What Every American Should Know About the Middle East
By Daniel Miessler on February 11th, 2008: Tagged as Culture | Politics | World

Most in the United States don’t know much about the Middle East or the people that live there. This lack of knowledge hurts our ability to understand world events and, consequently, our ability to hold intelligent opinions about those events.
For example, frighteningly few know the difference between Sunni and Shia Muslims, and most think the words “Arab” and “Muslim” are pretty much interchangeable. They aren’t. So here’s a very brief primer aimed at raising the level of knowledge about the region to an absolute minimum.
Basics
Arabs are part of an ethnic group, not a religion. Arabs were around long before Islam, and there have been (and still are) Arab Christians and Arab Jews. In general, you’re an Arab if you 1) are of Arab descent (blood), or speak the main Arab language (Arabic).
Islam is a religion. A Muslim (roughly pronounced MOOSE-lihm) is someone who follows the religion. So you wouldn’t say someone follows Muslim or is an Islam, just as you wouldn’t say someone follows Christian or is a Christianity.
Shia Muslims are similar to Roman Catholics in Christianity. They have a strong clerical presence via Imams and promote the idea of going through them to practice the religion correctly. Sunni Muslims are more like Protestant Christians. They don’t really focus on Imams and believe in maintaining a more direct line to God than the Shia.
Sunni Muslims make up most of the Muslim world (roughly 90%). 1
The rift between the Shia and Sunni started right after Muhammad’s death and originally reduced to a power struggle regarding who was going to become the authoritative group for continuing the faith.
The Shia believed Muhammad’s second cousin Ali should have taken over (the family/cleric model). The Sunni believed that the best person for the job should be chosen by the followers (the merit model) and that’s how the first Caliph, Abu Bakr, was appointed.
Although the conflict began as a political struggle it now mostly considered a religious and class conflict, with political conflict emanating from those rifts.
Sunni vs. Shia | Arab vs. Non-Arab
Here’s how the various Middle Eastern countries break down in terms of Sunni vs. Shia and whether or not they are predominantly Arab. Keep in mind that these are generalizations; significant diversity exists in many of the countries listed.
Iraq Mostly Shia (roughly 60%), but under Saddam the Shia were oppressed and the Sunni were in power despite being only 20% of the population. Arab.
Iran Shia. NOT Arab.
Palestine Sunni. Arab.
Egypt Sunni. Arab.
Saudi Arabia Sunni. Arab.
Syria Shia. Arab.
Jordan Sunni. Arab.
Gulf States Sunni. Arab.
Conclusion
What’s depressing is the fact that this only took me 20 minutes to write and you 2 minutes to read. Yet most people in the United States, including those in the media, the house of representatives, and probably even the Pentagon, lack even this cursory level of knowledge about the region.:
References
1The CIA World Fact Book | Field Listing - Religions
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Dan, I read your stuff all the time. It was great to see your site and this story on reddit’s front page. Thanks for this primer. I’m printing it out and posting it near my computer. I think it will be realy useful in attempting to understand world events.
Comment by Clint — 2/11/2008 @ 2:32 pm
Really :-)
Comment by Clint — 2/11/2008 @ 2:35 pm
You mean, of course, ELICIT. Trust me when I say illicit isn’t a verb.
Comment by SRS — 2/11/2008 @ 3:57 pm
um, Christian arabs? You don’t mention them in your break down (which I know is Sunni vs Shia but…) and Jews… and non arab Christians…. and Drews….. I think this is more a ‘review of Musilms in the middle east by numbers and sect’ than it is a primer of the middle east.
Good write up though! Looking forward to the next installment.
Comment by knowmad — 2/11/2008 @ 4:36 pm
Um… that’s “…elicit a stern correction.” Not “illicit”.
Good stuff, though.
Comment by stenboj — 2/11/2008 @ 5:43 pm
General comment:
Daniel Miessler clearly knows a lot more than most about Islam and the Arab world. However, I am not sure that Syria is Shia? The Assads, for example, are Allawis, yet another, but tiny, Muslim sect!
“knowmad” comment suggests that he heard about the ‘Druze’ in radio news bulletins and can be forgiven for calling them “Drews”!!!
The stern correction which elicited comment on typographical error, also applies to calling an Arab an ‘Iranian’!
Comment by Sami — 2/12/2008 @ 5:10 am
What about the Hakawe tribe from F Troop?
Comment by G Herbert Walker Bush — 2/12/2008 @ 10:10 am
I am from the middle east and Syria is not even a Shia majority.
If the fact that Syria supports Hezbollah in the Lebanese south makes you think its Shia its not the case. I believe that this support is for pure secular political reasons.
Secondly, a considerable region to the east of the Arabic peninsula (Gulf states lands) have Shia majorities. For example Al Ihsa’ region in Saudi Arabia and the Kingdom of Bahrain. BTW Shia in these regions are heavily oppressed, especially in Saudi Arabia.
Comment by Mohammad Abdul-Amir — 3/30/2008 @ 9:24 am
Second the point about Syria: It is majority Sunni.
Comment by Beetle B. — 3/31/2008 @ 5:42 pm
As a Syrian, I’m going to have to third the comment about Syria not being a Shia country. The Alawites are considered shia, but they really aren’t.
Oh, and the person who attempted to knowmad? It’s not Drews. It’s Druze.
Comment by LaylaK — 10/21/2008 @ 5:19 am