answersLogoWhite

0

What are the cause of the Arab Israeli conflict?

Updated: 8/21/2019
User Avatar

Wiki User

9y ago

Best Answer

There are a myriad of reasons underlying and undergirding the Arab-Israeli Conflict in recent times and it is important to evaluate all of these rationales. However, it is important to note that the actual military conflict is an international one with set international players. The spiritual conflict is much more pervasive. At the core for this difference is that Jews and Arabs see their communities as being brethren in the same way that all Americans see each other as brethren. There is a saying among Arabs that goes "If an Arab falls in the desert and nobody hears him, everybody still feels him."

NOTE: Jews are an ethno-religious group, while Arabs are merely an ethnic group with an incredible variety of religious difference (similar to the way that White connotes a race with an incredible variety of religious differences). These days, Jews do not typically target Muslims with faith-based issues (i.e. we abhor you because of the false prophecy of Mohammed) and Muslims similarly do not target Jews on faith-based issues (i.e. we abhor you because you say that Isaac was taken to Mt. Moriah instead of Ishmael being taken to Saudi Arabia).

NOTE 2: Reasons cited for the conflict therefore vary from participant to participant and observer to observer. A powerful example of this divide can be found in opinion surveys of Palestinians and Israelis.

Causes for the Arab-Israeli Conflict:

1) Hallowed Land: The Jews consider the Land of Israel (which is not necessarily all in the borders of the State of Israel) to be a holy piece of land in that God promised it to the Jewish people as an eternal inheritance. Thus, some Jews, especially Religious Zionists see resettlement of the Land of Israel by Jews to be part of God's plan and mandate and therefore do everything in their power to settle it. In addition, it contains specific religious and historical sites such as the Western Wall and the Old City of Jerusalem, the Cave of Machpelah, the Old City of Jaffa, and the Sanctuary of Shiloh among others. Muslims also consider Jerusalem holy because of Mohammed ascending to Heaven on the Buraq over Jerusalem's Temple Mount. Both cultures want to ensure maintenance and access to the sites which they feel have been limited by the other. (Jews claim that Jordanians used the Western Wall as a landfill and Arabs argue that Israelis arbitrarily close off access to Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock.

2) Zionism: A number of Jews in Europe began to feel that they were being permanently and deliberately excluded from parts of European society because of the prevalent racial and pseudo-scientific forms of Anti-Semitism. They believed that there was no possible equality between European nationals and their Jewish residents and were disinterested in the Andaluci­an Solution because they did not want to be second-class citizens. They believed that the Jewish people needed to form a political apparatus (an Independent State) to defend themselves and their civil rights. Zionism originally had purely secular connotations, but with the advent of Religious Zionism, the powerful secular cause of Zionism joined with the Hallowed Land idea to provoke conflict. Zionism is strongly opposed by many for many different reasons. See the link at the bottom of the page for Anti-Zionist arguments and rationales.

3) Halutzim & Jewish Land Acquisition: In the First Zionist Congress in 1897, the main resolution was to acquire, by any means, a piece of land to be made a country for the Jews. Early Zionists tried to figure out how to attract Jews to leave their country of origin and come to build this Jewish State. The general consensus always revolved around building a State in the Land of Israel/British Mandate of Palestine since that would make attraction easiest. (The idea of the Jews Returning to Israel had a very romantic notion to Jews at the time and still does today.) As a result, politically influential Jews began purchasing tracts of land from the Ottoman Pashas in control of the territory without indigenous consent and promptly began to develop it. The indigenous Palestinians took issue with the migrations of these Halutzim (Jewish Pioneers) but as the land was bought legitimately, they had little recourse but to allow them to arrive. This occupation and colonialism were certainly not greeted with friendly handshakes or pats on the back by the indigenous inhabitants who stood to lose everything.

