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MIDDLE EAST - FOREIGN POLICY - UNITED STATES (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   078784


Future of the Middle East: strategic implications for the United States / Gause, F Gregory; Mohamedi, Fareed; Molavi, Afshin; White, Wayne   Journal Article
Gause, F Gregory Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
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2
ID:   077236


Iraq and the limitations of American foreign policy in the Midd / MacQueen, Benjamin; Simpson, Kumuda   Journal Article
MacQueen, Benjamin Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract The Bush administration has manoeuvred itself into an exquisite dilemma. Iraq is by all reasonable assessments a foreign policy calamity and perceptions of American power and legitimacy are at an all time low. All the options available to the US in dealing with the situation carry significant costs. For the US to extricate itself from Iraq it must engage with regimes that it claims it has an existential and intractable conflict with, such as Iran and Syria. This is a direct outcome of the failure of the Bush administration to acknowledge the realities of the situation in Iraq and the complexities involved in solving this crisis. It also highlights a much greater problem with current US foreign policy towards the Middle East, namely an ignorance of the interconnected nature of conflicts and tensions in the region. Approaching Iran and Syria regarding the Iraqi crisis would signal a positive shift away from the current values-driven unilateralism towards a more realistic and flexible policy to further US national interests.
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