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Title: Crisis%20and%20Conflict%20in%20the%20Middle%20East


1
Crisis and Conflict in the Middle East
  • Introduction

2
The European contest to control the Arab world
  • The Arab-Israeli conflict originated in the
    contest among European powers to control the Arab
    territories of the Ottoman empire.
  • Developing Arab nationalism in the late 19th
    century was contested by European ambitions and a
    growing Jewish nationalist movement in Europe.

3
The Ottoman Empire
  • Spread from Anatolia (now Turkey) along the
    eastern Mediterranean coast to Morocco and down
    the Arabian Peninsula to Mecca and Medina. By
    1529 it reached to Vienna.
  • By the 19th century it had become weakened
    politically and economically.
  • European powers seized territory in Europe and
    North Africa

4
Britain takes territory
  • Britain wanted to control the trade routes to
    India.
  • By WW1 Britain controlled Gibraltar, Malta,
    Cyprus, Egypt, Sudan, Aden South Africa.
  • Britain also established special relations with
    local Arab rulers along the Persian Gulf

5
France Italy counter
  • France countered by seizing Algeria, Tunisia
    Morocco
  • Italy grabbed Libya.
  • The Ottoman Empire shrank to Anatolia and the
    Arab provinces on the eastern Mediterranean
    (Syria, Lebanon, Palestine), the Red Sea coast
    (Hejaz, Yemen), and Mesopotamia (Iraq).

6
Zionism
  • Jewish nationalism growing in Europe in the 1880s
    because of deep-seated anti-Semitism
  • Zionists felt that Jews needed their own
    independent state.
  • Jewish immigration to Palestine increased from
    1882 to 1914 until they were 10 of the
    population
  • WZO (f.1897) assisted with purchase of land in
    Palestine with the aim of creating an independent
    state.

7
WW1
  • Ottoman empire fought on the side of Germany and
    the Austro-Hungarian Empire
  • Russia, France and England competed for the
    potential spoils of war carving up the
    territory of the Ottoman empire.
  • To achieve this Britain made 3 contradictory
    agreements.

8
1. The Hussein-McMahon Correspondence 1915 1916
  • Britain gained support of the ruler of the Hejaz
    (who was also the religious leader of Mecca and
    Medina)
  • Britain persuaded Sharif Hussein of Mecca to
    launch an Arab revolt against the Ottoman Empire
    and seek Arab independence
  • Hussein and Arab nationalists thought that this
    would avoid European rule

9
  • But Britain insisted in ruling Iraq, kept
    protectorates in the Persian Gulf and Aden. They
    hinted that France would have a role in Lebanon.
  • Palestine was not mentioned as being excluded
    from the Arab zone.
  • Sharif Husseins forces helped the British take
    Palestine, Transjordan and Syria during 1917-18
  • Britain seized Iraq and Husseins son, Faisal was
    made ruler of Syria.

10
2. The Sykes-Picot Agreement of May 16, 1916
  • A secret agreement between France and Britain.
  • France to control Lebanon, Syria and Northern
    Iraq
  • Britain to dominate Transjordan and southern
    Iraq.
  • Palestine to be under international control and
    not in Arab areas that would receive
    independence.

11
  • The Arab area shrank to a small part of the
    Arabian peninsula
  • This agreement was the basis for the post war
    settlement that the League of Nations ratified.

12
3. The Balfour Declaration of November 2, 1917
  • Britain told the Zionist movement that it
    favoured the establishment of a national home
    for the Jewish people in Palestine
  • Britain hoped this would encourage American and
    Russian Jews to press their governments to fight
    harder in Europe.
  • Forming a Jewish national home under British
    protection would circumvent the promises to the
    French to internationalize Palestine and the
    inclusion of Palestine in the Arab zone.

13
  • By offering to help the Zionists establish a home
    in Palestine, Britain could place its own troops
    there and control the strategic territory near
    the Suez Canal and control the holy places in
    Jerusalem.

