed the
first complex society that resembles what we'd now call a "country,"
complete with written laws and a political system. Put differently,
there are more years between Sumerians and ancient Romans than there are
between ancient Romans and us.
2. How ancient Phoenicians spread from Lebanon across the Mediterranean
The Phoenicians, who lived in present-day Lebanon and coastal
Syria, were pretty awesome. From about 1500 to 300 BC, they ran some of
the Mediterranean's first big trading networks, shown in red, and
dominated the sea along with the Greeks, who are shown in brown. Some
sailed as far as the British Isles, and many of them set up colonies in
North Africa, Spain, Sicily, and Sardinia. This was one of the first of
many close cultural links between the Middle East and North Africa – and
why Libya's capital, Tripoli, still bears the name of the ancient
Phoenician colony that established it.
The Middle East actually gave Europe religion four times,
including Islam, but this map shows the first three.
First was Judaism, which spread through natural immigration and when Romans forcibly dispersed the rebelling Israelites in the first and second century AD.
In the first through third centuries A.D., a religion called Mithraism — sometimes called a "mystery religion" for its emphasis on secret rites and clandestine worship — spread from present-day Turkey or Armenia throughout the Roman Empire (at the time, most adherents believed it was from Persians in modern-day Iran, but this is probably wrong).
Mithraism was completely replaced with Christianity, which became the Roman Empire's official religion, after a few centuries. It's easy to forget that, for centuries, Christianity was predominantly a religion of Middle Easterners, who in turn converted Europeans.
First was Judaism, which spread through natural immigration and when Romans forcibly dispersed the rebelling Israelites in the first and second century AD.
In the first through third centuries A.D., a religion called Mithraism — sometimes called a "mystery religion" for its emphasis on secret rites and clandestine worship — spread from present-day Turkey or Armenia throughout the Roman Empire (at the time, most adherents believed it was from Persians in modern-day Iran, but this is probably wrong).
Mithraism was completely replaced with Christianity, which became the Roman Empire's official religion, after a few centuries. It's easy to forget that, for centuries, Christianity was predominantly a religion of Middle Easterners, who in turn converted Europeans.
4. When Mohammed's Caliphate conquered the Middle East
In the early 7th century AD in present-day Saudi Arabia, the Prophet Mohammed founded Islam, which his followers considered a community as well as a religion. As they spread across the Arabian peninsula, they became an empire, which expanded just as the neighboring Persian and Byzantine Empires were ready to collapse. In an astonishingly short time — from Mohammed's death in 632 to 652 AD — they managed to conquer the entire Middle East, North Africa, Persia, and parts of southern Europe. They spread Islam, the Arabic language, and the idea of a shared Middle Eastern identity — all of which still define the region today. It would be as if everyone in Europe still spoke Roman Latin and considered themselves ethnically Roman.
This is a rough political map of the world in 750 AD, at the
height of the Omayyad Caliphate ("caliph" means the ruler of the global
Islamic community). This is to give you a sense of how vast and powerful
the Muslim empire had become, barely one century after the founding of
the religion that propelled its expansion. It was a center of wealth,
arts, and learning at a time when only China was so rich and powerful.
This was the height of Arab power.
6. The six-century rise and fall of the Ottoman Empire
The Ottoman Empire is named for Osman, its first ruler, who in
the early 1300s expanded it from a tiny part of northwest Turkey to a
slightly less tiny part. It continued expanding for about 500 years —
longer than the entire history of the Roman Empire — ruling over most of
the Middle East, North Africa, and southeastern Europe for centuries.
The empire, officially an Islamic state, spread the religion in
southeast Europe but was generally tolerant of other religious groups.
It was probably the last great non-European empire until it began
declining in the mid-1800s, collapsed after World War I, and had its
former territory in the Middle East divided up by Western Europe.
7. What the Middle East looked like in 1914
This is a pivotal year, during the Middle East's gradual transfer
from 500 years of Ottoman rule to 50 to 100 years of European rule.
