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Alterman compellingly shows how the interests of the U.S. and Egypt diverged to undermine this early American attempt at economic assistance for Egyptian development.
"Alterman provides a valuable framework for improved understanding of the tradeoffs affecting American economic relations with the Third World..." - Bill S. Mikhail, kiplinger.com
"...a laudable attempt to describe Nasser's early relations with the United States from the bottom up..." - Tore Tingvold Peterson, International History Review
"The book is a significant contribution to the literature of American foreign relations and the flawed U.S.-Egyptian relationship." - Terri A. Thomas, H-Levant, H-Net Book Review
"...studies that treat the role of economic aid as an instrument of American foreign policy toward Egypt." - L. Carl Brown, Foreign Affairs, 3-4/01/03
This is an important book on a timely subject: missed messages and missed opportunities between the United States and the Arab world. Michael Doran, Princeton University
Acknowledgments Introduction Contexts The Economic Origins of a Partnership Chicken Aid EARIS The Aswan High Dam Conclusion Bibliography
JON B. ALTERMAN is a program officer in the Research and Studies Program at the U.S. Institute of Peace. As an International Affairs Fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations, he served as Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs. From 1993-97 he taught at Harvard University, from which he received a Ph.D. in history. His opinion pieces have appeared in the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Asharq al-Awsat, and other major publications. Alterman is the author of New Media, New Politics? From satellite television to the Internet in the Arab world, editor of Sadat and His Legacy