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Israeli Palestinian Conflict

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Title: Israeli Palestinian Conflict


1
Israeli Palestinian Conflict
Creating Peace in The Middle East
2
Historical Ownership
  • People have continuously inhabited the area now
    know as Israel for 10 000 years
  • The Amorites, Canaanites and other Semitic
    peoples entered the area around 2000 BC, and the
    area became known as the Land of Canaan.
  • between 1800 and 1500 BC the Hebrews left
    Mesopotamia and settled in Canaan
  • The Israelites came from Egypt with Moses to the
    Land of Canaan
  • in 1000BC King Davis conquered Jerusalem it was
    then divided into two Kingdoms, Judea in the
    South and Israel in the North. Jerusalem remained
    the center of the Kingdoms, and stayed this way
    until 133 AD
  • The Assyrians then conquered Israel between 722
    and 721BC.
  • Around 586BC the Babylonians conquered Judah.
    They destroyed Solomons Temple, and exiled many
    Jews.
  • 50 years later the Persian King Cyrus conquered
    Babylonia. He allowed some Jews from Babylonia to
    rebuild and settle in Jerusalem.
  • The Persians ruled from 530-331BC
  • Alexander the Great conquered the Persian Empire,
    which was ruled by his generals after his death.
  • General Seleucus founded a dynasty in 200BC, and
    gained control of much of Palestine. This dynasty
    allowed Judaism, and its leaders were called the
    Seleucids.

3
  • When Antiochus IV tried to forbid Judaism in
    167AD the Jews, under the leadership of the
    Maccabeans drove the Seleucids out of Palestine
    and established a Kingdom with Jerusalem as its
    capital. This Kingdom had a large degree of
    autonomy and received Roman protection.
  • In 61 BC the Romans got the area under their
    direct control. They then drove the Jews out and
    renamed the area Palestine. Most Jews living
    there either fled or were exiled directly.
  • In 638 AD Jerusalem was conquered by the Caliph
    Omar, and he gave his protection to all its
    inhabitants. Muslims continued to hold power in
    the area up until the early 1900s. They allowed
    Jews and Christians to keep their religions, but
    most locals assimilated to Arab-Islamic culture
    anyway.
  • During WW1 an Ottoman military government ruled
    Palestine. Many Jews were forced to leave
    Palestine during this time as they were Russians
    and the Turks wanted them out.
  • The Sykes-Picot agreement of 1916 divided
    Palestine. Part was to go to the British, part to
    an Allied government, and Syria and Lebanon were
    to go to the French.
  • The Arabs revolted against the Ottoman Empire,
    and they believed that the British would back
    their bid for independence. The Arabs then felt
    slighted because Syria and Lebanon were to be
    given to the French, they thought Palestine was
    part of the land that was promised to them, and
    they disliked the idea of a Jewish homeland in
    Palestine.
  • After WWI Palestine became a British mandate
    (1920), and remained that way until 1948.

4
Importance of Jerusalem
  • Jerusalem is the third most important city in the
    Islamic faith after Mecca and Medina.
  • Jerusalem is the place where Mohammed, on his
    horse al-Baruq ascended to the heavens on his
    miraculous night journey. A huge mosque was built
    on this site with a gold dome, it is called
    Al-Aqsa.
  • Jerusalem is also significant to Islam because of
    its strong associations with the prophets,
    particularly David and Solomon. Jerusalem was
    also the place every Muslim faced when praying
    before the Kaaba was built in Mecca.
  • In Judaism Jerusalem is the holiest area of the
    world. Everything in Jerusalem is holy, down to
    the pebbles on the street.
  • Jerusalem has been important in Judaism for
    thousands of years, ever since King Davids
    struggle for the city, and his desire to build a
    Jewish temple there.
  • Jerusalem is mentioned hundreds of times in the
    Tanakh, the Jewish bible.
  • Jerusalem was also known as the center of the
    world in Medieval Christian thought, and
    continues to be important as Jesus was crucified
    and resurrected in Golgotha near Jerusalem.
  • Jerusalem is an important center for all three
    western religions, but the conflict over
    Jerusalem is between Judaism and Islam.

