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Chapter Nine: The Question of Israel and Palestine

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Title: Chapter Nine: The Question of Israel and Palestine


1
Chapter NineThe Question of Israel and
Palestine
2
The Origins of the Conflict
3
The Origins of the Conflict
  • Conflict between Palestinians and Zionists
  • Zionist- A person favoring the creation of a
    Jewish state
  • 1890- European Jews began flocking to Palestine
    to create a Jewish state
  • The European Jews were willing to remove the
    Turks, but they also wanted control of Palestine
    without interference from the Palestinians

4
The Origins of the Conflict
  • The promises made by the British during WWI
  • Arabs
  • The British hinted to the Arabs that they would
    allow Arabs all through the region to unite in
    one government if the Arabs would revolt against
    the Turks
  • Zionists
  • The British promised the Zionists they would
    recognize the creation of Israel
  • French
  • The British promised the French to split the
    Middle East when the war was over

5
The Origins of the Conflict
  • Two terrorist organizations created by the
    Jewish
  • Irgun Zvai Leumi
  • The Stern Gang
  • 1948
  • The United Nations recognizes Israel
  • The Arabs attack Israel

6
The Origins of the Conflict
  • Seeking peace with Israel
  • Egypt sought peace with Israel in 1973
  • Jordan joined the peace process
  • Syria and Iraq rejected peace
  • The militant Arabs who joined the Syrians and
    Iraqis called themselves the Rejectionist Front

7
The Origins of the Conflict
  • The Palestinians turn to terrorism
  • Since the Palestinians were not strong enough to
    attack the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) directly,
    they used other tactics (e.g., bombing public
    places, conducting open murder), referring to
    their actions as military operations and commando
    tactics

8
The Rise of the PLO
9
The Rise of the PLO
  • Creation of the PLO
  • In 1957, Yasser Arafat gathered groups of
    disgruntled Palestinians in Jordan
  • In 1964, Arafat formed the Palestinian Liberation
    Organization (PLO)
  • Arafats purpose was to create a political
    organization to help form a multinational
    alliance against Israel

10
The Rise of the PLO
  • Fatah
  • Joining a group of young Palestinians, Arafat
    formed a quasi-military organization called Fatah
    in 1959 and merged it into the PLO in 1964
  • Fatah ran its first operation in 1965, blowing up
    an Israeli water pump

11
The Rise of the PLO
  • Tactics of Fatah
  • Sending small ambush teams from the Jordanian
    border
  • Planting bombs
  • Shelling Israeli settlements from Jordan

12
Fatah after Karamah A Legend is Born
13
Fatah after KaramahA Legend is Born
  • Karamah
  • On March 21, 1968, the Israelis launched a
    mechanized assault on the village of Karamah- one
    of Arafats primary bases in Jordan
  • After heavy fighting, Karamah held firm despite
    the odds against the Palestinians
  • It was the Jordanian army that stopped the
    Israeli armor
  • Yet, the PLO emerged from Karamah with the
    reputation of a fighting force, and Yasser Arafat
    became a bona fide hero

14
Fatah after KaramahA Legend is Born
  • After Karamah
  • The PLO began a terrorist campaign against
    Israel
  • Terrorism was the only viable military tactic for
    a small group of relatively weak people who
    wanted to launch an offensive against a superior
    force

15
Fatah after KaramahA Legend is Born
  • PLO as a model for terrorist groups
  • The PLO was a model for terrorist groups in the
    Americas, Europe, and Asia
  • Nationalistic militants from Ireland and the
    Basque region of Spain trained in PLO camps
  • The ideological left and European left-wing
    terrorists flocked to training centers
  • Cuba claimed the PLO served as an example for
    South and Central American revolutionary groups

16
Fatah after KaramahA Legend is Born
  • The PLO splinters
  • Despite Arafats attempt to keep the movement
    together, various groups started to go their own
    way as early as 1970
  • The Democratic Front for the Liberation of
    Palestine
  • Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
  • Individuals such as Abu Abbas, Abu Nidal, and
    Abu Ibrahim defected

17
Palestinian Violence Expands
18
Palestinian Violence Expands
  • King Hussein of Jordan
  • Concerned with the growing influence of foreign
    nationals in his own land, in 1970, King Hussein
    ordered the PLO to stop attacking Israel
  • Hussein was trying to stop the rival influences
    in Jordan
  • Arafat defined Husseins order, and stepped up
    operations against Israel

