[1] The report of the United Nations Special Committee on
Palestine came before the General Assembly for a vote on November
29, 1947. On the basis of their four month investigation, the
majority of UNSCOP's members concluded that a partition creating
two states, one Jewish and one Arab, in the territory that Great
Britain had ruled as the League of Nations mandate of Palestine
since 1920 represented the best chance for stability in a region
that had already experienced decades of upheaval. The General
Assembly endorsed their recommendation.
[2] Since the last quarter of the nineteenth century, European
Jews had been immigrating to the land between the Jordan River and
the Mediterranean. When Great Britain assumed the administration of
Palestine following the Ottoman Empire's collapse, it accepted a
dual obligation that proved impossible to fulfill. The Balfour
Declaration, a 1917 statement of British policy that supported the
creation of a Jewish national home in Palestine, was incorporated
into the mandate charter. At the same time, the basic premise of
the mandate concept required Great Britain to promote the
development of political and governmental institutions enabling the
population under its supervision to achieve self-government. The
first commitment necessitated the continuation of extensive Jewish
immigration to Palestine; the second required cooperation with the
Arabs, who constituted more than 90% of the population and resented
the influx of European Jews into their lands. As immigration
accelerated in the 1930s following the rise of Nazism,
Palestinians' fears of being swamped heightened and recurrent
violence between the two communities increased. Whatever Great
Britain did to placate one side inevitably alienated the other.
[3] In 1945, Jews in Palestine stood ready to absorb the
survivors of the Holocaust - a scenario that the Palestinians
vehemently opposed and that the British knew would ignite a civil
war. Faced with a "Jewish revolt," Great Britain referred the
Palestine question to the United Nations and, with the passage of
the partition resolution, declared that its mandate would end on
May 15, 1948.
[4] The UN plan envisioned an Arab state of three geographical
sectors and a similarly constructed Jewish state, with Jerusalem
and its environs an international zone. The Jewish population had
swollen to a third of Palestine's total, but UNSCOP allotted the
Jews 55% of the land. Given the interwoven patterns of settlement,
Arabs constituted almost half the population of the proposed Jewish
state. The Jews accepted partition, but the Arabs did not, in part
because of the proposal's inequities, but more fundamentally from
the conviction that the United Nations had no right to deprive them
of their land against their will.
[5] From November 1947 until the British mandate ended, both
communities jockeyed for position on the ground. Jewish forces
prepared to defend what the UN had allocated to them; the
Palestinians, who had no armed forces of their own, made plans with
neighboring Arab states to prevent partition from materializing.
Consequently, when Jewish leaders proclaimed the creation of Israel
on May 14, 1948, forces from five Arab armies invaded. The new
state was defended by an army that had grown out of the Haganah, a
Jewish militia.
[6] The ensuing war resulted in a victory for Israel that left
it in control of not only the territory assigned to it by the UN,
but of all the rest of the former mandate except for an area
successfully defended by the Trans-Jordanian army (the West Bank)
and a strip along the Mediterranean coast around the city of Gaza.
In neither of these areas, however, did a Palestinian Arab state
emerge. By annexing the West Bank in 1950, Trans-Jordan became
Jordan. The Gaza district, where Egyptian troops had fought during
the war, fell under Egyptian administration.
[7] The first Palestine War solved none of the region's
problems, even as it spawned new ones. It ended not with the
finality of borders sealed by peace treaties among the combatants,
but with the impermanence of UN mediated cease-fire lines. At the
end of the war, three-quarters of a million Palestinians who had
fled their homes in what became Israel were living as refugees in
the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, and adjoining Arab states. Israel
refused to consider their repatriation until a peace treaty came
into effect; the Arab states would not embark upon such a process
until the refugees were permitted to return to their homes. The war
also left Jerusalem, with its enormous religious and political
significance for Jews and Arabs alike, divided, its western
portions under Israeli control and its eastern neighborhoods within
the West Bank.
[8] Rage and bitterness over the war and its aftermath permeated
the Arab world, generating implacable hostility to Israel. Not only
did the war leave the Palestinians stateless, but it also so
thoroughly rent the fabric of civil and political society as to
deprive them of common institutions and viable national leadership.
Many of the refugees lived as wards of the United Nations Relief
and Works Agency. In Israel, the 1950 Law of Return expedited
Judaization by automatically granting Israeli citizenship to any
Jewish immigrant. The confiscation of Palestinian refugees'
property facilitated the settlement of newcomers, including
European and Arab Jews, many of the latter of whom found their
situation following the Palestine War untenable. Aided by Western
financial support, contributions from world Jewry, and German
reparations, the government of Israel embarked upon the task of
building a prosperous, modern state.
[9] Sporadic raids into Israeli territory by Palestinian
guerrillas from the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, followed by
Israeli retaliatory attacks, persisted throughout the early 1950s.
