1st Edition

The Long Armistice Un Peacekeeping And The Arabisraeli Conflict, 19481960

By Nathan A Pelcovits Copyright 1994
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    280 Pages
    by Routledge

    Drawing on previously untapped documents, interviews with key actors, and his own experiences in the Department of State, Nathan Pelcovits takes a fresh look at the impact of UN intervention, as peacekeeper and peacemaker, on the Arab-Israeli conflict during the formative years between 1948 and 1960. He examines the reasons behind the UN assumption of a quasi-custodial role in the dispute and how it is that Israel and the Arab states have come to hold diametrically opposed views of the value of engaging the UN as intermediary, with the UN-Israel relationship cooling into one of mutual suspicion and mistrust. Most relevant to the current peace process, Pelcovits explains why UN action shifted early in the game from an ambitious effort at peaceful settlement to "keeping" the peace of a long armistice. Pelcovits argues that the wounds of the formative years have affected the dynamic of the peace process to this day. The UN has been accorded a marginal role in the negotiations—ceremonial and passive—and UN peacekeepers are not likely to be enlisted as guarantors of the settlement.

    Foreword -- Introduction -- The Fateful Year—1948–1949 -- From Peacemaking to Peacekeeping -- The Armistice Regime Erodes, 1952–1955 -- The Egyptian Front, 1955–1956 -- After Suez: Conditions of Withdrawal -- Enforcing the Restored Armistice -- Guardians of the Arab-Israeli Stalemate

    Biography

    Nathan A. Pelcovits is a former professorial lecturer at The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies During the 1960s and 1970s, he directed the UN planning office at the Department of State and was the chief officer for planning and administering U.S. participation in UN peacekeeping missions in the Congo, in Cyprus, and on Arab-Israeli fronts. He is the author of Peace-keeping on Arab-Israeli Fronts (Westview).