- Oxford University Press (UK)
Global Offensive: The United States, the Palestine Liberation Organization, and the Making of the Post-Cold War Order
Key Metrics
- Paul Thomas Chamberlin
- Oxford University Press (UK)
- Hardcover
- 9780199811397
- 9.3 X 6.3 X 1.1 inches
- 1.25 pounds
- History > Middle East - Israel & Palestine
- English
Book Description
In The Global Offensive, historian Paul Thomas Chamberlin offers new insights into the rise of the Palestine Liberation Organization in its full international context. After defeat in the 1967 war, the crushing of a guerrilla campaign on the West Bank, and the attack on al-Karama, Arafat and his fellow guerilla fighters opened a global offensive aimed at achieving national liberation for the Palestinian people. In doing so, they reinvented themselves as players on the world stage, combining controversial armed attacks, diplomacy, and radical politics. They forged a network of nationalist revolutionaries, making alliances with South African rebels, Latin American insurrectionists, and Vietnamese Communists. They persuaded the United Nations to take up their agenda, and sent Americans and Soviets scrambling as these stateless forces drew new connections across the globe. The Vietnamese and Palestinian people have much in common, General Vo Nguyen Giap would tell Arafat, just like two people suffering from the same illness. Richard Nixon's views mirrored Giap's: You cannot separate what happens to America in Vietnam from the Mideast or from Europe or any place else.
Deftly argued and based on extensive new research, The Global Offensive will change the way we think of the history of not only the PLO, but also the Cold War and international relations since.
Author Bio
Paul Chamberlin specializes in twentieth century international history with a focus on U.S. foreign relations and the Middle East.
His first book, The Global Offensive: The United States, the Palestine Liberation Organization, and the Making of the Post-Cold War Order (Oxford, 2012), is an international history of the Palestinian liberation struggle.
His next book, The Cold War's Killing Fields: Rethinking the Long Peace (HarperCollins, 2018), is a global history of the bloodiest encounters of the Cold War.
Awards
Oxford University Press International History Prize, 2010.
Fellow in American Foreign Policy at Williams College, 2009-10.
Fellow in International Security Studies at Yale University, 2008-09.
Foreign Language Area Studies Fellowship, Middle East Studies Center, Ohio State University, 2004-07.
Education
Ph.D. – Ohio State University, 2009
M.A. – Ohio State University, 2005
B.A. – Indiana University, 2002
Source: Columbia University Department of History
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