Western Europe was getting richer and more powerful as it carved up
Africa, including the Arab states of North Africa, into colonial
possessions. Virtually the entire region was ruled outright by Europeans
or Ottomans, save some parts of Iran and the Arabian peninsula divided
into European "zones of influence." When World War I ended a few years
later, the rest of the defeated Ottoman Empire would be carved up among
the Europeans. The lines between French, Italian, Spanish, and British
rule are crucial for understanding the region today – not just because
they ruled differently and imposed different policies, but because the
boundaries between European empires later became the official borders of
independence, whether they made sense or not.
8. The Sykes-Picot treaty that carved up the Middle East
You hear a lot today about this treaty, in which the UK and
French (and Russian) Empires secretly agreed to divide up the Ottoman
Empire's last MidEastern regions among themselves. Crucially, the
borders between the French and British "zones" later became the borders
between Iraq, Syria, and Jordan. Because those later-independent states
had largely arbitrary borders that forced disparate ethnic and religious
groups together, and because those groups are still in terrible
conflict with one another, Sykes-Picot is often cited as a cause of
warfare and violence and extremism in the Middle East. But scholars are still debating this theory, which may be too simple to be true.
9. An animated history of great empires in the Middle East
Michael Izady / Columbia University
This time-lapse map by Michael Izady — a wonderful historian and cartographer at Columbia University, whose full collection can be found here
— shows the political boundaries of the greater Middle East from 1450
through today. You'll notice that, for much of the last 500 years, most
or all of the region has been under some combination of Turkish,
Persian, and European control. For so much of the Arab Middle East to be
under self-rule is relatively new. Two big exceptions that you can see
on this map are Morocco and Egypt, which have spent more of the last 500
years as self-ruling empires than other Arab states. That's part of why
these two countries have sometimes seen themselves as a degree apart
from the rest of the Arab world.
11. The 2011 Arab Spring
The Economist
It is still amazing, looking back at early and mid-2011, how
dramatically and quickly the Arab Spring uprisings challenged and in
many cases toppled the brittle old dictatorships of the Middle East.
What's depressing is how little the movements have advanced beyond those
first months. Syria's civil war is still going. Egypt's fling with
democracy appeared to end with a military coup in mid-2013. Yemen is
still mired in slow-boil violence and political instability. The war in
Libya toppled Moammar Qaddafi, with US and European support, but left
the country without basic security or a functioning government. Only
Tunisia seems to have come out even tenuously in the direction of
democracy.
The Middle East today
12. The dialects of Arabic today
Wikimedia
This map shows the vast extent of the Arabic-speaking world and
the linguistic diversity within it. Both go back to the Caliphates of the sixth and seventh century, which spread Arabic from its birthplace on the Arabian Peninsula across Africa and the Middle East. Over the last 1,300 years the language's many speakers have diverged into distinct, sometimes very different, dialects. Something to look at here: where the dialects do and do not line up with present-day political
borders. In places where they don't line up, you're seeing national borders that are less likely to line up with actual communities, and in some cases more likely to create problems.
13. The Sunni-Shia divide
The Shia Revival by Vali Nasr
The story of Islam's division between Sunni and Shia started with the Prophet Mohammed's death in 632. There was a power struggle over who would succeed him in ruling the Islamic Caliphate, with most Muslims wanting to elect the next leader but some arguing that power should go by divine birthright to Mohammed's son-in-law, Ali. That pro-Ali faction was known as the "Partisans of Ali," or "Shi'atu Ali" in Arabic, hence "Shia." Ali's eventual ascension to the throne sparked a civil war, which he and his partisans lost. The Shia held on to the idea that Ali was the rightful successor, and grew into an entirely separate branch of Islam. Today about 10 to 15 percent of Muslims worldwide are Shia — they are the majority group in Iran and Iraq only — while most Muslims are Sunni. "Sunni" roughly means "tradition." Today, that religious division is again a political one as well: it's a struggle for regional influence between Shia political powers, led by Iran, versus Sunni political powers, led by Saudi Arabia. This struggle looks an awful lot like a regional cold war, with proxy battles in Syria and elsewhere.
