Die territoriale Kontrolle Israels/Palästinas nach dem britischen Rückzug und vor der Intervention der arabischen Verbündeten

Von Deltarianus

22 Kommentare

  1. Powerful_Chicken_742 on

    I’m curious, what would have happened had the Arab armies never invaded?

  2. So it’s basically the most Jewish populated areas, as well as some parts that linked those areas (like Deir Yassin).

  3. GustavoistSoldier on

    This comment section is surprisingly civil for an Israel-Palestine post

  4. heytherehellogoodbye on

    „Arab allies intervention“ i.e. total war invasion with explicit goal of extermination

  5. Civil War? The vast majority of Jewish combatants were foreign migrants that arrived between 1918 and 1946

    This is called invasion.

  6. History shakes out in weird ways. The Kurds just a few hundred miles east had more of land base for the formation of a legitimate state and were left „drawn and quartered after Sykes Picot pulled out crayons post Ottoman collapse.

  7. The Arabs gambled and lost everything by choosing to reject a two-state solution at first. Although I think what Israel is doing is completely wrong and I don’t support their colonialist policies, it is a kind of irony that the rejection of two states by Arabs resulted in only one state – the one they did not want.

  8. comicallycontrarian on

    „Jewish-occupied“ instead of Jewish-populated

    You knows Jews actually lived there right? Like they didnt just invade from Europe in 1948, the majority of Jews had been living there for a few generations by that point.

    The fact it doesn’t show Egyptian-occupied Gaza, or Jordan-occupied West Bank, like this is just inaccurate

  9. Idk if this map is very accurate… my family is from Acre which is shown as fully Orange here even though it was 99% Palestinians before the Nakba. It portrays a perspective which shows, that the land was empty and the Jews just built on it from scratch even though my town was brutally destroyed. Here’s the Wikipedia excerpt of what happened:

    “Israel’s Carmeli forces attacked on May 16 and, after an ultimatum was delivered that, unless the inhabitants surrendered, ‚we will destroy you to the last man and utterly,‘ the town notables signed an instrument of surrender on the night between 17 and 18 May 1948. Sixty (60) bodies were found and about three-quarters of the Arab population of the city (13,510 of 17,395) were displaced.”

    I don’t know it just rubs me the wrong way that we are not even shown with a point on the map. Just orange paint of a Jewish controlled area like it was empty beforehand…

  10. Burroflexosecso on

    Weird how this map includes the illegaly occupied Golan Heights as a claim of territorial integrity

  11. bodycornflower on

    lots of zionist bots here concern trolling about what would happen to the poor israelis if they lost this war as if we don’t literally live in the timeline where israel got its way and that way included two genocides one in 1947 and one before our own eyes. it’s also telling that they all think the war started the same day israel was declared because they dgaf about facts theyre just here to parrot agenda

  12. Snoutysensations on

    „Territorial control“ needs a little clarifying.
    The Israeli side had a well organized government with relatively clear chains of command.
    The Palestinian side never established broadly accepted leadership with anything resembling a national control system.  There were certainly well known leaders but the Beduin of the south and the Christians of Nazareth and the Druze of the north were never under a unified command from Jersualem.  This is part of why Jordan had such an easy time outright annexing the West Bank after the 48-49 war.  

  13. FingerBlaster70 on

    “Jewish occupied territory” on a map of Judea and Jerusalem is wild work

  14. tiananmensquarechan on

    Why does Palestine need to pay for European anti-Semitism? Why not establish the Jewish state in Thuringia? After all, it was the first region the n@zis won in.

  15. Original-Task-1174 on

    Just to say that before the Zionist movement, there were even more Christians than Jews in Palestine, and Palestinian Arabs made up about 90% of the population.

  16. Primary_Iron3429 on

    “Intervention” is such a polite word to describe 7 armies attacking “to drive the Jews into the sea”.

  17. This is historically relevant in that pre-wwi/wwii newcomers, jewish people resided in these areas and of course near Jerusalem. They were ALL called Palestinians. That is just common knowledge for anything between the last 500 years till postwwi/wwii stuff

  18. Competitive_Twist149 on

    It was stolen from the Israelites by the Roman’s and given to Palestinians, who had a treaty with hitler to help kill the Jews. You support Palestine you support Nazi’s and Hitler

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