The Next 100 Years


partly on how aggressively the Russians move, how tenaciously the Balts re­



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The Next 100 Years A Forecast for the 21st Century ( PDFDrive )


partly on how aggressively the Russians move, how tenaciously the Balts re­
sist, how much risk the Poles are willing to take, and how distant the United 
States intends to be. Finally, it depends on internal German politics. 
Internally, Europe is inert, still in shock over its losses. But external 
forces such as Islamic immigration or Russian attempts to rebuild its empire 
could bring the old fault line back to life in various ways. 


79
t h e n e w f a u lt l i n e s
t h e m u s l i m wo r l d 
We have already discussed the Islamic world in general as a fault line. The 
current crisis is being contained, but the Islamic world, overall, remains un­
stable. While this instability will not gel into a general Islamist uprising, it 
does raise the possibility of a Muslim nation- state taking advantage of the 
instability, and therefore the weaknesses within other states, to assert itself as 
a regional power. Indonesia, the largest Muslim state in the world, is in no 
position to assert itself. Pakistan is the second- largest Muslim state. It is also 
a nuclear power. But it is so internally divided that it is difficult to see how 
it could evolve into a major power or, geographically, how it could spread its 
power, bracketed by Afghanistan to the west, China and Russia to the 
north, and India to the east. Between instability and geography, Pakistan is 
not going to emerge as a leading Muslim state. 
After Indonesia and Pakistan, there are three other major Muslim
nation- states. The largest is Egypt with 80 million people, Turkey is second 
with 71 million people, and Iran is third with 65 million. 
When we look at the three economically, Turkey has the seventeenth-
largest economy in the world, with a GDP of about $660 billion. Iran is 
twenty- ninth, with a GDP of just under $300 billion. Egypt is fifty- second, 
with a GDP of about $125 billion a year. For the past five years Turkey’s 
economy has been growing at 5 to 8 percent a year, one of the highest sus­
tained growth rates for any major country. With the exception of two years 
of recession, Iran has also had a sustained GDP growth rate of over 6 per­
cent for the past five years, as has Egypt. These two countries are growing 
fast, but they are starting with a much smaller base than Turkey. Compared 
to European countries, Turkey already has the seventh- largest economy and 
is growing faster than most. 
Now, it’s true that economic size is not everything. Iran appears to be the 
most aggressive of the three geopolitically—but that is actually its basic 
weakness. In trying to protect its regime against the United States, Sunni 
Muslims, and anti- Iranian Arabs (Iran is not an Arab country), Iran is con­
stantly forced to be prematurely assertive. In the process, it draws the atten­
tion of the United States, which then inevitably focuses on Iran as a 
dangerous power. 


80
t h e n e x t 1 0 0 y e a r s
Because of its interests in the Persian Gulf and Iraq, Iranian goals run 
counter to those of the United States. That means Iran must divert resources 
to protect itself against the possibility of American attack at a time when its 
economy needs to develop very rapidly in order to carry it into the first rank 
regionally. The bottom line is that Iran irritates the United States. Suffi­
ciently alarmed, the United States could devastate Iran. Iran is simply not 
ready for regional power status. It is constantly forced to dissipate its power 
prematurely. Attempting to become a major regional power while the world’s 
greatest power is focused on your every move is, to say the least, difficult. 
There is also the question of geography. Iran is on the margins of the re­
gion. Afghanistan is to the east, and there is little to be gained there. In any 
expansion of influence to the north, Iran would collide with the Russians. 
Iraq is a possible direction in which to move, but it can also become both a 
morass and a focal point for Arab and American countermeasures. It is not 
easy to increase Iranian regional power. Any move will cost more than it is 
worth. 
Egypt is the largest country in the Arab world and has been its tradi­
tional leader. Under Gamal Abdel Nasser, it made a major play to become 
the leader of the Arab world. The Arab world, however, was deeply frag­
mented, and Egypt managed to antagonize key players like Saudi Arabia. 
After the Camp David accords with Israel in 1978, Egypt stopped trying to 
expand its power. It had failed anyway. Given its economy, and its relative 
isolation and insularity, it is hard to see Egypt becoming a regional power 
within any meaningful time frame. It is more likely to fall into someone 
else’s sphere of influence, whether Turkish, American, or Russian, which has 
been its fate for several centuries. 
Turkey is a very different case. It is not only a major modern economy
but it is by far the largest economy in the region—much larger than Iran, 
and perhaps the only modern economy in the entire Muslim world. Most 
important, it is strategically located between Europe, the Middle East, and 
Russia. 
Turkey is not isolated and tied down; it has multiple directions in which 
it can move. And, most important, it does not represent a challenge to Amer­
ican interests and is therefore not constantly confronted with an American 
threat. This means it does not have to devote resources to blocking the 


United States. With its economy surging, it will likely soon reemerge in its
old role, as the dominant force in the region.
It must be remembered that until World War I, Turkey was the seat of
a major empire (see map, page 82). Shorn of its empire, Turkey became a
secular state governing a Muslim population. It was, until 1918, the most
powerful Muslim country in the world. And, at its height in the fourteenth
to sixteenth centuries, the Turkish empire was far reaching and extremely
powerful.
By the sixteenth century, Turkey was the dominant Mediterranean
power, controlling not only North Africa and the Levant but also southeast-
ern Europe, the Caucasus, and the Arabian Peninsula.
Turkey is an internally complex society, with a secular regime protected
by a military charged constitutionally with that role and a growing Islamist
movement. It is far from certain what sort of internal government it might
end up having. But when we look at the wreckage of the Islamic world after
t h e n e w f a u lt l i n e s
81

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