TimeLine (Chronology) of Zionism, Israeli and Palestinian� History and the Conflict
These timelines are intended to give you an overview and reference points for major events. Links to historical sources, Photo Gallery of Zionist History �and the history of Zionism and the Creation of Israel will help round out the picture. Additional information (off site): Brief History of Israel and Palestine and Labor Zionism
Concise Overview of Recent Events in Zionism and Israeli-Palestinian History
Detailed Timeline of Zionism, Jewish History of Israel and the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict
1843 | First Zionist writings of Rabbi Alcalay and of Rabbi Kalischer, Emuna Yeshara. |
1844 | First census in Jerusalem shows 7120 Jews, 5760 Muslims, 3390 Christians. |
1856 | Ottoman reforms (Tanzimat) - including requirement to register ownership of land in Palestine and pay taxes on it. |
1860 | First Jewish settlement (Mishkenot Sha'ananim) outside Jerusalem walls. |
1878 | First Zionist Settlement - Petah Tikwa. |
1870s | Formation of 'Hovevei Tziyon in Russia |
1882 | Leon Pinsker writes Auto-Emancipation in 1882; formation of Bilu; beginning of the First Aliya (wave of immigration). |
1897 | First Zionist Congress in Basle, Switzerland. |
Nov 2, 1917 | British issued the Balfour Declaration, v promising a “National Home” for the Jews in Palestine. |
1936-1939 | Arab 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, 1942 | Biltmore Program - Zionist leaders, headed by Chaim Weizmann and David Ben-Gurion, convene at the Biltmore Hotel in New York and set 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." |
May 15, 1948 | Israel 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, 1949 | Armistice - 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, 1956 | Suez 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, 1964 | PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization) founded with the aim of destroying Israel. The Palestinian National Charter (1968) officially called for liquidation of Israel. |
May, 1967 | Egyptian 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 5-11,1967 | 6-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. |
Oct. 6, 1973 | Yom 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 crossed the Suez Canal and cut off the Egyptian Third Army. |
March 26, 1979 | Peace treaty signed between Egypt and Israel. |
June 7, 1981 | Israel destroys Iraqi nuclear reactor in daring raid. |
Oct. 6, 1981 | Egyptian President Anwar Sadat is assassinated while on the reviewing stand of a victory parade. |
June 6, 1982 | Massive Israeli invasion of Lebanon to fight PLO. |
Sept. 13, 1993 | Oslo Declaration of Principles - Israel and PLO agree to mutual recognition. |
Sept 28, 1995 | Oslo Interim Agreement signed. Palestinian Authority to be established. |
Nov. 4, 1995 | Israeli PM Yitzhak Rabin assassinated by right-wing Israeli fanatic Yigal Amir. Rabin is replaced by Shimon Peres |
June, 1996 | Right-Wing Likud leader Benjamin Nethanyahu elected Prime Minister in Israel, replacing Shimon Peres. |
Sept, 1996 | Al-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, 1997 | Israel and Palestinians reach agreement on Israeli redeployment in the West-Bank city of Hebron |
Oct. 1998 | Wye 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, 1999 | Israel elects Labor party leader and Former General Ehud Barak as Prime Minister in a landslide. Barak promises rapid progress toward peace. |
March, 2000 | Israeli-Syrian peace negotiations fail when Hafez Assad rejects an Israeli offer relayed by US President Clinton in Geneva. |
Sept. 28, 2000 | Palestinians 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, 2001 | Right-wing Likud leader Ariel Sharon elected Prime Minister in Israel replacing Ehud Barak and promising "peace and security." |
March-April 2002 | Israel 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, 2003 | Elections in Israel give wide margin (40 seats) to right wing Likud party, returning PM Ariel Sharon for another term. |
July 9, 2004 | International court of Justice (ICJ) rules that the Israeli security barrier violates international law and must be torn down. |
Nov 11, 2004 | Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat dies. |
Jan 9, 2005 | Mahmoud Abbas elected President of the Palestinian National Authority. |
Jan 10, 2005 | Ariel Sharon forms unity government with Labor and United Torah Judaism parties in Israel. |
1800? BCE | Abraham migrates to Canaan according to Jewish tradition. |
1300? BCE | Migration and conquest of Canaan by the Philistines and Israelite tribes. Map of Canaan. |
1000? BCE | Jewish 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 BCE | Fall of Israel (Northern Kingdom) to Assyria |
586 BCE | Fall of Judea (Southern Kingdom) to Babylon and destruction of the first temple |
About 539 BCE | Fall 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 BCE | Rebuilding of the Second Temple under Persian rule. |
331 BCE | Alexander the Great conquers Persia. The land was subject to Egyptian rule after his death, followed by Seleucid Syrian rule. |
313 BCE | Ptolemy of Egypt rules Jerusalem and Judea. |
170 BCE | Antiochus Ephiphanes rules Judea. |
166 BCE | Revolt 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� |
About 61 BCE | Roman conquest of Jerusalem by Pompei. Land is divided into various provinces (maps). |
40 BCE | Reign of Herod the Great; Herod conquered Jerusalem in 37 BCE. Herod began an extensive restoration of the temple about 20 BC |
4 BCE | Probable year of birth of Jesus. Jesus was crucified between 31 and 33 AD. |
66-73 AD | First Jewish revolt. Fall of the Jewish Second Temple to Romans in 70 AD. |
133-135 | Second Jewish revolt under Bar - Kochba crushed. Judea renamed Palestina. Jews are banned from Jerusalem by Hadrianus Caesar. |
313 | Roman Emperor Constantine legalizes Christianity |
614 | Persians conquer Judea and Jerusalem.. |
628 | Emperor Heraclius defeats Sassanid Persians, reconquers Jerusalem.. |
About 638 | Arab conquest of Jerusalem. (slightly earlier or later according to different sources). Caliph Omar 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). |
969 | Fatimid conquest. Churches and synagogues of Jerusalem destroyed. |
1071 |
Battle of Manzikert. The Byzantine emperor Romanus IV Diogenes is defeated by the Seljuk Turks, opening Asia Minor to Turkish invasion. Seljuks devastate Jerusalem.
|
1099 | Crusaders conquer Jerusalem, slaughter most Jewish and Moslem inhabitants, expel Jews. |
1141 | Poet Yehuda Halevi dies in Jerusalem. |
1187 | Salah-ed-din (Saladin) reconquers Jerusalem |
1244 | Rise of the Mamlukes. Jerusalem taken by Muslims. |
1260 | Battle of Ayn Jalut (Nazereth) - Holagu (Mongols) defeated. |
1291 | Crusaders defeated at Acre and evicted from Palestine. |
1517 | Ottoman Turkish conquest of Palestine. |
1537-41 | Muslim walls built around Jerusalem by Suleiman the Magnificent. |
1626 - 1676 | False Messiah Sabbatai Zevi. |
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).�� |
1799 | Napoleon conquers Jaffa but retreats before Acco (Acre); 1799 - Napoleon's Proclamation of a Jewish Statewas stillborn, and his declaration of equal rights for Jews was repealed in part in 1806. |
1831 | Egyptian 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. |
1834 | Jerusalem Arab families including the Abu Ghosh clan revolt against Egyptian rule. The rebellion is eventually crushed. |
1839 | Tanzimat - reorganization program- is proclaimed in the Ottoman empire. |
1840 | Blood libel (accusation that Jews kill Christian children to use their blood for Passover Matzoth) against Damascus Jewry |
1843 | First Zionist writings of Rabbi Alcalay and of Rabbi Kalischer, ( Emuna Yeshara, Minhat Yehuda) . |
1844 | First census in Jerusalem shows 7120 Jews, 5760 Muslims, 3390 Christians. |
1856 | Ottoman reforms (Tanzimat) - including requirement to register ownership of land and pay taxes on it. Laemel school founded in Jerusalem, provides secular as well as religious education, infuriating orthodox Jews. |
1860 | First Jewish settlement (Mishkenot Sha'ananim) outside Jerusalem walls. |
1861 | The Zion Society is formed in Frankfort, Germany; Moses Hess writes "Rome and Jerusalem." Pub 1862 |
1870s | Formation of 'Hovevei Tziyon in Russia |
1878 | First Zionist Settlement - Petah Tikwa;� Naphtali Herz Imber writes Tikvatenu (Our Hope), later adopted as the Zionist anthem and the Israeli national anthem, Hatikvah. |
1881-84 | Pogroms in Russia kill tens of thousands of Jews (1881-1884). Leon Pinsker writes Auto-Emancipation in 1882; formation of Bilu; beginning of the First Aliya (wave of immigration) which lasted until 1903. The First Aliya was characterized by plantation settlements funded by the Baron de Rothschild beginning in 1883. Formation of Hibbat Tziyon federation of Hovei Tziyon in 1884, headed by Pinsker. |
1890 | Publicist Nathan Birnbaum coins the word Sionismus - Zionism. |
1892 | Railroad from Jaffa to Jerusalem. The Jerusalem railway station was to appear in the first movie newsreels of Palestine. |
1893-4 | In France, Captain Alfred Dreyfus, falsely charged with espionage. Ultimately he is exonerated with the help of Emile Zola, but the trial and attendant wave of antisemitism cause many Jews to rethink their commitment to assimilation.� The trial and other influences led Theodor Herzl to write Die Judenstadt - The Jewish State. |
1897 | First Zionist Congress in Basle, Switzerland. |
1901 | Fifth Zionist Congress establishes the Jewish National Fund; Eliezer ben-Yehuda publishes a Hebrew newspaper, “Hashkafah" (The Outlook), supported by Baron Edmond de Rothschild. |
1902 | Herzl publishes Altneuland. |
