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portada THE GREAT GAME OF THE CRESCENT. What If Picot and Sykes Had Been Enemies? (en Inglés)
Formato
Libro Físico
Año
2026
Idioma
Inglés
N° páginas
282
Encuadernación
Tapa Blanda
Dimensiones
22.90 x 15.20 x 1.50 cm
ISBN13
9798252553399

THE GREAT GAME OF THE CRESCENT. What If Picot and Sykes Had Been Enemies? (en Inglés)

Mani Vannan (Autor) · Independently published · Tapa Blanda

THE GREAT GAME OF THE CRESCENT. What If Picot and Sykes Had Been Enemies? (en Inglés) - MANI VANNAN

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Reseña del libro "THE GREAT GAME OF THE CRESCENT. What If Picot and Sykes Had Been Enemies? (en Inglés)"

In November 1915, two men met in a Foreign Office room in London with maps, instructions, and competing visions of the world they intended to inherit. François-Georges Picot represented France's claim to the Levant - a claim rooted in missionary networks, commercial concessions, and a conviction so deeply felt it had become indistinguishable from personal identity. Sir Mark Sykes represented Britain's determination to control the corridor from Egypt to India and the oil fields of Mesopotamia. They were supposed to reach an agreement. In history, they did. In this book, they don't.

The Great Game of the Crescent is a work of narrative counterfactual history that asks a single, precisely bounded question: what if the Sykes-Picot Agreement of May 1916 had never been signed? Not because the men were incompetent or the talks were poorly organized, but because the one question on which their interests were most irreconcilably opposed - the question of administrative authority in the Mosul region of northern Mesopotamia, sitting above what would prove to be among the largest oil accumulations in the world - proved, in December 1915, to be the one question neither government would authorize its negotiator to concede.

The consequences of that failure unfold across three decades and five territories. The Arab Revolt of 1916, launching into a political vacuum rather than a secretly pre-arranged world, gives Sharif Hussein of Mecca leverage that the historical revolt never possessed - and Faisal ibn Hussein rides into Damascus in October 1918 with genuine rather than illusory Allied backing. The Kurdish populations of the northern Tigris region, their political status now a strategic asset in a Franco-British competition for regional influence, emerge from the post-war settlement with a recognized if constrained autonomy that the historical Lausanne Treaty erased without trace. Palestine is contested by two European powers simultaneously courting Zionist support, producing a mandatory politics of triangulated pressure rather than British monopoly. And the Mosul oil fields, whose scale is confirmed by the Baba Gurgur blowout of 1927, are developed under a consortium whose competing stakeholders give the Arab and Kurdish populations above the reservoir a fractionally larger claim on what lies beneath.

None of this is a happy ending. The fundamental injustices of the post-war settlement - the dispossession of the Palestinians, the suppression of Kurdish national identity, the imposition of borders drawn for European convenience rather than Arab self-determination - are not undone by the absence of one agreement between two men in a London room. What changes is the degree of agency available to the people most affected by those injustices: slightly more room to negotiate, slightly more leverage against the powers that would otherwise have disposed of their futures without consultation, slightly more time and institutional space to build the political structures that might, over decades, make "slightly more" into something that mattered.

The Great Game of the Crescent is both a work of historical imagination and a methodological argument: that counterfactual history, done rigorously - anchored in archival evidence, faithful to documented human motivation, honest about the limits of what can be traced - is not a parlor game but a tool for understanding causation. By tracing what the Sykes-Picot Agreement actually did, through the controlled experiment of imagining its absence, the book illuminates with unusual clarity what the lines drawn on that map were really for, and what it cost the people who lived inside them.

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