Middle East and Africa | Land of lousy armies

Why are Arab armed forces so ineffective?

Governments are splashing the cash, but that may do little to burnish their armies’ reputations

Qatari special operations personnel conduct a military free-fall Friendship Jump over Qatar
Photograph: AP

WHEN ARAB air-defence crews helped fend off Iran’s missile attack on Israel in April, they drew much praise. And yet Arab states are not usually lauded for their martial prowess; many have lousy military reputations. They have been repeatedly humiliated in wars with Israel. They proved ineffective during the 1991 Gulf war; Egypt deployed two armoured divisions but America quickly sidelined them when they struggled to overcome even limited Iraqi resistance. Other Gulf countries, such as Saudi Arabia, provided only a handful of troops. More recently, despite considerable American military support, the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen descended into a quagmire.

Map: The Economist
The Economist today

Handpicked stories, in your inbox

A daily newsletter with the best of our journalism

More from Middle East and Africa

Is the American-built pier in Gaza useful or a fiasco?

The Economist went there to find out

The “Venice of Africa” is sinking into the sea

Megacities on the continent’s western coast are being swamped by rising oceans


Is a Palestinian state a fantasy?

Amid war in Gaza, the prospect is at once more relevant than ever and more distant


More from Middle East and Africa

Is the American-built pier in Gaza useful or a fiasco?

The Economist went there to find out

The “Venice of Africa” is sinking into the sea

Megacities on the continent’s western coast are being swamped by rising oceans


Is a Palestinian state a fantasy?

Amid war in Gaza, the prospect is at once more relevant than ever and more distant


Private firms are driving a revolution in solar power in Africa

Unreliable grids and falling costs are persuading companies to go off-grid

Israel’s northern border is ablaze

Can it fight Hamas and Hizbullah simultaneously?

A remarkable new era begins in South Africa

A national unity government can save democracy and the economy