Lexington Books
Pages: 234
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-5428-2 • Hardback • April 2017 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4985-5430-5 • Paperback • February 2020 • $47.99 • (£37.00)
978-1-4985-5429-9 • eBook • April 2017 • $45.50 • (£35.00)
Ghada Hashem Talhami is professor emerita at Lake Forest College.
Chapter 1: The British Mandate: Jerusalem Undivided
Chapter 2: American Zionists Take the Lead
Chapter 3: The Battle for Jerusalem: Bucking the International Consensus
Chapter 4: Planning for Expansion: Overcoming the Limitations of the First Borders
Chapter 5: War Unites Jerusalem
Chapter 6: Israeli Faits Accomplis and Jordanian Weakness
Chapter 7: Oslo: The Chimera of a Just Peace
Chapter 8: Clinton’s Quest for a Mideast Legacy
Chapter 9: Conclusion
Ghada Hashem Talhami has assiduously unveiled and documented the preeminent role of American presidents in the Zionist takeover of Jerusalem, despite their politically-pragmatic non-recognition of the city as Israel’s capital. Mining the Johnson presidential archives with laser focus on Israel’s gains from the 1967 war, she explicates the evolution of the US commitment to Israel’s aberrant political behavior, going beyond acceptance to strategic ally. She has brought to life often neglected Palestinian resistance actions to Israeli machinations. With analytical acuity, this study details the Zionist tactics used to prevent the internationalization of Jerusalem until the opportunity to gain control of all of it developed, as it did in 1967. Talhami’s book is unique in its focus on Jerusalem, though this emphasis is ably placed within the larger context of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. This readable work of scholarship spotlights the critical importance of Jerusalem to any settlement to the conflict.
— Elaine Hagopian, Simmons College
Continuing her well-known tradition of fine scholarship, Ghada Talhami’s American Presidents and Jerusalem provides essential reading for anyone who is concerned with the evolution of the Jerusalem issue and the broader question of Palestine, from which it cannot be separated. The recent American presidential election and the beginning of a new administration in Washington have again renewed the timeliness of the topic, demonstrating once more the ‘twisted priorities’ and ‘subordination of foreign policy issues to domestic political considerations’ that Professor Talhami writes about in the case of earlier chief executives. With its focus on the role of American presidents—from Wilson to Clinton—in shaping Jerusalem’s destiny, Professor Talhami’s well-written, objective study will interest students of American foreign policy in general and especially of presidential decision-making. This is a straightforward account by an author who avoids the kind of jargon that characterizes some studies. Her heavy reliance on primary sources, exemplified by her extensive research at the Lyndon Baines Presidential Library, adds to the book’s academic significance, and the way she brings in statements by presidents and other policymakers during crisis periods often enlivens the story.
— Glenn E. Perry, Indiana State University
Of the many areas in which US government has disregarded international law and the rights of indigenous inhabitants in the formulation of its foreign policy is with regard to Jerusalem, where ideology, sentimentality, racism, and short-sighted perceptions of strategic interests proved to be of greater consequence than the legal and moral rights of the city’s people or the possibility or a peaceful resolution to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Ghada Hashem Talhami does a great service in taking into account the perspectives of Palestinian Arabs and others who had lived in the city for centuries prior to the Zionist movement and the establishment of the state of Israel. Emphasizing the role of presidential advisers and domestic political pressure on presidents unfamiliar with the complexities of the issue or the dangerous ramifications of the policies they promoted, Professor Talhami provides an important contribution to the study of the failure of the United States to be an honest broker.
— Stephen Zunes, University of San Francisco
Ghada Hashem Talhami has given us a deeply-informed, ambitiously-conceived, richly-researched, and forcefully-argued study of the international history of Jerusalem over the last century. She shows that Zionist and Israeli actors worked tirelessly to extinguish Palestinian Arab claims and connections to the city, and that successive US presidents—with varying degrees of awareness and approval—repeatedly acquiesced in these erasures. Readers of all persuasions, especially those inclined to question Talhami's conclusions, should attend to this important book and consider its implications.
— Salim Yaqub, University of California, Santa Barbara
In her 2017 work American Presidents and Jerusalem, Palestinian-American author Ghada Hashem Talhami presents a thorough, well-researched and well-documented account of the struggle over Jerusalem from the beginning of the Zionist movement in the late 1900s through the early part of the current century. Talhami, an emerita professor at Chicago's Lake Forest College, makes a concerted effort to be transparent and balanced in her treatment of this controversial topic.
— Middle East Policy