After its formation in 1947, the CIA went to work in the Middle East, its highest-profile operation being the 1953 restoration of the shah of Iran. While that episode forms a chapter in Wilford’s history of early CIA operations in the region, his work focuses on the intelligence officers who conducted the cloak-and-dagger. In that case, it was a grandson of Theodore Roosevelt, Kermit “Kim” Roosevelt Jr., whose nickname, borrowed from the title of Rudyard Kipling’s novel, evoked his delight in spycraft. Recounting Roosevelt’s and several others’ lives, Wilford reconstructs the agents’ influence as a coterie of CIA operatives on the agency’s Middle East activities in the 1950s. Wilford taps the memoirs and personal papers of those Arab experts as well as agency materials he has researched to depict an intelligence service supportive of Arab nationalism and initially opposed to the establishment of Israel, a posture the CIA promoted through the front organization American Friends of the Middle East. Suggesting significant effects wrought on events by American secret agents, Wilford merits the attention of students of CIA history. --Gilbert Taylor
New York Times Book Review Editor's Choice
Wall Street Journal
[Wilford] makes deft use of declassified government documents....In addition to analytical rigor, Mr. Wilford has an eye for a good story...Mr. Wilford is a careful historian, with no Middle Eastern ax to grind. The main goal of America’s Great Game is to shed light on the role of the CIA in the Middle East. It succeeds magnificently.”
New York Times Book Review
What is most remarkable in this tale
is how quickly our three Arabists were willing to jump to the other side of the street, to go from identifying and encouraging progressive Arab leaders to trying to neutralize them, to go from deriding the client regimes left behind by the European powers to cozying up to them
. It’s to Wilford’s credit that he highlights the inconsistencies and often, outright falsehoods of his main sources.”
Boston Globe
They were romantics and spies. They opposed Communism and supported Arab interests. They were susceptible to the American missionary impulse in foreign policy and the dreamy British view of the Middle East as a staging ground for heroics and adventure. They were the Arabists of America’s clandestine services and for decades their story has been shrouded in mystery and misunderstanding
. [Hugh Wilford’s] chronicle of their adventures and, more often, their misadventure, makes for compelling, illuminating reading.”
Los Angeles Times
There are cross-currents and intrigues aplenty in America’s Great Game: British spies versus American spies, rivalry between the State Department and the CIA, career conflicts between various American officials and the role of U.S. advertising executives: Mad Men’ in the Middle East. A clean writer and top-notch researcher, Wilford tells his tale briskly.”
New York Journal of Books
[An] important, engaging, and readable book.”
The Daily Beast
America’s Great Game is professor Hugh Wilford’s gripping and witty account of American efforts to shape policy in the Middle East, in an attempt to avoid the mistakes that the British had made during their Great Game’ to control Central Asia. The picture he paints, though, is one more of failed good intentions than of imperialistic villainy.”
Washington Independent Review of Books
[A]bsorbing.... [A] lively drama.... America’s Great Game is unfailingly interesting.... Wilford’s book is broadly researched and well documented.... Wilford’s narrative is full of fascinating anecdotes and his prose is clear and often lively.”
American Jewish WorldIf you are afraid that this book is too specialized for you, fear not. Because it is very well written, well organized and brings its characters to life, you can dip into it selectively or allow the whole saga to unfold.”
The New Republic
America’s Great Game is about the moment, from the late 1940s to the late 1950s, when the United States was the region’s upstart, rather than its hegemon. Wilford’s book...underscores the high hopes but ultimate flaws and fallacies in the Americans’ meddling....Wilford contrasts the hopes expressed by the spies and young Arab nationalists in Cairo and Damascus for a new kind of power relationship with the reality of American ambition, deceit, and blunder.”
Pittsburgh Tribune Review
Many who fret today over America’s Middle East role and relations likely don’t realize that when its involvement there first deepened, after World War II, U.S. policy was quite different from what it is now pro-Arab, anti-Zionist. That policy, says Hugh Wilford in his new book America’s Great Game, was carried out largely by three men who worked for the CIA in its early years
. Wilford shows that as different as U.S. Middle East policy now is, it still has to deal with ramifications of his CIA Arabists’ adventurism.”
