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Arab-Israeli conflicts 351 Spath
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Israel/Palestine
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Maps pre-1948 conflicts Yishuv1948 Israel1947 UN Partition Plan
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First Arab-Israeli War of 1948 (review) Israel Declares State – 14 May 1948 Arab Armies invade Israel - 15 May, 1948 Temporary cease fire, followed by Israeli gains beyond Partition Plan Cease fire, Israeli recognition among UN and major powers
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Al-Nakba (The Catastrophe) About 700,000 Palestinian Arabs were forced or fled from their homes (70%) and property Ben-Gurion to cabinet, “prevent their return” Destitution among Palestinians in refugee camps
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1956 & 1967 Wars
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1956 Suez War (review) Nasser opposition to Baghdad Pact Czech Arms deal after border fighting in Gaza Aswan High Dam Project & revocation of loan Nasser’s Nationalization of the Suez France, Britain, Israel invade Sinai UNEF on border between Gaza Strip & Israel and at Sharm al-Shaykh to ensure open straits Reputational effects
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Egypt, Sinai, Strait of Tiran
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1967 War Causes Long-term – No recognition of Israel among Arab states – Arabs states’ Previous defeats – Israeli ‘hawkishness’ & excessive retaliation – Fear and mistrust by both sides (fuels arms buildup) – No resolution of refugee issue (Palestinians became focal point for Arabism) Proximate – Arms buildup (cold war context) – Superpower interference (esp. Soviet ‘intelligence’) – Defense pacts between Egypt, Syria, Jordan – Turbulence in Syria (Salah Jadid, headwaters project, turn to S.U.) – Palestinian raids & border clashes b/w Syrians and Israelis in Golan – Nasser’s brinkmanship – Lack of diplomatic voices in warring countries and internat’l community
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Six Day War -June, 1967 Arab MobilizationIsrael takes Sinai
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Results Israel restored its image as a strong and independent state. Khartoum Resolution (1967) Israel was now three times bigger than it had been in 1966. The pan-Arab ideas of Nasser were losing legitimacy. He took a great hit to his prestige. Israel now had the security risk of an extra 1 million Arab people inside its own borders. About 1/3 million Arabs fled to Jordan- where they were easy prey to PLO recruiters. Resolution 242 (accepted by Israel, Egypt, Jordan) Israel launched a huge settlement plan to occupy the land won with people loyal to Israel.
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Israel before and after the six-day war 1967.
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War of Attrition (1967-1970) 1973 Yom Kippur War (Harb Tishrin)
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Egyptian soldiers cross the canal by boat - Bar Lev line
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1973 War Last conflict b/w Israel and Allied Arab force Superior military engineering to cross Bar Lev Line Soviet and U.S. airlifts of support – Saved Israelis from utter defeat as they almost ran out of ammunition Israeli counter-offensive Ended in cease fire and Resolution 338 – Affirms resolution 242 & prompted Geneva Conference (preceded the Egyptian-Israeli diplomacy and ultimately peace agreement of 1979) Arab Oil Embargo (next week – Is oil a weapon?)
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The Golan Heights. With seeming success of Egyptian army, Syria invaded Israel from the North over the Golan Heights, making initial gains but then being rebuffed.
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1982 invasion of Lebanon
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Sabra & Shatila…
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Israel/Palestine: Peace Process
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Parties involved in the peace process On the Israeli side: – Doves: Labor, Mapam & Arab parties – Hawks: Likud, Gush Emunim & Nationalist parties (like Yisrael Beiteinu – “no loyalty, no citizenship”) – Pragmatist (Flip-floppers) – Shas – Kadima - unilateral On the Palestinian side: – Compromisers: The Palestinian National Authority, Fatah, DFLP – Purists: Hamas (changing?), Islamic Jihad, PFLP The United States Other: EU, UN, Russia [+ U.S. = Quartet]
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Overview of the peace process By the 1991 Madrid Conference: – Intifada – Gulf War – Demise of Soviet Union – Labor government in Israel 1991-93: – The issue of settlements – Rabin’s election 1993: Oslo I Agreement: – Mutual recognition between PLO & Israel – 5-year program for Palestinian autonomy
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Overview of the peace process – cont. 1994: Return of Arafat to the Occupied Territories 1994: Israel-Jordan peace agreement 1995: Oslo II agreement 1995-2000: Breakdown: – Assassination of Rabin – Israeli practices against spirit & letter of accord – Arafat’s monopolization of power – Increased popularity and violent activity of Hamas 2000-: Reversal – Election of Sharon – Second Intifada – Reinvasion of PNA territories
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OSLO II – toward expanding Palestinian self-rule Creation of Palestinian Council to administer the territories Redeployments of Israeli military from some of the Occupied Territories Area A – administered by Palestinian Authority in civil & security issues Area B – administered by PA in civil issues, but security remains under Israeli admin Area C – Israeli control w/ 3-phase redeployment over 18 months; excludes areas subject to final status negotiations & religious sites; Israeli security overrides “Safe Passage” Recognition in Pal. Covenant Palestinian police, no other armed forces Further negotiations on final status issues after implementation
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West Bank & Gaza
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2000 Camp David Summit
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Reported Bridging Proposal by Clinton Accepted as basis for further negotiations Second round of negotiations at Taba under Euro sponsorship No agreement. Ehud Barak pulls out because he was up for election Road map (2002) Arab Peace Initiative (2002, 2007)
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Israeli Strategies of Control Settlements Walls & Fences Confiscation and destruction of property Roadblocks & checkpoints Prisons & Detention (roughly < 1,000) Inhibiting Trade (through Israel only) Imposed embargo Permitted list vs. Not- Permitted (objectionable) list Use of Informers Public employment of Palestinians in Israeli construction projects Divide Opposition All yields feelings of inferiority
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Palestinian strategies for liberation Palestinian reliance on neighbor states – Through comprehensive settlement (Arab Peace Initative, 2002, 2007) – Through economic & military support Palestinian self-reliance—PLO Using neighbors’ territories—Jordan and Lebanon Internal resistance—the two Intifada’s (1987-91, 2000-04/05) From rock throwing to suicide bombing to rocket attacks Negotiations Protest and Demonstrations (ISM, etc)
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Conceptual issues… Exclusivist (rejectionist) and Accommodationist -- competing claims of 2 peoples to exclusive right of national self- determination and sovereignty on same piece of land single-state (can be exclusivist b/c undermines the other) exclusivist to accommodationist trend (untenable status quo) Violent and non-violent (diplomatic vs. militaristic strategies for resolution) RIPENESS Positive and Negative peace -- Negative absence of war or direct violence -- Positive transformation of society w/ principles of equality, social justice, & nonviolence
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Some of the issues… A bi-national state or a two-state solution? Fixed, agreed-upon borders Status of East Jerusalem Jewish Settlements (land/growth) – Law of Return and Nationality Law Fate of Palestinian refugees (compensation/return) – Right of Return (Res. 194) Resource allocation (i.e. water issues) How sovereign should the Palestinian state be? Economic viability of Israel and Palestine
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Some scenarios presented previously… Two states for two people Greater Israel (Palestinian transfer v. Palestinians as citizens) Greater Palestine (P. state w/ Jews as citizens) Partial autonomy – Palestine controls civic affairs & internal security of its territories, Israel administers external security and controls land & resources Return to pre-Oslo situation – Israeli occupation Binational state on land of Palestine and Israel
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The Role of Spoilers
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Wood carvers in Deheisheh Refugee Camp Har Homa Settlement Israeli Only Highway leading to settlement
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Separation Barrier
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