Simple Version
There are a number of people and political parties both in Israel and Palestine and outside that have a vested interest in seeing one party defeat the other entirely. The notion of a shared peace is undesirable to these people. In addition, internal issues such as trust between the parties deteriorated with time. Finally, the Olso Accords were not intended as a long-term solution, but as a jumping-off point for future negotiations.
Hamas opposed the Oslo accords and wanted to undermine the PLO-Israeli peace process.
The main result is that the Palestinian Authority became a recognized representative of the Palestinian people and statehood aspirations.
There is no organization that fits all of these criteria. There is no Palestinian/Arab/Islamic militant organization that was founded in 1817. However, a militant organization created in 1987 that rivaled the Palestine Liberation Organization and strongly opposed the Oslo Accords was HAMAS.
Yes. The Oslo Accords. However, no treaty that fully addresses even one of the major sticking points has been proffered and signed.
No. According to the Oslo Accords in 1993, the Gaza Strip officially belongs to the Palestinian Authority. It is currently occupied by the Hamas Paramilitary/Terrorist Group.
the oslo accords was when the israel war was lost to germany
The Oslo Accords was negotiated between the Israeli government and the Palestinian representative body PLO.
Nope. I think only Camp David Accords?
Bill Clinton
Hamas opposed the Oslo accords and wanted to undermine the PLO-Israeli peace process.
israelis and palestinians
they tried to resolve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
Israel and Palestine (Study Island)
The Oslo Accords were signed in 1993 and 1995, and partly superseded by the Gaza-Jericho Agreement (aka 1994 Cairo Agreement).
The Oslo Accords in 1993 were negotiations in Oslo that year between the Israeli government and the Palestinian representative organization Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) ending up with an agreement between the two parties, and formally signed later that year under the auspiecesof US president Bill Clinton.
The Oslo agreement was a confirmation that Israel and the Palestinians would work towards a two state solution, especially over issues on the West bank. The agreement broke down when Arafat rejected dealing with Israel regarding the value of a two state solution. President Clinton arranged the Oslo accords.
The Oslo Accords allowed for (1) Israel's recognition of the Palestinian Authority, composed primarily by the Palestine Liberation Organization, as the legitimate representative of the Palestinian People and that (2) the Palestinian Authority would have direct civil governance over select regions of the West Bank and most of the Gaza Strip, called Zone A under the terms of the Accords.