The Political Psychology of Appeasement: Finlandization and Other Unpopular Essays

Cover
Transaction Publishers, 1980 - 283 Seiten
This volume takes its title from one of the most prescient essays of our times: an analysis of Eurocommunism as a consequence of military stalemate and the atrophy of will in the West. These essays highlight Laqueur's exceedingly sober assessment of the current status in world power, not primarily in military terms but in geopolitical and ideological terms.
 

Ausgewählte Seiten

Inhalt

Finlandization
1
The Fall of Europe?
21
Eurocommunism and Its Friends
37
Russia Beyond Brezhnev
49
Essays in Futurism
61
Six Scenarios for 1980
63
The Next Ten Years
75
Terrorism
85
The World and President Carter
141
The Next Four Years Confronting the Problems
155
The Issue of Human Rights
173
Third World Fantasies
187
FascismThe Second Coming
199
Peace in the Middle East
209
Peace With Egypt?
211
Is Peace Possible in the Middle East?
225

Karl Heinzen and the Origins of Modern Terrorism
87
The Futility of Terrorism
99
Second Thoughts on Terrorism
115
World Affairs and US Foreign Policy
125
The Psychology of Appeasement
127
in the Middle East? The View from Tel Aviv
237
Judaica
253
The World of Mr Begin
255
Hannah Arendt in Jerusalem The Controversy Revisted
269
Urheberrecht

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Autoren-Profil (1980)

Walter Louis Laqueur was born in Breslau, Germany on May 26, 1921. At the age of 17, he fled just a few days before Kristallnacht and found his way to Palestine, where he was known as Ze'ev. He worked briefly on a kibbutz before moving to Jerusalem, where he spent a year enrolled in the Hebrew University and covered the Middle East as a journalist. In 1955, he moved to London, where he was a founder and editor of The Journal of Contemporary History and a founder of Survey, a foreign affairs journal. From 1965 to 1994 he was director of the Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust and Genocide, a leading archive in London. He became a scholar of the Holocaust, the collapse of the Soviet Union, European decline, the Middle East conflict, and global terrorism. He wrote numerous books including A History of Zionism, A History of Terrorism, The Terrible Secret, Putinism: Russia and Its Future with the West, and The Future of Terrorism: ISIS, Al Qaeda, and the Alt-Right written with Christopher Wall. His memoirs included Thursday's Child Has Far to Go; Worlds Ago; Best of Times, Worst of Times; and Reflections of a Veteran Pessimist. He was also the editor of The Holocaust Encyclopedia. He died on September 30, 2018 at the age of 97.

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