If there's ever been a peaceful period in Muslim history, the Cold War was not that period …
If there's ever been a peaceful period in 
Muslim history, the 
Cold War was not that period. During this period, the 
Muslim world was something of a battleground, in which the 
Islamic countries were 
pawns in a great superpower 
chess game. The 
Muslim world encompasses many places – among them 
South Asia, which actually has more 
Muslims than North Africa and the 
Middle East combined. But they do not form a majority in this broader region of 
South Asia. By contrast, around 90% of North Africa and the 
Middle East are 
Muslims, and the same is actually true of Central 
Asia as well. Since I discuss Central 
Asia in another blog post about the 
Soviet war in Afghanistan, I will not do so here. And since I have discussed the 
South Asian part of the Cold War in another blog post, I will not do that here, either. Here, I will just discuss the traditional power centers of the 
Muslim world, which are North Africa and the 
Middle East. Many (but not all) of these conflicts would involve the new state of 
Israel as well.
An Egyptian artillery piece captured in the First Arab-Israeli War, 1948