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Democracy prevention : the politics of the U.S.-Egyptian alliance /

by Brownlee, Jason.
Publisher: Cambridge [England] New York : Cambridge University Press, 2012Description: xv, 279 p. : map ; 24 cm.ISBN: 9781107025714 (hardback); 9781107677869 (paperback).Subject(s): POLITICAL SCIENCE / Government / International | United States -- Foreign relations -- Egypt | Egypt -- Foreign relations -- United States | Egypt -- Foreign relations -- 1952-Summary: "For fifteen years the military regime that took power in Egypt in 1952 enjoyed a contentious but respectful bilateral relationship with the United States. After Israel devastated the Egyptian military in the 1967 War, however, Cairo severed diplomatic ties with Washington. , dipYears later, compatible strategic aims brought the two governments back together. While Anwar Sadat strove to restore Egypt's territory and solvency, the White House sought to reduce Soviet influence in the Middle East. A US-Egyptian alliance served both parties, but it took a daring military assault by Sadat to impress the wisdom of the friendship upon the Nixon administration. What followed was one of the most tectonic shifts of the Cold War: the complete return of the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt; a lasting peace between Israel and Egypt, Israel's most formidable regional adversary; and a strategic pact between the United States and Egypt, previously a key client of the Soviet Union. After the Iranian Revolution, Egypt became a component of America's new strategy for preserving its influence over the Persian Gulf"-- Provided by publisher.
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Item type Location Call number Status Date due
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Epoka University Library
E 183.8 .E35 .B76 2012 (Browse shelf) Available
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E 183.8 .C2 .R32 2001 Crossing the 49th parallel : E 183.8.C2 .S56 1979 Canadian American relations / E 183.8.C5 .A658 1993 The dragon and the eagle : E 183.8 .E35 .B76 2012 Democracy prevention : E 183.8 .G3 .M35 2002 No exit : E 183.8 .I4 .R63 2000 Comrades at odds : E 183.8 .I55 .H68 2001 US foreign policy and the Iran hostage crisis /

Includes bibliographical references (p. 247-265) and index.

"For fifteen years the military regime that took power in Egypt in 1952 enjoyed a contentious but respectful bilateral relationship with the United States. After Israel devastated the Egyptian military in the 1967 War, however, Cairo severed diplomatic ties with Washington. , dipYears later, compatible strategic aims brought the two governments back together. While Anwar Sadat strove to restore Egypt's territory and solvency, the White House sought to reduce Soviet influence in the Middle East. A US-Egyptian alliance served both parties, but it took a daring military assault by Sadat to impress the wisdom of the friendship upon the Nixon administration. What followed was one of the most tectonic shifts of the Cold War: the complete return of the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt; a lasting peace between Israel and Egypt, Israel's most formidable regional adversary; and a strategic pact between the United States and Egypt, previously a key client of the Soviet Union. After the Iranian Revolution, Egypt became a component of America's new strategy for preserving its influence over the Persian Gulf"-- Provided by publisher.

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