Shared Boundaries 1900-1949
Readings
Treaty
of Versailles
The Treaty of Versailles was signed at the conclusion of World
War I. While Germany agreed to an armistice on the basis of President Wilson's
Fourteen Points Proposal, presented to Congress in November 1918, France and
Great Britaindiffered in their goals for the peace process. The disagreement
over terms of the process became manifest in the negotiations for a final
peace treaty in Paris. Ultimately, the US chose not to ratify the treaty,
and the treaty's harsh reparations and other stipulations eroded international
diplomatic relations.
This web resource has a number of parts. The link is to the
Menu page for the entire document. Part I contains the League of Nations charter,
while the remainder of the sections discuss the settlements arranged for concluding
the war. This reading can be accessed online, or portions may be printed.
Reading Guide Questions
In parts II & III of the treaty, the
author nations discuss the new international borders of Germany and its allies.
In what ways does the treaty's division of Europe echo the League's dissection
of the regions of the former Ottoman Empire? How does it appear different?
In part XIII, the league discusses their
desires for promoting economic equality through labor conditions. How are
these provisions different from the economic power given to the Mandates?
Which nations appear to have greater autonomy, European nations formerly allied
with Germany, or the Middle Eastern Mandates?
League
of Nations Charter
In order to supplement students' study of both the Treaty of
Versailles and the San Remo Mandates, it may be helpful to examine the League
of Nations charter. The aims of the League, outlined in very beginning of
the document, give a framework for the decision-making that led to the partition
of the former Ottoman Empire among the European nations. Students may also
want to refer to Article 23 and the list of objectives established by the
League. In 1932, Iraq became the first Arab nation to join the League. The
League's actions during the inter-war period had a number of direct effects
upon the Middle Eastern region, both on member and non-member nations, and
it is important to understand the principles underlying those actions. This
document may be best accessed online.
Reading Guide Questions
Examine the League's guiding principles in
the preamble to the document. Do you consider these aims to be noble intentions?
Does the use of Mandates appear to be in line with these goals?
Articles 12-17 establish a precedent for
conflict resolution among member nations. How do the principles asserted in
these sections support the use of treaties and cooperative agreements in discussions
with newly independent Middle Eastern nations?
Anglo-Egyptian Treaty of 1936 - Anglo-Egyptian
Treaty.doc
Though negotiated between Britain and Egypt, this treaty demonstrates
the manner in which Britain sought to maintain its imperial influence in the
Middle East. Despite the cooperative efforts of both governments, Britain's
military presence in the Suez region diminished Egypt's power as an independent
nation. By continuing to exert influence in the region despite its willingness
to conduct treaty negotiations, Britain further undermined its credibility
as an honest broker in the region. In Egypt, this distrust of British intentions
gave rise to a significant opposition movement among more militant Muslim
groups. This document can be printed and used as a handout.
Reading Guide Questions
What were the terms of the 1936 treaty? How
many British military units remained in the region?
What was the popular reaction among the Egyptian
population to the Wafd government's tolerance of British influence? How did
nationalist sentiments perpetuate a resistance among groups such as the Muslim
Brotherhood?
1943 Unwritten Lebanese covenant-
See 1943 Lebanese National Pact.doc
Rife with internal religious conflict, the Lebanese government
made an unwritten pact after a series of meetings with Christian and Muslim
leaders. The Pact is noteworthy in that it demonstrated a joint initiative
by two opposing groups aimed at compromise. By agreeing not to seek independence
with the aid of Western nations, Christian minorities in Lebanon were given
the freedom to continue the current system of sectarian relations within the
country. Despite its noble intentions at preventing conflict, the pact only
postponed the conflict between Christians and Muslims that would eventually
lead to a civil war in the nation. This document can be printed and used as
a handout.
Reading Guide Questions
Although the covenant emerged out of religious
alliances, the 1943 agreement highlighted the willingness of Lebanese Christians
and Muslims to work together in maintaining a peaceful status quo in the country.
How did their agreeing to disagree on religion aid both sects?
Why was this covenant more prudent than demanding
that all Maronite Christians accept Islam as their new religion? In your opinion,
is it possible for an agreement like this to endure, or do you think the civil
war was inevitable? Explain.
Arab
League Charter
Formed in 1945 to help foster stronger relations among member
Arab nations, the Arab league is a long-standing cooperative body in the Middle
East. Original member nations included Syria, Transjordan, Iraq, Saudi-Arabia,
Lebanon, and Yemen. The organization sought to further the goal of Arab representation
among all of its member nations and help secure the interests of member nations
against potential threats.
