Israeli-Palestinian conflict
|
Israel, the West Bank and Gaza Strip are at the center of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. |
The
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a part of the greater
Arab-Israeli conflict, is an ongoing
conflict between the
State of Israel and
Palestinian Arabs.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not a simple two-sided conflict with all Israelis (or even all Israeli
Jews) sharing one point of view and all Palestinians another. In both communities, some individuals and groups advocate total territorial removal of the other community, some advocate a
two-state solution, and some advocate a
binational solution of a single secular state encompassing present-day Israel, the
Gaza Strip, the
West Bank, and
East Jerusalem.
Since the
Oslo Accords, the government of Israel and the
Palestinian Authority (PA) have been officially committed to an eventual two-state solution. The main unresolved issues between these two bodies are:
* The status and future of the
West Bank,
Gaza Strip, and
East Jerusalem which comprise the areas for the proposed
State of Palestine.
* Israeli security, including the
Israeli West Bank barrier.
* Palestinian security.
* The nature of a future
Palestinian state.
* The fate of the
Palestinian refugees.
* The
settlement policies of Israel, and the ultimate fate of settlements.
* Sovereignty over Jerusalem's holy sites, including the
Temple Mount and
Western Wall complex.
The refugee issue arose as a result of the
1948 Arab-Israeli war. The issue of the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and East Jerusalem arose as a result of the
Six-Day War in 1967.
There has been both literal prolonged violent
conflict, with various levels of intensity, and the underlying conflict of ideas, goals and principles. On both sides, there have at various times been parties who differ in the degree to which they advocate or use the violent tactics,
active non-violence, etc. There are people who sympathize with the goals of one or the other side, without necessarily embracing the tactics that have been used on behalf of those goals; further, there are those who embrace at least some of the goals of both sides. And to refer to "both" sides is, itself, a simplification:
Fatah and
Hamas are far from agreement over goals for the Palestinians; the same could be said for the various Israeli political parties, even if discussion is limited to the Jewish Israeli parties.
| PLO | Fatah | Hamas | PIJ | PFLP | | | | | |
| The emblems of major Palestinian organizations include a map of present-day Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. (Significant populations of Palestinians and Israelis alike claim a right to the entire region). |
Those qualifications mean that any rapid summary of the nature of the conflict is bound to be very partial. That said, those who advocate violent Palestinian resistance generally justify doing so as legitimate resistance to an illegitimate Israeli
military occupation of Palestine supported by military and diplomatic assistance from the United States. Many tend to view the armed Palestinian resistance within the West Bank and Gaza Strip as a right granted by the
Geneva conventions and the
United Nations Charter, and some extend this view to justify attacks, frequently against civilians, within Israel proper. Another popular justification is based on Islamic (some call it
Islamist) religious views.
Conversely, those sympathetic to Israeli military action and other Israeli measures against the Palestinians tend to view these actions as legitimate Israeli self-defense against a campaign of
terrorism perpetrated by Palestinian groups such as
Hamas,
Islamic Jihad,
Fatah and others, and supported by other states in the region and by the majority of the Palestinians, at least those Palestinians who are not Israeli citizens. Many tend to believe that the control of part or all of the territory is necessary for the security of Israel. This sharp contrast of views on the legitimacy of the actions of each party to the conflict has been a key obstacle to resolution.
One current peace proposal is the
Road map for peace presented by the
Quartet of the
European Union,
Russia, the
United Nations and the
United States on September 17, 2002. Israel has also accepted the road map but with 14 "reservations". The current Palestinian government rejects the proposal. Israel is currently implementing a controversial
disengagement plan proposed by former Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon. So far, Israel has removed all of its civilian and military presence in the Gaza Strip, (namely 21 Jewish settlements there, and four in the West Bank), but continues to supervise and guard the external envelope on land excepting a border crossing with Egypt, which is jointly run by the
Palestinian National Authority in conjunction with the
European Union. Israel also maintains exclusive control in the air space of Gaza, and continues to conduct military activities, including incursions, in the territory. The Israeli government argues that "as a result, there will be no basis for the claim that the Gaza Strip is occupied territory", while others argue that the only effect would be that Israel "would be permitted to complete the wall
[that is, the
Israeli West Bank Barrier] and to maintain the situation in the West Bank as is" [
1] [
2]. Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert has stated that further unilateral withdrawals from some West Bank settlements may be undertaken if the peace process continues to be stalled.
