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ID079231
Title ProperTacit support for terrorism
Other Title Informationthe rapprochement between the USSR and Palestinian guerrilla organizations following the 1967 war
LanguageENG
AuthorGinat, Rami ;  Bar-Noi, Uri
Publication2007.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article demonstrates the inconsistent and wavering Soviet attitude towards national liberation movements in general and the Palestinian organizations in particular. Until the late 1960s, the Soviets viewed these organizations with suspicion, hesitating to engage in political dialogue with them. However, in the 1970s, political and military events in the region, as well as modifications in the Kremlin's Cold War strategies, led to a general shift towards the Middle East in Soviet foreign policy. Soviet leaders showed increased willingness to provide certain Palestinian organizations with arms with which to conduct terrorist activities against Israeli, pro-Israeli, Jewish and Western targets. The article explores the complex relations between Palestinian organizations and the USSR in the field of international terror. The study also exposes and analyzes the nature and content of Soviet-Palestinian arms dialogues and transactions. It provides clear evidence that Soviet policymakers and other luminaries were fully informed of, and sometimes directly involved in, these transactions and dialogues at the highest levels
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Strategic Studies Vol. 30, No.2; Apr 2007: p255-284
Journal SourceJournal of Strategic Studies Vol. 30, No.2; Apr 2007: p255-284
Key WordsUSSR ;  Soviet Union ;  PLO ;  Terrorism ;  CPSU ;  Guerrilla ;  Cold War ;  KGB ;  Israel ;  Zionism ;  Middle East