Futile Diplomacy, Volume 3 (eBook, PDF)
The United Nations, the Great Powers and Middle East Peacemaking, 1948-1954
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
Futile Diplomacy, Volume 3 (eBook, PDF)
The United Nations, the Great Powers and Middle East Peacemaking, 1948-1954
- Format: PDF
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
This book, first published in 1997, provides a careful and balanced behind-the-scenes account of the intricate diplomatic activity of the period between the first and second Arab-Israeli wars. The author examines the recurring deadlocks in terms of the motives and calculations of the various parties, and reveals how new incentives of pressures offered by outsiders proved incapable of reversing the serious deterioration of Arab-Israeli relations as the region headed for war at Suez. The text of this volume comprises both an in-depth analysis of the period and events, and a selection of primary documents from archival sources.…mehr
- Geräte: PC
- mit Kopierschutz
- eBook Hilfe
- Größe: 7.12MB
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 418
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Mai 2015
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317441922
- Artikelnr.: 42884450
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 418
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Mai 2015
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317441922
- Artikelnr.: 42884450
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Period 1.2. Changing Structure and Dynamics of the Post-1948 Conflict 1.3.
Forms of Third-Party Intervention in the Arab-Israeli Dispute 1.4. The Maze
of Mutual Perceptions and Misconceptions 2. War and Mediation, 1948 2.1.
Bernadotte's 'Suggestions', 27 June 1948 2.2. Direct Negotiations 2.3. The
Bernadotte Plan, September 1948: Acquiescence versus Agreement 2.4.
Patterns and Precedents 3. Egypt and Israel at Rhodes 3.1. United Nations
Peacemaking: Two Tracks 3.2. From Truce to Armistice 3.3. Getting to the
Table 3.4. Opening of Talks 3.5. Breakthrough: Signing the Armistice
Agreement 3.6. From Armistice to Peace? 4. The Lausanne Conference:
Prenegotiation 4.1. The Palestine Conciliation Commission 4.2. Preparing
the Ground 4.3. Shuttle Diplomacy 4.4. Quest for an Advance Gesture from
Israel 4.5. PCC Beirut Conference, March 1949 4.6. Continuing Pressure for
an Israeli Gesture 4.7. The Shadow of Rhodes 4.8. Strains in the Arab
Common Front 5. Manoeuvring at Lausanne 5.1. Opening the Conference 5.2. A
Basis for Discussion: The Lausanne Protocol, 12 May 1949 5.3. Staking out
the Positions: The First Deadlock 5.4. Israel's Offer to Incorporate the
Gaza Strip 6. Lausanne: The Final Stalemate 6.1. July Recess 6.2.
Resumption of the Conference 6.3. Israel's Offer to Repatriate 100,000
Refugees 6.4. Continued Conciliation or Imposed Settlement? 6.5. Winding up
the Conference 6.6. Lausanne Postcripts 7. Geneva Interlude 7.1. Years of
Drift 7.2. From Conciliation to Mediation? 7.3. Bilateral Negotiations 7.4.
PCC Geneva Meetings, January-July 1950 8. Deterioration of the Armistice
8.1. From Negative Peace to Positive Peace? 8.2. Beginnings of the Arms
Race 8.3. Regional Stability and Arms Control: The Tripartite Declaration,
May 1950 8.4. The Entrenchment of Israeli and Arab Positions 8.5. Piecemeal
Approaches: 'Knitting Tissue' over the Wound 9. PCC Paris Conference,
Autumn 1951 9.1. From Atrophy to Activity: Ely Palmer, the State
Department, and the PCC Initiative 9.2. Preparing the Conference 9.3. The
Conference Begins 9.4. The PCC's Comprehensive Pattern of Proposal 10. The
Paris Conference and the Demise of PCC Mediation 10.1. Draft Non-Aggression
Formulae 10.2. From Preamble to Proposals 10.3. Paris Deadlock and the
General Assembly 10.4. The Final Sessions: 14 November 1951 10.5. The
Demise of the PCC and United Nations Mediation 11. The United Nations and
Direct Negotiations, 1952-53 11.1. The Seventh General Assembly (1952):
Eight-Power Draft Resolution 11.2. Changes during 1953: Qibiya and
Israeli-Jordanian Tensions 11.3. The Israeli Call for Direct Negotiations:
November 1953 12. The United Nations Conference that Never Was, 1953-54
12.1. Invoking Article XII: The First Stages 12.2. Arab Reactions to
International Pressure 12.3. Responses to Jordan's Refusal Aftermath 13.
