Map of middle east after ww17/11/2023 To understand the form the processes of independence and decolonization took in the Middle East, one has to begin in the nineteenth century. According to historian Albert Hourani, "It would be better … to see the history of this period as that of a complex interaction: of the will of ancient and stable societies to reconstitute themselves, preserving what they had of their own while making the necessary changes in order to survive in the modern world increasingly organized on other principles, and where the centers of world power have lain for long, and still lie, outside the Middle East" (Hourani, Khoury, and Wilson 2004, p. Indeed, the independence process has been very complex in the Middle East. Such interests now had the added dimension of being pursued within the larger framework of geopolitical tensions created by the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. Britain and the United States focused on controlling the production of oil. While the formal empires of European countries seemingly disintegrated in the 1950s, the former colonial powers, now joined by the United States, continued to maintain a presence in the region. A series of treaties and agreements led to British withdrawal from Egypt and Iraq as a result of one of these agreements, Sudan also gained independence. The British withdrew from Palestine in 1948, leaving behind the new state of Israel, which was carved out of a large portion of Palestine from most of the rest was created Jordan. France retreated from Syria and Lebanon in 1946 after numerous catastrophic engagements with local peoples. In the decades immediately following the conclusion of World War II, European formal empires in the Middle East began to unravel. Independence and Decolonization, Middle East
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