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The
Council on Foreign Relations Does the Middle East
Denying reality..
[Daniel Mandel
and Asaf Romirowsky] 9/1/05
Both the
Clinton and George W. Bush administrations have faced challenges
from the Middle East and Islamist terror. Both administrations
wrestled with questions of unilateralism versus multilateralism,
the efficacy of military force, failures in Arab-Israeli diplomacy,
and rising concern regarding jihadism and weapons proliferation
in the region. During the same period, many of the articles
and reports coming from the Council on Foreign Relation's Middle
East program have opposed U.S. unilateralism and military action,
exonerated the Palestinian leadership for their sponsorship
of terrorism, supported engagement with rejectionist states
and leaders, and downplayed the threat of radical Islam.
As the council
prepares to celebrate its eighty-fifth anniversary, it enjoys
a reputation for balanced debate.[1] Newspapers
such as The New York Times, which provides space on
its website for council products,[2] treat
the institution as a neutral authority. But when it comes to
the Middle East, the council has increasingly eschewed research
and debate and instead picked a line to the detriment of its
scholarship. As some scholars retire and council president
Richard Haass taps younger scholars to take their place, he
has an opportunity to restore the Middle East program's relevancy.
Panegyrics
over Policy
The council's
Middle East program has long been dominated by a trio of senior
scholars: Judith Kipper and Henry Siegman, who remain at the
council, and Richard Murphy, who stepped down in September
2004. All three have espoused unrealistic characterizations
of Middle Eastern leaders and downplayed regional threats to
U.S. interests, often without the benefit of corroborating
evidence.
Judith Kipper
is director of the council's Middle East Forum. Her scholarly
credentials are minimal: a bachelor's degree from the University
of California-Los Angeles. Writing in the Columbia Journalist
Review, Janet Steele, University of Virginia rhetoric and
communication studies professor, noted, "though Kipper has
spent time in the Middle East, she does not speak Arabic and
has written nothing of consequence on the region."[3] The
council website credits her with no research publications and
only seven opinion pieces in the past four years. In these,
Kipper writes most often about the Arab-Israeli conflict, whose
solution she believes lies in perfecting the land-for-peace
formula.[4] The
assumption that land-for-peace is the only viable formula ignores
the experience of practitioners. Dennis Ross, the White House's
Middle East peace process special envoy throughout the entire
Oslo process culminating with the Camp David II summit, has
written, "If the Arab world accepted Israel's moral legitimacy,
Arab leaders could publicly accept that Israel has needs as
well—justifying compromise and even pressure on the Arab side
in the negotiation. But that has not happened yet."[5] Kipper's
analysis also ignores issues such as the problem of Palestinian
incitement to violence and terrorism and the absence of a Palestinian
consensus supporting a two-state solution.[6]
Kipper also
comments frequently on Islamism, arguing that radical ideology
has nothing to do with Islam, a position that puts her at odds
both with moderate Islamic leaders and a growing number of
Middle Eastern intellectuals.[7] Says
Kipper,
There's
a tiny minority of people who are doing violence who happen
to be Muslim. There is nothing in Islam that advocates violence.
Islam does not tolerate suicide or suicide bombings. Like
Christianity, like Judaism, like Buddhism or Hinduism, like
you name it, everybody has their crazies, and every single
religion has gone through reformation, transformation, modernization,
and that's what we're seeing today.[8]
On an assortment
of conflicts involving Muslim societies, Kipper has dismissed
any possibility that religion is a motivating factor. Speaking
before a town hall meeting in Los Angeles, she stated:
None of
this is about Islam. Can you hear me? None of this is about
Islam. 99.9 percent of Muslims are just like you and me.
They want to live in safety and security, educate their kids,
go to the mall on Saturday, and do whatever you do. The fastest
growing religion in the United States of America is Islam.
Your friends, your neighbors, your dentist, your lawyers,
your doctors, your colleagues are going to be Muslim in the
future.[9]
The assertion
that "Muslims are just like you and me" is politically correct
and true for many Muslims who have internalized Western democratic
values. But, there is also ample documentation that Saudi-funded
mosques have disseminated very different teachings. A recent
report issued by Freedom House details how Saudi publications
have disseminated extremist religious ideology in the United
States, promoting hatred of Jewish and Christian "infidels" as
well as the suppression of women.[10] Anti-American
incitement has also led to violence. According to State Department
statistics, between 1961 and 2003, terrorists killed 3,776
Americans.[11] Of
that number, Muslim terrorist groups killed all but some two
hundred.[12] Kipper's
mantra may be in part motivated by naïveté, but the records
of other council scholars suggest an unwillingness to cross
lucrative supporters and business partners undercuts council
scholarship.
