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Arab-Israeli conflict

A Wisdom Archive on Arab-Israeli conflict

Arab-Israeli conflict

A selection of articles related to Arab-Israeli conflict

We recommend this article: Arab-Israeli conflict - 1, and also this: Arab-Israeli conflict - 2.
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Arab-Israeli conflict, Arab-Israeli conflict - History, Arab-Israeli conflict - Quotations, Arab-Israeli conflict - Reasons for the conflict, Arab-Israeli conflict - Abbreviated timeline, Arab-Israeli conflict - Israeli views, Arab-Israeli conflict - Mutual claims, Arab-Israeli conflict - Palestinian and other Arab views, Arab-Israeli conflict - Peace and reconciliation, Jewish-Arab conflict in the days of Muhammad, List of conflicts in the Middle East, International law and the Arab-Israeli conflict, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict, Israeli-Palestinian conflict timeline, Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Islamist movement, Israel, Israel Defense Force, Occupation of the Gaza Strip by Egypt, Occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem by Jordan, Political status of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Proposals for a Palestinian state, War on Terrorism, Greater Israel, Greater Syria

ARTICLES RELATED TO Arab-Israeli conflict

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Arab-Israeli conflict

The Arab-Israeli conflict is a long-running conflict in the Middle East concerning self-determination of the Jews in the Land of Israel and, after the establishment of the state of Israel, its relations with the Arab states and the Palestinian population (see Israeli-Palestinian conflict.) Some uses of the term Middle East conflict refer to this matter, but the region has been host to other disputes and wars not directly ...

Including:

Read more here: » Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Arab-Israeli conflict

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict
The League was established on March 22, 1945. When the League founding pact was signed in Cairo, Egypt, "[t]he Arab League states collectively put their weight behind the basic demands of Palestine's Arabs but arrogated to themselves the right to select who would represent the Palestinians in their councils, so long as their country was not independent." 1 (p.173) By the end of World War II, the Palestinian Arabs were left leaderless. The mufti of Jerusalem Hajj Amin ...

Including:

Read more here: » Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab-Israeli conflict - Reasons for the conflict

The Arab-Israeli conflict is the result of numerous factors. Reasons cited for the conflict therefore vary from participant to participant and observer to observer. A powerful example of this divide can be found in opinion surveys of Palestinians and Israelis. In a March, 2005 poll 63% of the Israelis blamed the failure of the Oslo Peace Process on Palestinian violence, but only 5% of the Palestinians agreed. 54% of Palestinians put the blame on Israeli policies, but only 20% of the Israelis agreed.[11] It is therefore difficult to develop a single, objective reason for the conflict, so ...

See also:

Arab-Israeli conflict, Arab-Israeli conflict - History, Arab-Israeli conflict - Before 1947, Arab-Israeli conflict - War of 1948, Arab-Israeli conflict - Aftermath of the 1948 war, Arab-Israeli conflict - War of 1956, Arab-Israeli conflict - Between 1956 and 1967, Arab-Israeli conflict - War of 1967, Arab-Israeli conflict - War of 1968-1970, Arab-Israeli conflict - War of 1973, Arab-Israeli conflict - War of 1978, Arab-Israeli conflict - War of 1982, Arab-Israeli conflict - Intifada of 1987-1993, Arab-Israeli conflict - Gulf War of 1990-1991, Arab-Israeli conflict - Intifada of 2000, Arab-Israeli conflict - Reasons for the conflict, Arab-Israeli conflict - Israeli views, Arab-Israeli conflict - Palestinian and other Arab views, Arab-Israeli conflict - Mutual claims, Arab-Israeli conflict - Peace and reconciliation, Arab-Israeli conflict - Quotations, Arab-Israeli conflict - Abbreviated timeline

Read more here: » Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab-Israeli conflict - Reasons for the conflict

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab-Israeli conflict - Reasons for the conflict

The Arab-Israeli conflict is the result of numerous factors. Reasons cited for the conflict therefore vary from participant to participant and observer to observer. A powerful example of this divide can be found in opinion surveys of Palestinians and Israelis. In a March, 2005 poll 63% of the Israelis blamed the failure of the Oslo Peace Process on Palestinian violence, but only 5% of the Palestinians agreed. 54% of Palestinians put the blame on Israeli policies, but only 20% of the Israelis agreed.[10] It is therefore difficult to develop a single, objective reason for the conflict, so ...

See also:

Arab-Israeli conflict, Arab-Israeli conflict - History, Arab-Israeli conflict - Reasons for the conflict, Arab-Israeli conflict - Israeli views, Arab-Israeli conflict - Palestinian and other Arab views, Arab-Israeli conflict - Mutual claims, Arab-Israeli conflict - Peace and reconciliation, Arab-Israeli conflict - Quotations, Arab-Israeli conflict - Abbreviated timeline

Read more here: » Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab-Israeli conflict - Reasons for the conflict

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - 1948 Arab-Israeli War

The 1948 Arab-Israeli War is referred to as the "War of Independence" (Hebrew: מלחמת העצמאות) or as the "War of Liberation" (Hebrew: מלחמת השחרור) by Israelis. For Palestinians, the war marked the beginning of the events referred to as "The Catastrophe" ("al Nakba," Arabic: النكبة ). It was the first in a series of wars in the Arab-Israeli conflict. It established the state of Israel as an independent state, dividing the remaining areas of the British Mandate of Palestine into areas co ...

