1950's
Tensions
remained high after the armistice agreements that ended the
Arab-Israeli War of 1948.
Conflict
along the Jordanian border went through gradual stages, building up
from small Israeli raids with Palestinian counter raids through major
Israeli incursions.
Summer
1954 - Israeli false-flag operation to plant bombs
inside civilian targets within Egypt and blame the resulting damage
on radical Arab factions is uncovered and stopped. ("The Lavon Affair")
February
1955 - Israeli raid on an Egyptian military outpost in Gaza kills
37 Egyptian soldiers. The Egyptian government began to actively
sponsor, train, and arm the Palestinian volunteers from Gaza as
fedayeen units which committed raids into Israel.
July 1956
- Egypt's President Nasser nationalizes the Suez Canal. The ensuing
"Suez Crisis" was a diplomatic and military confrontation
between Egypt on one side, and Britain, France and Israel on the
other. The United States, the Soviet Union, and the United Nations
playing major roles in forcing Britain, France and Israel to
withdraw.
The Six-Day
War
June 1967 -
After
years of tension because of Egyptian-aided fedayeen
attacks, the "Six Day War" began on June 5 with Israel
launching surprise strikes against Egyptian airfields in response to
the mobilisation of Egyptian forces on the Israeli border.
- Israel took control of the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt; the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, from Jordan; and the Golan Heights from Syria.
- An estimated 300,000 Palestinians left the West Bank and Gaza, most of whom settled in Jordan. Minority Jews living across the Arab world faced persecution and expulsion following the war.
- Israel having thus captured the rest of Mandate Palestine from Jordan and Egypt began a policy of Israeli settlements in the Occupied Territories.
September 1967
-
The Khartoum Resolution issued at the Arab League Summit, commits
Arab states to ensure the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the land
seized in the Six Day War and to insist on the rights of the
Palestinian people in their own country.
Fallout from
the Six Day War
July
1968 - Armed, non-state actors such
as Fatah and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
achieved the majority of the Palestinian National Council votes
February
3, 1969 - at the Palestinian
National Council in Cairo, the leader of the Fatah, Yasser Arafat was
elected as the chairman of the PLO.
1969 - PLO
attempts to take control of the West Bank. Israeli Defense Forces
force them into Jordan.
September 1970
- July 1971 A
military struggle between Jordan and the Palestinian armed
organizations results in the expulsion of the PLO to Lebanon.
1971 to 1981 -
The
center of PLO activity shifted to Lebanon, where they established
bases to stage attacks on Israel and launch an international terror
campaign, largely aimed at abducting airplanes.
1975 -
Start of the Lebanon Civil War. The war continued until 1990.
1977
- The rise of the Likud Party to power in Israel leads to increased
settlement-building in the Occupied Territories.
1978-9
- Camp David Accords Sep.17, 1978 lead to 1979 Egypt-Israel Peace
Treaty.
1981
- Israel unilaterally annexes the Golan Hights, taken from Syria in
the 1967 war.
1981-2 -
One-year ceasefire brings a temporary halt to the fighting along the
Lebanese-Israeli border.
1982 - Israel
invades Lebanon (1982 Lebanon War). In June 1985, Israel withdrew
most of its troops from Lebanon, leaving a residual Israeli force and
an Israeli-supported militia in southern Lebanon as a "security
zone" and buffer against attacks on its northern territory. The
remaining Israeli troops were finally withdrawn in 2000.
1982
- Israel returns Sinai Peninsula to Egypt in accordance with terms of
the 1979 peace treaty. The Gaza Strip remains occupied by Israel.
1987 - Start
of the First Palestinian Intifada (uprising). Hamas is founded. The
Intifada lasts until the Madrid Conference. of 1991.
1990 - 1991 -
First Gulf War. PLO leader Arafat's support for Iraq leads to many
Arab states cutting off funds to the PLO.
October
30 - Nov. 1, 1991 -
Madrid Conference, cosponsored by US and USSR, was an attempt to
re-initiate a Middle East peace process. It lead to a series of
bilateral and multilateral negotiations between Israel, Jordan,
Lebanon, Syria, and the Palestinians that lasted until January 1994.
The Conference and the ensuing negotiations had few concrete
accomplishments but did establish a basis for dialogue.
