Printer-friendly version Send by email | | Title | Normalization and "Anti-Normalization" in Jordan: The Public Debate | | URL | http://meria.idc.ac.il/journal/2001/is... | | Description | The Jordan-Israel peace treaty, signed in October 1994, was accompanied on both sides by high hopes of warm relations between the peoples of the two countries. A wide range of factors, however, led to a deterioration in any public support for the peace agreement on the Jordanian side. These included: the limits of economic benefits arising from the agreement; the slow, and uncertain pace of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations; Israel.s 1996 'Grapes of Wrath' operation in Lebanon and attempted assassination of Hamas leader Khalid Mishal in September 1997; the strength of traditional anti-Israel feeling especially among Palestinians; and the vigorous 'anti-normalization' movement, led by the Islamic Action Front and the country.s professional associations. - MERIA Editor | | Authors / Editors | Scham, Paul L.; Lucas, Russell E. | | Date Published | September 2001 | | Download Citation | This citation can be downloaded in the following bibliographic database formats: Tagged; XML; BibTex |
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