The book is an argument about (i) the role of war in Arab World (AW) and (ii) about what unravelled Arab Socialism & its consequences. It is extremely interesting on this topic, giving very profound & deep analysis. However, for one, I'm not sure I agree with author on the value of 'security' over anything else as basis for anti-imperialism (without critical qualification) & to me, his analysis of imperialism as the focus on the destruction of value and the fragmentation of states to weaken state's ability to rest imperialism (as basis for working class power) is *a element*, but I think not the sole element.
However, I can only give it three stars - despite its really interesting content - because the writing style *is attrocious*, in the sense it is filled with academic jargon in a way I've rarely seen before and it is really hard to read at times. Furthermore, a lot of the middle chapters are largely statistics-focused without enough analysis, this is the truest with the chapter on Egypt which...does not even give a proper account of history, just comparing statistics on various indexes under Nasserist Egypt & post-Nasserist Egypt.
Nonetheless, the book offers a lot to think about & engage with, but the author really needs an editor.