Seven Stories Press, 2002. — 116 p. Lebanese scholar As'ad Abu Khalil examines the roots of the September 11 crisis, the causes for antipathy toward the United States, and the historical relations between the U.S. and the Islamic world. Abu Khalil also reviews the background of U.S. entanglement with the Middle East, and how it catalyzed militant fundamentalist networks that...
Routledge, 2012. — 181 p. The recent "Arab spring", with its popular uprisings in many Arab countries, has exposed the ambiguity at the heart of American promotion of democracy in the Middle East. The US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq were packaged as democracy promotion, as heralding the beginning of a new phase in the politics of the Middle East when democracy would...
Arab Scientific Publishers, 2009. — 270 p. During Roosevelt's first term of presidency, the American Secretary of State Stimson wrote in late 1932:Although this government has recognized the Arabian Kingdom and is in diplomatic relations with it through the respective representatives of the two governments in London, it is not contemplated that this government will establish...
Routledge, 2019. — 207 p. This book aims at uncovering the politics behind the provision of US foreign aid to Pakistan during three distinctive periods: the Cold War, the post-Cold War and the "war on terror." Focusing on a comprehensive analysis of aid allocation and delivery mechanisms, this book uncovers the primary factors behind historical as well as contemporary US aid to...
Potomac Books, 2016. — 208 p. In the spring of 2004, army reservist and public affairs officer Steven J. Alvarez waited to be called up as the U.S. military stormed Baghdad and deposed Saddam Hussein. But soon after President Bush's famous PR stunt in which an aircraft carrier displayed the banner "Mission Accomplished," the dynamics of the war shifted. Selling War recounts how...
Routledge, 2022. — 207 p. Presenting the Middle East peace process as an extension of US foreign policy, this book argues that ongoing interventions justified in the name of ‘peace’ sustain and reproduce hegemonic power. With an interdisciplinary approach, this book questions the conceptualisation and general understanding of the peace process. The author reinterprets regional...
Rutgers University Press, 2020. — 234 p. Intervention Narratives examines the contradictory cultural representations of the US intervention in Afghanistan that help to justify an imperial foreign policy. These narratives involve projecting Afghans as brave anti-communist warriors who suffered the consequences of American disengagement with the region following the end of the...
Oxford University Press, 2019. — 271 p. Based on extensive fieldwork in Afghanistan and eight years of interviews, this book reviews the dynamics between Afghan and U.S. journalists, and the global diplomatic power of the American press within the context of the post-9/11 era. Journalists are actors in international relations, mediating communications between governments and...
Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2012. — 228 p. How have the costs, both human and material, of US involvement in the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq affected the country's will for conducting regime-change operations? What are the implications for issues of strategy? The authors of US Policy in Afghanistan and Iraq assess the impact of the two conflicts on US foreign policy,...
Gorgias Press, 2008. — 401 p. This incisive study by historian Lester Brune examines the background and implications of these events. Considering the late twentieth-century involvement of the United States in Iraq, Brune discusses the policy of containment and the decision to go to war a second time in the region in the twenty-first century. He traces the situation up to the...
Scarecrow Press, 1977. — 431 p. The United States' relationship with the Middle East prior to World War I was limited, although commercial ties existed even in the early 19th century. President Andrew Jackson established formal ties with the Sultan of Muscat and Oman in 1833. (The Sultan saw the U.S. as a potential balance to Britain's overwhelming regional influence.)...
University Press of Kentucky, 2012. — 228 p. Presidents George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush both led the United States through watershed events in foreign relations: the end of the Cold War and the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Many high-level cabinet members and advisers played important foreign policy roles in both administrations, most notably Dick Cheney, Colin...
The New Press, 2022. — 118 p. — ISBN 978-1-62097-768-2 Through the structure of a deeply engaging conversation between two of our most important contemporary public intellectuals, we are urged to defy the inattention of the media to the disastrous damage inflicted in Afghanistan on life, land, and resources in the aftermath of the U.S. withdrawal and the connections to the...
The New Press, 2022. — 208 p. Through the structure of a deeply engaging conversation between two of our most important contemporary public intellectuals, we are urged to defy the inattention of the media to the disastrous damage inflicted in Afghanistan on life, land, and resources in the aftermath of the U.S. withdrawal and the connections to the equally avoidable and...
