000 01666nam a22002177a 4500
008 241004s2024 sp |||||s|||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _cES-MaBCM
100 1 _918586
_aGhilès, Francis
245 1 0 _aReading History Wrong :
_bthe plight of European foreign policy in the Middle East
_cFrancis Ghiles
_h[Recurso electrónico]
260 _aBarcelona
_b : CIDOB
_c , 2024
300 _a5 p.
490 _aNotes internationals
_v303
504 _aBibliografía: p. 5
520 _aSince the early 20th century, France and the United Kingdom (UK) and, after 1945, the United States (US), have been getting the Middle East wrong. In 2003, France’s President Chirac and Germany’s Chancellor Schröder refused to endorse what proved to be a catastrophic mistake: the US-led invasion of Iraq. Eight years later, President Sarkozy chose to abandon the wisdom of his predecessor and was a cheerleader for the toppling of the Libyan leader Gaddafi, which allowed Russia back into the Mediterranean area. Western leaders’ misreading of the Middle East has been compounded by the media, whose moral grandstanding has increasingly replaced serious reporting and debate. Middle Eastern countries today are defending their interests aggressively and refusing to play by the rules set in Paris, London or Washington. A new nationalism stalks the region, making diplomacy more transactional.
650 0 _aGeopolítica
650 7 _aRelación Este-Oeste
651 0 _9116737
_aOriente Medio
856 _uhttps://mpr.bage.es/cgi-bin/koha/opac-retrieve-file.pl?id=fd09eab88f3c6dd36ac0b050c98dfc62
_yDESCARGAR DOCUMENTO
942 _cLE
999 _c228321
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