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Israel and Palestine in the Year 2000


Article # : 14621 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 5 / 1988  1,660 Words
Author : Seymour Martin Lipset
Seymour Martin Lipset, former president of American Professors for Peace in the Middle East, is Caroline S.G. Munro Professor of Political Science and Sociology and senior fellow of the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.

       The land of prophecy calls out for a prophet. It needs one in the ancient tradition, a prophet who does not predict the future with certainty or access to divine revelation, but who warns his people that unless they reform, dire portents await them, including their destruction as a nation and their expulsion from the Holy Land.
       
        The problems that confront Israel 40 years after its creation and 12 years before the new Julian millennium are immense. Most frightening are Israel's relations with the Palestinians of the West Bank and Gaza. These threaten to produce a repeated dose of what the Palestinians call the "uprising": riots and demonstrations, rock-throwing and Molotov cocktails, and, in the long run, the possibility of another war.
       
        Israel also faces what some have called "the war of the Jews" between the Orthodox and the less religious or totally secularized. This conflict has already upset the peace of Jerusalem with stone-throwing and riots. Another internal battle, between the doves and the hawks, pits those who would like to trade the occupied territories of the West Bank and Gaza for peace against those who would retain the territories that they refer to as Judea and Samaria. The latter would either expel the Arabs to the neighboring countries or allow them to stay with limited political rights.
       
        Beyond these political tensions are "normal" problems that affect Israel more than many other countries, particularly that of economic viability. As of 1988, the country has a high standard of living compared with Third World countries, but still runs a continuing massive deficit in its foreign trade that is covered by governmental and private contributions from the United States.
       
        An optimistic scenario
       
        What will Israel be like in the year 2000? An optimistic scenario posits peace with its Arab neighbors. The peace exists as a result of negotiations between Israel and an Arab delegation that was composed of Jordanians and representatives of a Palestinian provincial (autonomous) government that was set up in 1988-89 under Israeli auspices as laid out in the Camp David agreements. Representatives from Egypt and Syria, which took part in response to pressure from the Soviet Union, participated in the peace process to facilitate good economic relationships with the United States.
       
        Although the peace conference threatened to break down on a
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