SIPRI Yearbook 2021
III. The Israeli–Palestinian conflict and peace process
The history of Israel’s occupation of the Gaza Strip, Golan Heights and West Bank—territories it captured in the 1967 Arab–Israeli War—is well known and much commented on.1 Israeli settlement expansion in the occupied territories has added to recent instability, especially in the West Bank, where Israel threatened in 2019 to annex parts of the territory with the tacit support of the United States.2 A new US ‘peace plan’, the threatened annexation of parts of the West Bank and a series of normalization agreements between Israel and four states—Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan and the United Arab Emirates (UAE)—were the key developments in 2020.3 The economic and humanitarian costs to the Palestinian people of the Israeli occupation continued to be severe.4
- Citation (MLA):
- Davis, Ian. "6. Armed conflict and peace processes in the Middle East and North Africa." SIPRI Yearbook. SIPRI. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2016. Web. 21 Jan. 2025. <https://www.sipriyearbook.org/view/9780192847577/sipri-9780192847577-chapter-006-div1-031.xml>.
- Citation (APA):
- Davis, I. (2016). 6. Armed conflict and peace processes in the Middle East and North Africa. In SIPRI, SIPRI Yearbook 2021: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 21 Jan. 2025, from https://www.sipriyearbook.org/view/9780192847577/sipri-9780192847577-chapter-006-div1-031.xml
- Citation (Chicago):
- Davis, Ian. "6. Armed conflict and peace processes in the Middle East and North Africa." In SIPRI Yearbook 2021: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security, SIPRI. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016). Retrieved 21 Jan. 2025, from https://www.sipriyearbook.org/view/9780192847577/sipri-9780192847577-chapter-006-div1-031.xml
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