Israel's Wars and Politics: From 1948 to the Contemporary Fronts (Paperback) by Anna Castro on MixCache.com
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Israel's Wars and Politics: From 1948 to the Contemporary Fronts MTA
Military Campaigns, Domestic Politics, and Regional Implications

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About this book:
Israel's Wars and Politics: From 1948 to the Contemporary Fronts

This book explores the evolution of Israel's national security doctrine from the 1948 War of Independence to the modern era of multi-domain warfare. It traces a chronological trajectory through major conventional conflicts, such as the Six-Day War and Yom Kippur War, into the asymmetrical challenges of the Lebanon and Gaza wars. The narrative emphasizes how Israel’s military strategy has consistently navigated the tension between tactical superiority and the search for long-term strategic end states, while being heavily influenced by internal coalition politics and shifting civil-military relations.

A central theme is the transformation of the regional environment from a struggle against state armies to a complex "mosaic" of non-state actors like Hezbollah and Hamas. The text details Israel’s adaptation to these threats through technological revolutions—most notably in missile defense and cyber warfare—and the implementation of the "Campaign Between Wars" to disrupt Iranian entrenchment in Syria. These military developments are juxtaposed with significant diplomatic shifts, including the historic peace with Egypt and the more recent realignment of the Abraham Accords, which redefined regional partnerships based on shared security interests against Iran.

The book also addresses the persistent "territorial dilemmas" and the internal fragmentation of Palestinian politics, contrasting the governance of the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank with Hamas in Gaza. It examines the legal and ethical scrutiny Israel faces in urban warfare, the role of intelligence in preventing existential threats like Iran's nuclear program, and the strategic impact of natural gas discoveries in the Eastern Mediterranean. Ultimately, the work portrays Israel’s security as a moving compact between state institutions, technological innovation, and an ever-evolving regional order.

The concluding analysis suggests that Israel has entered an era of "strategic patience" and multi-domain conflict, where the boundaries between home front and battlefront have blurred. As the nation moves toward a "1948 mindset" of proactive threat neutralization, the text highlights the ongoing difficulty of translating military achievements into a durable political peace. The book frames the future of the region as a choice between continued horizontal escalation and the potential for a cooperative regional framework built on shared economic and security interests.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • How military campaigns and domestic politics are inextricably linked, with Israel's electoral cycles, coalition bargaining, and civil-military relations shaping strategic decisions from operation timing to casualty management
  • The evolution of Israel's security doctrine from conventional interstate wars to asymmetric conflicts with non-state actors like Hezbollah and Hamas, necessitating continuous tactical and strategic adaptation
  • Israel's strategic transformation through technological innovation (Iron Dome, David's Sling, cyber capabilities) and doctrinal shifts toward multi-domain warfare and proactive threat neutralization beyond its borders
  • The regional security environment's transformation from interstate conflict to a complex mosaic of state and non-state actors, illustrated by peace treaties, the Arab Spring upheaval, and the Abraham Accords realignment
  • The enduring challenges of legitimacy and legal scrutiny in modern warfare, including proportionality debates in urban warfare, ICC scrutiny, and the ethical complexities of fighting adversaries embedded in civilian populations
Who's It For:

This book is designed for students of international relations and Middle Eastern studies seeking a comprehensive historical-analytical framework, journalists covering regional conflicts who need contextual depth, and policymakers involved in security decision-making who require insights into Israel's evolving security doctrine and the interplay of military action with diplomatic and political considerations.

Author:

Anna Castro

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

March 12, 2026

Language:

English

Word Count:

42,219 words

Reading Time:

2 hours 57 minutes

Sample:

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