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History 171D The United States and the World Since 1945.

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Presentation on theme: "History 171D The United States and the World Since 1945."— Presentation transcript:

1 History 171D The United States and the World Since 1945

2 The Arab-Israeli Conflict

3 September 1973—Henry Kissinger replaced William Rogers as Secretary of State

4 Two weeks later, another major war broke out in the Middle East

5 The Arab-Israeli Conflict

6 For centuries, much of Arab world had been under control of Ottoman Empire, based in Turkey

7 Ottoman Empire crumbled after it fought on losing side in World War I

8 After WWI, League of Nations awarded Britain mandates over Palestine, Jordan, and Iraq

9 Theodor Herzl Late 19th century—European Jews, inspired by Theodor Herzl, began settling in Palestine in pursuit of Zionist program

10 During WWI Britain had made conflicting pledges to Zionists (Balfour Declaration, 1917) and Arabs (vague promises of independence) Arthur BalfourSharif Hussein of Mecca

11 Interwar period—Britain caught between conflicting demands of Zionists and Palestinian Arabs Jewish refugees from Europe, late 1930s Palestinian rebels against British rule, late 1930s

12 Rise of Hitler in 1930s, and especially Nazi Holocaust in 1940s, gave enormous impetus to Zionist movement

13 1945-1946—Zionist groups attacked British forces in Palestine and illegally smuggled Jewish refugees into Palestine

14 Early 1947—Britain announced it would pull out of Palestine in 1948, turning issue over to United Nations

15 Summer 1947—UN Special Commission recommended partion of Palestine into Jewish and Arab states

16 Zionists accepted partition plan; Arabs rejected it

17 Division within Truman administration Secretary of State George Marshall WH Counsel Clark Clifford

18 Truman decided to support partition

19 November 1947— UN General Assembly voted in favor of partition

20 1947-1948—UN partition vote sparked violence between Zionists and Palestinian Arabs

21 May 1948—Zionists declared independent state of Israel

22 Truman immediately recognized Israel

23 Arab states went to war against new state

24 but Israeli army defeated them

25 ... and took more territory than initially allotted to Jewish state

26 1947-1949—750,000 Palestinians fled or were driven from homes in present-day Israel

27 Israel refused to permit repatriation of refugees

28 Truman tried to get Israel to give back territory and take back some Palestinian refugees, but Israel refused and Truman gave up

29 Dwight D. Eisenhower set out to follow more “even- handed” Middle East policy

30 1956-1957—Following British, French, and Israeli attack on Egypt, Eisenhower pressured Israel to withdraw from Egyptian territory

31 Israel complied but got concessions in return: termination of Egyptian blockade of Strait of Tiran and stationing of UN peacekeeping force in Sinai

32 Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson (especially latter) were more partial to Israel than Eisenhower had been

33 Late 1950s and 1960s—Arab world divided between conservative governments (e.g., Saudi Arabia & Jordan) and radical governments (e.g., Egypt, Syria, & Iraq)

34 Gamal Abdel Nasser vs. King Hussein

35 May 1967—Nasser moved forces into Sinai, requested withdrawal of UN peacekeepers, and reinstated blockade of Strait of Tiran

36 June 1967—Israel launched preemptive strike against Egyptian air force

37 Israel took Sinai Peninsula and Gaza Strip from Egypt; West Bank from Jordan, Golan Heights from Syria

38 After 1967 war Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) emerged as independent force PLO chairman Yasser Arafat

39 Attack on 1972 Munich Olympics

40 Nasser’s successor: Anwar Sadat

41 1973 Arab-Israeli War aka “Yom Kippur War”

42 Brent Scowcroft

43 With Sadat After war, Kissinger launched “shuttle diplomacy” With Israeli PM Golda Meir

44 1974-1975— Kissinger negotiated partial Israeli pullback in Sinai, paving way for Camp David Agreement of late 1970s

45 Late 1973-early 1974—Oil producing Arab states embargoed oil shipments to West, causing major spike in gas prices and in general inflation rate

46 August 1974—Nixon resigned; Vice President Gerald Ford became president

47 Gerald Ford, 1974-1977

48 Spring 1975—North Vietnam launched offensive against South

49 April 1975—Saigon fell

50 Spring 1975— Communist takeovers in Laos and Cambodia

51 1975-1979—Khmer Rouge and the Cambodian genocide

52 1975—US, Soviet Union, and European nations met in Helsinki, Finland, to sign Helsinki Final Act Western nations formally recognized European borders established at end of World War II, and East bloc nations pledged to respect human rights (but then reneged on pledge)

53 1975-1976—Church and Pike Committees exposed prior covert actions of CIA Senator Frank Church displaying poison dart gun

54 1974—Jackson-Vanik Amendment denied most- favored nation (MFN) status to Soviet Union Refusnik supporters protesting to President Ford Henry Jackson Charles Vanik

55 Mid-1970s—Détente came under attack from both right and left, as exemplified by presidential campaigns of Ronald Reagan (in Republican primary) and Jimmy Carter Carter, Reagan, and Ford

56 November 1976—Jimmy Carter elected president


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