Richard Murphy,
until recently the Hasib J. Sabbagh Senior Fellow for the Middle
East, was a career foreign service officer whose postings in
the Middle East culminated with ambassadorships to Syria (1974-78)
and Saudi Arabia (1981-83). Murphy holds a B.A. from Harvard
University and an A.B. from Emmanuel College, Cambridge University.
Sabbagh, his patron, is the vice-chairman of Consolidated Contractors
Company and made his money in the Persian Gulf over decades
working with regimes such as Yemen, Libya, Egypt, Kuwait, and
Saudi Arabia.[13]
Murphy's
television commentaries show sympathy toward his subjects that
sometimes trumps analytical dispassion. He downplays criticism
of the Saudi kingdom despite evidence that Saudi officials
have played a double game. As the 9-11 Commission found, the
initial Saudi government's reaction to heavy involvement by
its citizens in the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks
was "disbelief and denial." While Saudi authorities have often
said their government sought cooperation with the U.S. anti-terrorist
efforts, requests by Washington for assistance received at
best lackluster support.[14] Saudi
charities have also remained pivotal funding sources for terrorist
groups like Hamas[15] that
have not only murdered Israelis, but also Americans. For example,
Hamas was responsible for the July 2002 terror attack in a
cafeteria at Hebrew University frequented by American students.
Five of the nine killed were American students.[16]
Responding
on Fox's "The O'Reilly Factor" to allegations that Saudi officials
and citizens financed terrorists, Murphy stated that the Saudis "don't
fund terror." [17] Such
statements stand in contrast to a body of evidence presented
by Robert Baer, a former CIA case officer, in his book, Sleeping
with the Devil: How Washington Sold Our Soul for Saudi Crude:
Princess
Haifa's [wife of Prince Bandar, Saudi ambassador to the United
States] contribution to a Saudi who aided two of the September
11 hijackers added up to $130,000. Throw in $550,000 that
a mysterious Saudi donated to a San Diego mosque that served
as forward base for the same two hijackers, and the money
exceeds the roughly $500,000 the FBI estimates as the total
cost of the 9/11 attacks. In other words, Bandar's—or some
other Saudis—"lost" money ended up paying for nineteen jihadis
to massacre more than three thousand people.[18]
Murphy may
now be retired, but his shadow remains formidable as he keeps
up his media commentary arguing, for example, that Washington
should engage more with Islamists.[19]
Henry Siegman
The final
pillar of the council's Middle East staff is Henry Siegman,
resident at the council for more than a decade. His official
biography trumpets him as the "Foremost expert on the Middle
East peace process and inter-religious relations, Arab-Israeli
relations, and U.S.-Middle East policy."[20] Yet,
like Kipper, Siegman possesses no specialist qualifications.
He holds only a bachelor's degree from the New School for Social
Research. Prior to joining the council, Siegman was executive
director of the American Jewish Congress for sixteen years.
Criticism
of Israel and the support it receives from the American Jewish
community[21] is
a frequent theme of Siegman's writing. His perspective of the
Arab-Israeli conflict is not based on fieldwork or practitioner
experience but rather upon reference to his own background
as a refugee from Nazism, which, he says, sensitized him to
the tribulations of Palestinians under Israeli occupation.[22]
Siegman argues
that Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza is the root
cause of the Arab-Israeli conflict,[23] a
conclusion that discounts both pre-1967 hostilities and attempts
by rejectionist states like Iran and Syria to undermine Palestinian-Israeli
peace talks. It also ignores statements by Yasir Arafat that
the Oslo agreement was merely a part of the Palestine Liberation
Organization's "phased strategy [for] the complete liberation
of Palestine."[24]
Siegman's
account of the Oslo accords' failure[25] also
contradicts accounts by those with firsthand knowledge of events.
