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Bibliografická citace

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New York : Council on Foreign Relations, c2011
xvi, 480 s. : 1 mapa ; 23 cm

objednat
ISBN 978-0-87609-500-3 (brož.)
Obálkový podnázev: what happened, what it means, and what comes next
Pod názvem: Foreign Affairs
000230765
Contents // Regional Map xi // Introduction—Gideon Rose xii // THE PAST AS PROLOGUE // The Sorrows of Egypt—Found Ajami 2 // Foreign Affairs (September/October 1995) // Back to the Bazaar—Martin Indyk 22 // Foreign Affairs (January/February 2002) // Freedom and Justice in the Modern Middle East —Bernard Lewis 38 // Foreign Affairs (May/June 2005) // Adrift on the Nile: The Limits of the Opposition // in Egypt—Steven A. Cook 57 // Foreign Affairs (March/April 2009) // Is El Baradei Egypt’s Hero? Mohamed El Baradei and the Chance for Reform—Steven A. Cook 68 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 26, 2010) // THE ICE BREAKS UP // Morning in Tunisia: The Frustrations of the Arab World Boil Over—Michele Penner Angrist 75 // ForeignAfFairs.com (January 16, 2011) // [iii] // Contents // Letter From Cairo: The Peoples Military in Egypt? // —Eric Träger // ForeignAfFairs.com (January 30, 2011) // The U.S.-Egyptian Breakup: Washingtons Limited Options in Cairo—Steven A. Cook // ForeignAfFairs.com (February 2, 2011) // The Muslim Brotherhood After Mubarak: // What the Brotherhood Is and How It Will Shape the Future—Carrie Rosefiky Wickham // ForeignAffairs.com (February 3, 2011) // Egypt’s Democratic Mirage: How Cairo’s Authoritarian Regime Is Adapting to Preserve Itsdi—Joshua Stacher ForeignAffairs.com (February 7, 2011) // Overcoming Fear and Anxiety in Tel Aviv: // How Israel Can Turn Egypt’s Unrest Into an Opportunity—AlufBenn // ForeignAffairs.com (February 8,
2011) // Mubarakism Without Mubarak: Why Egypt’s Military Will Not Embrace Democracy—Ellis Goldberg // ForeignAffairs.com (February 11, 2011) // Reflections on the Revolution in Egypt —Richard N. Haass // Project Syndicate (February 13, 2011) // Postcolonial Time Disorder: Egypt and the Middle East, Stuck in the Vast—James D. Le Sueur // ForeignAffairs.com (February 14, 2011) // Contents // Egypt’s Constitutional Ghosts: Deciding the Terms of Cairo’s Democratic Transition—Nathan J. Brown // ForeignArFairs.com (February 15, 2011) // A Tunisian Solution for Egypt’s Military: // Why Egypt’s Military Will Not Be Able to Govern Clement M. Henry and Robert Springborg ForeignAffairs.com (February 21, 2011) // The Fall of the Pharaoh: How Hosni Mubarak’s Reign Came to an End—Dina Shehata Foreign Affairs (May/June 2011) // The Black Swan of Cairo: How Suppressing Volatility Makes the World Less Predictable and More Dangerous —Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Mark Blyth // Foreign Affairs (May/June 2011) // THE CRACKS SPREAD // Why Jordan is Not a Regional Domino —Robert Danin // CFR.org (February 1, 2011) // Green Movement 2.0? How US. Support Could Lead the Opposition to Victory—Geneive Abdo ForeignAffairs.com (February 18, 2011) // Iran’s Protests and Economic Realities —Interview with Suzanne Maloney CFR.org (February 22, 2011) // The Arab Turmoil and Palestinians —Interview with Rashid I. Khalidi // CFR.org (February 25, 2011) // l6l // 163 // 168 // I75
// M // Contents // Letter From Sanaa: Saleh on the Edge —Abdullah al-Qubati 182 // ForeignAfFairs.com (February 25, 2011) // Bahrain’s Shia Question: What the United States Gets Wrong About Sectarianism—Kristin Smith Diwan 187 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 2, 2011) // Rage Comes to Baghdad: Will Iraq’s Recent Protests // Lead to Revolt?—Raad Alkadiri 193 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 3, 2011) // The Sturdy House That Assad Built: Why Damascus // Is Not Cairo—Michael Bröning 200 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 7, 2011) // Rageless in Riyadh: Why the Al Saud Dynasty // Will Remain—F. Gregory Cause III 205 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 16, 2011) // Syria’s Assad No Longer in Vogue: What Everyone Got Wrong About Bashar al-Assad—Tony Badran 210 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 25, 2011) // Meanwhile in the Maghreb: Have Algeria and Morocco Avoided North Africa’s Unrest?—Azzedine Layachi 215 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 31, 2011) // Bahrain’s Base Politics: The Arab Spring and America’s Military Bases—Alexander Cooley and Daniel H. Nexon 221 // ForeignAfFairs.com (April 5, 2011) // Let Them Eat Bread: How Food Subsidies Prevent // (and Provoke) Revolutions in the Middle East // —Annia Ciezadlo 229 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 23, 2011) // [vi] // Contents // Demographics of Arab Protests // —Interview with Ragni Assaad 236 // CFR.org (February 14, 2011) // Are the Mideast Revolutions Bad for Womens Rights? // —Isabel Coleman 242 // Washington Post (February
