Crucial dates of the
peace process |
Below is a timeline of key events in the Arab-Israeli
peace process since the 1967 Six Day war.
22 November 1967
Following the Six Day war between Israel and
Egypt , Syria and Jordan (which ended on 10 June 1967) the UN issues
resolution 242 on this day. It stipulates that the Security Council
is: “expressing its continuing concern with the grave situation
in the Middle East , emphasising the inadmissibility of the acquisition
of territory by war and the need to work for a just and lasting
peace in which every state in the area can live in security”. The
resolution becomes the basis for all future peace treaties, agreements
and accords.
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Egyptian
leader Gamal Abd al-Nasir during the 1967 war
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14 February 1969
The fifth Palestinian National Council meeting
convenes in Cairo . Yasir Arafat, leader of the Palestine Liberation
Organisation (PLO), is declared as chair of the executive committee,
effectively becoming head of the Palestinian movement.
25 June 1970
US Secretary of State William Rogers launches
an initiative for peace in the Middle East , later known as the
Rogers Plan. It is described as an encouragement to Israel and
the Arabs to move towards a just and lasting peace by means of
a final settlement. Gamal Abd al-Nasir, Egypt 's president, accepts
the plan as a way of bridging Egyptian and Israeli attrition.
6 October 1973
Egypt and Syria attack Israeli forces in the
Sinai and Golan Heights on Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement,
hoping to reclaim territory lost in the Six Day war. They make
initial gains but are forced to retreat after an Israeli counter
attack. After regaining the territory, Israel 's Prime Minister
Golda Meir resigns.
9 November 1977
Egypt 's president Anwar al-Sadat astonishes
the world when he lands in Israel , the first Arab head of state
to recognise and visit Israel . Addressing the Israeli parliament,
the Knesset, al-Sadat's speech paves the way for the Camp David
accords signed between Egypt and Israel under US sponsorship. The
accords become the cornerstone for the first peace treaty between
Israel and an Arab country. It is signed on 26 March 1979, formally
ending the state of war between the two sides.
7 August 1981
The then Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Fahd bin
Abd al-Aziz - later to become King Fahd of Saudi Arabia
- announces an initiative for peace in the Middle East . The initiative
consists of eight articles of intent, including an implicit recognition
of Israel . It mentions the right to exist for all Middle Eastern
countries, and is based mainly on UN resolution 242. The initiative
calls for a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.
(But Israel annexes East Jerusalem a year later.) In November 1981,
the initiative is officially submitted to the first Arab Summit
in Fes , Morocco , but fails to win majority approval. Fes hosts
another Arab summit in 1982 and the initiative is resubmitted and
is approved by an overwhelming majority. |
6 June 1982
Israel invades Lebanon and occupies its southern
region causing a furore in the Arab world. All diplomatic peace
initiatives are suspended. The Israeli army allows the newly created
Christian SLA (South Lebanon Army) to carry out massacres and commit
human rights abuses.
23 November 1984
The Palestinian National Council holds its
17th session in Amman , Jordan . King Hussayn of Jordan delivers
a speech urging conferees to agree on a Jordanian–Palestinian peace
initiative, based on UN resolution 242. The Palestinian leadership,
startling the world, announces that the PLO is considering dropping
armed resistance |
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Victims
of the Sabra and Shatila
massacre in Lebanon |
against Israel and could
agree to live side by side with an Israeli state if Israel were
to pull out from the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967.
The Arab states start intensive diplomatic efforts to reach a compromise
with Israel on this.
In 1985 Jordan and the PLO agree on co-federalism in a bid to
form a pan-Arab formula for peace in the Middle East . The formula
stipulates that lands recovered from Israeli occupation would be
annexed to Jordan under a federation system. But efforts collapse
when Israeli warplanes bomb PLO headquarters in Tunis .
9 December 1987
An Intifada (popular uprising) among the occupied Palestinian
population begins. Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, including
women, children and teenagers take part. The symbol of the Intifada
becomes the stone-throwing of children against the Israeli army.
Between December 1987 and September 1993 (the Declaration of Principles
Agreement) thousands of Palestinians are killed, with the UN reporting
the Palestinian death ratio at 25 to 1 Israeli during this first
Intifada.
6 March 1991
The US , fresh from victory in the first Gulf war, announces an
initiative for peace in the Middle East to take place in the autumn
of that year.