Dennis Ross, for example, wrote, "Oslo might not have failed
if Arafat had been prepared to be a leader and not just a symbol."[26] President
Bill Clinton, too, speaking after the failure of the Camp David
summit, said, "[Barak] moved forward more from his initial
position than Chairman Arafat … particularly surrounding the
questions of Jerusalem."[27]
Siegman's
tendency to use council prestige to add gravitas to his political
pronouncements continued into the Palestinian terrorism campaign
that erupted in the aftermath of Camp David II's failure. Ignoring
several dozen suicide attacks in Israeli cafes, hotels, and
buses, he asked:
Is there
a justification for an Israeli policy that remains fixated
on detestation of Yasir Arafat and deliberately ignores major
changes within Fatah and the Palestinian population, withholding
any action that might help these constructive forces achieve
dominance? In fact, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has resorted
to measures that undercut Palestinians who seek to abandon
violence and resume a political dialogue.[28]
While Siegman
holds Sharon guilty of original sin, Palestinian Authority
prime minister Mahmoud Abbas received not only the benefit
of the doubt[29] but
also had expunged his record of Holocaust denial,[30] his
efforts to avoid a Palestinian Authority commitment to dismantle
terrorist organizations,[31] and
the death of sixty-four Israelis in terrorist attacks during
his brief premiership.[32]
Following
Arafat's death, Abbas assumed the leadership of the Palestinian
Authority. While Siegman maintained that Abbas was sincere
in his desire to crack down on terrorism, the Palestinian politician
has sidestepped any commitment to end permanently Palestinian
terrorism.[33] During
his election campaign, he shared the stage with wanted terrorists,
whom he called "heroes."[34] He
later confirmed death sentences on three Palestinians condemned
by Palestinian state security courts for helping Israel fight
terrorists.[35] Siegman,
however, blamed Israeli counter-terrorism efforts for Abbas'
failure to fulfill his commitments.[36] Even
Benny Morris, among the most prominent of Israel's new historians,
said Siegman "simply, completely, does not understand the Middle
East."[37] When
facts undercut Siegman's theories, he simply omits them.
Siegman's
revisionism and factual inaccuracies extend to his treatment
of Israel's security fence. While Siegman attributes the fence
to Sharon,[38] left-leaning
prime minister Ehud Barak first proposed the measure in 1999.[39] Sharon
began to implement the Barak plan in February 2002 following
a month in which Palestinian terrorists killed eighty Israelis
and wounded 600 in twelve different suicide attacks. While
the fence cut Palestinian terrorism in Israel by 95 percent,[40] Siegman
suggested that the barrier might serve not only as an excuse
for the Palestinian leadership to avoid dismantling terrorist
infrastructure but also as the cause of an internal Palestinian
civil war.[41] To
Siegman, the fault for Palestinian intracommunal violence rests
with Israel.
In recent
years, Siegman has made his demonization of Israel more pointed.
In 2001, Siegman wrote that Israelis "have found it painful
to acknowledge the injustice that the establishment of the
Jewish state inflicted on the Palestinian people for fear that
such an acknowledgment would delegitimize the entire Zionist
enterprise."[42] He
has subsequently promoted an analogy between Israel and apartheid
South Africa common among fringe political movements but not
borne out in fact. "An apartheid political system that the
world would not tolerate in racist South Africa will not survive
in a racist Israel,"[43] he
wrote in the International Herald Tribune.
Can CFR's
Middle East Program Rebound?
While the
Kipper-Murphy-Siegman trio overshadowed the council's Middle
East program for years, a change of council leadership in July
2003 provided an opportunity to revitalize the program's scholarship.
Richard Haass, director of State Department policy planning
in the first George W. Bush administration, succeeded outgoing
president Leslie Gelb.[44] While
there have been some personnel changes during the first two
years of Haass's tenure, he has yet to broaden the debate within
the council's Middle East program. Scholars supportive of robust—and
perhaps unilateral—counter-proliferation efforts, a no-nonsense
approach to international organizations, and the prioritization
of democracy promotion over engagement have little traction
at the council.
New Middle
East program hires under Haass' stewardship have mirrored his
own views favorable toward engagement and skeptical of sanctions,
unilateralism, and military force. Following Operation Desert
Storm, while Haass served as a senior director for the Near
East on the National Security Council, he counseled "moderation" toward
Saddam, who had turned his Republican Guards on civilians to
crush the Shi‘ite and Kurdish uprising.[45] After
resigning from his most recent stint in government in 2003,
Haass penned several articles critical of George W. Bush's
decision to go to war in Iraq.[46]
Under Haass,
in July 2004, the council published a working group report
entitled Iran: Time for a New Approach.[47] The
working group was stacked with long-time proponents of engagement
and penned by Suzanne Maloney, a Middle East advisor for ExxonMobil.
