Oil and the Middle East
MTA
A History
*Oil and the Middle East: A History* traces the transformation of the region from an area of ancient bitumen seeps to the epicenter of the global energy market. The narrative begins with the geological formation of vast hydrocarbon reserves and their early utility in Mesopotamia, eventually moving into the late 19th and early 20th centuries when European imperial powers secured the first modern concessions. Key milestones include the 1908 strike in Persia, the post-WWI Mandate system that carved up Ottoman territories, and the massive Arabian discoveries of the 1930s that brought American corporations into a British-dominated sphere.
The book details the mid-century rise of the "Seven Sisters" cartel and the subsequent nationalist pushback, highlighted by the 1953 Iranian coup and the 1956 Suez Crisis. These tensions culminated in the 1960 formation of OPEC and a series of nationalizations in the 1970s, as states like Iraq, Libya, and Saudi Arabia reclaimed sovereignty over their resources. The text analyzes how the 1973 embargo and the 1979 Iranian Revolution caused global economic shocks while flooding the Gulf with "petrodollars," enabling the construction of expansive welfare states and rapid urbanization.
The latter portion of the history examines the intersection of oil and modern warfare, from the Tanker War of the 1980s to the 1991 and 2003 conflicts in Iraq. It also explores the 21st-century shift toward natural gas, led by Qatar, and the strategic "eastward pivot" to Asian markets like China. The narrative concludes by addressing contemporary challenges, including the North American shale boom that disrupted OPECâs market control and the urgent pressure of climate change. The final chapters discuss how petrostates are now utilizing sovereign wealth funds and diversification blueprints, such as Saudi Vision 2030, to prepare for a post-oil future defined by renewable energy and technological innovation.
This book is ideal for students, scholars, and professionals seeking a deep understanding of how oil shaped the modern Middle Eastâfrom its geological origins to contemporary energy transitions. It will particularly benefit those studying international relations, energy policy, Middle Eastern history, or global economics who need to grasp the interconnected technical, political, and social forces that turned desert sands into global power centers. General readers interested in the historical roots of current energy conflicts, wealth disparities, and geopolitical alliances in the region will also find it essential reading.
March 18, 2026
English
46,405 words
3 hours 15 minutes
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