You are right, I am not an expert on the issue of Persian Arabs. Likewise I wouldn't expect someone from the middle east to know too much about the India-Pakistan subcontinent unless that's their academic specialty. The middle east is not mine.
So essentially you are saying there was oppression and that integration was done forcefully. In which case I would apply the same standards and support their rights. But this is off topic. If you think it's an ongoing issue that you need to discuss further, open a new thread about it.
That's precisely what i'm talking about. I would never comment or even dare to go near the Pakistan India tensions, or even talk about Kashmir. For the shear reason that I have no Idea what the conflict is all about, what are Pakistani grievances, what are Indians saying, I have no Idea, because it's not my business. And if you talk to Persians and Turks, most have no clue about any of these things.
Middle east is not a place for the right of self determination, there is just no History of Democracy in this region. You can study the Modern History of Persia, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia. What you would find most ironic is that almost all of these countries that you probably admire, were founded through ethnic cleansing and genocide. Take Persia for example, since 1921, In order to Unify Persia, Reza Shah crushed every single self governance. These were various Iranian ethnicities who had formed their own independent governments. Tens of thousands of People were killed and ultimately his son Mohammad Reza Shah continued his path by crushing the Azerbaijani revolt. These were ethnic Azeris in North Western Iran who wanted self Rule. What you know to be Iran today came to being through a lot of bloodshed. Take Turkey now, what you know as modern Turkey was established on the blood of 1.5 million Armenians and the displacement of the remaining 1million. These Armenians had 6 provinces in Turkey. Did theseArmenians had homes properties, lands, and ..... What happened to it? The Kurds aNd the Turks took them. Add this to the displacement of 3 million Kurds since 1984 in Turkey. Now take Saudi Arabia, study the founding father of Al saud. You know how many tribes he massacred and how many he ethnically cleansed and conquered. Search for GREATER YEMEN. And see for yourself how much of that Yemen has been lost through time to saudi Arabia.
Almost all great middle eastern countries were established through bloodshed and ethnic cleansing.
You as an outsider might find it hard to grasp these matters but the understanding that the people of the middle east have from the ballot box and democracy is quit different. Take Iraq for example, they have been given the right of self determination for nearly 12 years and yet ethnic cleansing seems to be the mechanism that they still resort to in order to resolve their problems. Take Lebanon, the oldest arab democracy, study the History of that country and count how many civil wars and how many ethnic cleanings took place. Israel is part of the same equation. What happened in Palestine is like a day in the beach compared to what happened in other Middle Eastern countries. Both in scale and magnitude. Take Kurds for example, for the last two centuries, the kurds have been fighting for their independence, from sykespicot until now, in no international agreement they were ever recognized as a nation entitled to its own state. In Iraq, they have been given self governance, but the Iraqi kurdistan is not even 15 percent of the entire territories the kurds want their future state to be. The Kurdish people have been living uninterrupted for thousands of years in their ancestral homeland. Is it fair to treat them like this? These are all debatable issues. Middle East because of its harsh environment is not a place of self determination but rather a place of iron fist, meaning if you want to survive you have to .........
Now when you put Israel in this context everything would make sense.
Ultimately the land was not divided fairly since the Jews constituted no more than 32% of Mandatory Palestine (after 1920, i.e excluding Trans-Jordan) and were given 60% of the land.
The Peel Commission was a lot more fair, but was rejected by the Arabs. This was a huge mistake on their part, but it is understandable why they would've made this mistake - no, it has nothing to do with them not wanting Jews anywhere near them.
The Zionist Congress discussed the Peel Commission proposal, and the majority opposed it because they said they needed more land. The minority of Zionists that supported it did so only because they said they would expand their borders. They had already made it clear that they would expand beyond the Peel Commission borders.
Therefore the Arabs would have considered any land being given to the Zionists as a threat. They obviously could've handled it a lot more diplomatically, which is why this was a mistake.
As for violence, it was the Jews who formed militant groups like Haganah, Irgun and Lehi to eliminate political opposition and intimidate locals.
Only if you consider the negev desert which deemed uncultavable and unusable. Now if the negev desert is excluded the usable land allocated to arabs was substantially bigger. Much of the land allocated to the jews was originally swamp and desert that had been irrigated and fertiled by jewish immigrants since erally 1880s. additionally, the land that had been allocated to The Jews did not include western jerusalem in which had a jewish majority or even Hebron. Jerusalem with a population of 100 thousand jews was to be cut off from the Jewish state, and Hebron was to be part of the Arab state, with no jewish precense, eventhough jews had lived there for thousands of years until the arab massacre of 1929 and 1936 drove them out. There are mutiple contributing factors that come into play when nationas are partitioned and divided up. Its not just whether they live and own the entire land, let me give you some examples. Take Austrailia, this is the population distrubution of Austrlia.
Now take Canada,
As you can see population or the distribution of population are not the only factors considered when a nation is being given the right of entitlement to a land. What is critical in the case of Israel and Palestine, is that land allocated to the jews, they were the majority, and the land allocated to the arabs, they were the majority.
Back to the 1937 partition. it is true that some zionists wanted all of what was Palestine but the zionist leadership by Chaim Weizmann and Ben Gurion accepted the partition plan as the basis for further NEGOTIATIONS over gaining more territory. Now if Arabs had accepted, today the advocates for Palestine had a great case to make. They said a jewish state even the size of a postage stamp is not acceptable.
I think you are refering to some statements by the zionist leadership about terretorial expansion. Talk is talk, action is important. Let me give you some examples, when president Khatami was in power in Iran, he had a deputy named mohammad abtahi. He suggested " soft ethnic cleansing " meaning that Arabs and Kurds of Iran would be employed and send off to central Iran away from their provinces and we would transfer Persians to Kurdish and Arab provinces. Since Persians are the majority and they are the minority Through means of employment and job oppurtinities and interrmarige we would completely eradicate these trouble making ethnicites. This was something that was discussed on the highest levels of government and military but was it ever implimented. No Never. Take Menachim begin for example he said that Eretz Israel is from the nile river to the euphratis, now this was a guy who ten years later gave the entire sinai back to egypt and his party 25 years later pulled out of gaza. Actions speak louder than words. These were all based on assumptions, just a few weeks ago, a member of the parliment in Iran said if we show flexibility on the nuclear issue, tomorrow we have to show flexibility on gay rights. Tomorrow they will ask us to legalize alcohol.
Brother, you have never lived with Arabs, you dont know them, when I hear palestinian arguments it is nothing but redudent pan-arab propoganda. The same arguments saddam hussein used in order to justify his war against Iran. You as an outsider see it as an invasion by zionist i see it as a usual ethnic clash something the middle east is used to.