19
Palestinian Violence Expands
  • Hussein attacks the PLO
  • In September, 1970, Hussein attacked the PLO
  • The PLO had nowhere to run Arafat fled to Lebanon

20
Palestinian Violence Expands
  • Black September
  • Arafat created a new group to strike at Israel,
    naming it Black September
  • Black September attacked in Munich at the 1972
    Olympics Games

21
The PLO and the Changing Face of Middle Eastern
Terrorism
22
The PLO and the Changing Face of Middle Eastern
Terrorism
  • As various terrorist groups split off from
    Arafats control, a host of Arab states offered
    support and assistance, causing further splits in
    Fatah
  • The Abu Nidal Group (Black June)
  • Formed in the 1970s after Arafat stated publicly
    that the PLO would recognize Israels right to
    exist in return for a Palestinian homeland
  • Knowing Abu Nidals frustration, Saddam Hussein
    approached the terrorist group with a
    proposition
  • Abu Nidal could develop his own organization, and
    the Iraqis would assist with funding

23
The PLO and the Changing Face of Middle Eastern
Terrorism
  • The Abu Nidal Group organization
  • Abu Nidal developed a rigid hierarchy and assumed
    control of the new organization
  • He created an internal committee, the Committee
    for Revolutionary Justice, a group of internal
    thugs that kept Abu Nidals followers in line

24
The PLO and the Changing Face of Middle Eastern
Terrorism
  • Syria and Abu Nidal
  • Syria was interested in gaining power in Lebenon
  • Syria approached Abu Nidal with a proposition
  • They offered to fund Abu Nidal if he would
    conduct operations for Syria

25
The PLO and the Changing Face of Middle Eastern
Terrorism
  • Abu Nidal a gang of mercenaries
  • Abu Nidal accepted missions and payment from
    Libya and other Arab states
  • The Soviet Union sought his services
  • Abu Nidal set up an infrastructure in Europe
  • In Libya, Colonel Moammar Khadaffy sought to
    establish his own links with Abu Nidal
  • Abu Nidal was too independent for Libya

26
Intifadas and Religious Revival
27
Intifadas and Religious Revival
  • Three competing interests in Middle Eastern
    violence
  • Who will govern and what will be governed?
  • The internal struggle among Arab states
  • Militant Muslims came to believe that secular
    politics are doomed to failure

28
Intifadas and Religious Revival
  • The Intifada
  • On December 9, 1987, thousands of protesters
    marched in Jabiliya, a Palestinian refugee camp
    in the Gaza Strip, to protest the Israeli killing
    of four Palestinians
  • A spontaneous riot broke out in Gaza, and within
    days it had spread through all the Occupied
    Territories
  • As the resistance continued, the Palestinians
    called the uprising the Intifada, and it had a
    religious flavor

29
Intifadas and Religious Revival
  • The United States and the Intifada
  • The United States responded to the Intifada with
    a new peace proposal
  • The United States brokered a temporary peace
    agreement in September 1993
  • Known as the Oslo Accords, the peace agreement
    introduced a radical new concept to the long
    struggle It defined a semiautonomous Palestinian
    National Authority (PNA) and hinted at the
    possibility creation of a Palestinian state

30
Intifadas and Religious Revival
  • The Israeli Likud Party
  • In May 1996, the conservative Israeli Lukid Party
    came to power
  • The new Likud government, under the direction of
    Benjamin Netanyahu, tried to back away from the
    Oslo Accords as it increased military action in
    Lebanon. This brought Hezbollah, Hamas, and other
    militants back to the streets, and the fragile
    peace threatened to evaporate
  • By 1998, the Israelis and Palestinians signed a
    new agreement, the Wye Accords, and Arafat
    reasserted power over the PNA
  • Netanyahu lost a 1999 national election to Ehud
    Barak of the more centrist Labor Party
  • The Likud Party campaigned against Barak in 2000
  • Ariel Sharon, the leader of the Likud Party, won
    the election and was reelected in 2003

31
Intifadas and Religious Revival
  • The current state of the Israeli-Palestinian
    conflict
  • Yasser Arafat died in the fall of 2004
  • Much of the stuggle has turned to religion, and
    members of the Rejectionist Front maintain their
    hatred of Israel with passionate zeal
  • Israel has produced its own brand of religious
    fanaticism
  • This strain of Judaism calls for the conquest and
    destruction of the Arab states surrounding
    Israel, and this view increasingly influences the
    Israeli government
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