U.S. Policy on Jerusalem

U.S. Policy on Jerusalem

by Yossi Feintuch
U.S. Policy on Jerusalem

U.S. Policy on Jerusalem

by Yossi Feintuch

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Overview

Feintuch's book is a well-researched and competent monograph, laboriously going through the many and often inconsequential debates on the subject in the U.N. Following the course of U.S. policy over the years, he finds it ill defined and bumbling. It is hard to disagree with that conclusion. Foreign Affairs

Drawing on unpublished primary sources and personal interviews with former high-ranking U.S. officials such as Dean Rusk, Arthur Goldberg, and Evan Wilson, the author has developed a comprehensive picture of U.S. policy on Jerusalem, a subject which up until now has only been treated as a facet of the Arab-Israeli conflict. The years examined span 1919, when the United States first formulated a position on Jerusalem, to the mid-1980s. The emphasis is on the period from 1947, when the United States supported the U.N. resolution calling for the full internationalization of Jerusalem, to 1967, when a new U.S. policy was established recognizing Israel's de facto control of Jerusalem.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313257001
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 12/01/1987
Series: Contributions in Political Science , #19
Pages: 190
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.50(d)
Lexile: 1670L (what's this?)

About the Author

YOSSI FEINTUCH is an Assistant Professor at Ben-Gurion University in Beer-Sheva, Israel.

Table of Contents

Maps
Preface
From Sykes-Picot (1916) to Morrison-Grady (1946)
Corpus Separatum, September-November 1947
The Failure to Protect Jerusalem, December 1947-May 1948
America Declines to Assist Bernadotte, May-August 1948
The Search for an Alternative to Corpus Separatum, August-December 1948
The Palestine Conciliation Commission, January-August 1949
Volte-Face: The Ostensible Triumph of Corpus Separatum, September-December 1949
A Stalemate Develops at the United Nations, 1950
The United States Taboo on Jerusalem, 1950-1967
1967 and After: The Israeli Triumph
Conclusion
Selected Bibliography
Index

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