By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
How It Came To The Gaza War
Early on we posted an extensive article titled Authentic Description Of Palestine, whereby
today we proceed with a tiny scrap of land wedged between Israel, Egypt,
and the Mediterranean Sea, the Gaza Strip has been a military and political
flashpoint for much of its history.
In the past 100 years,
the ancient city of Gaza and its surrounds have been ruled by the Ottoman
Empire, Britain, Egypt and Israel. Home to 2 million Palestinians, many of them
refugees, it’s one of the world’s most densely populated areas.
It is now self-governed by the Islamist militant group, Hamas — designated
a terrorist organization by several countries — which has launched a brutal
attack on Israel in recent days.
How did today’s Gaza Strip come into being? And why
has it been controversial?
The city of Gaza in 1898.
What’s The Gaza Strip And Who Lives There?
The town of Gaza
dates back to ancient times, controlled for a period by the Romans. Gaza’s port
was once a busy trading hub, but the history of the modern enclave called the
Gaza Strip dates back to 1947.
That was when the United Nations approved a plan to
partition the region, then occupied by the British and known as Mandatory
Palestine (because the British had been granted a mandate by the League of
Nations to administer it), into separate Jewish and Arab states, after World
War II and the Holocaust.
Palestinian Arabs
were allotted the town of Gaza and surrounding areas, along with a larger
territory surrounding Jerusalem, part of which forms the West Bank today. The
following year, when Britain ceded control of the region, the newly formed
state of Israel accepted the UN’s boundaries but the Arabs did not.
On May 15, 1948, the day after Britain’s official
departure, war broke out between Israel and Arab countries including Syria,
Lebanon, Jordan, and Egypt. The town of Gaza became strategically important to
Egyptian forces as they moved north after their assault bogged down nearby.
“The Egyptian army had orders to conquer Israel through the coastline,” he
says, but stopped north of Gaza, facing Israeli resistance. That left the
Egyptian forces controlling a strip of land 40 kilometers long and between six
and eight kilometers wide.
When Egypt and Israel
agreed to cease hostilities and drew up an armistice agreement on February 24,
1949, the territory’s boundaries were formally drawn up into the region that we
know today as the Gaza Strip, with the city of Gaza towards its northern border.
The first
Arab-Israeli War displaced between 700,000 and 800,000 Palestinians, many of
whom ended up in the Gaza Strip. This is how the Gaza Strip was created. The
war of 1948 resulted in pushing the Palestinians to these borders.
Today, there are
eight official refugee camps within Gaza accommodating more than 600,000
people. Some of the camps were set up to house Palestinians fleeing the first
Arab-Israeli war. About 81 per cent of the population lives in poverty and the
unemployment rate is nearly half, says the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine Refugees, which provides services for refugees in Gaza.
About 1 million people rely on daily food aid.
When Did Israel First Occupy The Gaza Strip?
Gaza remained under Egyptian military rule until the
Suez Crisis of 1956 when, once again, its geography proved significant. That
was when Egypt, under President Gamal Abdel Nasser, nationalized the Suez Canal
Company, giving it the power to control the passage of vessels through the
region.
In response, Israel,
alongside paratroopers from France and Britain, attempted to wrest control of
the canal back from Egypt, with the Gaza Strip a key target in its efforts to
encircle Egyptian forces and to prevent subsequent retaliatory strikes.
“Nationalisation
of the canal was very alarming to the European powers,” says the University of
Melbourne’s Dr Simon
Frankel Pratt. “So a
kind of agreement or pact emerged between Great Britain, France, and Israel.
The United States disapproved significantly of this plan and prevented it
coming to full fruition, but it did lead to a war.”
Israel subsequently occupied
the Gaza Strip for several months before relinquishing it to Egypt, who
remained in charge for the next decade.
When Was Hamas Formed?
By 1967, Israel, surrounded by hostile Arab states
that potentially threatened its existence, had acquired a large and
well-trained army. After a series of minor skirmishes with its neighbors, who
appeared to be mobilizing for full-scale war, on the morning of June 5, Israel
struck first.
Within hours, it had
wiped out most of the Egyptian, Jordanian, and Syrian air forces, leaving their
ground troops vulnerable. Over the next five days, Israeli forces captured the
Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt, the Golan Heights from Syria,
and the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan, with Arab casualties and
equipment losses vastly outnumbering those of Israel. A ceasefire was agreed on
June 10.
The Six Day War left
more than 1 million Arab refugees under Israeli rule, strengthening support for
the Palestinian Liberation Organization. “Palestinians were becoming more and
more aware they were going to have to do more of their liberating themselves,
that they couldn’t rely on the Arab states,” says Ian Parmeter, a research
scholar at the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies at ANU.
The region remained unstable: significant conflicts
include the Yom Kippur war of 1973, when Egypt and Syria surprised Israeli
forces, and the populist uprisings known as the intifadas of 1987 and 2000,
when Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza staged a series of protests
and riots against Israeli rule. “It was soon after the start of the First
Intifada in 1987 that Hamas was formed in Gaza,” says Parmeter. “Hamas was an
offshoot of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood … and was formed in Gaza because there
were strong connections at that stage between Gaza and Egypt.”
In the 1990s, the
Palestinian Liberation Organization and Israel struck agreements in Washington,
DC, and Egypt called the Oslo Accords, outlining a peace process that
recognized Palestinians’ right to self-determination.
The PLO formally
agreed to give up resistance through violent means as a method for establishing
a Palestinian state or for liberation. The accords led in 1994 to the creation
of the Palestinian National Authority.
An Israeli army patrol passes through Gaza’s main
square in 1969, two years after the Six Day War.
Who Controls The Gaza Strip Today?
Palestinian National Authority president Yasser Arafat
died in 2004, a political figure whom historians now consider came closest to
uniting the Palestinian cause. In 2005, Israel withdrew its military and
settlers from the Gaza Strip for security and political reasons amid little
prospect of wider peace negotiations. “It was labeled the ‘hornet’s nest’,”
says Porat. “A hotbed of extremist ideologies because of poverty and a
fundamentalist point of view.” Gaza remained dependent on Israel for its water,
electricity, and telecommunications, and Israel also controlled its air and
maritime spaces.
In 2006, the militant
organization, Hamas, defeated Fatah in a democratic election after a campaign
that argued the Oslo Accords had failed. However, Hamas regarded some opponents
as a continuing threat. “As a result, [Hamas] launched a pre-emptive campaign
in the Gaza Strip to eliminate the Palestinian security forces who, according
to Hamas, were disloyal to the government,” Iqtait
says. “It resulted in the complete takeover of the Gaza Strip, both politically
and in terms of security.”
Hamas and other
militant groups have continued to clash with Israel in the years since, with
sporadic rocket attacks emerging as a threat to Israeli citizens within range
of the Gaza Strip. In 2021, militants fired more than 4000 projectiles into
Israel over 11 days, killing 10 Israeli civilians and injuring more than 300
others. Retaliatory Israeli air strikes killed more than 200 Palestinian
civilians.
The rocket threat led
Israel to invest heavily in its “Iron Dome” defense system. It has also
increasingly fortified the physical cordon around the Gaza Strip, including
building underground barricades to prevent militants from tunneling underneath,
which was nonetheless breached in the latest attacks.
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