CLOSE
Loading...
12° Nicosia,
20 May, 2026
 
Home  /  Comment  /  Opinion

Gaza as a riviera and… Iran as Texas

Imperial legacies still shape the Middle East, from Mosaddegh to modern power plays.

Alexis Papachelas

Alexis Papachelas

When empires collapse or shrink, they usually leave behind a “black hole” along with a long list of unresolved problems that someone else is expected to sort out. The Ottoman Empire fell apart, and the British stepped in to draw artificial borders, creating new states while making a series of conflicting promises to Jews and Palestinians.

Much of what we are experiencing today can be traced back to those decisions, which shaped the future of the Middle East. Then came the decline of the British Empire after World War II, along with its increasingly desperate effort to hold on to its colonial spheres of influence. In Iran, Britain tried to keep control of oil through the Anglo-Iranian company in a blunt and heavy-handed way. It could not do it alone, so it pulled in the successor Western power, the United States.

When the British faced the nationalization of their company, they persuaded Dwight D. Eisenhower that if he did not intervene, Iran would fall to the communists and ultimately to Moscow. In the intense climate of the Cold War, the first major global operation of the Central Intelligence Agency followed, aimed at overthrowing Iranian prime minister Mohammad Mosaddegh.

Before the coup, the Americans tried to negotiate, but they ran into a leader who made it clear he had no interest in compromise. He argued that foreign involvement was ultimately about reducing Iran to something smaller, tracing that threat all the way back to the destruction of Persepolis by Alexander the Great. American officials were struck by conversations with ordinary citizens who said they did not care if they went hungry, because no one would be able to exploit Iranian oil if the British left. U.S. technocrats interpreted these attitudes as a mix of patriotism and a Shiite sense of martyrdom. Given that historical weight, it is easy to imagine how the idea that someone else should control Iran’s oil sounds to Iranians today.

Now the map of the Middle East is being redrawn. The Gulf states are in shock and looking for new alliances, uneasy about relying on what used to be called the American umbrella. Benjamin Netanyahu is pushing for what he calls a final victory, whatever the cost, both on the battlefield and at the ballot box. China is waiting. Donald Trump will try to show that history can be bent, that Gaza could become a Riviera and Iran could turn into Texas.

TAGS
Cyprus  |  opinion  |  op-ed  |  Middle East  |  geopolitics  |  Iran  |  Gaza  |  imperial legacy

Opinion: Latest Articles

Israel at Eurovision

Israel at Eurovision

Why are Russian bans in sports and culture not matched with similar restrictions on Israel?
Opinion
 |  OPINION
File photo of Constantinos the Great Beach Hotel in Protaras, Cyprus

Prudently & sparingly

As tourism takes a hit from regional tensions, questions grow over whether profitable hotels should receive state aid while ...
Dorita Yiannakou
 |  OPINION
In Trozena, investors see opportunity while the state once again looks unprepared and absent. Photo credit: trozena.cy

On Trozena’s pitch-black ridge

A forgotten Cypriot village becomes the latest battleground between unchecked development and the loss of local identity. ...
Apostolos Kouroupakis
 |  OPINION
From Suez to Iran, history offers a reminder that even the best-laid military plans can quickly unravel. Photo credit: @whitehouse Instagram

Give peace a chance

Trump’s unpredictable war strategy has left allies uneasy and searching for clarity.
Costas Iordanidis
 |  OPINION
Behind the push for investment, a quiet power struggle between Cyprus’s top business bodies is becoming impossible to ignore. Photo credit: Unsplash

In the trenches

A long-simmering rivalry spills into the open as business groups clash over influence and exclusion.
Dorita Yiannakou
 |  OPINION
Growth for a few, hardship for many, and the quiet collapse behind the success story. Photo credit: Unsplash

The wreckage of a narrative

A decade after the crisis, the story of economic recovery looks far less convincing for most Cypriots.
Paris Demetriades
 |  OPINION
The idea of resurrection collides with modern conflict in a fractured world. File photo

Resurrection Day

The uneasy distance between spiritual truth and political force.
Costas Iordanidis
 |  OPINION
Whether corruption or conspiracy, accountability can no longer wait. Photo credit: Unsplash

Enough is enough

A nation pushed to its breaking point by scandal and institutional decay.
Opinion
 |  OPINION
X