14
The League of Nations
  • These deals were sanctioned by the League of
    Nations.
  • Britain and France were given mandates to rule
    areas on behalf of their residents
  • Syria Lebanon went to France. Iraq, Palestine,
    Transjordan to Britain.
  • The Balfour Declaration was written into
    Britains mandate over Palestine.

15
  • European colonial rule prevailed in the Middle
    East, at the expense of Arab independence.
  • Jewish nationalism was given priority over the
    rights of the Palestinians
  • Arabs felt betrayed and bitter at the carving up
    and colonisation of their territories.

16
1946-67
  • Israel and Palestine

17
Why was the state of Israel created in 1948?
  • The Holocaust created great sympathy for the
    Jews. Many western countries wanted to create a
    homeland where they could settle and feel safe.
  • Jews had been arriving in the area since the
    1890s. Jews believed that Palestine was the
    Promised Land of the Old Testament.

18
  • From 1921 Palestine was controlled by Britain.
    But in 1947 the British handed Palestine over to
    the United Nations.
  • The United Nations recommended dividing Palestine
    between Arabs and Jews. The plan was published in
    November 1947.

19
Why did the Arabs reject the UN Plan?
  • They believed that Palestine was theirs by right.
  • The Jews had been given 60 percent of the land.
  • The Arabs seemed to have been allocated the worst
    land.

20
  • As the British withdrew, the Palestinians fought
    to gain control of every town.
  • Israeli terrorist gangs forced Arabs to leave
    their homes and flee for their lives.

21
What was Israel like?
  • It was a secular state. All people living within
    its borders would have the full rights of
    citizenship.
  • Arabs would qualify as citizens and be able to
    vote and stand for the Knesset,
  • This did not satisfy many Arabs. They did not
    want to live in Israel. They wanted a state of
    their own.

22
  • Israel was created on 14 May 1948. On 15 May 1948
    the armies of Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Transjordan,
    Saudi Arabia and Egypt attacked Israel.

23
Why did the Israelis win the war of 1948-9?
  • The numbers of soldiers on both sides were about
    equal. But the Israeli army was well trained and
    used to fighting
  • The Arab armies were inexperienced and divided.
  • Israels forces were also much better armed and
    supplied than those of the Arabs.
  • There was great financial support for the new
    state of Israel in the USA.

24
What effects did the war have?
  • The Israelis took over all of the areas that the
    United Nations had set aside for Arabs.
  • About 800,000 Arabs left the new state of Israel.
    This created the Palestinian refugee problem.
  • The refugee camps became the training grounds for
    the freedom fighters or 'Fedayeen'. Attacks began
    almost immediately upon targets in Israel.

25
  • More Jewish immigrants began to arrive and new
    settlements were begun to house the new
    immigrants. Many of these were in areas that
    Israel had occupied during the war of 1948-9.
  • There were no peace treaties afterwards only
    ceasefires. Another attack could be expected at
    any time.
  • The Israeli government tried to encourage more
    immigration in an effort to increase the Israeli
    population.

26
  • The Law of Return gave every Jew the right to
    return to Israel. The population rose rapidly as
    a result.
  • Arab states began to look towards the Soviet
    Union for support.
  • The war led to increased support for Arab
    nationalists such as Nasser in Egypt and led to
    the downfall of King Farouq of Egypt who was
    overthrown in a coup.

27
Why was there a Suez Crisis in 1956?
  • In Egypt in July 1952, there was a revolution.
    The new leader of Egypt was Colonel Gamal Abdul
    Nasser.

28
Nasser
  • Nasser wanted to force the British to leave the
    bases that they still held in Egypt and unite the
    Arab nations in one single movement with Egypt at
    its head.
  • In 1954 British agreed to evacuate all troops
    from Suez by April 1956, but retained the right
    to reoccupy the base in the event of an attack by
    any outside power on an Arab League state or
    Turkey.

