Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Timeline: Concise Chronology of Israel, Zionism and Jewish History - Draiman


Timeline: Concise Chronology of Israel, Zionism and Jewish History



1800? BCE
Abraham migrates to Canaan according to Jewish tradition.
1300? BCEMigration and conquest of Canaan by the Philistines and Israelite tribes. Map of Canaan.
1000? BCEJewish conquest of Jerusalem; reign of David (maps); After the death of David's son, Solomon, the kingdom split into two: Israel in the north, Judea in Jerusalem and the south (maps).   Brief History of Early Palestine in maps.
721 BCEFall of Israel (Northern Kingdom) to Assyria
586 BCEFall of Judea (Southern Kingdom) to Babylon and destruction of the first temple
About 539 BCEFall of Babylon. Jews allowed to return to Judea. Tradition has it that Ezra and Nehemia led this return, and later rebuilt the walls of Jerusalem, but the walls were apparently not built until 100 years later.
About 519 BCERebuilding of the Second Temple under Persian rule.
331 BCEAlexander the Great conquers Persia. The land was subject to Egyptian rule after his death, followed by Seleucid Syrian rule.
166 BCERevolt of Judah Maccabee against Syrian Hellenic dynasty; Simon. 164 - Liberation of Jerusalem. Judah is named Friend of the Roman Senate and People; Rule of the Maccabees: 166 - Judah 160 -Jonathan 143 
66-73 ADFirst Jewish revolt. Fall of the Jewish Second Temple to Romans in 70 AD.
133-135Second Jewish revolt under Bar Kochba  crushed. Judea renamed Palestina. Jews are banned from Jerusalem by Hadrianus Caesar.
614Persians conquer Judea and Jerusalem..
628Emperor Heraclius defeats Sassanid Persians, reconquers Jerusalem..
About 638Arab conquest of Jerusalem (slightly earlier or later according to different sources). CaliphOmar provides the Christians of Jerusalem with a Covenant guaranteeing their protection. Land  divided into the Jund of filastin, in the south (capital in Al-Lod and later in Ramlah), and the Jund of Urdunn in the north, with capital in Tiberias (Tabariyeh).
1099Crusaders conquer Jerusalem, slaughter most Jewish and Moslem inhabitants, expel Jews.
1187Saladin (Salah-al-din) reconquers Jerusalem
1291Crusaders defeated at Acre and evicted from Palestine.
1517Ottoman Turkish conquest of Palestine.
1740
Ottoman Sultan invites Rabbi Haim Abulafia (1660-1744),  Kabbalist and Rabbi of Izmir, to come to rebuild the city of Tiberias; thousands of Jews immigrate to the land in a wave of Messianic fervor, including  Rabbi Moses Haim Luzzatto (1707-1746).  
1799Napoleon conquers Jaffa but retreats before Acco (Acre); 1799 - Napoleon's Proclamation of a Jewish State was stillborn, and his declaration of equal rights for Jews was repealed in part in 1806.
1831Egyptian Conquest of Palestine area by Mehmed Ali of Egypt, who rebelled against the Ottomans. He was forced to withdraw in 1840 under pressure by European allies.
1843First Zionist writings of Rabbi Alcalay and of Rabbi Kalischer, Emuna Yeshara.
1844First census in Jerusalem shows 7120 Jews, 5760 Muslims, 3390 Christians.
1856Ottoman reforms (Tanzimat) - including requirement to register ownership of land in Palestine and pay taxes on it.
1860First Jewish settlement (Mishkenot Sha'ananim) outside Jerusalem walls.
1878First Zionist Settlement - Petah Tikwa.
1870sFormation of Hovevei Tzion in Russia
1881-1885Wave of Russian pogroms catalyzes First Aliya (wave of immigration to Israel)..
1882Russian May Laws; Leon Pinsker writes Auto-Emancipation in 1882; formation of BILU; beginning of the First Aliya (wave of immigration).
1897First Zionist Congress in Basle, Switzerland.
1903Kishinev Pogrom and Russian Pogroms of 1905 catalyze Second Aliya
Nov 2, 1917British issued the Balfour Declaration,  promising a “National Home” for the Jews in Palestine.
August, 1929Arab Riots and Massacres in HebronJerusalem, Safed, Haifa, Motza and elsewhere. The Jews had set up a dividing screen at the Wailing Wall in Yom Kippur of 1928 to separate men and women worshippers, prompting rumors that the Jews wanted to build a synagogue at wall, which were spread deliberately by Hajj Amin El Husseini.
1936-1939Arab Revolt led by Haj Amin Al-Husseini. Over 5,000 Arabs were killed according to some sources, mostly by British. Several hundred Jews were killed by Arabs. Husseini fled to Iraq and then to Nazi Germany. British White Paper (1939) severely restricts Jewish immigration.
May 9, 1942Biltmore Program - Zionist leaders, headed by Chaim Weizmann and David Ben-Gurion, convene at the Biltmore Hotel in New York and declare their postwar program (known as the Biltmore Program).  The program recommended an end to the British Mandate and demand Jewish control over immigration to Palestine with the aim of founding a Jewish "Commonwealth." wish history, Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, Timeline, Zionist movement, Israel history, Middle East history
May 15, 1948Israel War of Independence  (1948 War). Declaration of Israel as the Jewish State; British leave Palestine; Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan, Saudi Arabia declared war on Israel. Egyptian, Syrian and Jordanian invasion began.
April 3, 1949Armistice - Israel and Arab states agree to armistice. Israel gained about 50% more territory than was originally allotted to it by the UN Partition Plan.
Oct. 29, 1956Suez Campaign. In retaliation for a series of escalating border raids as well as the closure of the straits of Tiran and Suez canal to Israeli shipping, and to prevent Egyptian use of newly acquired Soviet arms in a war, Israel invades the Sinai peninsula and occupies it for several months, with French and British collaboration.
May, 1964PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization) founded with the aim of destroying Israel. ThePalestinian National Charter (1968) officially called for liquidation of Israel.
May, 1967Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser closes the straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping and dismisses UN peacekeeping force. Negotiations with US to reopen the Straits of Tiran fail.
June 5-10,1967Six day war - Israel destroys the Egyptian air force on the ground, conquers and occupies Sinai and Gaza, then conquers the West Bank from Jordan, and Golan Heights from Syria.UN resolution 242 called for  Israeli withdrawal, establishment of peace.
June 19, 1967Israeli Cabinet decides on secret offer, to be delivered to Syrians and Egyptians though American diplomats, calling for return of territories conquered in the Six day war  in return for peace.
Oct. 6, 1973Yom Kippur War (October War). In a surprise attack on the Jewish day of atonement, Egypt retook the Suez canal and a narrow zone on the other side. Syria reconquered the Golan Heights. Following massive US and Soviet resupplying of the sides, Israel succeeded in pushing back the Syrians and threatening Damascus. Ariel Sharon was instrumental in the successful crossing of the Suez Canal, which cut off the Egyptian Third Army. Israeli casualties were unacceptably high however, and both Syria and Egypt celebrate the anniversary of the war as a victory.