The report proposed renewed U.S engagement with the Islamic
Republic and was dismissive of the decision by Iranian authorities
to give Al-Qaeda operatives safe-haven within Iran.[48]
Such views
mirrored those espoused by Haass both during his government
tenure and in his think-tank interludes. Utilizing funding
by oil companies Conoco and Arco to promote his work, he has
consistently opposed U.S. sanctions against Iran.[49]
Further mirroring
Haass's views is 2004 hire Ray Takeyh, a task force member
and Maloney's husband. Takeyh, who took the unfortunate step
of predicting the death of Islamism a few months prior to 9-11,[50] in
recent years has become a leading voice for rapprochement with
Iran despite its nuclear ambitions.[51] Ignoring
Iran's status as "the most active state sponsor of terrorism
in 2004,"[52] and
absent supporting evidence, Takeyh wrote that Khatami "secured
Khamenei's essential backing for his ‘good neighbor' diplomacy."[53]
The polemization
of scholars' work extends beyond the Iran issue, though. In
2005, David Phillips, a former State Department official who
serves as the deputy director of the council's Center for Preventive
Action, wrote a book purporting to be a study of post-Iraq
war planning.[54] He
argued, for example, that "Iraq was thrown into crisis when
Bush administration officials, especially Pentagon political
appointees, rushed to war and decided to ignore the planning
that was under way."[55] But
much of the book's discussion was inaccurate.[56] Phillips
omitted discussion of the interagency process and based analysis
of post-war reconstruction upon secondary accounts rather than
fieldwork. When pressed, his publicist acknowledged that he
had not traveled to Iraq to interview Iraqis or conduct research. The
Wall Street Journal determined that he had lifted descriptions
of Iraqi cities from newspaper accounts.[57] The
Economist opined that Losing Iraq "resounds with
the unmistakable sound of bureaucratic scores being settled."[58]
Rachel Bronson,
senior fellow and director of Middle East and [Persian] Gulf
Studies, has scholarly credentials—a Ph.D. from Columbia University[59]—but
seldom produces research that challenges the conventional wisdom
of the more cautious State Department establishment. Her opinion
articles counsel continued support for Arab regimes[60] with
an emphasis on maintaining the U.S.-Saudi partnership.[61]
The Middle
East program can, however, produce solid and timely research.
Steven Cook, a New Generation fellow, speaks Arabic, has a
Ph.D, and has published solid journal articles on subjects
ranging from political liberalization in Algeria, to U.S. and
Turkish cooperation against terrorism,[62] to
the value of the U.S.-Egyptian partnership.[63]
The council
has been unable to retain other scholars, though, who might
have added to the council's intellectual diversity on the Middle
East. Adjunct senior fellow Michael Doran, a specialist on
Arab politics who has criticized the Saudi royal family,[64] left
the council after a brief affiliation. The White House subsequently
tapped Doran for a senior National Security Council position.[65] Michael
Mandelbaum, a U.S. and European foreign policy specialist,
also parted ways with the council in mid-2004.
Max Boot,
a senior fellow in national security studies, takes a more
hawkish approach to terrorism, Islamism, and their Middle Eastern
sponsors than does Haass. He bucks the rule that council scholars
do not support the Bush administration's democratization drive,
Israel's right to defensible borders, and a no nonsense and
at times undiplomatic approach both to terrorism and counterproliferation.
Then again, Boot remains outside the council's Middle East
program altogether.
Conclusion
Foreign policy
is contentious and includes a range of legitimate points of
view. The Council on Foreign Relations built its reputation
by hosting a range of views which encapsulate the debate. Guided
by a consistent vision of U.S. and international interests
and empirical rigor, the council has made important contributions
in many areas. In recent years, though, its production relating
to the Middle East has been the exception. Collaboration across
disciplines, fieldwork, and practitioner experience separate
the premier policy think tanks from the isolation of university
departments and the shallowness of many pundits. Research quality
declines when fieldwork, language ability, and practitioner
experience take a back seat to polemics. Columbia University,
for example, has seen its reputation plummet because of the
tendency of a single department to apply political litmus tests
in both job searches and tenure decisions. Islamism, Arab-Israeli
diplomacy, and terrorism ensure that the Middle East will challenge
the U.S. policy establishment for years to come. The Council
on Foreign Relations can play a role in developing relevant
strategy. Whether its Middle East program will do so remains
to be seen. tOR
Daniel
Mandel is author of H.V. Evatt and the Establishment
of Israel (Frank Cass, 2004) and Asaf Romirowsky is
a research fellow at the Middle East Forum.
