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Russia in the Middle East Friend or Foe?
Book Code: C9328
ISBN: 0-275-99328-0
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-99328-3
232 pages
Praeger Security International General Interest-Cloth
Publication: 11/30/2006
List Price: $49.95 (UK Sterling Price: £27.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • Kreutz has written a useful book concerning Russian ties with a number of Arab countries, including Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Iraq, and other nations located in the Arabian Peninsula, and the Palestinians. The book contains both a historical and political examination of Russia's approach toward the Palestinian problem. Kreutz furnishes an overview of Soviet policy in the region and then discusses how Russian policy developed after the breakup of the Soviet Union. The author places significant emphasis on Russia's role in the Arab-Israeli conflict....[a] useful volume on a timely topic. Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, and faculty.
    —Choice
    June 2007
  • Andrej Kreutz provides a detailed and fresh analysis of the Russian policies and motivations in that region in the past decade, updating and expanding upon the excellent scholarship of Galia Golan's Soviet Policies in the Middle East from World War Two to Gorbachev.
    —The International History Review
    June 2008
  • [D]etailed and carefully researched....[t]he volume represents a worthwhile addition to the literature on Russian-Arab relations.
    —The Russian Review
    January 2008
  • Kreutz analyzes post-Soviet Russian foreign policy towards Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Israel/Palestine, Iraq, Egypt, and the Arabian Peninsula in terms of its broad historical and geopolitical framework. The major questions he wishes to address in his treatment concern the origins of Russia's objectives in the Arab East (Al- Mashreq), the impact of sociopolitical change in Russian statehood on Russian foreign policy, the basic goals and characteristics of Russian diplomacy, President Putin's particular contributions to those goals and characteristics, and the compatibility (or lack thereof) of Russian foreign policy in the region with American, Israeli, or broader Western objectives.
    —Reference & Research Book News
    February 2007
  • Endorsement From Andrei Tsygankov
    Program Chair, International Studies Association 2006-07
    Associate Professor, International Relations/Political Science
    San Francisco State University:
    Andrej Kreutz's study is rich, comprehensive, and sensitive to both Russian and Middle Eastern security perspectives. It provides important insights into the nature of the two's relationships, and it should become an essential reading for all those seeking to understand Russian and Middle Eastern politics.
  • Endorsement From Janice J. Terry
    Professor of Middle East History, Eastern Michigan University:
    Based on meticulous research, Russia in the Middle East offers a comprehensive overview of Russian foreign policy toward specific Arab states in an era of shifting alliances and rapid change.
  • Endorsement From Andrei Liakhov
    International Law Expert:
    Kreutz's book is a very thoroughly researched work on one of the most complicated contemporary international problems--a problem that, at the end of the day, affects all of us. He explores Russia's contribution to the quest for an equitable solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict without which it is impossible to understand the dynamics and motivation of the main actors in the conflict. It is a must read for every person studying the Middle East.
Description: Kreutz examines the goals and strategies of Russia and the former Soviet Union toward most of the Arab states in the Middle East. The author argues that Russia has been an important actor in the region for over a century and has tried to regain its influence in several countries following its strategic retreat after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s. However, according to Kreutz, Moscow does not seek confrontation with the United States or with the West in general in the region. Rather, the Russians are interested in peace and stability in the region, which is close to its borders. Because of that, although Moscow wants to cultivate its links with Israel, it also seeks to reach a peaceful and balanced solution to the Palestinian-Israel and the Arab-Israeli conflicts, taking Palestinian and Arab interests into account. Washington can better engage Moscow as a stabilizing force in the Middle East and as a collaborator in the struggle against Islamic terrorists. At the same time, the United States must be cognizant of where Washington and Moscow diverge. Although Russia may be too weak now to compete with the United States on a global scale, it is not happy to see American or EU encroachment close to its own neighborhood. If we take their weakness for granted and become blind to the possibilities for Russian alliances in the region, we do so to our disadvantage. This book demonstrates Russia's enduring interest and influence in the Arab Middle East.
LC Card Number: 2006028576
LCC Class: DS63
Dewey Class: 327
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