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Conflicts and Change in the Middle East

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Title: Conflicts and Change in the Middle East


1
Conflicts and Change in the Middle East
2
Middle East
  • Physical Setting

3
  • The Middle East has been a crossroads for people
    of Africa, Asia, and Europe since ancient times.
  • This fact led to an enormous diversity of
    peoples, belief systems, and cultures.
  • These differences have sometimes led to conflict.

4
  • The discovery of oil in the region brought power
    to some Middle Eastern nations.
  • However, these oil resources are not evenly
    distributed across the region.
  • As a result, Middle Eastern countries have gone
    to war over control of oil-rich lands.
  • Dependence on oil is why the Middle East is of
    vital interest to many countries today.

5
The Creation of the State of Israel
  • Arab Palestinians and
  • Israels Neighbors

6
A Jewish State Among Arab Nations
  • Jews had begun migrating to Palestine in the late
    1800s.
  • After World War II, many Jewish survivors of the
    Holocaust migrated to Palestine, and the horrors
    of that time created support for a Jewish
    homeland.

7
  • Both Jews and Palestinian Arabs claimed a right
    to the land of Palestine.
  • Violent clashes between the groups have occurred
    as a result of these claims.

8
Creation of Israel
9
  • In 1947, the United Nations drew up a plan to
    divide Palestine, which was under British rule,
    into an Arab state and a Jewish state.
  • Jews accepted the plan, but Arabs did not.
  • In 1948, Britain withdrew, and Jews proclaimed
    the independent state of Israel, which was
    recognized by both the United States and the
    Soviet Union.

10
The Development of Israel
  • Israel developed rapidly.
  • Between 1948 and the mid-1980s, nearly 2 million
    Jews migrated to Israel, some to escape
    persecution.
  • The government built towns for settlers.
  • A skilled work force expanded the economy.

11
Israels Natural Resources
  • Largest oil fields in the world.
  • Oil-rich nations gain wealth and political and
    economic power.
  • Limited water supply.
  • Arguments over dams and water rights.

12
Israels Religious Ethnic Differences
  • Muslims, Christians, and Jews.
  • Different sects within religions.
  • More than 30 languages.
  • Religious, racial and cultural prejudices.
  • Desire for a united Arab state.

13
Palestinian and Arab-Israeli Wars
14
  • When the state of Israel was created, Arabs vowed
    to drive the Jews out and restore Palestine as an
    Arab nation.
  • The first Arab-Israeli war occurred in 1948 and
    after the fighting ended, 700,000 Arabs became
    refugees.
  • Many went to U.N. refugee camps.

15
  • As a result of this war Israel nearly doubled in
    size and over time, these U. N. refugee camps
    became permanent homes for these displaced Arab
    Palestinians.
  • The poverty and discrimination experienced by
    these Arab Palestinians fueled anger.
  • Many dreamed of an Arab Palestinian state.

16
  • The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) was
    led by Yasir Arafat.
  • The PLO represented many Palestinian groups and
    used terrorist tactics to fight a guerilla war
    against Israelis at home and abroad.
  • Another war was fought in 1956.
  • In 1967, during the Six-Day War, Israel overran
    the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan Heights on the
    Syrian border, and East Jerusalem.

17
  • In 1973, Egypt and Syria launched a war against
    Israel on the Jewish high holy day of Yom Kippur.
  • The Israelis quickly repulsed this attack and
    soon after this Egypt and Israel began to seek
    peace.

18
Camp David Accords
  • In 1979, Egypt and Israel signed the Camp David
    Accords, an agreement between the two countries
    to end the war.

19
Intifada
  • In 1987, young Palestinians mounted the intifada,
    or uprising.
  • Teenagers defied Israeli soldiers with tactics
    such as throwing rocks and homemade bombs
    (Molotov cocktails).
  • Crackdowns on the violence fueled further
    conflicts.

20
  • In 1993, direct talks were held for the first
    time between Israel and the PLO.
  • Yasir Arafat and Israeli prime minister Yitzhak
    Rabin signed a historic agreement that gave
    Palestinians in Gaza and Jericho limited
    self-rule but not an independent Palestinian
    state.
  • In 1994, Jordan, led by King Hussein, also made a
    peace agreement with Israel.

21
  • The death of Palestinian leader, Yasir Arafat, in
    2004 improved peace prospects between Israel and
    Palestine.
  • In the summer of 2005 Israel withdrew settlers
    and soldiers from Gaza and four Northern West
    Bank settlements.

22
  • In 2006, Palestinians elected members of Hamas to
    their parliament.
  • Hamas is known for its social services to
    Palestinians and its terrorist activities.

23
  • Presently, the United States wants Hamas to
    renounce their terrorist activities/connections.
  • Due to these connections the United States has
    ended all diplomatic ties and funding to the
    Palestinians until these activities/connections
    are ended.

24
  • In 2006, after a massive stroke that
    incapacitated controversial leader Ariel Sharon,
    Ehud Olmert became prime minister of Israel.

