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The Arab-Israeli Conflict 1945-1979
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Introduction: the postwar situation Zionist organizations supported GB: the Jewish Brigade in Rome
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I- The postwar era A- The UN vote of the Partition of Palestine and the Civil War B- The Declaration of Independence and the War of Independence C- The beginning of a long crisis: the Arab refugees
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The Zionists resumed their fight against the British presence in Palestine: terrorist bombing of the King David’s Hotel (1946), Britain’s headquarter
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1945: Creation of the Arab League, in Egypt: their only point of agreement is to prevent the creation of a Jewish state
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A decisive problem exploited by the USSR: the Jewish Displaced Persons (DPs) in postwar Europe
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DPs camps in Europe and refugees trying to find family members
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The Exodus: Holocaust refugees forced back to Germany by GB; others sent to Cyprus detention camps
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Nov. 29 th 1947: the UN General Assembly voted the Partition of Palestine
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Abd al-Kader al-Huseini Fawzi al-Kaukji
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The Civil War: Nov. 30 th 1947 to May 14 th 1948 The Deir Yassin massacre, Apr. 9 th 1948, by the Irgun
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Israel’s Declaration of Independence: May 15 th 1948
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David Ben Gurion: Prime Minister and Min. of Defense Moshe Shertok / Sharett: Foreign Minister
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War of Independence, May 15 th 1948 - Jan. 17 th 1948
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Israel’s victory: the armistice lines of Jan.-Feb. 1949 Israel, 1949-1967
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Israel’s paranoia: a geographic explanation
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The refugee crisis: the Arab Naqba (catastrophe)
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II- The 1950s: from missed opportunities to the Suez Crisis A- The aftermath of the War of Independence: between hopes and turmoil B- The Suez Crisis Oct. 30 th - Nov. 7 th 1956: Arab-Israeli war, decolonization war, or proxy to the Cold War? C- 1958 upheavals and the US-USSR reassessment of the Middle East
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Refugees settled in camps in neighboring countries
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King Adbullah of Jordan assassinated: July 1951
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Nasser and the Free Officers
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The Baghdad Pact: a Middle Eastern version of NATO
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Nasser’s provocations: rapprochement with the USSR
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The Sinai Campaign, Oct. 30 th – Nov. 7 th 1956
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III- The 1960s: from missed opportunities to the Six-Day War A- The “Arab Cold War”: inter-Arab rivalries B- The road to war: the Jordan waters dispute, the Fedayeen’s raids and the Israeli retaliations C- The Six-Day War and its aftermath
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The Arab Cold War: revolutionary Pan-Arabism vs. traditional conservative dynasties
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Main weapons in the 1960s in the Arab-Israeli conflict: French Mirage and Soviet MiG
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1963: the Cairo conference 1964: the PLO is created
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Prime Minster Levy Eshkol after he resigned from the Defense Ministry, with his replacement Moshe Dayan
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The Six-Day War: surprise attack and conquest of the Sinai June 5 th -8 th
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The Six-Day War: the Jordanian front, June 5 th to 7 th
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The Six-Day War: the Syrian front, June 9 th to 10 th
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The Khartoum Arab summit, Sept. 1967: the 3 NOs
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IV- The October War and the Israeli Egyptian Peace Treaty A- The War of Attrition B- The emergence of a Palestinian resistance: Black September, 1970 C- The surprise attack of October 1973 and its aftermath: the Camp David accords, 1979
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Nasser hands over the Palestinian question to Arafat
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Black September, 1970: Jordanian strikes on the PLO
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Black September, 1970
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Nasser reconciled Arafat and King Hussein
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Nasser’s funerals
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Anwar al-Sadat succeeded to Nasser
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The October War
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Carter’s shuttle diplomacy at Camp David
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The first Arab-Israeli peace accords, March 1979, Washington DC
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Sadat’s assassination
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