Is Peace Possible?

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The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been one of the defining political issues in the Middle East for decades. The conflict itself can be dated to 1948, when the state of Israel established independence, but the underlying problems responsible for the creation of Israel, and as a result, the conflict, can be traced back as far as the 19th century. While these days, the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict takes place at a domestic level, its roots, as well as the frequent failed attempts at peace that spanned the 20th century, stemmed from international interference and mismanagement.

Anti-Semitic sentiments were alive in well in Eastern Europe as far back as the late 1800s. In his book, Strong Societies and Weak States: State-Society Relations and State Capabilities in the Third World, in a chapter entitled “Laying the Basis for a Strong State: The British and Zionists in Palestine,” Joel Migdal describes the hardships that Jews experienced. Many European states were experiencing a Nationalist phase, which, as Migdal writes, “effectively excluded the Jews.” (Migdal 52). Jews were denied citizenship in countries such as Romania, despite having lived there for centuries. Other acts of open hostility were practiced not only at a personal level, where attacks and anti-Semitic comments were the norm, but also at the state level, which allowed policies that discriminated against the Jewish population.

It was in this atmosphere that Zionist thought took root and began to grow. Theodor Herzl, the leader of early Zionism, visualized a society in which Jews would not be a minority desperately trying to fit into other cultures, but rather be the cultural norm with their own territory. Migdal writes, “After some arguing within Herzl’s...

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...rights, and therefore, the conflict itself. Had the British powers of the early 20th century been more clear in their language regarding the inherent rights of Palestinian Arabs, more closely monitored levels of immigration, or even paid more attention to the needs of the Palestinians, perhaps the conflict could have been nipped in the bud. As it grew, and other nations threw their hats into the ring, stronger action could have been taken against the settlement-building and subsequent refugee problem in the Palestinian territories. However, very little was done during the time when change could have been more easily exacted in the region; at this point, two very strong viewpoints have been established, it is now left up to the Israelis and Palestinians themselves to reconcile their differences, compromise their viewpoints, and restore amiable relations to the region.

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