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Margaret Thatcher and the Middle East / Azriel Bermant.

By: Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2016Description: 1 online resource (xvi, 257 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781316585283 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 327.4105609/048 23
LOC classification:
  • DS63.2.G7 B47 2016
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction: Britain's colonial legacy and its postwar Middle East policy -- Thatcher and the'Finchley factor' -- The new Soviet threat -- Thatcher endorses the Venice Declaration -- Operation Babylon -- The crisis in Anglo-American relations -- Israel's invasion of Lebanon -- Thatcher's diplomatic initiative -- Thatcher's landmark visit to Israel -- The Reagan Administration spurns the London Agreement -- The collapse of the'Jordanian option' -- A new approach towards the PLO -- The end of a friendship -- Conclusion.
Summary: Margaret Thatcher and the Middle East examines Thatcher's policy on the Middle East, with a spotlight on her approach towards the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It questions claims that she sought to counter the Foreign Office Middle East policy, and maintains that the prime minister was actually in close agreement with the Whitehall bureaucracy on the Arab-Israeli conflict. In particular, the volume argues that Thatcher's concerns over Soviet ambitions in the Middle East encouraged her to oppose the policies of Israel's Likud governments, and to work actively for an urgent resolution of the conflict. Furthermore, while Thatcher was strongly pro-American, this was not translated into automatic support for Israel. Indeed, the Thatcher government was very much at odds with the Reagan administration over the Middle East, as a result of Washington's neglect of the forces of moderation in the region.
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Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 11 Aug 2017).

Introduction: Britain's colonial legacy and its postwar Middle East policy -- Thatcher and the'Finchley factor' -- The new Soviet threat -- Thatcher endorses the Venice Declaration -- Operation Babylon -- The crisis in Anglo-American relations -- Israel's invasion of Lebanon -- Thatcher's diplomatic initiative -- Thatcher's landmark visit to Israel -- The Reagan Administration spurns the London Agreement -- The collapse of the'Jordanian option' -- A new approach towards the PLO -- The end of a friendship -- Conclusion.

Margaret Thatcher and the Middle East examines Thatcher's policy on the Middle East, with a spotlight on her approach towards the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It questions claims that she sought to counter the Foreign Office Middle East policy, and maintains that the prime minister was actually in close agreement with the Whitehall bureaucracy on the Arab-Israeli conflict. In particular, the volume argues that Thatcher's concerns over Soviet ambitions in the Middle East encouraged her to oppose the policies of Israel's Likud governments, and to work actively for an urgent resolution of the conflict. Furthermore, while Thatcher was strongly pro-American, this was not translated into automatic support for Israel. Indeed, the Thatcher government was very much at odds with the Reagan administration over the Middle East, as a result of Washington's neglect of the forces of moderation in the region.

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