14. The ethnic groups of the Middle East
Michael Izady / Columbia University
The most important color on this map of Middle Eastern ethnic
groups is yellow: Arabs, who are the majority group in almost every
MidEast country, including the North African countries not shown here.
The exceptions are mostly-Jewish Israel in pink, mostly-Turkish Turkey
in green, mostly-Persian Iran in orange, and heavily diverse
Afghanistan. (More on the rich diversity of Iran and Afghanistan below.)
That splash of red in the middle is really important: ethnic Kurds, who
have no country of their own but big communities in Iran, Iraq, Syria,
and Turkey. But the big lesson of this map is that there is a belt of
remarkable ethnic diversity from Turkey to Afghanistan, but that much of
the rest of the region is dominated by ethnic Arabs.
15 . Weighted Muslim populations around the world
Pew Forum
This map makes a point about what the Middle East is not: it is
not synonymous with the Islamic world. This weighted population map
shows every country in the world by the size of its Muslim population.
Countries with more Muslim citizens are larger; countries with fewer
Muslim citizens are smaller. You'll notice right away that the Middle
East makes up just a fraction of the world's total Muslim population.
There are far more Muslims, in fact, in the South Asian countries of
India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. The biggest Muslim population by far is
Indonesia's, in southeast Asia. And there are millions in sub-Saharan
Africa as well. The Islamic world may have begun in the Middle East, but
it's now much, much larger than that.
Israel-Palestine
16. Israel's 1947 founding and the 1948 Israeli-Arab War
Left map: Passia; center and right maps: Philippe Rekacewicz / Le Monde Diplomatique
These three maps show how Israel went from not existing to, in
1947 and 1948, establishing its national borders. It's hard to identify a
single clearest start point to the Israel-Palestine conflict, but the
map on the left might be it: these are the borders that the United
Nations demarcated in 1947 for a Jewish state and an Arab state, in what
had been British-controlled territory. The Palestinians fought the
deal, and in 1948 the Arab states of Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, and Syria invaded.
The middle map shows, in green, how far they pushed back the Jewish
armies. The right-hand map shows how the war ended: with an Israeli
counterattack that pushed into the orange territory, and with Israel
claiming that as its new national borders. The green is what was left
for Palestinians.
17. The 1967 Israeli-Arab War that set today's borders
BBC
These three maps (click the expand icon to see the third) show
how those 1948 borders became what they are today. The map on left shows
the Palestinian territories of Gaza, which was under Egyptian control,
and the West Bank, under Jordanian control. In 1967, Israel fought a war
with Egypt, Jordan, and Syria. The war ended with Israel occupying both
of the Palestinian territories, plus the Golan Heights in Syria and
Egypt's Sinai peninsula: that's shown in the right map. Israel gave
Sinai back as part of a 1979 peace deal, but it still occupies those
other territories. Gaza is today under Israeli blockade, while the West
Bank is increasingly filling with Israeli settlers. The third map shows
how the West Bank has been divided into areas of full Palestinian
control (green), joint Israeli-Palestinian control (light green), and
full Israeli control (dark green).
18. Israeli settlements in the Palestinian West Bank
Jan De Jong / Foundation for Middle East Peace
Since 1967, Israelis have been moving into settlements
in the West Bank. Some go for religious reasons, some because they want
to claim Palestinian land for Israel, and some just because they get
cheap housing from subsidies. There about 500,000 settlers in 130
communities, which you can see in this map. The settlements make peace
harder, which is sometimes the point: for Palestinians to have a state,
the settlers will either to have to be removed en masse, or Palestinians
would have to give up some of their land. The settlements also make
life harder for Palestinians today, dividing communities and imposing
onerous Israeli security. This is why the US and the rest of the world
opposes Israeli settlements. But Israel is continuing to expand them
anyway.
