
Russia's Forceful Re-entry Into The Middle Eastern Arena, And The Accentuated Continuity Of Soviet Policy And Methods Of The 1960s And '70s, Highlight The Topicality Of This Groundbreaking Study, Which Confirms The Ussr's Role In Shaping Middle Eastern And Global History. This Book Covers The Peak Of The Ussr's Direct Military Involvement In The Egyptian-israeli Conflict. The Head-on Clash Between Us-armed Israeli Forces And Some 20,000 Soviet Servicemen With State-of-the-art Weaponry Turned The Middle East Into The Hottest Front Of The Cold War. The Soviets' Success In This War Of Attrition Paved The Way For Their Planning And Support Of Egypt's Cross-canal Offensive In The 1973 Yom Kippur War. Ginor And Remez Challenge A Series Of Long-accepted Notions As To The Scope, Timeline And Character Of The Soviet Intervention And Overturn The Conventional View That Détente With The Us Induced Moscow To Restrainthat A Us-moscow Détente Led To A Curtailment Of Egyptian Ambitions To Recapture Of The Land It Lost To Israel In 1967. Between This Analytical Rethink And The Introduction Of An Entirely New Genre Of Sources-- -memoirs And Other Publications By Soviet Veterans Themselves---the Soviet-israeli War Paves The Way For Scholars To Revisit This Pivotal Moment In World History.
This study investigates the extent and nature of direct Soviet military involvement in the Arab-Israeli conflict between 1967 and 1973, challenging the conventional narrative of Soviet restraint during the Cold War. Authors Gideon Remez and Isabella Ginor utilize a synthesis of newly available Soviet veteran memoirs and archival publications to argue that the USSR played a far more active, aggressive role in shaping Middle Eastern military outcomes than previously acknowledged by Western historians. By re-evaluating the timeline of Soviet intervention, the authors demonstrate that Moscow's strategic objectives were not curtailed by détente, but rather actively pursued through direct combat support and offensive planning.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant revisionist contribution that forces a re-examination of Cold War historiography regarding the Middle East. Readers frequently note the high density of the prose and the meticulous use of primary source material from Soviet veterans to support the authors' claims.
Page Count:
506
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190911433
ISBN-13:
9780190911430
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