Arab-Israeli Conflict - History.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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the Suez Canal and in 1951 blockaded the Strait of Tiran (Israel’s access to the Red Sea), which Israel regarded as an act of war.
In June 1956 Egypt nationalized theSuez Canal, which had been jointly owned by Britain and France.
In late October, Israel invaded the Gaza Strip and Sinai Peninsula, defeating Egyptian forces there.Britain and France attacked Egypt a few days later.
Although the fighting was brief and Israel eventually withdrew from the Sinai and Gaza, the conflict furtherexacerbated regional tensions.
V THE SIX-DAY WAR AND THE 1973 WAR
In 1967 Egypt, Syria, and Jordan massed their armies on Israel’s borders, and several Arab states called for war.
Egypt demanded the withdrawal of UN observers fromthe Sinai Peninsula. Assuming the Arabs would attack, Israel struck first, in June 1967, and caught the Arabs by surprise.
In the Six-Day War that followed, Israel demolished the armies and air forces of Egypt, Syria, and Jordan.
It also gained control of the West Bank, the Sinai Peninsula and Gaza Strip, the Golan Heights regionof southwestern Syria, and all of Jerusalem.
A second wave of Palestinian refugees fled the fighting, worsening the problem created by the first exodus in 1948.
Withthe armies of its enemies crushed, Israel felt it could wait for the Arab states to offer peace on terms it found comfortable.
Many UN members were less confident thatpeace would follow and generally did not approve of Israel’s territorial gains.
In late November the UN Security Council passed Resolution 242, which called for anexchange of territory for peace and for a resettling of the Palestinian refugees.
The Arab states continued to call for the destruction of Israel, while Israel for its part, refused to consider withdrawing from the territories it had occupied except in thecontext of a comprehensive peace plan.
The Arabs increasingly threw their support behind the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), a political body that had beenformed in 1964 to create a Palestinian state.
Using terrorism, the PLO attacked Israel from their bases in Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria; attacks by Palestinian Arabs camefrom within the Gaza Strip and West Bank as well.
Israel’s position hardened, and little progress toward achieving peace was made in the late 1960s or early 1970s.
Egyptian president Anwar al-Sadat reconstructed the Egyptian army in the early 1970s.
Syria also prepared for war and received weapons from the Union of SovietSocialist Republics (USSR).
Israel, in turn, fortified its forward positions and was supplied with weapons by the United States.
The Arabs attacked in October 1973 onYom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish year, and caught Israel by surprise.
Egypt and Syria pushed across the armistice lines established after the Six-Day War,which had kept Egyptian troops west of the Suez Canal and Syrian troops northeast of the Golan Heights.
The Arab advances greatly restored Arab confidence.
Israel,however, quickly recovered from the surprise and again pushed into Arab territory, surrounding or destroying the bulk of the Egyptian and Syrian forces.
Nevertheless,Israel suffered greatly in the three-week war, especially from the injuries, deaths, and massive physical destruction of the war’s first two days.
Moreover, Israel’sconfidence was shaken, and the euphoria that followed the country’s victory in the Six-Day War was lost.
In Israel and among most Western countries, the conflict cameto be known as the Yom Kippur War; Arabs call it the October War or Ramadan War.
See Arab-Israeli War of 1973.
Following the war, U.S.
secretary of state Henry Kissinger negotiated a series of disengagement agreements with the warring parties.
Kissinger’s work (labeled shuttle diplomacy because he flew back and forth between the capitals of the warring countries, which refused to meet with one another) did little to change the prewar status quo, and the countries were technically still at war.
Even so, the agreements did reverse the military buildup and achieved a relatively peaceful, if tense, stalemate.
VI CAMP DAVID ACCORDS
In the late 1970s Egypt’s military expenses caused it increasing economic hardship and social unrest, prompting Sadat to initiate negotiations with Israel in 1977.
Sadathoped to end the military buildup and regain the Sinai Peninsula.
Israelis greeted Sadat’s visit to Jerusalem enthusiastically.
United States president Jimmy Carterfacilitated the negotiations between Sadat and Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin.
The agreements came to be known as the Camp David Accords after theMaryland retreat where Carter hosted some of the negotiations.
