Anglo-American policy toward the Persian Gulf, 1978-1985

power, influence and restraint

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Last edited by MARC Bot
December 21, 2022 | History

Anglo-American policy toward the Persian Gulf, 1978-1985

power, influence and restraint

"For many commentators and historians the announcement of the Carter Doctrine signaled the end of the British presence and the final transfer of power to the United States in the Persian Gulf. But on the ground the reality was different. After the announcement of the British leaving the Persian Gulf in 1971, formal positions were replaced by informal ones. Britain still ran much of the political, economic, and military life in the lower Gulf and in the Arabian Peninsula. The transition from formal to informal empire was seamless: British influence remained large and almost paramount in the region. Margaret Thatcher's premiership saw a sharp increase in British influence not only in the traditional British enclaves of the Persian Gulf sheikdoms, but surprisingly even in Saudi Arabia. The historic Al-Yamamah deal with Saudi Arabia in 1985, selling advanced fighter aircraft, was Britain's largest ever arms deal. While British influence in the Gulf increased, the Americans floundered, culminating in the ignominy of the Iran/Contra scandal and the Reagan administration meekly accepting Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's apology for attacking the USS Stark and killing 34 American sailors in May 1987--payback for the Irani-American rapprochement. Tore T. Petersen sets out the policy objectives of Great Britain and the United States as they confronted the initial emergence of fundamentalist Islam, with the occupation of the Holy Mosque in Mecca and Khomenei's revolution in Iran. Research by the author in the Nixon, Carter, and Reagan presidential libraries provides strong evidence for U.S. strategy based on Nixonian foreign policy objectives, supported all the way through to the Reagan administration"--

"Tore Petersen provides an analysis on how Great Britain and the United States confronted the initial emergence of fundamentalist Islam with the occupation of the Holy Mosque in Mecca and Khomenei's revolution in Iran. Despite the loss of Iran, the United States and Britain managed to secure the Arab side of the Persian Gulf in the Western camp"--

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
167

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Book Details


Table of Contents

The Nixonian Foundations of American Foreign Policy
Jimmy Carter in the Oval Office
Margaret Thatcher takes Charge
Ronald Reagan : Leadership Style and Foreign Policy
Iran: The Pillar Crumbles
Iran: Getting stuck in the Rubble
Saudi Arabia: The Myth of Independence
Saudi Arabia: What Foreign Policy
Oman: Discretion Required
Epilogue.

Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (pages 128-163) and index.

Published in
Brighton

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
327.41053609/048
Library of Congress
DS326 .P487 2015, DS228, DS247.A138 P48 2015

The Physical Object

Pagination
1 online resource (xiii, 167 pages, 4 unnumbered of pages)
Number of pages
167

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL28342853M
Internet Archive
angloamericanpol0000pete
ISBN 10
1782841849, 1782841865, 1845193717, 184519750X
ISBN 13
9781782841845, 9781782841869, 9781845193713, 9781845197506
LCCN
2014032423
OCLC/WorldCat
1129792592, 795182330

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