Hachette Books, 2022. — 432 p. In recognition of the 10th anniversary of the attack in Benghazi, a noted Libya expert and eyewitness to the attack provides a startling reconsideration of one of the defining controversies of our era. Ten years after an attack on the US diplomatic mission in Benghazi killed Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans, cries of...
Free Press, 2017. — 304 p. In 1956 President Nasser of Egypt moved to take possession of the Suez Canal, thereby bringing the Middle East to the brink of war. The British and the French, who operated the canal, joined with Israel in a plan to retake it by force. Despite the special relationship between England and America, Dwight Eisenhower intervened to stop the invasion. In...
Stanford University Press, 2009. — 265 p. The last six years have witnessed a virtually unending debate over U.S. policy toward Iraq, a debate that is likely to continue well into the new administration and perhaps the next, notwithstanding recent improvements on the ground. Too often, however, the debate has been narrowly framed in terms of the situation in Iraq and what steps...
Potomac Books, 2019. — 279 p. From Sadat to Saddam offers a fresh perspective on the politicization of the U.S. diplomatic service and the militarization of U.S. foreign policy. The narrative begins with the 1981 assassination of Egyptian President Sadat, continues through two Gulf wars and ends with US withdrawal of combat troops from Iraq in 2011. The book recounts successes...
Columbia University Press, 2008. — 455 p. As world attention is renewed and refocused on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict at the sixtieth anniversary of its seminal year of 1948, Marda Dunsky takes a close look at how more than two dozen major American print and broadcast outlets have reported the conflict in recent years. Beginning with the failed Camp David summit of July...
Manchester University Press, 2014. — 160 p. Beneath the violence of the US war in Iraq was a subterranean conflict between President Bush and Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, rooted in their different beliefs and leadership styles. Bush was prepared to pay a high cost in American lives, treasure, and prestige to win. Rumsfeld favoured turning the war over to the Iraqis, and was...
Brookings Institution Press, 2019. — 345 p. A critical examination of the history of US-Palestinian relations. The United States has invested billions of dollars and countless diplomatic hours in the pursuit of Israeli-Palestinian peace and a two-state solution. Yet American attempts to broker an end to the conflict have repeatedly come up short. At the center of these failures...
Broadside Books, 2022. — 272 p. The Trump administration’s peace agreements in the Middle East were the greatest foreign policy accomplishment in decades. Now, for the first time, his ambassador to Israel explains how they pulled it off. Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results is insanity. For decades, the U.S. State Department called it diplomacy....
Praeger, 2010. — 304 p. This modern study of the Iran-Iraq War utilizes newly available primary materials to analyze American policy towards the war and question the veracity of the United States' claims of strict neutrality. The Iran-Iraq War lasted from September 1980 to August 1988, dominating the landscape of the Middle East and polarizing many of the world's nations for...
I.B. Tauris, 2021. — 295 p. What happens to policies when a president dies in office? Do they get replaced by the new president, or do advisers carry on with the status quo? In November 1963, these were important questions for a Kennedy-turned-Johnson administration. Among these officials was a driven National Security Council staffer named Robert Komer, who had made it his...
Praeger, 1987. — 237 p. A very welcome addition to the largely scarce literature on the history of Middle Eastern-US relations in the area of economic development. Although the United States' economic relations with the Third World have gone through various phases as political and fiscal conditions have shifted, Dr. Godfried contends that the main policy outlines established in...
SAGE, 2010. — 137 p. This book deals with the complex and changing U.S. relations with India and Pakistan in the sixty years since World War II. It carries a series of brief sketches on how twelve U.S. presidents, starting with Franklin Roosevelt, perceived and dealt with South Asia. The author proposes that though there are broad historical patterns in which the policies and...
Routledge, 2018. — 325 p. The dawn of the Cold War marked a new stage of complex U.S. foreign policy involvement in the Middle East. More recently, globalization and the region’s ongoing conflicts and political violence have led to the U.S. being more politically, economically, and militarily enmeshed – for better or worse―throughout the region. This book examines the emergence...
Potomac Books, 2017. — 289 p. Douglas Grindle provides a firsthand account of how the war in Afghanistan was won in a rural district south of Kandahar City and how the newly created peace slipped away when vital resources failed to materialize and the United States headed for the exit. By placing the reader at the heart of the American counterinsurgency effort, Grindle reveals...
