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351 Spath. Arab-Israeli conflicts. Israel/Palestine. Maps pre-1948 conflicts. Yishuv. 1947 UN Partition Plan. 1948 Israel. First Arab-Israeli War of 1948 (review). Israel Declares State – 14 May 1948 Arab Armies invade Israel - 15 May, 1948
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351 Spath Arab-Israeli conflicts
Maps pre-1948 conflicts Yishuv 1947 UN Partition Plan 1948 Israel
First Arab-Israeli Warof 1948 (review) • Israel Declares State – 14 May 1948 • Arab Armies invade Israel - 15 May, 1948 • Temporary cease fire, followed by Israeli gains beyond Partition Plan • Cease fire, Israeli recognition among UN and major powers
Al-Nakba (The Catastrophe) • About 700,000 Palestinian Arabs were forced or fled from their homes (70%) and property • Ben-Gurion to cabinet, “prevent their return” • Destitution among Palestinians in refugee camps
1956 Suez War (review) • Nasser opposition to Baghdad Pact • Czech Arms deal after border fighting in Gaza • Aswan High Dam Project & revocation of loan • Nasser’s Nationalization of the Suez • France, Britain, Israel invade Sinai • UNEF on border between Gaza Strip & Israel and at Sharm al-Shaykh to ensure open straits • Reputational effects
1967 War Causes • Long-term • No recognition of Israel among Arab states • Arabs states’ Previous defeats • Israeli ‘hawkishness’ & excessive retaliation • Fear and mistrust by both sides (fuels arms buildup) • No resolution of refugee issue (Palestinians became focal point for Arabism) • Proximate • Arms buildup (cold war context) • Superpower interference (esp. Soviet ‘intelligence’) • Defense pacts between Egypt, Syria, Jordan • Turbulence in Syria (Salah Jadid, headwaters project, turn to S.U.) • Palestinian raids & border clashes b/w Syrians and Israelis in Golan • Nasser’s brinkmanship • Lack of diplomatic voices in warring countries and internat’l community
Six Day War -June, 1967 Arab Mobilization Israel takes Sinai
Results • Israel restored its image as a strong and independent state. • Khartoum Resolution (1967) • Israel was now three times bigger than it had been in 1966. • The pan-Arab ideas of Nasser were losing legitimacy. He took a great hit to his prestige. • Israel now had the security risk of an extra 1 million Arab people inside its own borders. About 1/3 million Arabs fled to Jordan- where they were easy prey to PLO recruiters. • Resolution 242 (accepted by Israel, Egypt, Jordan) • Israel launched a huge settlement plan to occupy the land won with people loyal to Israel.
War of Attrition (1967-1970) 1973 Yom Kippur War (Harb Tishrin)
Egyptian soldiers cross the canal by boat - Bar Lev line
1973 War • Last conflict b/w Israel and Allied Arab force • Superior military engineering to cross Bar Lev Line • Soviet and U.S. airlifts of support • Saved Israelis from utter defeat as they almost ran out of ammunition • Israeli counter-offensive • Ended in cease fire and Resolution 338 • Affirms resolution 242 & prompted Geneva Conference (preceded the Egyptian-Israeli diplomacy and ultimately peace agreement of 1979) • Arab Oil Embargo (next week – Is oil a weapon?)
The Golan Heights. • With seeming success of Egyptian army, Syria invaded Israel from the North over the Golan Heights, making initial gains but then being rebuffed.
