The Israeli Palestinian Conflict

News of the Israeli-Palestinian Confrontation December 15-31 2006

During the past two weeks events focused on the meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian Authority chairman Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen). . Ehud Olmert and Abu Mazen agreed to a series of measures to ease the humanitarian conditions of the Palestinians, centering around facilitating the passage of goods and people between Israel
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The uncovering of an operative infrastructure belonging to Hamas (in Judea) thwarted plans to abduct Israelis and use them as bargaining chips in negotiations for the release of prisoners.

In recent months, the Israeli security forces have uncovered a squad consisting of Hamas operatives in the Judea region. Instructed by senior operatives from the Gaza Strip, the squad members were planning to abduct a settler or a soldier in the Jerusalem area and use him as a bargaining chip in the negotiations for the
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News of the Israeli-Palestinian Confrontation December 1-14, 2006

The Palestinian terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip continue to violate the ceasefire by sporadically firing Qassam rockets at population centers in the western Negev. However, the scope of rocket fire from the Strip has decreased, and there has been a sharp decrease in other forms of terrorist activity. Responsibility for most of the continued
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Hamas prime minister Ismail Haniya firmly positioned himself in the Iranian-Syrian axis during visits to Damascus and Teheran

Hamas prime minister Ismail Haniya firmly positioned himself in the Iranian-Syrian axis during visits to Damascus and Teheran. He made it clear that Hamas rejected Israel’s right to exist and supported its destruction by terrorism. He totally rejected the demands of Abu Mazen, the Quartet and the international community.
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Women in terrorism: a Palestinian feminist revolution or gender oppression?

The place of women in terrorism and the extensive media coverage received by attacks involving women have been on the agenda of discussions of global terrorism. Throughout history, women have participated in national struggles for independence, in wars and more recently, in terrorist attacks.
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News of the Israeli-Palestinian Confrontation November 15-30, 2006

The focus of the past two weeks was an unwritten understanding for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip. It was reached in a phone conversation between Palestinian Authority chairman Abu Mazen and Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert, and began on November 26. Despite the understanding, the Palestinian terrorist organizations continued sporadic rocket fire at Sderot
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The Israeli Palestinian Conflict

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a nationalist conflict between two peoples living in the Land of Israel: the Jewish people and the Palestinian people. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is more than 100 years old and has been given worldwide prominence. The roots of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict go back to the 19th century, when nationalist movements gained momentum around the world, among them the Zionist movement and the call to emigrate to the Land of Israel to build a national home for the Jewish People. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict took a nationalist turn and grew after the First World War. 

The issues at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict include the permanent borders, security arrangements, Israel’s demand for Palestinian recognition of the existence of the Jewish People, the status of the Palestinian refugees, the control of Jerusalem, the Israeli settlements in Judea and Samaria, the distribution of water resources and the distribution of additional resources in Judea and Samaria.

A prominent feature of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the severe manifestations of violence and terrorism in the Gaza Strip and Judea and Samaria that have accompanied it throughout the years of its existence. The fighting is carried out by terror squads and individuals. These manifestations of violence have led to many losses and property damage on both sides.

Over the years, many attempts have been made to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Most of the proposals attempted to promote a permanent solution that would involve the creation of Palestinian autonomy or an independent Palestinian state to be established alongside the State of Israel. This is known as the “two-state solution.” Another proposed solution for resolving the conflict is a “one-state solution” whereby all of the western Land of Israel, including the Gaza Strip and Judea and Samaria, would become a binational state. The attempts were unsuccessful due to disagreements over the nature of the solution and due to a basic lack of trust between the sides.