Plain Dealer, Cleveland
[A] lively, informative study of early Cold War American diplomacy and spy plots in the Middle East....Even more fascinating than the foreign cloak-and-dagger exploits is Wilford’s examination of clandestine CIA attempts to weaken domestic U.S. support for the new state of Israel
As Kim [Roosevelt] or Archie [Roosevelt] might have said, Wilford’s book is a ripping good yarn. Moreover, it sounds salutary warnings about Americans’ inflated sense of our ability to influence local developments and the dangers of unintended consequences.”
Library Journal, starred review
A lively and well-balanced examination of American muddling and vacillating in the Middle East. Highly recommended for readers interested in modern Middle East history and those curious about the complicated threads of idealism, adventurism, and imperialism confusing American foreign policy.”
Kirkus
By turns admiring and critical play-by-play of CIA Arabists as they directed the Cold War’s Middle East chessboard.... [An] insightful examination of these Mad Men on the Nile.’”
Booklist
Suggesting significant effects wrought on events by American secret agents, Wilford merits the attention of students of CIA history.”
Eugene Rogan, author of The Arabs: A History
A gripping account of how America’s best and brightest, with the best of intentions, lost the Arabs and Iranians at the start of the Cold War. An outstanding book, more relevant today than ever.”
Salim Yaqub, University of California, Santa Barbara, author of Containing Arab Nationalism: The Eisenhower Doctrine and the Middle East
From the grim vantage of our own era, it is easy to forgetor startling to learn for the first timethat the CIA’s interactions with the Middle East began on a more hopeful basis, and were often spearheaded by individuals who strongly sympathized with the political aspirations of Arabs and Muslims. Through exhaustive research, keen insight, and vivid and witty prose, Hugh Wilford brilliantly recreates the lives and milieus of the adventurers, scholars, policymakers, and polemicists who forged America’s covert relations with the countries and peoples of the Middle East. Without romanticizing their exploits, or overlooking their moments of hubris, obtuseness, and insensitivity, Wilford helps us see the world as they saw it and, perhaps, better understand the world they made. This is collective biography at its best.”
Ian Johnson, author of A Mosque in Munich: the Nazis, the CIA and the Rise of the Muslim Brotherhood
Filled with rich anecdotes and unbelievably larger-than-life characters, Hugh Wilford’s book is long overdue. Readers have long been familiar with Britain’s Great Game’ in the 19th century to control Central Asia, but America’s ill-fated gamesmanship to control the Middle East is equally riveting and star-crossed. Using newly available archives, Wilford tells the dramatic story of romantically pro-Arab American intelligence operatives who, paradoxically, laid the groundwork for an America despised in the region and involved in an endless series of wars. This makes America’s Great Game more than a great adventure story; it’s the missing backstory to an ongoing foreign policy tragedy.”
Jeremi Suri, author of Liberty's Surest Guardian: American Nation-Building from the Founders to Obama
America's Great Game is an epic story of how the American search for adventure and idealism contributed to coups and counter-revolutions in the Middle East. Drawing on extensive research, Wilford explains the rise of the CIA, the tortured American relationship with Arabs and Jews, and Washington's Cold War complicity with British imperial interests. What makes this book most enthralling is that the author builds the story around the grandsons of Theodore Roosevelt. This is a valuable history and a fascinating reada true page-turner.”
Kai Bird, co-author of American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer and author of Crossing Mandelbaum Gate
Fascinating and authoritative. Hugh Wilford has written a lively, witty account of the CIA’s escapades in the Middle East during the late 1940s and 1950s. Wilford uses the colorful life stories of cousins Kim and Archie Rooseveltand their fellow covert operator Miles Copelandto explain America’s troubled historical relationship with Israel and the modern Arab world. This book is both an entertaining biography and a ground-breaking piece of critical history.”
Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones, author of In Spies We Trust: The Story of Western Intelligence
This is a great book: well written with compelling details, good stories, and impressive use of primary evidence. It is tied together by a first-rate thesis that will make people think again about the Middle East.”