1903 | Following the horrors of the Kishinev pogroms, Herzl proposes to substitute another country as a "night refuge" for persecuted Jews. British officials suggest El Arish and later Uganda. The idea is rejected by the Russian Jews whom Herzl wanted to help. Sixth Zionist Congress split over British offer to settle Uganda. A commission is appointed to look into the question. Eventually the British offer is withdrawn. Laemel school moved to "new" part of Jerusalem, outside the walls. |
1904 | Second Aliya (wave of immigration) - young socialist immigrants (1904-1914). Catalyzed by progroms and a coincidental wave of arrests in Russia preceding and following the 1905 revolution.� Herzl dies. Vaad Halahshon founded to popularize Hebrew as the language of the Jews in Palestine. |
1905 | The seventh Zionist Congress (Basel) rules out any alternative to Palestine� as the objective of the Zionism |
1906 | David Gruen (later Ben-Gurion) arrives in Israel; First Hebrew high school founded in Jaffa; Bezalel School of Art founded in Jerusalem by Boris Schatz. |
1907 | Arthur Ruppin visits Palestine, reports to Zionist organization on status of settlements and is sent to open the Palestine Bureau in 1908. |
July 3 1908 | The Young Turks revolt breaks out in the Ottoman empire, and is eventually led by Enver Pasha; Sultan ‘Abd al-Hamid II is forced to restore the constitution of 1876, entailing the creation of a new parliament, and indirect representative elections. ‘Abd al-Hamid is then deposed (27Apr 09), and his brother Mehmet V installed. Policies for the ‘Turkification’ of the Ottoman territories promulgated through 1909, resulting in the creation of societies promoting pan-Arab ideas, |
1908 | First Arabic newspaper in Haifa, al-Karmil, popularizes opposition to selling land to Zionists. |
1908 | �The eighth Zionist congress in 1908 adopted "Synthetic Zionism" incorporating both Practical Zionism (settlement on the land) and Political Zionism (attempts to get an internationally recognized homeland. Jewish Agency brings Yemenite Jews as immigrants to provide inexpensive labor 1908-1914. |
1909 | Foundation of Tel Aviv (Called Ahuzat Bayit) near Jaffa; foundation of first Kibbutz - Degania (1910 according to some sources); foundation of Hashomer (the Watchman) patrol group. |
1910 | British archeologist Montague Parker excavates under the Haram as Sharif (temple mount). Rumors that he had found and stolen the Ark of the Covenant caused riots by Jews and Arabs. |
1911 | Filastin, large Arabic newspaper, launched in Jaffa. |
1912 | Aref el Aref, later the historian of Palestine, mandate Southern District officer and mayor of East Jerusalem, warns in Filastin that the Jews want to take over the country. |
Aug 1914 | Start of WW I. Foreign nationals (including Zionists with Russian citizenship) expelled from Palestine. |
� July 1915 | �Husayn-McMahon Correspondence - Britain promises independence for Arabia. Zion Mule Corps ("the Hebrew Legion)� established by Yosef Trumpeldor in British Army. |
May� 1916 | Sykes-Picot Agreement divides up Fertile Crescent between France & Britain into zones of influence, recognizing Arab independence in part of the land. |
Nov 2, 1917 | British issued the Balfour Declaration,�� promising a “National Home” for the Jews in Palestine.� |
Dec 1917 | Gen. Sir Edmund Allenby captures Jerusalem from Ottomans for the British. Col. Reginald Storrs is appointed military governor. Allenby's conquest was aided by information from the Jewish Nili underground. However, the conquest of northern Palestine is delayed for 9 more months because fresh German advances in France force Allenby to send troops back to� Europe. |
Apr, 1918 | Zionist commission arrives in Palestine. |
June, 1918 | Emir Feisal and Dr. Weizmann meet near Aqaba |
Nov 1918 | First Muslim-Christian association formed in Jaffa to oppose the creation of a Jewish homeland. Another was formed in Jerusalem soon after. Armistice between Allies and Germany, Nov 11. |
Jan. 1919 | First Palestinian (Arab) Congress advocated incorporation of Palestine into greater Syria. |
Jan 18, 1919 | Paris Peace Conference opens - results in Treaty of Versailles, June 28, 1919. Haim Weizmann headed the Zionist delegation. |
July 1919 | General Syrian Congress (which included prominent Palestinians, Transjordanians, Lebanese & Syrians) held in Damascus, supporting the independence of an undivided Syria, and opposed to Zionism. Britain cedes authority over Syria to France after the congress finishes; Gen. Henri Gourand becomes High Commissioner. |
28 Aug 1919 | Henry King and Charles Crane, the US members of the International Commission of Inquiry, sent primarily on the initiative of President Wilson, present their report based on their visit to the region in June-July, against creation of a Jewish National home in Palestine. |
1919-1922 | Third Aliyah (Wave of immigration) - consisted mostly of Jews returning to Palestine from exile. |
Feb - Mar 1920 | Jewish settlements of Tel Hai and Metullah in N. Palestine attacked (Feb 20). Josef Trumpeldor killed in second attack at Tel Hai (March 1) |
March 1920 | Faysal elected and crowned king of Greater Syria at 2nd General Syrian Congress in Damascus; assembly proclaims independence from France of Greater Syria; rejects Balfour Declaration and Sykes-Picot agreement. Allies occupy Constantinople. |
April, 1920 | Musa Kazim al-Husayni, mayor of Jerusalem, is replaced by Raghib al-Nashashibi; clan rivalry grows.� |
April, 1920 | "Nebi Musa" Arab riots led by Haj Amin El Husseini and Aref El Aref in Hebron and Jerusalem. Forty Six Jews Killed. |
Apr 25, 1920 | San Remo Conference - Supreme Allied Council assigns mandates for Mesopotamia and Palestine to Britain, and Syria and Lebanon to France. |
June 1920 | Haganah, Jewish Self Defense, organized by Vladimir (Ze'ev) Jabotinsky, Eliahu Golumb and others. |
July 1920 | Herbert Samuel named High Commissioner of Palestine. King Faisal recognizes French Mandate. French forces under Gourand retake Damascus by force with British support.� Britain arrests Palestinian notables who had supported Faysal. |
Dec 1920 | Histadrut, the General Federation of Hebrew Workers in the Land of Israel (Histadrut Haklalit Shel Haovdim Haivriyim Be'eretz Yisrael), was formed. Remained exclusively Jewish until 1960s, when it officially dropped ‘Hebrew’ from its name (1966). |
1921 | 12th Zionist Congress. Haim Weizmann becomes President of the ZIonist Organization. First Moshav, Nahalal, founded. |
May 1921 | Arab riots in Jaffa against Jewish population. Yosseff Haim Brenner killed. |
May 10, 1921 | Haj Amin El Husseini appointed Grand Mufti by British High Commissioner Herbert Samuel, though Husseini had been convicted of organizing riots in 1920 and had been sentenced to ten years in jail |
Jan 1922 | Haj Amin El Husseini appointed President of the Supreme Muslim Council. |
June 3, 1922 | The Churchill ("Command") White Paper �notes that the Balfour declaration only promised a Jewish homeland in Palestine, and reserves East Palestine for Transjordan. |
July 24, 1922 | British Mandate for Palestine; Official establishment of Transjordan as a separate state; Britain, in military control of Syria, allows French forces led by Gourand to retake Damascus by force. |
1922-1932 | Fourth Aliya (wave of immigration) |
May 25, 1923 | Proclamation of Transjordanian Independence under Emir Abdullah |
May 29, 1923 | Palestine Constitution suspended by British after Arabs refuse to participate in the government. |
July 24, 1923 | Lausanne Peace Treaty signed by Greece, Turkey and the Allies |
Sept 29, 1923 | Palestine Mandate officially comes into force. |
1924 | Official inauguration of the Israel Technical Institute (Technion) in Haida |
1925 | Official inauguration of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Revisionist movement founded by Zeev Jabotinsky ;Brit Shalom (Covenant of Peace) movement founded by Martin Buber, Yehuda Magnes and others advocating a binational state. |
Feb. 20, 1928 | Britain recognizes Transjordanian independence (subject to treaty provisions). |
July 5, 1928 | Sir John Chancellor becomes High Commissioner in Palestine. |
August, 1929 | Arab riots in Hebron, Jerusalem, 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 Haj Amin El-Husseini. Amid heightening tensions, a demonstration by Jews in 1929 and Arab incitement ignited violence and rioting against Jews. Thousands of Jews fled the ancient Jewish quarter in Jerusalem. The Hebron Jewish community was evacuated after 64-67 were killed in riots. |
1930 | The Hope-Simpson Report �recommends cessation of Jewish immigration. |
Oct 21, 1930 | British Passfield White Paper proposes to limit Jewish immigration to Palestine. |
1931 | After questions in commons and League condemnation, � Ramsay MacDonald� writes to Haim Weizmann Rescinding the Passfield White Paper; |
1931 | �IZL (Irgun or Etzel - The Irgum Tzvai Leumi) formed by Jabotinsky and others who leave the Haganah. |
1932-1939 | Fifth Aliya (wave of immigrants) - Consisting mostly of Jews fleeing Nazi Germany and neighboring countries. Beginning in 1936, riots and administrative restrictions greatly reduced the number of immigrants. 1933 - Assassination of Chaim Arlozorov. |
1936-1939 | Arab Revolt led or coopted by the Al-Husseini family and Fawzi al-Kaukji and apparently financed by Axis powers. Over 5,000 Arabs were killed according to some sources; most were killed by other Arabs and by British. Eleven Arab clans were wiped out by Husseini and his men.� Several hundred Jews were killed by Arabs. Husseini fled to Iraq and then to Nazi Germany. 1937-� Orde Wingate forms "night squads" for Jewish self-defense. Between 1937 and 1939 Jews build 54 "stockade and watchtower" settlements to circumvent British regulations against new settlements, and bring tens of thousands of illegal immigrants into Palestine. |
