1. Obama's wavering: US foreign policy on the Egyptian crisis, 2011–13.
- Author
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Fabbrini, Sergio and Yossef, Amr
- Subjects
FOREIGN relations of the United States in the 21st century ,FINANCIAL crises ,ARAB Spring Uprisings, 2010-2012 ,POLITICAL leadership ,ECONOMIC conditions in Egypt, 2011- - Abstract
The existing literature explains the wavering course of President Barack Obama's policy on the 2001–03 Egyptian crisis as attributed to either his personal characteristics (lack of an international experience, predisposition to sermonize rather than to strategize) or to the impact of the decline of the United States as a global superpower (inability to influence foreign actors and contexts). Although both explanations are worthy of consideration, this article seeks to demonstrate that they are insufficient when accounting for the uncertainties shown by the United States during the Egyptian crisis. Domestic factors, particularly the internally divided US political elite and a foreign policy team with different views, played a crucial intervening role in defining the features of US foreign policy. It was domestic politics that made the Obama administration ineffective in dealing with the new scenario that emerged in the Middle East and in Egypt in particular. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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