4) Balfour Declaration, the Holocaust, and UN Resolution 181: The European Climate also supported the Zionist idea of forming a Jewish State in the Middle East as it would allow Jews to leave Europe and stop being a European problem. This prevented the Europeans from having to absorb the refugees themselves, rapidly increased the numbers of Jews in Israel. In addition, Britain issued the Balfour Declaration which declared Britain's intent to create a Jewish State in the Middle East. This, however, was not seriously considered until the Holocaust proved to Europeans (and Jews) that Europe was no longer safe for Judaism. UN Resolution 181 promoted a partitioning of the British Mandate of Palestine into a Jewish State and an Arab State. While this resolution did pass (and is in fact legally binding) many Arabs find issue with its decision because there were not enough independent Arab States to vote it down.

5) Rejection of Israel: (Written by someone else) The cause is the rejection of Israel's right to exist on its historical homeland. It should be noted that the Jews accepted the partition plan while the Arabs rejected it. Ever since, Israel always sought a solution while the Arab rejectionists continued to fight to destroy Israel, even at the expense of their own people and used the Palestinian refugees as pawns. The root cause is the rejection of Israel's right to exist, for Israel made it clear that she was always willing to negotiate with any peace partner including the Palestinians. Israel needs secure borders as well. When Israel first offered to return most of the land for peace, the Arab states said,"No peace. No negotiations. No recognition".

6) Palestinian Exodus & UNRWA: This is probably the most thorny issue between Israel and Palestine. During the Arab-Israeli War of 1948-9 (in which Palestinian militias also participated), many Palestinians were forced out of their homes by Israeli soldiers due to brutal atrocities. In addition, many left because they feared similar outcomes. Also Arab leaders encouraged the exodus, because they believed that they could destroy Israel and safely return all of the Palestinians after the conflict. However, this did not happen and a large number of Palestinians (some estimate four million) are in UNRWA Refugee Camps and there is a large Palestinian Diaspora. They have not forgiven Israel for not allowing them to return after the War.

-- (Related, but written by someone else) The occupation of Palestine and the exile of its people into the neighboring countries is the cause. My grandparents witnessed this first-hand. It was a brutal, cold-blooded occupation, plain and simple. There are still thousands of Palestinians who are living in refugee camps all around the Arab world, with no country to call their own. They have no passports, they can't work, their living conditions are appalling. I am one of the lucky ones, but it is a sad, sad thing, and to see the whole world just standing on the sidelines doing nothing... It just breaks my heart. The world has to understand that Arabs will never, ever let go of Palestine, no matter how many years have passed since it has been stolen and labeled "Israel."

-- An observer's take on the preceding: In summary then, as I understand it, roughly 600,000 Jews in 1947-48 were expelled from Iraq, Iran, Jordan, Lebanon, and Egypt and their homes and possessions confiscated, plus millions more from Europe, Russia, and the rest of the world during the 60-some years since then. All were fed, housed, educated, employed, and absorbed in a new nation roughly the size of New Jersey, where today there are no refugee camps. At the same time, roughly 600,000 Arabs were expelled from Israel to the surrounding Muslim countries, where, 60-some years later, their descendants still languish in "refugee camps", without passports, without jobs, in appalling living conditions. It just breaks the hearts of the lucky ones. The world looks on and understands that even though the Arabs will never, ever let go of Palestine, they have not yet gotten around to absorbing their refugee "brothers". Correct me if I'm wrong.

7) Occupation of the West Bank & Gaza: In 1967, Israel fought the Six-Day War against the Arab States and took over control of the West Bank and Gaza. These territories did not come under Israeli Civil Authority and have been instead militarily controlled. Palestinians who live in these territories have to contend with Israeli checkpoints, military provisions, and incoming settlers (from the Hallowed Land section). This occupation is perceived by Palestinians to be a repression of their Right to a State and their ability to lead normal productive lives. Settlers in the territories act in a very cavalier fashion (similar to cowboys in the Wild West) and steal property owned by Palestinian families for generations in the name of Religious Zionism. Zionist Squatters are a huge problem in cities like Hebron where these individuals have "liberated" over a quarter of the city from its Palestinian inhabitants and begun to drive a wedge into those communities.

