Palestine The Best Arabs of all time
Yes and No. The Mandate of Palestine was merely the British Name for the land they occupied in the Southwestern Levantine region of the Middle East. There was no nation of Palestine or independent Governate of Palestine at any point in the prior 2000 years. When the Jewish population of the Mandate of Palestine declared independence, they used the name Israel to denote their country. The Arab residents of the British Mandate preferred to continue using the name Palestine to represent themselves. The majority of the Mandate's land ended up in Israeli hands in 1949, but some parts were under Arab control. It is these Arab areas that will likely form the basis of the Palestinian State.
Because the Jewish state does not allow it, and the USA, is with Israel.
well yes because we do need to become one nation!!! well yes because we do need to become one nation!!!
There was no country of Israel prior to 1948 (when Israel declared independence in Tel Aviv), although there had been Jewish States in the area 2000 years earlier. There was no country of Palestine prior to 1988 (when Palestine declared independence in Tunis, Tunisia). There had never been an Arab State with its center in the southern Levant prior to this and the last Arab Empire to rule the southern Levant lost control to the Ottomans nearly 500 years ago. The Arab-Israeli Conflict began in the 1920s between the the Yishuv (Jewish Settlers who would eventually become the Israelis) & their allies and the Arab Fellahin (Arab peasants who would eventually become the Palestinians) & the surrounding Arab countries. So, both Israel and Palestine came about as a result of the continuing conflict.
Yes. Jordan is considered an Arab Nation.
The Arabs wanted a unitary independent Arab State to be created called Palestine and would refuse the creation of any Jewish State in the region.
No. Israel is a considered to be the Jewish State. Palestine is considered an Arab country.
The underlying supposition of this question, namely that Palestine was ever a Nation in the sense of having self-determination over domestic affairs, is incorrect. Palestinians trace their roots back to the Abbassid Caliphate in the 1100s and 1200s when Arab blood and Nabatean/Canaanite blood began to mix in what would become the British Mandate of Palestine. This group of people was in no way unique from the peoples who would become the Syrians, Jordanians, or Lebanese. The Abbassid holdings eventually fell to the Mamluks who then lost it to the Seljuks and Ottoman Turks. The Ottomans were forced to cede the territory of the British Mandate of Palestine to the British who held it until 1948, when they withdrew pursuant to UN Resolution 181. Palestinians are trying currently to declare themselves a Nation, but this has not gotten UN backing, nor would it lead to a historically relevant claim. If what you are trying to ask is "Over what time period did ethnic Palestinians make up the majority population of the territory constituted by the British Mandate of Palestine?" the answer is easier: from the origins of the Palestinian people to 1949 when the Arab-Israeli War of 1948-9 ended and Palestinians were forbidden from returning to Israel.
Israel and Palestine.
Musilm Arab
The Arabs wanted a unitary independent Arab State to be created called Palestine and would refuse the creation of any Jewish State in the region.