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  • When I did my graduate studies at the Middle East Institute at Columbia University's School

  • of International Affairs, I took many courses on the question of the Middle East conflict.

  • Semester after semester, we studied the Middle East conflict as if it was the most complex

  • conflict in the world -- when in fact, it is probably the easiest conflict in the world to explain.

  • It may be the hardest to solve, but it is the easiest to explain.

  • In a nutshell, it is this: One side wants the other side dead.

  • Israel wants to exist as a Jewish state and to live in peace. Israel also recognizes the

  • right of Palestinians to have their own state and to live in peace. The problem, however,

  • is that most Palestinians and many other Muslims and Arabs, do not recognize the right of the

  • Jewish state of Israel to exist.

  • This has been true since 1947, when the United Nations voted to divide the land called Palestine

  • into a Jewish state and an Arab state.

  • The Jews accepted the United Nations partition but no Arab or any other Muslim country accepted it.

  • When British rule ended on May 15, 1948, the armies of all the neighboring Arab states

  • -- Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Transjordan, and Egypt -- attacked the one-day old state of

  • Israel in order to destroy it.

  • But, to the world's surprise, the little Jewish state survived.

  • Then it happened again. In 1967, the dictator of Egypt, Gamal Abdel Nasser, announced his plan,

  • in his words, "to destroy Israel." He placed Egyptian troops on Israel's border,

  • and armies of surrounding Arab countries were also mobilized to attack.

  • However, Israel preemptively attacked Egypt and Syria.

  • Israel did not attack Jordan, and begged Jordan's king not to join the war. But he did.

  • And only because of that did Israel take control of Jordanian land, specifically the "West Bank"

  • of the Jordan River.

  • Shortly after the war, the Arab states went to Khartoum, Sudan and announced their famous

  • three "No's: "No recognition, no peace, and no negotiations,"

  • What was Israel supposed to do?

  • Well, one thing Israel did, a little more than a decade later, in 1978, was to give

  • the entire Sinai Peninsula -- an area of land bigger than Israel itself, and with oil --

  • back to Egypt because Egypt, under new leadership, signed a peace agreement with Israel.

  • So, Israel gave land for the promise of peace with Egypt, and it has always been willing

  • to do the same thing with the Palestinians. All the Palestinians have ever had to do is

  • recognize Israel as a Jewish state and promise to live in peace with it.

  • But when Israel has proposed trading land for peace -- as it did in 2000

  • when it agreed to give the Palestinians a sovereign state in more than 95% of the West Bank

  • and all of Gaza -- the Palestinian leadership rejected the offer,

  • and instead responded by sending waves of suicide terrorists into Israel.

  • Meanwhile, Palestinian radio, television, and school curricula remain filled with glorification

  • of terrorists, demonization of Jews, and the daily repeated message that Israel should cease to exist.

  • So it's not hard to explain the Middle-East dispute. One side wants the other dead.

  • The motto of Hamas, the Palestinian rulers of Gaza, is: "We love death

  • as much as the Jews love life."

  • There are 22 Arab states in the world -- stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to the Indian Ocean.

  • There is one "Jewish State" in the world. And it is about the size of New Jersey.

  • In fact, tiny El Salvador is larger than Israel.

  • Finally, think about these two questions: If, tomorrow, Israel laid down its arms and announced,

  • "We will fight no more," what would happen? And if the Arab countries around Israel

  • laid down their arms and announced "We will fight no more," what would happen?

  • In the first case there would be an immediate destruction of the state of Israel and the

  • mass murder of its Jewish population. In the second case, there would be peace the next day.

  • As I said at the outset, it is a simple problem to describe: one side wants the other dead

  • -- and if it didn't, there would be peace.

  • Please remember this: There has never been a state in the geographic area known as Palestine

  • that was not Jewish. Israel is the third Jewish state to exist in that area.

  • There was never an Arab state, never a Palestinian state, never a Muslim or any other state.

  • That's the issue: why can't the one Jewish state the size of El Salvador

  • be allowed to exist? That is the Middle-East problem. I'm Dennis Prager.

When I did my graduate studies at the Middle East Institute at Columbia University's School

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中東問題 (The Middle East Problem)

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    周杰 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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