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Palestine, Israel and the Arab-Israeli Conflict
A Primer
Table of Contents
Page
                      1
Introduction
The Land and the People
Page
                      2
Zionism
Page
                      3
The British Mandate in Palestine
Page
                      4
The United Nations Partition Plan
Page
                      5
Palestinian Arab Refugees
Palestinians
Palestinian Arab Citizens of Israel
Page
                      6
The June 1967 War
Page
                      7
The Occupied Territories
Jerusalem

Page
                      8
The Palestine Liberation Organization
UN Security Council Resolution 242
Page
                      9
The October 1973 War
Camp David I
Page
                      10
The Intifada
Page
                      11
The Madrid Conference
Page
                      12
The Oslo Accords
Page
                      13
Camp David II
Page
                      14
The Fall 2000 Uprising

From
http://www.merip.org/palestine-israel_primer/brit-mandate-pal-isr-prime.html

}}>Begin
Palestine, Israel and the Arab-Israeli Conflict
A Primer
Back to Table of Contents
The British Mandate in Palestine
By the early years of the 20th century, Palestine was becoming a trouble

       spot of competing territorial claims and political interests. The Ottoman
Empire was weakening, and European powers were entrenching their grip

       on areas in the eastern Mediterranean, including Palestine. During 1915-
16, as World War I was underway, the British High Commissioner in Egypt,
Sir Henry McMahon, secretly corresponded with Husayn ibn `Ali, the
patriarch of the Hashemite family and Ottoman governor of Mecca and
Medina. McMahon convinced Husayn to lead an Arab revolt against the
Ottoman Empire, which was aligned with Germany against Britain and
France in the war. McMahon promised that if the Arabs supported Britain in
the war, the British government would support the establishment of an
independent Arab state under Hashemite rule in the Arab provinces of the
Ottoman Empire, including Palestine. The Arab revolt, led by T. E. Lawrence
("Lawrence of Arabia") and Husayn's son Faysal, was successful in
defeating the Ottomans, and Britain took control over much of this area
during World War I.
Britain       made other promises during the war that conflicted with the
Husayn-McMahon understandings.
But Britain made other promises during the war that conflicted with the

   Husayn-McMahon understandings. In 1917, the British Foreign Minister,

         Lord Arthur Balfour, issued a declaration (the Balfour Declaration)
announcing his government's support for the establishment of "a Jewish
national home in Palestine." A third promise, in the form of a secret
agreement, was a deal that Britain and France struck between themselves to
carve up the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire and divide control of the
region.
After the war, Britain and France convinced the new League of Nations
(precursor to the United Nations), in which they were the dominant powers,
to grant them quasi-colonial authority over former Ottoman territories. The
British and French regimes were known as mandates. France obtained a
mandate over Syria, carving out Lebanon as a separate state with a (slight)
Christian majority. Britain obtained a mandate over the areas which now
comprise Israel, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and Jordan.
In 1921, the British divided this region in two: east of the Jordan River

 became the Emirate of Transjordan, to be ruled by Faysal's brother
'Abdullah, and west of the Jordan River became the Palestine Mandate. This
was the first time in modern history that Palestine became a unified political
entity.
Arabs       were angered by Britain's failure to fulfill its promise to create

           an independent Arab state.
Throughout the region, Arabs were angered by Britain's failure to fulfill its
promise to create an independent Arab state, and many opposed British and
French control as a violation of their right to self-determination. In Palestine,
the situation was more complicated because of the British promise to

  support the creation of a Jewish national home. The rising tide of European
Jewish immigration, land purchases and settlement in Palestine generated

         increasing resistance by Palestinian Arab peasants, journalists and

        political figures. They feared that this would lead eventually to the

    establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine. Palestinian Arabs opposed
the British Mandate because it thwarted their aspirations for self-rule,

 and opposed massive Jewish immigration because it threatened their
position in the country.
In 1920 and 1921, clashes broke out between Arabs and Jews in which
roughly equal numbers of both groups were killed. In the 1920s, when the
Jewish National Fund purchased large tracts of land from absentee Arab
landowners, the Arabs living in these areas were evicted. These
displacements led to increasing tensions and violent confrontations between
Jewish settlers and Arab peasant tenants.
In 1928, Muslims and Jews in Jerusalem began to clash over their respective
communal religious rights at the Wailing Wall (al-Buraq in the Muslim

  tradition). The Wailing Wall, the sole remnant of the second Jewish Temple,
is one of the holiest sites for the Jewish people. But this site is also holy to
Muslims, since the Wailing Wall is adjacent to the Temple Mount (the Noble
Sanctuary in the Muslim tradition). On the mount is the site of the al-Aqsa
Mosque and the Dome of the Rock, believed to mark the spot from which the
Prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven on a winged horse.
On August 15, 1929, members of the Betar youth movement (a pre-state
organization of the Revisionist Zionists -- click here for more info)
demonstrated and raised a Zionist flag over the Wailing Wall. Fearing that
the Noble Sanctuary was in danger, Arabs responded by attacking Jews
throughout the country. During the clashes, sixty-four Jews were killed in
Hebron. Their Muslim neighbors saved others. The Jewish community of
Hebron ceased to exist when its surviving members left for Jerusalem. During
a week of communal violence, 133 Jews and 115 Arabs were killed and
many wounded.
European Jewish immigration to Palestine increased dramatically after
Hitler's rise to power in 1933, leading to new land purchases and Jewish
settlements. Palestinian resistance to British control and Zionist settlement
climaxed with the Arab revolt of 1936-39, which Britain suppressed with the
help of Zionist militias and the complicity of neighboring Arab regimes. After
crushing the Arab revolt, the British reconsidered their governing policies in
an effort to maintain order in an increasingly tense environment. They issued
a White Paper (a statement of political policy) limiting future Jewish
immigration and land purchases. The Zionists regarded this as a betrayal of
the Balfour Declaration and a particularly egregious act in light of the
desperate situation of the Jews in Europe, who were facing extermination.
The 1939 White Paper marked the end of the British-Zionist alliance. At the
same time, the defeat of the Arab revolt and the exile of the Palestinian
political leadership meant that the Palestinian Arabs were politically
disorganized during the crucial decade in which the future of Palestine was
decided.
Page 4 | The United Nations Partition Plan
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