5
The Zionist Movement
  • The emancipation of European Jewry dates back as
    far as the French Revolution, when Jews were no
    longer confined to the ghettos of European
    cities, they were given citizenship and were
    treated like everyone else.
  • After the French revolution, a spiritual bond of
    the Jewish people to Israel began to be
    expressed. Around 1808 Lithuanian Jews began
    immigrating to Israel, purchasing Palestinian
    land and beginning an agricultural settlement.
  • In 1835 Rabbi Zyi Hirsch Kalischer petitioned
    Rothschild to buy the temple mount in Jerusalem
    for the Jews.
  • The emancipation of Jews was taken further with
    the introduction of the Zionist movement, an
    ideology that states that the Jews were a people
    like any other, however they were a people
    without a country and would remain politically
    powerless as long as they did not have a national
    home. According to Zionist ideology this
    homelessness was the cause of the Jewish
    problem
  • The Zionist movement was founded in 1897 by
    Theodor Herzl and was seen as the Jewish national
    liberation movement. By this point Judaism was
    seen as more than just a religion and the
    struggle became political and was spurred on by
    the rise of nationalism in the 19th century.

6
Balfour Declaration
  • November 2nd 1917, in the after math of the
    division of the Ottoman Empire after World War I.
    It stated that the British government supported
    the Zionist plans for a Jewish national home in
    Palestine, as long as the preset citizens of the
    region were not prejudiced against.
  • Text of the declaration
  • Foreign Office,November 2nd, 1917.Dear Lord
    Rothschild,I have much pleasure in conveying to
    you, on behalf of His Majesty's Government, the
    following declaration of sympathy with Jewish
    Zionist aspirations which has been submitted to,
    and approved by, the Cabinet"His Majesty's
    Government view with favour the establishment in
    Palestine of a national home for the Jewish
    people, and will use their best endeavours to
    facilitate the achievement of this object, it
    being clearly understood that nothing shall be
    done which may prejudice the civil and religious
    rights of existing non-Jewish communities in
    Palestine, or the rights and political status
    enjoyed by Jews in any other country".I should
    be grateful if you would bring this declaration
    to the knowledge of the Zionist
    Federation.Yours sincerelyArthur James Balfour
  • This declaration has been very controversial in
    how people decipher the text.
  • In his November, 2002 interview with the New
    Statesman magazine, the UK Foreign Secretary,
    Jack Straw blamed Britain's imperial past for
    many of the modern political problems, including
    the Arab-Israeli conflict.
  • "The Balfour declaration and the contradictory
    assurances which were being given to Palestinians
    in private at the same time as they were being
    given to the Israelisagain, an interesting
    history for us, but not an honorable one," he
    said.

7
League of Nations
  • The mandate area of Palestine after World War I
    consisted of present day Israel and Jordan it was
    in affect from 1920 to 1948.
  • British victories in World War I had left the
    bulk of this land under British military rule. In
    1929 Britain placed the Palestine area under
    civil rule, in anticipation of the formal League
    of Nations mandate to the United Kingdom that
    came into affect in September 1923. The League
    explicitly tasked the British with recognizing
    "the historical connection of the Jewish people
    with Palestine and to the grounds for
    reconstituting their national home in that
    country" and securing the establishment of the
    Jewish national home while simultaneously
    safeguarding "the civil and religious rights of
    all the inhabitants of Palestine.
  • The territory west of t he river Jordan, the area
    which was under British civil rule stayed under
    British power until 1948 when the united nations
    succeeded the league of nations and Britain
    decided to terminate their mandate. The United
    Nations special committee on Palestine
    recommended a creation of independent Arab and
    Jewish states, with Jerusalem placed under
    international administration. The plan was
    rejected immediately by the Palestinian and the
    Arab league, but supported by the Jewish
    population. The British refused to implement a
    policy not supported by both sides, and withdrew.
    The day before the British withdrew the Jews
    declared the independent state of Israel,
    resulting in the 1948 Arab- Israeli war.

