Columbia University Press
Dying to Forget
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Reviews
[A] thought-provoking read.... Highly recommended.
Making excellent use of the previously overlooked papers of Max Ball, who directed the Oil and Gas Division of the Department of the Interior, Gendzier methodically reveals the significant role that oil played in US calculations about the emerging State of Israel.
Gendzier's thorough but dense account, best suited to the serious student of Middle East policy, is essential to any sophisticated understanding of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
A Middle East scholar uncovers the post-World War II history of American policy in Palestine. From the beginning, it's been about oil.... compiling an almost bulletproof brief. Vital reading for those looking to understand, 65 years later, the origins of the continuing conflict in the Middle East.
Richard A. Falk, Princeton University:
In this fascinating, illuminating, and authoritative reconstruction of the complex evolution of U.S. policy toward the emergence of Israel, Gendzier tells a gripping story that displays extraordinary narrative skills as well as exhibiting her mastery of an astonishing range of scholarly materials. Although primarily a brilliant contribution to diplomatic history, this work is relevant to our understanding of the crucial interplay between Israeli diplomacy and oil geopolitics in the Middle East.
Andrew J. Bacevich, author of Washington Rules: America's Path to Permanent War:
Present-day U.S. policy in the Middle East consists of contradictions wrapped in illusions propped up by hypocrisies. Gendzier traces those contradictions, illusions, and hypocrisies to a single point of origin: Washington's ill-fated response to the 'Palestine question' during the pivotal years from 1945 to 1949. Dying to Forget is comprehensive, illuminating, and, above all, compelling—revisionism in the best sense of the term.
Noam Chomsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology:
Drawing from a rich variety of sources, many previously untapped, Irene L. Gendzier provides a most valuable reinterpretation of the roots of U.S. policy towards Israel and the Palestinians. In particular, she shows convincingly that the crucial choice for planners was not 'oil versus Israel,' as commonly believed, but rather 'oil and Israel,' and demonstrates no less convincingly that the secrets of the past that she uncovers are intimately connected with 'the troubled present.' A very significant contribution.
Rashid Khalidi, Columbia University:
By tying together the strands of oil and strategic interests in Saudi Arabia with the familiar narrative about the American relationship with Zionism, this book is a major contribution to our understanding of crucial events for the future of the Middle East. Gendzier provides revelations and fresh insights throughout.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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Introduction
xiii - Part I. The Petroleum Order and the Palestine Question, 1945–1946
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1. The Primacy of Oil
3 -
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2. The Palestine Question: 1945
23 - Part II. The Question of Partition and the Oil Connection, 1947–1948
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3. The Critical Year: 1947
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4. The Winter of Discontent: 1948
79 -
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5. The Oil Connection
91 - Part III. Beware “Anomalous Situation,” 1948
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6. The Transformation of Palestine
115 -
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7. Truce and Trusteeship
137 -
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8. Recognition and Response
159 - Part IV. Rethinking U.S. Policy in Palestine/Israel, 1948
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9. Reconsidering U.S. Policy in Palestine
183 -
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10. The Palestine Refugee Problem
201 -
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11. The State Department on the Record
220 - Part V. The End as the Beginning, 1948–49
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12. The PCC, Armistice, Lausanne, and Palestinian Refugees
243 -
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13. The View from the Pentagon and the National Security Council
275 -
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14. The Israeli–U.S. Oil Connection and Expanding U.S. Oil Interests
293 - Part VI. In Place of a Conclusion
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Reflections on Discovery, Denial, and Deferral
305 -
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Notes
325 -
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Index
389