March 26, 1979Peace treaty signed between Egypt and Israel.
June 7, 1981Israel destroys Iraqi nuclear reactor in daring raid.
Oct. 6, 1981Egyptian President Anwar Sadat is assassinated while on the reviewing stand of a victory parade.
June 6, 1982Massive Israeli invasion of Lebanon to fight PLO.
Sept. 13, 1993Oslo Declaration of Principles - Israel and PLO agree to mutual recognition.
Sept 28, 1995Oslo Interim Agreement signed. Palestinian Authority to be established.
Nov. 4, 1995Israeli PM Yitzhak Rabin assassinated by right-wing Israeli fanatic Yigal Amir. Rabin is replaced by Shimon Peres
June, 1996Right-Wing Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu elected Prime Minister in Israel, replacingShimon Peres.
Sept, 1996Al-Aqsa tunnel riots - Arab sources spread the false rumor that a gate opened in an underground tunnel tourist attraction by the Israeli government, endangered the foundations of the Al-Aqsa mosque. This caused several days of rioting and numerous casualties.
Jan 18, 1997Israel and Palestinians reach agreement on Israeli redeployment in the West-Bank city of Hebron
Oct. 1998Wye River Plantation talks result in an agreement for Israeli redeployment and release of political prisoners and renewed Palestinian commitment to correct its violations of the Oslo accords including excess police force, illegal arms and incitement in public media and education.
May 17, 1999Israel elects Labor party leader and Former General Ehud Barak as Prime Minister in a landslide. Barak promises rapid progress toward peace.
March, 2000Israeli-Syrian peace negotiations fail when Hafez Assad rejects an Israeli offer relayed by US President Clinton in Geneva.
Sept. 28, 2000Palestinians initiated riots after Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon  visited the Temple Mount, which is also the location of the Haram as Sharif holy to Muslims.
Feb 6, 2001Right-wing Likud leader Ariel Sharon elected Prime Minister in Israel replacing Ehud Barak and promising "peace and security."
Mar.-Apr. 2002Israel conducts operation Defensive Wall in the West Bank, following a large number of Palestinian suicide attacks on civilian targets. Saudi peace initiative adopted at Beirut summit.
Jan 28, 2003Elections in Israel give wide margin (40 seats) to right wing Likud party, returning PM Ariel Sharon for another term.
July 9, 2004International court of Justice (ICJ) rules that the Israeli security barrier violates international law and must be torn down.
Nov 11, 2004Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat dies.
Jan 9, 2005Mahmoud Abbas elected President of the Palestinian National Authority.
Jan 2006On January 4, Ariel Sharon suffered a massive stroke, leaving the leadership of Israel and the new Kadima party in the hands of Ehud Olmert  
Jan 26, 2006On January 26, the radical Islamist Hamas movement won an upset victory in Palestinian Legislative Council elections, threatening to end about 40 years of Fateh-PLO leadership of the Palestinians and to completely ruin hopes for peace with Israel. Hamas spokesmen sent mixed signals, but vowed never to recognize Israel and never to give up their claim to all of Palestine.
March 28Ehud Olmert elected PM of Israel, heading Kadima party coalition
July 12Second Lebanon War - Hezbollah terrorists cross the blue line border with Lebanon, attack an Israeli patrol, killing 3 and capturing 2 soldiers. Additional soldier dies the following day and several are killed when a tank hits a mine, pursuing the captors. At the same time, Hezbollah began a series of rocket attacks on northern Israel. In subsequent days, Israel carried out massive but selective bombing and artillery shelling of Lebanon, hitting rocket stores, Hezbollah headquarters in Dahya quarter of Beirut (see Beirut Map and al-Manara television in Beirut, and killing over two hundred persons, many civilians. Hezbollah responds with several hundred rocket attacks on Haifa, Tiberias, Safed and other towns deep in northern Israel, killing 13 civilians to July 18 (See Map of Hezbollah Rocket Attacks, and a Hezbollah Iranian supplied C-802 missile hits an Israeli missile cruiser off the cost of Beirut, killing 4. Hezbollah rocket also sinks at least one foreign neutral ship and damages an Egyptian one. G-8 meeting calls for cessation of violence, return of Israeli soldier and disarmament of Hezbolla in accordance with UN Security Council Resolution 1559 and UN Security Council Resolution 1680
Aug 14, 2006Cease fire, based on UN Security Council Resolution 1701
Feb. 2007Israeli renovations near the Mughrabi gate of the Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem spark widespread unrest in the Arab world, over false charges that Israel is destroying the mosque.
Feb. 8, 2007Palestinian Unity Agreement in Mecca. Hamas and Fatah agree to share power, based on vaguely worded agreement. Hamas officials reiterate that they will never recognize Israel. US and Israel insist that the new government must recognize right of Israel to exist, disarm terrorist groups and agree to end violence.
Feb. 19, 2007Trilateral Israeli-Palestinian-American summit with Secretary of State Rice, PM Ehud Olmert and President Abbas ended with no visible result.
March 17, 2007Palestinian unity government sworn in.
June 2007Hamas ousts Fatah from Gaza in bloody coup.
Nov. 26-28US convenes peace summit at Annapolis, Md. with participation of Arab nations, Quartet, EU members, GCC and others including South Africa. Israelis and Palestinians are forced to agree on a joint statement that vows to implement the quartet roadmap in parallel, with US monitoring performance and the sides negotiating continuously with the aim of concluding an agreement by the end of 2008. See: Joint Israeli-Palestinian Declaration, and its meaning  
Jan. 2008President Bush visit to Middle East; Hamas "breakout" into Egypt at Rafah Crossing.
Feb. 12, 2008Hezbollah "militant" Imad Moughniyeh killed by car bomb in Damascus. Moughniyeh was a "militancy" mastermind, responsible for attacks on U.S. embassy and US marines in Lebanon in the 80s, for kidnapping of American nationals, for explosions in Israel Embassy and Jewish Center in Argentina and apparently for planning the kidnappings that triggered the second Lebanon War. FBI had a $5 million dollar reward out for Moughniyeh. Israel denies any involvement in the killing of Moughniyeh.
Dec 27, 2008-Jan 18, 2009Operation Cast Lead - Israeli operation in Gaza to stop Hamas rocket attacks. Over 1,000 Palestinian casualties.
April 1, 2009Following elections,  Likud party head Benjamin Netanyahu becomes Prme Minister.
June 4, 2009Address by President Obama in Cairo, June 4, 2009 - Historic speech of rapprochement with the Arab and Muslim world also has direct implications for Israeli-Palestinian conflict, since the President calls for an end to Israeli construction of settlements in the occupied territories, as well as Arab recognition of Israel and a two state solution.