Simon and Schuster, 2009. — 228 p. Richard Haass, a member of the National Security Council staff in the George H. W. Bush administration and the State Department director of policy planning for George W. Bush, reviews the causes and strategies of the first and second Iraq wars while providing a thoughtful examination of the means and ends of U.S. foreign policy. War of...
Potomac Books, 2005. — 224 p. Although it seems almost incredible today, the United States had relatively little interest in the Middle East before 1945. But the dynamics and outcome of World War II elevated the importance of the Middle East in the American mind, and the United States has viewed the region with vital interest to its security and economy ever since. The...
Scarecrow Press, 2007. — 241 p. The current state of affairs between the United States and the Middle East is probably the most volatile and absorbing relationship the U.S. is involved in today. Prior to 1941, however, the U.S. preferred to limit its involvement with the Middle East to launching ministries of evangelism and social welfare across the region and investing in the...
Unity and Struggle Publications, 1992. — 148 p. The war of aggression launched against Iraq by the United States and its allies continues to this day; nor has the United States "won". Arthur Henson's book is a thorough & unsparing investigation into the origins of this criminal war, which is rooted in the conflict over control of oil. It addresses the critical need for a...
Routledge, 2005. — 304 p. Hilali provides an excellent study into the US-Pakistan partnership under the Reagan administration. The book explores the causes of Pakistan's involvement in the Afghanistan war and the United States' support to prevent Soviet adventurism. It shows that Pakistan was the principal channel through which assistance was provided to Afghan freedom...
Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014. — 264 p. US foreign policy in the Middle East has faced a challenge in the years since World War II: balancing an idealistic desire to promote democracy against the practical need to create stability. Here, Cleo Bunch puts a focus on US policy in Jordan from the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948 to 1970 and the run up to 'Black...
Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. — 232 p. The authors present a vital analysis of the foreign policy-making processes of the two Bush administrations prior to the attacks on Iraq. In a thorough comparison, they show how both presidents used historical analogies to evaluate information, relied on instinct to formulate decisions, and drew on moral language to justify their choices.
Simon and Schuster, 2009. — 224 p. Making peace in the long-troubled Middle East is likely to be one of the top priorities of the next American president. He will need to take account of the important lessons from past attempts, which are described and analyzed here in a gripping book by a renowned expert who served twice as U.S. ambassador to Israel and as Middle East adviser...
University of North Carolina Press, 2011. — 335 p. As its interests have become deeply tied to the Middle East, the United States has long sought to develop a usable understanding of the people, politics, and cultures of the region. In Imagining the Middle East, Matthew Jacobs illuminates how Americans' ideas and perspectives about the region have shaped, justified, and...
I.B. Tauris, 2020. — 314 p. The history of U.S. diplomacy in the Middle East is marked by numerous stark failures and a few ephemeral successes. Jimmy Carter's short-lived Middle East diplomatic strategy constitutes an exception in vision and approach. In this extensive and long-overdue analysis of Carter's Middle East policy, Jorgen Jensehaugen sheds light on this important...
Twayne Publishers, 1996. — 308 p. Critically assesses United States foreign relations since 1945 by presenting both historical and current information on the effect that U.S. politics and economics have had around the world. Each volume is an authoritative, readable account by a preeminent historian and includes: -- A concise chronology of major events: - Background on pre-1945...
Harvard University Press, 2016. — 440 p. In T. E. Lawrence's classic memoir Seven Pillars of Wisdom, Lawrence of Arabia claimed that he inspired a "dream palace" of Arab nationalism. What he really inspired, however, was an American idea of the area now called the Middle East that has shaped U.S. interventions over the course of a century, with sometimes tragic consequences....
Henry Holt and Company, 2010. — 288 p. The bestselling author of Overthrow offers a new and surprising vision for rebuilding America's strategic partnerships in the Middle East. What can the United States do to help realize its dream of a peaceful, democratic Middle East? Stephen Kinzer offers a surprising answer in this paradigm-shifting book. Two countries in the region, he...
Palgrave Macmillan, 2023. — 287 p. After two decades of War on Terror, it is particularly important, for both academic and policy purposes, to clearly understand why the US formidable mobilization of means and might has transformed into a such a blatant geostrategic defeat of the US and its allies in the broad Middle East. This is all the more paradoxical that the WOT achieved...
Routledge, 2010. — 208 р. This book examines US hegemony and international legitimacy in the post-Cold War era, focusing on its leadership in the two wars on Iraq. The preference for unilateral action in foreign policy under the Bush Administration, culminating in the use of force against Iraq in 2003, has unquestionably created a crisis in the legitimacy of US global...
