Bingham, who served as the chair of the U.K. Vaccine Taskforce, and journalist Hames debut with an incisive behind-the-scenes look at the challenges Bingham faced in her role. When British prime minister Boris Johnson asked Bingham, a managing partner at a venture capital firm with a history of investing in new medicines, to helm a group charged with getting shots into arms by the end of 2020, she was initially hesitant, as her decades of experience in biotech and drug development had taught her that “drug discovery at breakneck speed” was impossible. She ended up accepting the position, only to find that the science, including the unprecedented use of mRNA, was only part of the problem. She and her team had to overcome unrealistic promises of how many doses would be available within months, and navigate confusing misstatements by Johnson, such as when he explained that Britain’s capacity for vaccine creation was limited because the country didn’t “have any enzymes.” Nonetheless, on Dec. 8, 2020, the world’s first Covid-19 vaccination took place in the U.K. The authors combine a lucid explanation of the scientific breakthroughs needed to create the first Covid vaccine with an insider look at the politics that hampered the taskforce’s efforts. The result is a valuable addition to the literature documenting the crisis. (Dec.)
Steven Simon. Penguin Press
Hubris regularly begets disaster in this astringent history of American policy in the Middle East since 1980, in which former State Department official Simon (coauthor, The Sixth Crisis) surveys decades of American successes and failures in the region. The latter far outnumber the former and include the Reagan administration’s secret, illegal arms sales to Iran; George W. Bush’s Iraq War, which led to hundreds of thousands of deaths; Donald Trump’s self-defeating repudiation of Obama’s Iran nuclear deal, which ended up accelerating Iran’s nuclear program; and many feckless stabs at an Israeli-Palestinian peace plan. The author highlights persistent dysfunction in U.S. policy, including a tendency to resort to military coercion, policymakers’ rejection of lower-level experts who contradict their theories, and “a superimposition of grand ideas on antithetical Middle Eastern realities.” Stocked with sharply etched portraits of statesmen, Simon’s narrative elucidates complex issues in pithy, biting prose. (On the Iran-Iraq War: “Equally jarring is the idea that both the United States and the Soviet Union were supporting Iraq only because the prom queen—Iran—had spurned them.”) Simon’s insider savvy and bracing honesty make for an illuminating take on America’s vexed relationship with the region. (Apr.)
Edited by John Corrigan, Melani McAlister, and Axel R. Schäfer. Univ. of North Carolina
These nuanced essays, compiled by religion professor Corrigan, American studies professor McAlister, and U.S. history professor Schäfer, look at the global growth of evangelicalism. The contributions “trace an alternative history of evangelical internationalism... that accounts for the racial diversity of the U.S. and global evangelical communities,” beginning with history professor Emily Conroy-Krutz’s exploration of American evangelicals’ first faltering forays into international mission work in the late 19th century. The pieces grapple with the “masculinist and imperialist logic of racial supremacy [that] often undergirded Protestant support for U.S. expansion,” as when historian Sarah Miller-Davenport posits that evangelicals viewed U.S. victory in WWII as proof that the country “was a Christian nation singled out by God,” a belief that justified missionaries’ symbiotic relationship with postwar U.S. military occupations of the Philippines and Japan. Studying evangelical movements in the Global South, religion professor David C. Kirkpatrick notes that the native-born evangelical left in Latin American countries vocally opposed U.S. intervention in their politics and critiqued the U.S. evangelical conviction in the power of benevolent foreign intervention. In foregrounding international forms of evangelicalism, this volume delivers thought-provoking visions of how the faith tradition’s domestic manifestations might take inspiration from global communities and reckon with the darker episodes in its history. Scholars of American religion should take note. (Oct.)
By Walter Russell Mead. Knopf
Mead (God and Gold), a professor of foreign affairs at Bard College, delivers a sweeping study of the relationship between the U.S. and Israel. Stretching from the colonial era to the present day, Mead’s comprehensive history analyzes the impacts of Christianity’s changing attitudes toward Judaism and Jews; broad political trends that enabled the acceptance of Jewish people “as active members of the American commonwealth,” exemplified by George Washington’s 1790 letter to the congregation of Touro Synagogue in Newport, R.I.; and economic developments such as the rise of labor unions. Revealing inconvenient facts for both Palestinians and Israelis (“Most of the land that Zionists settled before 1947 was freely sold to them by Arabs”), Mead forcefully critiques Yasser Arafat for rejecting a peace agreement proposed by the Clinton administration and contends that U.S. foreign policy toward Israel is governed by self-interest. Though he declines to offer detailed prescriptions for how American leaders should handle Israeli settlements in the West Bank, Iranian funding of Hamas, and other contentious matters, Mead provides more than enough context to understand them. The result is a valuable resource for policymakers and voters alike. (July)
By Henry Kissinger. Penguin Press