Violence in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The neutrality of this article is disputed.
Please see the discussion on the talk page.

The conflict between various Palestinian groups and Israel has existed in one form or another since the first half of the 20th century, and has left much bitterness and death on both sides. This article summarizes some aspects of the violence.

Contents

[edit] Overview and Background

The conflict has undergone 5 or 6 distinct phases since it began. (Timings are approximate):

[edit] Prior to 1940-45

Up until World War II, violence in Palestine was sporadic, and intensified in relation to increased Jewish immigration as part of the Zionist movement, which sought to create a Jewish state in the Land of Israel. At the time, it had an overwhelmingly Arab population, however some cities, most notably Jerusalem, had a Jewish majority. (See Demographics of Jerusalem)

Jews settled in what was then part of the Ottoman Empire, which includes modern day Israel, Jordan and other territories. They bought land for farming.

After 1917 and the Balfour Declaration, Arabs became concerned at the British support and influx of Jews, whose policy was to buy land and immigrate to what was then Palestine (the territories of today's Israel and Jordan). Initial violence was small and localised, such matters as new land purchases, or synagogue locations. After the Riots in Palestine of 1920 the Jewish Yishuv (community) set up its own defence irregulars, Haganah, and intelligence operation. The aim at this time was to gain foreknowledge of future attacks and be able to protect the Yishuv against such attacks.

Violence escalated in 1929 when Arab riots broke up and a large number of Jews were injured at the Western Wall (at Judaism's most sacred site, the Temple Mount). In Hebron, the entire Jewish community was massacred, as Arab rioters killed at least 67 Jews. In the Safed massacre, 18 Jews were killed and 80 wounded.

The years 1930-1935 were marked by activities of the Black Hand Islamist militant organization led by Izz ad-Din al-Qassam who was killed by the British in 1935.

In 1936-1939, the Arabs - led by the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin Al-Husseini - launched the Great Arab Revolt, a campaign of violent riots and attack on Jews - which lead to hundreds of casualties and ended after the British officers deported Husseini and hanged many rioters. While mainstream Zionism, represented by Vaad Leumi and the Haganah, practiced the policy of Havlagah (restraint), Irgun chose to retaliate, furthering chaos in the region.

[edit] WW2 and prior to formation of State of Israel

With the rise of the Nazi party in Europe, and again after World War II, Jews sought to relocate to this area in larger numbers. Although this plan to create a Jewish state in Palestine has its roots as far back as the 1897 First Zionist Congress in Basel, the Nazi Holocaust provided an urgency to the Zionist project.

Intense conflict arose as the Arab and Jewish sides jockeyed for position and the land, under British rule. The first Jewish defence forces such as Haganah were set up, along with the Lochamei Herut LeIsrael (led by Yitzhak Shamir) and the Irgun Tzvai Leumi "Etzel" (led by Menachem Begin), which sought to obtain security for the Jewish community, but were also preparing for the day when open conflict would break out. At this point the conflict was characterised by sporadic violence, and small scale terrorst incidents and guerrilla attacks, until 1946.

In 1944, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Amin al-Husayni, the senior Islamic religious authority of the Palestinian Arabs and close ally of Adolf Hitler, sponsored an unsuccessful chemical warfare assault on the Jewish community in Palestine. Five parachutists were supplied with maps of Tel Aviv, canisters of a German–manufactured "fine white powder," and instructions from the Mufti to dump chemicals into the Tel Aviv water system. District police commander Fayiz Bey Idrissi later recalled, "The laboratory report stated that each container held enough poison to kill 25,000 people, and there were at least ten containers." [1]

On the 22nd of July 1946, the conflict took a significant turn with the bombing of the King David Hotel - Jerusalem's most famous hotel and the fortified military and civilian headquarters of the British occupation. Operation Malonchik was led by Menachim Begin, head of the militant Zionist underground assault unit, the Irgun. Dressed as Arabs, the Irgun militants drew a truck up to the kitchen of the King David Hotel and began to unload a cargo that looked like milk, but was in fact at least 500 lb of high explosives. Despite several warning phone-calls from the Irgun, the British commander refused to believe them, and refused to evacuate. As the BBC put it "the entire wing of a huge building was cut off as with a knife" [2]. At least 88 people were killed - including British, Arabs and 15 Jews who worked inside.