29
US Policy
  • At this time the USA was attempting to build a
    barrier against Soviet expansion.
  • Baghdad Pact Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, Iraq and
    Britain signed interlocking agreements in 1954
    -55 and received generous US economic and
    military aid.
  • Nasser refused to allow Egypt to join. Syria and
    Jordan declined too. - claiming imperialist aims
    of the west.

30
  • Nasser appealed to the USA for arms, but was
    refused. Instead he agreed to buy 200m Soviet
    arms from Czechoslovakia.
  • The US government offered 50,000,000 for the
    Aswan Dam project. But when Nasser also asked for
    help from the Soviet Union, the US government
    withdrew the offer.

31
Nassers response
  • Annoyed by the US refusal to help fund the 1
    billion Aswan project, Nasser retaliated by
    nationalising the Suez Canal on 26 July 1956
  • He said he would use the revenues to fund
    development projects the West refused to help.
  • Suez was operated by a French company

32
How did the West and Israel react?
  • The British government regarded Nasser's actions
    as a threat to the Commonwealth, which, it
    believed, depended upon the Canal for trade
    links. Anthony Eden called the nationalisation
    theft.
  • The French sent Israel 75 of their latest fighter
    aircraft.
  • The Israelis wanted to take advantage of the
    situation to launch an attack on Egypt.

33
  • On 29 October the Israeli army attacked Egypt
    through Sinai without warning.
  • On 30 October the British and French governments
    demanded that Egypt withdraw its forces from the
    Suez Canal, or they would intervene within twelve
    hours.

34
  • On 1 November British and French planes began to
    bomb the Egyptian airforce, destroying most of
    Nassers planes on the ground.
  • On 5 November, when the British and French
    dropped paratroops at Port Said.
  • On 6 November 200 British and French warships
    bombarded Port Said and then landed a further
    22,000 troops many by helicopter. Nasser ordered
    the Canal to be blocked.

35
What effects did the Suez War have?
  • There was overwhelming condemnation of the
    invasion.
  • The General Assembly of the UN voted 64-5 for a
    cease-fire on the same day.
  • The Soviet Union threatened to send troops to
    support Egypt

36
  • President Eisenhower told the British government
    that it must withdraw.
  • On 7 November Britain and France announced a
    cease-fire.

37
  • The Israelis withdrew six months later and a UN
    peacekeeping force was put in place for ten
    years.
  • Israel was guaranteed the use of the Gulf of
    Aqaba. The port of Eilat, which had been
    blockaded by the Egyptians before the war, was
    now reopened.
  • This was a great victory for Nasser and the Arab
    countries.

38
Damage to Britain
  • The Sunday Times of London wrote
  • Eden was the last British Prime Minister to
    believe that Britain was a Great Power and the
    first to confront a crisis which proved beyond
    doubt that she was not.
  • January 16 1977

39
What effects did Suez have in the Middle East?
  • Arab hostility to Israel increased still further.
  • The pro-western regime in Iraq was overthrown in
    1958 and Syria and Libya both began to look to
    the Soviet Union for military aid.
  • In 1958 Syria and Egypt formed the United Arab
    Republic, which lasted for three years.
  • In 1964 Nasser supported the setting up of the
    Palestine Liberation Organisation

40
Why did Superpower involvement increase in the
Middle East?
  • To try to protect Israel and other countries from
    Soviet influence, the Eisenhower Doctrine was
    announced in 1957.
  • US aid was offered to any country in the Middle
    East threatened by communism.
  • The Soviet Union began to send military advisers
    to Egypt. By 1970 there were an estimated 20,000
    and military aid worth more than 12,000,000,000
    had been sent to the Arab countries.

41
  • All the equipment and weapons lost by Syria and
    Egypt in the wars of 1967 and 1973 were
    apparently immediately replaced by the Soviet
    Union.
  • From 1968 to 1973 the Soviet Union sent
    2,600,000,000 worth of aid to the Arab states of
    Syria and Egypt.
  • Increased Soviet aid to the Arabs meant increased
    American aid to Israel. In the late 1960s and
    early 1970s the USA sent 2,000,000,000 to
    Israel.