Oxford University Press, 2023. — 368 p. America's decision to go to war in Iraq in 2003 is arguably the most important foreign policy choice of the entire post-Cold War era. Nearly two decades after the event, it remains central to understanding current international politics and US foreign relations. In Confronting Saddam Hussein, the eminent historian of US foreign policy...
Routledge, 1985. — 161 p. U.S.-Saudi relations have been marked by ambivalence since their inception over 50 years ago. The Arab-Israeli conflict, the division between buyer and seller of oil, the superpower-small state dichotomy, and the divergence of cultures, traditions, and perceptions have all contributed to the anomalies that have marked the relationship between the two...
Routledge, 2009. — 544 p. Divided into three sections, the Handbook of US-Middle East Relations provides a thorough and up-to-date overview of contemporary US-Middle East relations in historical perspective. With chapters contributed by leading experts in the field, this Handbook will be of use to academics, students and researchers in international relations, policy analysts,...
I.B. Tauris, 2015. — 295 p. The US-led coalition which launched an invasion of Iraq on 20 March 2003 led to a decade-long military presence in the country. In the run-up to that invasion, many comparisons were made with the 1991 Gulf War. Ahmed Ijaz Malik takes these two instances of military intervention by Republican US governments to highlight how the official discourse of...
CQ Press, 2016. — 368 p. Challenges for America in the Middle East offers a comprehensive and contemporary analysis of the foreign policy challenges the United States faces in the Middle East. It takes a close look at the critical policy dilemmas posed by radical Islam, the Arab Spring, the Shia Crescent, and Israel–Palestine relations. Authors Richard W. Mansbach and Kirsten...
Routledge, 2016. — 205 p. US Democracy Promotion in the Middle East seeks to explore the changes in US strategy towards democracy promotion in the Middle East during the Clinton and Bush administrations, with a particular focus on Egypt, Iraq and Kuwait. At a time of regional turmoil and political reform, the topic of democracy promotion has never been more pertinent. We are...
Columbia University Press, 2020. — 375 p. Since the mid-twentieth century, the United States and Saudi Arabia have built a close but often troubled alliance. In this critical history, Victor McFarland reveals the deep ties binding the leaders of the two nations. Connecting foreign relations and domestic politics, McFarland challenges the view that the U.S.-Saudi alliance is the...
Pen and Sword Military, 2005. — 375 p. By means of interviews with, and contributions from, prominent international figures, Axis of Freedom examines the dramatic world events which unfolded from 11 September 2001 to the end of occupation of Iraq in the summer of 2004. Many books have been written on the war on terror, but none include the personal views and opinions of so many...
I.B.Tauris, 2012. — 255 p. The early years of Syrian-US relations can be described as hopes dashed, hopes revived. Although American missionaries had visited the Middle East in the nineteenth century, it was not until after World War I that Syrian and US dignitaries met in an official capacity. The relationship had its ups-and-downs: warm under Woodrow Wilson; virtually...
Institute for Palestine Studies, 1995. — 350 p. Fallen Pillars is a concise summary of the dramatic evolution of American policy towards Palestine and Israel over the past half century. It demonstrates how and why this evolution has been almost invariably in a direction closer to Israel, and how this has caused unintended strains and contradictions that, at times, have confused...
Palgrave Macmillan, 2012. — 212 p. Based upon extensive archival research in Great Britain, the United States, and the Middle East, including sources never previously utilized such as declassified intelligence records, postwar planning documents, and the personal papers of key officials, this is painstakingly researched account of the origins of American involvement in the...
Westview Press, 1986. — 246 p. An area vital to US interests, the Gulf has long been a volatile region. The vulnerability of Western interests is illustrated by such destabilizing influences as the political power of OPEC, the fall of the Shah of Iran, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and the Iran-Iraq War. The contributors to this volume examine the causes and effects of...
Lexington Books, 2016. — 200 p. This book sheds light on key issues in the Middle East. As the politics and society of the Middle East change, American foreign policy has become stagnant and stubborn. However, the changes occurring in the Middle East have brought into existence new, unfamiliar policies from regimes that reject old alliances and demand new solutions. Ongoing...
