New Books in Middle Eastern Studies

Samuel Helfont, "The Iraq Wars: A Very Short Introduction" (Oxford UP, 2025)

Dec 24, 2025
Samuel Helfont, an associate professor and historian specializing in Iraq, dives into the complexities of the Iraq Wars in this discussion. He emphasizes the interconnectedness of the Gulf War, the 2003 invasion, and the rise of ISIS. Helfont reveals Saddam's multifaceted motives for invading Kuwait and critiques the US's messy handling of the conflicts. He argues that the Iraq Wars should be viewed as a continuous chain of events. Ultimately, he addresses whether the conflicts have truly ended and shares insights about his future research plans.
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INSIGHT

Iraq Wars As A Linked Chain

  • Samuel Helfont frames the Iraq Wars as a connected chain of events from 1990 through ISIS's rise.
  • He wrote a concise book because no short synthesis previously linked English and Arabic sources across these conflicts.
INSIGHT

Multiple Motives Behind Kuwait Invasion

  • Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait for multiple reasons: debt, oil, access to the sea, and post‑Cold War strategic fears.
  • New Iraqi archival research shows the end of the Cold War accelerated his decision-making calculus.
INSIGHT

New World Order Shaped U.S. Intervention

  • U.S. response to Kuwait was shaped by the post‑Cold War aim to build a rules‑based 'new world order.'
  • George H.W. Bush framed intervention as preserving international norms, not merely protecting oil.
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