42
What caused the Six Day War?
  • In May 1967 the Egyptian government began to make
    claims that the Israelis were building up forces
    for an attack.
  • President Nasser sent Egyptian forces into Sharm
    el Sheikh close to the Israeli border and ordered
    the UN forces (UNEF) to leave Egypt.

43
  • Nasser was hoping that the tone of his speeches
    and the increased strength of the Arab states,
    which were now equipped with modern Soviet
    weapons, would force Israel to back down.
  • The Israelis accused Nasser of threatening war.
    Nasser believed that his aggressive stance would
    gain him the approval and support of the other
    Arab nations.

44
  • On 5 June 1967 the Israeli armed forces attacked
    the Arab countries without warning. The Egyptian
    air force was virtually wiped out on the ground.
  • All of Sinai was occupied by the Israelis. The
    Jordanian army was pushed back across the Jordan
    River and the Israelis occupied all of the West
    Bank.

45
  • In the north the Israelis seized the Golan
    Heights from Syria and began to advance on
    Damascus.
  • The UN called for a cease-fire, which was
    accepted by Jordan on 7 June and then by Egypt
    and Syria. By 10 June the fighting had finished
    and the Arab states had been defeated.

46
Why did the Israelis win so easily?
  • It is almost certain that the Israelis planned
    and then executed an unprovoked attack to knock
    out their enemies before they could do anything
    about it.
  • The Arab states were caught completely off guard.

47
  • They had the best-equipped troops in the Middle
    East. Not only their weapons, but also their
    training, was vastly superior to their opponents.
  • Israel could put 300,000 trained and experienced
    soldiers into the field against 180,000.

48
What effects did the Six Day War have?
  • Israel now had fixed boundaries that could be
    defended much more easily.
  • Israel had a great deal more territory.
  • The Israeli government believed that it could
    exchange territory for concessions, which would
    guarantee the security of Israel.

49
  • Israel now had fixed boundaries that could be
    defended much more easily.
  • Israel had a great deal more territory.
  • The Israeli government believed that it could
    exchange territory for concessions, which would
    guarantee the security of Israel.

50
  • Both governments forced the Palestinians out for
    fear of reprisals from Israel. The Palestine
    Liberation Organisation (PLO) left to set up
    bases in Jordan.
  • Civil war broke out in Jordan as the guerrillas
    fought the government
  • Other Arab groups became convinced that the only
    way of defeating Israel was by international
    terrorism.

51
1967-96
52
International terrorism
  • From the late 1960s terrorism was directed
    against any country that supported Israel.
  • The aim was to force countries to withdraw
    support from Israel and so isolate it in the
    Middle East
  • Most of the international terrorism was carried
    out by extremist groups.

53
  • In 1968 the PFLP began to hijack aircraft and
    killed more than fifty hostages.
  • In 1970 the PFLP hijacked four airliners with 600
    passengers and then destroyed three on the ground
    at Dawsons Field in Jordan.

54
  • In 1972 Black September received a 5,000,000
    ransom for a German airliner and then killed
    eleven Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympic
    Games.
  • Arafat decided that the PLO proper would only
    carry out raids against Israel.

55
  • In the same year an Israeli aeroplane was
    hi-jacked and flown to Entebbe in Uganda. The
    passengers were rescued, however, by an operation
    carried out by Israeli Special Forces.

56
What caused the war of Yom Kippur?
  • In 1970 Nasser died and was succeeded as
    President of Egypt by Anwar Sadat.
  • Sadat wanted to force Israel to return the land
    that had been occupied in 1967 and then reach an
    agreement with the Israeli government.
  • Sadat wanted to inflict a military defeat upon
    Israel to force it to the negotiating table.