Conclusion 13.1. Assessment of the Arab-Israeli Impasse 13.2. Approaches to
Conflict Resolution 13.3. American Leverage on the Parties 13.4. Techniques
of Conciliation 13.5. The Attitudes and Positions of the Parties 13.6. From
War to War 14. Documents
Period 1.2. Changing Structure and Dynamics of the Post-1948 Conflict 1.3.
Forms of Third-Party Intervention in the Arab-Israeli Dispute 1.4. The Maze
of Mutual Perceptions and Misconceptions 2. War and Mediation, 1948 2.1.
Bernadotte's 'Suggestions', 27 June 1948 2.2. Direct Negotiations 2.3. The
Bernadotte Plan, September 1948: Acquiescence versus Agreement 2.4.
Patterns and Precedents 3. Egypt and Israel at Rhodes 3.1. United Nations
Peacemaking: Two Tracks 3.2. From Truce to Armistice 3.3. Getting to the
Table 3.4. Opening of Talks 3.5. Breakthrough: Signing the Armistice
Agreement 3.6. From Armistice to Peace? 4. The Lausanne Conference:
Prenegotiation 4.1. The Palestine Conciliation Commission 4.2. Preparing
the Ground 4.3. Shuttle Diplomacy 4.4. Quest for an Advance Gesture from
Israel 4.5. PCC Beirut Conference, March 1949 4.6. Continuing Pressure for
an Israeli Gesture 4.7. The Shadow of Rhodes 4.8. Strains in the Arab
Common Front 5. Manoeuvring at Lausanne 5.1. Opening the Conference 5.2. A
Basis for Discussion: The Lausanne Protocol, 12 May 1949 5.3. Staking out
the Positions: The First Deadlock 5.4. Israel's Offer to Incorporate the
Gaza Strip 6. Lausanne: The Final Stalemate 6.1. July Recess 6.2.
Resumption of the Conference 6.3. Israel's Offer to Repatriate 100,000
Refugees 6.4. Continued Conciliation or Imposed Settlement? 6.5. Winding up
the Conference 6.6. Lausanne Postcripts 7. Geneva Interlude 7.1. Years of
Drift 7.2. From Conciliation to Mediation? 7.3. Bilateral Negotiations 7.4.
PCC Geneva Meetings, January-July 1950 8. Deterioration of the Armistice
8.1. From Negative Peace to Positive Peace? 8.2. Beginnings of the Arms
Race 8.3. Regional Stability and Arms Control: The Tripartite Declaration,
May 1950 8.4. The Entrenchment of Israeli and Arab Positions 8.5. Piecemeal
Approaches: 'Knitting Tissue' over the Wound 9. PCC Paris Conference,
Autumn 1951 9.1. From Atrophy to Activity: Ely Palmer, the State
Department, and the PCC Initiative 9.2. Preparing the Conference 9.3. The
Conference Begins 9.4. The PCC's Comprehensive Pattern of Proposal 10. The
Paris Conference and the Demise of PCC Mediation 10.1. Draft Non-Aggression
Formulae 10.2. From Preamble to Proposals 10.3. Paris Deadlock and the
General Assembly 10.4. The Final Sessions: 14 November 1951 10.5. The
Demise of the PCC and United Nations Mediation 11. The United Nations and
Direct Negotiations, 1952-53 11.1. The Seventh General Assembly (1952):
Eight-Power Draft Resolution 11.2. Changes during 1953: Qibiya and
Israeli-Jordanian Tensions 11.3. The Israeli Call for Direct Negotiations:
November 1953 12. The United Nations Conference that Never Was, 1953-54
12.1. Invoking Article XII: The First Stages 12.2. Arab Reactions to
International Pressure 12.3. Responses to Jordan's Refusal Aftermath 13.
Conclusion 13.1. Assessment of the Arab-Israeli Impasse 13.2. Approaches to
Conflict Resolution 13.3. American Leverage on the Parties 13.4. Techniques
of Conciliation 13.5. The Attitudes and Positions of the Parties 13.6. From
War to War 14. Documents