[1] See
CFR mission
statement, accessed June 3, 2005; CFR brochure,
2003-04, p. 6.
[2] See "From
the Council on Foreign Relations," The New York Times website,
accessed June 14, 2005.
[3] Janet Steele, "TV's
Talking Headaches," Columbia Journalism Review,
July/Aug. 1992.
[4] Judith Kipper, "Cease-fire
Fails to Stop Violence in Middle East," The San Diego
Union-Tribune, July 8, 2001.
[5] Dennis Ross, The
Missing Peace (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2004),
p. 762.
[6] On these sources of
conflict, see Yossi Klein-Halevi, "The Asymmetry of Pity," The
National Interest, Fall 2001, pp. 37-44; two representative
polls: "While Indicating Important Shifts in Palestinian
Public Attitudes toward the Intifada and the Peace
Process, PSR
Poll Shows Significant Support for the Appointment of
a Prime Minister and Refusal to Give Confidence in the New
Palestinian Government," no. 6, Palestinian Center for Policy
and Survey Research, Nov. 14-22, 2002; "Opinion
Poll #11," Development Studies Programme, Birzeit University,
Mar. 12, 2003.
[7] See, for example, "Arab
Liberals: Prosecute Clerics Who Promote Murder," Middle East Quarterly, Winter
2005, pp. 84-6.
[8] Judith Kipper, speech at town hall
meeting, Los Angeles, Jan. 21, 2003, accessed June 3, 2005.
[9] Ibid.
[10] Saudi
Publications on Hate Ideology Fill American Mosques (Washington,
D.C.: Center for Religious Freedom, Freedom House, 2003), chaps. 1, 2,
3, 5.
[11] "Significant
Terrorist Incidents, 1961-2003: A Brief Chronology," Office of the
Historian, Bureau of Public Affairs, U.S. Department of State, Mar. 2004.
[12] Ibid.
[13] See Consolidated Contractors
Company official website, at http://www.ccc.gr; Forbes,
Dec. 5, 1994.
[14] The 9/11 Commission Report (New
York: W.W. Norton and Company, 2004), p. 373.
[15] Dore Gold, Hatred's Kingdom:
How Saudi Arabia Supports the New Global
Terrorism (Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing, 2003), p. 127.
[16] "Americans
Killed by Terrorists," editorial, International Broadcasting Bureau, Aug.
6, 2002.
[17] Fox News, Apr.
10, 2002.
[18] Robert Baer, Sleeping with
the Devil: How Washington Sold Our Soul for Saudi Crude (New York:
Crown Publishers, 2003), p. 69.
[19] Richard Murphy and Basil Eastwood, "Talk
to Political Islamists in the Arab World," Daily Star (Beirut),
May 4, 2005.
[20] Henry
Siegman biography, CFR website, accessed June 3, 2005.
[21] Chris Hedges, "Separating Spiritual
and Political, He Pays a Price," The New York Times, June 13, 2002.
[22] Henry Siegman, "How
Palestinian Property Was Seized," The International Herald Tribune,
Jan. 27, 2005; Hedges, "Separating Spiritual and Political."
[23] Henry Siegman, "Middle East Conflict:
Seek Palestinian Confidence in What?" The International Herald Tribune,
July 17, 2001; idem, "The
Road Map Was Doomed from the Outset," The International Herald Tribune,
Sept. 1, 2003.
[24] "Political Program for the Present
Stage Drawn up by the 12th PNC, Cairo, June 9, 1974," Journal of Palestine
Studies, Summer 1974, pp. 224-5; Daniel Pipes and Alexander T. Stillman, "Two-Faced
Yasser," The Weekly Standard, Sept. 25, 1995.
[25] Siegman, "Middle East Conflict."
[26] Ross, The Missing Peace,
p. 767.
