The Israel – Palestine conflict is rooted in pre-biblical times. Though its borders have shifted over the years, Palestinian territories used to be what is now Israel, Gaza, and the West Bank.
Both
Israeli Jews’ and Palestinian Arabs’ history, culture, and identity are linked
to the Palestinian territories and to the
ancient city of Jerusalem, “one of the most bitterly contested cities on
earth,” according to The Associated Press.
The
Ottoman Empire controlled the region for about 400 years before its defeat,
along with Germany, in World War I. Britain was given control of
Palestine by the League of
Nations in 1920, under an order called the British Mandate.
In
1917, the British government signaled its support for the establishment of a Jewish state in
Israel with the Balfour Declaration.
While the declaration stated support, it also said that “nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestinian territories, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.”
Jewish migration from eastern and
central Europe surged from 1922 to 1947 as Jews fled
persecution and the destruction of their communities during the interwar period
and during World War II. By the end of the Holocaust, more than 6 million
European Jews had been murdered, and many survivors were left stateless.
As the
number of Jewish immigrants increased, many Palestinians were displaced. They
began pushing back and violence resulted.
In 1929, 67 Jews were killed in the Hebron massacre, part of Palestinian riots against Jewish immigration in Palestine.
1. Current
Dispute
Gaza: Also
known as the Gaza Strip, it’s the home to about 2 million Palestinians,
many of them displaced after leaving or being driven from Israel during
the War of Independence.
West
Bank: Smaller than Delaware, the West Bank is east of
Israel. About 3 million Palestinians live there, most of them Muslim Arabs. The
West Bank contains a number of Jewish holy sites, which are visited by
thousands of pilgrims every year.
East
Jerusalem: Jerusalem itself is a divided, disputed city. It was
cut in two after the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. Israel
controlled the western portion and Jordan controlled the east.
Israel captured the entire city in the 1967 Six-Day War.
Though
Jerusalem's ownership is disputed, Israeli
officials claim it as the undivided capital of Israel. In
2017, the Trump administration moved the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem
from Tel Aviv, a formal recognition of Jerusalem as the capital.
However,
most nations do not acknowledge Jerusalem
as belonging to either Israelis or Palestinians.
2, Groups
participating in the fight
Hamas
Hamas is the
largest Palestinian militant group and has fired rockets
from Gaza at Israeli cities in the fighting.
It was
founded in 1987 during the first Palestinian uprising against Israeli
occupation of Gaza and the West Bank and hasand has controlled Gaza since winning elections in 2006, then wresting
military control from another leadership group in 2007. It's
committed to the destruction of Israel and is considered a terrorist group by
the U.S., the U.K. and other nations.
Israeli
Defense Forces
The
IDF is the combined armed
forces of Israel, including the army, navy, and air force. It was
established in 1948, two weeks after Israel declared itself a state.
3. Timeline
of conflict
1947: The U.N.
votes to divide Palestine
into separate Jewish and Arab states and make Jerusalem an
international city. Arabs reject the plan, which is later dropped.
1948: After
the British Mandate expires on May 14, the Jewish
People's Council meets in Tel Aviv and establishes the State of Israel. The
U.S. officially recognized the new nation later that day; the USSR acknowledges
it three days later.
1949: The
Armistice Agreements is a U.N.-mediated
attempt to bring peace to Palestine. Israel signs agreements
with Egypt, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon to reach a formal
peace treaty within six months, but the effort ultimately fails.
1956: Egypt
nationalizes the Suez Canal and bars Israeli ships from using it and the
Straits of Tiran, another shipping route. Israel, aided by Britain and France,
invades Egypt. The Soviet Union, an ally of Egypt, threatens nuclear
retaliation, and the U.S. pressures British, French and Israeli forces to
withdraw. The U.N. deploys a peacekeeping force.
1964: The
Palestine Liberation Organization, a group with the goal of uniting Arab groups
and liberating the Palestinian territories through armed struggle, was formed in
Egypt.
1967: The
Six-Day War grows out of the Suez Canal conflict. Egypt
orders the U.N. force to leave, closes the Straits of Tiran to Israel
again, and plans a secret attack against Israel. In a
preemptive strike, Israel attacked Egypt and later Jordan and Syria,
capturing Gaza, the West Bank, East Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, and the Sinai
Peninsula.
1973: The
Yom Kippur War starts with Egypt and Syria attacking Israel on Yom Kippur, the
holiest day of the Jewish year. The war is an attempt to reverse the
defeat of the 1967 war. The Israelis counterattack and win. The U.S.
helps secure disengagement agreements from combatants, laying the groundwork for
future peace efforts.
