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ROGERS PLAN (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   171047


Golda Meir and the 1973 Yom Kippur War / Gat, Moshe   Journal Article
Gat, Moshe Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Most historians blame Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir for the outbreak of the 1973 Yom Kippur War, having allegedly rejected all peace proposals made by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. In fact, Sadat was adamantly opposed to Meir’s demand for direct negotiations, envisaging political settlement as an American dictate on Israel. The Yom Kippur War shook both sides of their intransigence and brought them closer to each other’s position.
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2
ID:   143620


Military power and foreign policy inaction: Israel, 1967-1973 / Gat, Moshe   Article
Gat, Moshe Article
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Summary/Abstract Between 1967 and 1973, Israeli governments took no initiative to set a peace process in motion. Instead, they simply responded to proposals that were raised from time to time, and, for the most part, rejected all of them – the Rogers Plan, Sadat’s willingness to sign a peace agreement and his initiative for an interim settlement – with the sole exception being the ceasefire agreement reached in August 1970. While Israeli policy lacked initiative on the political front, it dedicated much effort to convincing the United States that the greater Israel’s military power, the better its deterrence capabilities would be, which in turn would increase the likelihood of achieving peace. Hence, Israeli leaders’ repeated requests to be supplied with advanced aircraft.
Key Words Israel  Egypt  Peace Process  Anwar Sadat  Rogers Plan  Meir Golda 
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