1937-1938 | Peel and Woodhead commissions recommend partitioning Palestine into a small Jewish state and a large Arab one. |
Oct. 1, 1937 | British declare Higher Arab Committee in Palestine an illegal body. |
Oct. 16, 1937 | (approximate date) Haj Amin El-Husseini,� Mufti of Jerusalem escapes to Syria and thence to Iraq. |
Jan.-Mar. 1939 | St James Conference - Round-table conference on Palestine in London, with Arab countries, Zionists and Palestinian representatives. |
May 17, 1939 | 1939 White Paper limits Jewish immigration to Palestine to 75,000 in total, restricts Jewish land purchases (regulations come into effect in 1940), envisions an Arab Palestinian state. Jews found the Mossad l'aliya betto arrange for illegal immigration. |
Sept. 3, 1939 | Britain and France declare war on Germany. In Palestine, soldiers are recruited for the British army. About 26,000 Jews and 6,000 Arabs join and fight with the allies. |
1940 | Lehi (Lochami Heruth Yisrael - Freedom fighters of Israel) underground formed by Avraham Stern ("Yair"). |
1941 | Palmach underground established, originally with British help, as part of a force that was to fight a Nazi takeover in Syria. |
Apr. 1, 1941 | Agitation by exiled Palestinian Mufti Haj Amin El Husseini leads to coup. Pro-Axis Government under Rashid Ali in Iraq. |
May -June, 1941 | British reoccupy Habbanieh and Baghdad, Rashid Ali and pro-Axis leaders flee to Teheran and Berlin; After the revolt is suppressed, a pogrom against the Jews (Farhoud) takes place in Baghdad, while British troops stand by and refuse to intervene.. Click for details of Mufti, British Intervention and the Farhud |
Nov 25, 1941 | The Jewish illegal immigrant ship Patria (also called Patra) carrying refugees from Europe, detained in Haifa by the British, is blown up by the Jewish underground Hagana to prevent transshipment of the refugees to Mauritius. The explosion was supposed to cause a small leak. Instead, the ship sank and 252 people died. |
Feb. 24, 1942 | The Jewish illegal immigrant ship Struma, forced to sail north from Turkey, is torpedoed by a Soviet submarine (either collaborating with British or because the ship was mistaken for German shipping) and sunk with the loss of �428 men, 269 women and 70 children. |
Oct. 1942 | Battle of El Alamein. British under General Montgomery defeat Rommel's Afrika Korps and end the Nazi threat on Egypt and Palestine. |
May 9, 1942 | Biltmore Program - Zionist leaders, headed by Chaim Weizmann and David Ben-Gurion, convene at the Biltmore Hotel in New York and set 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." |
1943 | Warsaw Ghetto uprising; Palmach members parachuted behind enemy lines in Europe. |
1944 | Jewish Brigadeis� formed to fight as part of the British forces in World War II. |
Oct 7, 1944 | Arab leaders meet in Alexandria to discuss postwar plans for independence and ways to prevent implementation of Jewish control over Palestine. |
Nov 6, 1944 | Members of the Jewish Lehi underground� Eliyahu Hakim and Eliyahu Bet Zuri� assassinated Lord Moyne in Cairo. Moyne, a known anti-Zionist, was Minister of State for the Middle East and in charge of carrying out the terms of the 1939 White paper - preventing Jewish immigration to Palestine by force. |
March 22, 1945 | League of Arab States set up� (Egypt, Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, Transjordan, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, with Musa ‘Alami as Arab States’ chosen representative of the Palestinians) with British approval to shift welfare responsibility onto local population and to ensure continuing Arab support. The goals of the league were as stated in the Alexandria Protocol, of which it was an outgrowth. |
Aug, 1945 | US President Truman asks British to admit 110,000 Jewish refugees to Palestine. |
Sept., 1945 | British limit Jewish immigration into Palestine to 1,500 a month. |
Nov. 1945 | Anglo American Committee of Inquiry for Palestine appointed. |
Mar, 1946 | British-Tranjordanian treaty; British recognize Emir Abdullah as King of Transjordan. |
Apr. 1946 | Report of Anglo American Committee of Inquiry published. Recommend admission of 100,000 Jews to Palestine. |
June,, 1946 | Haj Amin El Husseini, Mufti of Jerusalem, escapes from detention in France aided by French collaborators. Husseini was to have been deported to Germany and tried for war crimes after spending the war working for the Nazis in Germany. |
July 22, 1946 | Irgun Jewish underground blows up British HQ in King David Hotel, Jerusalem, killing 91 persons. |
Aug, 1946 | British start deporting illegal Jewish immigrants to detention camps in Cyprus. |
Sept, 1946 | Palestine round-table conference opens in London. |
Feb. 1947 | Britain refers Palestine issue to the UN |
April 16, 1947 | Dov Bela Gruner and three other Jews convicted of anti-British violence handed� in Acre prison. Gruner was a member of the Irgun Tzvai Leumi (Etzel). |
May, 1947 | UN General Assembly appoints UN Special Committee on Palestine (UNSCOP ). |
July 18, 1947 | British rammed the Jewish illegal immigrant ship Exodus (formerly "President Warfield") on the high seas. They towed it to Haifa where it was the subject of extensive publicity, generating public sympathy for the Zionist cause. The passengers were eventually disembarked in Hamburg. The incident set world and particularly US opinion against the British, and caused the British to intern illegal immigrants thereafter in Cyprus, rather than attempting to return them to Europe. |
Sept 1, 1947 | UNSCOP issues its report, calling for partition of Palestine. |
Nov. 29, 1947 | UN Partition Resolution (GA 181) - Palestine was to be divided into a Jewish State and an Arab State; Jerusalem was to be internationalized. The resolution is supported by both the US and USSR. Arab countries and Arab league refuse to recognize the resolution. |
Dec. 1, 1947 | Arab riots in Jerusalem. Beginning of Arab blockade of Jerusalem. The period to May 1948 was characterized by numerous skirmishes, road ambushes, riots, bombings and massacres, whether organized by one of the other sides or spontaneous. The Haifa riots and massacres were typical. T |
January 1948 | Arab Salvation Army (also called Arab Liberation Army - ALA)� are admitted to Palestine by the British, following a promise not to attack Jewish settlements. Their leader, Fawzi Al-Kaukji may have entered Palestine only in March. Jewish Agency concludes arms deal with Czechoslovakia, but most arms do not arrive until June 1948, after the British have left. The UN, including the US, had placed an arms embargo on Palestine. This did not apply to Arab countries including Transjordan. As independent states, they were allowed to acquire arms. The Jordan Legion received a steady supply of arms from Britain through the Suez Canal, at least until May 1948, �including a large number of 25 pounder cannon at the beginning of 1948.Hagana agents purchased 20 Auster light aircraft in Britain, sold for scrap, rebuilt them and brought them to Palestine for use of the Haganah. Haganah later rebuilt Spitfires left by the mandate for scrap as well, but did not have real fighter and bomber aircraft until May 1948� when Czech Messerschmidts and B-17s purchased clandestinely were brought into the country. |
January 1948 | Jewish convoy to Gush Etzion, near Jerusualem,� ambushed, 35 underground members massacred. |
Mar. 1946 | Provisional Jewish government formed in Tel-Aviv. Convoy to Gush Etzion ambushed in Nebi Daniel. Arabs begin to flee Haifa. |
April 6-8, 1948 | Arab blockade of Jerusalem is broken temporarily by operation Nachshon. Death of Abd-El-Qader Al-Husseini at Kastel - The foremost Palestinian military leader is shot by a Jewish sentry when he wanders into Jewish held Kastel in the Jerusalem corridor thinking it is in Arab hands. |
April 9, 1948 | Deir Yassin Massacre - Jewish dissident underground groups - Irgun and Lehi, invade Palestinian village of Deir Yassin. Over 100 Palestinian civilians and 4 attackers are killed. |
April 13, 1948 | Haddassah Convoy Massacre - In retaliation for Deir Yassin, Arabs killed about 80 Jewish medical personnel and sick persons on their way to Hadassah hospital. |
April 13-20, 1948 | Operation Har'el launched by Hagannah at conclusion of Operation Nachshon, does not succeed in opening the road to Jerusalem.� |
April 1948 | Arab flight from Haifa continues; Arab flight from Jaffa. |
April 22-31 1948 | Operation Misparayim launched by Hagannah to assume control of Haifa after British withdrawal and attacks by Arab forces and Irgun. |
May 12, 1948 | Haganah captures Tsfat (Safed). Arab population flees the city before it is captured. |
May 13, 1948 | Jaffa surrenders to Haganah. |
May 14, 1948 | Gush Etzion Massacre - In retaliation for Deir Yassin Massacre, Arabs killed over 50 Jewish defenders at Gush Etzion, after they had surrendered. British High Commissioner Cunningham leaves Palestine. |
May 15, 1948 | Israel War of Independence (1948 War). Declaration of Israel as the Jewish State, recognized immediately by USA and on May 17 by USSR. Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan, Saudi Arabia declared war on Israel. Egyptian, Syrian and Jordanian invasion began. |
May 17, 1948 | Haganah captures Acco (Acre). Most of the Arab population flees the city before it is captured. |
May 18, 1948 | Syrian army captures Massada and Merom Hagolan. |
May 28, 1948 | Jewish quarter of the old city of Jerusalem falls to the Jordan Legion. The inhabitants were protected from the wrath of a lynch mob by the Legion under Abdullah Tell, and noncombatants were expelled to West Jerusalem. About 300 Haganah defenders were taken prisoner and sent to Jordan. The entire quarter including 58 of the 59 synagogues was demolished by the Arab mob despite efforts of the Legion. |