One such incident in the Gaza Strip in 1955 initiated a chain of
events that culminated in the 1956 Suez War. Pitting Israel,
France, and Great Britain against Egypt, the war did not directly
affect the Palestinians, except for a brief Israeli occupation of
the Gaza Strip. It did, however, enhance the prestige of Egyptian
president Gamal Abdel Nasser (despite his military defeat) and of
the ideology of Arab nationalism that he personified.
[10] The desirability of controlling Palestinian militancy in
order to maintain pressure on Israel while preventing the outbreak
of renewed fighting for which the Arabs were unprepared, prompted
Nasser to promote the formation, in 1964, of the Palestine
Liberation Organization. The PLO included a deliberative body (the
Palestine National Council) and a military wing (the Palestine
Liberation Army). Its charter set forth as its objective the
creation of a secular state in all of the territory of the former
mandate. Recruiting guerrillas from among the alienated youth of
the refugee camps, the PLO launched attacks against Israel,
primarily from the West Bank. Israeli reprisals took the lives of
many non-combatants (as did the PLO raids) and the inability of the
Jordanian government to protect the refugee camps worsened
relations between it and the West Bank Palestinians.
[11] In the spring of 1967, powerful Israeli assaults on
Palestinian camps in Syria and the West Bank from which PLO
guerrillas were thought to operate spurred regional tensions. Syria
activated a military alliance with Egypt, to which Jordan also
adhered. Convinced that its Arab enemies were about to strike,
Israel pre-empted them. When surprise air raids on the morning of
June 5 had assured it of air superiority, its army moved against
Egyptian ground forces in the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula,
Jordanian troops in Jerusalem and the West Bank, and Syrian
outposts on the Golan Heights along Israel's northeastern border.
In less than a week, the Arab armies were defeated and Israel had
tripled the territory under its administration. For the
Palestinians, the war's main consequences were the Israeli
occupation of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza
Strip - the only parts of their land salvaged in 1948 - and the
creation of a new wave of refugees who fled across the Jordan River
before the advancing Israeli forces. The magnitude of the defeat
left no doubt that the Palestinians could not depend on their
fellow Arabs to secure their interests against Israel. It also
cemented the hold of a militant PLO leadership headed by Yasser
Arafat.
[12] At an August summit in Khartoum, the Arab states vowed not
to recognize, negotiate, or make peace with Israel until it had
withdrawn from the lands occupied during the war and acknowledged
the Palestinians' rights. The broader international response to the
June War came in November in the form of UN Resolution 242, which
pointed to trading land for peace as the key to a permanent
settlement. Noting the right of all people in the region to live in
peace, its most important provisions called for a mutual end to
belligerency, Israeli withdrawal from occupied territories, and a
settlement of the refugee problem. The PLO rejected the resolution
because it made no provision for a Palestinian state (as had the
1947 UN partition plan) and referred to the Palestinians only
obliquely, and only as refugees.
[13] As subsequent efforts at mediation between Israel and the
Arab states (but not the PLO) by both the United Nations and the
United States failed, Palestinian anger rose. In violation of
international law, Israel annexed East Jerusalem and began
constructing Jewish settlements throughout the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip. It further contravened accepted practice in the
occupied territories by imposing communal punishments, deporting
Palestinian residents, and suspending normal judicial procedures.
With their links to Jordan and Egypt largely cut, Palestinians
became economically dependent on Israel.
[14] Deprived of its West Bank bases, the PLO regrouped in
adjacent countries, from which its attacks on Israel invited
retaliations against its hosts. In Jordan, the large and
increasingly militant Palestinian population assumed the status of
a "state within a state." Several commercial aircraft hijackings
carried out in September1970 by the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, a radical component of the PLO, along with
the revelation of a plot to assassinate King Hussein, convinced the
monarch that the PLO threatened to undermine his government and
draw his nation into unwanted renewed conflict with Israel. The
king unleashed his army, defeating the Palestinian guerrillas and
expelling them from Jordan. Most of them relocated to south
Lebanon, the only remaining Arab controlled territory offering
direct access to Israel. The events of "Black September" reinforced
the Palestinian conviction that they could rely only on their own
resources in their efforts to regain their land.
[15] Humiliated by the 1967 defeat, but unsuccessful in
persuading the United States to urge Israel to negotiate, Anwar
Sadat, Nasser's successor as Egyptian president, concluded that
only a major jolt would break the stalemate. In October 1973, he
enlisted Syria in a military campaign to regain the Sinai Peninsula
and the Golan Heights. Initially successful Arab offensives were
halted, and then reversed, by Israel, in large part due to the
dispatch of American military equipment to replace materiel lost in
the war's opening days. The advantage thus afforded Israel
threatened to provoke a parallel response from the Arabs' Soviet
patrons, particularly when Israel disregarded a UN cease-fire
resolution until it had assured itself of the Egyptian army's total
defeat.