1993-2000 -
The Oslo Peace Process
The
Oslo peace process continued throughout the 1990s with both sides
obligated to work towards a two-state solution. The Declaration of
Principles signed by Yassar Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin in September
1993 was a major breakthrough achieved outside of the Madrid
framework, which specifically barred foreign-residing PLO leaders
from the negotiation process.
January
1993 - Israeli and Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)
negotiators began secret negotiations in Oslo, Norway.
September
9, 1993- Yasser Arafat sent a letter to Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin, stating that the PLO officially recognized Israel's
right to exist and officially renouncing terrorism.
September
13, 1993 - Arafat and Rabin signed a
Declaration of Principles in Washington, D.C. The stated goals of
the Oslo I Accord were a Palestinian interim Self-Government and a
permanent settlement of unresolved issues within five years.
1994
- Establishment of the autonomous governmental authority, the
Palestinian Authority and its associated governing institutions to
administer Palestinian communities in the Gaza Strip and the West
Bank.
1994 -
Jordan signs peace treaty with Israel. The West Bank and East
Jerusalem remain occupied by Israel.
February,
1994 - Israeli extremist, a follower of the Kach Party, murdered
29 Palestinians and wounded 125 in Hebron (Cave of the Patriarchs
massacre).
April,
1994 - As an act of revenge to the massacre, Hamas launched
suicide attacks targeting the Israeli civilian population in many
locations throughout Israel.
September 28,
1995
- Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO chairman Yasser Arafat signed
the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip in Washington.
- The agreement allowed the PLO leadership to relocate to the occupied territories and granted autonomy to the Palestinians with talks to follow regarding final status.
- In return the Palestinians recognized Israel's right to exist and promised to abstain from use of terror. The agreement was opposed by the Hamas and other Palestinian factions, whom at this point were committing suicide bomber attacks throughout Israel.
November 4,
1995
- Right-wing Jewish radical assassinates Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
1996 -
The right-wing Likud Party candidate, Benjamin Netanyahu, is elected
Prime Minister
November 17,
1998
- With the peace process faltering, Netanyahu and Arafat sign the Wye
River Memorandum. The Memorandum detailed the steps to be taken by
the Israeli government and Palestinian Authority to implement the
earlier Interim Agreement of 1995.
July 2000
- Camp David 2000 Summit was held, aimed at reaching a "final
status" agreement. The summit collapsed after Yasser Arafat
would not accept a proposal drafted by American and Israeli
negotiators. Israeli Prime Minister Barak was prepared to offer the
Gaza Strip, a Palestinian capital in a part of East Jerusalem, 73% of
the West Bank (excluding eastern Jerusalem) raising to 90–94% after
10–25 years, and financial reparations for Palestinian refugees in return for
peace. Arafat turned down the offer without making a counter-offer.
During the civil war and the First Arab-Israeli War of 1948, Israel had captured nearly 60% of the land proposed for the new Palestinian State by UN Resolution 181, leaving Israelis in control of 78% of the former Mandate Palestine. Jordan controlled the West Bank and Egypt controlled the Gaza Strip (map on the left). In the Six Day War of 1967, Israel captured both areas and began a policy of Jewish settlement building that has continued to the present day. Shown in green on the map on the right is the area administered by the Palestinian National Authority per "Oslo 2".
References
Wikipedia articles on the topics related to Israeli-Palestinian conflict are the major source for these posts. The articles on Palestine and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict were particularly helpful.
Palestinian Territory 1949 vs. 1993-Present (Oslo 2)
During the civil war and the First Arab-Israeli War of 1948, Israel had captured nearly 60% of the land proposed for the new Palestinian State by UN Resolution 181, leaving Israelis in control of 78% of the former Mandate Palestine. Jordan controlled the West Bank and Egypt controlled the Gaza Strip (map on the left). In the Six Day War of 1967, Israel captured both areas and began a policy of Jewish settlement building that has continued to the present day. Shown in green on the map on the right is the area administered by the Palestinian National Authority per "Oslo 2".
References
Wikipedia articles on the topics related to Israeli-Palestinian conflict are the major source for these posts. The articles on Palestine and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict were particularly helpful.
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