With the unilateral disengagement plan, the Israeli government's stated intent is to allow Palestinians to create a homeland with minimal Israeli interference while extricating Israel from a situation it believes to be too costly and strategically unsound to maintain over the long run. Many Israelis, including a significant portion of Sharon's former
Likud Party are worried that the lack of Israeli military presence in the Gaza Strip will lead to an increase in rocket launching activity towards Israeli towns around Gaza .
Palestinians want Gaza and the West Bank to become part of a (preferably contiguous)
future state. Since the Gaza withdrawal, the future of the West Bank (known to many Israelis as historical
Judaea and
Samaria), containing several hundred thousand Israeli settlers, is yet to be determined. Israel currently plans on expanding existing large West Bank settlement blocs, and maintains the current
impasse in the
peace process —negotiations toward a permanent
peace treaty featuring a two-
state solution— cannot be restarted until the
Palestinian government dismantles what Israel describes as
terrorist groups. This is further complicated by
Hamas's victory in the latest Palestinian legislative elections.
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Map of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, showing areas of formal Palestinian authority in dark green and Israeli-administered areas in light green. |
See History of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for an account of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict beginning in the 1880s and continuing to the present day.Ethnicity
*
Arab Palestinian peopleReligion
*
Judaism -
Christianity -
IslamGeography
*
Palestine (
Land of Israel)
*
Geography of Israel*
West Bank (
Judea and
Samaria)
*
Gaza StripHistory
*
Israeli-Palestinian conflict timeline Until 1949*
Balfour Declaration, 1917*
British Mandate of Palestine*
1947 UN Partition Plan*
Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel*
1948 Arab-Israeli War*
1949 Armistice Agreements*
Palestinian exodus1949-1967*
Suez Crisis*
Six Day War*
Khartoum Resolution*
Occupation of the Gaza Strip by Egypt*
Rule of the West Bank and East Jerusalem by Jordan1967-1993*
War of Attrition*
Yom Kippur War*
Operation Entebbe*
Camp David Accords (1978)*
1982 Lebanon War*
Gulf War*
Oslo Accords*
First Intifada1993-present*
Camp David 2000 Summit*
Al-Aqsa Intifada*
Road map for peace*
Israel's unilateral disengagement plan*
Jabalia Offensive in the fall of 2004
*
Russia and the Arab-Israeli conflict*
Operation Summer RainsIdeology and ideas
*
Zionism*
Pan-Arabism*
Jewish state*
Proposals for a Palestinian stateMedia coverage
*
New HistoriansPromises, an
Oscar-nominated documentary*
Media coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict*
Charles EnderlinElements of the conflict
*
Terrorism against Israel*
Palestinian refugees
*
Israeli settlements
*
Israeli West Bank barrier*
Child suicide bombers*
Violence in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict*
Peace process in the Israeli-Palestinian conflictOrganizations and armed forces
*
Israel Defense Forces*
Fatah*
Hamas*
Hezbollah*
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)
*
Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development*
Palestinian National Authority*
Palestine Liberation Organization*
Palestinian Islamic Jihad Movement*
Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades (Linked to Fatah)
Peace Organizations
There are numerous organizations, both in Israel and Palestine, and around the world, that work toward a just peace by social, cultural, economic and political means. Some of these groups are:
*
Peace Now*
Seeds of Peace*
Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions*
Sabeel - "Living Water"People
Israeli*
David Ben-Gurion â€"
Menachem Begin â€"
Golda Meir â€"
Yitzhak Rabin â€"
Shimon Peres â€"
Benjamin Netanyahu â€"
Ehud Barak â€"
Ariel Sharon â€"
Chaim Weizmann â€"
Ehud Olmert â€"
Gilad Shalit â€"
Adam Keller Court MartialPalestinian*
Mahmoud Abbas â€"
Hanan Ashrawi â€"
Yasser Arafat â€"
Marwan Barghouti â€"
Amin al-Husayni â€"
Osama Muamar and Mustafa Muamar -
Dalal Mughrabi â€"
Nabil Shaath â€"
Ahmad Shukeiri â€" Sheikh
Ahmed Yassin â€"
Ahmed Qurei â€"
Muhammad al-Durrah â€"
Mustafa BarghoutiOthers*
King Hussein â€"
Anwar Sadat â€"
Colin Powell â€"
Anthony ZinniRelated conflicts
*
Arab-Israeli conflict*
List of conflicts in the Middle EastGeneral History* Bregman, Ahron (2002).
