Decision on Palestine deferred : America, Britain and wartime diplomacy, 1939-1945

書誌事項

Decision on Palestine deferred : America, Britain and wartime diplomacy, 1939-1945

Monty Noam Penkower

(Israeli history, politics, and society)

Frank Cass, 2002

  • : cloth
  • : pbk.

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

: cloth ISBN 9780714652689

内容説明

Professor Penkower's latest book, Decision on Palestine Deferred, offers the first sustained, documented account of Palestine and the Anglo-American alliance during the Second World War. Firmly grounded in three decades of archival research, his spirited narrative offers a fascinating cast of characters against the backdrop of the larger Middle Eastern context. The latter relates to Jewish and Arab activities during the War, the grave threat of Erwin Rommel's Afrika Korps, U.S. interest in Saudi Arabian oil, and the effort to achieve Arab unity. Zionism's shift to viewing the United States as the center of decision making in international affairs, and hence the Archimedean point for forging Jewry's destiny, occurred in these same six years. British anxieties about imperial security, while administering the Palestine mandate by means of a stringent immigration quota, jostled with the first American steps taken to formulate a stance vis-a-vis Palestine, and the region as a whole. The differing approaches of Churchill and Roosevelt to the Palestine imbroglio are also explored, as are the varied avenues that were then championed within the Jewish camp. The impact of the Holocaust, with both governments breathing the very spirit of defeatism and despair, surfaces throughout.

目次

an important addition to the histories of both wartime diplomacy and the foundation of Israel" - Middle East Journal
巻冊次

: pbk. ISBN 9780714682501

内容説明

On 1 March, 1943, Chaim Weizmann, the elder statesman of Zionism, addressed a rally in Madison Square Garden to "Stop Hitler Now!". Three months earlier, a public declaration by the Allied governments had acknowledged that the German authorities were implementing Adolf Hitler's oft-repeated intention to exterminate the Jewish people in Europe. Some 2,000,000 Jews had already been killed since the beginning of World War II by the Third Reich and its collaborators, yet a deafening silence resounded throughout free world corridors of power. Alas, Weizmann's and similiar heartfelt pleas went unanswered. Britain's Archbishop of Canterbury and Arthur Cardinal Hinsley called on that same occasion for speedy deeds to meet the most appalling horror. Faced with the crime of the Holocaust - Christianity and Western humanism abdicated moral responsibility to try to save an innocent people. Without that decay of conscience, already evident in the years between Hitler's advent to power and the Nazi blitzkrieg against Poland, European Jewry would not have gone abandoned into the night. Over the past two decades, access to most of the archives has enabled historians to authenticate this grim truth. Political expediency reigned supreme in the war counsels of those governments which alone could have checked the tempo of Hitler's Final Solution of the Jewish problem.

目次

  • Part 1 1939-1942: To the precipice
  • the first round
  • 1941 - the turning point
  • Biltmore and Rommel
  • deliverance and destruction. Part 2 1943-1945: Bermuda and Riyadh
  • plus ca change
  • ...plus c'est la meme chose
  • a politics of postponement
  • "Rejoice not, O Israel...".

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