19. Israeli and Hezbollah strikes in the 2006 Lebanon War
New York Times
This map shows the 2006 war between Israel and Lebanon. It also
shows the way that war between Israel and its enemies has changed:
Israel now has the dominant military, but the fights are asymmetrical.
Israel wasn't fighting a state, but the Lebanese militant group
Hezbollah. It launched many air and artillery strikes in Lebanon (shown
in blue) to weaken Hezbollah, destroying much of the country's
infrastructure in the process. Hezbollah fought a guerrilla campaign
against the Israeli invasion force and launched many missiles into
Israeli communities; their strikes are shown in red. The people most
hurt were regular Lebanese and Israelis, hundreds of thousands of whom
were displaced by the fighting.
20. Which countries recognize Israel, Palestine, or both
Wikimedia
The Israel-Palestine conflict is a global issue, and as this map
shows it's got a global divide. Many countries, shown in green, still do
not recognize Israel as a legitimate state. Those countries are
typically Muslim-majority (that includes Malaysia and Indonesia, way
over in southeast Asia). Meanwhile, the blue countries of the West (plus
a few others) do not recognize Palestine as a country. They still have
diplomatic relations with Palestine, but in their view it will not
achieve the status of a country until the conflict is formally resolved.
It is not a coincidence that there has historically been some conflict
between the blue and green countries.
Syria
21. Syria's religious and ethnic diversity
Michael Izady / Columbia University
Each color here shows a different religious group in the part of
the eastern Mediterranean called the Levant. It should probably not be
surprising that the birthplace of Judaism and Christianity is
religiously diverse, but this map drives home just how diverse. Israel
stands out for its Jewish majority, of course, but this is also a
reminder of its Muslim and other minorities, as well as of the Christian
communities in Israel and the West Bank. Lebanon is divided among large
communities of Sunnis, Shias, Christians, and a faith known as Druze —
they're at peace now, but the country's horrific civil war from 1975 to
1990 divided them. There may be a similar effect happening in Syria,
which is majority Sunni Muslim but has large minorities of Christians,
Druze, Shia, and a Shia sect known as Alawites whose members include
Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad and much of his government.
22. Current areas of control in the Syrian Civil War
BBC
This map shows the state of play in Syria's civil war, which
after three years of fighting has divided between government forces, the
anti-government rebels who began as pro-democracy protestors, and the
Islamist extremist fighters who have been moving in over the last two
years. You may notice some overlap between this map and the previous:
the areas under government control (in red) tend to overlap with where
the minorities live. The minorities tend to be linked to the regime,
whereas the rebels are mostly from the Sunni Muslim majority. But the
anti-government Syrian rebels (in green) have been taking lots of
territory. Syria's ethnic Kurdish minority also has militias that have
taken over territory where the Kurds live. Over the past year, though,
there's been a fourth rising faction: Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant (sometimes called ISIS, shown in blue), an extremist group based
in Iraq that swears allegiance to al-Qaeda. They're fighting both the
rebels and the government. So it's a three-way war now, as if it weren't
already intractable enough.
23. Who's arming the Syrian rebels
New York Times
This map shows how weapons are coming to Syria's rebels. The
rebels are getting lots of outside arms and supplies, overwhelmingly
from other Middle Eastern countries that want to topple the Syrian
government. The US and other Western countries are giving the rebels a
little help, but not much; the rebels are mostly supported by the
governments of other Sunni Arab countries. As you can see from the map,
oil-rich Qatar and Saudi Arabia are the biggest backers (the arms being
shipped in from Croatia are thought to be Saudi-bought), along with
Turkey. Most of the guns go to Turkey, where the Turkish government
helps move them to the rebels. The Jordanian government is also using
its border with Syria to truck up weapons for the rebels. Meanwhile,
Iran is backing and arming and supplying the Syrian government. This
really has become a proxy war between Sunni powers that want a Sunni-run
Syria and Shia powers that want to keep Syria's Shia rulers.