Israel's Wars: A History Since 1947. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415287162
* Bard, Mitchell.
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Middle East Conflict. 2nd ed. (Alpha, 2002), ISBN 0028644107
* Bickerton, Ian J. and Carla L. Klausner.
A Concise History of the Arabâ€"Israeli Conflict. 4th ed. (Prentice Hall, 2001), ISBN 0130903035
* Cohn-Sherbok, Dan.
The Palestine-Israeli Conflict: A Beginner's Guide (Oneworld Publications, 2003), ISBN 1851683321
* David, Ron.
Arabs & Israel for Beginners (Writers and Readers Publishing, Inc. 1996), ISBN 0863161618
* Dowty, Alan.
Israel/Palestine (Polity, 2005), ISBN 0745632025
* Fraser, T. G.
The Arabâ€"Israeli Conflict. 2nd ed. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004), ISBN 1403913382
*
Gelvin, James L. The Israel-Palestine Conflict: One Hundred Years of War (Cambridge University Press, 2005), 0521618045
* Harms, Gregory with Todd M. Ferry.
The Palestine-Israel Conflict: A Basic Introduction (Pluto Press, 2005), ISBN 0745323782
* Hirst, David.
The Gun and the Olive Branch. 3rd ed. (Nation Books, 2003), ISBN 1560254831
* Hurewitz, J. C.
The Struggle for Palestine (Shocken Books, 1976), [out of print]
* Khouri, Fred J.
The Arabâ€"Israeli Dilemma. 3rd ed. (Syracuse University Press, 1985), ISBN 0815623402
*
Morris, Benny.
Righteous Victims: A History of the Zionistâ€"Arab Conflict, 1881â€"2001 (Vintage Books, 2001), ISBN 0679744754
* Mandel, Neville J.
The Arabs and Zionism Before World War I (University of California Press, 1976), [out of print]
* Roraback, Amanda.
Palestine in a Nutshell or
Israel in a Nutshell (Enisen Publishing, 2004), ISBN 0970290845
* Safran, Nadav.
Israel: The Embattled Ally (The Belknap Press, Harvard, 1978), [out of print]
* Smith, Charles D.
Palestine and the Arabâ€"Israeli Conflict. 5th ed. (Bedford/St. Martin's, 2004), ISBN 0312404085
* Sykes, Christopher.
Crossroads to Israel (Cleveland: The World Publishing Company, 1965), [out of print]
* Tessler, Mark.
A History of the Israeliâ€"Palestinian Conflict (Indiana University Press, 1994), ISBN 0253208734
* Thomas, Baylis.
How Israel Was Won (Lexington Books, 1999), ISBN 0739100645
* Wasserstein, Bernard.
Israelis and Palestinians (Yale University Press, 2003), ISBN 0300101724
Analytical / Focused* Carey, Roane, ed.
