America's Moment in the Middle East Office of the Alumni Association
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- Podcasts
L. Carl Brown, Garrett Professor in Foreign Affairs Emeritus of Near Eastern Studies led a five-week Alumni Studies course in the fall of 2007 entitled "America’s Moment in the Middle East." This course examined America’s involvement in the Middle East for the sixty-year period from 1947 to 2007.
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Imperial Overstretch? The U.S. and the Middle East, 1991 to the Present
The U.S.-Middle East relations of recent decades, including the first Gulf War, emergence of Al-Qaeda , U.S. containment strategy for Iraq and Iran, and the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 up through the U.S. invasion of Iraq, as presented by L. Carl Brown, Garrett Professor in Foreign Affairs, Emeritus, as part of the "America's Moment in the Middle East" Alumni Studies program, Fall 2007.
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One Revolution, Another Presidential Doctrine & the Cold War Winding Down: The U.S. and the Middle East, 1979-1991
The 1979-1991 period in U.S.-Middle East relations, focusing upon the Carter doctrine, Iranian revolution, end of the Cold War, and introduction of Afghanistan into this arena, as presented by L. Carl Brown, Garrett Professor in Foreign Affairs, Emeritus, as part of the "America's Moment in the Middle East" Alumni Studies program, Fall 2007.
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Three Presidents, Two Doctrines: U.S. and the Middle East, 1947-1963
A history of 20th-century international politics in the Middle East with a focus upon U.S. involvement after WWII, presented by L. Carl Brown, Garrett Professor in Foreign Affairs, Emeritus, as part of the "America's Moment in the Middle East" Alumni Studies program, Fall 2007.
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Three Wars, One Peace: U.S. and the Middle East, 1963-1979
The period of 1963-1979 in U.S.-Middle East relations as it relates to the Arab-Israeli conflict as presented by L. Carl Brown, Garrett Professor in Foreign Affairs, Emeritus ,as part of the "America's Moment in the Middle East" Alumni Studies program, Fall 2007..