Iran
24. How Iran's borders changed in the early 1900s
Wikimedia
Iran is the only Middle Eastern country was never conquered by a
European power, but it came pretty close in the 1900s. It lost a lot of
territory to Russia (the red stripey part). After that, the Russian
Empire and British Empire (the British Indian Raj was just next door)
divided Iran's north and south into "zones of influence." They weren't
under direct control, but the Iranian government was bullied and its
economy and resources exploited. This remains a point of major national
resentment in Iran today.
25. Iran's religious and ethnic diversity
Perry-Castañeda Map Library, University of Texas
Iran is most associated with the Persians — the largest ethnic
group and the progenitors of the ancient Persian empires — but it's much
more diverse than that. This map shows the larger minorities, which
includes Arabs in the south, Kurds in the west, and Azeris in the north
(Iran used to control all Azeri territory, but much of now belongs to
the Azeri-majority country Azerbaijan). The Baloch, in the southeast,
are also a large minority group in Pakistan. There is significant unrest
and government oppression in the "Baluchistan" region of both
countries.
26. Iran's nuclear sites and possible Israeli strike plans
Reuters
This is a glimpse at two of the big, overlapping geopolitical
issues in which Iran is currently embroiled. The first is Iran's nuclear program: the country's leaders say the program is peaceful, but basically no one believes them, and the world is heavily sanctioning Iran's economy to try to convince them to halt the nuclear development that sure looks like it's heading for an illegal weapons program. You
can see the nuclear development sites on here: some are deep underground, while others were kept secret for years. That gets to the other thing on this map, which was originally built to show how Israel could hypothetically launch strikes against Iran's nuclear program. Israel-Iran tensions, which have edged near war in recent years, are one of the biggest and most potentially dangerous things happening right now in a part of the world that has plenty of danger already. Israel is worried that Iran could build nukes to use against it; Iran may be worried that it will forever be under threat of Israeli strike until it has a nuclear deterrent. That's called a security dilemma and it can get
bad.
Afghanistan
Cecile Marin
So, first ignore everything on this map except for the
light-orange overlay. That shows the area where an ethnic group called
the Pashtun lives. Now pretend it's the 1800s and you are a British
colonial officer named Mortimer Durand, and it's your job to negotiate
the border between the British Indian Raj and the quasi-independent
nation of Afghanistan. Do you draw the border right smack across the
middle of the Pashtun areas, thus guaranteeing decades of conflict by
forcing Pashtuns to be minorities in both states? If you answered "yes,"
then you would have made a great British colonial officer, because
that's what happened. The "Durand Line," marked in red, became most of
the border between modern Afghanistan and Pakistan. Many Pashtun now
belong to or support a mostly-Pashtun extremist group called the
Taliban, which wreaks havoc in both countries and has major operating
bases (shown in dark orange) in the Pakistani side of the border.
Thanks, Mortimer!
28. The 1989 war that tore up Afghanistan
Revolution Unending: Afghanistan, 1979 to the Present / Columbia University Press
In 1979, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan to defend the
pro-Moscow communist government from growing rebellions. The US (along
with Saudi Arabia and Pakistan) funded and armed the rebels. The CIA
deliberately chose to fund extremists, seeing them as better fighters.
When the Soviets retreated in 1989, those rebel groups turned against
one another, fighting a horrific civil war that you can see on this map:
the red areas were, as of 1989, under government control. Every other
color shows a rebel group's area of control. Some of these rebels, like
the Hezb-i Islami Gulbuddin, are still fighting, though most of them
were defeated when the Taliban rose up and conquered the country in the
1990s.