8
Biltmore Declaration
  • Despite the need to find a haven for refugees,
    the doors of Palestine remained closed to Jewish
    immigration.
  • The Zionist leadership met in the Biltmore hotel
    in New York City in 1942.
  • At the Biltmore conference the Zionist leadership
    declared that it supported the establishment of
    Palestine as a Jewish Commonwealth.
  • The Biltmore declaration was a restatement of
    Zionist aims that went beyond the Balfour
    declaration and determined that the British were
    in principle an enemy to the movement.

9
UN Partitioning
  • UN Resolution 181 was adopted by the UN General
    Assembly on 29 November, 1947, and called for the
    division of Palestine into two states, Israel for
    the Jewish population, and Palestine for the Arab
    population. This Resolution had many flaws that
    could not be reconciled, leading to escalated
    conflict between the two factions.
  • Resolution 181, proposed by the United Nations
    Special Commission On Palestine (UNSCOP),
    attempted to divide the country so that each
    nation shared equal land. Complex borders were
    created so that the displacement of peoples could
    be limited. Having their state divided, seeing
    the Israeli land claims grow from 8 to
    approximately 50, unequal amounts of fertile
    land, as well as being allotted land that was not
    connected annoyed the Arab population. Inciting
    Hatred and sparking conflict.
  • According to the terms of Resolution 181,
    Jerusalem was to become an international city.
    Under the control of an international
    administration, the UN hoped for a peaceful city
    allowing for the religious doings of any
    Religion. Both the Israelis and the Palestinians
    were unhappy that Jerusalem could not be their
    capital city because it was the religious and
    economic center of their nations.

10
The War of Independence - 1948
  • Violence broke out immediately following the UN
    partition and swept throughout the country. Two
    armies of Arab irregular volunteers began the
    violence in retaliation of Resolution 181, and
    clashed with the Zionist underground army
    Haganah, and other dissident factions. Riots,
    ambushes, and other tragedies occurred, such as
    the massacres at Gush Etzion and Deir Yassin, by
    the Palestinians and Israelis respectively. Towns
    and villages were deserted because of citizens
    fleeing the fighting.
  • The Palestinians began a siege on Jewish
    Jerusalem, stopping food, water, and fuel from
    reaching that sector of the city. Meant to
    maintain mutual relations of peace while
    protecting and preserving the unique spiritual
    and religious interests within the city,
    Jerusalem became a war zone and a major component
    of the war. Lasting nearly 6 months, Jewish
    forces broke the siege and built the Burma Road,
    which allowed for resources to reach the city
    without crossing main Arab territories and roads.
    It was now evident that the religious claims for
    Jerusalem overruled and political action to
    divide the city.
  • On 14 May, 1948, The Jews proclaimed the
    Independent State of Israel and the British left
    Palestine. Calls for action from the Palestinians
    were answered by the neighboring countries of
    Egypt and Syria. Although greatly outnumbered,
    and with a disadvantage of arms, Israel overcame
    the invasion and even pushed the invaders back
    into their own countries. Israel also attempted
    to break through Jordanian positions, but failed,
    leading to the long, winding path of the Burma
    Road. The lack of unification and organization of
    the Arab armies brought about their defeat. Egypt
    held the Gaza Strip and Jordan held the West
    Bank. About 726 000 Arabs fled or were forced out
    of Israel into neighboring Arab countries and
    became refugees.
  • The War of Independence ended on 20 July, 1949,
    with Israel in control of more land than was
    given in the UN partition. Although a cease fire
    had been reached, peace was not in sight for the
    Arab-Israeli conflict.

