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Social SciencesGovernment and Political Science

Israeli-Arab Negotiations: Background, Conflicts, and U.S. Policy

Authors: Carol Migdalovitz; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
Abstract:
After the first Gulf war, in 1991, a new peace process involved bilateral negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon with mixed results. Milestones included the Israeli-Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) Declaration of Principles of September 13, 1991, providing for Palestinian empowerment and some territorial control, the Israeli-Jordanian peace treaty of October 26, 1994, and the Interim Self-Rule in the West Bank or Oslo II accord of September 28, 1995, which led to the formation of the Palestinian Authority (PA) to govern the West Bank and Gaza. However, Israeli-Syrian negotiations were intermittent and difficult, and postponed indefinitely in 2000. Negotiations with Lebanon also were unsuccessful, leading Israel to withdraw unilaterally from south Lebanon on May 24, 2000. President Clinton held a summit with Israeli and Palestinian leaders at Camp David on final status issues that July, but they did not produce an accord. A Palestinian uprising or intifadah began in September. On February 6, 2001, Ariel Sharon was elected Prime Minister of Israel, and rejected steps taken at Camp David and afterwards. The post 9/11 war on terrorism prompted renewed U.S. focus on a peace process, emphasizing as its goal a democratic Palestinian state as a precondition for achieving peace. On April 30, 2003, the United States, the United Nations, European Union, and Russia presented a "Roadmap" to Palestinian statehood within 3 years. It has not been implemented by either Israel or the Palestinians. PA Chairman/President Yasir Arafat died on November 11, 2004; on January 9, 2005, Mahmud Abbas was elected to succeed him and he seeks final status talks. Since Hamas, which Israel and the United States consider a terrorist group, won the January 2006 Palestinian parliamentary elections, however, the situation has been complicated.

Description: Congressional rept.
Pages: 35
Report Date: 14 NOV 2006
Report Number: A624854

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Keywords relating to this report:
*AGREEMENTS
*ARABS
*CONFLICT
*GEOPOLITICS
*ISRAEL
*ISRAELIS
*POLITICAL NEGOTIATIONS
CONGRESS
ELECTIONS
EUROPEAN UNION
FOREIGN AID
FOREIGN POLICY
JORDAN
LEBANON
POLITICAL PARTIES
RUSSIA
SYRIA
TERRORISM
TERRORISTS
UNITED NATIONS
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT
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