June 11, 1948 | First truce begins, lasting until 8 July. |
June 23, 1948 | Irgun’s Altalena ship brings weapons and 940 immigrants to Palestine. The arms shipment was a violation of UN embargo, but Israel government agreed to it, provided the Irgun handed over the weapons to IDF and formed a unified force. Irgun Commander Menahem Begin refused to hand over weapons and Irgun insisted on keeping a portion of the arms for its own use as a separate force. Palmach units of IDF under Yigal Allon attempted to capture weapons by force, killing 14 Irgun men. Yizhak Rabin, in command of shore batteries in Tel-Aviv, was ordered to fire upon and sink the Altalena after it attempted a landing there. According to some reports, factions of the Irgun (Etzel) were planning a coup with the arms. |
June, 28, 1948 | Count Folke Bernadotte's first peace plan - Jerusalem to be Arab. |
July 08, 1948 | Egyptian army breaks truce, due to end July 9. Attacks from neighborhood of Majdal (Ashdod). Israeli counterattack at Faluja was unsuccessful. This phase of the war is known as "the ten days," and included Mivtza Dani - the Israeli conquest of Lydda (Lod) and Ramla, breaking the Arab siege of Jerusalem, and creating thousands of refugees, as well as advances in the north. During this time Israel had acquired three B-17s and some Dakotas. One of the B-17s succeeded in dropping some bombs on Cairo on its way to delivery in Israel, others bombed Damascus and Rafa. |
�July 10, 1948 | Arab League announced the establishment of a temporary Palestinian civilian administration over Arab held-areas of Palestine, but it was never implemented. |
July 12, 1948 | Egyptians attack Kibbutz Negba with armor and massive troop concentrations. Israelis suffer 5 dead, 16 wounded, Egyptian casualties 200- 300 dead and wounded. |
July 19, 1948 | Second truce in Palestine. |
Sept 17, 1948 | Swedish Count Folke Bernadotte, a UN mediator, was assassinated in Jerusalem, and Lehi members were suspected. The Israel government outlawed the organization's branch in Jerusalem and shut down its publication, Hamivrak. The leaders of Lehi, Natan Yellin-Mor and Mattityahu Shmuelevitz, were sentenced to long jail terms by a military court, but were released in a general amnesty. Bernadotte, who had been instrumental in saving about 21,000 Jews in WW II, was proposing to "relieve" Israel of the Negev and force return of the Palestinian refugees. The latter proposal was adopted in UN General Assembly Resolution 194.� |
Sept 22, 1948 | Palestinian States - AHC communiqué announces the establishment of the Government of All Palestine (APG; Hukumat 'Umum Filastin); Declaration of Independence� proclaimed by Hajj Amin to Palestine National Council in Gaza (30Sept-1Oct) on 1Oct, with Hajj Amin as President of the PNC, Ahmad Hilmi ‘Abd al-Baqi as PM, Jamal al-Husayni as Foreign Minister, in the Mandate territory of Palestine, with the flag of the 1916 Arab Revolt. Jerusalem as capital, Gaza as seat of government. Recognized and sponsored by Egypt and Arab League, who sought to forestall ‘Abdullah’s plan to annex West Bank; strongly opposed by Jordan, who organized a much larger rival Palestinian Congress in Amman on 30Sept to support Jordan’s policy in Palestine. APG issued Palestinian passports; but with Egyptian disillusionment, HQ transferred to Cairo in Oct, Hajj Amin was confined to Cairo and is & actions curtailed; many leading members left to work for Amman. Ahmad Hilmi continued to represent Palestine in the League until his death in September 63. |
Oct. 15, 1948 | Second truce ends; Israeli offensive breaks Egyptian siege of Israeli settlements in the Negev (operation Yoav). Beersheva is taken. In the north, operation Hiram defeats the Arab Liberation army. IDF massacres in Eilabun, Saliba, Safsaf, Jish, Hule, Majd el-Krum, Bi'na, Dier el assad and Arab al-Mawassa.� |
Dec. 11, 1948 | UN Resolution 194 called for cessation of hostilities, return of refugees who wish to live in peace. The resolution reflected UN and US anger over the assassination of Count Bernadotte. |
Dec. 1948 | Israelis advance into Egypt; Nokrashy Pasha, Egyptian PM, assassinated. |
Dec 19, 1948- Jan 7, 49 | Israeli Operation Horev conquers Gaza and enters Sinai. Intervention by British and US forces Israel to withdraw. Israel shot down several British reconnaissance planes, apparently unarmed (four Spitfires and one Tempest) January 7, 1949. |
March 7-10, 1949 | Operation Uvda - IDF captures southern Negev including Eilat with no resistance. |
Feb-Jun, 1949 | Israel and Arab states agree to armistice in separate agreements.� Israel-Egypt Israel -Lebanon Israel-Jordan Israel-Syria) Israel gained about 50% more territory than was originally allotted to it by the UN Partition Plan. The war created about 780,000 Palestinian refugees who fled or were evicted from Jewish held areas. Gaza fell under the jurisdiction of Egypt. The West Bank of the Jordan was occupied by Jordan and later annexed, consistent with secret agreements with the Jewish leadership made before the outbreak of hostilities. |
April 27 – Sept 1949 | Lausanne conference - Abortive Israel Arab Truce Negotiations. Minor achievements - working recognition of Israel by Arab States who attended the conference, and acceptance of UN Resolutions by both sides. However no substantive agreements were reached. |
Apr. 1950 | De Jure British recognition to Israel and Greater Jordan (including West Bank). |
1950 | Law of Return passed. Massive immigration to Israel in 1949-1951 and imposition of rationing program. Rationing lasted until 1959. Immigration curtailed because of extreme economic problems. |
July, 1951 | Assassination of Jordan's King Abdulla because of rumored plans for peace with Israel. His grandson Hussein was crowned in his place following the brief reign of Tallal. |
1951-1958 | Israel drains the Huleh valley swamps to eradicate malaria and reclaim the land. |
Jam. 18, 1953 | Beginning of anti-Zionist stance in USSR. Moscow accuses "Zionist agents" of murdering Zhdanov and attempting to murder other Soviet leaders. |
July 12, 1953 | Shishakly becomes President of Syria. |
Sept. 7, 1954 | Ben-Gurion resigns as Israeli PM, succeeded by Moshe Sharett. |
October 1953 | IDF paratrooper unit 101 under Ariel Sharon �killed 69 civilians and destroyed a great deal of property in a raid on the Jordanian village of Qibieh. The raid was a reprisal for a raid on Tirat Yehuda. |
July 1954 | The Lavon Affair: Israeli government spies, seemingly without PM Sharett’s knowledge, attempt to sabotage British & US property in Egypt to put blame on Egyptian terrorists, thus driving a wedge between Britain and Egypt, and postponing British evacuation of the Suez. The plan’s failure leads to the fragmentation of Mapai’s leadership, with recurring crises of mutual recrimination over the next decade. Ben Gurion insisted on a full investigation of the affair but was rebuffed by Lavon partisans. Defense Minister Pinhas Lavon resigns in Feb 1955.� Egypt retaliated against Egyptian Jews, some of whom were involved in the plot. |
Oct 19, 1954 | Anglo-Egyptian evacuation agreement signed (troops guarding canal to leave). |
Jan. 27, 1955 | Military court in Cairo sentences 2 members of Israeli spy ring to death They are executed Jan 27. |
Feb, 1955 | Pinhas Lavon resigns as Israel defense minister and is replaced by David Ben-Gurion; |
1955 | Continuous incidents between Egypt and Israel/Syria, primarily in Gaza DMZ. Operation Black Arrow (Hetz Shahor) launched by Israel in Feb 1955, following Egyptian incursions, killed 38 Egyptians, resulted in a major embarrassment for Egypt and caused Nasser to rethink his strategy with Israel. |
Sept 27, 1955 | Egyptian-Czech arms deal. Secret clause requires Egypt to get financing of Aswan dam from USSR. |
Nov. 2, 1955 | Ben-Gurion replaces Sharett as Israeli PM. |
Dec 11, 1955 | Israel launched an attack on Syria following firing on a police patrol boat possibly sent as a deliberate provocation. (operation Olive Leaves), condemned in SCR111, 19 Jan 56, |
April 5 1956 | Increased tension between Israel & Egypt-Syria. IDF claimed 180 attacks on Israel from Gaza in past four months. Three Israelis killed April 4 when Egyptians opened fire on an Israeli patrol. Israel responded, and an artillery duel culminated in an Israeli artillery barrage at centre of Gaza City (4-5Apr) that killed 59, wounds about 100, mostly civilians. Egypt responded with increased commando raids, sending hundreds of fedayeen across the border in separate raids and killing 12 Israelis. Temporarily calmed through offices of UNS-G. |
June 1956 | Sharett resigns as Israeli FM ( dies.1965); Golda Meir takes over; Last British troops leave Suez Canal base on June 13. |
July 26, 1956 | The US withdraws funding from the Aswan dam, USSR steps in. In response, Nasser nationalizes the Suez Canal Company (26 Jul), to opposition of British (lease due to terminate in 1968). Is unanimously supported in this by the Arab League (Aug), though Iraqi leaders secretly call on the British to topple Nasser; imposition of martial law in Iraq. Britain, France and USA announce financial retaliation. |
Aug. 16, 1956 | London Conference on Suez Canal boycotted by Egypt. |
Sept 10, 1956 | Egypt rejects 18 nation proposals for Suez Canal. |
Sept 19, 1956 | Second London conference on Suez. |
Sept. 23, 1956 | Britain and France refer Suez dispute to UN Security Council. |
Oct. 29, 1956 |
Suez 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. French and British were interested in reversing the nationalization of the canal. Israel withdraws after a UN peace keeping force is placed in Sinai, and US guarantees right of passage for Israeli shipping through the Straits of Tiran. Suez Canal reopened March 23, 1957.