11
Conflicts Since 1949
  • The Sinai CampaignFollowing the Lavon Affair
    in 1954, where an Israeli spy ring was caught
    attempting to blow up foreign institutions in
    Egypt, tensions quickly began to rise between the
    two nations. Egypt attempted to buy arms from the
    West, but when rejected, he turned to the Eastern
    Bloc, and shut down the Suez Canal to Israeli
    shipping. Israel then made an agreement with
    France to purchase arms to counter Egypt. Several
    border incursions occurred, but the conflict did
    not escalate until Israel joined Britain and
    France in 1956 in an attempt to reverse the
    nationalism of the Suez Canal. Israel took the
    Sinai, but returned it under pressure of the UN,
    but received guarantees that international
    waterways would remain open to Israeli shipping.
  • The 1967 6-Day War When tensions rose again in
    1967, Israel went to war with Egypt, Jordan, and
    Syria, and was successful at claiming the Sinai
    Peninsula, Gaza, the West Bank, the Golan
    Heights, and Jerusalem. The UN called for a cease
    fire, which was reached on 10 June, 1967, as well
    as the return of the lands acquired during the
    war. Israel eventually followed these orders for
    the Sinai Peninsula and Golan Heights, but
    maintained control over the West Bank, Gaza
    Strip, and Jerusalem. The balance of power had
    now changed in the Middle East, with Israel being
    more powerful than ever before.
  • The Yom Kippur WarOn 6 October, 1973, Egyptian
    troops crossed the Suez Canal and entered Israel.
    Israeli troops were caught by surprise, both by
    this being the most holy day in the Jewish
    religious calendar, and by lack of training and
    maintenance of equipment. Israel eventually
    regained their positions, signed a cease fire,
    and reached a peace settlement with Egypt in
    1979. Israel withdrew control of the Sinai
    Peninsula in 1982.
  • Several other minor conflicts have occurred since
    this time, including Israeli clashes with
    Lebanon, Syria, and Palestine under the Palestine
    Liberation Organization (PLO). None helped to
    find peace in the region, but all of these wars
    made it obvious that fighting is not the way to
    solve this conflict.

12
Oslo Accords
  • On September 13th 1993 representatives of the PLO
    and the state of Israel signed the Declaration
    of Principles on Interim Self-Government
    Arrangements. It contained a set of general
    principles regarding a 5 year interim period of
    palestinian self rule. The so called permanent
    Status Issues were deferred to a later
    negotiations that were intended to take place in
    the third year of the interim period but never
    actually occurred.
  • The main points of the Oslo Accords were
  • -The transfer of power to Palestinians in the
    West Bank and Gaza, including Israeli military
    withdrawal.
  • -Permanent status issues such as Jerusalem,
    Refugees, security arrangements and borders were
    to be settled at a later date.
  • -Security remains an Israeli responsibility
  • - A palestinian government was to be elected and
    the palestinian council will have a strong police
    force in order to guarantee public order and
    internal security
  • - two economic annexes were also agreed upon
    which outlined economic cooperation between
    Israel and Palestine.

13
The Wall
  • The building of the wall first started in 2002,
    it consists of both fully concrete wall and fence
    and runs 670 kilometres along the edge of the
    west bank. The construction started under Ariel
    Shannon and has caused a huge amount of conflict.
    Critics call it the apartheid wall.
  • Israel built the wall in order to protect Jewish
    citizens from Palestinian aggression, such a
    suicide bombing, car theft and other forms of
    violence. However, the wall does not run along
    the green line, a line that is the official
    boarder of the west bank and Israel, it runs
    inside the Palestinian side of the boarder,
    cutting off many Palestinians from the west bank
    and causing outcry from the Palestinians.
    Palestinians say it is a move by Ariel Shannon to
    take away Palestinian land. Palestinians say that
    had the wall been built along the green line it
    would have shown that Israel was serious about
    ending their occupation.
  • Both the UN and America condemn the wall, saying
    it is cutting off Palestinians in Israeli land
    from services such as health care and voting.