Howard Grief (1940-2013) Israel Legal Rights to all of Palestine - Draiman



Howard Grief (1940-2013) Israel Legal Rights to all of Palestine - Draiman


Howard Grief (1940-2013) Israel Legal Rights to all ofPalestine

Howard Grief did not suffer fools gladly, most notably those, including jurists, who in the face of documented historical evidence of Israel’s sovereignty over Judea, Samaria and the Golan, as agent and assignee of the Jewish People, persist in referring to those areas as “disputed,” “unallocated” and, most offensively, “occupied” territories. Irrespective of the direction of the prevailing political winds, Howard might have believed that the legal questions had been put to rest with the publication in 2008 of his The Legal Foundation and Borders of Israel under International Law, the 660-page product of more than two decades of ground-breaking research that should have shattered every myth, every lie, every distortion and misrepresentation of fact employed over the 68 years of Israel’s reestablishment to negate the sovereign right of the Jewish People to their National Home

Alas, five years after the book’s publication and two months since Grief’s tragic, untimely passing, the myths, the lies, the distortions show no sign of loosening their grip on global consciousness. If he oversold himself on the compelling power of truth in an age in which “narratives” have all but supplanted historical fact, Grief could not have envisioned the solid wall of indifference with which The Legal Foundation was greeted by the media. Arguably the most important book published in Israel since the l967 war garnered not one review from a Leftist-dominated Israeli press. A review of the book by this writer did appear in Outpost and with the efforts of Americans For A Safe Israel, in several American-Jewish weeklies

Howard Grief did not cast himself as the instrument for setting Israel’s legal and historical record straight when he gave up a successful 23-year law practice in Montreal to make Aliyah in 1989.

As he points out in the introduction to his book, it was thrust upon him with the amazing discovery that 41 years after the state was declared, he could find “no single book that contained an organized and systematic presentation of Israel’s rights to the Land of Israel – not just the area included in the State of Israel, but to all of the land east and west of the Jordan…” Did any such “rights” exist? He was determined to find out.
Two events triggered his decision to go public with what he was discovering:
A 93-page position paper on the key elements of Israel’s founding that he put together in 1991 for presentation to the Carnegie Foundation in New York by Yuval Ne’eman, prelude to a speech to be given by Ne’eman, then Minister of Energy and Infrastructure in the Yitzhak Shamir government.

Howard Grief served as legal advisor to the ministry from 1991-93.
The second event was Ne’eman’s decision to do an article for the prestigious Global Affairs magazine citing Grief’s research as the authority for his conclusions.
As a legal historian Howard Grief at that point had already gone where no man had gone before.Beneath the accumulated debris of 70 years of history, he had unearthed the forgotten key, the rosetta stone that spelled out the Jewish People’s sovereign right to the 
Landof Israel in all its historic dimensions.
It was the April, 1920 San Remo Resolution of the five victorious World War I Allied powers – America, Britain, France, Italy and Japan. British Foreign Minister Lord George Curzon, no defender of Jewish aspirations in Palestine, grudgingly called it the “Jewish Magna Carta.“ Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, 
America’s most passionate Zionist, remarked that the boundaries of the future Jewish state had been set and that there was no need for additional discussion.
Indeed, the 1920 San Remo Resolution in transforming the 1917 Balfour Declaration into a binding international legal document, making it the basis of Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations and further incorporating it into the Mandate for Palestine, legally obligating Britain as trustee to aid and encourage Jewish immigration and settlement to the National Jewish Home, the San Remo Resolution of 1920 was the legal mechanism which reconstituted the Jewish National Home in Palestine in 1920 and the ticket to Jewish sovereignty when it became a majority, albeit one that a Palestinian Jewish population of 80,000 at the time was not yet in a position to exercise.

“Once international law in the form of the 1920 San Remo Resolution recognized that de jure sovereignty over all regions of historical Palestine and the Land of Israel had been vested in the Jewish People,” Grief observed, “neither the Supreme Council of the Allied Powers nor the Council of the League of Nations, nor its successor, the United Nations, could thereafter revoke or alter Jewish sovereignty by a new decision…If either of these bodies really had such a right in regard to Palestine and the Land of Israel, the sovereignty of every state in the world over its own territory would be put in jeopardy.”