Reading Guide Questions
What nations are eligible for membership
under the original charter?
What are the League's primary concerns, according
to Article 2 of the charter? How does the League's representational structure
reinforce those goals?
Extension question- How does this charter
compare with the missions of larger organizations such as the United Nations?
How are the organizations similar? How are they different?
United
Nations Charter
This site has the United Nations Charter in a number of formats,
including a high resolution file of the actual document. While students do
not need to read the entire document, the Preamble and the Purposes and Principles
sections give a brief description of the United Nations' goals as an international
institution. It is important that students understand the aim of the UN in
order to analyze the body's continued role in sponsoring peace agreements
among Middle Eastern nations. This document can be accessed online or printed
in a variety of formats.
Reading Guide Questions
The United Nations took the place of the League of Nations in 1945.
Examine the preamble to this document and list the goals of the UN.
How does this document compare to the League of Nations' Covenant?
What provisions does the UN charter make that the League of Nations did not
discuss? What types of goals does the charter discuss, and how are the organization's
purposes and principles the same or different?
Shared
Boundaries 1950-Present
Introduction: Striving for Common Ground
The past fifty years have produced a series of peace treaties and cease-fire
agreements among Middle Eastern nations. Some agreements have provided longer-lasting
results, while others have been undermined by a series of continuing conflicts.
The documents included here trace the evolution of the Middle East Peacekeeping
process from the conclusion of the first Palestine War to the most recent
Road Map for peace in the region.
It is extremely important for students to observe and understand the lengths
to which different nations have gone in their attempts to bring lasting resolution
to the various battles that divide the Middle East. In some cases, peace solutions
have evolved from the internal desires of the individual nations; in other
instances, the agreements were reached after other nations have intervened.
In examining both successful and unsuccessful treaties and agreements, students
can gain a better understanding of the future potential for peace in this
region.
Framing Questions
How have peace negotiations between Palestinian
and Israeli leaders evolved over the past fifty years?
Why have nations such as Egypt and Israel
succeeded at negotiating peace treaties while nations such as Israel and Palestine
have had more difficulty maintaining lasting peace?
Why have the series of U.N. resolutions enforcing
an Israeli-Palestinian peace failed to achieve their goal of a lasting peace?
Shared Boundaries 1950-Present
Readings
Baghdad
Pact
Signed in September 1955, by Great Britain, Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Pakistan,
this treaty cemented the relationships between these initial nations, as well
as any member of the "Arab League or any other State actively concerned
with the security and peace in this region" fully recognized by the charter
members. The Pact was meant to solidify the fact that peace and security between
these nations was an integral part of the peace and security of all the nations,
and the nations of the Middle East in particular. Beyond providing for peace
among these nations, the pact was among the first cooperative steps taken
on behalf of a group of Middle Eastern nations working towards a common goal.
This reading can be accessed online or printed as a handout.
Reading Guide Questions
What type of cooperation did Arab League nations expect in return for
signing this agreement? Where did the league draw its model for establishing
friendly relations?
What role did the United Kingdom play in this agreement? Why might
involvement in such an agreement have been in the British interest?
UN
Security Council Resolution 242 (1967)
Passed at the conclusion of the Six Days War, this seminal resolution came
to serve as the basis for all UN proceedings aimed at achieving a peaceful
solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict. This document can be printed as an
acrobat file for use as a handout.
Reading Guide Questions
What does the Resolution state regarding the peace and security of
all nations? How does the Resolution view Israel's acquisition of land?
What is the intended role of the special representative to the region,
according to this resolution?
UN
Security Council Resolution 338 (1973)
Passed in order to achieve a cease-fire in the Yom Kippur War (1973), this
resolution demanded a conclusion to military conflict, as well as the implementation
of Security Council Resolution 242. The resolution reaffirmed the need for
a combined, cooperative effort to achieve a peaceful solution to conflict
in the region. This document can be printed for classroom use.
Reading Guide Questions
How does this document both reaffirm and modify Resolution 242?
What provision does the resolution make for the need for a lasting
peace? Does the Resolution provide any guidance for such action?
Camp
David Accords- Preamble and Initial Framework
The first significant framework for peace in the Arab-Israeli conflict was
set forth by Muhammad Anwar al-Sadat, President of the Arab Republic of Egypt,
and Menachem Begin, Prime Minister of Israel in a meeting with US President
Jimmy Carter, at Camp David from September 5 to September 17, 1978. The three
leaders presented their framework, along with an invitation for other nations
involved in the conflict to adhere to the terms outlined in the proposal.