1979: The Camp David
Accords, an Israeli-Egyptian peace deal, is set up by President
Jimmy Carter and signed by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin.
1979: Israel
begins gradual withdrawal from the Sinai.
1987: Palestinians
stage the first of two uprisings, or intifadas, in Gaza, Israel and the West
Bank, using mass boycotts, civil disobedience and attacks on Israelis. More
than 50 Israeli civilians are killed. The intifada lasts more than
five years, ending in September 1993.
The
Israeli military kills 1,070
Palestinians, including 237 children. Jewish settlers kill 54 Palestinians.
The U.S. and the U.N. criticize Israel's use of lethal force.
1991: In
response to the intifada, the Madrid
Conference, a historical gathering of all participants in the Arab-Israeli conflict,
is chaired by the U.S. and Russia.
1993: Oslo
I, known as the Declaration of Principles, is signed by Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. It establishes a timetable
for a Middle East peace process.
1995: Oslo
II is signed, a second agreement in which the Palestine Liberation Organization
recognizes the state of Israel and Israel allows Palestinians limited
self-government in Gaza.
2000: President
Bill Clinton, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, and Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat gather at the Camp David summit, a meeting intended to end
hostilities. It ends without an agreement. Palestinians, frustrated over
failures to create a Palestinian state, began the second intifada in September,
which lasted until February 2005. An estimated 3,100
Palestinians and nearly 1,000 Israelis were killed.
2005: Israel
withdraws from Gaza but retains control.
2007: Hamas,
the militant Palestinian group, wins elections in Gaza.
2008: Israel
launches a major military campaign against Hamas in Gaza after
increased rocket fire from militants. The fighting ended on Jan. 18, 2009, with
1,440 Palestinians and 13 Israelis killed.
2012: Israeli
forces kill Ahmed Jabari, a Hamas military chief, in a missile strike. The
strike is part of an Israeli
operation to eliminate weapons and militants in Gaza. Hamas
says the killing has "opened the gates of hell."
2014: Hamas
kidnaps and kills three Israeli teens in the West Bank, igniting the Gaza War,
in which rocket attacks and airstrikes kill 2,251 Palestinians and 73
Israelis. A senior Hamas leader praises the kidnapping and says it was intended to spark a new
Palestinian uprising. The war lasted for 50 days.
2017: The
Trump administration says it will move the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem
from Tel Aviv, in effect an official U.S. recognition of Israel's claim to
the city. The embassy is relocated in 2018.
2018: Protests
break out on the Gaza-Israeli border as the U.S. Embassy is relocated.
Demonstrators throw explosives and rocks across barrier fences and
are met with gunfire and tear gas. At least 58 Palestinians are killed, the
Gaza health ministry says.
2021: Fighting
erupts again as Israeli police raid the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem on
April 13, the first night of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, and disconnect
speakers broadcasting prayers as Reuven Rivlin, the Israeli president, is
speaking at the Western Wall, a site sacred to the Jewish people. The raid, on what's
considered a holy Muslim
site on one of the holiest nights of Ramadan, is viewed by Muslims as an
insult.
2022: In
the spring and summer of 2022 Israel experienced a string of terrorist attacks
that led it to take what it described as preemptive action, including
airstrikes targeting senior commanders and weapons depots, against Iran-backed
militant groups such as Islamic Jihad. At least 44 Palestinians, including 15
children, were killed in three days of violence in August 2022.
2023: In
January, Israel launched the first of two raids against the Jenin refugee camp
in the West Bank, where it said Palestinian militants and activists were hiding
out. The second raid, in July 2023, saw Israel send about 1,000 soldiers,
backed by drone strikes, to Jenin to demolish what it characterized as a
militant "command center."
October
2023: In the biggest offensive in years, dozens of gunmen
from the Palestinian militant group Hamas infiltrate southern Israel in a
stunning surprise attack that coincided with a major Jewish holiday. Overnight and
into the morning, Hamas launched thousands of rockets into
Israel. Israel’s national rescue service said at least dozens of people were
killed and hundreds wounded.
Research
article: USA Today (main). Other reference: The Associated Press; United Nations; Reuters and U.S.
State Department
6 Comments:
Who do you support guys?
huna ta palestine ko kehi dosh haina, sabai hamas ko karan vako ho
malai ta israel ma vako nepali students ko tension xa
nice post
Support the honest people! Support the victims!!
people scare to speak truth. poor people has no one to speak for them.
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