Britain ruled Palestine. They called it the Palestine Mandate. Britain had agreed to hand Palestine over to Jews, mainly from Europe, but some Jewish terrorists bombed the King David Hotel and some other places to speed up the process. Britain withdrew, and the Jews took Palestine and began calling it Israel.
nothing hahahahaha
they actually lost money overall. They gained in the short term, but Jews had a disproportionately high influence on the economy, leading to a long term loss.
The British shift in support for the Jews during the early 20th century was influenced by several factors, including the geopolitical landscape following World War I and the Balfour Declaration of 1917, which expressed support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Additionally, the rise of Jewish influence in international finance and politics, alongside a desire to gain favor with Jewish communities globally, played a role. However, British support fluctuated over time, often balancing competing interests in the region, particularly with Arab populations.
to gain influence in Africa without fighting each other
To gain influence in Africa without fighting each other.
military conquest
to gain knwledge
He had to kill Jews to gain support of the Germans.
jews
It depends on your terms. If you are referring to the West Bank and the Gaza Strip cumulatively as Palestine and the 1949 borders of the State of Israel as Israel, then Israel is 3x larger than Palestine. If you are referring to the British Mandate of Palestine, then the State of Israel according to 1949 borders is smaller than Palestine. If you are comparing the current areas under Israeli control to the area of Mandatory Palestine, they are roughly equal. (The gain in the Golan Heights is more-or-less offset by the loss of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank Zone A regions.)
gaft