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West Bank

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The West Bank is a region between Israel and Jordan, mostly inhabited by Palestinians and Israeli settlers.

Formerly part of the British Mandate of Palestine, it was controlled by Jordan from 1949 to 1967 and by Israel from 1967 to the present. Its boundaries are the result of the armistice lines reached during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War that led to Israel's independence. Israel occupied the territory in the war 1967.

Cities in the West Bank

The most densely populated part of the region is a mountainous spine, running north-south, where the cities of Nablus, Ramallah, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and Hebron are located. Jenin, in the extreme north of the West Bank is on the southern edge of the Jezreel Valley, Qalqilya and Tulkarm are in the low foothills adjacent to the Israeli coastal plain, and Jericho is situated near the Jordan River, just north of the Dead Sea.

Name

Origin of Name

Most of the territory's eastern border is the western bank the Jordan River, hence the name "West Bank" often used as the territory's name.

The Misplaced Pages simply calls the area the "West Bank" because editorial policy forbids it to take sides in controversies (see neutral point of view).

Political terminology

Israelis refer to the region either as a unit -- "The West Bank" ("ha-gada ha-maa'ravit") -- or as two units -- Judea ("yehuda") and Samaria ("shomron"), after the two biblical kingdoms, (the southern kingdom of Judah and the northern Kingdom of Israel -- the capital of which was, for a time, in the town of Samaria). The border between Judea and Sumaria is a belt of territory immediately north of Jerusalem) sometimes called the "land of Benjamin".

The Arab world and especially the Palestinians strongly object to the terms Judea and Samaria, the use of which they deem to reflect Israeli expansionist aims. Instead, they refer to the area as "the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River", emphasizing that the area is under Israeli military control and jurisdiction (see "occupied Palestinian territories").

Status

The West Bank has been the object of negotiation, terrorism and war.

The status of the West Bank, together with the Gaza Strip on the Mediterreanean shore, has long been disputed, though almost everyone agrees that the area is heading for statehood (see proposals for a Palestinian state).

The United Nations calls the West Bank and Gaza Strip "Israeli-occupied" (see Occupied territories for discussion of what "occupied" means). The US generally agrees with this formulation, although some senior officials (Kirkpatrick, Rumsfeld) have occasionally demurred.

Generally, the Arab World considers the West Bank the rightful property of its Palestinian residents and regards the Israeli presence as an occupation force. Supporters of this view commonly refer to the West Bank and Gaza as the "occupied territories."

Some official Arab maps show the West Bank, Gaza, and the rest of the territory bounded by Egypt, the Jordan River, Syria, Lebanon and the Mediterrenean Sea as "Palestine", reflecting a non-recognition of Israel as a state.

Saudi-Arabia recently proposed that Israel should completely withdraw from the West Bank and Gaza in exchange for a total recognition of Israel by the Arab world.

The vast majority of Palestinians feels that the West Bank ought to be a part of their sovereign nation, and that the presence of Israeli military forces is a violation of that sovereignty.

This is much too oversimplified. Israeli opinion is split into those who advocate, variously:

  • abandoning the West Bank entirely in hopes of ending Arab attacks on Israel (sometimes called the "land for peace" position)
  • maintaining a military presence in the West Bank to deter surprise attack, while relinquishing some degree of political control
  • annexing the West Bank (sometimes called an "extremist" position)

History

Note: this history should start much further back.

A part of the pre-1948 Mandatory Palestine, the territories now known as West Bank were mostly part of the territory reserved by the 1947 Partition Plan (UN General Assembly Resolution 181) for an Arab state. According to the plan, the city of Jerusalem and the surrounding towns (including Bethlehem and Ramallah) would be an internationally adminsitered territory, whose future would be determined at a later date. While a Palestinian Arab state failed to materialize, the territory was captured by the neighboring kingdom of Jordan. This occupation was not recognized by the UN or by the international community.

The boundary line between Israel proper and the West Bank was determined by the cease-fire talks in 1949 and is often called the "Green Line". During the 1950s, there was a signiciant phenomenon of Palestinian refugee infiltration through the Green Line. In the Six-Day War of 1967, Israel captured this territory, but the U.N. did not recognize it either and asked for Israel's withdrawal in Resolution 242. In 1988, Jordan withdrew all claims to it.

The 1993 Oslo accords declared the final status of the West Bank to be a subject to a forthcoming settlement between Israel and the Palestinian leadership. Following the accords, Israel withdrew its military rule from some parts of West Bank, which was then split into:

  • Palestine-controlled, Palestinian-administered land(Area A)
  • Israeli-controlled, but Palestinian-administred land (Area B)
  • Israeli-controlled, Israeli-adminstered land (Area C)

Areas B and C constitute the majority of the territory, made up out of the rural areas, while urban areas per se are mostly Area A.

Israel has been criticized for construction of numerous settlements in the West Bank in violation of international law. See Israeli settlements for a discussion of this question.

See also Palestine.