In ratifying the 1924 “Anglo-American Convention on Palestine,” Grief submits, the United States “became a contracting party” to the League of Nations Mandate for Palestine assigned to Britain
for administration as trustee, “a document not only devoid of any provision for an Arab state within Palestine, but one that specifically prohibited the partition of the land for any purpose other than the creation of a National Jewish home.” In fact, then President Calvin Coolidge was not plowing new American legal ground with his signature to that document. He was simply reinforcing a unanimous resolution of the 67th Congress three years earlier, signed by his predecessor, President Warren G. Harding, recognizing a future Jewish state in “the whole of 
Palestine.” President Barak Obama’s obsession with the creation of a bogus, irredentist “Palestinian Arab State” in Judea and Samaria is nothing less than a repudiation of the signatures of two American presidents and the unanimously expressed will of the U.S. Congress.


While Howard did not live to see the wide-scale embrace of his seminal contribution to Israeli history and international law or mercifully the post-mortem assault – thus far unavailing -- by an unforgiving Israeli Far-Left on his Wikipedia biography, he did live long enough to see The Legal Foundation and Borders of Israel under International Law beginning to gain traction. Wherever 
Israel’s history and legal rights to the Land of Israel are discussed and debated these days, this is the book most often cited.
Howard was too ill to accept the speaking engagements beginning to pour in from activist groups in the 
U.S.,CanadaScandinavia and Israel, but he went to his final rest knowing he had not labored in vain.
William Mehlman represents AFSI in 
Israel.

1 comment:

  1. Palestine aka Greater Israel is Jewish territory according to International law and treaties, additionally incorporating the January 3, 1919 Faisal Weitzman agreement executed by both parties in London on January 3, 1919.
    The Law of Return is for The Jews and reciprocating equity by the Arabs
    The Law of Return is for The Jews, the option to return to Greater Israel and The Arab-Palestinians to leave Greater Israel and return to the Arab countries they originated from. The Arab-Palestinians should move to the Million plus Jewish homes and land confiscated by the Arab countries from the million persecuted and expelled Jewish families and the 120,440 sq. km. of Real estate property the Arabs confiscated from the million plus Jewish families and their children expelled from Arab countries. That is the only viable alternative. (Why are we ignoring the Faisal Weitzman agreement of January 3, 1919 which is the only valid agreement executed by both the Arabs and the Jews). In reviewing various legal aspects of agreements and resolutions to be applied to third parties, all resolutions by the UN which are recommendation only, must be executed and agreed to by the parties otherwise they have no validity. Therefore, any and all resolutions issued by the UN which have not been executed and agreed to by the parties have no affect and are null and void. This applies to any of the League of Nation and the UN resolutions that affect the territories and boundaries of Israel and any other resolutions that affect Israel. That leaves us back to the territory allocated by the San Remo Conference of 1920 and its confirmation by the Treaty of Sevres and Lausanne, which is all of Palestine. (By the way I have the minutes of the 1918-19 Paris Conference, The 1920 San Remo Conference and The Treaty of Sevres which was executed by all the Supreme Allied Powers).

Arab-Israel, Palestinian - Israeli or Muslim versus the West? The evolution of the Palestine Issue in Arab and Western politics and policy


Which Conflict ??? Arab-Israel, Palestinian - Israeli or Muslim versus the West?
The evolution of the Palestine Issue in Arab and Western politics and policy
The conflict between the Arabs and Jews of Palestine has always been expressed in several different dimensions, each of which assumes greater or lesser importance at different times in history and in different perspectives. Some of the major dimensions are:
  • Arab people versus the Jews of Palestine or Israel
     
