280 likes | 473 Views
Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus Regional Issues Map: Creation of Israel The Arab-Israeli Conflict Faces of History: Golda Meir. Conflicts in the Middle East. Preview, continued Revolution in Iran Conflict in Iraq Visual Study Guide / Quick Facts Video: The Impact of Oil.
E N D
Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus Regional Issues Map: Creation of Israel The Arab-Israeli Conflict Faces of History: Golda Meir Conflicts in the Middle East
Preview, continued Revolution in Iran Conflict in Iraq Visual Study Guide / Quick Facts Video: The Impact of Oil Conflicts in the Middle East
Conflicts in the Middle East Main Idea Regional issues in the Middle East have led to conflicts between Israel and its neighbors and to conflicts in and between Iran and Iraq. • Reading Focus • How have regional issues contributed to conflicts in the Middle East? • What were some key events in the Arab-Israeli conflict? • What caused a revolution in Iran? • How have conflicts in Iraq affected that country?
Oil in the Middle East Oil Revenues • About two-thirds of world’s known oil reserved located in Middle East • Reserves have been great source of wealth for Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, other countries • Most members of Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries • OPEC attempts to regulate production of oil exports to maximize revenues • Oil revenues allowed Middle East governments to modernize countries, promote industrialization, economic, social development Regional Issues Over the last few decades, major conflicts have erupted in the Middle East. Issues that have contributed to the conflicts include the presence of huge oil reserves, the growth of Islamism, and the conflict between Israel and its neighbors. However, oil has also been a source of conflict.
Oil as source of conflict in Middle East Some governments have used oil revenues to build up military, maintain power, threaten neighbors Oil wealth has caused internal clashes within countries, societies Region’s strategic importance as source of oil has led outside nations to become involved in Middle Eastern affairs, politics Importance of Oil
Conflicts, Violence Islamists • Egypt, Iran, Iraq have seen growth of Islamism; has led to conflicts within society, government • Some extremists have used violence to bring about changes, have attacked regional governments, their allies, innocent civilians • Movement to reorder government, society according to Islamic laws • Islamists believe Muslim countries have strayed from true Islam, followed Western models of political, economic development Growth of Islamism
Conflicts with Israel • 1948, Israel established; since then most Middle Eastern countries have refused to recognize its right to exist • Some countries have repeatedly attacked Israel, funded militant groups that conduct raids, terrorist attacks against Israelis • Expansion of Israel • Series of wars between Israel, neighbors has led to expansion of Israel • Israel controls more land now than in 1948 when created • Result: many Palestinian Arabs live under Israeli control; another source of tension, conflict in region
Summarize What regional issues have led to conflicts in the Middle East? Answer(s): use of oil revenues; growth of Islamism; conflicts with Israel
War in 1967, 1973 Israeli Attacks Six-Day War • 1967, Egypt demanded UN remove troops from Gaza, Sinai Peninsula • Egyptian troops moved into Sinai to close off Gulf of Aqaba, Israel’s route to Red Sea • Israel expected large-scale Arab attack, decided to strike first • Launched air strikes against Egypt, Syria, Jordan; destroyed most of airplanes on ground • Ground troops moved in, defeated Arabs • In Six-Day War Israel took control of Golan Heights, Sinai Peninsula, Gaza Strip, West Bank, East Jerusalem • Took control of land in West Bank, Gaza with large Palestinian population The Arab-Israeli Conflict The Arab-Israeli conflict that began in 1948 has continued through the years. In 1967 and again in 1973, war erupted. Six years after the 1973 war, Egypt and Israel singed a peace agreement, but unrest among Palestinian Arabs in Israel remained a major problem.
Egypt Strikes Back • Yom Kippur War • Egypt, Syria determined to win territory back, launched Yom Kippur War, surprise attack against Israel in 1973 • Took name from Jewish holy day when attack began • U.S. Support • At first Arab troops made gains in war; Israeli’s government, led by Golda Meir, not fully prepared for attack; needed military support from U.S. • With support, Israeli forces regrouped, pushed back Egyptian, Syrian armies • Oil Embargo • Both sides agreed to cease-fire after weeks of fighting • During war, Arab members of OPEC declared oil embargo against countries supporting Israel • Price of oil around world rose dramatically as result of refusal to sell oil
Camp David Peace Treaty • 1977, Egyptian president Anwar Sadat made momentous declaration: Egypt wanted peace with Israel • U.S. president Jimmy Carter invited Sadat, Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin to Camp David, presidential retreat in Maryland • 1978, Sadat, Begin reached agreement known as Camp David Accords • Egypt recognized Israel; Israel returned Sinai Peninsula to Egypt • Treaty ended 30 years hostility between Egypt, Israel A Peace Agreement Until the late 1970s, no Arab nation had recognized Israel’s right to exist.
