What's new

Middle East Relationships, Explained Through An Interactive Map

The SC

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Feb 13, 2012
Messages
32,233
Reaction score
21
Country
Canada
Location
Canada
Trying to understand the complexities of Middle East politics can seem like an impenetrable task and the tangled and changing relations between governments and groups in the region are a common subject of discussion. What’s more, instead of clarifying the chaos, maps or charts that break down the various conflicts and alliances often merely prove how absurdly complex the situation really is.

However, one attempt at capturing how the region’s many different actors relate to each other has found an impressive way of merging simplification and accuracy.

Using a variety of data sources, David McCandless of the design site Information Is Beautiful (and author of Knowledge is Beautiful) created a chart that gives the appropriate impression of jumbled alliances, but is also interactive and explains specific connections. Made possible with the help of coders at Univers Labs, the interactive design clarifies which countries and groups are allied and who are sworn enemies.

By highlighting or clicking on any of the actors in the region, the reader can explore the actor’s relevant connections. Clicking on Islamic State, for example, shows that the extremist group has a mutual hatred with just about everyone else, with the exception of Qatar. Despite having participated in international airstrikes against IS, the Gulf State has been accused of being a hotspot for terror funding.

upload_2017-6-27_14-38-25.jpeg


While some of the connections may be up for debate, the chart is a great supplementary guide for an often incomprehensible topic. As with anything in the region, though, it will likely be subject to change as political bonds break and forge.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/30/middle-east-explained_n_6056786.html

Go to the site for the interactive map.. quite interesting..
 
Last edited:
The Middle East, explained in one (sort of terrifying) chart

What could be simpler than the Middle East? A well-known Egyptian blogger who writes under the pseudonym The Big Pharaoh put together this chart laying out the region's rivalries and alliances. He's kindly granted me permission to post it, so that Americans might better understand the region. The joke is that it's not a joke; this is actually pretty accurate.

imrs.php

Spend a few minutes staring at this and you will either have a seizure or actually comprehend the Middle East. Egypt is represented by the "MB" (Muslim Brotherhood) and "Sisi" for military leader Gen. Abdel Fatah al-Sissi. (Courtesy The Big Pharaoh)
There are rivals who share mutual enemies, allies who back opposite sides of the same conflict, conflicting interests and very strange bedfellows. There are two categories of countries: the ones that meddle (the United States, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey and Israel) and the ones that are meddled with (Egypt, Syria, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories). Each of the former is pushing for a different outcome in each of the latter, falling in and out of cooperation and competition. And that long-running interference is an important part of why conflict persists.

It's all kind of a scramble. The Big Pharaoh writes: "I keep on updating this chart because every time I look at it I discover that I've missed an arrow. That's how complicated it is."

The chart is a spin-off of the most amazing letter to the editor ever written, which appeared in Thursday's Financial Times. It also explained the entire Middle East, in a few short sentences. Here they are:

Sir, Iran is backing Assad. Gulf states are against Assad!

Assad is against Muslim Brotherhood. Muslim Brotherhood and Obama are against General Sisi.

But Gulf states are pro-Sisi! Which means they are against Muslim Brotherhood!

Iran is pro-Hamas, but Hamas is backing Muslim Brotherhood!

Obama is backing Muslim Brotherhood, yet Hamas is against the U.S.!

Gulf states are pro-U.S. But Turkey is with Gulf states against Assad; yet Turkey is pro-Muslim Brotherhood against General Sisi. And General Sisi is being backed by the Gulf states!

Welcome to the Middle East and have a nice day.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...st-explained-in-one-sort-of-terrifying-chart/
 
I wonder why there is no link between Iran and israel ... or why there is no isis ...
 
Where is isiso_O
Or does it not exist according to the OP?

PS : I thought sisi was isis :sarcastic:
 
Can someone explain why it says India loves Bahrain?
 
I wonder why there is no link between Iran and israel ... or why there is no isis ...
There is a red link for mutual hatred.. go to website from the link and click on Iran..

Where is isiso_O
Or does it not exist according to the OP?

PS : I thought sisi was isis :sarcastic:
You looked at the second post go to the first post you'll see it there..

Isis in reverse reads Sisi, so they are opposed to each other.. by the way his real name is Alssissi, so joke is misplaced..
 
Ugh this is such an oversimplification, and poorly presented too.

Does Pakistan have strained ties with Egypt and Iraq? I thought it would be somewhere between friendly and indiferrent, and it makes no sense that we are apparently allies with the UAE but have no relations with Saudi Arabia, Iran, Qatar, Oman, etc.
 
Back
Top Bottom