TY - BOOK AU - Zimmermann,Anne Mariel TI - US assistance, development, and hierarchy in the Middle East: aid for allies SN - 978-1-349-94999-1 U1 - 320.973 23E PY - 2017/// CY - New York PB - Palgrave Macmillan KW - Economic assistance, American--Middle East KW - Economic development--Middle East KW - Middle East--Politics and government KW - United States--Politics and government KW - International relations N1 - Bibliogr. p. 235-264; 1. What does US aid "buy" in the Middle East? -- 2. Aid and the logic of political survival -- 3. Non-distributive survival strategy -- 4. Origins of US aid to Israel -- 5. US aid to Israel : developmental bargain -- 6. Distributive survival strategy -- 7. Origins of US aid to Jordan -- 8. US aid to Jordan : geopolitical bargain -- 9. Hybrid survival strategy -- 10. Origins of US aid to Egypt -- 11. US aid to Egypt : illusive bargains -- 12. Conclusion N2 - "What does US aid 'buy' in the Middle East? Drawing on extensive primary source research, this book examines the role and consequences of US aid to three countries in the Middle East. The author argues that the political survival strategies of incumbent leaders in Egypt, Israel, and Jordan shaped not only the type of aid that these countries received from the US, but also its developmental and geopolitical impact. Leaders who relied heavily on distributing selective benefits to their ruling coalitions were more likely to receive forms of US aid that complemented their distributive political economies and undermined the state's developmental capacity, which simultaneously rendered them more dependent on US resources, and more likely to cede fragments of their sovereignty to their major donor. Non-distributive leaders, however, could reap the full benefits of highly discretionary and technologically sophisticated aid, incorporating it into developmental policies that rendered them progressively less dependent on Washington"and better able to say 'no' when it was in their best interest."-- ER -