Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Israel/Palestine: A Solution. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page research paper that briefly examines the Israeli/Palestinian conflict and proposes a solution. Israel has been at war with displaced Palestinians since the partitioning of Palestine by the UN in 1947. The Jewish people who created Israel feel that they have an ancient right to Palestine that dates back to the biblical Kingdom of Israel and they assert their historical prerogative. On the other hand, native Palestinians were displaced by the establishment of Israel from land that their families had occupied for generations, literally losing their homes. Their claim is equally just. This discussion of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict proposes one possible solution. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khispal.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
ancient right to Palestine that dates back to the biblical Kingdom of Israel and they assert their historical prerogative. On the other hand, native Palestinians were displaced by the establishment
of Israel from land that their families had occupied for generations, literally losing their homes. Their claim is equally just. This discussion of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict proposes one possible solution.
First of all, the first step to peace, as evidenced by the 1993 Israeli-PLO Accord, is that both sides have to acknowledge the legitimate right of the other side to
exist (Bickerton and Klausner 263). Prior to 1947, the entirety of Palestine was the homeland of Arab Palestinians. However the partitioning of this land and the establishment of the nation
of Israel in 1947 changed this reality. On the other hand, Israel has endeavored throughout the decades of its existence to exert control over the land allocated by the UN
to Palestinians. While both sides acknowledged the right of the other to exist in 1993, Israel and the Palestinians did not perceive the entirety of the situation in the same
manner. Israel saw the agreement as only a temporary first step toward Palestinian self-rule and, in fact, Yitzhak Rabin, the Israeli prime minister, ruled out any form of sovereign
statehood for the Palestinians (Bickerton and Klausner 265). The Palestinians, on the other hand, believed that the peace accord would lead directly to the establishment of their own nation-state
(Bickerton and Klausner 265). The peace process has been derailed by such misunderstandings. It has been derailed by the fact that Israel has continued to drop bombs on Lebanese
villages, which left half a million Lebanese homeless, and also because the Israeli army continued to would or kill Palestinian demonstrators (Goldschmidt 399). It has been derailed because Israel
...