In News
- Prime Minister of Palestine Mohammad Shtayyeh has said that,
- India can play a stabilising role in West Asia by maintaining cooperation with all related parties.
Israel- Palestine conflict
- It is an age-old tussle over identity and land starting with Jerusalem.
- It has been more than 100 years that Jews and Arabs are fighting over a piece of land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea.
- Zionist Movement
- In 1897, Jews started the movement to escape persecution and establish their own state in their ancestral homeland, Israel.
- The World Zionist Organisation was created to advocate for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine.
- A large number of Jews started flowing into Palestine and they bought land and started settling down there.
- Sykes-Picot Agreement
- By 1916, Palestine came under British control after the Sykes-Picot Agreement
- It was a secret agreement between Great Britain and France.
- This led to the division of the old Ottoman Turkish Empire.
- Balfour Declaration
- The British foreign secretary James Balfour agreed to the establishment of a Jewish homeland.
- Nazis gained power in Germany,
- In 1930’s , the Jews influx to Palestine increased with thousands of them resettled from Europe to Palestine.
- Arabs saw this as a threat to their homeland and their conflict reached its peak as the British Government remained as a mute spectator.
- Almost 6 million Jews lost their lives in the Holocaust which ignited a demand of separate Jewish state.
- Jews claimed Palestine to be their natural home while the Arabs too did not leave the land and claimed it.
- Two State Solution
- In 1947, the British Government went to the United Nations to solve the dispute and decide upon the future of Palestine
- The UN voted to split the land into two countries. Jewish people accepted the agreement and declared the independence of Israel.
- First Arab Israel war of 1948
- Arabs saw the creation of Israel as a part of a conspiracy to move them out of their land.
- Consequently, in 1948, the Arab states of Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, and Syria declared war on Israel.
- Israel emerged victoriously and captured the western half of the city, and Jordan took the eastern part which Israel later captured and annexed.
- Since then, Israel has expanded settlements in East Jerusalem.
- Creation of PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization) in 1964
- Large number of Palestinians moved out of Israel and settled in refugee camps near Israel’s border.
- It was the beginning of the Palestine refugee crisis which ultimately led to the creation of a terrorist organization PLO.
- The Palestinians want to make East Jerusalem the capital of their yet to be formed state.
- Six-Day War 1967
- Israel launched a preemptive strike against Egypt, Syria, and Jordan and captured
- Golan Heights from Syria.
- West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan.
- Sinai Peninsula and Gaza Strip from Egypt.
- Israel launched a preemptive strike against Egypt, Syria, and Jordan and captured
- Yom Kippur War 1973
- Under the UN Charter, there can be no territorial gains from war, even by a state acting in self-defence.
- In the light of Israel’s reluctance to return the captured territories, another Arab-Israeli war erupted in 1973 in which Israel suffered.
- In 1979, as per Israel-Egypt peace treaty, Israel returned the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt.
- Egypt became the first Arab nation to officially recognize Israel as a state.
- Recent attacks
- Israeli armed forces have recently attacked the Al-Aqsa Mosque ahead of a march by Zionist nationalists.
- The Al Aqsa Mosque is the third holiest shrine for Islam after Mecca and Medina.
- Also, earlier in 2021, four Palestinian families were evicted from their homes in Sheikh Jarrah in favor of Jewish settlers.
- The issue remains unresolved and potentially inflammable.
- Israeli armed forces have recently attacked the Al-Aqsa Mosque ahead of a march by Zionist nationalists.
- The current outbreak of violence is the most severe involving the rocket-firing by the Palestinians and the air-strikes conducted by Israelis in retaliation.
India-Palestine Relations
- Historic Ties:
- India had a historic tradition of supporting the rights of the Palestinian people.
- It is also an integral part of the nation’s foreign policy.
- Supporting the Palestinian:
- India support the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination and the establishment of an independent State of Palestine.
- In 1974, India became the first Non-Arab State to recognize the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) as the sole and legitimate representative of the Palestinian people.
- India’s position on Palestine is independent and consistent. It is shaped by independent views and interests, and not determined by any third country.
Why is India’s support significant?
- India’s growing Profile
- India is serving as a non-permanent member of the Security Council for 2021-22
- India was re-elected to the Human Rights Council for the 2022-24.
- Palestine wants support in multilateral forums.
- Also, in recent years, India has broken the tradition of supporting Palestine at the U.N.
- In 2019, India voted in favour of Israel at the ECOSOC (Economic and Social Council)
- to deny observer status to a Palestinian organisation named Shahed.
- India abstained during the voting on a resolution calling for investigation into Israeli actions in the Gaza Strip at the Human Rights Council.
- Political Stability
- India’s role in multilateral organisations required strenuous efforts in cooperation with all related parties
- to achieve security and stability in the MiddleEastand West Asia
- India’s role in multilateral organisations required strenuous efforts in cooperation with all related parties
- Financial Support
- Government of India contributed US$ 2 million to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA)
India’s role in Middle East
- After Abraham Accord (Israel–UAE normalization agreement)
- Will help India to move from bilateral relations towards an integrated regional policy.
- Regional coalitions are bound to widen Delhi’s reach and deepen its impact.
- India bridging the Arab-Israeli
- Often the Arab nations and Israel are divided over Palestine.
- India’s new foreign policy of simultaneous cooperation with Israel and the Arab world
- New QUAD
- A new minilateral with the US, UAE and Israel the “new Quad” is under discussion for the Middle East.
- Beneficial for all
- India’s scale , Israeli innovation and Emirati capital has a potential to produce immense benefits.
- In addition to it the American strategic support would be a powerful dynamic unfolding in the region.
India’s Look West Policy
- Look West Policy is a strategy to deal with the West Asian nations.
- Adopted by the Indian government in 2005 and has been intensified in the recent past.
- Look West Policy focus
- The Arab Gulf countries
- Israel
- Iran
- India’s Diplomacy
- India, through what can be viewed as imaginative diplomacy, has attained a unique position in the world.
- It has good and growing relations with all major nearby regional powers – Iran, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq, Egypt and Israel.
- India’s Success
- The success of this policy was seen when the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation has not taken a strong stance against India
- on the issue related to the abrogation of article 370 and 35A and
- UAE presented the Order of Zayed to PM Modi immediately after to boost the ties between the two nations.
- The success of this policy was seen when the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation has not taken a strong stance against India
Constraints with Look West Policy
- Peace negotiations between Israel and Palestine
- Are not seeing any progress and are challenged by the US’ increasing inclination towards Israel.
- India’s engagement with Iran
- Over the Chabahar port is unlikely to eliminate the Pakistan or China option.
- One reason is the more modest scale of India’s efforts in Central Asia and West Asia, especially compared to China’s BRI.
- US Iran tensions
- US’ unilateral withdrawal from the JCPOA and the re-imposition of sanctions on Iran has derailed India’s strategy
- Intensification of US-Iran tensions and India’s growing inclinations with the US.
Conclusion
- Strategic autonomy
- India must take all possible steps to maintain its current position in the Middle East to have the flexibility and strategic autonomy
- while also prioritizing the national interests of the country.
- Not Picking Sides
- India’s decisions are based on a mature understanding and evaluation of the Israel- Palestine issues
- India refused to pick a side and called for de-escalation and dialogue.
- Diplomatic Depth
- Presently, West Asia has become multipolar with powers diffused among various regional and extra-regional actors.
- Within this mix, India has pursued an approach that balances against different parties and their rivalries.
- Legitimacy resolutions
- India may render support that is parallel and complementary with the political support of the Palestinian cause
- In a manner that guarantees the implementation of international legitimacy resolutions.
Source: TH
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