The New Intifada: Resisting Israel's Apartheid (Verso, 2001), ISBN 1859843778
*
Chomsky, Noam.
The Fateful Triangle: The United States, Israel and the Palestinians. Rev. ed. (South End Press, 1999), ISBN 0896081877.
*
Dershowitz, Alan.
The Case for Israel (John Wiley & Sons, 2004), ISBN 0471679526
* Enderlin, Charles.
Shattered Dreams: The Failure of the Peace Process in the Middle East, 1995-2002 (Other Press, 2003), ISBN 1590510607
*
Finkelstein, Norman.
Image and Reality of the Israel-Palestine Conflict. 2nd ed. (Verso, 2003), ISBN 1859844421
2nd ed. introduction* Flapan, Simha.
The Birth of Israel: Myth and Realities (Pantheon Books, 1987),[out of print]
* Flapan, Simha.
Zionism and the Palestinians (Croom Helm, 1979), [out of print]
* Green, Stephen.
Taking Sides: America's Secret Relations with a Militant Israel (William Morrow and Co., Inc., 1984), [out of print]
*
Maniscalco, Fabio.
Protection, conservation and valorisation of Palestinian Cultural Patrimony (Massa Publisher, 2005), ISBN 8887835624
* Pappe, Ilan, ed.
The Israel/Palestine Question (Routledge, 1999), ISBN 0415169488
* Pearlman, Wendy.
Occupied Voices: Stories of Everyday Life from the Second Intifada (Nation Books, 2003), ISBN 1560255307
* Quandt, William B.
Peace Process. 3rd ed. (Brookings Institution Press, 2005), ISBN 0520246314
* Reinhart, Tanya.
Israel/Palestine: How to End the War of 1948 (Seven Stories Press, 2002), ISBN 1583225382
*
Ross, Dennis.
The Missing Peace: The Inside Story of the Fight for Middle East Peace (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005), ISBN 0374199736
*
Safran, Nadav.
The United States and Israel, ISBN 0674924908 [out of print]
* Said, Edward W.
The Question of Palestine (Vintage Books, 1992), ISBN 0679739882
* Shipler, David K.
Arab and Jew: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land. Rev. ed. (Penguin Books, 2002), ISBN 0142002291
* Swisher, Clayton E.
The Truth About Camp David (Nation Books, 2004), ISBN 1560256230
Peace proposals* A Comparison Of Three Drafts For An Israeli-Palestinian Peace Agreement [
3], by
Adam Keller [
4]
*
Resources >Modern Period>20th Cent.>History of Israel>State of Israel The Jewish History Resource Center, Project of the Dinur Center for Research in Jewish History, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
*
The Other Israel, newsletter of the Israeli peace movement since 1983*
UN SECURITY COUNCIL RESOLUTIONS AGAINST ISRAEL 1955-1992*
The Other Israel, online archive under construction *
A history of Israel, Palestine and the Arab-Israeli Conflict *
A Timeline of Israeli-Palestinian history and the conflict *
The Washington Institute for Near East Policy*
Israeli-Palestinian ProCon.org Pros and Cons of hundreds of issues related to the conflict.
*
Global Politician - Middle-East Section*
Middle East Policy Council - Conflict Statistics*
Behind the 21st Century Intifada - an analysis of Israel/Palestine - a working class history of the conflict
*
Palestinian Maps Omitting Israel and
Maps of "Palestine" as a means to instill fundamentally negative messages regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict*
"Barak's Generous offer" from
Gush Shalom*
Israeli settlements in the West Bank*
Russia as a Bridgehead of HAMAS*
Myths and facts online: a guide to the Arab-Israeli Conflict*
Current breakdown of fatalities in conflict*
The Origin of the Palestine - Israel Conflict, Published by Jews for Justice in the Middle East
*
Aix Group - Joint Palestinian-Israeli-international economic working group.
*
The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict --An unbiased, objective overview of the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians from 1948 through the present day. From the History Guy Website