描述
开 本: 16开纸 张: 胶版纸包 装: 精装是否套装: 否国际标准书号ISBN: 9781590511718
ForeWord Magazine
“This absorbing story of the unraveling of the
Middle East and the Persian Gulf includes interviews with the
political leaders, diplomats, and intelligence agents who have
tried to avoid, or who have contributed to these failures.”
Kirkus
From Enderlin, the Middle East bureau chief for France 2, a
journalistic account of the current era of troubles in Israel and
Palestine.In the author’s view, the seating of Ariel Sharon’s
government in February 2001 signaled the end of the Camp David era
of negotiation with the Palestinian government of Yasir Arafat,
undoing years of effort on the part of the Clinton administration.
Sharon declared that Arafat was an unfit partner for peace.
Although most Israelis agreed that a joint venture with the
Palestinians was essential, most also accepted that Arafat was an
enemy arguing for the destruction of Israel; worse enemies
notwithstanding, he became “Arafat the terrorist” once more. In
response to the growing intifada, Israel put new procedures in
place. “The military police no longer immediately investigated the
circumstances of a civilian death,” Enderlin charges, freeing
troops to “react more spontaneously” in the field. That
spontaneity, the journalist calculates, led to a lopsided body
count: During the next five years, some 3,185 Palestinian civilians
died in confrontations with the Israeli Defense Force, “among whom
were hundreds of bystanders.” This confrontation was inevitable,
argued Israel and its allies in the American government—most
notably, in Enderlin’s view, neoconservative theoretician Richard
Perle, then chair of Bush’s Defense Policy Board. It was
inevitable, the author agrees, to the extent that all other
possibilities but confrontation were systematically eliminated,
freezing out Arafat (who bitterly complained, “Am I bin Laden?”)
and fueling a vicious circle of rising radicalism and
intransigence. Rejecting warnings by Bush administration moderates
such as Colin Powell, the Sharon government finally decided it must
either expel Arafat from Palestine or kill him. When he died of
cancer in 2004, however, the cycle of violence continued, climaxing
with the disastrous Lebanon invasion of 2006. Enderlin urges Israel
to negotiate with the new government of Mahmoud Abbas based on the
principle of “territory for peace”—without which, he reasonably
concludes, peace will be impossible. An evenhanded view of a most
partisan conflict.
Library Journal
This French journalist, with long experience in the Middle East,
presents a detailed chronicle of the recent period of military,
diplomatic, and political conflict between Israel and the
Palestinians. He concludes that verbal commitment to mutual
recognition and negotiation by both sides could not overcome
Israeli determination for military action and unilateralism or
Palestinian ineptitude and internal divisions. Militant Palestinian
continuation of the intifada and Israeli reprisals resulted in lost
opportunities and continuing occupation and misery.
impasses…revealing the history of this former film noir through
interviews with the men who were its lead actors.” —Le Monde
From Ariel Sharon’s ascent to power in February 2001 to the
Israel-Lebanon conflict in July 2006, the Middle East has seen the
most murderous years of a feud which is, today, half a century old.
After the monumental convergence of powers at Camp David, the world
watched with bated breath as hope for a peaceful resolution to the
long, bitter dispute between Israel and Palestine was lost in the
wake of the Intifada. Following years of searching for an end to
the bloodshed, how did the tragic blindness of both parties throw
this region into such chaos?
In The Lost Years, Charles Enderlin presents a scrupulous chronicle
of the Israeli and Palestinian descent into hell. Political leaders
and secret negotiators, military chiefs and CIA agents, Enderlin
has met them all–Israelis and Palestinians–and he accounts for all
sides, including U.S. and international involvement. He trails the
bad political calculations of the Palestinians, which led to the
defeat of Fatah and to the victory of the Islamists. And he exposes
Israel’s unilateral political approach and new military doctrines
that had disastrous consequences for both camps. Intifada,
September 11th, war in Iraq, the construction of the wall, the
withdrawal from Gaza, the end of the reigns of the two old
enemies–Arafat and Sharon–the electoral victory of Hamas, and the
war in Lebanon; Enderlin reveals the implacable logic at work
behind the crucial events of a confused period. The Lost Years, the
sequel to Enderlin’s bestselling book, Shattered Dreams, is an
essential work for those who try to understand without judging, but
still want to believe in peace.
评论
还没有评论。