Unlike Russia, Saudi is not only a key pillar of American Middle East policy for generations, but one that is moving in an undeniably *positive* direction, in fits and starts.
It is a foundational text, and changed the way a lot of people understand foreign affairs.
If you’ve never read it, read it now. If you haven’t read it in a while, go read it again.
She focused her attention on US posture toward the Shah’s Iran—an authoritarian society that was nonetheless pro-American, pro-Israel and in many ways progressive and modern.
She used this issue to posit a way of dealing with non-free, non-democratic regimes.
The Shah’s was an Authoritarian State. The Ayatollah’s was a Totalitarian State—every part of an individual’s life was proscribed according to the regime’s ideology.
Totalitarian states will tell you how to live, down to the most minute detail, and enforce the state ideology. They control your mind.
Which brings us back around to Saudi Arabia.
KSA was always the definition of a totalitarian state. As a US ally, it was the rare exception to Kirkpatrick’s observation about states.
No, it’s neither suburban Virginia nor downtown Tel Aviv. But it’s moving in an unmistakable direction nonetheless.
Carter and Brzezinski felt good about themselves when they allowed the Shah to fall. They thought they were on the “right side of history.”
They were fools.
That’s a lot more than I can say for supposedly “learned” wags who take us down a horror road of one predictable virtue-signaling failure to the next.
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