[16] The war returned the situation in the Middle East to the
international spotlight by demonstrating its capacity to cause a
superpower clash. When a multinational conference co-sponsored by
the United States and the Soviet Union in late 1973 (but at which
the Palestinians were not represented) failed to provide a viable
forum for negotiations, United States Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger orchestrated a series of bilateral talks between Egypt
and Israel that resulted in the disengagement of their troops in
Sinai. As one inducement for Israel's participation in the
discussions, Kissinger promised that the United States would not
engage the PLO diplomatically until it had recognized Israel.
Convinced that the international community (including many Arab
states) cared little about Palestinians, and eager to preclude
Jordan from speaking on behalf of West Bank residents, the PLO
successfully campaigned for the designation of sole official
representative of the Palestinian people at an Arab League summit
meeting in 1974.
[17] Despite another attempt at a multinational conference under
Soviet - American auspices in 1977, no discernible movement towards
meaningful peace occurred. In November, Sadat made the dramatic
gesture of traveling to Jerusalem and offering to make peace in
return for Israel's withdrawal from the occupied territories and
its acknowledgment of the Palestinians' right to
self-determination. His initiative stagnated until a year later,
when United States President Jimmy Carter invited Sadat and Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem Begin to talks at Camp David. There they
reached agreement on a plan for peace between Egypt and Israel and
a framework for the settlement of the broader problem of Palestine.
The two states signed a formal peace treaty in March 1979, but the
PLO discounted Sadat's right to negotiate on its behalf and most
Arab states ostracized Egypt for abandoning the positions adopted
after the 1967 War.
[18] The neutralization of its most powerful Arab enemy enabled
Israel to address an increasingly serious problem without fear of
an Egyptian military response. Since their eviction from Jordan,
PLO guerrillas had been raiding Israel from southern Lebanon.
Israeli reprisals created tensions between the Palestinians and a
Lebanese government loath to confront Israel in their defense. The
replication of the autonomy the Palestinians had earlier enjoyed in
Jordan disturbed many Lebanese, and especially the Maronite elite
that dominated national politics and the economy. In 1976, a civil
war, whose causes reached deep into the roots of Lebanon's
multi-religious society, erupted, inevitably drawing in the
Palestinians.
[19] The United States brokered a cease-fire between Israel and
the PLO in 1981, but in June 1982 Israel invaded Lebanon,
ostensibly to establish a buffer zone to protect northern Israeli
communities. In fact, the operation's objective was the destruction
of the PLO as a military force. Palestinian fighters retreated to
Beirut where they, along with the civilian population of the
predominantly Muslim quarters of the city, were besieged by the
Israeli army. In August, Arafat agreed to withdraw the guerrillas
and disperse them throughout the Arab world. The PLO relocated its
headquarters to Tunis. Shortly after the departure of the
Palestinian fighters, the Israeli army stood by as Lebanese militia
allies of Israel massacred Palestinian civilians in the refugee
camps of Sabra and Shatilla. Units of the Israeli army remained in
occupation of parts of south Lebanon until 2000.
[20] Although the physical removal of its fighters from the
proximity of Israel prevented the Palestinian political leadership
from challenging Israeli policies on the West Bank and Gaza Strip,
a spontaneous uprising (intifada) broke out in the
occupied territories in 1987, the twentieth anniversary of the June
War. Its main participants were young Palestinians who had lived
their entire lives under Israeli military occupation and had grown
frustrated with their elders' apparent inability to alter the
situation. Israel's military superiority allowed it to crush the
revolt, but the insurrection underscored the urgent need for a
political solution to the problem of the occupied territories.
[21] The intifada galvanized the PLO, prompting its
leaders to embark on a new initiative in November 1988. The
Palestine National Council proclaimed the formation of a
Palestinian state with its capital in Jerusalem, a tactic
facilitated by King Hussein's renunciation of Jordanian claims to
the West Bank. The PNC also foreswore the use of violence outside
the occupied territories and embraced UN Resolution 242 as the
basis for a solution to the conflict. In April 1989, the PLO
executive committee elected Arafat president of the state (which
did not yet control any territory). In light of this policy
reversal, United States officials began to engage the PLO in
diplomacy.
[22] The Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August 1990 and the ensuing
Gulf War short-circuited any immediate prospect of moving towards a
Palestinian - Israeli settlement. PLO support for Saddam Hussein,
who vowed to use Iraqi weaponry to liberate Palestinian lands,
heightened Israeli mistrust, but also alienated the Gulf states
that provided extensive financial backing to the organization.
