Steven A. Cook
October 6 @ 7:30 pm - 9:00 pm
Magic City Books and the Tulsa Committee on Foreign Relations, in partnership with the University of Tulsa, are proud to welcome Steven A. Cook for a free program on Sunday October 6 to discuss his most recent book, The End of Ambition: America’s Past, Present, and Future in the Middle East.
This free event will begin at 7:30 pm in the Lorton Performance Center on the University of Tulsa campus. Steven will be joined in conversation by Magic City Books President and co-founder, Jeff Martin.
The End of Ambition highlights how America’s interests in the region have begun to change and critically examines alternative approaches to US-Middle East policy.
The End of Ambition is for sale at Magic City Books and will be available for purchase at the event on October 6. If you are unable to attend and would like a signed copy, you can order online at: https://magiccitybooks.square.site/product/the-end-of-ambition/2905.
About The End of Ambition
A clear-headed vision for the United States’ role in the Middle East that highlights the changing nature of US national interests and the challenges of grand strategizing at a time of profound change in the international order.
Following a long series of catastrophic misadventures in the Middle East over the last two decades, the American foreign policy community has tried to understand what went wrong. After weighing the evidence, they have mostly advised a retreat from the region. The basic view is that when the United States tries to advance change in the Middle East, it only makes matters worse.
In The End of Ambition, Steven A. Cook argues that while these analysts are rightly concerned that engagement drains US resources and distorts its domestic politics, the broader impulse to disengage tends to neglect important lessons from the past. Moreover, advocates of pulling back overlook the potential risks of withdrawal. Covering the relationship between the US and the Middle East since the end of WWII, Cook makes the bold claim that despite setbacks and moral costs, the United States has been overwhelmingly successful in protecting its core national interests in the Middle East. Conversely, overly ambitious policies to remake the region and leverage US power not only ended in failure, but rendered the region unstable in new and largely misunderstood ways.
While making the case that retrenchment is not the answer to America’s problems in the Middle East, The End of Ambition highlights how America’s interests in the region have begun to change and critically examines alternative approaches to US-Middle East policy. Cook highlights the challenges that policymakers and analysts confront developing a new strategy for the United States in the Middle East against the backdrop of both political uncertainty in the United States and a changing global order.
Steven A. Cook is the Eni Enrico Mattei Senior Fellow for Middle East and Africa Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is a columnist at Foreign Policy and the author of False Dawn, The Struggle for Egypt, and Ruling but Not Governing.