In Arab circles, the question is taboo. Representatives from the Palestinian Authority (PA) and the Arab press generally base any discussion on the false premise that the State of Israel has no right to exist in the Middle East, that its presence in the area is a result of the Holocaust, and the Jews have no historic claim to this land. They are “occupiers,” and the violence will cease only when the “occupation” is ended. That is the position of our Arab neighbors.

Let us look at some relatively recent history. This holy land was ruled for 402 years by the Ottoman Turks. It was in 1916, during World War I, when the question arose among the Triple Entente – Russia, Britain, and France – of what would happen to the Ottoman territories if the war led to the disintegration of “the sick man of Europe,” the Ottoman Empire.

As a result, the British and French entered into the Sykes–Picot Agreement, which was to determine the post-war partition of some Middle East lands. Named after its chief negotiators, Mark Sykes of Britain and George Picot of France, it effectively divided the Ottoman provinces outside the Arabian Peninsula into areas of British and French control.

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