14
Refugees and Citizenship
  • The number of Palestinian people recorded to have
    been displaced from their homes due to the UN
    partitioning of Israel in 1947 ranges from 726000
    to 957000
  • Approximately one third of these refugees fled to
    the west bank, another third to the Gaza strip
    and the remainder to Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.
  • In 1967 another 300,000 Palestinians fled from
    the West Bank and Gaza. In 2004 there were
    approximately 4,186,7111 refugees located in
    Jordan, the West Bank, Gaza, Lebanon and Syria.
  • In the West Bank and Gaza strip refugees are
    stateless and controlled partially by limited
    Palestinian authority and partially by Israeli
    military occupation. Sharp declines in the
    success of the economy of these areas, due to
    political violence and Israeli imposed mobility
    restrictions such a the wall has led to dramatic
    increases in unemployment and poverty rates.
  • In Jordan most Palestinians are full citizens and
    have equal quality of life to other Jordanians,
    fewer than one in eight Palestinian refugees in
    Jordan live in camps, and most camps have become
    urban neighborhoods.
  • On the contrary palestinian refugees in Lebanon
    face numerous employment restrictions and are
    barred from owning property, refugees therefore
    often live in poor overcrowded refugee camps
  • The citizenship of the palestinian people living
    within Israeli land is complicated by the fact
    that in order to become a full citizen with
    rights that equal those of the Jewish Israeli
    people they would have to recognize the fact that
    they are governed and controlled by the Israeli
    government. The majority of the palestinian
    people are therefore practicing mass abstention.
  • The palestinian people living within the West
    Bank and the Gaza strip are on the other hand
    considered to be palestinian citizens and are
    able to vote for the palestinian government but
    not the Israeli government. For these reasons the
    citizenships of the palestinian people are
    compromised.

15
Todays Government System- Palestine
  • The PNA/ PA is the Palestinian government which
    is recognised by the Israeli government. The
    leader of which is Mohammed Abbas, the leader of
    Fatah and the prime minister is Ismail Haniya,
    the leader of Hamas, the radical Palestinian
    party. The January 2006 elections for the
    legislative council resulted in Hamas winning 74
    seats and fatah winning 45 seats. The result of
    this election was the international community
    refusing to give aid to Palestine for their
    support of a terrorist group whose policies are
    to never give concessions to Israel
  • The PLO ( Palestinian Liberation Organisation) is
    the internationally recognised organisation in
    Palestine. In numerous negotiations by the
    General assembly the PLO has been called the
    sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian
    people. The PLO have held an observatory seat in
    the United Nations since 1974. After the
    Palestinian declaration of independence the seat
    was renamed Palestine.

16
Todays Government System- Israel
  • The president of the Israel government is Moshe
    Katsav, and the prime minister is Ehud Olmart.
    The government is voted in by proportional
    representation. Presently the Kadima party holds
    29 seats, the Labour party holds 19 seats and the
    Likud party holds 12 seats.
  • Since Israel was created in 1948, they have had a
    seat in the UN and have had large support from
    the United States and initially most of the
    international community. However this support is
    gradually being lost due to their treatment of
    the Palestinians.
  • Israel has granted the Palestinians their own
    government however this government is
    subordinate to the Israeli government and has
    very limited power.

17
Tactics of War
  • Israel
  • Israel has a very well equipped army, which has
    huge amounts of money filtered into it by the
    government. Their main manoeuvres are to protect
    the Golan Heights, prevent aggression by
    surrounding Arab nations, usually doing the acts
    of aggression themselves. With regards to the
    West Bank and Gaza Strip Israel is as violent as
    the Palestinians, if not more, because every
    Israeli death is revenged by seven Palestinian
    deaths. Israel now uses arial bombing as a way to
    attack the leaders of Hamas and the resistance
    cells that target the Jewish population. Israels
    army has traditionally been financed by The
    United states, and therefore is well equipped.
  • Palestine
  • Palestine has no army, only militant groups that
    join to fight against the Israeli occupation.
    Brought up to hate Israel, they use terrorist
    tactics, such as suicide bombing, car bombs and
    other small scale terrorist acts in attempts to
    destroy Israel. It is even seen as honourable to
    die for your religion. Palestine is not organized
    and controlled by strong, non-radical leaders, is
    severely limited by the Israeli government, and
    is therefore is not able to create an army of any
    great capabilities, or a government that could
    create a Palestine that did not need radical
    leaders

18
Current News
  • The two main Palestinian political factions are
    supposed to be working together in a unity
    government. But gunmen loyal to the two factions,
    Hamas and Fatah, have instead been fighting
    fierce battles on the streets of Gaza.
  • Aleem Magbool, BBC news, Ramallah, West Bank
  • This situation means that there is no stable
    government currently in power in Palestine and
    therefore no one to make settlements with Israel,
    peace will never be created if there are battles
    being fought within the palestinian government as
    well as with the Israeli government.
  • Israeli troops have detained a member of the
    Palestinian parliament said to have close ties
    with a militant offshoot of the mainstream Fatah
    party.
  • http//news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6700555.stm
  • This situation proves that although the
    palestinian government has been granted
    sovereignty over the Gaza strip and The West
    Bank, The israeli government remains in control
    both politically and militarily.

