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E-grāmata: Lost Peace: Great Power Politics and the Arab-Israeli Dispute, 1967-1979

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In A Lost Peace, Galen Jackson rewrites an important chapter in the history of the middle period of the Cold War, changing how we think about the Arab-Israeli conflict.

During the June 1967 Middle East war, Israeli forces seized the Sinai Peninsula and the Gaza Strip from Egypt, the Golan Heights from Syria, and the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan. This conflict was followed, in October 1973, by a joint Egyptian-Syrian attack on Israel, which threatened to drag the United States and the Soviet Union into a confrontation even though the superpowers had seemingly embraced the idea of détente. This conflict contributed significantly to the ensuing deterioration of US-Soviet relations.

The standard explanation for why détente failed is that the Soviet Union, driven mainly by its Communist ideology, pursued a highly aggressive foreign policy during the 1970s. In the Middle East specifically, the conventional wisdom is that the Soviets played a destabilizing role by encouraging the Arabs in their conflict with Israel in an effort to undermine the US position in the region for Cold War gain.

Jackson challenges standard accounts of this period, demonstrating that the United States sought to exploit the Soviet Union in the Middle East, despite repeated entreaties from USSR leaders that the superpowers cooperate to reach a comprehensive Arab-Israeli settlement. By leveraging the remarkable evidence now available to scholars, Jackson reveals that the United States and the Soviet Union may have missed an opportunity for Middle East peace during the 1970s.
Acknowledgments ix
List of Abbreviations
xiii
Introduction: A Great Power Peace? 2(6)
1 Deadlock: The Superpowers after the June 1967 War
8(26)
2 Toward a Breakthrough? Nixon, the War of Attrition, and a Shift in Soviet Policy
34(38)
3 Waiting for 1973: The Election, the Summit, and Sadat's Expulsion of the Soviets
72(23)
4 "Under the Cover of Detente": The October War, Watergate, and Kissinger
95(38)
5 "The Maximum Anti-Soviet Policy": The Superpowers and the Road to Sinai II
133(29)
6 A Peace Too Far? The Comprehensive Framework Collapses
162(26)
Conclusion: What Drove the Cold War? 188(9)
Notes 197(54)
Index 251
Galen Jackson is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Williams College.