57
  • On 6 October 1973 Egypt and Syria suddenly
    attacked Israel.
  • On this day most Jews spent their time fasting or
    in prayer
  • The Egyptian forces crossed the Suex Canal and
    advanced across Sinai, but moved too quickly and
    allowed the Israelis an opportunity to
    counter-attack.

58
  • On 15 October the Israelis once again crossed the
    Suez Canal and encircled the Egyptian Third Army.
  • In the north Syrian forces took the Golan
    Heights, but were forced back by Israeli
    reinforcements.

59
  • At this point the Soviet Union USA ordered the
    Israelis to agree to a truce. When the war ended
    on 24 October, little had changed, but massive
    casualties and damage had been caused.

60
What were the effects of the war?
  • Both sides were convinced that peace talks were
    necessary.
  • The Arab forces had fought well and shown that
    Israel was not invincible.
  • The Israeli armed forces had been shaken and
    their losses had been proportionally much greater
    than their opponents.

61
  • The Arab states placed an oil embargo on the USA
    and reduced shipments to the West. Petrol
    rationing was put into effect in Britain.
  • When the crisis was over, the Arab states raised
    the price of oil by 600 percent to try to force
    the West to stop backing Israel.
  • They soon realised that controlling the price of
    oil gave them a powerful weapon that could be
    used to support the Palestinians.

62
Why was the Palestinian Liberation Organisation
important?
  • The PLO (Palestine Liberation Organisation) was
    set up in 1964. It was an umbrella organisation.
  • Some groups were violent, others, like Al-Fatah,
    were more moderate
  • Nevertheless, Al Fatah carried out major
    terrorist raids. In 1967 it killed 97 Israeli
    soldiers.

63
  • The PLO was based at first in Egypt, but was
    forced to leave in 1968 after the Six Day war and
    moved to Jordan.
  • In September 1970 war broke out between the PLO
    and the Jordanian army.
  • The USA, however, promised aid and the Jordanian
    army was able to defeat the PLO, and force it to
    move to Lebanon and Syria.

64
  • The defeat of the PLO led to the creation of a
    new and much more violent organisation, Black
    September.
  • In October 1974 the PLO was recognised by the
    Arab governments as the only organisation that
    could speak on behalf of the Palestinians.
  • It was then recognised by the United Nations and
    Arafat addressed the UN General Assembly.

65
How did Arafat try to change the PLO?
  • In 1985 Arafat, along with King Hussein of
    Jordan, recognised the state of Israel and in
    1988 persuaded the PLO to accept the right of the
    state of Israel to exist. The PLO subsequently
    renounced violence.
  • This led to official contacts between the USA and
    the PLO for the first time and increased
    international support for the PLO.

66
  • These changes made possible the agreement between
    Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin, the Israeli
    prime minister in 1993.
  • This resulted in the creation of Palestinian
    self-rule in the Gaza Strip and parts of the West
    Bank.

67
Why did fighting break out in Lebanon?
  • Lebanon had a mixed population of Christians and
    Muslims.
  • In 1975 civil war broke out between Muslims and
    Christians.
  • Israel was drawn into the conflict in Lebanon in
    1978 to destroy PLO bases

68
  • A UN peacekeeping force was installed, but failed
    to keep the two sides apart.
  • The Israelis invaded for a second time in 1982
    and drove the PLO out of the country.

69
  • A UN peacekeeping force was installed, but failed
    to keep the two sides apart.
  • The Israelis invaded for a second time in 1982
    and drove the PLO out of the country.

70
What effects did the Israeli actions have?
  • The massacres had a dramatic impact upon
    international opinion, which had hitherto tended
    to back Israel. Inside Israel, an effective Peace
    Movement emerged for the first time.
  • Some PLO guerrillas returned from Tunisia and set
    up Hizbollah, a new and more violent terrorist
    organisation.

71
  • The massacres had a dramatic impact upon
    international opinion, which had hitherto tended
    to back Israel. Inside Israel, an effective Peace
    Movement emerged for the first time.
  • Some PLO guerrillas returned from Tunisia and set
    up Hizbollah, a new and more violent terrorist
    organisation.

