Israel Palestine Isue
Israel Palestine Isue
Israel Palestine Isue
and Solutions
The Israel-Palestine conflict – often referred as the ‘world’s most intractable
conflict’ – is rooted in a dispute over land claimed by Jews as their biblical
birthright and by the Palestinians, who seek self-determination. Despite
repeated attempts to end the conflict between the two countries, there is no
peace settlement in sight.
Jews have been persecuted throughout the history due to their religious
beliefs and foreign culture.
In 1897, Jews started a movement called a Zionist movement, to
escape persecution and establish their own state in their ancestral
homeland, Israel. The World Zionist Organisation was created to
advocate for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine.
As a result, a large number of Jews started flowing into Palestine and
they bought land and started settling down there.
By 1916, Palestine came under the British control after the Sykes-Picot
Agreement (a secret agreement between Great Britain and France).
This led to the division of the old Ottoman Turkish Empire.
Later through Balfour declaration, the British foreign secretary James
Balfour agreed to the establishment of a Jewish homeland.
After Nazis gained power in Germany in 1930s, the Jews influx to
Palestine took a major turn with hundreds of thousands of them resettled
from Europe to Palestine. Arabs saw this as a threat to their homeland
and they fought bitterly with them. As the British Government remained
as a mute spectator, violence reached its peak.
In 1947, the British Government referred the question of the future of
Palestine to the United Nations. UN voted to split the land into two
countries. Jewish people accepted the agreement and declared
independence of Israel.
Under the UN Charter, there can lawfully be no territorial gains from war,
even by a state acting in self-defense.
Therefore, in response to the Six-Day War, the UN Security Council
adopted a resolution for ‘Land for peace’ and it mandated that Israel
should return the captured areas back to the defeated nations.
In the light of Israel’s reluctance to return the captured territories,
another Arab-Israeli war erupted in 1973 (Yom Kippur war) in which
Israel suffered some setbacks.
In 1979, Israel-Egypt signed a peace treaty, accordingly Israel return
Sinai Peninsula to Egypt (1982). Egypt became the first Arab nation to
officially recognize Israel as a state.
Hamas and Fatah
In 1987, Hamas (Islamic Militant group) for the liberation of Palestine
through Jihad came into existence. It refused to recognize Israel as a
country. It has received support from Iran and Syria.
On the other hand, Fatah, a faction of PLO under Yasser Arafat received
support from Western nations.