U.S.-PLO Dialogue
Secret Diplomacy and Conflict Resolution
by Mohamed Rabie
Foreword by Harold H. Saunders
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In December 1988 the United States announced its decision to start a dialogue with the Palestine Liberation Organization. A year and a half later, it suspended the dialogue.
In the months between, two men with no government ties, Mohamed Rabie and William Quandt, were catalysts in the short-lived talks. This memoir explains in detail their efforts to persuade both the United States and the PLO to focus on "shared" objectives, the difficulties encountered by all sides, and the disappointment they experienced as the talks were suspended. Rabie also discusses the developments that led to the U.S.-PLO dialogue and the activities that made it a reality, offering insights into the decision-making process within the PLO as well as an analysis of prominent PLO personalities.
All parties to Middle East politics, the Arab-Israeli conflict, and peacemaking in the Middle East will be interested in Rabie's articulation of the importance of secret diplomacy and unofficial dialogue as indispensable tools in political negotiation and mediation.
1995. 218pp. 6 X 9. 18 appendixes, index.
ISBN 0-8130-1326-7 Cloth, $49.95s
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From the Foreword:
"This book is one testimonial to those dedicated individuals who have added an essential public dimension to the Arab-Israeli peace process."
"I know of few people as dedicated and able as Mohamed Rabie. Some will see his account as pro-Palestinian, but the fact is that Palestinians, like Israelis, have a point in the long-standing Arab-Israeli dispute and it too needs to be
understood."--Hermann F. Eilts, former U.S. ambassador to Egypt and Saudi Arabia
"Tells in gripping detail what went on behind the scenes. . . . [Rabie] explains how the PLO works, as well as how he and other individuals anxious for peace were able to break through a blocked door and eventually bring about a dialogue between the U.S. and the
PLO."--Charles Butterworth, Woodrow Wilson International Center
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