  • Palestinians versus the Jews of Palestine or Israel
     
  • Muslims versus Jews of Israel
     
  • Muslims and Arabs versus the West
It is not always easy to untangle these different motifs either in popular thinking about the conflict or in policy decisions of governments. It is fair to say that over the years the conflict over Palestine-Israel has evolved from an Arab-Jewish conflict into a Palestinian - Israeli or Palestinian-Jewish conflict and a Muslim-Jewish conflict. It would be foolhardy, however, to ignore the existence of a genuine conflict between the Arab countries and the West that has only a peripheral relation to the Palestinian issue, or to dismiss aspects of the Arab-Zionist and Muslim-Jewish conflict that always existed, were never fully resolved, and may very likely return to the fore after the basic needs and aspirations of the Palestinians are met. We can distinguish several phases:
Ottoman: When the first Zionist settlers arrived in Palestine toward the end of the 19th century, there was no particularist nationalism in the Ottoman Turkish Empire, beyond a broad movement for Arab liberation and perhaps the Armenian and Greek communities, which were not related to the Palestinian issue. The Zionist settlement program was viewed with alarm both by Arab nationalists inside and outside Palestine, because it might threaten Arab national claims, and by Arabs living in Palestine who felt threatened by the Jews or who were directly affected by Zionist settlement. Thus, the conflict was both a local issue and an Arab/Muslim  issue.
Mandatory Palestine: The coming of the British and the Balfour declaration intensified the conflict. The end of World War I, breakup of the Ottoman Empire and the peace treaties changed the Middle East and created a new reality and a new set of conflicts. The war created a number of semi-independent Arab states that the British had hoped would be beholden to them, but which in fact, became increasingly independent and jealous of outside interference. The British and French, and later the Americans, wanted to maximize their influence in the region and retain control over strategic and natural resources: namely, the Suez Canal and the oil resources of the Gulf countries, which became increasingly important. The Arab countries believed they had been deceived by the British, because they thought they would be setting up an independent country or countries throughout the Middle East, whereas in fact Syria and Lebanon were given to France as mandate countries based on the secret Sykes-Picot agreement and Palestine was given to Britain, based on the Balfour declaration. The Arabs considered that this arrangement as the British promises to them except Palestine. The Arabs and the Jews entered into an agreement in January 1919 executed by Feisal and Weizmann Agreement. The Hashemite family of Feisal, which had aided Lawrence of Arabia in overthrowing Turkish rule, was ousted from Saudi Arabia by Ibn Saud. Instead of a united Hashemite Arabia, the Hashemites were forced to content themselves with kingdoms in Iraq and Jordan. In Syria, the French, with the consent of the British, put down a revolt in favor of Feisal. Ibn Saud was quick to align himself with the British, but the politics and aspirations of the Saud dynasty were different from those of Feisal and the Hashemites, and having seen how the British had dealt with Feisal, Saud was not likely to fall into the same traps. Saud also had the advantage that increasingly, the great powers recognized the strategic importance of the vast oil wealth of Saudi Arabia and the Gulf region.
The Arab Revolt - Beginning in 1936, the Arabs of Palestine revolted against British rule and in particular, against the Jewish national home promise of the League of Nations Mandate for Palestine, and the immigration of Jews to Palestine. Ibn Saud intervened, and was allowed to intervene by the British on behalf of the Palestinians,  thereby gaining prestige in the Arab world as protector of Arab interests. The Arabs rejected the Peel Report, which would have partitioned Palestine into a tiny Jewish state and a much larger Arab area, and  ensured that the British would accede to Arab/Palestinian demands and close the gates of Palestine to Jewish immigration. According to historian Elie Kedourie [1], this intervention in the revolt in Palestine marked the beginning of the primacy of the Arab/Palestine conflict as an issue in Arab relations with the West, and the beginning of Arab intervention in that conflict. The role of Palestine as an Arab-Western issue and as an issue in Arab national politics was extended in the 1940's, when President Roosevelt felt compelled to reassure King Saud that the United States would not back an independent Jewish state in Palestine, and with the formation of the Arab League. One of the express purposes of the Arab League was to prevent the formation of a Jewish state.
Partition and the first Arab-Israeli War - The nature of the Arab League, founded to oppose the creation of a Jewish state, as well as the agitation of the Grand Mufti, Haj Amin El Husseini, and the prestige value of Palestine as an issue in Arab politics, made it almost inevitable that the Arab countries would attack the new state of Israel. What is less widely understood, is that the several Arab countries had a deep aversion to Haj Amin El Husseini, and had no intention of allowing him to set up an independent Arab/Palestinian state.Transjordan, Syria and Egypt intended to carve up Palestine between them, or parts of it, and to prevent each other from having too large a slice of Palestine [2,3,4].  King Abdullah of Transjordan had already made a tacit agreement with the Zionist leadership to confine Jordanian territorial aspirations to the West Bank, and encouraged the Israelis to minimize Egyptian gains in Gaza. Abdulla el Tall told Elias Sasson "Strike the Egyptians as much as you can, our attitude will be neutral [2,4]. The Israelis were so successful at this that they eventually incurred the wrath of the RAF and the British government, which forced them to withdraw from forward positions in El Arish. The Syrians, for their part, feared that if Transjordan was too successful in Palestine, they would attempt to overthrow the Syrian government and replace it with a Hashemite monarchy.[3] None of the Arab states was enthusiastic about setting up a Arab/Palestinian state, though abortive rival Jordanian and Egyptian versions of the Arab "Palestinian State" were announced in Gaza and the West Bank also known as Judea and Samaria at the end of the war for propaganda purposes.  In the context of inter-Arab politics, the Arab/Palestinian refugees and the million Jewish refugees from Arab lands created as a result of the 1948 war (the Israeli War of Independence) were a troublesome or useful byproduct of the conflict, and Arab/Palestinian national rights were a hot issue to be deflected and suppressed, because they represented the possibility of radicalization in the Arab world. Arab/Palestinian rights. Sympathy for the Arab/Palestinians was expressed in the desire to liberate Palestine as an Arab national cause. Arab/Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza were not allowed autonomous self-government. Arab/Palestinian aspirations were carefully channeled away from the direction of national self-determination.
Decolonialization - In the period after World War II, the role of France and Britain in the Middle East and North Africa, and their colonial empires, collapsed very rapidly. In addition to formal withdrawal from Egypt, Algeria and Syria, client regimes collapsed in Iran, Iraq and Libya. The USSR helped to accelerate this process, and both the USSR and more clumsily the US, intervened in several cases. The US worked against the British in Egypt, but worked with the British in Iran, to remove the nationalist Mossadeqh and reinstate the more amenable Shah Reza Pahlevi. With the exception of the Iranian counter-coup, all the regimes that came to power were anti-Western, with the Arab/Palestine issue being only a minor part of their agenda initially. The subsequent development of the Arab-Israeli or Muslim-Israeli conflict must be viewed in this context.
Nasser and the Rise of Arab Nationalism - Gamal Nasser was the most important  of the new leaders who rose with the wave of decolonialization. He replaced Farouk, a British client, and then proceeded to remove the last vestiges of Western influence from Egypt. At the same time, he molded the Baathist Pan-Arab cause and recast it in his image, in a bid to make himself and Egypt leaders of the Arab world.  The Palestinian issue was useful to Nasser.  First, failure of the old regimes to liberate Palestine in 1948 was the issue that legitimized the revolution of 1953. Liberation of Palestine would now ultimately be used as an issue that would establish Nasser's credentials as the central leader of the Arab world.  The Arab/Palestinian issue became subordinate to a larger anti-colonialist issue, or perhaps it is more correct to say that the Arab/Palestinian issue for the Arabs was always representative of the larger colonialist issue and inseparable from it. Arab nationalists resented Western influence and control, and Israel represented a "foreign western  implant" on Arab soil. For Nasser however, the presence of the British in Egypt was a more pressing issue, and one that seemed easier to resolve.  He nationalized the Suez Canal and provoked a conflict with Britain and France as well as with Israel. Israel, France and Britain attacked Egypt in October 1956. Israel quickly reached the Suez Canal and French and British troops moved to take over the canal area. But Nasser correctly assessed and capitalized on US-European rivalries to transform the humiliating military defeat of the Sinai campaign into a great moral and political victory. 
Soon after the Suez campaign, Egyptian agents contacted Yasser Arafat and tried to set him up as a student leader who would channel Arab/Palestinian aspirations in the pan-Arabist, pro-Egypt direction desired by Nasser. The eventual result was the creation of the Fatah and the PLO as "liberation movements" and their adoption at the second Arab summit conference of 1964, in the context of achieving Arab aspirations in Palestine, rather than Arab/Palestinian national aspirations. The Arab/Palestinians themselves were not too happy with this arrangement or with the tutelage and interference of Egypt and Syria, but they had little choice, especially as the Syrians provided the organization and military know-how to set up the first Fatah cells in the 1960's. Whatever genuine Arab/Palestinian national sentiment existed was kept carefully and control and channeled into the pan-Arab issue. Arab/Palestinians were not allowed real political freedom either in the West Bank or Gaza Strip, though in theory they could have formed a state there at any time, free of Israeli influence, and free to oppose Israel in the international arena.
Arafat and the birth of Arab/Palestinian Nationalism - Arab nationalism began to vanish from the Middle East political scene after the debacle of the 1967 6-day war. Instead of destroying Israel and  liberating Palestine, the Arab countries suffered a humiliating defeat and what had been left of Palestine before 1967 was now in Israeli hands. Yasser Arafat, the PLO and the Fatah were now freed from the shackles of Egyptian and Syrian control, and developed the line of independent Arab/Palestinian nationalism, which had been more or less implicit in the Fatah program and in Arafat's writings in his newspaper, Falestinunah.
The PLO at the UN -  Since the late 1930s, US and British foreign policy had placed great weight on the Arab-Jewish (later, Arab-Israeli) conflict as the major fly in the ointment of Arab/Muslim-Western relations. This view was reinforced by the successive wars with Israel, culminating in the defeat of the Arabs in 1967. The defeat catalyzed the rise of Arab/Palestinian nationalism. The Arab/Palestinian plight, hitherto a more-or-less neglected byproduct of the Arab-Israeli conflict, was brought to the fore. Yasser Arafat addressed the UN, and the PLO was given recognition. UN General Assembly Resolution 3236 recognized the PLO as representatives of the Arab/Palestinian people, and stated the support of the General Assembly for Arab/Palestinian self determination. It also put the stamp of approval on Arab/Palestinian "resistance." It stated that the UN:
1. Reaffirms the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people in Palestine, including:
(a) The right to self-determination without external interference;