8) Blockade of Gaza & Dependence of the West Bank:Due to the militancy of Hamas, Israel has found it necessary for defense to form a blockade around Gaza and to only allow certain materials into the territory. This has resulted in a Human Relief Crisis in the Gaza where the average caught in the struggle barely have enough food, heat, and light to adequately survive. On a different token, the West Bank (as controlled by the Palestine Authority) is a patchwork of separate unconnected jurisdictions. As a result, the West Bank leaders depend on Israel for defense coordination, tax collection, and assurances of safety from settlers. This creates a secondary occupation-dynamic where the Palestinian government is bound to the desires and wishes of the Israeli people in addition to its actual constituency.

9) Retaliation: This one is fairly simple. Each side honors its fallen by engaging in retaliatory killings and attacks. In addition, the retaliation is usually on a larger scale than the offense. (I.e. one death results in ten retaliatory deaths etc.)

10) Andalucian Solution: Many Arabs capitalize on the situation in Andaluci­a as being the perfect solution to create Arab-Jewish harmony and are angered when Jews do not agree. In Andalucia (Islamic Spain of the 700s-1000s), Christians, Muslims, and Jews all had a flowering of their cultures and an interchange of ideas. It was one of the most progressive societies in the World for its time and certainly a much better time/place for Jews than many countries in the Modern Era. Jews get angered by the fact that Arabs do not note that Jews were second-class citizens in Andaluci­a who were granted the privilege of settling in Andaluci­a (a privilege which was revoked on several occasions). Jews want to be able to control their affairs and have civil rights, which Arabs seem not to understand when they advocate this model.

11) Pan-Arab Nationalism: Beginning in the 1950s and reaching its apex in the 1960s and 1970s, the wave of Pan-Arab Nationalism began to assert that all Arabs should live in one united country that would span from Morocco on the Atlantic Ocean to Iraq on the Persian border and all lands in between. This view was based on the history of the Umayyad Caliphate in the year 700 C.E. which controlled all of that territory and formed the basis of the modern Arab Identity. It also harkens back to the Abbassid Caliphate of a couple hundred years later which was the pinnacle of Arab scientific accomplishment. The thought of Pan-Arabists was that a Pan-Arab State would bring about a second unity of the Arab peoples like the type seen in the Umayyad days and the cultural flowering seen in the Abbassid days. Israel was a logistical problem for that ideology in that it cleanly separated North Africa (Egypt specifically) from the Levant countries of Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan. More importantly, it represented a non-Arab country in the region that according to Pan-Arabism should be an Arab State.

12) Historical Arab Anti-Semitism: (Written by someone else) The root cause or partial root cause of the Arab-Israeli conflict is Islamic anti-Semitism with its origins dating back to the rise of Islam in the seventh century. Several verses from the Qur'an, such as chapter 2, verses 61 and 65; chapter 3, verse 71; chapter 4, verse 46; chapter 5, verses 60-65, and 78-82; and chapter 7, verse 166 assign negative attributes to Jews. In addition, the type of institutionalized discrimination mandated by the Pact of Umar applied to Jews throughout the Islamic world to one degree or the other over the centuries inevitably led to deeply ingrained feelings of a natural right to Muslim authority over any Jews living in the Middle East or North Africa. Some critics of Islam claim that Muslims also developed an abiding belief in the supremacy of Islam as a result of its early conquests and centuries long position as a dominant religious and political force in the Middle East and beyond. The relative decline of Islam as a dominant military and political force may have engendered in the Islamic world a deep seated desire to regain Islam's past glory. Critics of Islam argue that it follows that the presence of Israel, a Jewish state and democracy, in the heart of the Islamic world is very difficult for Muslims to accept. It is very difficult for Muslims to reconcile Israel's presence and its regional military supremacy with the prevalent Muslim view that, as recipients of Allah's final revelation, that no Muslims should be subject to the political supremacy of a Jewish state. Supporters of Israel argue that regardless of the small size of Israel and the vastly larger land mass of the surrounding Arab lands, from the Muslim perspective, Israel's existence is a cancer in the heart of the Islamic world. [See, Stunich, Andrew (2007). The Real Cause of and Likely Progression of the Arab-Israeli Conflict below, See also, A Regional Perspective on the Arab-Israeli Conflict by Jay Shapiro[6] Also see, [[Myths & Facts Online Arab/Muslim Attitudes Toward Israel By Mitchell G. Bard, below]

