Yes, and No. Several Arab and North African countries do not consider Israel a legitimate state, and therefore have no diplomatic relationship with it. Those countries that have no diplomatic relations with Israel will, in some cases, reject a passport that contains an Israeli Visa. (A Visa being the stamp given upon arrival, or any other official document or stamp given by Israeli passport officials.)
Israel, recognizing this, allows the option of stamping a loose-leaf insert to the passport that can be removed before travel to a state that does not recognize Israel. (It is worth noting, however, that Arab border police at crossings with Israel are not as kind. Most Arab countries that ban Israeli stamps will also deny entry to someone who crossed at an Israeli crossing like Taba or Wadi Arabah with only the Arab stamp.)
Sadat entered Egypt into a peace agreement with Israel. The existing Arab policy had been to accept nothing less than the complete destruction of Israel.
No. The Arab Nations openly stated that they were trying to erase Israel from the map during the Arab-Israeli War of 1973 (also known as the Yom Kippur War or Ramadan War). Any support of Israel would have been counter to their agenda and would thus be very displeasing to them. The Arab displeasure with American support for Israel during that conflict was expressed through the Arab Oil Embargo that attempted to cow into submission the many nations that had supported Israel in the past.
There has never been a civil war in Israel, whether the ancient Israel or the modern one. If this is referring to the Jewish-Arab Engagement that eventually became the Arab-Israeli War of 1948, this conflict had dragged on for 8-9 months before becoming part of the Arab-Israeli War of 1948, for a total of 20 months.
Answer 1Palestine.Answer 2No really good answer. Since Palestine had never previously been an Arab self-determining region prior to 1948, it seems unreasonable to claim that Israel was created from the country of Palestine. (This is as opposed to saying that the US State of Texas was created from the original country of Texas which was independent for a short period.) Israel was previously the British Mandate of Palestine which was previously a part of the Ottoman Empire, so the country that Israel would have been created from would either be the United Kingdom, the Ottoman Empire, or the League of Nations Trust (the organization that supervised Mandates).
It depends on the war in question:During the Arab-Israeli War of 1948: Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, and Iraq joined Egypt.During the Arab-Israeli War of 1967: Syria and Jordan joined Egypt.During the War of Attrition of 1967-1970: The USSR joined Egypt.During the Arab-Israeli War of 1973: Syria joined Egypt.Since 1979, Egypt and Israel have been at peace.(Note that Egypt was on the defensive during the Arab-Israeli War of 1956, so it had no countries join it in attack.)
Israel has been in wars because the Arab countries refuse to accept Israel as a valid country.
the Jews are from israel. israel has been a Jewish country from the times of the bible.
Egypt in 1979. Jordan in 1994. There has been no other peace agreement between Israel and any Arab State, only armistices.
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.
If Israel had not been created, the Arab countries would not have mobilized forces against it. If the Arab countries had not mobilized forces against Israel, Israel would not have been able to defeat those forces in combat during the Six Day War.
The first Arab nation to make peace with Israel was Egypt. Egypt signed the Camp David accord that was mediated by President Jimmy Carter, and the two nations have been at peace ever since. It was a great success.
Sadat entered Egypt into a peace agreement with Israel. The existing Arab policy had been to accept nothing less than the complete destruction of Israel.
The Arab League has only ever proffered one solution to the Creation of the State of Israel and that is an unceasing war of elimination, economic boycott, and impermissibility of any dialogue with or recognition of Israel. The Arab League's membership declared war on Israel when the the Jews declared a State. Since the State of Israel has been in existence, the Arab League proposed a solution in 2002 to create a lasting resolution to the Arab-Israeli Conflict called the Arab Peace Initiative. Israel has rejected the initiative since the agreement would require Israel to allow Palestinians the Right of Return not just to the Palestinian Territories but to Israel itself, effectively ending the mission of Israel as the Jewish State. Israel wanted to negotiate further with the Arab League to create a mutually viable solution, but the Arab League refused any negotiation on the terms of the Arab Peace Initiative.
Israel claimed authority to lands that the Arabs believed should have been exclusively an Arab State.
Israel is a Jewish state which has historically been at odds with the Arab Middle East. The United States has supported Israel as a) the only democratic and free society in the Middle East and b) as an ally against hostile Arab nations.
yes they have
No. The Arab Nations openly stated that they were trying to erase Israel from the map during the Arab-Israeli War of 1973 (also known as the Yom Kippur War or Ramadan War). Any support of Israel would have been counter to their agenda and would thus be very displeasing to them. The Arab displeasure with American support for Israel during that conflict was expressed through the Arab Oil Embargo that attempted to cow into submission the many nations that had supported Israel in the past.