Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Subjects not Subjected

At the Napoleon's Egypt blog, several letters are available on the early days of the occupation, some of them by members of the team of scientists Bonaparte brought with him. Excerpt:


' The port of Alexandria is divided into two very beautiful bays (with no great depth of water), separated by a dike or causeway near 1200 yards in length, and reaching to the Pharos, that is to say, to the site of that ancient and magnificent edifice, from whence vessels were discovered at the distance of thirty or forty leagues. . .

I shall say nothing more of this city; except that is inhabitants, though vanquished, are not in a state of complete subjection, nor likely to be so for a long time to come. We must use policy here, for we are not strong enough to do otherwise(7). For the rest, we respect their religion, their manners, and above all, their women; these last, it must be confessed, are not mightily engaging. In short, they are a hideous, and abominable race.'
'

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Sunday, September 09, 2007

Cole on CSPAN-2 Tonight at 10 EDT

Note: My talk on Napoleon's Egypt will be shown in the US on CSPAN-2 at 10 pm EDT on Sunday evening, September 9.

At the Napoleon's Egypt Blog, a letter from one of Bonaparte's scientists (a botanist) exhibiting the disillusionment the invaders felt on seizing Egypt. My assistant said it reminded him of Conrad's "Heart of Darkness."

Also, for those who missed it, The Nation review of the book is online.

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Saturday, September 08, 2007

French Fear Guerilla War in Egypt, 1798

Note: My talk on Napoleon's Egypt will be shown in the US on CSPAN-2 at 10 pm EDT on Sunday evening, September 9.

At the Napoleon's Egypt blog, a late 18th century complaint from a regular officer about the enemy's guerrilla tactics:


"The Mameloucs [Mamluks]*, though beaten, may re-assemble. Their manner of making war authorizes the idea, that the country which we have traversed, and from which we have just driven them, ought not to be looked upon as conquered; since there is nothing to prevent their re-occupying it. In a country where the enemy attaches no kind of importance to the maintaining of a particular position, it is very difficult to determine him to quit the ground altogether. What secured our conquests in Italy, was the absolute refusal of the Austrians to advance, the moment they discovered their route lay near a fortress garrisoned by the French. The Mameloucs attack us at the distance of fifty paces, flee, and return the next day to attack us, in the very position from which we had driven them."


Read the whole thing.

----

*The martial ruling caste of Egypt, fickle vassals of the Ottoman Empire.

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Friday, September 07, 2007

The Nation Review of Napoleon's Egypt

Roger Owen's review of my new book, Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East is now online at The Nation.

Owen, who teaches at Harvard, is among our foremost historians of modern Egypt, and one the few who have worked both on economic and on political history. He is author of State, Power and Politics in the Making of the Middle East and several other seminal books.

He writes:


' Try as we might, it is difficult for most of us to imagine what it's like for a country to be invaded and occupied. Photographs help: pictures of German troops marching down the Champs-Élysées in 1940 with not a Frenchman in sight, pictures taken that same year of a British policeman on patrol with a German officer in the newly captured British Channel Islands. The terrible incongruity of it all, the violation of what seemed the natural order, the sinister sense of foreboding, of a world turned upside down without any of the familiar certainties to hang onto.

Our best bet, though, for understanding what it's like to be on the receiving end of a military occupation by foreign soldiers is to watch films made recently in Iraq from an Iraqi point of view. There the sudden appearance of helicopters, or a checkpoint on the road ahead, or the spectacle of British or American soldiers in battle gear entering a busy square, bring an immediate sense of menace. All at once there is shouting from one side, screaming from the other, the sound of doors being kicked in, orders harshly given (often in a foreign language: English, that is), weapons cocked, shooting and explosions. Such confrontations are hardly more pleasant for the soldiers, who find themselves in a strange place, surrounded by what always seems a hostile crowd. If these men have itchy fingers, it's partly because they are insecure, frightened, angry and scarred from having seen some of their comrades blown to bits.

So it was in Egypt when the country was unexpectedly invaded and occupied by Napoleon's army in the summer of 1798. The French troops first landed in Alexandria before marching--tired, thirsty and beset by Bedouin irregulars--through the towns and villages to Cairo, parts of which soon turned violently against their new occupiers. Then further military expeditions up and down the land, with none of Napoleon's soldiers safe anywhere as the initial efforts to woo the native inhabitants only provoked further ambushes and violent acts of resistance and revenge. As Ahmed Hashim puts it so succinctly in his book Insurgency and Counter-Insurgency in Iraq, occupations are resisted simply because they are occupations . . .