Parties involved in the peace process • On the Israeli side: • Doves: Labor, Mapam & Arab parties • Hawks: Likud, Gush Emunim & Nationalist parties (like YisraelBeiteinu – “no loyalty, no citizenship”) • Pragmatist (Flip-floppers) – Shas • Kadima - unilateral • On the Palestinian side: • Compromisers: The Palestinian National Authority, Fatah, DFLP • Purists: Hamas (changing?), Islamic Jihad, PFLP • The United States • Other: EU, UN, Russia [+ U.S. = Quartet]
Overview of the peace process • By the 1991 Madrid Conference: • Intifada • Gulf War • Demise of Soviet Union • Labor government in Israel • 1991-93: • The issue of settlements • Rabin’s election • 1993: Oslo I Agreement: • Mutual recognition between PLO & Israel • 5-year program for Palestinian autonomy
Overview of the peace process – cont. • 1994: Return of Arafat to the Occupied Territories • 1994: Israel-Jordan peace agreement • 1995: Oslo II agreement • 1995-2000: Breakdown: • Assassination of Rabin • Israeli practices against spirit & letter of accord • Arafat’s monopolization of power • Increased popularity and violent activity of Hamas • 2000-: Reversal • Election of Sharon • Second Intifada • Reinvasion of PNA territories
OSLO II – toward expanding Palestinian self-rule • Creation of Palestinian Council to administer the territories • Redeployments of Israeli military from some of the Occupied Territories • Area A – administered by Palestinian Authority in civil & security issues • Area B– administered by PA in civil issues, but security remains under Israeli admin • Area C– Israeli control w/ 3-phase redeployment over 18 months; excludes areas subject to final status negotiations & religious sites; Israeli security overrides • “Safe Passage” • Recognition in Pal. Covenant • Palestinian police, no other armed forces • Further negotiations on final status issues after implementation
Reported Bridging Proposal by Clinton • Accepted as basis for further negotiations • Second round of negotiations at Taba under Euro sponsorship • No agreement. Ehud Barak pulls out because he was up for election • Road map (2002) • Arab Peace Initiative (2002, 2007)
Israeli Strategies of Control • Settlements • Walls & Fences • Confiscation and destruction of property • Roadblocks & checkpoints • Prisons & Detention (roughly < 1,000) • Inhibiting Trade (through Israel only) • Imposed embargo • Permitted list vs. Not-Permitted (objectionable) list • Use of Informers • Public employment of Palestinians in Israeli construction projects • Divide Opposition • All yields feelings of inferiority
Palestinian strategies for liberation • Palestinian reliance on neighbor states • Through comprehensive settlement (Arab Peace Initative, 2002, 2007) • Through economic & military support • Palestinian self-reliance—PLO • Using neighbors’ territories—Jordan and Lebanon • Internal resistance—the two Intifada’s (1987-91, 2000-04/05) • From rock throwing to suicide bombing to rocket attacks • Negotiations • Protest and Demonstrations (ISM, etc)
Conceptual issues… • Exclusivist (rejectionist) and Accommodationist • -- competing claims of 2 peoples to exclusive right of national self-determination and sovereignty on same piece of land • single-state (can be exclusivist b/c undermines the other) • exclusivist to accommodationist trend (untenable status quo) • Violent and non-violent (diplomatic vs. militaristic strategies for resolution) • RIPENESS • Positive and Negative peace • -- Negative absence of war or direct violence • -- Positive transformation of society w/ principles of equality, social justice, & nonviolence
Some of the issues… • A bi-national state or a two-state solution? • Fixed, agreed-upon borders • Status of East Jerusalem • Jewish Settlements (land/growth) • Law of Return and Nationality Law • Fate of Palestinian refugees (compensation/return) • Right of Return (Res. 194) • Resource allocation (i.e. water issues) • How sovereign should the Palestinian state be? • Economic viability of Israel and Palestine
Some scenarios presented previously… • Two states for two people • Greater Israel (Palestinian transfer v. Palestinians as citizens) • Greater Palestine (P. state w/ Jews as citizens) • Partial autonomy – Palestine controls civic affairs & internal security of its territories, Israel administers external security and controls land & resources • Return to pre-Oslo situation – Israeli occupation • Binational state on land of Palestine and Israel
Wood carvers in Deheisheh Refugee Camp Har Homa Settlement Israeli Only Highway leading to settlement