Palestinian Nationalism Palestinian Resentment • 1964, Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) formed • Pledged to destroy Israel, replace with Palestinian state • 1969, Yasser Arafat became leader, PLO launched guerilla attacks against Israel • In effort to stop attacks, Israel invaded Lebanon, 1978 and 1982 • Tensions building also in West Bank, Gaza where Israel had begun building settlements • 1987, Palestinian resentment began rebellion called intifada Palestinian Unrest • Egypt, Israel made peace; Palestinian Arabs continued struggle for nationhood • 1947 UN partition plan had called for two states in Palestine—a Jewish state, an Arab state • After 1948 Arab-Israeli war, land set aside for Arab state occupied by Israel, Egypt, Jordan
Tenuous Peace • Intifada • Palestinian youths battled Israeli troops in widespread street violence • Israel responded with military, police resistance; fighting continued to 1990s • 1993, Arafat, Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin negotiated Oslo Accords • Oslo Accords • Oslo Accords called for Palestinians to gradually gain control over governing West Bank, Gaza • Israel, PLO supposed to sign permanent peace agreement by 1998 • Undermining Peace • Extremists on both sides worked to undermine peace process • Militant group Hamas launched suicide bombings in Israel • 1995, Rabin assassinated; relations between Israeli, Palestinian leadership soured
More Fighting Hamas in Control • Israelis countered by sending troops backed by tanks, fighter jets, helicopter gunships into cities in West Bank, Gaza • 2004, Arafat died, succeeded by Mahmoud Abbas • 2004, Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon withdrew Israel from Gaza, parts of West Bank • 2005, Gaza turned over to Palestinians • 2006, militant Hamas won control of Palestinian parliament Continuing the Conflict • 2000—second intifada began • Palestinian youths joined by Palestinian security forces with guns • Hamas sent suicide bombers into Israel to attack civilians Armed conflict also erupted when Israeli soldiers were kidnapped along borders with Gaza and Lebanon. Israel launched air strikes to secure its borders.
Sequence Describe the sequence of events in the Arab-Israeli conflict. Answer(s): 1967: Six-Day War; 1973: Yom Kippur War; 1978: Camp David Accords; 1987: intifada; 1993: Oslo Accords; 2000: second intifada; 2005: Israel withdraws from Gaza
Revolution in Iran • Different Kind of Conflict • Different kind of conflict erupted in Iran • Revolution ousted shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi • Westernization of Iran • Shah had close ties with Western governments, oil companies • Iran westernized, foreign influence grew • Society Changed • By 1970s, Iran had changed from traditional rural society • Had become more industrialized, urban society • Islamists Opposed Shah • Many Iranians felt threatened by rapid change, others felt betrayed by corrupt government • Islamists opposed shah because of ties to West
1978, Iranians began to protest against shah’s rule Protests inspired by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Shia religious leader 1979, unable to calm unrest, shah fled Iran Iran became Islamic republic with Khomeini as leader, during Iranian Revolution Rise of Khomeini
American Hostages Khomeini’s Reign • 1979, Iranian revolutionaries seized U.S. embassy in Tehran, took 66 Americans hostage • Iranians demanded shah be returned to Iran, stand trial • Shah left U.S., but Iranians held hostages until January, 1981 • Under Khomeini, government suppressed political opposition, enforced strict social religious values • Foreign policy strongly anti-Western, especially after shah went to U.S. for medical treatment Khomeini’s Reign
Sequence What was the sequence of events that led to the Iranian Revolution? Answer(s): Protests began against the shah; the shah fled Iran in 1979; Iran became an Islamic republic with Khomeini as its leader
Iran-Iraq War Persian Gulf War • 1980, Iraq attacked Iran because of border disputes • Also Iran called for revolution among Iraq’s Shiite population • War long, costly; as many as 500,000 dead on both sides • Iraq used chemical weapons • 1988, both sides agreed to cease-fire • After cease-fire, Saddam Hussein continued to build up Iraq’s military; already had largest army in Arab world • 1990, Iraq accused neighboring Kuwait of drilling into Iraqi oil field, stealing oil • Hussein used this as excuse to invade Kuwait Conflict in Iraq As Iran’s new government was dealing with the hostage crisis, it found itself at war with its neighbor, Iraq.
Sanctions • In effort to end Iraqi occupation of Kuwait, UN passed economic sanctions against Iraq; sanctions failed • Result: U.S.-led coalition launched Persian Gulf War • Attacked Iraqi forces in Kuwait; Kuwait freed within weeks • Weapons • After war, UN continued economic sanctions, insisted Iraq destroy chemical, biological weapons, agree not to develop nuclear weapons • Inspectors had been sent to verify Iraq’s weapons had been destroyed • Iraq failed to fully cooperate with UN weapons inspectors
Weapons Inspections Growing Insurgency • UN weapons inspections did not find stockpiles of chemical, biological, nuclear weapons • Iraq again did not fully cooperate • Some U.S. officials convinced Hussein hiding weapons • 2003, another U.S.-led coalition invaded Iraq, forcing Hussein out • Efforts to restore peace thwarted • Growing insurgency targeted coalition forces, Iraqi allies, innocent civilians The Iraq War • After attacks of September 11, 2001, some U.S. leaders believed Saddam Hussein posed a greater threat to America than before • Hussein might have deadly weapons he could give to terrorists Insurgent attacks by different groups from both inside and outside Iraq caused a greater number of casualties.
Meanwhile, coalition worked to create new, democratic government in Iraq 2004, power transferred to Iraqis 2005, Iraqis voted in country’s first multiparty election in fifty years Later approved new constitution to make Iraq Islamic federal democracy Continued violence, potential for civil war made country’s future highly uncertain Coalition Government
Infer What are the main problems Iraq has faced in recent years? Answer(s): wars, economic sanctions, insurgency, potential for civil war
VideoThe Impact of Oil Click above to play the video.