Arab Israeli Conflict
The Arab-Israeli conflict
The current Arab-Israeli conflict has a long standing history which goes back to the 1910s when the Ottoman Empire was still in place. During the WWI, the Germans sided with the Ottoman and the British sided with the Arabs in revolting against the Ottoman Empire. The British promised the Arabs self rule and to the Jews they promised them a homeland in Palestine (Kattan, et.al., 2009:Pp59). The Arabs took over the control of Syria and immediately after the war, the League of Nations gave the French the control over Syria and to the British they gave what are today Israel, Gaza Strip, West Bank and Jordan. In 1921 the British divided their large mandate into two; the East of Jordan became the emirates of Transjordan under Abdullah and the West of Jordan became the mandate of the Palestine (the Promised Land to the Jews) though it remained under the British control. In the 1930s, the migration of the Jews perpetually increased, just before the WWII due to the increased persecution of the Jews by the Nazis and the Holocaust that followed. The local Arabs in Palestine wanted to limit the arrival of the Jews hence and ensuing clash between the Palestinians and the arriving Jewish immigrants (Bassiouni & Ben Ami, 2009:Pp21). The neighboring Arab states supported the Palestine push for controlling the Jewish arrivals. Following the rampant clashes, the British gave up their mandate over Palestine in 1947 and the UN took over. At this point, the UN suggested for there to be two states in Palestine: one Arab and one Jewish. This proposal was accepted by the Jewish but rejected by the Arabs. In flowing year, David Ben-Gurion declared the foundation of the state of Israel, an idea that was opposed by the surrounding Arab nations and Syria, Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon invaded the Jews but they were repulsed. By 1949, the Jews had significantly extended the region under the Israel nation significantly over the borders that had been proposed by the UN. Another historical and significant happening in the region was the joining of the Israel with the French and British army to invade the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt, though later on the international pressure forced them to let go of Sinai Peninsula and they had to vacate their troops from Suez Canal. In 1964, probably the most significant development took place in line with the Arab-Israeli conflict and enmity, the Palestine Liberation Organization was formed with the whole idea of being the sole representatives of the Palestinians and geared towards reclaiming their land and completely destroying the state of Israel (Kattan, et.al., 2009:Pp62). This marked the turning point for the Arab-Israel conflict that still rages on to the current time with various interventions that have been attempted from various nations and organizations.
The 1967 Arab-Israeli War
After the Suez War in 1952, this was the next significant war between the Arab world and Israel and the magnitude of the structural failures that went international in this case exposed the failures of the Eisenhower, Kennedy as well as Johnson as the presidents of the U.S. To prevent the renewed Arab-Israeli conflict. The tripartite agreement of the 1950 Declaration in the region that saw the United Kingdom, France and the U.S. pledged to ensure there is no aggression towards Israel by the Middle Eastern state and that there is no arms race within this region held ground until the early 1960s. The U.S. pressed for the withdrawal of the Israel from the Suez Canal, the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula. This withdrawal was in exchange for peace from the surrounding Arab states and this approach has persisted to the current times within the U.S. Middle East peacemaking efforts. The U.S. also rejected Israel request for defensive weapons except the limited quantities of defensive weapons. The Lyndon Johnson presidency reshaped the U.S. role in the Arab-Israeli conflict. By the time he took over the presidency, the policymakers had already reached a conclusion that this previous approach was no longer viable. This decision was informed by the Soviet selling of arms to the left-leaning Arab states; Egypt in particular, threatened to erode the military superiority of the state of Israel. The advisors to president Lyndon saw it that if the U.S. did not move in to offset the shift, there was a high risk of the Israeli launching a preventive war and...
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