Israel responded to Iraqi missile attacks by imposing a curfew on
the West Bank and the Gaza Strip that brought the territories'
already crippled economy to a standstill. The victory of the
American-led coalition in the war, in conjunction with the collapse
of the Soviet Union, dramatically altered the Middle East's
political environment and paved the way for a peace conference in
Madrid in October 1991. For the first time, all the parties to the
dispute met together, although Palestinians were permitted to
participate only as members of the Jordanian delegation.
[23] The unwieldy Madrid format gave way to bilateral
discussions on an array of topics, but produced no breakthroughs.
In 1993, however, secret Norwegian-sponsored talks between
Palestinians and Israel resulted in the PLO's recognition of the
Jewish state, its renunciation of terrorism, and the invalidation
of articles in its Charter that denied Israel's right to exist. In
return, Israel recognized the PLO as the representative of the
Palestinians. On September 13, in Washington, Arafat and Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin signed a "Declaration of Principles."
The document envisioned the formation of a Palestinian Authority to
govern those territories, beginning with portions of the Gaza Strip
and the West Bank city of Jericho, from which Israel was prepared
to withdraw. Subsequent negotiations were to produce a permanent
settlement.
[24] The implementation of the Oslo Accords proceeded slowly.
Almost a year passed before Israel evacuated the areas referred to
in the Declaration of Principles and the Palestinian Authority took
shape only in the summer of 1994, when Arafat arrived from Tunis. A
second agreement in 1995 (Oslo II) extended Palestinian rule to
additional parts of the West Bank, but divided the remaining 90% of
the region into areas over which the Palestinian Authority
exercised administrative and police powers while Israel retained
responsibility for security and others that remained fully under
Israeli control. Arafat's Fatah faction won a majority in the 1996
elections for the Palestine Council and the veteran leader became
its president. With Israel and the PLO seemingly resolving their
differences, some Arab states amended their policies towards
Israel. Jordan signed a peace treaty in 1994 and other Arab states
opened contacts at one level or another.
[25] The thorniest issues dividing Palestinians and Israelis
centered on the determination of secure, defensible, and mutually
acceptable borders; the disposition of Jewish settlements in the
West Bank and the Gaza Strip; the status of Jerusalem; and the
right of Palestinian refugees (or their descendants) to return to
land, now inside Israel, from which they had fled in 1948. To
further complicate peacemaking, militants from the Islamist
organizations Hamas and Islamic Jihad launched a wave of terrorism
intended to derail a process they believed had already conceded too
much to Israel. Their views were mirrored by Israeli extremists,
one of whom assassinated Rabin in 1995.
[26] Following the election of Binyamin Netanyahu, an outspoken
critic of the Oslo Accords, as Prime Minister in 1996, the peace
process ground to a halt. In an attempt to revive it, United States
President Bill Clinton brought the Israeli and Palestinian leaders
together for a summit in 1998. By the terms of the Wye River
Memorandum that summarized the talks, Netanyahu agreed to turn over
additional West Bank territory to the Palestinian Authority in
return for Arafat's cooperation with American intelligence agencies
to contain Palestinian extremists. Despite the Israeli public's
broad support for the arrangement, Netanyahu ultimately reneged on
it in order to appease his right wing constituencies. In the 1999
elections, he lost the prime ministry to Labor Party leader Ehud
Barak. Clinton tried again to broker an accord in the summer of
2000. Meeting at Camp David, Arafat rejected Barak's territorial
offer on the grounds that it would create isolated pockets of
Palestinian territory while Israel retained its hold on the area.
This, plus the leaders' inability to reach agreement on the final
status of Jerusalem and the refugees' right of return led to the
collapse of the negotiations.
[27] Throughout the post-Oslo years, Palestinian frustration
mounted and violence flared across the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip. In this tense atmosphere, Palestinians interpreted the
September 2000 visit to East Jerusalem's Temple Mount - the site of
the al-Aqsa mosque, the city's most important Islamic shrine - by
the prominent right-wing politician Ariel Sharon, as a deliberately
provocative assertion of Israel's claim to all of Jerusalem. The
ensuing clashes mushroomed into a renewed wave of Palestinian
rebellion, the al-Aqsa intifada. Marked by increasingly
aggressive behavior on both sides - including the assassination of
Palestinian leaders, a virtually complete shut down of the
territories, and a wave of Palestinian suicide bombings inside
Israel - the intifada produced the worst violence in the
West Bank since 1967. The decision of Sharon, now the prime
minister, to occupy most of the urban centers of the West Bank in
March 2002 produced fierce fighting and extensive casualties among
Israeli soldiers, Palestinians who resisted the incursions, and
civilians. Israeli forces besieged the Palestinian Authority
headquarters in Ramallah for several weeks and destroyed much of
the infrastructure of the nascent Palestinian state. In the wake of
this episode, mutual recriminations, unreserved hostility, and
bitter mistrust left the peace process in tatters.