19
Demands - Palestine
  • The Palestinians want to have their own state,
    they believe Israel needs to give them complete
    control of the Gaza strip, The West bank and the
    whole of Jerusalem. Some groups, such as Hamas
    who are unfortunately in power, believe that not
    only should Palestine be given the Gaza strip,
    the west bank and Jerusalem but also all of the
    pre 1967 land Israel had. The Palestinians also
    believe that they must be given complete control
    of their government and economics. However,
    Israel fears that giving Palestine autonomy would
    be a huge security risk, since giving Palestine
    the Gaza strip, there are been a larger number
    of rockets fired into Israel from inside the Gaza
    strip than ever before. Furthermore, Palestine
    insists that Palestinian refugees need to be
    returned to the land they once owned, a
    concession that Israel cannot grant, mostly
    because if they are returned, there will a
    majority of Palestine in the country and thus
    they would have the ability to dissolve the
    Jewish state.
  • Lastly, the Palestinians require that they are
    given enough natural resources in order to make
    them a viable country, a topic of hot debate
    because water is crucial to the existence of both
    countries.

20
Demands - Israel
  • Having control over the entire state of Israel,
    and the Palestinians surrounded in two small
    regions, Israel has very few demands remaining to
    be addressed. Historical demands that remain to
    be fulfilled are exclusively owning East
    Jerusalem and the Old City, as well as
    recognition as a state by the Palestinians and
    other Arab peoples. Of Hamas, the current
    political leaders of Palestine, Israel demands
    protection of Israeli citizens in illegal cities
    built on land taken from Palestine, that they
    renounce violence, and that they abide by all
    previous agreements made during this conflict.

21
Our Solution
  • Through our research of the historically
    attempted solutions and the demands of the
    Palestinian and Israeli people we have come to
    the conclusion that in order to create peace in
    this area, two separate, independent states will
    have to be created with their own identity,
    national language, religion and flag. Each nation
    would have its own seat in the UN, its own
    government and government system and its own
    individual economy.
  • In order to divide the land, a border will be
    created, dividing the country equally in half.
    The border will run east, west and will provide
    the Israelis and Palestinians with equal amounts
    of fertile/ arable land, as well as equal amounts
    of desert or arid land. They will also have equal
    access to fresh water as well as Ocean access to
    allow for trade.
  • Jerusalem will be created as an international
    Free city, which is open for religious doings and
    will recognize Jewish, Islamic and Christian
    Holidays. There will be no residential areas
    within old Jerusalem to prevent either religion/
    nationality from holding a stronger civilian
    presence around the significant historical or
    religious areas and buildings.

22
Solution continued...
  • Both of the newly established nations will
    partake in a slow demilitarization to a defensive
    level, they will also partake in
    denuclearization.
  • The international community will be prevented
    from providing military aid to either country,
    but will react to any aggression against either
    country or by any other international country
    against either of the newly created states. The
    international reaction will come in the form of
    sanctions or intervention by UN and international
    armies.
  • The UN will oversee and moderate the governments
    and economies of the two nations for a period of
    5 years and if the nations keep the peace they
    will be provided with international aid and
    loans.
  • Unlimited funds will be provided to create this
    division and money will be given to both nations
    to build new towns and cities and homes for the
    citizens of the new states. Money will also be
    provided to return refugees to their new nations
    and to help them settle.
  • A school board will be created for both countries
    to teach the children peace and teach both
    religions equally, in order that the hatred will
    not be passed on to future generations.

23
Bibliography
  • www.mideastweb.org/briefhistory.htm
  • www.bbc.co.uk
  • http//www.mideastweb.org/zionism.htm
  • http//www.zionism-israel.com/zionism_history.htm
  • http//www.mideastweb.org/briefhistory.htmThe20B
    ritish20Mandate
  • http//www.palestinefacts.org/pf_1991to_now_oslo_a
    ccords.php
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