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1957 | Fateh founded (informally) with the aim of destroying Israel. Formal establishment about 1964. |
1957 (?) | Construction of Israel nuclear breeder reactor using French technology begins in Dimona some time in the latter part of the 1950s. The French later tried to stop the program, but backed down when Israeli FM Peres said Israel would make the deal public. Reactor was discovered by the US in U-2 flights in 1960 or 1961. |
Oct. 23, 1958 | Soviet loan to Egypt to finance Aswan Dam. |
Nov 18, 1959 | Israel abandons earlier Jordan river diversion scheme, begins work on the National Water Carrier Project,� to divert the waters of the River Jordan from the Sea of Galilee to the Negev, taking its share of� Jordan water in accordance with Johnston plan. |
1959(?) | Yasser Arafat, Khalil al Wazir and others found the Palestine Liberation Committee, soon renamed "Fatah" (Conquest). The organization was to be modeled on the Algerian FLN. |
1960 | Israeli Agents capture Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in Argentina and abduct him to Israel. Eichmann had order the deaths of millions of Jews as well as Romany people and other minorities. |
1961 | Eichmann trial is televised and seen around the world. Eichmann was executed in June, 1962. |
24 June, 1963 | Ben-Gurion resigns as Israeli PM, because of his frustration at being unable to get justice in the Lavon Affair. |
�Jan 13-17 1964 | First Arab summit at Cairo (the Egyptians count this as the third Arab Summit)� (ie. heads of State, instigated by Nasser), prompted by Israel’s R .Jordan diversion scheme and Palestinian agitation against it.� Arabs declare their intentions of stopping the Israeli diversion scheme, which is in accordance with the Johnson plan, and decided on establishment of the PLO. A Unified Arab Command under Egyptian supervision was created. This summit and the one that followed in September caused considerable alarm in Israel, and is cited by Avi Shlaim (The Iron Wall) as the actual beginning of the 6 day war. |
May, 1964 | PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization) founded with the aim of destroying Israel. The Palestinian National Charter (1968) officially called for liquidation of Israel. PLO was founded by Egypt to divert Palestinian energies from the nascent Fatah movement of Yasser Arafat, which had become anti-Nasserist. |
Sept 13, 1964 | Second Arab Summit at Alexandria decides on diversion of the headwaters of the Jordan as well as strengthening regional Arab armies. Arabs declare the aim of destroying Israel. Israel addressed two notes to the UN Security Council, concerning the alarming nature of the summit resolutions to destroy Israel. |
Sept. 18. 1965 | Third Arab Summit at Casablanca. Conference draws up staged plan for combating Israel, first building up armed forces of Jordan, Syria and Lebanon over 2.5-3 yrs & refraining from war with Israel; then proceeding to war. |
Nov 13, 1966 | Samu'� raid: Israeli troops kill 15 Jordanian soldiers and 3 civilians, & dynamite 125 houses, in an attack on the frontier village of Samu‘ near Hebron; in response to the death of 3 Israeli soldiers by a road mine. Israel is censured by SCR228 (25 Nov 66), but no military response from Amman. This leads to recriminations in the Israeli government, which had intended a smaller scale raid, and� Palestinian anger & clashes with Jordanian security forces throughout West Bank, especially in Nablus where the army had to intervene. The PLO gains support. |
May, 1967 | Egyptian 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. |
May 27, 1967 | Nasser cancels a planned Egyptian attack on Israel, after it became obvious that the Israelis knew about the plan. |
May 30, 1967 | Jordan signs a defense pact with Egypt, allows Egyptian command of Jordan Legion. |
Jun 2, 1967 | Moshe Dayan joins Israeli cabinet as Minister of Defense. Unity gov't formed. |
June 5-11,1967 | 6-day war. Following a long period of tension, Israel attacks - 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 (November 1967) called for� Israeli withdrawal, establishment of peace. |
Aug-Sept 1967 | Khartoum Conference - Arab summit says no to peace or negotiations with Israel. |
Nov 22, 1967 | UN Security Council resolution 242 (November 1967) called for� Israeli withdrawal, establishment of peace |
Oct 21, 1967 | Egyptian missile ship sinks the Israeli destroyer Eilath. Israel retaliates by heavy artillery bombardment of Suez refinery complex. |
March 21, 1968 | Battle of Karameh - Jordanian and Palestinian forces inflicted a partial defeat on Israel troops staging a massive retaliatory raid on a Jordanian town that had served as a staging area for guerilla attacks and a base for PLO/Fatah guerillas.. The Fatah declared a great victory and retreated into the hills. The anniversary of Karameh is still celebrated as a victory by Palestinians. |
Jun 1968 | Escalation along the Suez Canal. Egyptians violated the cease fire repeatedly along the Suez canal. Nasser stated as strategy that Egypt can suffer numerous casualties because of manpower reserves, while Israel cannot. |
Dec 1968 | PFLP attack on El Al plane in Athens. One Israeli killed; Israel responds on Dec� 28 with helicopter raid on Beirut International Airport. Commandos destroy 13 Arab planes and damage airport. SCR262 of 31Dec unanimously censures Israel, |
Jan 6, 1969 | French ban on arms supplies made public by Israel. |
Jan 27, 1969 | Iraqis hang 14 (9 Jews) as Israeli spies. |
Feb 1-4, 1969 | Fifth Palestine National Council (PNC) in Cairo. Fatah gains formal control� with Yasser Arafat declared chair of Executive Committee. PNC statement sets goal of a "secular democratic state" society for Muslims, Christians & Jews. |
Feb 18, 1969 | PFLP attack El Al plane in Zurich; strong international condemnation. |
Feb 20, 1969 | PFLP bomb attacks on a Jerusalem supermarket |
Feb 24, 1969 | Israeli airstrike against 2 al-Fatah camps near Damascus; large no of casualties. Fatah moves to strengthen its position in Jordan; PFLP becomes more explicit in its call for the overthrow of King Hussein, seen as a Western puppet. |
Feb 1969 | Internal struggles in Syrian Baa‘th party: Hafez al-Assad, defense minister, takes full control over military in Syria; civilian institutions left under the control of President Atasi. Former stressed pan-Arab cooperation, especially with Egypt; latter rejected cooperation with the conservative regimes, & controlled the Sa‘iqa fida’i organization. |
Mar 11 1969 | Golda Meir becomes Prime Minister in Israel after death of Levi Eshkol. |
Aug 29, 1969 | Group commanded by Leila Khalid hijacks TWA plane flying to Tel Aviv. |
March 1969 | Hostilities along the Suez canal. between Israel and Egypt escalate� as Soviets supply SAM-2 radar and pilots, US supplies Israel with Phantom jets and Hawk missiles. |
April, 23, 1969 | War of attrition between Israel and Egypt� - �Nasser formally declares that he is no longer bound by the terms of the armistice. Constant artillery and air duels around the Suez canal, as well as IAF bombardment of Egyptian targets.� US agreed with Israeli reports that Nasser was violating the cease fire agreement and preparing for another war. |
Sept 9, 1969 | Major Israeli raid on Egypt. |
Oct. 22, 1969 | Palestinian guerillas clash with Lebanese security forces. An agreement between al-Fatah and the Lebanese was concluded on Nov. 3. |
Dec. 9, 1969 | US Secretary of State William Rogers outlines US proposals for an Israeli-Egyptian peace settlement (Rogers Plan), which are rejected by both sides. |
Dec 21-23 | Fifth Arab summit in Rabat ends in disagreement. |
July 1970 | Israel-Egypt�War of attrition terminated by a cease fire, July 1970, following pressure from USA and USSR on both sides. |
Sept. 1970 | "Black September"- King Hussein of Jordan moves against the increasingly menacing power of the PLO. Palestinian guerillas flee Jordan and take up residence in Lebanon. |
Sept 6, 1970 | PFLP hijack Swissair, BOAC, PanAm and TWA flights and divert them to Jordan. 310 passengers are held hostage and released after governments agree to release Palestinian prisoners. In the wake of the hijackings Lufthansa reportedly paid protection money to guerilla movements, and France purchased immunity for Air France by agreeing to maintain an anti-Israel policy. |
Sept 28 1970 | Nasser dies of cardiac arrest after negotiating Jordan-Palestinian truce; Anwar al-Sadat comes to power in Egypt. |
May 30, 1972 | PFLP and Japanese Red Army attack at Lod Airport killed 27. |
Sept 5, 1972 | Black September movement massacres Israeli Olympic team in Munich, triggering a systematic manhunt by Israelis for the assassins. |
Oct. 6, 1973 | Yom 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 �crossed the Suez Canal and cut off the Egyptian Third Army. |
Oct. 22, 1973 | UN Security Council Resolution 338 called for cease fire and negotiations for peace. Following the cease fire, Israel withdrew from part of Sinai in stages, beginning with relief of the Egyptian third army, and likewise withdrew from a small part of the Golan heights. |
Dec - 21-29 1973 | Middle East Peace Conference convened in Geneva, with Jordan, Egypt, SU, US & Israel attending (Syria refused). First objective is the disengagement of forces. |
Jan� 18 1974 | Egypt-Israel Separation of Forces Agreement (Sinai I), opposed by Syria. UN Emergency Force takes up positions in the buffer zones established in Sinai; fully deployed by Mar. 3. |
April 10, 1974 | Golda Meir resigns as PM of Israel following popular protest over the Yom Kippur War. Yitzhak Rabin, former Chief of Staff of IDF and ambassador to US takes her place. |
April 11 1974 | Kiriat Shmona Massacre - PFLP-GC takes dozens of teenagers hostage in Qiryat Shmona, Israel, to demand the release of prisoners. IDF storms the building, but terrorists kill 19. Israeli reprisal raids on Southern Lebanon condemned by UN Security Council in SCR347 on April 24. |
May 15, 1974 | Ma'alot Massacre - PLO (PDFLP) gunmen took over a school in the northern Israeli village of Ma’alot, demand release of prisoners, killing 25 and wounding many others. |
May 31, 1974 |
Syria-Israel disengagement agreement over the Golan, with Syria accepting SCR 338 (& thus 242) as a basis for peace, & Israel partially withdrawing to establish a demilitarized zone, with UN Disengagement Observer Force separating parties. Israel withdrew from Quneitra on 26 June, but Syria did not rebuild or repopulate the town.