[27] President Bill Clinton, statement
on Middle East peace talks, Washington, D.C., July 25, 2000.
[28] Henry Siegman, "Sharon's
Real Purpose Is to Create Foreigners," The International Herald
Tribune, Sept. 25, 2002.
[29] Ibid.
[30] Yael Yehoshua, "Abu
Mazen: A Political Profile," no. 15, Middle East Media Research Institute
(MEMRI), Apr. 29, 2003.
[31] The Sydney Morning Herald, July
23, 2003; Michael Freund, "Abu Mazen—Arafat's ‘Pragmatic' Protégé," The
Jerusalem Post, Apr. 2, 2003.
[32] London Telegraph, Sept.
9, 2003.
[33] Bruce Thornton, "Will
Abbas Bring an End to the Conflict?" Private Papers (Victor
Davis Hanson), Jan. 15, 2005.
[34] WAFA (Palestinian News Agency),
Jan. 1, 2005; Associated Press, Jan. 1, 2005.
[35] The Jerusalem Post, Feb.
16, 2005.
[36] "Siegman:
Abbas Needs Political Boost from Bush," cfr.org, May 25, 2005.
[37] New York Review of Books,
Apr. 8, 2004.
[38] International Herald Tribune,
Dec. 26, 2003.
[39] Ehud Barak, "Peace as My Paramount
Objective," Mideast Mirror (London), June 28, 2000.
[40] David Makovsky, A Defensible
Fence: Fighting Terror and Enabling a Two-State Solution (Washington:
Washington Institute for Near East Policy, 2004), pp. 16-7.
[41] Henry Siegman, "Don't Be Fooled
by Sharon's ‘New' Message: Israel's Future," The International Herald
Tribune, Dec. 26, 2003.
[42] Henry Siegman, "Israel:
A Historic Statement," The New York Review of Books, Feb. 8,
2001.
[43] Siegman, "Don't Be Fooled."
[44] Richard
N. Haass biography, CFR website, accessed June 3, 2005.
[45] Lawrence F. Kaplan, "Drill Sergeant:
The Oil Industry's Man at the State Department," The New Republic,
Mar. 26, 2001.
[46] Richard N. Haass, "Wars of Choice," The
Washington Post, Nov. 23, 2003; idem, "Freedom Is Not a Doctrine," The
Washington Post, Jan. 24, 2005.
[47] Zbigniew Brzezinski and Robert
M. Gates, co-chairs, Iran:
Time for a New Approach (Washington, D.C.: CFR, July 19, 2004).
[48] "Iran's
Link to Al-Qaeda: The 9-11 Commission's Evidence," Middle East Quarterly,
Fall 2004, p. 72; Agence France-Presse, July 19, 2004.
[49] Kaplan, "Drill Sergeant."
[50] Ray Takeyh, "Islamism:
R.I.P.," The National Interest, Spring 2001, pp. 97-102.
[51] Ray Takeyh, "Iran's
Nuclear Skeptics," The Washington Post, Apr. 25, 2003.
[52] "Iran," Country
Reports on Terrorism, Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism,
U.S. Department of State, Apr. 27, 2005, chap. 5B.
[53] International Herald Tribune,
June 17, 2005.
[54] Losing Iraq: Inside the Post-War
Reconstruction Fiasco (New York: Basic Books, 2005).
[55] John J. Miller, "The
Phony Insider," The Washington Examiner, May 15, 2005.
[56] The New York Times, July
10, 2005.
[57] Robert Pollock, "The
Armchair Analyst," The Wall Street Journal, May 10, 2005.
[58] The Economist, July 2,
2005.
[59] Rachel
Bronson biography, CFR website, accessed June 3, 2005.
[60] Rachel Bronson, "Recall, Reagan
Had Riyadh to Thank," The Daily Star, June 19, 2004.
[61] See various opinion articles
catalogued at Rachel Bronson
biography, CFR website.
[62] Steven
A. Cook biography, CFR website, accessed June 3, 2005.
[63] See, Steven A. Cook, "Egypt
- Still America's Partner?" Middle East Quarterly, June 2000,
pp. 3-13.
[64] Michael Scott Doran, "The
Saudi Paradox," Foreign Affairs, Jan./Feb. 2004, pp. 35-51.
[65] Jewish Telegraph Agency,
May 11, 2005.
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