As Begin - later elected Prime Minister of Israel - wrote in his famous book The Revolt: Story of the Irgun: "The revolt sprang from the earth... A new generation grew up which turned its back on fear. It began to fight instead of to plead. For nearly two thousand years, the Jews, as Jews, had not borne arms, and it was on this complete disarmament, as much psychological as physical, that our oppressors calculated... We fight, therefore we are" [1].

As David Ben Gurion admitted to the Jewish Agency in regard to stopping the upsurge in Jewish terrorism in Palestine: "We cannot do it because, as I told you, it is futile, sir, it is futile." [3]

[edit] 1947 to 1970 (approx)

The conflict at this point was characterised by being inter-state. Israel was invaded several times by its neighbours, notably the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, 1970 War of Attrition and 1973 Yom Kippur War, and launched its own invasions, most notably the 1967 Six Day War, in the course of which, Israel occupied territories such as the West Bank and Gaza Strip, the Golan and Sinai, areas which included a very hostile Arab population and several million Palestinian refugees. This, together with Arab anger over what they saw as Western countries interfering non-neutrally in their affairs, became a breeding ground for mass anger. The Middle East was turbulent and Islamic Fundamentalism came to the forefront during this time, but neither the mass terrorism nor the large-scale Israeli settlements building program had fully emerged during this juncture.

[edit] 1970 onward

Popular Palestinian guerrilla movements came to the fore in this time. Aircraft hijackings and bombings took place, the 1972 Israeli Olympic team was attacked and eleven athletes were killed. This led Israel to launch reprise assassinations in Operation Wrath of God. Later on suicide bombings became a preferred tool of destruction. These actions were operated by a large number of groups and individuals, which made detection and prevention difficult, and were targeted not only at Israelis, but also at the nationals of other countries felt to be aiding them, principally America. Many of these actions were supported at State level, with countries such as Syria, Libya and others openly sponsoring terrorism of this kind.

In response, there were several actions by the Israeli's, including armed incursion (Lebanon 1980), segregation (cutting off the West Bank and Gaza Strip from mainland Israel), an increased level of aggression (including retaliation against houses and villages), and economic deprival.

Various peace initiatives, such as 1978 Camp David, 1993 Oslo and Camp David 2000 were brokered. That those countries which agreed to peace, such as Jordan and Egypt, were given back by Israel the land which had been occupied, upon conclusion of the peace process.

[edit] 1987 onwards: The Intifadas

The popular uprising known as the Intifada in 1987, and the al-Aqsa Intifada in 2000, brought violence to the everyday street in a greater way than previously, and the response by the Israeli's was equally escalated.

[edit] Current

Whilst the above trends still are the broad status quo, the political map has developed. Terrorism now includes large scale terrorism, such as the 9/11 attack by Islamic extremists on New York, and another change is the controversial (and somewhat provocative) building of new Israeli settlements in the West Bank.

[edit] Timeline of violence in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict

Violence in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: 2000 - 2001 - 2002 - 2003 - 2004 - 2005 - 2006

[edit] List of organisations on both sides which are or have been responsible for violence

[edit] Palestinian, Arab, Islamic

See also: Category:Palestinian militant groups

[edit] Israeli, Jewish

Before 1948:

After 1948:

  • Kach (banned by Israel government, membership is illegal)
  • IDF

[edit] See also

(Neutral Point Of View note: the presence of the last 2 links are for those seeking further information on international law in general. It is not an opinion on this specific conflict)

[edit] References

  1. Begin, Menachim. The Revolt. WH Allen, London. 1951

    [edit] External links