Yes.
The British the controlled in Palestine didn't find solution that the Arabs agreed, they were lost so they asked the UN for help, the UN decided to make the UN partition plan, the Jews agreed but the Arabs didn't and a civil war started until Israel born and than 6 countries joined the fight against Israel .
Israel.
The United Nations preceded the independence of the State of Israel. Israel, therefore, could not have created the United Nations.
Yes it is. Approved by the UN in 1947 and recognized by the UN and a lot of countries in 1948 and later.
Helped to create Israel
No. No country is leased by or to another country. Additionally, Palestine had no ability to lease out territory given that it was not a country at the time of Israel's independence. Israel received independence as a result of the UN Partition Plan of Mandatory Palestine.
Yes, it is.Israel is a sovereign nation and member of the UN, independent of any other nation.
Israel - but the idea that it was created 'in response to the holocaust' needs very careful scrutiny.
Israel has been a member of the United Nations since the UN General Assembly voted on the May 11, 1949 with UNGA Resolution 273 (III) to admit Israel to UN membership as a "peace-loving country".
The partition plan to create the state of Israel was approved by a vote of 33 to 13, with 10 abstentions.
First of all, Israel has never been a member of the EU. As for the UN, there is no precedent for "kicking a country out of the UN", and even if there were, it's far from clear or certain whether there is anything illegal about the settlement construction.
Israel is not a legitimate country and to date is not a recognised country, not even by their own lapdogs...The UN....so effectively, they do not belong to a continent
Israel, is the answer you are seeking but its not strictly correct. The UN created Israel after much pressure from Jewish /American interests. The British held the mandate for Palestine, the land the Jewes wanted as 'The Promised Land' even though Palestinians already lived there. Britain gave up the mandate and the rest is an unpleasant history