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American Attitudes Towards the Middle East : A 10 page research paper that examines how US foreign policy has regarded relations with the Middle East. Bibliography lists 10 sources. 99usme.rtf
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10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KE9_99usme.rtf
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of the United States in the countries of the Middle East has always been intrinsically connected to the discovery of oil in this region. As exemplified in the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia, US interest in relations with the Middle East in the earlier part of the twentieth century was one of almost total neglect prior to the oil discovery. Whatever
interest that existed generated by "oil companies, an occasional stray diplomat or two and military planners who were worried less about the country itself than about the enemy hands" into
which the region might fall (Long 1). In the 1930s, whatever perception existed in the US pertaining to the Middle East was held by a few oil men and an
even small number of government officials who were primarily interested in insuring against trade inequities for US firms doing business overseas (Long 2). The "benign neglect" on the part of
the US government was not merely the result of the relative economic insignificance of Saudi Arabia in the early days, but rather stemmed from the fact that the US, "more
than any other major trading country," had historically followed a policy of governmental noninterference in private business (Long 74). The US, which was blessed with an abundance of natural resources
and a large domestic market, had yet to develop an "export" mentality (Long 74). Oil has always been an intrinsic factor in the relations between the United States and
the countries of the Middle East. The earliest official interest by the US in Middle East oil occurred during World War I (Long 10). Prior to that war, there was
not a great deal of public incentive to encourage of developing foreign sources of oil since the US was already the worlds leading producer and US oil reserves appeared to
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