72
What caused the Intifada?
  • In the 1980s many Arab states paid less attention
    to Israel.
  • The PLO was relatively inactive because of its
    break up in 1983.

73
  • Palestinians in the Occupied Territories began to
    take matters into their own hands.
  • The Intifada began with protests, strikes
    non-payment of taxes and refusal to use identity
    documents.

74
  • The PLO moved in and the Intifada became more
    serious.
  • The Israelis retaliated mostly with curfews and
    tear gas, but some soldiers used their firearms
    and by 1991 697 Palestinians had been killed.

75
What were the results of the Intifada?
  • Palestinians came to believe that their destiny
    was in their own hands.
  • Some Israeli politicians saw the futility of
    attempting to retain control of areas, which were
    valueless and which were costing Israeli lives.

76
  • International opinion also swung against Israeli
    tactics in Gaza and the West Bank.
  • Yasser Arafat announced that the PLO was
    renouncing violence.

77
How successful were attempts at peace?
  • In 1977 Menachem Begin became Prime Minister of
    Israel. He showed that he was prepared to make
    agreements with the Arab states and this led to
    the Camp David Talks with Egypt in 1978.
  • Begin was a realist. Since 1967 Israel had
    occupied Sinai, which was almost entirely desert
    and of no real value. He could see no point in
    holding on to it and so continuing to anger the
    Egyptians.

78
  • Begin was also coming under increasing pressure
    from the USA to reach some sort of agreement with
    Israels neighbours.
  • The Camp David Agreement was signed by President
    Sadat of Egypt and Menachem Begin the Israeli
    Prime Minister in 1978.

79
  • Israel promised to evacuate all land taken from
    Egypt, except the Gaza Strip, within three years.
    This was completed on time in 1982.
  • In return Israel would have free use of the Suez
    Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba.

80
What effects did the Camp David Agreement have?
  • This was the first agreement between Israel and
    any of her Arab neighbours. But it did nothing
    for the Palestinians.
  • Sadat was seen as having betrayed the Palestinian
    cause and in1981 he was assassinated by Muslim
    extremists in his own guards.

81
  • In 1988 Yasser Arafat renounced the use of
    violence. The USA accepted Arafats statements
    and made its first official contacts with the
    PLO.
  • In 1991 the USA sponsored a peace conference in
    Madrid. Many Palestinian delegates were members
    of the PLO and their attitude impressed the
    Americans.

82
What effects did Yitzhak Rabin have?
  • In June 1992 the Labour Party was elected to
    power in Israel. Yitzhak Rabin, the new Prime
    Minister, lifted the official ban on contact with
    the PLO in January 1993.
  • Rabin announced that Palestinian rights would be
    restored in every respect. Rabin was convinced
    that the only way to end the violence was by
    negotiation.

83
  • All building on the West Bank was stopped and the
    Israeli army was refused permission to search the
    Palestinian University campus.
  • 800 of the 7,429 Palestinians being held by the
    Israelis were released.
  • Secret talks took place in Oslo between the
    Israeli government and the PLO in January 1993.

84
  • The PLO agreed to recognise Israel, renounce
    terrorism and accept responsibility for all
    groups within the PLO.
  • Israel agreed to recognise the PLO as the
    representative of the Palestinian people.
  • Israeli troops would be withdrawn from Gaza and
    Jericho. The Palestinians would govern these
    areas and take over responsibility for law and
    order.

85
  • On 1 July Yasser Arafat returned to head the new
    Palestinian Authority. A second agreement was
    signed in 1995.
  • Palestinian attacks on Israelis continued and
    fighting broke out between extremist groups and
    Arafats Palestinian police force.

86
  • The Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was shot
    while attending a peace rally by an Israeli
    extremist, who believed that Rabin had given away
    too much in his agreements with the Palestinians.
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