THE POSITION OF THE KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA AND JORDAN ON THE EISENHOWER DOCTRINE IN 1957
Downloads
Objective: This investigation focuses on the stand taken by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, vis a vis the Eisenhower Doctrine made public by the United States in 1957 as part of its containment policy toward Soviet penetration in the Middle East. Method: The doctrine took shape after the Suez crisis and the ascendance of Arab nationalism as championed by Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser, prompting Washington to offer its allies in the region direct military assistance to compensate for the rising power in the Arab world. Results: Saudi Arabia adopted the doctrine with a degree of caution, officially embracing it but did not directly get involved or use it as an excuse for intervention in Arab countries' affairs. This was in light of its struggle to ensure the independence of Arab decision-making atoning between regional relations and international dimensions, in addition to fears of the doctrine as a tool for establishing US hegemony. Jordan’s attitude was based on fluctuation, marked by heavy internal and external pressures. At first, King Hussein refused to embrace the doctrine to avoid popular and nationalist backlash, but with economic crisis and external security threats, eventually he could not escape aid offered by the US based on the doctrine with a marginal room for maneuvering. Novelty: The article asserts that these responses by each country to the Eisenhower Doctrine indicate the manner in which elements of the Middle East's political realities were entangled at that time; interests in the observance of national sovereignty, in obtaining Western aid, and in responding to rapidly occurring political transformation in the region.
U.S. Department of State, Foreign Relations of the United States, 1955-1957, Volume XIII, Doc. No. 150, Dec. 4, 1956, p. 372.
U.S. Department of State, Foreign Relations of the United States, 1955-1957, Volume XIII, Doc. No. 564, Nov. 10, 1956.
Iraqi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Reports of the Iraqi Embassy in Amman: Eisenhower Project and the Jordanian National Front, Doc. No. 2725/311, 1957, p. 34.
Iraqi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Reports of the Iraqi Embassy in Amman: Statement of H.E. Abdullah Al-Rimawi, Doc. No. 2725/311, 1957, p. 45.
Iraqi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Reports of the Iraqi Embassy in Washington: Eisenhower Doctrine, Doc. No. 5043/311, 1957.
Iraqi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Reports of the Iraqi Embassy in Amman: Position of H.M. King of Jordan, Doc. No. 2725/311, 1957, p. 32.
Iraqi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Reports of the Iraqi Legation in Amman: Vote of Confidence Session, Doc. No. 2713/311, May 27, 1957, p. 22.
Iraqi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Reports of the Iraqi Embassy in Amman: Statement of the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Doc. No. 2725/311, 1957, p. 45.
Iraqi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Reports of the Iraqi Embassy in Amman: Eisenhower Project and the Position of H.M. King of Jordan, Doc. No. 2725/311, 1957, p. 32.
Iraqi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Reports of the Iraqi Embassy in Amman: Telegram from MPs Yaqoub Ziyad and Faiq Ward, Doc. No. 2725/311, 1957, p. 62.
J. Baylis, Anglo-American Defense Relations 1939-1984: The Special Relationship, London, p. 56.
J. Campbell, Defense of Middle East: Problems of American Policy, New York: Start Food Press, 1961.
M. O. Khairy, Jordan and the World System: Development in the Middle East, Frankfurt am Main & New York: Peter Lang, 1984.
A. A. R. Mustafa, The United States of America and the Arab East, Cairo, n.d.
I. S. Maqlad, Strategy and International Politics: Basic Concepts and Facts, Beirut: Arab Research Foundation, n.d.
A. Nutting, "How Britain plays its role in the Middle East," Al-Bahith Al-Arabi, no. 4, Beirut, 1985.
A. Eden, The Complete Memoirs of Sir Anthony Eden 1951-1957, vol. 2, Beirut, n.d.
D. D. Eisenhower, Memoirs, H. Junghan, Trans., n.d.
C. Johnston, Jordan on the Edge, F. Shamma, Trans., Amman: Ministry of Culture and Information, n.d.
G. Urensen, Washington Comes Out of the Shadows: American Policy Towards Egypt 1946-1956, Beirut, 1987.
F. Gerges, The Arab Regional System and the Great Powers, Beirut: Center for Arab Unity Studies, 1997.
United Nations, Fourth UN General Assembly, First Special Session, Ninth Meeting, Aug. 24, 1955.
M. H. Heikal, The Suez Story: The Last Battles in the Era of Giants, 6th ed., Beirut: Publications Distribution Company, 1985.
M. Bahri, American Policy in the Middle East from Truman to Kissinger, Beirut, 1982.
M. Edenous, Defeated Teams: The Arab Revolution 1955-1958, K. Hammad, Trans., Beirut, 1961.
N. Al-Sharabi, America and the Arabs: American Policy in the Arab Homeland in the Twentieth Century, London: Riyadh Al-Rayyes Books and Publishing, n.d.
Y. Primakov, Anatomy of the Middle East Conflict, S. Ahmed, Trans., Beirut, 1979.
Copyright (c) 2025 Ismail Mohammed Hassan Al-Wais

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.














