America, Islam, and the 9-11 war / Peter Warren Singer
Material type: TextPublication details: 2006Subject(s): In: Current History Vol 105 No 695, December 2006, pp.415-422 (20)Summary: Outlines how relations between the United States and the Islamic world have evolved since the 9-11 attacks. Argues that the USA needs to pay much more attention to constructive diplomacy, be more even handed in its approach to the Arab-Israeli peace process, be aware of the differences between the traditional Islamic core of the middle east and the rapidly developing countries of what used to be considered the periphery, for example in Southeast Asia, and recognise that the future depends on policies not battles.Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Journal Article | Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals | UNITED STATES (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Not for loan | 21552-1001 |
Outlines how relations between the United States and the Islamic world have evolved since the 9-11 attacks. Argues that the USA needs to pay much more attention to constructive diplomacy, be more even handed in its approach to the Arab-Israeli peace process, be aware of the differences between the traditional Islamic core of the middle east and the rapidly developing countries of what used to be considered the periphery, for example in Southeast Asia, and recognise that the future depends on policies not battles.
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