Middle East
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The Middle East is a political and cultural subregion
of Asia, or of Africa-Eurasia. The core of the region comprises
the lands between the Mediterranean Sea and the Persian Gulf
along with the Anatolian, Arabian and Sinai peninsulas.
Sometimes, it is used in a broader sense which can include areas
stretching from North Africa in the west to Pakistan in the east
and the Caucasus and/or Central Asia in the north. The media and
various international organizations (such as the United Nations)
usually considers the Middle East to be Southwest Asia
(including Cyprus and Iran) plus all of Egypt.
Characteristics
The Middle East is generally thought of as a predominantly
Islamic Arabic community. However the area encompasses many
distinct cultural and ethnic groups, including the Arabs,
Berbers, Jews, Iranians, Syriacs (also called: Arameans,
Assyrians, Chaldeans, Maronites), Kurds, Druze and Turks. The
main language groups include: Arabic, Aramaic Hebrew, Persian,
Kurdish and Turkish. The corresponding adjective is
Middle-Eastern and the derived noun is Middle-Easterner.
Most Western definitions of the "Middle East" -- in both
established reference books and common usage -- define the
region as 'nations in Southwest Asia, from Iran (Persia) to
Egypt'. Consequently, Egypt, with its Sinai Peninsula in Asia,
is usually considered part of the 'Middle East', although most
of the country lies geographically in North Africa. North
African nations without Asian links, such as Libya, Tunisia and
Morocco, are increasingly being called North African -- as
opposed to Middle Eastern (Iran to Egypt - Asia) -- by
international media outlets.
Borders
The term Middle East defines a cultural area, so it does not
have precise borders. The most common and highly arbitrary
definition includes: Bahrain, Cyprus, Egypt, Turkey, Iran
(Persia), Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar,
Saudi Arabia, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, Yemen, the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Iran is often the eastern border, but Afghanistan and western
Pakistan are often included due to their close relationship
(ethnically and religiously) to the larger group of Iranian
peoples as well as historical connections to the Middle East
including being part of the various empires that have spanned
the region such as those of the Persians and Arabs among others.
Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and western Pakistan (Baluchistan and
North West Frontier Province) share close cultural, linguistic,
and historical ties with Iran and are also part of the Iranian
plateau, whereas Iran's relationship with Arab states is based
more upon religion and geographic proximity. Also the Kurds,
another group of Iranic linguistic extraction, are the largest
ethnic group in the Middle East without their own state.
North Africa or the Maghrib, although often placed outside the
Middle East proper, does have strong cultural and linguistic
links to the region, and historically has shared many of the
events that have shaped the Mediterranean and Middle Eastern
regions including those prompted by Phoenician-colonized
Carthage and Greco-Roman civilization as well as Muslim
Arab-Berber and Ottoman empires. The Maghrib is sometimes
included, sometimes excluded from the Middle East by the media
and in informal usage, while most academics continue to identify
North Africa as geographically a part of Africa, but being
closely related to southwestern Asia in terms of politics,
culture, religion, language, history, and genetics. This can be
compared with other similar instances in which, for example,
Tasmania and Newfoundland, geographically non-European, share
many such traits with northwestern western Europe while
Madagascar is in some of these respects more like southeast Asia
than southeast Africa.
The Caucasus region, Cyprus, and Turkey, although often grouped
into Southwest Asia based upon geographic proximity and
continuity, are generally considered culturally and politically
European due to their various historic and recent political ties
to that region. For example, Armenia and Cyprus, although both
exist in close geographic proximity to the Middle East, possess
two important criteria that links them more to Europe than to
the Middle East: their national identity that combines an
Indo-European linguistic background and majority populations
that adhere to Christianity, which are both factors that do not
correspond with most typically Middle Eastern countries some of
whom possess one trait (Indo-European languages dominate Iran
and Afghanistan for example) or the other (Lebanon is the only
country that may have a Christian majority but this remains
speculative as well). Turkey possesses neither of these European
traits, but has deep historic (and according to genetic research
DNA) connections with Europe since it was the site of the
Byzantine Empire and the Ottoman Empire that overlapped into
Europe. As a prospective candidate of the European Union and a
long-time member of NATO, Turkey has adopted the secular traits
that dominate Europe and has severed many of its ties to the
Middle East with the notable exception of the religion of Islam.
Both Georgia and Azerbaijan were radically altered by the
dominion of the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union and are seen
as more 'European' than Middle Eastern and generally viewed as a
regional bloc in the Caucasus region.
Central Asian countries from the former Soviet Bloc also show
varying degrees of affinity and historical ties to the Middle
East, but not in any uniform fashion. While the southern states
of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan display many
cultural, historical, and socio-political similarities to the
Middle East, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan are examples of more
remote and mixed cultures. As a result, these states are often
viewed as Eurasian (in ways similar to the Caucasus) and their
Russian/Soviet past has set them apart in various ways from the
Middle East, while there has been a movement to re-establish
ties to the region in Tajikistan, for example, based upon their
ethno-linguistic affinities with Iran and Afghanistan. Like the
Caucasus and Turkey, Central Asia has strong secular and
'western' affinities that are both Soviet legacies, although
this may change with some recent shifts towards a
historical-cultural renaissance and resurgence of Islamic
identity that were suppressed for decades by Soviet authorities.
The State of Israel also represents a unique fusion of European
and Middle Eastern traits, but due to geographic continuity with
the Levant and a majority population that is predominantly
Middle Eastern (including Sephardic Jews, Sabras, Israeli Arabs,
etc.), it perhaps shares more similarities with its neighbors
then is readily apparent from media coverage.
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