Including:

Read more here: » 1948 Arab-Israeli War: Encyclopedia - 1948 Arab-Israeli War

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - 1947 UN Partition Plan

On 29 November 1947 the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine, a plan to resolve the Arab-Jewish conflict in the British Mandate of Palestine, was approved by the United Nations General Assembly, at the UN World Headquarters in New York. The plan partitioned the territory into Jewish and Arab states, with the Greater Jerusalem area (encompassing Bethlehem) coming under international control. The failure of this plan led to the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. 1947 UN Partition Plan - Creation of the plan. The U ...

Including:

Read more here: » 1947 UN Partition Plan: Encyclopedia - 1947 UN Partition Plan

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Camp David 2000 Summit

The Middle East Peace Summit at Camp David of July 2000 took place between United States President Bill Clinton, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, and Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat. It was an attempt to negotiate a "final status settlement" to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Camp David 2000 Summit - The summit. President Clinton announced his invitation to Barak and Arafat on July 5, 2000, to come to Camp David to continue their negotiations on the Middle East peace process. Building on th ...

Including:

Read more here: » Camp David 2000 Summit: Encyclopedia - Camp David 2000 Summit

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - After 2000

In 2002, Saudi Arabia offered a peace plan in the New York Times and at a summit meeting of the Arab League in Beirut. The plan, based on UN Security Council Resolution 242 and Resolution 338, but going further, essentially calls for full withdrawal in return for fully normalized relations with the whole Arab world. This proposal received the unanimous backing of the Arab League for the first time. In response, Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said: "... the Saudi step is an important one, but it is liable to founder if terrorism ...

See also:

Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Before 1948, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1948-1949, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1949-1967, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1967-2000, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - After 2000, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Footnotes, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Arab-Israeli peace diplomacy and treaties

Read more here: » Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - After 2000

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Projects working for peace among Israelis and Arabs

This page discusses the many projects that work to create a peaceful and productive co-existence between Israelis and Arabs including the Palestinians. Projects working for peace among Israelis and Arabs - Israeli-Arab co-existence projects. Projects working for peace among Israelis and Arabs - Ta'ayush Arab-Jewish Partnership. Formed in the fall of 2000, Ta'ayush (Arabic for "coexistence") is a grassroots movement of Arabs and Jews working to break down the walls of raci ...

Including:

Read more here: » Projects working for peace among Israelis and Arabs: Encyclopedia - Projects working for peace among Israelis and Arabs

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1948-1949

The day after the state of Israel was proclaimed, six League members, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Transjordan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, supported by other members (notably Yemen), coordinated the attack on the State of Israel in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and explicitly stated the destruction of the newly-formed Jewish state as their goal. On May 15, 1948, the Arab League Secretary General Abdul Razek Azzam Pasha announced the intention to wage "a war of extermination and a momentous massacre which will be spoken of like the Mongolian massacres and ...

See also:

Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Before 1948, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1948-1949, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1949-1967, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1967-2000, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - After 2000, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Footnotes, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Arab-Israeli peace diplomacy and treaties

Read more here: » Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1948-1949

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Daniel Pipes

Daniel Pipes is an American neoconservative [1] columnist, author, counter-terrorism analyst, and scholar of Middle Eastern history. The author or co-author of 18 books, which have been translated into 19 languages, Pipes is both praised and criticized for his outspoken views on Islam and Islamism. Pipes is the founder and director of the Middle East Forum, a former member of the presidentially-appointed board of the U.S. Institute of Peace, and a regular columnist for the New York Sun and The Jerusalem Post. He c ...

Including:

Read more here: » Daniel Pipes: Encyclopedia - Daniel Pipes

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Six-Day War

The Six-Day War (Hebrew: מלחמת ששת הימים transliteration: Milhemet Sheshet Hayamim), also known as the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, Six Days' War, or June War, was fought between Israel and its Arab neighbors Egypt, Jordan, and Syria. It began when Israel launched what it considered a pre-emptive attack against Egypt, following the latter's closure of the Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping and the deployment of troops in the Sinai near the Israeli border, and after months of increasingly tense bord ...

Including:

Read more here: » Six-Day War: Encyclopedia - Six-Day War

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - United Arab Republic

The United Arab Republic (UAR) (Arabic: لجمهورية العربية المتحدة - al jumhuriya al-'arabia al-muttahida) was the state formed by the union between the republics of Egypt and Syria in 1958. It existed until Syria's secession in 1961, although Egypt continued to be known as the UAR until 1970. United Arab Republic - Causes of the union. Established on February 1 as a first step towards a pan-Arab nation, the UAR was created when a group of political and military leaders in ...

