Alvin Rubinstein's 1977 book analyzes the diplomatic, military, political, and economic aspects of the Soviet-Egyptian influence relationship following the June War of 1967. The work draws on available Soviet and Arab materials to develop the concept of influence as an analytical tool. It was originally published by Princeton University Press and is part of the Princeton Legacy Library.
Use Cases
- Analyzing patterns of diplomatic and military aid based on the described chronological and issue-oriented approach.
- Studying the correlation between foreign interactions and influence in Soviet-Third World relationships as discussed.
- Modeling asymmetric international relationships based on the described aims and accomplishments between nations.
- Examining the role of economic and political aspects in bilateral influence relationships as outlined in the description.
Strengths
- Analysis is based on all available Soviet and Arab materials as stated in the description.
- Work explores multiple dimensions: diplomatic, military, political, and economic aspects.
- The original text is preserved in a durable paperback edition via the Princeton Legacy Library.
Limitations
- Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment.
- Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
- Last update date is unknown; freshness unverified.
Provenance
- Source
- Alvin Z. Rubinstein / Princeton University Press
- Collection Method
- Scholarly analysis drawing on Soviet and Arab materials.
- Time Range
- Post-1967 June War period, analyzed in a 1977 publication.
- Freshness
- Originally published in 1977; last updated date is unknown.
- Geography
- Soviet Union, Egypt, and the Middle East context.