Quote Originally Posted by Ronin13 View Post
The entire Palestine vs Israel match is pretty old and tired.
How true.

Israel is very accepting to a peaceful solution, but it just seems too many factions aligned with Palestine are hell bent on destroying the Jews entirely.
Correction. Israel SAYS they would be accepting to a peaceful solution. However their actions don't bear that out.

The extreme factions on both sides are an issue and will likely always be an issue (it's hard to argue with someone when "god says" they're right) but they don't come close to the "big issue".

There are really three "big" issues preventing a sustainable peace between Israel and Palestine.

1. Jerusalem
2. Settlers in the West Bank
3. The right of return for Palestinian refugees.

To speak intelligently about these issues will require getting into a bit of history so bare with me.

JERUSALEM-Under UN resolution 181 (Nov 29, 1947) Jerusalem was supposed to be directly administered by the UN. The British (being the governing power) were responsible to implement the plan. The fear of backlash to British interests from the Arab World caused them to resign their mandate over Palestine and withdraw. Jordan (then called Trans-Jordan) took the opportunity to cross the Jordan river and invade what was supposed to be the "Arab State". They took the West Bank and Jerusalem in Heavy fighting with the Haganah. By the time an armistice was reached in 1949 the city was divided in two. West Jerusalem was controlled by the Israelis. East Jerusalem by Trans-Jordan. It remained that way until the 1967 war (also called the Six-Day War). On June 7 Mordechi Gur's 55th Paratrooper entered and held the Old City of Jerusalem. From that point on the city has been controlled and administered by the Israelis (with the exception of the Temple Mount, where the al-Aqsa Mosque (Dome of the Rock) is controlled by a muslim waqf). In 1980 Israel passed a law (The Jerusalem Law) declaring Jerusalem "Whole and united" as the capital of Israel. The UN Security Counsel passed a vote (14-0 with the US abstaining) immediately afterwards for the Israelis to withdraw the Law. The Palestinians have also declared that the capital of the Palestinian State is to be in East Jerusalem. That was the major stumbling block between Ehud Barak and Yasser Arafat at the 2000 Camp David Summit.

Israel has alternately offered and refused to give over control of East Jerusalem depending on the Prime Minister. Any time the topic of dividing Israel comes up it's met with fierce opposition from both Right-wing Orthodox Jews and Christian-Zionists One more issue of late is the fact that Israel is even now building more apartment blocks for Israelis in East Jerusalem despite Prime Minister Olmert saying at the Annapolis conference (Nov '07) that Israel would cease all settlement activity in the West Bank (Israel's position is that East Jerusalem is not part of the West Bank). The Palestinian position was stated By Arafat at the 2000 Camp David Summit "the Arab leader who would surrender Jerusalem is not born yet".

SETTLEMENTS-Search "Israeli Settlement" and do some reading. This issue has a possible solution that has been proposed and accepted by both sides a couple of times. Basically the Israeli Government will assess the area the settlements occupy (approx. 5% of the West Bank) and give an equal amount of land to the Palestinian Government. The Israeli far right wing sees this as unacceptable and has gone so far as to claim all the land to the Jordan River. Some Palestinian's oppose this because they feel it legitimizes Israelis "stealing" their land.

RIGHT OF RETURN-At this point there are something on the order of 4 million Palestinian "refugees" outside the borders of Israel and Palestine. These are people or the children/grandchildren of people who left their homes in what is now the State of Israel and the Palestinian Territory. The Palestinian people claim they have the right to return to their original land or homes based on UN General Assembly Resolution 3236. The Israelis adamantly refuse and see this as tantamount to national suicide. The Israelis argue that Israel was created as a Democratic Jewish State and allowing the right of return would change the demographic so drastically that the population would be over 40% Arab. Thus destroying any identity of a Jewish State. The proposed solution is to offer displaced Palestinians the right to return to what will likely become the Palestinian State or offer them compensation.

Obviously there are many more, smaller issues in addition to these three. The whole process is complicated by Hard-liners on both sides who refuse to compromise what they see as their "god given" right to the land. I could link a half dozen recent articles showing the actions of both sides undercutting the peace process but if you read the Jerusalem Post (www.jpost.com) and the news put out by the Palestinian Media Center (www.palestine-pmc.com) even for a short time you can see some shining examples for yourself.