9 research outputs found

    Une convergence d’intĂ©rĂȘts : la collaboration entre les services secrets français et britanniques au Levant pendant la PremiĂšre Guerre mondiale

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    Un manuel rĂ©cent compare les services de renseignements modernes Ă  une entreprise multinationale. De ce point de vue, les services de renseignements se mesurent non pas seulement Ă  l’aune de leur efficacitĂ© sur le territoire national, mais Ă©galement Ă  celle de l’ampleur de la collaboration – et de ses effets – avec des partenaires Ă©trangers. AttestĂ©es dĂšs la PremiĂšre Guerre mondiale, les premiĂšres expressions de cette « multinationalité » des services de renseignement modernes se sont multipl..

    Book Review: Defeat In Detail: The Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 1912-1913

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    Intelligence and the origins of the British Middle East

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    This article examines how intelligence services and officers laid the groundwork for British rule in Palestine during 1918–23. The patterns for British rule in the Middle East were established by officers who, during the First World War, were responsible for the implementation of Britain's Arab and Zionist policies. It was not until mid-1919 that the inherent conflict between the Arab and Zionist policies became apparent to these officers, who had worked with Zionist intelligence and Arab nationalists during the war. This article examines the roots of British rule during 1919–21 as intelligence cooperation with Zionists helped guarantee a British Mandate, but could not secure the country from violence forever. The zero-sum conflict between Arab nationalist and Zionists emerged as British policy options narrowed.This research was supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council

    De Bonaparte Ă  Balfour

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    La premiĂšre partie de la grande Ă©popĂ©e du Proche-Orient . Une somme rĂ©unissant les meilleurs spĂ©cialistes, par-delĂ  tous les clivages partisans. ExpĂ©dition d’Égypte, rĂ©veil de la Palestine, rivalitĂ©s entre grandes puissances, surenchĂšre d’investissements, Ă©tablissement de comptoirs, de missions religieuses, dĂ©veloppement de programmes archĂ©ologiques, de rĂ©seaux hospitaliers
 Sur fond d’Empire ottoman vieillissant, le regard de l’Occidental sur l’Orient se met Ă  changer. De province reculĂ©e, elle devient un enjeu aussi original qu’unique de la diplomatie internationale. Esther Benbassa, Catherine Nicault, Jacques Thobie
 nous racontent avec talent cette mutation appelĂ©e Ă  bouleverser la donne mondiale. Un livre passionnant sur la Palestine d’avant les Mandats

    Listening in combat - surveillance technologies beyond the visual in the First World War

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    The arts of combat have long motivated humans to extend the range of, and refine the capacities of, their senses. For centuries, innovations from both military and civilian origins have extended and enhanced those capacities in ever-escalating strategic efforts to secure crucial intelligence both to win battles and win new markets. Much is known about the visual technologies that co-evolved between civilian and military usage: the telescope in the seventeenth century, the observation balloon in the eighteenth century, and the submarine periscope in nineteenth century, extended to trench usage in the First World War. We focus here on the sense of hearing, its technological enhancements, and its interplay with other senses, thereby to explore the sensory interplay of vision and sound in extreme human combat situations. We argue that, both for those at the battle front and those remote from it, the significance of this increased significant of hearing in the early twentieth century cannot be understood without reference to the combat experiences and technological initiatives of the First World War. Our core claim is that the rise of listening cultures of various forms during and after the First World War owed much to the changing technologies, strategies and behaviors, cultivated in the context of military endeavors
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