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Israel/Palestine

 

But since the two sides couldn"t live with each other, the Balfour .
             Declaration was unworkable. Britain then partitioned the country .
             (http://www.levitt.com/misc/israel_history.html/beck-521).
             After World War II, a tired Britain referred the Palestine-Israel problem to the .
             United Nations. The United Nations couldn"t partition a country without the .
             consent of its people. The Jews welcomed the partition. The partition gave the .
             Jews 55% of the Palestinian land when they were only 34% of the population in .
             the Palestinian area. Feeling sorry for the Jews, many nations, mostly European .
             nations, wanted Jews to have their own nation. On may 14, 1948, Israel was .
             declared a independent state (beck-522).
             The day after Israel declared itself an independent nation, it was attacked and .
             invaded by 6 Arab states. Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, and Syria .
             were the invaders. When they began the invasion, the 6 countries were intending .
             on destroying Israel. The new Jewish state survived. Israel depended on American .
             help in this ordeal and again in their future wars .
             (http://www.levitt.com/misc/israel_history.html / beck-522).
             The second war was started when Egypt took the Suez Canal in 1956. Egypt .
             took the canal as an act of anger for the loss of U.S. and British financial .
             support. The British and the French got revenge by teaming with Israel. Israel .
             forces quickly took down the Egyptians. But the tension between the U.S. and the .
             Soviet Union forced the Israel forces and its European allies to withdraw ending .
             the 1956 Suez Crisis. But in the coming years, Israel and the Arab neighbors of .
             Israel were building tension. In 1967, Abdel Nasser, the president of Egypt and .


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