Routledge, 2005. — 167 p. Robert J. Pauly, Jr examines the history of US foreign policy toward the Greater Middle East in general and focuses specifically on the fundamental economic, military and political causes of the 1990-1991 Persian Gulf crisis. He investigates to what extent these causes were internal and external in origin, looks at the principal actors in the crisis,...
Routledge, 2020. — 304 p. This book explores the often assumed but so far not examined proposition that a particular U.S. culture influences U.S. foreign policy behavior or, more concretely, that widely shared basic assumptions embraced by members of the U.S. administration have a notable impact on foreign policy-making. Publicly professed beliefs regarding America’s role in...
Brookings Institution Press, 2014. — 211 p. In February 1989, the CIA's chief in Islamabad famously cabled headquarters a simple message: "We Won." It was an understated coda to the most successful covert intelligence operation in American history. In What We Won, CIA and National Security Council veteran Bruce Riedel tells the story of America's secret war in Afghanistan and the...
Rowman & Littlefield, 2010. — 408 p. This provocative, thoroughly researched book explores the covert aspects of U.S. foreign policy. Prominent political analyst Peter Dale Scott marshals compelling evidence to expose the extensive growth of sanctioned but illicit violence in politics and state affairs, especially when related to America's long-standing involvement with the global...
Penguin Press, 2023. — 495 p. A longtime American foreign policy insider’s penetrating and definitive reckoning with this country’s involvement in the Middle East—and its bitter end. The culmination of almost forty years at the highest levels of policymaking and scholarship, Grand Delusion is Steven Simon’s tour de force, offering a comprehensive and deeply informed account of...
Penguin Press, 2023. — 542 p. — ISBN 9780735224254 A longtime American foreign policy insider’s penetrating and definitive reckoning with this country’s involvement in the Middle East—and its bitter end. The culmination of almost forty years at the highest levels of policymaking and scholarship, Grand Delusion is Steven Simon’s tour de force, offering a comprehensive and deeply...
Cambridge University Press, 2021. — 282 p. Why did the United States invade Iraq, setting off a chain of events that profoundly changed the Middle East and the US global position? The Regime Change Consensus offers a compelling look at how the United States pivoted from a policy of containment to regime change in Iraq after September 11, 2001. Starting with the Persian Gulf...
Cornell University Press, 2016. — 295 p. In Spheres of Intervention, James R. Stocker examines the history of diplomatic relations between the United States and Lebanon during a transformational period for Lebanon and a time of dynamic changes in US policy toward the Middle East. Drawing on tens of thousands of pages of declassified materials from US archives and a variety of...
I.B. Tauris, 2018. — 287 p. From nonviolent protests in Cairo and Manama to the ousting of Libya's Gaddafi and the beginning of the Syrian Civil War, the series of uprisings which swept through the Middle East and North Africa from late 2010 have been burdened with the collective hopes and expectations of the world. Western supporters quickly identified these uprisings as a...
Penguin Books, 2011. — 702 p. An unprecedented history of American involvement in the Middle East. In this definitive and revelatory work, noted historian Geoffrey Wawro approaches America's role in the Middle East in a fundamentally new way-by encompassing the last century of the entire region rather than focusing narrowly on a particular country or era. With verve and...
Cornell University Press, 2021. — 347 p. In Oil Money, David M. Wight offers a new framework for understanding the course of Middle East-US relations during the 1970s and 1980s: the transformation of the US global empire by Middle East petrodollars. During these two decades, American, Arab, and Iranian elites reconstituted the primary role of the Middle East within the global...
Routledge Chapman, 2021. — 172 p. This book is a comprehensive analysis of the Taliban, and how it has affected post-9/11 U.S.-Pakistan relations. It analyzes the genesis of the Taliban, the rationale behind their emergence and how they consolidated their rule in Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001. It examines the U.S. policies towards the Taliban in the post 9/11 era and Pakistan's...
The MIT Press, 2014. — 245 p. Although George W. Bush memorably declared, "I'm the decider," as president he was remarkably indecisive when it came to U.S. policy toward the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. His administration's policymaking featured an ongoing clash between moderate realists and conservative hard-liners inspired by right-wing religious ideas and a vision of...
Routledge, 2016. — 325 p. Turkey’s relations with the European Union is one of the most enigmatic topics in the European Studies literature. This country, kept at bay by Europeans for centuries, once came unexpectedly close to full-membership. The progress Turkey recorded in its European quest is difficult to account for with either Turkey’s performance or the positive attitude...