29. How the Taliban overlaps with ethnicity
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
This is to underscore the degree to which Afghanistan's current
war (the war that began when the US and allies invaded in 2001, not the
1979 to 1989 war against the Soviets or the civil wars from 1989 to
2001) is and is not about ethnicity. The Taliban does very broadly, but
not exclusively, overlap with the Pashtuns in the south and east. That's
especially important since there are so many Pashtuns just across the
border in Pakistan, where the Taliban have major bases of operation. But
there are rebel groups besides the Taliban, not all of which are
Pashtun. Generally, though, the north of the country is stabler and less
violent than the south or east.
30. The most important parts of the Afghan War, in one map
Philippe Rekacewicz / Le Monde Diplomatique
The Afghanistan War is extremely complicated, but this map does a
remarkable job of capturing the most important components: 1) the
Taliban areas, in orange overlay; 2) the areas controlled by the US and
allies, in depressingly tiny spots of green; 3) the major Western
military bases, marked with blue dots; 4) the areas of opium production,
which are a big source of Taliban funding, in brown circles, with
larger circles meaning more opium; 5) the supply lines through Pakistan,
in red, which Pakistan has occasionally shut down and come under
frequent Taliban attack; 6) the supply line through Russia, which
requires Russian approval. If this map does not depress you about the
prospects of the Afghan War, not much will.
Saudi Arabia and Oil
31. What Saudi Arabia and its neighbors looked like 100 years ago
Joaquín de Salas Vara de Rey
The Arabian peninsula has a very, very long history, and the
Saudi family has controlled much of it since the 1700s. But to
understand how the peninsula got to be what it is today, go back about a
100 years to 1905. The Saudis at that point controlled very little,
having lost their territory in a series of wars. The peninsula was
divided into lots of little kingdoms and emirates. The Ottoman Empire
controlled most of them, with the British Empire controlling the
southernmost third or so of the peninsula — that line across the middle
shows how it was divided. After World War I collapsed the Ottoman
Empire, the Saudis expanded to all of the purple area marked here, as
the British had promised for helping to fight the Ottomans. (This deal
is dramatized in the film Lawrence of Arabia). By the early 1920s, the
British effectively controlled almost all of the peninsula, which was
divided into many dependencies, protectorates, and mandates. But the
Saudis persisted.
32. Oil and Gas in the Middle East
US Energy Information Administration
The Middle East produces about a third
of the world's oil and a tenth of its natural gas. (It has a third of
all natural gas reserves, but they're tougher to transport.) Much of
that is exported. That makes the entire world economy pretty reliant on
the continued flow of that gas and oil, which just happens to go through
a region that has seen an awful lot of conflict in the last few
decades. This map shows where the reserves are and how they're
transported overland; much of it also goes by sea through the Persian
Gulf, a body of water that is also home to some of the largest reserves
in the region and the world. The energy resources are heavily clustered
in three neighboring countries that have historically hated one another:
Iran, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia. The tension between those three is
something that the United States, as a huge energy importer, has been
deeply interested in for years: it sided against Iran during the
Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s, against Iraq when it invaded Kuwait and
threatened Saudi Arabia in the 1990s, again against Iraq with the 2003
invasion, and now is supporting Saudi Arabia in its rapidly worsening
proxy war against Iran.
33. Oil, trade, and militarism in the Strait of Hormuz
Financial Times
The global economy depends on this narrow waterway between Iran
and the Arabian Peninsula. Ever since President Jimmy Carter issued the
1980 "Carter Doctrine," which declared that the US would use military
force to defend its access to Persian Gulf oil, the little Strait of
Hormuz at the Gulf's exit has been some of the most heavily militarized
water on earth. The US installed a large naval force, first to protect
oil exports from the brutal Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s, then to protect
them from Saddam Hussein in the 1990s Gulf Wars, and now to protect them
again from Iran, which has gestured toward shutting down oil should war
break out against Israel or the US. As long as the world runs on fossil
fuels and there is tension in the Middle East, there will be military
forces in the Strait of Hormuz.
