Description

Book Synopsis
American Alliance Policy in the Middle East provides a stimulating, new look at a U.S. Cold War foreign policy gripped by anticommunist paranoia. Through case studies of America''s relationships with Iran, Israel, and Saudi Arabia, John P. Miglietta reveals how an overriding fear of global communism led to the overcommitment of U.S. security resources to the region. The perceived need to preserve Middle East stability rendered U.S. policy ineffectual and unresponsive to changing local conditions, drastically altering the patron-client paradigm to the detriment of American strategic interests. This superb analysis of American foreign policymaking illustrates how Cold War anticommunist ideology prevented the evolution of traditional military alliances into broader-based relationships and perpetuated authoritarian regimes that mired the Middle East in a cycle of poverty and despotism.

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Alliances, American Foreign Policy, and International Relations Theory Chapter 2 The United States and Iran: The Forging of an Alliance Chapter 3 The United States and Iran: The Implications of the New Persian Empire Chapter 4 The Origins of the American-Israeli Alliance: 1948-1960 Chapter 5 The Establishment and Implications of the U.S.-Israel Alliance Chapter 6 The Origins of the U.S.-Saudi Alliance Chapter 7 The Strategic Implications of the American-Saudi Alliance Chapter 8 Conclusions

American Alliance Policy in the Middle East

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    A Hardback by John P. Miglietta

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      Publisher: Rlpg/Galleys
      Publication Date: 8/15/2002 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739103043, 978-0739103043
      ISBN10: 0739103040

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      American Alliance Policy in the Middle East provides a stimulating, new look at a U.S. Cold War foreign policy gripped by anticommunist paranoia. Through case studies of America''s relationships with Iran, Israel, and Saudi Arabia, John P. Miglietta reveals how an overriding fear of global communism led to the overcommitment of U.S. security resources to the region. The perceived need to preserve Middle East stability rendered U.S. policy ineffectual and unresponsive to changing local conditions, drastically altering the patron-client paradigm to the detriment of American strategic interests. This superb analysis of American foreign policymaking illustrates how Cold War anticommunist ideology prevented the evolution of traditional military alliances into broader-based relationships and perpetuated authoritarian regimes that mired the Middle East in a cycle of poverty and despotism.

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 Alliances, American Foreign Policy, and International Relations Theory Chapter 2 The United States and Iran: The Forging of an Alliance Chapter 3 The United States and Iran: The Implications of the New Persian Empire Chapter 4 The Origins of the American-Israeli Alliance: 1948-1960 Chapter 5 The Establishment and Implications of the U.S.-Israel Alliance Chapter 6 The Origins of the U.S.-Saudi Alliance Chapter 7 The Strategic Implications of the American-Saudi Alliance Chapter 8 Conclusions

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