CAUSES OF MIDDLE EAST CRISIS. AND IT IS CONSEQUENCES.
SETTING THE STAGE In the years following World War II, the
Jewish people won what for so long had eluded them: their own state. The gaining of their homeland along the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea, however, came at a heavy price
. A Jewish state was unwelcome in this mostly Arab region, and the resulting hostility led to a series of wars. Perhaps no Arab people, however, have been more opposed to a Jewish state than the Palestinians, who claim that much of the Jewish land belongs to them. These two groups have waged a bloody battle that goes on today. Israel Becomes a State The land called Palestine now consists of Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. To Jews, their claim to the land dates back 3,000 years, when Jewish kings ruled the region from Jerusalem. To Palestinians (both Muslim and Christian), the land has belonged to them since the Jews were driven out around A.D. 135. To Arabs, the land has belonged to them since their conquest of the area in the 7th century. After being forced out of Palestine during the second century, the Jewish people were not able to establish their own state and lived in different countries throughout the world. The global dispersal of the Jews is known as the Diaspora. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a group of Jews began returning to the region their ancestors had fled so long ago. They were known as Zionists, people who favored a Jewish national homeland in Palestine. At this time, Palestine was still part of the Ottoman Empire, ruled by Islamic Turks. After the defeat of the Ottomans in World War I, the League of Nations asked Britain to oversee Palestine until it was ready for independence. By this time, the Jews had become a growing presence in Palestine, and were already pressing for their own nation in the territory. The Palestinians living in the region strongly opposed such a move. In a 1917 letter to Zionist leaders, British Foreign Secretary Sir Arthur Balfour promoted the idea of creating a Jewish homeland in Palestine while protecting the “rights of existing non-Jewish communities.” Despite the Balfour Declaration, however, efforts to create a Jewish state failed—and hostility between Palestinians and Jews continued to grow
Israel and Arab States in Conflict
The new nation of Israel got a hostile greeting from its neighbors. The day after it
proclaimed itself a state, six Islamic states—Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi
Arabia, and Syria—invaded Israel. The first of many Arab-Israeli wars, this one
ended within months in a victory for Israel. Full-scale war broke out again in 1956,
1967, and 1973.
Largely as a result of this fighting, the state that the UN had set aside for
Palestinians never came into being. Israel seized half the land in the 1948–1949
fighting. While the fighting raged, at least 600,000 Palestinians fled, migrating from
the areas under Israeli control. They settled in UN-sponsored refugee camps that
ringed the borders of their former homeland. Meanwhile, various Arab nations
seized other Palestinian lands.
Egypt took control of the Gaza
Strip, while Jordan annexed the
West Bank of the Jordan River.
(See the map at left.)
The 1956 Suez Crisis The second
Arab-Israeli war followed in 1956.
That year, Egypt seized control of
the Suez Canal, which ran along
Egypt’s eastern border between
the Gulf of Suez and the
Mediterranean Sea. Egyptian president
Gamal Abdel Nasser sent in
troops to take the canal, which was
controlled by British interests. The
military action was prompted in
large part by Nasser’s anger over
the loss of U.S. and British financial
support for the building of
Egypt’s Aswan Dam.
Outraged, the British made an
agreement with France and Israel to
retake the canal. With air support
provided by their European allies,
the Israelis marched on the Suez
Canal and quickly defeated the
Egyptians. However, pressure from
the world community, including the United States and the
Soviet Union, forced Israel and the Europeans to withdraw
from Egypt. This left Egypt in charge of the canal and thus
ended the Suez Crisis.
Arab-Israeli Wars Continue Tensions between Israel and
the Arab states began to build again in the years following
the resolution of the Suez Crisis. By early 1967, Nasser and
his Arab allies, equipped with Soviet tanks and aircraft, felt
ready to confront Israel. “We are eager for battle in order to
force the enemy to awake from his dreams,” Nasser
announced, “and meet Arab reality face to face.” He moved
to close off the Gulf of Aqaba, Israel’s outlet to the Red Sea.