Including:

Read more here: » United Arab Republic: Encyclopedia - United Arab Republic

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Yusuf al-Qaradawi

Yusuf al-Qaradawi (Arabic: يوسف القرضاوي) (born September 9, 1926) is a Muslim scholar and preacher best known for his popular al Jazeera program, ash-Shariah wal-Hayat ("Shariah and Life"), and his website IslamOnline, which was launched in 1997. He has also published some fifty books, including The Lawful and the Prohibited in Islam and Islam: The Future Civilization. Qaradawi is controversial: among Muslims he is widely considered a moderate conservative, while many Western critics regard him as dan ...

Including:

Read more here: » Yusuf al-Qaradawi: Encyclopedia - Yusuf al-Qaradawi

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Brit Shalom

Brit Shalom (Hebrew: ברית שלום, lit. "covenant of peace"; Arabic: تحالف ألسلام, Tahalof Essalam; also called the Jewish-Palestinian Peace Alliance) is an Israeli organisation of Jewish and Palestinian peace activists working towards reconciliation, peace and equal rights in the region. It generally favors binational confederation or two-state coexistance, drawing upon fringe historical and contemporary movements as varied as Uri Avneri's pan-Semitism, Buberian Zionism, and even aspects of ...

Including:

Read more here: » Brit Shalom: Encyclopedia - Brit Shalom

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia - Arab League

The Arab League or League of Arab States (Arabic: جامعة الدول العربية), is an organization of Arab states - compare Arab world. It resembles the Organization of American States, the Council of Europe, or the former Organization for African Unity (now African Union), in that it has primarily political aims; however, its membership is based on culture rather than geographical location(which is the basis for membership of the other organizations cited above); one can regard each of these organiza ...

Including:

Read more here: » Arab League: Encyclopedia - Arab League

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1949-1967

As a result of 1949 Armistice Agreements, the West Bank and East Jerusalem were ruled by Jordan, while the Gaza Strip was occupied by Egypt until the 1967 Six Day War. In 1951, the Arab League established the Office of the Arab Boycott of Israel (OABI) based in Damascus in order to boycott companies that do business with Israel from operating in the Arab world. In its heyday, the Arab boycott office blacklisted more than 8,500 ...

See also:

Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Before 1948, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1948-1949, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1949-1967, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1967-2000, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - After 2000, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Footnotes, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Arab-Israeli peace diplomacy and treaties

Read more here: » Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1949-1967

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - 1982 Lebanon War - Background

After the 1948 Arab-Israeli conflict, Lebanon became home to more than 110,000 Palestinian refugees. From 1970 to 1973, the PLO was engaged in the Jordanian Civil War, which routed a large number of Palestinian fighters and refugees into neighboring Lebanon. By 1975, they numbered more than 300,000, creating an informal state-within-a-state in South Lebanon. The PLO became a powerful force and played an important role in the Lebanese Civil War. Continual violence occurred between Israel and ...

See also:

1982 Lebanon War, 1982 Lebanon War - Background, 1982 Lebanon War - Reasons for the war, 1982 Lebanon War - Course of the fighting, 1982 Lebanon War - Outcome of the war, 1982 Lebanon War - Casualties, 1982 Lebanon War - The security buffer zone, 1982 Lebanon War - Political results, 1982 Lebanon War - Consequences

Read more here: » 1982 Lebanon War: Encyclopedia II - 1982 Lebanon War - Background

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Before 1948

The League was established on March 22, 1945. When the League founding pact was signed in Cairo, Egypt, "[t]he Arab League states collectively put their weight behind the basic demands of Palestine's Arabs but arrogated to themselves the right to select who would represent the Palestinians in their councils, so long as their country was not independent." 1 (p.173) By the end of World War II, the Palestinian Arabs were left leaderless. The mufti of Jerusalem Hajj Amin ...

See also:

Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Before 1948, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1948-1949, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1949-1967, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - 1967-2000, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - After 2000, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Footnotes, Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Arab-Israeli peace diplomacy and treaties

Read more here: » Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict - Before 1948

Arab-Israeli conflict: Encyclopedia II - Jews Against the Occupation - Selected quotes

"The Israeli military fires ... live ammunition at unarmed Palestinian civilians engaged in peaceful protest, failing to distinguish between peaceful and violent resistance." -- Sam Miller-Eisenstein [3] "Dore Gold is an architect of the spin that the killing of Palestinian civilians and the destruction of Palestinian society somehow constitute a battle between two equal sides," said Sam Miller-Eisenstein of Jews Against the Occupation. "Palestinians don’t have tanks – they have stones, a few militants, and what remains of their dignity. This is not a war ...

See also:

Jews Against the Occupation, Jews Against the Occupation - Selected quotes

Read more here: » Jews Against the Occupation: Encyclopedia II - Jews Against the Occupation - Selected quotes

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