This document can be viewed online, or printed if desired.
Reading Guide Questions
Examine the guiding principles for the pursuit of peace, as they are
outlined in the beginning of the document. How do these assertions build upon
the earlier UN Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338?
What does the document assert are the necessary requirements for peace
in this region? How will meeting these requirements aid in conducting friendly
negotiations between nations in this region?
What were the terms of the agreement between Egypt and Israel? How
did they handle the distribution of disputed territories? What concessions
did both sides make in the negotiation process?
1979
Egypt-Israel Treaty
Egyptian President Anwar al-Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin
concluded the Camp David Summit by signing an agreement that they would reach
a Peace Treaty between their nations within three months of the creation of
the Camp David Framework for peace. This document provides the framework for
the eventual treaty. The final Treaty was signed in March 1979. This document
can be viewed online or printed as a handout.
Reading Guide Questions
What types of arrangements did Israel and Egypt still have to agree
to, according to this framework? What types of resources would the two nations
have to work to share? What types of free-passage were necessary for fulfilling
the framework?
What provisions were made for sustaining forces in the region? How
many troops were both sides allowed to leave stationed?
How do you think this framework compares with earlier negotiations?
Do you consider it to be more or less effective? Why or why not?
1988
UN Iran-Iraq Cease-fire agreement, part I and part
II
United
Nations Iran-Iraq Observation Group- (UNIIMOG) Mission page
These two cease-fire agreements both concluded the military conflict between
Iran and Iraq and established the United Nations Iran-Iraq Observation Group.
The agreement called for the formation of UNNIMOG, the United Nations Iran-Iraq
Military Observer Group, charged with the task of "verifying, confirming,
and supervising the ceasefire and the withdrawal of all forces to the internationally
recognized boundaries, pending a comprehensive settlement." UNIIMOG was
responsible for monitoring the terms of the cease-fire and insuring that both
governments held to their portions of the agreement. The operation was phased
out by the end of 1991, as UNSCOM, the United Nations Special Commission,
was created to monitor Iraq's use of nuclear and chemical weapons under the
terms of UN resolution 687.
Reading Guide Questions
What are the terms of the ceasefire agreement, as discussed in these
two documents?
Given the fact that the conflict had evolved into a war of attrition,
do you find it surprising that the cease-fire concluded the conflict along
these terms?
Does the agreement establish a lasting peace between these two countries?
Why do you think so? Why not?
1993
Oslo Accords- Declaration of Principles on Interim Self-Government Arrangements
The Oslo Accords were intended to serve as a framework for the on-going peace
process and present a framework for Israeli-Arab cooperation. The plans provided
guidance for self-government, as well as an eventual Palestinian state. Despite
the workability of the two-state solution, more radical groups were staunchly
opposed to the two-state solution. Students should be familiar with the Oslo
Accords as the beginning of an attempt to establish a permanent Palestinian
state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip territories. This document is rather
lengthy, and therefore may be best accessed online.
Reading Guide Questions
What was the aim of the Oslo negotiations, according to the first section
of the Declaration? How does the Declaration describe the mutual goals of
both Israelis and Palestinians?
What time period does the Declaration establish for a transitional
period? Why does the agreement use the term "Interim government"
in describing the Palestinian government?
What provisions does the document make for the settling of disputes
between Israelis and Palestinians? What is the role of other nations in this
region in this agreement, according to this document?
1994
Israeli- Jordan Peace Treaty
On October 26, 1994, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Prime Minister Abdul-Salam
Majali signed the Treaty of Peace between the State of Israel and the Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan. The treaty was only the Second signed by Israel since its
independence. The treaty aims to establish and maintain good neighborly relations
between the two nations by cooperating in many spheres on joint projects.
This is an important document in tracing the emergence of peace between Israeli
and its neighboring Muslim nations. Due to length, this document may be best
accessed online.
Reading Guide Questions
Examine the reasons for pursuing peaceful relations. Why do both Israel
and Jordan find peace to be in the mutual best-interest of these two nations?
Do you think the "General Principles" provide adequate support
for a lasting agreement between these two countries? How does this agreement
improve upon prior agreements between Israel and Muslim nations?
What types of cooperation does the treaty discuss? How will these new
elements of cooperation benefit both nations? What concessions are made to
preserve the cultural and religious desires of both groups?