34. Why Egypt's Suez Canal is so important for the world economy
Nicolas Rapp / Fortune
The Suez Canal changed everything. When Egypt opened it in 1868,
after ten years of work, the 100-mile, man-made waterway brought Europe
and Asia dramatically and permanently closer. The canal's significance
to the global order was so immediately obvious that, shortly after the
British conquered Egypt in the 1880s, the major world powers signed a
treaty, which is still in force, declaring that the canal would forever
be open to trade and warships of every nation, no matter what. Today,
about eight percent of all global trade and three percent of global energy supply goes through the canal.
Iraq and Libya
BBC
There are few grimmer symbols for the devastation of the Iraq War
than what it did to Baghdad's once-diverse neighborhoods. The map on
the left shows the city's religious make-up in 2005. Mixed
neighborhoods, then the norm, are in yellow. The map on right shows what
it looked like by 2007, after two awful years of Sunni-Shia killing:
bombings (shown with red dots), death squads, and militias. Coerced
evictions and thousands of deaths effectively cleansed neighborhoods, to
be mostly Shia (blue) or mostly Sunni (red). Since late 2012, the
sectarian civil war has ramped back up, in Baghdad and nationwide.
36. Where the Kurds are and what Kurdistan might look like
Philippe Rekacewicz / Le Monde Diplomatique
The ethnic group known as Kurds, who have long lived as a
disadvantaged minority in several Middle Eastern countries, have been
fighting for a nation of their own for a long time. This map shows where
they live in green overlay, and the national borders that they have
proposed on three separate occasions, all of them failed. The Kurds have
fought many armed rebellions, including ongoing campaigns in Syria and
Turkey, and suffered many abuses, from attempted genocides to official bans
on their language and culture. Their one major victory in the last
century has been in Iraq: as a result of the US-led invasion that
toppled Saddam Hussein, Iraqi Kurds have autonomous self-rule in Iraq's
north.
37. A hypothetical re-drawing of Syria and Iraq
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
This is an old idea that gets new attention every few years, when
violence between Sunnis and Shias reignites: should the arbitrary
borders imposed by European powers be replaced with new borders along
the region's ever-fractious religious divide? The idea is unworkable in
reality and would probably just create new problems. But, in a sense,
this is already what the region looks like. The Iraqi government
controls the country's Shia-majority east, but Sunni Islamist extremists
have seized much of western Iraq and eastern Syria. The Shia-dominated
Syrian government, meanwhile, mostly only controls the country's Shia-
and Christian-heavy west. The Kurds, meanwhile, are legally autonomous
in Iraq and functionally so in Syria. This map, then, is not so much
just idle speculation anymore; it's something that Iraqis and Syrians
are creating themselves.
38. How Libya's 2011 War changed Africa
Philippe Rekacewicz / Le Monde Diplomatique
Noble as the cause was, the destruction of Moammar Qaddafi's
dictatorship by a spontaneous uprising and a Western intervention has
just wreaked havoc in Africa's northern half. This map attempts to show
all that came after Qaddafi's fall; that it is so overwhelmingly complex
is precisely the point. The place to center your gaze is the patterned
orange overlay across Libya, Algeria, Mali, and Niger: this shows where
the Tuaregs, a semi-nomadic ethnic minority group, lives. Qaddafi used
Libya's oil wealth to train, arm, and fund large numbers of Tuaregs to
fight the armed uprising in 2011. When he fell, the Tuaregs took the
guns back out with them to Algeria and Mali, where they took control of
territory. In Mali, they led a full-fledged rebellion that, for a time,
seized the country's northern half. Al-Qaeda moved into the vacuum they
left, conquering entire towns in Mali and seizing fossil fuel facilities
in Algeria. Criminal enterprises have flourished in this semi-arid belt
of land known as the Sahel. So have vast migration routes, of Africans
looking to find work and a better life in Europe. At the same time,
armed conflict is getting worse in Nigeria and Sudan, both major oil
producers. Qaddafi's fall was far from the sole cause of all of this,
but it brought just the right combination of disorder, guns, and
militias to make everything a lot worse.
