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Why the US could not shake off the Middle East

Lessons from a pivot to Asia that never comes

It is 80 years old now but still one of the more arresting images of the photographic age. On board the USS Quincy, an ailing Franklin Roosevelt meets King Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia (or Ibn Saud, as the Anglo-American world knew him). And so begins, or at least deepens, the US role in the Middle East. Consider it FDR’s parting gift.

“You shouldn’t have,” some would say, including men as dissimilar as Barack Obama and Donald Trump. Both of those presidents were first elected as sceptics of American involvement in the region. The botched occupation of Iraq was just one reason to turn elsewhere. At home, green tech and a shale bonanza were lessening the need for Gulf oil. Besides, there was China to worry about.

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