13) Anti-Colonialism: Israel was seen by many in the Arab World as being a European colony in the Middle East because much of the state infrastructure was built by Europeans. This, of course, did not take into account the Mizrahi Exodus (see below) which makes Israel a much more mixed nation, but there are some elements of truth. Israel was conceived primarily by European Jews, funded with European and American money, and built in a Western Governmental style. The Arabs saw this as an attempt by Europeans to influence their affairs and control their futures without having to maintain their untenable pre-World War II empires. This belief was exemplified by the British, French, and Israeli responses to the Suez Crisis. Jews argue that Israel is not a colony because it is loyal only to its own needs; it just so happens that those needs align more often with modern, liberal states than those of its Arab neighbors.

14) Lack of Respect: Arabs feel maligned by the Great Powers in the World and see Israeli support by those same Great Powers as a way of denying them a seat at the Global Table. Arabs have a strong sense of cultural pride, believing themselves to be the heirs of the Abbassid cultural legacy of science, math, philosophy, and historiography. However, they are weakly involved in International Agencies, their countries rarely have pull over anything except oil prices, none of them are allowed nuclear weapons or any other sort of powerful weaponry, and their hopes and dreams are largely ignored. Unlike the Arabs, though, the Jews have managed to make Israel a cornerstone of American and British foreign policy and guarantee their international protection and seat at the Global Table. Therefore, the Arabs have a lot of negativity towards Israel for securing that spot.

15) An Irrational Perception of Israeli Imperialism:There is a belief in the Arab World that it is Israel's intent to expand and colonize other Arab regions in the Levant. They point to Israel's occupation of the Sinai Peninsula from 1967-1982, the Israeli occupation of Lebanon south of the Litani River from 1982-2000, and the continued holding of the Syrian Golan Heights conquered in 1967 and annexed to Israel in 1981. Religious Zionists claim that Israel should spread from the Nile to the Euphrates which encompasses a territory occupied in full or in part by six different countries. Most Jews and Israelis say that Israel has enough trouble controlling what little territory it does have and that the idea of controlling more is absurd, but the past extraterritorial occupations leave a different taste for most Arabs.

16) The Mizrahi Exodus: Jews become irate over the fact that the Arab countries refuse to recognize the events that led up to the Jewish exodus from the Arab World. Jews from the Arab World or Mizrahi Jews, did not live in the Andaluci­an Solution as most Arabs uncritically believe, but lived in countries which limited their rights, organized pogroms (such as the Farhud in Baghdad), stole their property, and executed and disappeared family members. Between 1950 and 1952 over 500,000 Mizrahi Jews immigrated to Israel where they were forced to live in camps in the desert until proper shelters could be built for them. (The population before the immigration was around 600,000 which made this immigration almost impossible to accommodate.) Arabs often claim that the hostility towards the Mizrahim (if they admit that such things occurred) were just outbursts and that they do not treat minorities as badly anymore, but refuse to publicly atone for the treatment or be self-critical about this history.

17) Biblical Causes: Arabs and Jews consider themselves descended from Abraham's sons Ishmael and Isaac respectively. Abraham aggressively kicked his maidservant Hagar and her son Ishmael out of the house in order for his son Isaac (born of his wife Sarah) to have primary attention. Jews and Christians assert that Abraham had a more special relationship with Isaac, taking him up a mountain in an attempt to sacrifice him. Muslims allege the same story, but with Ishmael. So, many claim that Jews and Arabs have a sibling rivalry of sorts coming from this moment. However, both the Bible and Qur'an make it very clear that after the halted sacrifice, Ishmael and Isaac actually spent a good deal of time together and remained on good terms. In fact, Isaac's son Esau married one of Ishmael's daughters.

