חדש על המדף

חדש על המדף

Cross on the Star of David: The Christian World in Israel's Foreign Policy, 1948-1967
Uri Bialer לקטלוג
Cross on the Star of David: The Christian World in Israel's Foreign Policy, 1948-1967
The official establishment of the State of Israel in May 1948 constituted the realization of the Zionist vision, but military victory left in its wake internal and external survival issues that would threaten this historic achievement for decades to come. The refusal of the international community to recognize the political, geographic, and demographic results of the War of Independence presented Israel with a permanent regional security threat, while isolating and alienating it in the international arena. One of the most formidable problems Israeli foreign policy faced was the stance of the Christian world toward the new state. Attitudes ranged from hostility and categorical non-recognition by the Catholic Church, through Protestant ambivalence, to Evangelical support.

Cross on the Star of David presents the first scholarly analysis, based on newly declassified documents, of Israeli policymaking on this issue. Uri Bialer focuses on the impact that modes of thinking rooted in the historical tradition of Jewish-Christian interactions had on Israeli policymakers and concludes that they were not innocent of the perceptions and biases that influenced the Christian world's behavior toward Israel. The result is a fine-grained, original interpretation of an important dimension of Israeli foreign policy from the founding of the State to the 1967 war.


Uri Bialer Holds the Maurice B. Hexter chair in International Relations-Middle East Studies in the Department of International Relations at Hebrew University. He is the author of Oil and the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1948-1963 and Between East and West: Israel's Foreign Policy Orientation, 1948-1956. He is a member of the editorial board of Israel Studies.