Is a pan-Islamic foreign policy possible? What are the possible obstacles and what might facilitate its emergence? Is a pan-Islamic foreign policy possible? What are the possible obstacles and what might facilitate its emergence?

Is a pan-Islamic foreign policy possible? What are the possible obstacles and what might facilitate its emergence‪?‬

    • ¥600
    • ¥600

Publisher Description

We have to look back to the year 750 AD, the end of the Omayyad Caliphs 1, to see the "Islamic world" acting as an united power. The probability of an emergence of a pan-Islamic foreign policy is to be discussed in this essay, which means a foreign policy that involves all Muslim countries and allows them to speak with one voice. Joint policy aims can only be formulated when the interests differ just slightly. The Islamic countries however have few common goals. Firstly this essay will discuss economic, and secondly political and cultural factors. Thirdly the structure of the states will be considered, and finally religious influences will be evaluated. It will be shown that obstacles impeding a collective foreign policy outweigh the driving forces in its favour by far.

Economic issues regularly have a strong impact on foreign policy strategies. The interlinkages between the areas of politics and economics are often so complex, that even one major common aim of two states might not be enough to produce a consensus between them on one policy programme. There might be joint interests like issues concerning oil if we talk about Indonesia and Kuwait, for instance. The differences in their goals, however, are too great to bring them together. Kuwait is rich and tries to retain its wealth, while Indonesia struggles with economic difficulties, inflation and local uprisings. The archipelago depends on the support of the world bank while the Kuwaitis do not know any problems of that kind. Nevertheless there are attempts to combine several nations′ economic interests with one another. OPEC, while not all of its member have an Islamic population (although its most influential and powerful ones do), is a fine example of how international co-operation might work. All participants of that organisation produce oil, and they founded this alliance to raise the world oil price by organised behaviour 2. History shows that this was quite effective in the beginning. Yet this is not enough to be optimistic to create promising prospects for a pan-Islamic co-operation. Since Venezuela has a Christian population, not all OPEC states are Islamic; the organisation can therefore not be seen as a fine prototype for a purely Muslim alliance. Additionally the development of OPEC continued less successfully - in terms of forming a combined foreign policy strategy - than it began.

GENRE
Politics & Current Events
RELEASED
2002
December 4
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
11
Pages
PUBLISHER
GRIN Verlag
SELLER
Open Publishing GmbH
SIZE
206.5
KB
Zukunftsfähigkeit der Rentenversicherung im Rahmen der Social Security in den USA Zukunftsfähigkeit der Rentenversicherung im Rahmen der Social Security in den USA
2003
Can the Vietnam War be accurately seen as a 'great illuminating failure' for the American people? Can the Vietnam War be accurately seen as a 'great illuminating failure' for the American people?
2002
Using the concepts of reliability and validity, critically examine how confident Human Resource professionals should be in using interviews as an effective selection technique Using the concepts of reliability and validity, critically examine how confident Human Resource professionals should be in using interviews as an effective selection technique
2002
Are authoritarian states more able to resort to the use of violence than democracies to fulfill their foreign policy aims? Are authoritarian states more able to resort to the use of violence than democracies to fulfill their foreign policy aims?
2002
Is global governance bound to be undemocratic? Is global governance bound to be undemocratic?
2002
Why did the U.S. forces fail to achieve victory in Vietnam? Why did the U.S. forces fail to achieve victory in Vietnam?
2002