18) Fantasy of a Euro-Jewish Conspiracy Theory to Kill Muslims: (Written by someone else) After World War I there was no place for the Jews because everyone hated them and kept abusing them so the British thought OH HOW ABOUT WE JUST GIVE THEM A COUNTRY SO THEY DONT BOTHER US ANYMORE!!!! So they offered them Argentina and Palestine. And the Jews thought we will take Palestine so we can make up some bulls**t reasons for invading the country. So they come into Palestine and kill all the Arabs and Muslims and kick them out. (All except for the 20% of present-day Israelis who are Arabs and Muslims, that is. And wouldn't one or the other be enough ? Do you think they really kicked them all out after they killed them ?) Then when the Israelis had a reputation of being war-like and against peace they made up that conspiracy terrorist theories against Muslims so now everyone hates the Muslims. (I'm beginning to understand. Those sneaky Jews made up bulls**t theories, and the truth is plain to you, but everybody else believes them, because they cleverly manipulate public opinion by shrewdly never bombing buses or pizza joints.) FYI: Osama bin Laden was trained as an American Operative to help sabotage the soviet union back in the 80's. When his job was finished he was paid and lived happily ever after. (So, as we can plainly see, everything is the Jews' fault again. And don't forget about the sinking world economy and global warming either !)

19) Islamism: Islamism, the political philosophy that Shari'a or Islamic Religious Law should be the grounds upon which a state is ruled (as opposed to Islam, which is the religion), want to create a government that falls within their stringent and puritanical view of Islamic moral standards. In the Islamist conception, only Muslims should be in power in the State and any non-Muslim minorities should have a secondary role if they should have one at all, whereas Jews are too "uppity" in having created a state where they are in the dominant position. Second, Israel is situated in territory which used to be governed by Muslims for nearly 1300 years (with a century-long break under the Crusader States). As a result, Israel is considered a usurpation of historical Islamic authority whereas European countries (for example) never had Islamic authority before. Islamists have talked about reintroducing the jizya tax, a symbol of humiliation for Non-Muslims in both the Gaza Strip and in the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). At present, since no Jews live in either area, the primarily target of these laws would be Christians, but they do intend to subject the Jews to at least the jizya, if not outright execution and genocide, if they had the chance.

20) Qur'anic Injunctions: Of course, different Muslims interpret the Qur'an differently, but there are certainly Qur'anic verses that can be read by those seeking to be intolerant of good grounds to do so. Q: 3:19 claims that the only religion that is acceptable to God is Islam. Q: 3:110 claims that Muslims are the best people in all history. Q: 8:55 claims that those who disbelieve are the worst of animals. Q: 9:29 argues for the repression and inequality of Jews and Christians before Muslims. -- There are numerous other verses that promote the view that intolerance and inequality between Muslims and Non-Muslims is Divinely Supported, creating difficulty in rejecting it, especially between Muslims and Jews.

Different Answer (Abridged)

The conflict between Arabs and Jews in the Middle East was over land of historic Israel and Palestine. The conflict has led to several wars, beginning in 1948, among Arab nations, Palestinian refugees, and the state of Israel. Since 1979 several peace accords have been signed, addressing parts of the conflict. The area is the homeland of the Jewish people, who immigrated to the area beginning in the 13th century bc as Hebrew tribes. The tribes confederated as the Israelites who ruled much of the area from the 11th century to the 6th century bc. The Jews formed an identity as the people of the covenant but subsequently came under the rule of others until they succeeded in establishing an independent Jewish state called Judea in 168 bc. The Romans expelled the Jews from Judea in ad 135. In subsequent centuries many Jews maintained the idea of regaining control of the area, which they considered home. In the 1890s Theodor Herzl, a Jewish journalist living in Austria, advocated reestablishing a Jewish state in Palestine. Palestine was already inhabited, however. The countryside was home to Arabs, most of them Muslims, while the larger towns contained both Arabs and Jews. Some of the Jews were long established there, while others were religious pilgrims from Europe who had come to live near the holy sites in Jerusalem and other cities. (Because the vast majority of Palestinians were Muslim Arabs, the term Palestinians now usually refers only to them, not to the Jews of Israel. Most Palestinians are Muslims.) The land was ruled by the Ottoman Empire, but the Ottomans saw little of value in Palestine and neglected the area. Consequently, poverty, disease, and malnutrition were widespread. Nonetheless, the area served as a land corridor between Europe, Asia, and Africa and thus had strategic importance. It was also near the Suez Canal, which, when opened in Egypt in 1869, connected the Mediterranean Sea with the Red Sea. Palestine was therefore important to the British, who occupied Egypt in 1882 and depended on control of the canal for its fortunes. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries the Zionist movement gained strength in Europe, and large numbers of Jews immigrated to Palestine. The movement focused on self-reliance through agriculture, and many immigrants settled in the countryside. To do so, Jews had to buy land from local Arab holders of small tracts and from absentee Arab landlords of large areas. As a result, Jews and Arabs came into increasing contact; at times, Jewish purchases led to the displacement of Arab peasants from the land. Although the Ottoman government sought to slow the Zionist movement, Jews established a significant and expanded presence. Their success furthered the world debate about whether and how to establish a Jewish homeland, and it also created apprehension among Arabs.