Read the whole thing.

The book:

Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East.

At the Napoleon's Egypt blog: Bonaparte establishes the Egyptian Institute.

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Thursday, August 30, 2007

Akhavi on Neocolonialism

Khody Akhavi at IPS covers my talk last Friday at the New America Foundation, on my book, Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East. He writes:


'In Cole's view, the Bush administration's rhetoric of "liberating Iraq" from the clutches of a tyrannical leader with a hankering for weapons of mass destruction can't mask its long-term neo-colonial ambitions. Like Napoleon, Bush has a tendency to believe his own propaganda. Both invasions deployed rhetoric of liberation. Like the French general, Bush had a desire to create a "Greater Middle East", only to face an insurgency that viewed the foreign presence as an occupation, not liberation.'


Read the whole thing.

Video of my talk at NAF is available here.

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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Sam Seder Interview on Napoleon's Egypt

Sam Seder is calling me Wednesday to talk about my new book, Napoleon's Egypt.

The segment will air Sunday Sept. 26, during Sam's show (see link above).

At the Napoleon's Egypt Blog, Capt. Shechy's eyewitness account of the taking of Alexandria.

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Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Napoleon's Egypt and the Page 99 Test



Marshal Zeringue's Page 99 Test highlights my new book, Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East.

This book blog is premised on Ford Maddox Ford's bon mot, "Open the book to page ninety-nine and read, and the quality of the whole will be revealed to you."



Also, at the Napoleon's Egypt Blog, Bourrienne's account of the taking of the port of Alexandria.

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Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Napoleon Bonaparte on Liberating the Middle Easterners



At the Napoleon in Egypt blog, more correspondence of Gen. Bonaparte concerning his planned invasion of Egypt, from April-May 1798. Included is his proclamation to the troops (who did not yet know where they were going) about the nature of their mission. See if it sounds familiar:

' PROCLAMATION.
"TOULON, 10th May 1798."

"Soldiers, you are one of the wings of the army of England.* You have fought on mountain and plain, and besieged forts; it remained for you to wage a maritime war.

"The Roman legions, which you have sometimes imitated but not yet equalled, fought against Carthage both by sea and on the plains of Zama. Victory never abandoned them because they were constantly brave, patient in the support of fatigue, well disciplined, and united.

"Soldiers, Europe has its eyes upon you.

"You have great destinies to fulfil, battles to fight, dangers to overcome. You will do more than you have yet accomplished for the prosperity of your country, for the happiness of mankind, and for your own glory.

"Sailors, infantry, cavalry, artillery, be united, and remember that on the day of battle you will stand in need of each other, &c. "


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The Revolutionary French named their armies for the intended object of conquest. The Army of England had been intended for a channel crossing. Diverted to Egypt, it became the Army of the Orient.

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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Napoleon Defeats Knights of St. John, Takes Malta



At the Napoleon in Egypt blog, Bourrienne's brief account of the conquest of the Knights of St. John at Malta.

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Monday, July 30, 2007

Bonaparte Betrayed at Cairo



At the Napoleon in Egypt blog, the story of how Gen. Bonaparte discovered during his march on Cairo that his wife was cheating on him, and what he wrote his brother in response.

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Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Napoleon's Invasion of the Middle East



At my book blog for my new publication on Bonaparte's Egypt expedition, I have been putting up some texts related to the misadventure The first close-up Western view of Egypt's Bedouin is posted today; ominously, this bit of colonial anthropology was made possible by some French scientists (savants) being taken hostage for ransom just after Gen. Bonaparte took the port city of Alexandria.



This of PBS documentary on Bonaparte, which covers the Egyptian expedition, is worth looking at if you haven't.

Enjoy!

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Monday, July 23, 2007

Napoleon's Egypt



I am repeating this posting for Monday, since many readers skip the weekends.

I just received an advance copy of my new book, Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East. I'm a proud parent/author and breaking out the virtual cigars. I think Palgrave Macmillan did a stellar job with the editing and production. The actual publication date is August 7.



This episode, all too little known, was the first instance of a modern European country attempting to invade, occupy and "liberate" an Arab, Muslim Middle Eastern region.

I have started a historical blog on the book as a place to put up some materials that might interest readers of the book, as a sort of supplement. If I get time I may do some translating or posting of translated texts.

The first posting was of the relevant portion of a PBS documentary on Bonaparte, which covers the Egyptian expedition.

Enjoy!

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