This book reviews a distinctive and interesting history of Henry Kissinger's diplomacy in the Middle East, through which it reveals the special difficulties and obstacles that Kissinger and his successors faced in their efforts to achieve the peace process between Israel and its Arab neighbors, and how three American presidents failed over more than twenty years ago since the last time it mediated It has the United States in a peace agreement between the Israelis and the Palestinians. Martin Indik, the former US ambassador to Israel and the special envoy of Israeli -Palestinian negotiations in 2013, suffered from these frustrations and repeated political disappointments. Martin Indik is now returning to the beginnings of the US -led peace efforts and returning to Henry Kissinger, the man who established the peace process in the Middle East, in an attempt to understand the path of the American diplomatic force in the region. This book takes us inside the discussions according to the recently released documents from the American and Israeli archives, special interviews with Kissinger, Indic's personal experiences with some major actors such as Anwar Sadat, Golda Meir, Mushier Diane, Isaac Rabin, Hafez al -Assad, Kissenger himself, and others .Indic's story combines the views of an informed person looking for peace -making lessons in the Middle East with dated views that accurately study the records of these events. He also explained that Kissinger's peace -making plan in the Middle East is necessary to understand how peace is made or how to ignite wars and conflicts.