Begin's Foreign Policy 1977-1983: Israel's Move to the Right: 164 (Contributions in Political Science)
English


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About The Book

Those involved in diplomacy with Israel would be well advised to become familiar with this study of former Prime Minister Menachem Begins foreign policy for it examines in well-documented detail the snares and obstacles that await any negotiator charged with confronting Begins successors. . . . This study is well annotated with diverse and authoritative primary sources and has an excellent bibliography and useful index. Journal of Palestine StudiesThis volume is an in-depth analysis of the ideological psychological and political origins of Israels foreign policy during the stormy prime ministership of Menachem Begin. In a more general way it is a commentary on and an interpretation of the psycho-ideological approach of the entire Israeli Right. Under Begins leadership Israel dramatically changed its role adopting new policies not only toward the West Bank but also toward the Arab countries and the superpowers. In this sense the 1977 Israeli elections are seen as a historic watershed and although Begins ideology was based on the intellectual foundations laid by Vladimir Jabotinsky the leader of the Revisionist movement it also had many new elements. The author calls the 1977 elections The Neo-Revisionist Revolution and the implications of this concept are thoroughly examined. A systematic effort is made to study Begins foreign policy in its totality and the book deals with such crucial issues as the Camp David accords the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty the annexation of East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights the destruction of the Iraqi nuclear reactor and the invasions of Lebanon.
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