Showing posts with label lost Arab war of 1967. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lost Arab war of 1967. Show all posts

Monday, 6 October 2025

Palestinian Experience: Cycles of Betrayal

The Palestinian question remains one of the most enduring and unresolved issues of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. From the early days of British colonial involvement to the present-day geopolitical maneuvering, Palestinians have repeatedly found themselves at the intersection of promises made and promises broken — victims of a cycle of disappointment perpetuated by global powers and regional actors alike.

The first major turning point came with the Balfour Declaration of 1917, in which Britain simultaneously pledged support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine while assuring Arabs that their political rights would not be compromised. The contradiction proved devastating, the Mandate period institutionalized inequality, laying the foundation for future conflict.

The Nakba of 1948 further deepened Palestinian displacement and dispossession, as hundreds of thousands were uprooted without meaningful international intervention. Subsequent decades brought renewed hopes — and renewed betrayals.

The 1967 war not only expanded Israeli occupation but also exposed Arab regimes’ hollow rhetoric of liberation.

The Oslo Accords of the 1990s, once hailed as a breakthrough, devolved into a mechanism for managing rather than resolving occupation.

International mediators, notably the United States, often acted less as neutral brokers and more as enablers of the status quo.

Even in recent years, Palestinians continue to confront shifting alliances and selective morality.

The Abraham Accords normalized ties between Israel and several Arab states, effectively sidelining the Palestinian cause.

Each diplomatic milestone elsewhere in the region has come at the expense of Palestinian aspirations for sovereignty and justice.

The persistence of this pattern underscores a grim reality - for over a century, Palestinians have been entangled in a geopolitical web that values stability over justice and negotiation over equity.

Until the cycle of symbolic commitments and political abandonment is broken, the Palestinian experience will remain defined by unfulfilled promises — a history not of reconciliation, but of recurring disappointment.