20, 2011) // INTERVENTION IN LIBYA // Our Bargain With the New Gadhafi—Elliott Abrams 248 // Wall Street Journal (February 25, 2011) // Libya’s Terra Incognita: Who and What Will // Follow Qaddafi?—Frederic Wehrey 252 // ForeignAfFairs.com (February 28, 2011) // What Intervention Looks Like: How the West Can Aid the Libyan Rebels—Robert E. Hunter 258 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 16, 2011) // The Folly of Protection: Is Intervention Against Qaddafi s Regime Legal and Legitimate?—Michael W. Doyle 263 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 20, 2011) // To the Shores of Tripoli: Why Operation Odyssey Dawn Should Not Stop At Benghazi—Dirk Vandewalle 269 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 21, 2011) // A New Lease on Life for Humanitarianism: // How Operation Odyssey Dawn Will Revive RtoP —Stewart Patrick 274 // ForeignAfFairs.com (March 24, 2011) // Contents // In Libya, How Obama Can End a Mission // That Started Badly—Gideon Rose 279 // Washington Post (March 25, 2011) // The Mythology of Intervention: Debating the Lessons of History in Libya—Micah Zenko 284 // ForeignAffairs.com (March 28, 2011) // Flight of the Valkyries? What Gender Does // and Doesn’t Tell Us About Operation Odyssey Dawn // —Charli Carpenter 290 // ForeignAffairs.com (March 28, 2011) // Qaddafi Must Go—Max Boot 296 // Weekly Standard (March 28, 2011) // Winning Ugly in Libya: What the United States Should Learn from Its War in Kosovo—Michael O’Hanlon 300 // ForeignAffairs.com (March 30, 2011) // Will
Libya Become Obamas Iraq? // —Meghan L. O’Sullivan 306 // Washington Post (April 1, 2011) // Prepared Statement Before the Committee on // Foreign Relations, United States Senate // —Richard N. Haass 313 // First Session, 112th Congress Flearing on Perspectives on the Crisis in Libya (April 6, 2011) // WHAT IT MEANS AND WHAT COMES NEXT // Demystifying the Arab Spring: Parsing the Differences Between Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya—Lisa Anderson 320 // Foreign Affairs (May/June 2011) // [vili] // Contents // Understanding the Revolutions of 2011: // Weakness and Resilience in Middle Eastern Autocracies —Jack A. Goldstone 329 // Foreign Affairs (May/June 2011) // The Heirs of Nasser: Who Will Benefit From the Second Arab Revolution?—Michael Scott Doran 344 // Foreign Affairs (May/June 2011) // The Rise of the Islamists: How Islamists Will Change Politics, and Vice Versa—Shadi Hamid 359 // Foreign Affairs (May/June 2011) // Terrorism After the Revolutions: How Secular Uprisings Could Help (or Hurt) Jihadists—Daniel Byman 370 // Foreign Affairs (May/June 2011) // DOCUMENTS Remarks by President Barack Obama // on a New Beginning 382 // Cairo University, Egypt (June 4, 2009) // Hillary Rodham Clinton’s Remarks to the Forum // for the Future 400 // Doha, Qatar (January 13, 2011) // The Last Official Address by Tunisian President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali 404 // January 13, 2011 // The Last Official Address by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak 408 // February 10, 2011 // [ix]
// Contents // Excerpts from Libyan Leader Muammar al-Qaddafi’s Televised Address 414 // February 22, 2011 // Excerpts from the Sermon of Shaykh Yusuf al-Qaradawi 421 Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt (February 23, 2011) // What Is the Revolution? What Is the Regime? 428 // From Revolutionary Egypt, Volume 2 // Arab League Resolution 7360 on the Repercussions of the Current Events in Libya 431 // March 12, 2011 // UN Security Council Resolution 1973, Libya 434 // March 17, 2011 // Remarks by President Barack Obama in Address // to the Nation on Libya 444 // Washington, DC (March 28, 201D // Joint Statement by Nicholas Sarkozy and David Cameron on Libya 455 // March 28, 2011 // Excerpts from Syrian President Bashar al-Assad s Speech Before the Syrian People’s Assembly, Damascus 458 // Damascus, Syria (March 30, 2011) // Hillary Rodham Clinton’s Remarks at the Gala Dinner Celebrating the U.S.-Islamic World Forum 467 // Brookings Institution, Washington, DC (April 12, 2011) // Acknowledgments 480 // M

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