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With Friends Like These - Reagan, Bush, and Saddam, 1982-1990 (Paperback, College Edition)
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With Friends Like These - Reagan, Bush, and Saddam, 1982-1990 (Paperback, College Edition)
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List price R261
Loot Price R226
Discovery Miles 2 260
You Save R35 (13%)
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A solid but dry academic analysis of how and why the US
wrongheadedly tilted toward Iraq and leader Saddam Hussein until
the Gulf War. In 1982, notes Jentleson (Political Science/Univ. of
California, Davis), the Reagan administration removed Iraq from a
list of state sponsors of terrorism. The main reason: leverage
against Iran, Iraq's opponent in war. Iraq gained trade credits,
military aid, and, in 1984, restoration of diplomatic relations.
But, as Jentleson persuasively argues, the "enemy of my enemy" is
not necessarily a friend. Hussein did not moderate his behavior,
but flagrantly violated human rights, pursued construction of an
atom bomb, and continued to support terrorism. The author suggests
that trade considerations and a wishful State Department outweighed
the outrage of Congress. In 1989, President Bush signed a strategic
directive pointing toward normalization of relations between the
two countries; once again, political and trade considerations
outweighed the well-founded doubts of those concerned with human
rights and nonproliferation. Jentleson also criticizes the inept
accommodation US officials offered as Hussein prepared for his
invasion of Kuwait. The author follows his case study with a
prescription for appropriate strategy in such "enemy-enemy-friend"
cases: Policy makers should ensure reciprocity (a rough equivalence
in mutual benefits) and proportionality (the support offered should
not allow the "friend" to be too powerful); they should also
maintain deterrent credibility (a willingness to leave the
alliance). He also criticizes Bush administration "groupthink" and
federal agencies' failure to cooperate. Jentleson relies mainly on
secondary sources where a journalist might have pinned down some of
the faulty policy makers in interviews. He also could have offered
more context on such issues as the Republican posture toward human
rights policy and the importance of Israeli-Arab peace talks.
Finally, Jentleson, who has served as an advisor to President
Clinton's State Department, avoids commenting on the current US
posture toward Iraq. For students, scholars, and policy types.
(Kirkus Reviews)
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