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The Work of God's Children
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Israel
Following World War II,
the British withdrew from their mandate of Palestine, and the UN
partitioned the area into Arab and Jewish states, an arrangement
rejected by the Arabs. Subsequently, the Israelis defeated the Arabs in
a series of wars without ending the deep tensions between the two
sides. The territories Israel occupied since the 1967 war are not
included in the Israel country profile, unless otherwise noted. On 25
April 1982, Israel withdrew from the Sinai pursuant to the 1979
Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty. Israel and Palestinian officials signed on
13 September 1993 a Declaration of Principles (also known as the "Oslo
Accords") guiding an interim period of Palestinian self-rule.
Outstanding territorial and other disputes with Jordan were resolved in
the 26 October 1994 Israel-Jordan Treaty of Peace. In addition, on 25
May 2000, Israel withdrew unilaterally from southern Lebanon, which it
had occupied since 1982. In keeping with the framework established at
the Madrid Conference in October 1991, bilateral negotiations were
conducted between Israel and Palestinian representatives and Syria to
achieve a permanent settlement. In April 2003, US President Bush,
working in conjunction with the EU, UN, and Russia - the "Quartet" -
took the lead in laying out a roadmap to a final settlement of the
conflict by 2005, based on reciprocal steps by the two parties leading
to two states, Israel and a democratic Palestine. However, progress
toward a permanent status agreement was undermined by
Israeli-Palestinian violence between September 2003 and February 2005.
An Israeli-Palestinian agreement reached at Sharm al-Sheikh in February
2005, along with an internally-brokered Palestinian ceasefire,
significantly reduced the violence. In the summer of 2005, Israel
unilaterally disengaged from the Gaza Strip, evacuating settlers and
its military. The election of Hamas in January 2006 to head the
Palestinian Legislative Council froze relations between Israel and the
Palestinian Authority. Ehud Olmert became prime minister in March 2006;
following an Israeli military operation in Gaza in June-July 2006, he
shelved plans to unilaterally evacuate from most of the West Bank. The
kidnapping of two Israeli soldiers by Lebanese Hizballah led to a
34-day conflict in Lebanon in June-August 2006.
Hebrew is the official language, and Arabic is a minority language.
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