Xequecal wrote:
DFK! wrote:
Who gives a **** who was there in 1948?
Either you side with the idea of the owner of territory being able to determine what to do with that territory, in which case the British created Israel and Israel may therefore exist as long as they can hold the territory...
OR...
...you believe that the indigenous peoples of an area hold the rights to that area (unless they've lawfully given it to others), in which case we would have to look to the original tribes of the area to determine who should own it. Also, just about everybody on this board would need to leave North America.
I'm more concerned with who was there in 1967, when Israel annexed the current Palestinian territories in a war they started. Even if you believe they were right in starting the war, they still annexed the Palestinian lands in a war the Palestinians had nothing to do with.
Israel did NOT start the war in 1967; they
pre-empted the Arab attack. This is like if someone has been telling you they're going to kick your ***, you see them reach for a knife, and you shoot them before they can get it out.
Not only do schoolyard rules of "I'm not touching you!" not fly in adult concepts of assault and self-defense, they also don't fly in international relations. The Israelis were able to pre-empt because Nasser's commander Field Marshall Amer was incompetent; telegraphing his intentions by transferring various decisions aimlessly around in the desert of the Siani beforehand. This also took a heavy toll on the men and vehicles in the month prior to the actual fighting.
There's also the fact that Jordanian plans had been captured by the Israelis, and among other things, indicated that in at least one place noncombatants were to be slaughtered - ""The reserve brigade will commence a nighttime infiltration onto Motza, will destroy it to the foundation, and won't leave a remnant or refugee from among its 800 residents".[88] (From the Wikipedia article on the 6-day war)
Then, let's see.. what else? Oh yes, Egypt had blockaded the straights of Tiran (an act of war) and kicked out the UN buffer from the Siani, and Iraqi troops had been moving into Jordan, both clearly threatening moves to the Israelis. By June 4th, the Arabs had made the decision to go to war; they just didn't get to it prior to having their air force nearly wiped out in a surprise attack (which, frankly, the Israelis were even surprised by. They didn't expect it to go as well as it did; all their pilots had been advised to reserve 5 minutes of fuel for air to air combat.)
As to the land taken, you also seem to forget that Iarael occupied the entire Siani peninsula and the Golan Heights as well as gaza and the West Bank, and that the entire point of holding the land they DID take was to trade it back to the Arabs in return for a peace treaty. The arabs weren't having it, and eventually gave up their claims to that land in the 1978 Camp David accords. Still, it should indicate the level of intransigence of the arabs that they were more than willing to sit there obstinately refusing a peace agreement of ANY kind for 11 years after the war, when that was all they needed to get the remaining land back. They took another shot in 1973 and that one didn't end well for them either. Mauritania (rather pointlessly) remained in a state of war against Israel until 1999.
Oh yes, then there's East Jerusalem. Let's see - despite the 1949 armistice guaranteeing Jewish access to the Wailing Wall, the Jordanians never complied, and Jewish holy sites had been left unmaintained, and graveyards desecrated. Israel, on the other hand, allows a Muslim Waqf to administrate the Al Aqsa mosque on the Temple Mount and bars Jews from praying on the mount itself, despite it's importance in Jewish tradition.
This is the fundamental problem with current views of the arab-Israel issues; people insist on seeing the Palestinians as helpless underdogs and ignore the history of the conflict itself. The 1967 war is not a matter of "Israel attacks first and grabs land"; that's a simplified, anti-Israel propaganda view of how events occurred. To be fair ISraeli conduct was not entirely blameless; there was the
Liberty incident (highly foolish on their part, seeing as they were counting on the U.S. Navy to prevent Soviet intervention) and apparently some Israeli troops took it upon themselves to trick or force some Palestinians into leaving their land. Nevertheless, the bottom line is that Nasser was undeniably planning to conquer Israel, he just got sucker-punched while he was dicking around about actually doing it.