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June 1974 | Twelfth Palestine National Council resolves �that “the PLO will struggle by every means ... to liberate Palestinian land & establish the people’s national, independent ad fighting authority on every part of Palestinian land to be liberated." Israelis interpret this as staged liberation of Palestine. However, this was also widely portrayed later as meaning that a State in part of Palestine was acceptable to the PLO, eventually causing PFLP (George Habash) to leave the PLO on Sept. 26, forming the "refusal front." PFLP rejoined the PLO in 1980. |
Oct 29, 1974 | Rabat Summit - Arab League summit in Rabat declares that the PLO is the only legitimate representative of the Palestinian people. This makes it more difficult for Israel to conclude a peace treaty with Jordan on the basis of return of the West Bank. Hussein declares that he is no longer empowered to act for the Palestinians, and prevents possibility of negotiation with local Palestinians. |
Nov 13 1974 | Yasser Arafat speaks at UN General Assembly debate on Palestine, on invitation of Oct 14 (GAR3210; vote: 105-4), with his pistol showing. UNGA recognizes Palestinians’ right to sovereignty (GAR3236) and� grants PLO observer status (GAR3237; 22Nov). |
November 1975 | UN General Assembly Resolution 3379 equates Zionism with racism. Harold H. Saunders tells house subcommittee that the Palestinian problem is in many ways the heart of the conflict, and that the US must seek partners who will recognize the relevant UN resolutions and engage them in dialog for peace. |
June-July 1976 | Palestinians hijacked an Air-France Air bus to Entebbe in Uganda. IDF commando units landed in Uganda, storm the plane and� free most of the hostages. |
Aug 13, 1976 | Lebanese militias massacre over 2000 Palestinians in the Tel Al-Zaatar refugee camp, apparently with participation of Syrian troops. According to journalist Robert Fisk, the attack began when Yasser Arafat asked that the camps be considered a non-combat zone, and then ordered Fatah gunmen to open fire on Christian militia. Palestinians retaliated with a massacre of Christians in Damour. |
June 20, 1977 | Likud party and Begin government took office in Israel. Israeli settlement of the West Bank and Gaza was intensified following the rise of the Likud to power. |
Nov. 20, 1977 | Egyptian President Anwar Sadat came to Jerusalem, spoke in Israeli Knesset (Parliament). |
Mar. 15,�� 1978 | Israel invaded Lebanon (operation Litani) after the PLO hijacked a bus on the main Tel-Aviv to Haifa highway. UN resolution 425 of March 19, 1978 called for withdrawal of Israeli forces. Israel did not fulfill the terms of Resolution 425 until May 2000. |
Sept. 17, 1978 | Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli PM Menachem Begin, meeting at Camp David under the auspices of US President Jimmy Carter, sign framework agreements for peace in the Middle East and peace between Egypt and Israel. |
Mar 26, 1979 | Peace treaty signed between Egypt and Israel. |
June 7, 1981 | Israel destroys Iraqi nuclear reactor in daring raid. |
Oct. 6, 1981 | Egyptian President Anwar Sadat is assassinated while on the reviewing stand of a victory parade. |
April 29, 1982 | Israel completes return of Sinai to Egypt under the peace agreement, including Yamit settlement. |
June 3, 1982 | Attempted assassination of Israeli Ambassador Shlomo Argov in London apparently by Abu Nidal faction, backed by Iraq. Large scale bombings by Israel in Lebanon especially on W.Beirut (4Jun).� PLO send First rockets at towns in N Israel since Jul 81. |
June 6, 1982 | Massive Israeli invasion of Lebanon to fight PLO. . UN Security Council Resolution 509 demands that Israel withdraw all its military forces forthwith, but Israel advances rapidly to Beirut, surrounding the capital by 13 Jun. Israeli cabinet is split on the sudden expansion of the war, beyond the 40 KM limit originally declared by Sharon. |
June 9, 1982 | Syrian Soviet SAM radar destroyed by Israel, Israeli-Syrian armor engagements. |
Summer, 1982 | Foundation of the Lebanese Shi’ite Hizbulla Islamist terror group. |
Aug. 22,� 1982 | PLO evacuation of Beirut. About 14,000 leave. PLO headquarters in Tunis. Evacuation complete Sept 1. |
Aug 23, 1982 | Bashir Jemayeel made President of Lebanon. |
Sept. 14, 1982 | Lebanese President-elect Bashir Gemayeel assassinated, by explosion of a bomb operated by Habib Tanious Shartouni, apparently an agent of Syrian intelligence. Amin Gemayeel, his brother was elected instead, Sept 21. |
Sept. 15, 1982 | Israeli invasion of West Beirut |
Sept. 16-17, 1982 | Lebanese Christian Phalange units under Elie Hobeika, allowed by Israeli forces to enter the Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra and Shatilla, massacre between 400 and 800 Palestinian civilians. Israel Gen. Yaron and others overheard incriminating conversations between Phalange officers but no action was taken by Israel to stop the massacre. |
24 Sept, 1982 | Peace Now movement holds record demonstration in Israel (~300,000), demanding end to war, commission of inquiry for Sabra and Shatilla |
Nov 11, 1982 | Israeli military headquarters in Tyre destroyed in an� explosion, killing 75 Israelis and 16 of their prisoners. |
Feb 8, 1983 | Israeli Kahan commission found Ariel Sharon and others indirectly responsible for allowing the massacre in Sabra and Shatilla. |
April 18, 1983 | Hizbulla suicide bomber destroyed the American Embassy in Beirut, killing over 60 people. |
May 17, 1983 | Israel and Lebanon conclude an abortive non-belligerency agreement. |
Sept.3, 1983 | Israel began partial withdrawal from Lebanon. |
Oct. 23, 1983 | Hizbulla suicide bomber destroyed the US Marine compound in Beirut, killing 241. |
Sept. 20, 1984 | Hizbulla suicide bomber destroyed the rebuilt American Embassy in Beirut, killing 25. |
June 1985 | Israel unity government, headed by Shimon Peres, orders withdrawal from most of conquered Lebanese territory. |
Nov. 1985 | Jonathan Pollard arrested by US authorities for spying for Israel. He was ultimately sentenced to life imprisonment. |
Dec 8, 1987 | First Intifadeh - Stone-throwing Palestinian teens led by local groups took on the Israeli occupation, attacking Israeli soldiers relentlessly. The triggering incident may have been the death of four Palestinian workers in a road accident with an Israeli vehicle. |
Jan. 1988 | Foundation of the Hamas Islamic Brotherhood. Hamas published their Charter in August 1988, based on the forged Protocols of the Elders of Zion, and advocating destruction of Israel. |
Nov. 15, 1988 | Palestine National Council of the PLO declare a Palestinian state in absentia - See Palestinian Declaration of Independence |
May 14, 1989 | Israeli Peace Plan of May 14, 1989, calls for a negotiating process with the Palestinians very similar to the one actually implemented by the Oslo accords.� |
Oct 30, 1991 | Madrid Peace Conference for peaceful resolution of the Middle East Conflict. |
June 23, 1992 | Labor party leader and former General Yitzhak Rabin, elected Prime Minister of Israel |
Sept. 13, 1993 | Oslo Declaration of Principles - Israel and PLO agree to mutual recognition, Yasser Arafat and PLO will be allowed to return to Gaza. PLO and Palestinian leadership renounce violence and use of terrorism, and agree to revise the PLO charter to remove chapters referring to destruction of Israel. Over the next, years, Israel withdraws from a small area (Area A) that is given to Palestinian sovereignty, a larger area (Area B) is given to Palestinian civil control only, while a third area of the West Bank and Gaza strip remains under total Israeli control. Israel does not dismantle any settlements, and the number of settlers and new settlements increases considerably. |
Feb 25, 1994 | Settler Baruch Goldstein opens fire on Muslims praying in the Tomb of Abraham mosque in Hebron, killing 30. This massacre formed the excuse for numerous terrorist acts by Hamas and other groups. Following the bombing, the Israel government placed restrictions on Hebron's Arab population and closed the Tomb to visitors for a an extended period.� Goldstein's grave became a shrine for right-wing settlers. The shrine was dismantled by the Israeli government in 2,000. |
April, 1994 | Hamas carries out suicide bombings in Israeli towns of Afula and Hadera, killing 13, wounding 80. |
May 1994 | Yasser Arafat arrives in Gaza. |
Oct 19, 1994 | Hamas suicide bombing on a Tel Aviv bus kills 22, wounds 40. |
July 24, 1994 | Hamas suicide bomber blows up a Dan bus in Tel Aviv. |
Oct. 26, 1994 | Peace treaty between Jordan and Israel. |
May, 1995 | Israeli-Syrian peace negotiations seem close to conclusion. |
Sept 28, 1995 | Oslo Interim Agreement signed. |
Nov. 4, 1995 | Israeli PM Yitzhak Rabin assassinated by right-wing Israeli fanatic Yigal Amir. |
Jan 5, 1996 | Israeli security service assassinates Palestinian terrorist Yihyeh Ayash, 'The Engineer," responsible for the death of over 60 Israelis. Ayash was lionized by Palestinians as a martyr and the PNA named a square after him in Jericho. |
Feb. 25, 1996 | Hamas suicide bomber blows up a No. 18 bus near Jerusalem's central bus station, killing 26 people and wounding 48 others. Less than an hour later, a second Hamas suicide bomb explodes at a soldiers' hitchhiking station near Ashkelon, killing one and injuring 31 others. The two attacks are said to be in retaliation for the slaying in Gaza of Yehiya Ayash. |
March 3, 1996 | A Hamas suicide bomber blows up a bus on Jerusalem's Jaffa Road, killing 19 people and leaving at least 9 wounded. The attack takes place on the same No. 18 bus line and almost at the same time as the previous week's attack. |
March 4,� 1996 | Dizengoff Center Bombing - A suicide bomb is detonated in Tel Aviv's Dizengoff Center, killing 13, including children, and wounding at least 130 on the eve of Purim (anniversary of Goldstein massacre). Hamas claims responsibility. |
June, 1996 | Right-Wing Likud leader Benjamin Nethanyahu elected Prime Minister in Israel, replacing Shimon Peres. |
Sept, 1996 | "Al-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, 1997 | Israel and Palestinians reach agreement on Israeli redeployment in the West-Bank city of Hebron |
March 21, 1997 | Cafe Apropos Bombing - A Hamas suicide bomber detonates an explosion at the Cafe Apropos in central Tel Aviv, killing 3 Israelis and wounding 47 others. |
July 30, 1997 | Two suicide bombers strike in the Mahane Yehuda open-air market in Jerusalem, claiming at least 12 victims and wounding at least 150 others. Hamas and Islamic Jihad claim responsibility. |