(b) The right to national independence and sovereignty;
2. Reaffirms also the inalienable right of the Palestinians to return to their homes and property from which they have been displaced and uprooted, and calls for their return;

3. Emphasizes that full respect for and the realization of these inalienable rights of the Palestinian people are indispensable for the solution of the question of Palestine;

4. Recognizes that the Palestinian people is a principal party in the establishment of a just and lasting peace in the Middle East;

5. Further recognizes the right of the Palestinian people to regain its rights by all means in accordance with the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations;

6. Appeals to all States and international organizations to extend their support to the Palestinian people in its struggle to restore its rights, in accordance with the Charter;

7. Requests the Secretary-General to establish contacts with the Palestine Liberation Organization on all matters concerning the question of Palestine;
General Assembly Resolution 3237, passed on the same day, granted observer status to the PLO. Under Soviet tutelage, the PLO and the Arab/Palestinians had achieved international recognition, and the cause of Arab/Palestinian self-determination was put on the international agenda.
Harold Saunders and the American Recognition of Arab/Palestinian Nationalism - In 1975, the new situation was acknowledged by Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Harold H. Saunders, who told a US House of Representatives subcommittee:
We have also repeatedly stated that the legitimate interests of the Palestinian Arabs must be taken into account in the negotiation of an Arab–Israeli peace. In many ways, the Arab/Palestinian dimension of the Arab–Israeli conflict is the heart of that conflict. Final resolution of the problems arising from the partition of Palestine, the establishment of the State of Israel, and Arab opposition to those events will not be possible until agreement is reached defining a just and permanent status for the Arab peoples who consider themselves Palestinians."
This document was rightly considered revolutionary because it proposed to recognize the national rights of the Arab/Palestinians and offered more than a broad hint that if the PLO adopted a compromise position and recognized the right of Israel to exist, the US would work to ensure dialogue between the parties.  Saunders acknowledged what was evident: there would be no solution without the Arab/Palestinians, the PLO was now the recognized representative of the Arab/Palestinians, and the US should be ready to do business with the PLO provided the PLO was amenable to a reasonable solution. This change of policy was extremely important, and is discussed in more detail elsewhere.  However, Saunders did not seek to redefine the conflict, and did not do so.
The first sentence makes it clear that the Arab/Palestinian problem is not the only issue, and this is amplified by "In many ways" in the next sentence. However, the cautionary preamble "in many ways" was dropped in most reports. Somehow, "that conflict" was transmuted to "the conflict," and Saunders soon came to be credited (or blamed) for the thesis that "The Arab/Palestinian dimension ... is the heart of the conflict."
In his Congressional testimony, Saunders also said: "It is a fact that many of the three million or so people who call themselves Arab/Palestinians today increasingly regard themselves as having their own identity as a people and desire a voice in determining their political status."
Saunders was merely over-stating in words what had become obvious, that the Arab/Palestinians had come of age, and that their conflict with Israel would henceforth dominate the Middle-Eastern political scene. It had in fact been dominating the Middle Eastern political scene for several years, since the PLO had threatened the regime of Hussein of Jordan, and had been expelled from Jordan to Syria and Lebanon. Saunders went on to state,
The statement is often made in the Arab world that there will not be peace until the 'rights of the Arab/Palestinians' are fulfilled, but there is no agreed definition of what is meant and a variety of viewpoints have been expressed on what the legitimate objectives of the Arab/Palestinians are...."
 
"No one, therefore, seems in a position today to say exactly what Arab/Palestinian objectives are.... The issue is not whether Arab/Palestinian interests should be expressed in a final settlement, but how. There will be no peace unless an answer is found. 

