Preview
  • The Case for Peace

  • How the Arab-Israeli Conflict Can Be Resolved
  • By: Alan Dershowitz
  • Narrated by: Alan Dershowitz
  • Length: 6 hrs and 21 mins
  • 3.8 out of 5 stars (30 ratings)

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The Case for Peace

By: Alan Dershowitz
Narrated by: Alan Dershowitz
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Publisher's summary

New York Times best-selling author Alan Dershowitz presents a persuasive roadmap for achieving a lasting peace between Israel and Palestine. As he did in his widely acclaimed work The Case for Israel, the renowned defender of civil liberties offers compelling, and sometimes controversial, solutions for ending this bloody, divisive conflict.

Dershowitz maintains that, following the death of Yassar Arafat and the democratic election of Mahmoud Abbas, the time is ripe to let go of old assumptions and embrace new solutions. The challenge, too, is not only to achieve peace, but to do it without further loss of life in the region.

The answer, Dershowitz maintains, lies in a two-state solution, with Israel recognizing the rights of Palestinian refugees and Palestine making a concentrated effort to stamp out terrorism. Both sides must take bold steps toward peace, steps that ensure a continuing security in the region.

With unflinching candor and rigorous logic, Dershowitz targets the opponents of Israel, including the United Nations, the media, and American academics who insist on a one-state solution. But he also attacks Israeli and Pelestinian extremists who oppose peace.

By plotting out a realistic course of action, The Case for Peace, demands the attention of anyone interested in the future of global politics.

Don't miss Alan Dershowitz talking about human rights and peace in the Middle East at the 92nd Street Y.
©2005 Alan Dershowitz (P)2005 Recorded Books, LLC
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What listeners say about The Case for Peace

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Thought Provoking

A well written and empassioned plea for peace.

I really enjoyed the conclusion of this book.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Riveting and very informative

I thought I knew this subject well, but I learned a great deal from Professor Dershowitz's book. Ten years after its publication, it is still important and useful to understanding the world we live in. I enjoyed it and would recommend it to anyone.

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1 person found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

He’s right

He makes some good points
Give it a listen
Every college kid should know this

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars

Strong and rational, yet reactionary and biased

Listeners should know Dershowitz is controversial. He is a prominent lawyer, engaged in a vicious debate with critics of Israel, like Noam Chomsky. According to his account, each side accuses the other of sloppy citations, lies, and hate. And he does not spare the reader this muck in the second half of the book.

This book is divided in two. The first is a rational and detailed argument for why a two state solution is possible. His arguments are strong. He presents the stumbling blocks to peace in detail and offers solutions.

The only problem is he denies what so many critics of Israel claim: the peace proposals that Palestinians keep turning down involve breaking up the West Bank into numerous mutually inaccessible peaces of land. Further, while he constantly emphasizes how the opponents of Israel are dangerous and irresponsible, he spends proportionately little time criticizing Israel. This in spite of the fact the fact that Israel occupies Palestinian and Syrian territory, is colonizing it, and kills numerous Palestinians for every Israeli killed.

Nevertheless, Dershowitz is serious about a two-state solution and his point of view deserves to be heard, particularly by those already exposed to Palestinian suffering. I give the first half four stars.

The second half is a bit more trashy. It is highly a detailed attack on leftist academics who challenge Israeli injustices. The argument and tone appear petty and childish, And he presents an unrecognizable picture of the only one I have read: Chomsky. Still, he has a point. Most leftist critics of Israel lack vision and are too focused on injustices to get down to making peace.

Dershowitz argues that the works of leftist Israel critics are used by Palestinian extremists to justify their violence. I have always wondered what they think of folks like Chomsky. But Dershowitz cites nothing but an argument here. Better to listen to Jimmy Carter's "Palestine Peace Not Apartheid."

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3 people found this helpful