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Answer 1

Basically, despite elaborate attempts to confuse the issues, the origin and essence of Arab/Israeli disputes can be reduced to the fact that Arabs were living on land which Zionists desired in order to create a Jewish state, and, after Israel was created in 1948, that Arabs resided on land which Israel wanted to use for expanding its size. All of this hostility is compounded by continuing attempts on the part of many Arabs to regain land taken by Israelis, and by the continued presence of Christian and Muslim Arabs in what many Israelis feel should be an exclusively Jewish state.

Answer 2

The way the question is posed is confusing and nonsensical. Israel does not oppose Arab people (no genetic hatred or disgust), Arab culture (no hatred or disgust of Arab traditions or foods), Arab nations (no hatred toward the existence of over 20 Arab countries, their foreign policy aside), Arab religions (Christians, Muslims, Druze, and Bahai'i live peacefully in Israel and constitute 20% of its population), or Arab language (which is the second official language of Israel). Secondly, "was" implies some historical period and Arab-Israeli relations have always been changing. Egypt under Anwar Sadat led the Arab-Israeli War of 1973, but he chose to make peace with Israel in 1979, 15 years before Jordan and was the first Arab State to recognize Israel. Therefore, "was" is subject to violently different arguments at different time periods.

However, the most consistent Anti-Arab argument that Israel holds is that it does oppose violent and extremist political groups that wish for its eventual and permanent removal from the map in addition to the ideologies that pervade the Arab World that sanction such groups. Israelis do not wish for the end of Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, or Egypt as much as they may detest the current governments of those countries and the majority of Israelis support a Palestinian State (under the definition that it is a separate sovereign state for Arabs). However, many Syrians, Lebanese, Jordanians, and Egyptians wish for the State of Israel to be gone. This is what Israel cannot stand about its Arab neighbors, that many of them do not begrudge them existence and even those who admit that Israel is not going anywhere do not believe it has the Right to Exist.

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Q: What was Israel's argument against Arabs?
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