25
Civil War in Lebanon
26
  • North of Israel, Lebanon had gained independence
    after WWII.
  • It was a thriving commercial center with a
    diverse population.
  • Christians and Muslims lived together peacefully.
  • However, as Palestinian refugees entered Lebanon,
    especially after 1967, they created a Muslim
    majority.

27
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28
  • The PLO gained more and more power within the
    refugee camps, then began to grow as these
    Palestinians moved into Lebanon.

29
  • A civil war between Christians and Muslims began
    in 1975.
  • Israeli and Syrian forces participated in this
    conflict.
  • In 2000 Israel withdrew its forces, and Syria
    followed reluctantly in 2005.

30
  • In 2006 Hezbollah within Lebanon, a radical Shia
    group, captured 2 Israeli soldiers, leading to a
    34-day conflict with Israel.

31
The Iranian Revolution
32
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33
  • In 1953, Britain and the United States helped
    Muhammed Reza Pahlavi gain control of the Iranian
    government.
  • He proclaimed himself the shah, ruling as a
    dictator, westernizing and modernizing the
    country.

34
  • In the 1970s, opposition to the shah was led by
    the exiled Ayatollah Khomeini.
  • Ayatollah is a title given to learned Shiite
    legal experts.
  • With protests mounting, the shah fled Iran in
    1979.
  • Soon afterward, Khomeini returned, declaring Iran
    an Islamic republic.

35
  • In 1989 Khomeini died and more moderate leaders
    took control of the Iran.
  • Then, in 2005, elections put conservatives back
    in power.

36
  • Today, world concerns have continued to grow over
    Irans nuclear program, which President Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad has continuously claimed is only
    meant to be used as a power source for his
    country and not for weapons production.

37
Impact of the RevolutionThe Iranian Revolution
had effects in Iran and beyond
  • The new Iranian government was extremely hostile
    to the West-western books, music, and movies were
    banned.
  • The government required strict adherence to
    Muslim religious tradition-Many rights were taken
    away from women.
  • Iranian militants seized the American embassy in
    Tehran and held a group of Americans hostage for
    more than a year.
  • Iran encouraged Muslims in other countries to
    work to overthrow secular governments and
    establish Islamic republics.

38
Islamic Fundamentalism
  • Beginning in the 1970s, increasing numbers of
    Muslims opposed westernization.
  • They wanted to apply Islamic principles to the
    problems in their nations.
  • This movement for reform, called Islamic
    Fundamentalism by many westerners, has played a
    key role in the Middle East.

39
LIBYA
  • In 1969 Muammar al-Qaddafi established a
    government based on Islamic principles.
  • He supported revolutionary organizations and
    activities in the Middle East and around the
    world.

40
ALGERIA
  • In 1992, the Algerian Islamic political party did
    well in elections.
  • The ruling party feared that an Islamic
    revolution might occur.
  • The military therefore seized power and took
    harsh measures against Islamic activities,
    resulting in the deaths of thousand of people.

41
TURKEY
  • Throughout the 1900s, the government of Turkey
    based many of its policies on western models.
  • In the 1990s, however, Islamic political parties
    gained increasing support and influence hoping to
    restore a traditional Islamic government to
    Turkey.

42
Saddam Hussein and Iraq
43
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44
  • Under the leadership of dictator Saddam Hussein,
    Iraq was involved in several conflicts in the
    Middle East.

45
Iran-Iraq War
  • In 1980, Husseins forces seized control of a
    disputed border area between Iraq and Iran.
  • War soon broke out between the two nations.

46
  • When both sides attacked oil tankers in the
    Persian Gulf, the United States Navy began to
    protect shipping lanes in the region.
  • The war continued until 1988 and created extreme
    hardship in both nations.

47
Persian Gulf War
  • In 1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait and seized its oil
    fields.
  • The United States saw the Iraqi action as a
    threat to Saudi Arabia and to the flow of oil.
  • The first response of the United States was to
    organize a trade embargo of Iraq.

48
  • Peacekeeping troops from many western and Middle
    Eastern countries went to Saudi Arabia.
  • When Iraq refused to withdraw from Kuwait, the
    1991 Persian Gulf War began.

49
  • The United States and its allies quickly won the
    war, and Kuwait was liberated.
  • The United States continued to view Iraqi
    dictator Saddam Hussein as a very dangerous force
    until he was captured on 12/13/03, placed on
    trial, and executed on 12/30/06.

50
SUMMARY
  • The Middle East is an area of great diversity and
    economic importance. It is also an area of great
    conflict. The creation of the state of Israel in
    1948 set off years of conflict between Arabs and
    Jews. A revolution occurred in Iran that created
    an Islamic republic. A growing influence in the
    area is that of Islamic fundamentalism, a
    movement to return to traditional Islamic ways.
    The aggressive actions of Iraq leader Saddam
    Hussein led to a war that involved many countries
    of the world.
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