Convinced that the Arabs were about to attack, the
Israelis struck airfields in Egypt, Iran, Jordan, and Syria.
Safe from air attack, Israeli ground forces struck like lightning
on three fronts. Israel defeated the Arab states in what
became known as the Six-Day War, because it was over in
six days. Israel lost 800 troops in the fighting, while Arab
losses exceeded 15,000.
As a consequence of the Six-Day War, Israel gained control
of the old city of Jerusalem, the Sinai Peninsula, the
Golan Heights, and the West Bank. Israelis saw these new
holdings along their southern, eastern, and western borders
as a key buffer zone against further Arab attacks.
Palestinians who lived in Jerusalem were given the choice of
Israeli or Jordanian citizenship. Most chose the latter.
Palestinians who lived in the other areas were not offered
Israeli citizenship and simply came under Jewish control.
A fourth Arab-Israeli conflict erupted in October 1973.
Nasser’s successor, Egyptian president Anwar Sadat
(AHN•wahr suh•DAT), planned a joint Arab attack on the
date of Yom Kippur, the holiest of Jewish holidays. This
time the Israelis were caught by surprise. Arab forces
inflicted heavy casualties and recaptured some of the territory
lost in 1967. The Israelis, under their prime minister,
Golda Meir (MY•uhr), launched a counterattack and
regained most of the lost territory. Both sides agreed to a truce after several weeks
of fighting, and the Yom Kippur war came to an end.
The Palestine Liberation Organization As Israel and its Arab neighbors battled
each other, the Palestinians struggled for recognition. While the United Nations
had granted the Palestinians their own homeland, the Israelis had seized much of
that land, including the West Bank and Gaza Strip, during its various wars. Israel
insisted that such a move was vital to its national security.
In 1964, Palestinian officials formed the Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO) to push for the formation of a Palestinian state. Originally, the PLO was an
umbrella organization made up of different groups—laborers, teachers, lawyers,
and guerrilla fighters. Soon, guerrilla groups came to dominate the organization
and insisted that the only way to achieve their goal was through armed struggle. In
1969 Yasir Arafat (YAH•sur AR•uh•FAT) became chairman of the PLO.
Throughout the 1960 and 1970 the group carried out numerous attacks against
Israel. Some of Israel’s Arab neighbors supported the organization’s goals by
allowing the PLO to operate from their lands
Efforts at Peace
In November 1977, just four years after the Yom Kippur war, Anwar Sadat stunned
the world by extending a hand to Israel. No Arab country up to this point had recognized
Israel’s right to exist. In a dramatic gesture, Sadat went before the Knesset, the
Israeli parliament, and invited his one-time enemies to join him in a quest for peace.
PRIMARY SOURCE
Today, through my visit to you, I ask you why don’t we stretch our hands with faith and
sincerity and so that together we might . . . remove all suspicion of fear, betrayal, and
bad intention? Why don’t we stand together with the courage of men and the
boldness of heroes who dedicate themselves to a sublime [supreme] aim? Why don’t
we stand together with the same courage and daring to erect a huge edifice [building]
of peace? An edifice that . . . serves as a beacon for generations to come with the
human message for construction, development, and the dignity of man.
ANWAR SADAT, Knesset speech, November 20, 1977
Sadat emphasized that in exchange for peace Israel would have to recognize the
rights of Palestinians. Furthermore, it would have to withdraw from territory seized
in 1967 from Egypt, Jordan, and Syria.
U.S. president Jimmy Carter recognized that Sadat had created a historic opportunity
for peace. In 1978, Carter invited Sadat and Israeli prime minister
Menachem Begin (mehn•AHK•hehm BAY•gihn) to Camp David, the presidential
retreat in rural Maryland. Isolated from the press and from domestic political pressures,
Sadat and Begin worked to reach an agreement. After 13 days of negotiations,
Carter triumphantly announced that Egypt recognized Israel as a legitimate
state. In exchange, Israel agreed to return the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt. Signed in
1979, the Camp David Accords ended 30 years of hostilities between Egypt and
Israel and became the first signed agreement between Israel and an Arab country
Leave a Comment