Points of Light
Left map: Gregor Aisch; right map: Eric Fischer
These maps are two ways of looking at a similar thing: the
digitalization of the Middle East. The map on top is actually a
population map: the dots represent clusters of people, but the dots are
colored to show how many IP addresses there are, which basically means
how many internet connections. The blue areas have lots of people but
few connections: these are the poorer areas, such as Yemen, Pakistan,
and Syria. White and red show where there are lots of connections: rich
countries like Israel and the United Arab Emirates, but also parts of
Egypt and Iran and Turkey, the populations of which are increasingly
wired, to tremendous political consequence. The map on the bottom shows
tweets: lots of dots mean lots of tweets from that area. They're colored
by language. Notice where these two maps are different: Iran has lots
of internet connections but almost no tweets; like Facebook, Twitter has
been banned since the 2009 anti-government protests. Saudi Arabia, on
the other hand, lights right up: its modestly sized population is
remarkably wired. The significance of that became clear, for example,
with the 2012 and 2013 social media-led campaigns by Saudi women to
drive en masse, in protest of the country's ban on female drivers. The
consequences of internet access and lack of access will surely continue
to be important, and perhaps hard to predict, for the region.
40. The Middle East at night from space
NASA Earth Observatory
I'm concluding with this map to look at the region without
political borders, without demographic demarcations of religion or
ethnicity, without markers of conflict or oil. Looking at the region at
night, from space, lets those distinctions fall away, to see it purely
by its geography and illuminated by the people who call it home. The
lights trace the rivers that have been so important to the Middle East's
history, and the world's: the Nile in Egypt, the Tigris and Euphrates
that run through Iraq and Syria, the Indus in Pakistan. They also show
the large, and in many cases growing, communities along the shores of
the Persian Gulf, the eastern Mediterranean, and the southern end of the
Caspian. It's a beautiful view of a really beautiful part of the world.
2 comments:
hello, your article starts using terms invented by the Greeks which later were adopted by the Romans even though Lebanon's Phoenician history is older at least 3000 years than the Greeks , and it's even the oldest in the world
"fertile crescent " is a designation imposed by the Greeks for linguistic purposes, the whole region speaking Aramaic starting in the 9th century bc ,while in reality the Aramaeans adopted the Phoenician in that period of time and spread it in Assyria ( present Syria-and part of Iraq and Turkey ) plus the land of Jews and the Philistins
the Phoenicians didn't abandon their language to adopt the "ARAMAIC " and many artifacts were found in Tyre and Sidon in Lebanon written in the same Phoenician datin back to 5th century BC ( that's at least 400 years after what the Greeks presumed spoken aramaic )
2-Phoenicia Lebanon was never in its history part of Syria , this was a viel intention made up by Herodotus the greek ( 5th century BC) and adopted later by the Romans , for he hated the Phoenicians who allied with the persians in their wars against the Greeks ..knowing that the Phoenicians allied with the persians because they helped them to free their country and lands from the Assyrians aka Syrians
so following the quote that says " the ennemie of my ennemie is my friend " the Syrians who were and still are the Phoenicians' lebanese vielest ennemies became Herodotus' friends
the Phoenician expedition led by Renand as well as many excavations proved how true and honest were the Phoenician historians ( Sanchoniaton Philo and Porphyry ) and showed huge number of contradictions in the Greeks and Romans texts .. every descent historian and archeologist will never use them as references like Pierre Marie Martin who said once about Lebanon's phoenician history " it's the history of the victim written by the assassins " .. also because the Greeks' hsitory starts barely in the 5th century BC while the Romans' history is barely 2milleniums old ..
since decades we are losing thousands of lebanese citizens who are still paying the heavy consequences of that fake history promoted by the Greeks and Romans and which considers our country as parf of Syria .. the Syrians were killin every Lebanese who speaks of a sovereign Lebanon and independant history and heritage during 40 years of occupation .. because they are poor culturally and they need to swallow Lebanon to share the great history and present of our people
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