We also have to take into consideration the million Jewish refugees expelled from Arab lands and their vast assets that was confiscated including over 120,000 square km. of Jewish owned land.
Again, Saunders was stating the obvious: a solution to the Arab/Palestinian problem is a necessary condition for a settlement, and without such a solution there can be no peace. Saunders did not say it was a sufficient condition however. He certainly did not state that a solution to the Arab/Palestinian problem would necessarily guarantee peace between Israel and the Arabs, or put an end to friction between the West and the Arabs. However, the Saunders thesis was quickly misinterpreted to imply that if only the Arab/Palestinian problem were solved, the entire Arab-Israeli conflict would vanish. Likewise, various "solutions" such as Israeli withdrawal from occupied territories, and/or return of the refugees, attached themselves to the Saunders thesis as if they were necessary and sufficient to meet Arab/Palestinian demands, and as if it was a certainty that  they would bring about a solution to the conflict.  Middle East history was now reinterpreted by many as if the Arab-Israeli conflict had begun in 1949, with the creation of the Arab/Palestinian refugee problem, or perhaps even in 1967, with the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza strip.
In December of 1975, Saunders co-authored a Brookings Institution report that reflected these ideas as well as others. The Brookings Report of December, 1975[5], called for a settlement among all parties, including all the Arab states. Among its summary points we find :
Point 1 states that the United States "is concerned for the security, independence, and well-being of Israel and the Arab states of the area."
Point 3 states, "We believe the time has come to begin the process of negotiating such a settlement among the parties, either at a general conference or at more informal multilateral meetings..." 
Point 3 (e) is the reference in these summary points to "Palestine" or Arab "Palestinian." It says, "Palestine. There should be provision for Arab/Palestinian self-determination....This might take the form of an independent Arab/Palestinian state ... or of a Arab/Palestinian entity voluntarily federated with Jordan but exercising extensive political autonomy."
The Arab "Palestine first" approach was sidelined for a while by events, but we can recognize in it the beginnings of the Madrid conference as well as the Oslo Accord.  In Israel, Menachem Begin was elected on a platform that stated, "Judea and Samaria will not be given over to any foreign government; between the sea and Jordan there will only be Israeli sovereignty." Egypt made a separate peace with Israel. If the Americans believed the Arab/Palestinian issue was crucial for peace, they did not make this particularly evident in their approach to Egyptian-Israeli peace. The PLO missed that opportunity when they refused the Egyptian invitation to participate in talks, and refused to recognize UN Security Council Resolution 242.  However the Arab "Palestine first" approach became more popular in the 80's. The first attempt was to provide a solution through a federation with Jordan. King Hussein brought this offer to the Israelis, but it was turned down by the Shamir government. This left only the Arab/Palestinians themselves, and the Arab/Palestinians were ready to deal only through the PLO. The PLO on the other hand, was unwilling to recognize Israel or Resolution 242, and the Israelis and US refused to deal officially with the PLO in consequence.  In the US, the problem was perceived as one of getting the PLO to become a part of the peace process. This was thought to be achieved in 1988, with the announcement by Chairman Yasser Arafat of PLO acceptance of resolution 242. Now the problem was to get the Israelis on board as well. This did not occur until the right-wing Shamir government was replaced by the Labor government of Yitzhak Rabin in 1992. The Rabin government  in fact leapt past the US, negotiating directly with the PLO, resulting in the Oslo Accords.
The Muslim Dimension - The Muslim dimension of the Arab/Palestine conflict was always implicit. Rather than being antithetical to Arab nationalism, Islamist and Muslim themes were always to some extent an integral part of the Arab nationalist doctrine. Islamic lands were divided into those that were already lost to the West, chiefly Al-Andalus, or Spain, and those that were properly part of Dar al-Islam, the home of Islam. Arab/Palestine was supposed to be in the latter category. The Israeli capture of Jerusalem greatly enhanced and underlined the Muslim religious dimension. Beginning with the Iranian revolution of Khomeini,  Islamism became an increasingly potent  political force in the Middle East, and therefore the Islamic dimension of the Arab/Palestine conflict assumed increasing importance as it was taken up by Iranians,  by Salafi radicals in the madrassas (Islamic schools) being built with Gulf oil money throughout the Muslim world, and by Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda. Bin Laden does mention Arab/Palestine in his rhetoric, subordinate to railing against the US for occupation of the holy places of Saudi Arabia. This caused some to further misinterpret the so-called Saunders doctrine to mean that the Israeli-Arab/Palestinian conflict, and US support of Israel, were at the heart of the Islamist struggle against the United States. However, the chief concern of Islamism, whether it is represented by the Shi'a Iranian branch or al-Qaeda, is the negation of Western influence, liberal democracy and the emancipation of women. The United States, and not Israel, is the Great Satan. The Arab/Palestinian issue, as well as anti-Semitism, are only convenient and popular issues. Islamist politicians leverage on these issues to advance their program.
The nature of the Israel-Arab conflict has certainly changed over time, and perceptions have changed. The distorted idea, convenient to Israel, and to a certain extent to Arab states, that the Arab/Palestinian issue was of little or no importance in solving the conflict has been been discarded. No Israeli leader can say any more, as Golda Meir said, "There are no Arab/Palestinians." However, this distortion has been replaced by a different set of questionable perceptions.  It is not clear by any means what the real importance of the Arab/Palestinian issue is to Muslim or Arab politics or in the every day lives of Arab people. It is uncertain whether they care about the Arab/Palestinian people, or about Arab (as opposed to Arab/Palestinian) control of Jerusalem and Palestine.  The Lebanese, for example, show no great love for the Arab/Palestinian refugees living in their midst, but manifest a great aversion to Israel and sympathy for the Arab/Palestinian cause, so long as the Lebanese themselves are not called upon to do anything for the Arab/Palestinians. The Syrian government apparently still considers Palestine part of "Southern Syria" and therefore within their rightful sphere of influence. 
Arab animosity to Jews and the idea of a Jewish state did not arise with the Zionist state or the Israeli liberation and occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. All the evidence indicates that it predates the state of Israel. 
Mousa Khazem El-Houseini, Mayor of Jerusalem, told Winston Churchill just after WW I:
The Jews have been amongst the most active advocates of destruction in many lands... It is well known that the disintegration of Russia was wholly or in great part brought about by the Jews, and a large proportion of the defeat of Germany and Austria must also be put at their door.
(Benny Morris, Righteous Victims, Knopf 1999 Page 99)
Today we and our subjects are deeply troubled over this Arab/Palestine question, and the cause of our disquiet and anxiety is the strange attitude of your British Government, and the still more strange hypnotic influence which the Jews, a race accursed by God according to His Holy Book, and destined to final destruction and eternal damnation hereafter, appear to wield over them and the English people generally.
 