Under the peace treaty signed in March 1979, Egypt regained the Sinai Peninsula, which was partiallydemilitarized; foreign observers were placed in the peninsula to maintain the treaty’s provisions; and Israel and Egypt entered into normal diplomatic relations.
For itspart, Israel achieved peace with what had been its largest enemy at the cost of evacuating Israeli settlers from the Sinai and losing some investment in the area’sinfrastructure, such as roads and housing.
The Camp David Accords, however, did nothing for Syria and only advanced the Palestinian cause in the vaguest of terms.For these reasons, the Arab League expelled Egypt and the rest of the Arab world widely condemned the accords.
In 1981 Sadat was assassinated by a group of Islamicfundamentalists within the Egyptian army.
Egypt continued to maintain relations with Israel after Sadat’s death.
Following Camp David, Syria maintained its warlike posture and demanded the unconditional surrender of the Golan Heights, and the PLO continued its terrorist assaultson Israel.
In 1982 Israel tried to wipe out the PLO by attacking its bases in Lebanon, which had been plunged into its own civil war in 1975.
The assault on the PLO,which Israel called Operation Peace for Galilee, quickly escalated into ground battles in Lebanon and full-scale engagements between the Israeli and Syrian air forces.After a siege on Beirut the PLO leadership evacuated from Lebanon and relocated to Tunisia.
Arabs were frustrated that Israel had occupied an Arab capital with littleintervention from the rest of the world, and the Palestinians of the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip felt more isolated and abandoned than ever.
Israelwithdrew from most of Lebanon by 1985, though it continued to maintain a self-declared security zone inside Lebanon along the Israeli border until 2000.
VII THE INTIFADA AND THE PEACE PROCESS
In the late 1980s Palestinians began the intifada (uprising), a widespread campaign against the continuing Israeli occupation of the Gaza Strip and West Bank.
The campaign combined elements of mass demonstrations, civil disobedience, riots, and terrorism.
The intifada put the Israeli army on the defensive and forced them todevote significant resources to patrolling the West Bank and Gaza Strip as a police force.
Along with Israeli civilian casualties, many soldiers, including civilian reservists,were injured or killed, and the army in turn often used brutal tactics against Palestinians.
As a result of the intifada, pressure grew within Israel to broaden the peace process.
The opportunity to do so was provided in 1991 by the Persian Gulf War.
In thiswar, a multinational coalition of Western and Arab armies expelled Iraq from Kuwait, which Iraq had invaded in 1990.
One of the coalition’s chief partners was theUnited States, a strong ally of Israel.
Following the Western-Arab victory, the United States, along with its one-time enemy the USSR, pressed Arabs and Israelis topursue peace in the Madrid Conference of 1991.
For the first time, all sides sat together to discuss bilateral and region-wide peace talks.
Although little progress wasmade, the conference paved the way for future agreements.
In 1993, while the official negotiating teams of the Palestinians and Israel were engaged in deadlocked negotiations in the United States, the two sides achieved a majorbreakthrough with the Oslo Accords, which were secretly negotiated in Oslo, Norway.
The Oslo Accords and the resulting Declaration of Principles set the stage for agradual transfer of power to the Palestinians.
Further agreements in 1994 and 1995 gave the Palestinians autonomy over most aspects of life in the Gaza Strip and inurban areas of the West Bank through a new administrative body, the Palestinian National Authority (PNA).
In the first elections for the PNA in 1996, PLO chairman YasirArafat was chosen as its president.
Finally, the agreements stated that soon after these elections Israel would conduct further withdrawals from rural areas of the WestBank, after which talks addressing the final status of the Palestinian areas would begin.
Meanwhile, with the initial progress on the Palestinian issue, many Arab states felt freer to engage Israel openly and formally, though still with caution.
On the heels ofthe 1993 agreements, Israel and Jordan took steps to negotiate a cooperative relationship.
Despite opposition from other Arabs that Jordan’s King Hussein, like Egypt’sSadat before him, was abandoning Palestinian interests in pursuit of a treaty with Israel, Hussein was undeterred.
Jordan and Israel signed a peace agreement in 1994.By the mid-1990s Israel had also achieved diplomatic relations with Arab countries in North Africa and the Persian Gulf..
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