'Inglorious Disarray' is a fine work of scholarship that draws on a massive array of sources for what is a definitive account of the often strained relationships between the main players.
Sunday Business Post
'Inglorious Disarray' offers a meticulously researched account of Europe's constant engagement with Israel and the Palestinians since the Six-Day War of 1967.
15 Minutes Magazine
'Inglorious Disarray' is not the first publication tracking the evolution of Europe's efforts to advance Middle East peace. However... it is certainly the most detailed and most valuable account so far, offering a wealth of insights to anyone working on the issue.
- Daniel Mockli, Office of the Foreign Minister, Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs, H-Diplo Roundtable Reviews,
A serious, cold-eyed account of political Europe's ineffective role in the Middle East conflict. Miller's unsparing analysis will provide much food for thought both for policy makers and for those with a more general interest in the region. This book will add to Miller's reputation as an impressive scholar.
- Lord Bew of Donegore, Professor of Irish Politics, Queen's University Belfast, and author of 'Ireland: The Politics of Enmity 1789-20',
a stimulating and genuinely original study that provides a new perspective on the ongoing Israel-Palestine question. Moreover, he gives insights into the workings of the EEC/EU, and the reasons for its failure to translate economic power into international influence . . . it will be essential reading for serious scholars of the Arab-Israeli dispute, as well as being of interest to the general reader.
- Simon C. Smith, University of Hull, H-Diplo Roundtable Reviews,
I found 'Inglorious Disarray' extremely interesting... it certainly adds another dimension to the Israel-Palestine conflict and is comprehensive, well informed and backed up by factual evidence rather than supposition.
- Professor Colin Shindler, SOAS, author of 'The Triumph of Military Zionism: Nationalism and the Origins of the Israeli Right',
This passionate and lucid account on the EU's role in the Middle East Peace Process should appeal to experts and the general public. Drawing from a variety of sources - Arab, Israeli, European and American - it narrates eloquently European Middle East policy in action and how this policy is perceived in the region. Rory Miller does an outstanding job in explaining how and why the EU plays 'second fiddle' to any US administration's intent to on making an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal.
- Walter Posch, SWP Berlin,