Sept, 1997 | Israeli agents bungled an attempt to kill Hamas terrorist leader Khaled Mashaal in Jordan (Sept 26). To placate Jordanian public opinion, Israel subsequently released Hamas leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin from jail. |
Oct. 1998 | Wye 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, 1999 | Israel elects Labor party leader and Former General Ehud Barak as Prime Minister in a landslide. Barak promises rapid progress toward peace. |
Jan. 2000 | Israeli-Syrian peace negotiations resumed by PM Ehud Barak. |
March, 2000 | �Israeli-Syrian peace negotiations fail when Hafez Assad rejects an Israeli offer relayed by US President Clinton in Geneva. |
May 2000 | Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon to international border is completed after many years of harassment by Hizbullah guerillas. UN declares Israel is compliant with Resolution 425, but the Hizbullah continues to harass Israeli positions, kidnapping three Israeli soldiers later in the summer. |
May, 2000 | Plan to turn over Abu Dis (Jerusalem suburb) to Palestinians is scuttled after Palestinians riot and Palestinian police open fire on Israelis. |
June 10, 2000 | Hafez Assad, President of Syria, dies. He is quickly replaced by his son, Bashar. |
July, 2000 | Israeli PM Barak, US President Clinton and Palestinian Chairman Yasser Arafat meet at Camp David in a failed attempt to hammer out a final settlement. |
Sept. 28, 2000 | Palestinians 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. Violence was apparently encouraged by Fatah Tanzim, as admitted by Marwan Barghouti. Violence escalated rapidly from rock throwing to machine gun and mortar fire, suicide bombings and lethal road ambushes, including some incidents instigated by settlers against Palestinians.� Israelis killed 15 Israeli Arabs in riots in September/October 2000, and over 2,000 Palestinians in retaliatory raids thereafter. Palestinians kill over 700 Israelis. Violence continues for over a year [to present - March 2003]. |
Dec, 2000 | Talks begun at Taba continuing to January 2001 in different venues, end inconclusively. |
Feb 6, 2001 | Right-wing Likud leader Ariel Sharon elected Prime Minister in Israel replacing Ehud Barak and promising "peace and security." |
April, 2001 | Mitchell commission recommendations for restoration of peace, return to the negotiating table. |
June 1, 2001 | Dolphinarium Discotheque in Tel Aviv hit by suicide bomb, killing 20, including many teenagers. Islamic Jihad and Palestine Hizbulla both claim the bombing. |
August 9, 2001 | Sbarro pizzeria suicide bombing in Jerusalem by Islamic Jihad movement kills 15, wounds 130. |
Aug 27. 2001 | Israel assassinates Abu Ali Mustafa, Secretary General of the PFLP (Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine) |
Oct., 17, 2001 | Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine assassinates Israeli tourism minister Rehav’am Ze’evi, known for extreme right-wing views, in retaliation for killing of Abu Ali Mustafa. After Palestine National Authority refuses to take effective action, Israeli troops enter Palestinian areas in the West Bank |
Jan 3, 2002 | Israel captures Karine-A carrying a boatload of illegal arms bound for Palestinian Authority as US envoy Anthony Zinni arrives to try to mediate a settlement. |
March 2002 | Midst mounting violence, Saudi Prince Abdullah announces a peace plan, according to which Israel would withdraw from the occupied territories in return for Arab recognition. |
March-April 2002 | In retaliation for a series of suicide bombings, Israel mounts operation "Defensive Wall" in the West Bank, arrests Palestinian leaders and particularly Marwan Barghouti, imprisoning PNA Chairman Arafat in the "Mukata" compound in Ramalah and besieges militants in the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. During the operation, about 50 people, including at least some civilians, were killed in the Jenin refugee camp, prompting charges of a massacre by Palestinians. A proposed UN investigation of the alleged massacres is abandoned after Israel refuses to cooperate. From objective reports, it appears that about 22 noncombatant civilians were killed in Jenin, either wrongfully and intentionally by Israeli troops, or when bulldozers crushed houses in the belief they were empty, or when booby-trapped houses exploded and fell in on their occupants. |
May 2002 | End of sieges in Mukata; Church of Nativity. Militants in church of nativity exiled�abroad. Wanted men in Mukata jailed in Jericho. Head of PFLP allegedly coordinated a suicide attack from his cell in Jericho. |
May 30, 2002 | PNA Chairman Arafat, under pressure for reform, signs the 2002: PNA Basic Law �that was passed several years ago by the PLC. |
June 24, 2002 | Controversial speech by US President Bush calls for Israeli withdrawal and Palestinian state, but insists the PNA must first be reformed and current leaders replaced. Israel moves to reoccupy the entire West Bank, with the exception of Jericho. |
July 23 2002 | Israel assassinates Saleh Shehadeh, head of Hamas Izzeldin-El Kassam armed brigades responsible for numerous terror attacks. |
Nov 3, 2002 | Israel government unstable as resignations of Labor party ministers become official.� |
Jan, 2003 | Cairo conference of Palestinian groups, first in 20 years. Conference fails to agree on cease fire offer to Israel. Islamist movements say PLO no longer represents the Palestinian people. |
Jan 5, 2003 | Double suicide bombing in Tel Aviv kills 23, prompting increased action of IDF against Hamas. |
Jan 28, 2003 | Elections in Israel give wide margin (40 seats) to right wing Likud party, returning PM Ariel Sharon for another term. |
Feb, 2003 | Israel initiates a series of incursions in the Gaza strip and Nablus with numerous civilian casualties beginning at the end of February. |
Mar 5, 2003 | Hamas suicide bombing of Haifa bus kills 17. Qassam rocket fire from Gaza on Sderot brings Israeli reoccupation of parts of Gaza around Jebalya refugee camp. |
March 6, 2003 | Qassam rocket fire from Gaza on Sderot brings Israeli reoccupation of parts of Gaza around Jebalya refugee camp. |
March 10, 2003 | Central Council of the PLO meets in Ramalla and approves Chairman Arafat's proposal to nominate a Prime Minister. His nominee, Abu Mazen is also approved. The Council also condemns violence against all civilians. The appointment of a PM is due to Israeli and US pressure to reform the PNA and provide leadership other than Arafat, who is considered untrustworthy. |
April 24, 2003 | Bowing to international pressure, Yasser Arafat allows the nomination� of Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) as new Palestinian PM. The Quartet (US, Britain, Russia and Spain) hope that he will institute reforms. Israeli government backs Abu-Mazen, promises concessions. |
April 29, 2003 | Abu Mazen (Mahmoud Abbas) appointed Palestinian PM & vows reform, but Arafat maneuvers to retain control. Violence continues. US released updated road map on April 30 |
June 4, 2003 | Aqaba Summit - Abu Mazen and Ariel Sharon vow to stop violence, end occupation according to the road map. Hamas and Islamic Jihad vow to continue violence. Fatah, Hamas and Islamic Jihad joined in killing four Israeli soldiers in Gaza (June 8) despite the call to end violence from Fatah leaders. |
June 10-11, 2003 | Failed Israeli assassination attempt on Hamas leader Ahmed Rantissi (June 10) and Hamas suicide attack that kills 15 in Jerusalem (June 11) jeopardize the future of the road map. |
Aug 20, 2003 | Hamas suicide bombing in a Jerusalem bus claims 21 lives |
August 21, 2003 | Israel, vowing that all Hamas leaders were now targets, assassinates Hamas leader Ismail Abu Shanab. Others killed in widespread operations in the West bank; Arafat moves to replace Abbas appointee Mohamed Dahlan as security chief in Gaza and to weaken Abbas. |
Sept 6, 2003 | Mahmud Abbas resigns; Failed Israeli assassination attempt on Hamas "spiritual leader" Ahmed Yassin, who is aged and crippled. |
Sept 8, 2003 | Yasser Arafat and Fatah/PLO name Ahmed Queia ("Abu Ala") as PM to replace Mahmud Abbas. |
Sept 10, 2003 | Twin suicide bombings kill 15 in Israel; Israel moves against against buildings surrounding Yasser Arafat's Mukata compound on the following day. US official Condoleeza Rice insists that the Road Map is "still on the table." |
Oct 4, 2003 | Palestinian Islamic Jihad Suicide bomber kills 20 in Arab-Jewish owned Haifa restaurant. |
Oct 5, 2003 | Israeli jets strike a camp in Syria allegedly used for training Palestinian terrorists. The strike gets US approval. |
Oct 9, 2003 | Palestinian PM designate Ahmed Qurei submits his resignation to Chairman Yasser Arafat because of differences of opinion regarding the mandate and composition of his government's cabinet. Increasing rumors of Arafat's illness attributed variously to cardiac problems or stomach cancer. |
Nov 12, 2003 | Palestinian PM Ahmed Qurei forms a government after a long period of negotiations, pledging to end terror and chaos in the Palestine Authority |
Nov 19, 2003 | UN Security Council passes resolution 1515 in support of the roadmap for peace. |
Nov 24, 2003 | Israeli PM Sharon announces Disengagement Plan for unilateral withdrawal of Israeli forces if the roadmap fails to produce an end to terrorism. |
Dec 2003 | Geneva Accord peace plan of Yossi Beilin and Yasser Abed Rabbo officially launched in Geneva (it was leaked at at the beginning of November). December 8 - UN General Assembly meets in Emergency Session to adopt Resolution ES-10/14 asking the International Court of Justice to rule on the legality of the Israeli security barrier. |
Feb 24, 2004 | International Court of Justice begins hearings on the legality of the Israeli security barrier, Israel and Palestinians use the hearings as a platform for demonstrations about terror and the occupation. |
March 22, 2004 | IDF assassinates Hamas �leader Ahmed Yassin. |
April 14, 2004 | Israeli PM Sharon meets with US President George Bush, gets letter supporting disengagement plan |
April 17, 2004 | IDF assassinates Hamas leader Abdel Aziz Rantissi. |
May� 2004 | Ariel Sharon's disengagement plan turned down in Likud party vote May 2; After 6 Israeli soldiers are killed when their APC is blown up in Gaza, Israel launches operation Rainbow to stop infiltration of arms across the Egypt-Gaza border in Rafah and to widen the Philadelphi patrol road. Demolition of houses and killing of over 40 Palestinians including noncombatants evokes world protest; plans to widen the corridor by demolishing houses meet legal snags and international protest;� Fatah-Tanzim leader Marwan Barghouti found guilty on 5 counts of murder; Arab summit in Tunis meets after postponement; Sharon proposes new disengagement plan. |