Институт изучения Израиля и Ближнего Востока, Институт востоковедения РАН, 2000 - 127 c. В данной книге на разнообразном материале прослеживаются особенности и специфика политики Соединенных Штатов Америки в чрезвычайно важном в геополитическом отношении и взрывоопасном регионе мира. Книга рассчитана на ученых-востоковедов, специалистов-политологов и всех тех, кто интересуется...
Москва: МПГУ, 2015. — 277 с. Монография рассчитана на круг читателей, изучающих проблему политики США на Ближнем Востоке и в целом интересующихся этой темой. В книге исследуются события, происходящие на Ближнем Востоке под влиянием США с 1958 г., когда произошла революция в Ираке, рассмотрено участие США в арабо-израильских войнах. Отдельное внимание уделено политике США в...
М.: Наука, 1982. — 216 с. В книге освещаются в комплексе основные проблемы политики США на Ближнем и Среднем Востоке в 70-е годы XX в. Рассматриваются движущие силы и мотивы ближневосточной политики США, вскрываются империалистические интересы влиятельных финансово-нефтяных групп США. В книге также характеризуется политическое положение в регионе, показаны успехи и трудности...
М.: Наука, 1982. — 218 с. В книге освещаются в комплексе основные проблемы политики США на Ближнем и Среднем Востоке в 70-е годы XX в. Рассматриваются движущие силы и мотивы ближневосточной политики США, вскрываются империалистические интересы влиятельных финансово-нефтяных групп США. В книге также характеризуется политическое положение в регионе, показаны успехи и трудности...
М.: Политиздат, 1983. — 288 с. В книге ученого-востоковеда и журналиста А.М. Васильева подробно рассказано о сложной обстановке в зоне Персидского залива; исследованы развитие событий в странах Аравийского полуострова, значение краха шахского режима в Иране, органическая взаимосвязь проблем нефти и мировой политики. Большое внимание уделено анализу курса США, направленного на...
София: Партиздат, 1986. — 112 с.
На болгарском языке.
Описание политики США в странах Персидского залива и борьбы за закрепление своих позиций в этом регионе.
М.: Сфера, 1997. — 144 с. — ISBN: 5-89144-020-2. В монографии рассматривается один из малоисследованных аспектов афганского регионального конфликта. На основе обширных оригинальных источников дан анализ политики США в отношении Афганистана в 1978—1989 гг. Для специалистов-международников, преподавателей вузов, студентов, а также для тех, кто интересуется внешнеполитическими...
М.: Политиздат, 1985. — 318 с.
В книге академика Е.М. Примакова освещаются узловые моменты ближневосточной политики США в 70 - 80-е годы. Эта политика привела к сепаратной кэмп-дэвидской сделке, заблокировала процесс достижения справедливого и всеобъемлющего урегулирования ближневосточного конфликта. В работе убедительно показано, что империалистическому курсу США на Ближнем...
М.: Политиздат, 1985. — 318 с.
В книге академика Е.М. Примакова освещаются узловые моменты ближневосточной политики США в 70 - 80-е годы. Эта политика привела к сепаратной кэмп-дэвидской сделке, заблокировала процесс достижения справедливого и всеобъемлющего урегулирования ближневосточного конфликта. В работе убедительно показано, что империалистическому курсу США на Ближнем...
Монография. — Томск: Издательский дом Томского государственного университета, 2015. — 404 с. — ISBN: 978-5-94621-502-2. В монографии исследуется процесс трансформации ближневосточной политики США в период президентства Дж.Ф. Кеннеди. Специфической чертой данного исследования стало использование американской теории фронтира, применение которой выявляет новые грани как политики...
М.: Государственное издательство политической литературы, 1955. — 136 с. Проникновение американских империалистов на Ближний и Средний Восток. Ближний и Средний Восток в планах американских агрессивных кругов после Второй мировой войны. Борьба между империалистами США и Англии за господство в странах Ближнего и Среднего Востока. Американские империалисты — злейшие враги народов...
М.: АИРО-XXI, 2016. — 448 с. — ISBN: 978-91022-293-3. В книге рассматривается интервенция США и НАТО в Ливии и её последствия для Сирии, Ирана и Кавказа. Анализируются подготовленность сторон к войне; воздушная операции США и НАТО; стратегия и тактика армии Каддафи и повстанцев ПНС; ведение информационной войны. Исследуются геополитические, военно-технические, экономические,...
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