Malaysia and Lebanon, 1963-2009: Small state bilateral relations / Ilango Karuppannan

Studies of the foreign policy behaviour of states have largely neglected the aspect of diplomatic relations between small states. This research attempts to address this gap by examining Malaysia’s bilateral relations with Lebanon, two small, if dissimilar states. This study examines the previously i...

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Main Author: Ilango , Karuppannan
Format: Thesis
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9043/
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9043/1/Ilango_Karuppanannan.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9043/5/Ilango_Karuppannan_%2D_Thesis.pdf
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author Ilango , Karuppannan
author_facet Ilango , Karuppannan
author_sort Ilango , Karuppannan
building UM Research Repository
collection Online Access
description Studies of the foreign policy behaviour of states have largely neglected the aspect of diplomatic relations between small states. This research attempts to address this gap by examining Malaysia’s bilateral relations with Lebanon, two small, if dissimilar states. This study examines the previously inaccessible diplomatic cables, reports, memoranda, third person notes and other official records of the ministry of foreign affairs of Malaysia, as well as secondary sources and first-hand views of relevant individuals, to construct a compelling account of the development of this relationship from 1963 to 2009. This study revealed critical junctures that cannot be easily explained. A more complete explanation was only possible by taking onto account the influence of a third state on the systemic environment which this thesis has coined as the Third State Effect. The third states investigated in this bilateral relationship are Indonesia and Israel. Diplomatic relations with Lebanon was essential for Malaysia to gain a diplomatic presence in the Middle East to neutralise the campaign of isolation against her mounted by Indonesia and her allies as part of the Konfrontasi. Subsequently, Israel served as the main driver of bilateral relations which in turn served to satisfy other domestic needs. The research makes a significant contribution towards building a corpus of knowledge of Malaysia’s relations with the Middle East. As Lebanon is considered by the Arab states as the geo-strategic front of the Middle East conflict, this study could also shed light into Malaysia’s relations with the other Arab states.
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format Thesis
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T13:48:29Z
publishDate 2018
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spelling um-90432021-02-16T20:20:25Z Malaysia and Lebanon, 1963-2009: Small state bilateral relations / Ilango Karuppannan Ilango , Karuppannan C Auxiliary sciences of history (General) CD Diplomatics. Archives. Seals Studies of the foreign policy behaviour of states have largely neglected the aspect of diplomatic relations between small states. This research attempts to address this gap by examining Malaysia’s bilateral relations with Lebanon, two small, if dissimilar states. This study examines the previously inaccessible diplomatic cables, reports, memoranda, third person notes and other official records of the ministry of foreign affairs of Malaysia, as well as secondary sources and first-hand views of relevant individuals, to construct a compelling account of the development of this relationship from 1963 to 2009. This study revealed critical junctures that cannot be easily explained. A more complete explanation was only possible by taking onto account the influence of a third state on the systemic environment which this thesis has coined as the Third State Effect. The third states investigated in this bilateral relationship are Indonesia and Israel. Diplomatic relations with Lebanon was essential for Malaysia to gain a diplomatic presence in the Middle East to neutralise the campaign of isolation against her mounted by Indonesia and her allies as part of the Konfrontasi. Subsequently, Israel served as the main driver of bilateral relations which in turn served to satisfy other domestic needs. The research makes a significant contribution towards building a corpus of knowledge of Malaysia’s relations with the Middle East. As Lebanon is considered by the Arab states as the geo-strategic front of the Middle East conflict, this study could also shed light into Malaysia’s relations with the other Arab states. 2018-06 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9043/1/Ilango_Karuppanannan.pdf application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9043/5/Ilango_Karuppannan_%2D_Thesis.pdf Ilango , Karuppannan (2018) Malaysia and Lebanon, 1963-2009: Small state bilateral relations / Ilango Karuppannan. PhD thesis, University of Malaya. http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9043/
spellingShingle C Auxiliary sciences of history (General)
CD Diplomatics. Archives. Seals
Ilango , Karuppannan
Malaysia and Lebanon, 1963-2009: Small state bilateral relations / Ilango Karuppannan
title Malaysia and Lebanon, 1963-2009: Small state bilateral relations / Ilango Karuppannan
title_full Malaysia and Lebanon, 1963-2009: Small state bilateral relations / Ilango Karuppannan
title_fullStr Malaysia and Lebanon, 1963-2009: Small state bilateral relations / Ilango Karuppannan
title_full_unstemmed Malaysia and Lebanon, 1963-2009: Small state bilateral relations / Ilango Karuppannan
title_short Malaysia and Lebanon, 1963-2009: Small state bilateral relations / Ilango Karuppannan
title_sort malaysia and lebanon, 1963-2009: small state bilateral relations / ilango karuppannan
topic C Auxiliary sciences of history (General)
CD Diplomatics. Archives. Seals
url http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9043/
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9043/1/Ilango_Karuppanannan.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/9043/5/Ilango_Karuppannan_%2D_Thesis.pdf