30 October 1991
An international peace conference, co-sponsored by the US and
the Soviet Union and with Israeli and Arab delegates, is convened
in Madrid , Spain . The talks do not prove successful, yet it leads
to secret meetings in Oslo , Norway , between the PLO and Israeli
officials and makes promising progress. |
13 September 1993
The PLO and Israel officially recognise each other by signing
a Declaration of Principles (DoP) in Washington , DC . The agreement,
drawn up in Oslo , stipulates that during a five-year interim period,
Palestinians would gradually be handed the administration of the
West Bank and Gaza , and continue to negotiate a permanent peace
treaty to settle on the final status of the occupied territories. |
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Yitzak
Rabin and Yasir Arafat
at the Oslo I peace agreement |
1 July 1994
Arafat returns to the Gaza Strip, Palestine , after 27 years in exile
and is to head an interim administration of the new Palestinian Authority |
26 October 1994
Jordan and Israel sign the Treaty of Peace in the Araba Valley,
Jordan, to become the second Arab state after Egypt to end the
state of war with Israel . As in 1993, the peace treaty is backed
by diplomatic moves by the US .
24 September 1995
Arafat and Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres sign the Taba
Agreement. The agreement sets up the mechanism for a transitional
period towards Palestinian self-rule in the Gaza Strip and the
West Bank , during which Palestinians will assume control over
Palestinian towns and villages, and consequently ends a 28-year
occupation there. |
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King
Husayn of Jordan and
Yitzhak Rabin shake on the accord |
4 November 1995
Israeli premier Yitzhak Rabin is assassinated by a Jewish extremist.
Peres becomes prime minister.
11 December 1995
Peres spells out his notion of a “grand peace” based on Israeli
withdrawal from the Golan Heights, Syria (occupied by Israel since
the 1967 conflict), in return for full normalisation of relations
with Syria and the Arab states. President Hafez al-Assad of Syria
responds positively to the initiative.
22 June 1996
Arafat wins elections and is sworn in as Palestinian president.
23 October 1998
Following a 19-month deadlock, during which Israelis and Palestinians
exchange accusations of disrupting the peace process, the Wye River
Memorandum is signed in the US , promising Palestinians faster
and further autonomy. A revised accord is signed in September kickstarting
fresh talks.
22 May 2000
Battered by frequent attacks mounted year on year by Islamist
resistance group Hizb Allah (Party of God), Israel 's prime minister
Ehud Barak announces a hasty withdrawal of Israeli troops from
southern Lebanon , after 22 years of occupation.
25 July 2000
A marathon summit hosted by US President Bill Clinton between
Barak and Arafat at Camp David collapses when they fail to agree
on, among other things, the future status of Jerusalem . |
28-29 September 2000
In a hugely provocative move, Israeli politician
Ariel Sharon's walkabout at al-Aqsa mosque sparks a violent reaction
in Palestine . The peace process in the Middle East receives a
deadly blow as Israel reoccupies the Palestinian territories amid
fighting between the Palestinian and Israeli army. A second Intifada
begins which, according to Israeli human rights organisation BTselem,
kills 2171 Palestinians and 194 Israelis killed by 15 October 2003. |
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Ariel
Sharon enters al-Aqsa
mosque with his security guards |
17 October 2000
Egypt hosts the Sharm al-Shaikh peace summit. The summit announces
a plan to bring weeks of Israeli-Palestinian confrontation to an
end. The plan does not succeed.
21 May 2001
Former US Senator George Mitchell releases his long-awaited report
(the Mitchell Plan) on the Middle East conflict. It calls for a
ceasefire, confidence-building measures and, ultimately, negotiations.
16 June 2002
Israel begins construction of its wall to enclose
the West Bank . |
20 September 2002
Israel besieges Arafat's headquarters in Ram Allah, demolishing
most of his office complex and confining him there, while simultaneously
embarking on a policy of extra-judicial assassinations and imprisonment
of Palestinian leaders.
26 February 2003
Israel begins a series of re-incursions (repeated throughout the
year) that lead to the re-occupation of parts of the Gaza Strip
and the West Bank , inflicting widespread damage and heavy civilian
casualties. |
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Yasir
Arafat's headquarters in
Ram Allah come under attack |
27 February 2003
Crown Prince Abd Allah bin Abd al-Aziz of Saudi Arabia , announces
an Arab peace initiative in the Middle East . The plan insists
on Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories in return for
Arab recognition of Israel 's right to exist. A similar version
but with reservations is adopted later by the Arab League. |
29-30 April 2003
Following the invasion of Iraq by the US and
allied occupation forces, Arafat, under intense international pressure,
allows the election of Mahmud Abbas as Palestinian prime minister
to embrace a reform and peace agenda. The Israelis and Palestinians
receive the long overdue, heavily promoted “road map” formula for
peace, internationally backed by the quartet of the US , Russia
, the European Union and the United Nations. |
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Former
Palestinian Prime
Minister Mahmud Abbas |
4 June 2003
Israeli Prime Minister Sharon and Palestinian Prime Minister Abbas
meet at Aqaba , Jordan , to discuss the implementation of the road
map. |