Sheer proximity remains a perennial source of friction, as Australia frets about China’s encroaching naval presence and Greece and Turkey bicker over Aegean islands and their surrounding undersea gas fields. Deserts play a similarly disruptive role: the arid northern reaches of nations in the Sahel are incubating tribal Islamist movements that could tear them apart, and dry, thirsty Egypt has threatened war over Ethiopia’s damming of the Nile’s headwaters. A dominant theme is how mountains weaken national stability by nurturing minority cultures and separatist movements in places like Scotland, Spain’s Basque region, and Turkey’s Kurdish areas. Journalist Marshall ( Prisoners of Geography) spotlights nine places, including Africa’s Sahel region, Australia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey, whose locale, terrain, and climate shape their destinies. Mountains, deserts, and distances still leave a deep mark on national character and international relations, according to this fascinating exploration of geopolitics.
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