'God's Holy Book (the Qur'an) contains God's own word and divine ordinance, and we commend to His Majesty's government to read and carefully peruse that portion which deals with the Jews and especially what is to be their fate in the end. For God's words are unalterable and must be.
...
''We Arabs have been the traditional friends of Great Britain for many years, and I, Bin Sa'ud, in particular have been your Government's firm friend all my life, what madness then is this which is leading on our Government to destroy this friendship of centuries, all for the sake of an accursed and stiffnecked race which has always bitten the hand of everyone who has helped it since the world began.
 




Nor can we say this was an isolated opinion, or that this view changed materially after World War II or after two Arab countries signed peace treaties with Israel. In 1961, Moustapha Tlass, Defense Minister of Syria, wrote a book perpetuating the blood libel, the accusation that Jews murder Christian children to use their blood for baking Matzoth. The book has since been reprinted many times, and the blood-libel accusation has appeared in Saudi newspapers as well. In 2002, Egyptian television aired a series which asserted the reality of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. In Turkey, Mein Kampf is a best seller.
While some Arab hostility to the United States and the West is due to American support for Israel, the reverse is also certainly true. Arabs and non-Arab Muslims are hostile to Israel because Israel is viewed as an outpost of Western civilization, and the "last outpost of Western Colonialism." There are numerous expressions of this attitude, which arises both from religious extremists who see Israel as a Trojan horse that will bring Western liberalism into the Middle East, and from leftists, who paint Israel as a tool of imperialism. At the Durban UN Conference on Racism, Yasser Arafat stated that Israel is the last outpost of colonialism, a view that has many adherents.
A Tunisian, Latif Chokri, stated in a dialogue:
Imperialist support for the Zionist institution has not decreased, simply because the institution is a convenient tool and spearhead for terrorising the peoples of the region, for laying hands on their resources, plundering their wealth and preventing them from uniting together and gaining their independence
(From "Dialogue - Review for discussion between Arab and Jewish activists of Palestine," www.miftah.org/Doc/Reports/2005/DialogueReport.pdf)
Salah Salah, Chair of the Commission of Refugees of the Arab Palestinian National Council stated:
I do not want to enter into a grand debate, by stating that Israel is an outpost of colonialism and imperialism in the region. I do not wish to impose my point of view on anybody, but you should know that there is an alliance between the Zionist project and the global imperialist regime, under various forms.
(From "Dialogue - Review for discussion between Arab and Jewish activists of Palestine," www.miftah.org/Doc/Reports/2005/DialogueReport.pdf)
The rights of Palestinian Arabs and concern over those rights were always an issue for the Arab/Palestinians, beginning in Ottoman times, when Arab/Palestinians protested against land sales to the Zionist movement. The problem took on much more urgency following the Israeli War of Independence (1948 War), when hundreds of thousands of Arab/Palestinians became refugees. There is no doubt that the emergence of the new PLO following the 6-Day war took the Arab/Palestinian issue out of the deep freeze, where it had been hidden for the convenience of Israel and the Arab countries. However, Arab/Palestinian antagonism to Zionism was, from the start, related to larger issues of Arab nationalism and resentment of the West, as well as to traditional Arab and Muslim attitudes toward Jews, and it would be a mistake to think that these larger issues could be resolved solely by ending the liberation and occupation of the West Bank also known as Judea and Samaria and Gaza, or even by resolving all the substantive issues that divide Arab/Palestinians and Israelis.
It is certainly true that hostility to Israel and Jews is fanned by the liberation and occupation and the plight of the Arab/Palestinians. Ending the liberation and occupation and the conflict will simplify US diplomacy in the region and improve sentiment toward Israel. However, It is not necessarily the case that extremists would be satisfied with a resolution that left an intact Israeli state or that hostility to Israel would vanish if ever the Arab/Palestinian issue were resolved. Racist and xenophobic views like the ones quoted above would continue to threaten the peace and challenge the legitimacy of governments that had signed peace treaties with Israel. It  is even less likely that resolution of the Israel-Arab/Palestinian conflict would somehow magically resolve the very real conflicts between Western and Arab/Muslim interests in controlling the oil resources of the Gulf or the fiction created by differences in Western and Muslim cultural and political outlooks. 
Today the closing of 2015, oil prices have dropped from a high of $120 to a low of $34 a barrel; oil has become much less a political weapon for the Arab world and the U.S. assuming the position of the largest producer of oil and gas in the world; plus the new technology of extracting oil; has enabled many nations in the world to produce oil and gas and new technology for producing renewable energy; thus, it additionally reduces world dependence on Arab oil, which reduces their political and economical power.



Notes:
1. Kedourie, Elie, Islam in the Modern World, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, N.Y. 1980
2. Rogan, Eugene, Jordan and 1948: The Persistence of an Official History,  p 118 in Rogan, E. and Shlaim. A. (eds)The War for Palestine, Cambridge, 2001, pp 104-124.
3. Landis, J., Syria and the Palestine War: Fighting Abdallah's 'Greater Palestine' Plan in Rogan, E. and Shlaim. A. (eds) The War for Palestine, Cambridge, 2001, pp 178-205.
4. Gerges, F.,  Egypt and the 1948 War: Internal Conflict and Regional Ambition in Rogan, E. and Shlaim. A. (eds) The War for Palestine, Cambridge, 2001, pp 151-177.
5. The Brookings Report on the Middle East Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Winter, 1977) , pp. 195-205.

Related:

Details of the historical events of the conflict are given in: Brief History of Israelis and Palestinians A capsule history of Palestine/Israel since early times.