Different Answer (Pro-Arab)

Many years ago there was a country called Palestine where Jews, Christians and Muslims lived together in relative peace.

Lots of Jews in other countries were being pushed out because people were jealous of their wealth or just wanted their farms, so certain politicians and rulers who believed that the bible was true decided to allow some of the Jews to live in Palestine.

Those who arrived in Palestine decided that, as this was their home, more Jews should live there.

In 1948 the politicians in other countries agreed to split Palestine into separate areas for Jews and Palestinians, this started a war between the Palestinians and the Jews which the Jews won.

Ever since that time the Jews, (Israelis), have been pushing out the Palestinians, (mostly Muslims), from their land (which is the main reason why, after 100 years of Jewish immigration from all over the world, only about 20% of Israel's population today is Arab Muslim), and the other Muslim states have been helping the Palestinians (which is the main reason why, after more than 60 years, there are only a few million Palestinians still in 'refugee camps' in Arab countries.).

Answer 3

In short the main reason is deep religious differences.

User Avatar

Wiki User

8y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

8y ago


The cause are those populations ... and the governments that incite and egg them on ...
who, for whatever reason, cannot and refuse to abide, stomach, tolerate, or accept
Israel's existence. Sadly for all parties, conflict is likely to persist until they get used to
the fact, since Israel is not going away.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

8y ago

The conflict in the Middle East between Arabs and Israelis is for the right to coexist. Both groups say they have equal rights for land. It is a very messy situation.

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What are the cause of the Arab Israeli conflict?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What was the Arab-Israeli dispute and what were the causes of this dispute?

This is two distinct questions. Please see these Related Questions which answer the two parts of the question:What is the Arab-Israeli Conflict about?What are the causes of the Arab-Israeli Conflict?


Who was the Arab-Israeli Conflict about?

It is not about a "who" but about numerous "whats". To discover the causes of the Arab-Israeli Conflict (i.e. the "whats") see the related question below.


What regions are involved with the Arab-Israeli Conflict?

The Arab-Israeli Conflict has mostly been kept within the southern Levant region and northeast Egypt.


What are the two groups involved in the Arab-Israeli Conflict?

As counter-intuitive as it might be, the two groups involved in the Arab-Israeli Conflict are the Arabs and the Israelis.


What were the origins of the Arab-Israeli conflict?

the israeli believe that israel is there promise land


Why is the Arab-Israeli Conflict over territory?

The majority of conflicts the world-over are over territory. It makes sense that the Arab-Israeli conflict is over territory as well. It would be surprising if it were not. To read about other causes of the Arab-Israeli Conflict, see the Related Question below.


Why did the Arab-Israeli Conflict intensify in the mid-1900s?

The British Departure from Mandatory Palestine, the Establishment of the State of Israel, and the Palestinian Arab Exodus during the 1948-9 Arab-Israeli War are some of the most important events in grounding the Arab-Israeli Conflict.


How is the Arab-Israeli conflict affecting the country?

Which country?


What city is the center of arab-israeli conflict?

Jerusalem.


What were the main causes of the Arab-Israeli conflict from 1948-1973?

The causes for the Arab-Israeli Conflict have not changed since 1973. Please see the Related Question below.


What was Somalia's role in Arab-Israeli conflict?

Somalia has no role in the Arab-Israeli Conflict, but like most Muslim-majority states, refuses to recognize the State of Israel.


Where can you find documentaries about Arab-Israeli conflict?

Try documentaryaddict.com