There seems to be geographical and cultural problems related to this situation that I really don't understand at all. I am wary of making such a direct statement about the whole situation itself, for I feel there may be some things I'm really missing here.
People that have little opportunity due to high population density, and little to no ability to exit are bound to be frustrated. And frustrated people with no outlet and no hope are more likely to turn to violence. That's true of any people.
I typically don't like that kind of language. Every single one of them cannot be intent on killing Israelis. Surely many of them can think for themselves.
I agree, but how do you tell the difference? Plus only a handful of people intent on terrorism makes life very difficult. Fighting asymmetrical war is a mess, as the US and USSR found out in Afghanistan. My real point was you can't (without engaging in literal genocide) kill every terrorist. And in killing terrorists, you tend to kill civilians who weren't against you which then themselves may turn to terror. It's a vicious cycle, yet at the same time you don't want to "give in either". It appears to me to be a very difficult situation and at this point it's been stuck at about the same place for long enough, reconciliation is hard to see.
There was a Poll of Palestinians in general in 2010:
Almost two-thirds of Palestinians (59 percent in the West Bank and 63 percent in Gaza) support the two-state solution (Israel and Palestine) but eventually hope that one state − Palestine − will prevail, according to a survey by pollster Stanley Greenberg for The Israel Project.
Only 23 percent said they believed in Israel’s right to exist as the national homeland of the Jews. However, 50 percent supported recognizing Israel as a Jewish state in order to reach the two-state solution. |
I'd really have to see the place to understand what is going on there geographically. Mostly it all looks the same from the tv screen, it just looks like desert and sand mounds, and hot sunsets.
I think it'd take not only seeing it but talking to both sides to fully understand. I've seen a documentary or two from both positions, and done a bit of study on my own but that's about it. But you can also just get out google maps and zoom in and take a look, see where the farms and population centers are.
However I assume it is a little cooler next to the sea, with more windows toward commerce or aid if needed. The Sinai desert probably is a more rough place.
Indeed, but there's lots of coastline.
I don't know the amount of natural resources in the area, though.
With 1.7 million people crammed into an area 25 miles long and about 5 miles wide with a population growth rate of over 3% per year (7th highest growth rate in the world) and essentially unable to leave, you have a powder keg. The cork needs to be pulled on that bottle before it blows even more explosively.