will involve the interplay of states with religions; at that point the power and
goals of the state dominate any independent role of religion.
This reality sets an
important stage for a key argument of this book: that most of the history of the
West’s relations with the Middle East is really about the geopolitics of empires
and states and not much about religion itself—regardless of the slogans, banners,
and ideological fervor invoked at the popular level to support the state. Take
Islam out of the equation, and there’s a very good chance you’d still find the
Middle East at loggerheads with the West.