July 9, 2004 | International court of Justice (ICJ) rules that the Israeli security barrier violates international law and must be torn down. UN GA later votes to order Israel to dismantle the barrier. Israel announces that it will ignore the ruling, but makes changes in the barrier route according to the rulings of the Israeli High Court. |
July 12-19, 2004 | UN Envoy Terje Roede Larsen slammed by Palestinian leaders for issuing a report that claims there is chaos in the Palestinian areas. Fighting between Fatah factions breaks out in Gaza, amidst kidnappings of Palestinians and foreigners. |
Aug 31, 2004 | 16 Israelis were killed in a suicide attack on a Beersheba bus. This was the first successful attack in many months. Another attack in the French Hill section of Jerusalem on September 22 killed one. During this period Israeli troops continued to operate in the West bank and Gaza, catching would-be terrorists, but also inflicting many casualties among civilians. |
Sept 26, 2004 | Hamas leader Izz El-Deen Al-Sheikh Khalil is assassinated by a car bomb in Damascus by Mossad agents. Hamas spokesmen announce they will consider attacking Israeli targets outside Israel. Under pressure from US, Syria forced many leaders of terrorist groups to leave Damascus. |
Sept 29, 2004 | Qassam rockets launched from Gaza kill two children in the Israeli town of Sderoth. Israel launches operation "Days of Repentance," occupying a large area in northern Gaza, demolishing houses and killing over 80 Palestinians by October 7.� |
Oct 7, 2004 | Multiple suicide attacks in the Sinai desert against Egyptian tourist areas frequented by� Israelis including the Taba Hilton hotel and Ras al-Shaitan (Ras Satan). About 27 persons killed, mostly Israelis. Initial reports attributed the attack variously to Al Qaida and to Palestinian groups, though Palestinian groups claimed no involvement. |
Oct 25-26, 2004 | Israel Knesset approves disengagement plan calling for withdrawal from Gaza with the support of Labor and Yahad leftist parties. Ruling rightist Likud members and� NRP demand a referendum. |
Nov 11, 2004 | Yasser Arafat dies. Abu Mazen and Abu Ala share his powers. Abu Mazen is selected as the Fatah candidate for head of the PNA and will have little serious opposition after Marwan Barghouthi, who had announced his candidacy, drops out of the race in December. |
Dec. 5, 2004 | Egypt releases Azzam Azzam, Israeli Druze jailed in Egypt for 8 years on espionage charges. |
Dec 12, 2004 | An explosion destroys an Israeli Joint Verification Team (JVT) terminal near the Egyptian-Gaza border, within Israel. Five Israeli soldiers killed. The explosion was carried out by tunneling from the Gaza side and planting a huge explosive charge. Hamas and the Fatah Eagles take responsibility. The attack was not condemned by the PNA. |
Dec 14, 2004 | Egypt, US and Israel sign a three way trade agreement that allows Egypt to establish Qualified Industrial Zones (QIZ) with a small share (about 11%) of Israeli participation, with the output of those ventures exported to the US free of tariffs. |
Jan 9, 2005 | Mahmoud Abbas elected President of the Palestinian National Authority. |
Jan 10, 2005 | Ariel Sharon forms unity government with Labor and United Torah Judaism parties in Israel. |
Feb 8, 2005 | Sharm El Sheikh Summit Conference - Israeli PM Ariel Sharon, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, President Mubarak of Egypt and King Abdullah II of Jordan meet in Sharm El Sheikh. Abbas and Sharon announce an end to the violence. Israel will release over 900 Palestinian prisoners and withdraw from Palestinian cities. Jordan and Egypt will return ambassadors to Israel. The Intifada is deemed to be over.� |
Feb 20, 2005 | Israeli cabinet approves plan for implementing disengagement. |
Feb 25, 2005 | Suicide bombing by Islamic Jihad kills 5 in Tel Aviv. Israel freezes planned handover of Palestinian towns. |
Mar 1, 2005 | London Conference hosted by Great Britain aims at organizing Palestinian security forces and getting financial backing for the Palestinian Authority. |
Mar 16 | Cairo Conference - Palestinian militant groups agree to a tahediyeh - a lull in the fighting. Hamas and Islamic Jihad will join the PLO. Hamas will participate in May elections for the Palestine Legislative Council.� Israel withdrew from� Jericho and a week later it withdrew from Jericho. |
Today, we hear a lot of talk about how Jerusalem should be split, – one half surrendered to Muslims, while the other half remains a mixed Muslim/Jewish city in Israel. If this is the appropriate diplomatic way of turning back the clock, and ensuring peace between Muslims and Jews, then why not try out this solution with Medina first–a city that was originally Jewish?
ReplyDeleteAlthough the fact is little publicized, the Arab world’s second holiest city, Medina, was one of the allegedly “purely Arab” cities that actually was first settled by Jewish tribes. 1 History shows that Judaism was already well established in Medina two centuries before Muhammad’s birth.
On page 40, of his book “Arabs In History”, Bernard Lewis writes:
“The city of Medina, some 280 miles north of Mecca, had originally been settled by Jewish tribes from the north, … The comparative richness of the town attracted an infiltration of pagan Arabs who came at first as clients of the Jews and ultimately succeeded in dominating them. Medina, or, as it was known before Islam, Yathrib, had no form of stable government at all. The town was tom by the feuds of the rival Arab tribes of Aus and Khazraj, with the Jews maintaining an uneasy balance of power. The latter, engaged mainly in agriculture and handicrafts, were economically and culturally superior to the Arabs, and were consequently disliked…. as soon as the Arabs had attained unity through the agency of Muhammad they attacked and ultimately eliminated the Jews.”
The number of Jews in Medina swelled following the Roman invasion of Israel – the subsequent expulsion of its Jewish population, and from Jews fleeing persecution in Persia2. These refugees were assimilated into the three major Jewish tribes in Medina: the Banu Nadir, the Banu Quynuqua, and the Banu Quraiza. When these Jews resettled in Medina, they took with them a superior knowledge of agriculture, irrigation, and industry. Homeless Jewish refugees in the course of a few generations became large landowners in the country. In addition, the refugees who had come from Israel quickly became the controllers of its finance and trade. This new Jewish prosperity also quickly became a direct challenge to the Arabs of the region, particularly the Quraysh at Mecca (of which Mohammad was a member) and other Arab tribes in Medina.
According to Alfred Guillaume,
At the dawn of Islam the Jews dominated the economic life of the Hijaz [Arabia]. They held all the best land … ; at Medina they must have formed at least half of the population. There was also a Jewish settlement to the north of the Gulf of Aqaba…. What is important is to note that the Jews of the Hijaz made many proselytes [or converts] among the Arab tribesmen.5
To add fuel to this fire, the Jews, strong in their faith in G-d, refused to accept Mohammad’s claims to be the final prophet. In response, a precedent was established by Muhammad among Arab-Muslims to expropriate that which belonged to the Jews of Medina.
Today, we hear a lot of talk about how Jerusalem should be split, – one half surrendered to Muslims, while the other half remains a mixed Muslim/Jewish city in Israel. If this is the appropriate diplomatic way of turning back the clock, and ensuring peace between Muslims and Jews, then why not try out this solution with Medina first–a city that was originally Jewish?
ReplyDeleteAlthough the fact is little publicized, the Arab world’s second holiest city, Medina, was one of the allegedly “purely Arab” cities that actually was first settled by Jewish tribes. 1 History shows that Judaism was already well established in Medina two centuries before Muhammad’s birth.
On page 40, of his book “Arabs In History”, Bernard Lewis writes:
“The city of Medina, some 280 miles north of Mecca, had originally been settled by Jewish tribes from the north, … The comparative richness of the town attracted an infiltration of pagan Arabs who came at first as clients of the Jews and ultimately succeeded in dominating them. Medina, or, as it was known before Islam, Yathrib, had no form of stable government at all. The town was tom by the feuds of the rival Arab tribes of Aus and Khazraj, with the Jews maintaining an uneasy balance of power. The latter, engaged mainly in agriculture and handicrafts, were economically and culturally superior to the Arabs, and were consequently disliked…. as soon as the Arabs had attained unity through the agency of Muhammad they attacked and ultimately eliminated the Jews.”
The number of Jews in Medina swelled following the Roman invasion of Israel – the subsequent expulsion of its Jewish population, and from Jews fleeing persecution in Persia2. These refugees were assimilated into the three major Jewish tribes in Medina: the Banu Nadir, the Banu Quynuqua, and the Banu Quraiza. When these Jews resettled in Medina, they took with them a superior knowledge of agriculture, irrigation, and industry. Homeless Jewish refugees in the course of a few generations became large landowners in the country. In addition, the refugees who had come from Israel quickly became the controllers of its finance and trade. This new Jewish prosperity also quickly became a direct challenge to the Arabs of the region, particularly the Quraysh at Mecca (of which Mohammad was a member) and other Arab tribes in Medina.
According to Alfred Guillaume,
At the dawn of Islam the Jews dominated the economic life of the Hijaz [Arabia]. They held all the best land … ; at Medina they must have formed at least half of the population. There was also a Jewish settlement to the north of the Gulf of Aqaba…. What is important is to note that the Jews of the Hijaz made many proselytes [or converts] among the Arab tribesmen.5
To add fuel to this fire, the Jews, strong in their faith in G-d, refused to accept Mohammad’s claims to be the final prophet. In response, a precedent was established by Muhammad among Arab-Muslims to expropriate that which belonged to the Jews of Medina.