Xequecal wrote:
That's all beside the point, it was Egypt, Syria, and Jordan that were responsible for that, the Palestinians were not. The Palestinians didn't need to get pre-empted, they had no real ability to attack Israel, they just got themselves annexed and then never got their lands back.
The land in question belonging to Jordan or Egypt beforehand. So, the Palestinians never had it in the first place; all they did was exchange one government for another, and that exchange happened because the original government wanted to go to war with a nation they lacked the military proficiency to defeat. The Palestinians could have had their land "back" had the Arab governments not been totally intractable, but they were.. and oh wait, then it would just be the arab nations controlling it anyhow, not the Palestinians, and we wouldn't even hear about this issue. At least by having Israel in control of it the 2-state solution at least gets international discussion.
Quote:
From 1950 to 1967, the West Bank was occupied by Jordan in much the same way Israel occupies it now. The Palestinians resisted that occupation and Jordan's "ownership" of the West Bank was never recognized by the international community.
And so it's somehow more of a problem if Israel takes it away from Jordan? Palestinian resistance of that occupation was pretty unworthy of mention. The fact is that Jordan was in control of it, and Israel took control in an attempt to deal with Jordan. This has nothing to do with anything at all, except "whaaa Palestinians!" They could have had the land as an independent state in the first place, except they bet on the Arabs to win, which just got it occupied by the Arabs, then the Israelis, in turn. Had Israel managed to get a peace treaty out of the Jordanians, it would most likely still be held by Jordan, except no one would give a ****.
Quote:
The "us vs. them" stance Israel takes on everything is the real issue, they treat all their enemies as one coherent entity and act as if all of them are at fault for the actions of any one of them. This is also how all the ceasefires keep getting broken, there are dozens of militant groups and if they sign a ceasefire with one of them they always expect that there will be no more violence period and will treat the ceasefire as broken if a different group than the one they signed with attacks them.
Gee, do you think that has anything to do with the fact that their enemies have acted precisely like that in the past? Ever heard of the United Arab Republic, or pan-Arabism? How about the fact that states like Iran that aren't Arabic, and have no meaningful interest whatsoever in the particulars of land distribution in that area constantly send aid to their enemies and engage in annihilationist rhetoric towards them for no reason other than "Because Islam!.. and we need to distract our own population."
When it comes to Israel, their enemies pretty much ARE completely united, and have been for a long time, even if they aren't united on anything else. Talk to someone who worked in a joint HQ with Saudis during Desert Storm. they were cheering at every SCUD landing in Israel, despite
being at war with the country shooting the SCUDs. Israelis are "the" enemy for a very very large portion of the Arab/muslim world.