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Auteur Français Alpher, Joseph.

Titre Periphery : Israel's search for Middle East allies / Yossi Alpher.

Table des matières
 Prefacexi
 Acknowledgmentsxv
 Introductionxvii
I.The Periphery Doctrine at Work 
1.Evolution of a Grand Strategy3
2.The Northern Triangle: Iran and Turkey11
3.Morocco25
4.The Southern Periphery29
5.The Levant Minorities41
6.The Kurds of Northern Iraq51
7.The Jewish Dimension61
8.The American Dimension65
9.End of the First Periphery, 1973--198371
II.Ramifications 
10.Iran: Periphery Nostalgia and Its Costs77
11.Israeli Skeptics87
12.Between Peripheries: Peace, Isolation, and Islam95
13.Is There a New Periphery?105
14.Arab Reaction125
III.Conclusion 
15.Can Israel Find a Regional Identity?135
 Heads of Mossad149
 Persons Interviewed151
Map 1 The Original Periphery Concept153
Map 2 The Expanded Southern Periphery155
Map 3 The Ethnic Periphery157
Map 4 A New Periphery?159
 Index161
 About the Author171

Exemplaires

Localisation Cote Statut
 Innovative University Library  DS119.6 .A67 2015    AVAILABLE
Description xxiv, 171 pages ; 24 cm.
Content Type text txt rdacontent.
Type De Document unmediated n rdamedia.
Carrier Type volume nc rdacarrier.
Summary "Since its establishment after World War II, the State of Israel has sought alliances with non-Arab and non-Muslim countries and minorities in the Middle East, as well as Arab states geographically distant from the Arab-Israel conflict. The text presents and explains this regional orientation and its continuing implications for war and peace. It examines Israel's strategy of outflanking, both geographically and politically, the hostile Sunni Arab Middle East core that surrounded it in the early decades of its sovereign history, a strategy that became a pillar of the Israeli foreign and defense policy. This "periphery doctrine" was a grand strategy, meant to attain the major political-security goal of countering Arab hostility through relations with alternative regional powers and potential allies. It was quietly abandoned when the Sadat initiative and the emerging coexistence between Israel and Jordan reflected a readiness on the part of the Sunni Arab core to deal with Israel politically rather than militarily. For a brief interval following the 1991 Madrid conference and the 1993 Oslo accords, Israel seemed to be accepted by all its neighbors, prompting then Foreign Minister Shimon Peres to muse that it could even consider joining the Arab League. Yet this periphery strategy had been internalized to some extent in Israel's strategic thinking and it began to reappear after 2010, following a new era of Arab revolution. The rise of political Islam in Egypt, Turkey, Gaza, southern Lebanon and possibly Syria, coupled with the Islamic regime in Iran, has generated concern in Israel that it is again being surrounded by a ring of hostile states--in this case, Islamists rather than Arab nationalists. The book analyzes Israel's strategic thinking about the Middle East region, evaluating its success or failure in maintaining both Israel's security and the viability of Israeli-American strategic cooperation. It looks at the importance of the periphery strategy for Israeli, moderate Arab, and American, and European efforts to advance the Arab-Israel peace process, and its potential role as the Arab Spring brings about greater Islamization of the Arab Middle East. Already, Israeli strategic planners are talking of "spheres of containment" and "crescents" wherein countries like Cyprus, Greece, Azerbaijan, and Ethiopia constitute a kind of new periphery. By looking at Israel's search for Middle East allies then and now, the book explores a key component of Israel's strategic behavior. Written in an accessible manner for all students, it provides a better understanding of Israel's role in the Middle East region and its Middle East identity."--Publisher's description.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Sujet National security -- Israel.
Israel -- Foreign relations.
Israel -- Foreign relations -- Middle East.
Middle East -- Foreign relations -- Israel.
ISBN 9781442231016
1442231017