Introduction to History: The Jews and the Arabs were both ancient Semitic, and the Old Testament says: Noah, who survived the ark in the prehistoric floods, and his son Abraham, the descendant of "Shem", two sons, one named Isaac and the other called Ishmael, the descendants of Isaac were Jews, and the descendants of Ishmael were Arabs. From an anthropological ethnological point of view, the Israeli-Arab dispute is a brotherly struggle. From history to this day, the intervention and intervention of Britain, the United States and other countries is the cause of the 70-year war in the Middle East.

The Jews have been a migratory people since ancient times, originally living in the city of Two Rivers, and later along the Euphrates River, to Canaan (present-day Palestine), and south to the Nile Delta.
Returned to Palestine in the 14th century BC. In the 6th century BC, it became the "Prisoner of Babylon", and by the 2nd century AD, it was scattered around the world under the killing of the Romans. Since the Jews founded Judaism, the belief in God prevented the Jews from becoming a stateless people in the process of migration, as the Turks did.
By the beginning of the 7th century, most of the countries of Western Europe had Jews, but their suffering was quite tragic, the Christian forces inherited the tradition of persecution of Jews in the Roman Empire, and Europeans had an instinctive dislike of Jews.
In 1881, a Jewish doctor living in Russia wrote a pamphlet entitled "Self-Liberation," in which for the first time it was explicitly asserted that Jews could only truly liberate themselves if they established a state. This was the beginning of a spontaneous Zionist movement of the Jews.
When World War I broke out in 1914, the British's intention to seize Palestine intensified, in order to completely open up the British-India communication line in order to expand the colony. The use of Jewish statehood can achieve the goal of controlling Palestine.
On 2 November 1917, it was declared: "His Majesty's Government is in favour of the establishment of a Jewish national state in Palestine and will do its utmost to bring this goal to fruition." "40 days later, the British Expeditionary Force in Egypt launched an attack on the Turkish army and occupied Jerusalem.
The League of Nations after World War I appointed British rule over Palestine, recognizing the historical ties of Jews with Palestine and the right to rebuild the state. The new colonial rulers encouraged Jewish immigration, and in less than 20 years, more than 400,000 Jews emigrated to Palestine, a third of the total number of native residents at the time.
British rule was met with strong resistance from the Arabs, and the contradictions between the Jews and the original natives became increasingly acute. Realizing that continuing like this would trigger a complex conflict between Judaism, Christianity, and Islam in history, affecting strategic access to the Mediterranean and oil interests in the Middle East, the British began to snub the Jews.
In 1939, Britain published a white paper on Palestinian policy, advocating the partition of Palestine and the establishment of a bi-national state. After decades of emigration, the Jews established the prototype institutions of various political and party state functions, and established the paramilitary organization "Haganah".
After the Second World War, Britain's economy was sluggish and overwhelmed, and the Foreign Office had to declare that Britain supported the establishment of a Jewish "homeland" rather than a "state."
This infuriated the Jews, who were completely disillusioned with the British, and began a terrorist attack on the British mandate in Palestine, causing Jerusalem to withdraw from martial law for a time. The cunning British finally decided to leave the question of Palestine at the disposal of the United Nations.
The Jews who felt teased were called "bitch-raising Englishmen"! They experienced the "teasing" of the British and the brutal persecution of Hitler's Germany, and they moved in large numbers to the United States and Palestine. The United States, on the other hand, saw a chess game in Britain's retreat and actively supported the Zionist movement.
On 29 November 1947, the Second Session of the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution 181 (II), which stipulated that the United Kingdom would end its mandate and establish an Arab and Jewish state; jerusalem and its vicinity would be sealed 158 square kilometers as a separate entity under the administration of the United Nations.
In May of the following year, British appointees withdrew from Palestine and said that Britain would no longer mediate the A-Yur conflict. On the afternoon of the 14th, the State of Israel was proclaimed. Prime Minister Ben Gurion of the Interim Government read Israel's Declaration of Independence in the endangered ancient Hebrew language, and ten minutes later, the United States recognized the State of Israel.
Twelve hours later, the war between the seven Arab states that had become independent against the establishment of the State of Israel began, and 3,700 Arab coalition troops attacked Israel.
The establishment of the State of Israel is like a sword inserted in the heart of the Arab world, and the United States has replaced Britain into the Middle East, and its mind is all on the oil reservoir of the Middle East, which has brought strategic ambitions and sown the seeds of unquenchable fire.
The Arabs will never figure it out: the Jews left their homeland 2000 years ago, the Arabs lived here for 1400 years, and some people confirmed land rights after a thousand years because their ancestors had built several kingdoms. Israel, on the other hand, believes that if the Jews want to rebuild their country, no one can rely on them, only by aircraft cannons. Since then, the Palestinian areas, and even the Arabian Peninsula, have entered a century of never-ending peace.