UN
Security Council Resolution
986- UN Resolution 986.pdf
Initially passed in 1995, this Security Council Resolution established the
Oil for Food program in Iraq in which established a means of distributing
humanitarian aid to segments of the Iraqi population plagued by deteriorating
nutrition and health. This document can be accessed online or printed.
Reading Guide Questions
How does this agreement use existing Iraqi assets to provide for the
Iraqi population? In theory, does this agreement seem like an effective way
to provide food and necessities to the region?
What is the danger of the treaty in terms of who remains authorized
to distribute food and provisions? Might it be possible for the government
to horde the provisions granted under the agreement?
The
Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip
(OSLO II)(1995)
The "Interim Agreement" was signed in Septemeber, 1995. Under the
accord, Israel was first scheduled to re-deploy from the major Palestinian
population centers in the West Bank (the "second redeployment")
and later from all rural areas (the "third redeployment"), with
the exception of Israeli settlements and the Israeli-designated military areas.
The Agreement divided the West Bank and Gaza into three areas, and assigned
distinctive borders and rules for administration and security controls within
these regions.
Reading Guide Questions
Compare this document to the initial OSLO Accords. What provisions
does this document include that the initial agreement did not make? Are there
any new dates or requirements?
Which nations witnessed and signed the agreement? What does this mean
about the international community's opinion of this document? Does the initiative
for this agreement appear to be internally or externally motivated?
Wye
River Memorandum
This document was intended to help implement the OSLO II "Interim Agreement"
on the West Bank and Gaza Strip of September 28, 1995, between Israel and
the PLO. Signed in Washington on October 23, 1998, the Wye River Memorandum
set further stipulations and timelines in order to aid Israelis and Palestinians
in meeting the terms of the Interim Agreement. Due to length, this document
may be best viewed online.
Reading Guide Questions
Compare this document to the earlier OSLO I and OSLO II agreements.
What provisions are added in order to help Israelis and Palestinians meet
the terms of the Interim Agreement? What does the document state about the
use of terrorism?
According to this document, what is the deadline for reaching an agreement
on giving Palestine a permanent nation status? What provisions does the document
make for achieving such a goal by that deadline?
2003
Roadmap for Peace
The most recent Middle East peace plan, known as the "Roadmap,"
was written under the endorsement of the "Quartet" powers: the United
States, European Union, United Nations, and Russia. The goal of the plan is
to arrive at a comprehensive peace by 2005. The plan discusses the hope that
peace will bring the simultaneous "emergence of an independent, democratic,
and viable Palestinian state living side by side in peace and security with
Israel and its other neighbors." The United States, the European Union,
the United Nations, and Russia will meet regularly to oversee the implementation
of this plan.
Teachers and students alike should be familiar with the current plan for
achieving peace in this region. This document can be printed as a handout,
or accessed online.
Reading Guide Questions
How does this document incorporate existing principles for peace, as
established in the OSLO and Wye River agreements? Does this document seek
a longer-lasting peace? Has the strategy for achieving peace changed?
What types of institutional changes must occur during the second phase
of the roadmap? What obstacles do you think the Quartet might face in this
stage?
What would the benefits of successfully reaching Stage III of the roadmap
be? Have the peace negotiations reached this stage?
Bonus Discussion- Do you think this plan will succeed? Why or why not?
Pay attention to the progression of Israeli-Palestinian agreements over the
past 50 years in framing your response.
Additional Links
Exploration is the essential first step in reaching a greater understanding
of this complex region. We offer these additional links for that purpose.
Bulletin
of Regional Cooperation in the Middle East
A good resource for researching the history of cooperation in the Middle
East, this bulletin has articles on a number of national and international
debates over Middle East policy. Because the path towards cooperative borders
has been riddled with obstacles, this periodical provides helpful information
in sorting out the various roadblocks to peace.
Foreign
Policy Article- After War Policy in Iraq
The jury is still out on the current War on Iraq and whether the Bush administration
has achieved its goals. This article presents a series of policies that the
United States should consider in establishing a new government in post-war
Iraq. Though not directly tied to the Arab-Israeli conflict, the U.S. presence
in Iraq has the potential to remain one of the largest shaping forces in the
peace process. This article may be helpful for advanced students seeking greater
insight into the complexities of the situation in Iraq.
Country
Profiles
The Country Profiles page of this unit provides links to additional information
on each nation in the region from both the US State Department and the US
Central Intelligence Agency.