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OverviewThe compelling, groundbreaking investigation of how the choices of twelve US presidents, from Truman to Trump, have fueled turbulence and turmoil in the Middle East. And the one president who chose a better way. Kicking the Hornet’s Nest is a riveting exploration of how twelve US presidents have shaped the Middle East, often unleashing instability and conflict along the way. It is also the story of one US president who successfully charted a better course. From Truman to Trump, Daniel Zoughbie meticulously unpacks the decisions that have set the stage for today’s unrest. But this book is more than just a history lesson; it’s a sharp analysis of presidential decision-making and its far-reaching consequences. Today, the Middle East stands as a volatile landscape, more tumultuous than at any time since the fall of the Ottoman Empire. Zoughbie paints a vivid picture of how nearly every major nation-state in the Middle East and North Africa has grappled with existential crises in the recent years, paving the way for terrorist groups to threaten national sovereignty and for local conflicts to destabilize world order. Drawing on a vast array of primary sources and interviews with world leaders, the narrative explores pressing issues like nuclear proliferation, genocide, and nationalist conflicts fueled by sectarian fervor that have triggered global refugee waves. Kicking the Hornet’s Nest is an eye-opening study of US presidential decision-making and foreign policy. With compassion and insight, Zoughbie reveals the essential information necessary for anyone seeking to understand eight decades of US foreign policy and its profound impact on billions of lives worldwide. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Daniel E ZoughbiePublisher: Simon & Schuster Imprint: Simon & Schuster Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.60cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.581kg ISBN: 9781668085226ISBN 10: 1668085224 Pages: 432 Publication Date: 20 November 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews""I strongly encourage you to read this thoroughly researched study from Daniel Zoughbie."" —Bobby R. Inman, Former Director, National Security Agency and Former Deputy Director, CIA “This book is a must read for those wanting to understand the complexities involved in Middle East conflicts and the reasons why our policies have failed."" —General Anthony Zinni USMC (Retired), Former Commander in Chief CENTCOM, and former US Special Envoy to Israel and the Palestinian Authority “Learning the lessons recounted in this book will inform whether U.S. foreign policy succeeds or fails in the future."" —Leon E. Panetta, former Director CIA, Secretary of Defense “This book is a must-read for those wanting to understand the complexities involved in Middle East conflicts and the reasons why our policies have failed.” —General Anthony Zinni, USMC (retired), former commander in chief of CENTCOM, and former US special envoy to Israel and the Palestinian Authority “Daniel E. Zoughbie tracks the tensions in foreign policy—the incidentals of urgent personalities and the fundamentals of enduring national interest—between the shallow and the deep. Most importantly, he underscores the need for wisdom and reflection when interfering in the affairs of other nations. I wish I had read his book years ago.” —Sir Mark Allen CMG, former head of MI6 Counter-Terrorism and honorary fellow at St. Antony’s College, Oxford “I strongly encourage you to read this thoroughly researched study from Daniel E. Zoughbie.” —Admiral Bobby R. Inman, US Navy (retired), former director of the National Security Agency, and former deputy director of the CIA “An engrossing account of how the blunders, indecisiveness, and exalted hubris of 12 presidents from Truman through Trump’s first term have transformed the Middle East into a destabilizing force…A stimulating, well-researched examination.” —Kirkus, starred review “A thought-provoking examination of American policymaking in one of the world’s most volatile regions. Whether readers agree with Zoughbie’s conclusions or not, his book will force them to reconsider whether decades of intervention have done more harm than good.” —The Washington Post ""Full of keenly observed historical detail and trenchant critiques of US policy gone wrong."" —The Financial Times “Learning the lessons recounted in this book will inform whether U.S. foreign policy succeeds or fails in the future."" —Leon E. Panetta, former Director CIA, Secretary of Defense “This book is a must-read for those wanting to understand the complexities involved in Middle East conflicts and the reasons why our policies have failed.” —General Anthony Zinni, USMC (retired), former commander in chief of CENTCOM, and former US special envoy to Israel and the Palestinian Authority “Daniel E. Zoughbie tracks the tensions in foreign policy—the incidentals of urgent personalities and the fundamentals of enduring national interest—between the shallow and the deep. Most importantly, he underscores the need for wisdom and reflection when interfering in the affairs of other nations. I wish I had read his book years ago.” —Sir Mark Allen CMG, former head of MI6 Counter-Terrorism and honorary fellow at St. Antony’s College, Oxford “I strongly encourage you to read this thoroughly researched study from Daniel E. Zoughbie.” —Admiral Bobby R. Inman, US Navy (retired), former director of the National Security Agency, and former deputy director of the CIA Author InformationDaniel E. Zoughbie is a complex-systems scientist, a historian, and an expert on presidential decision-making. He is associate project scientist at the Institute of International Studies at UC Berkeley; a faculty affiliate of the UCSF/UCB Center for Global Health Delivery, Diplomacy, and Economics; and a faculty affiliate at the New England Complex Systems Institute in Cambridge. He is also principal investigator of the Middle East and North Africa Diplomacy, Development, and Defense Initiative and author of Indecision Points: George W. Bush and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict (MIT Press, 2014). His award-winning research has been published in journals such as PLOS Medicine, PLOS Complex Systems, Mayo Clinic Proceedings, JAIDS, and Social Science and Medicine. Zoughbie has been appointed to positions at Georgetown University, Stanford University, Harvard University, University of Bologna, University College Dublin, University of Athens, and Campus Bio Medico University of Rome. Zoughbie graduated Phi Beta Kappa from UC Berkeley. He studied at Oxford on a Marshall Scholarship and completed his doctorate, also at Oxford, as a Weidenfeld Scholar. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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