Masters Thesis

"The Arab-Israeli conflict: foreign intervention in the Arab-Israeli conflict"

The purpose of this paper s to determine whether or not the influence and involvement by countries outside a conflict are helpful or detrimental to those directly involved. The problem in this scenario was the multitude of parties and underlining ulterior motives each may bring to the table. In other words, the Arab-Israeli conflict was not only a struggle between the two sides but rather a debate inclusive of countries with unique approaches and, unfortunately, the lack of a single compromising resolution. The approaches included proposed solutions such as the two-state solution, 2+1 solution, the multilateral solution, the one-state solution and the ultimate deal. Not one of these solutions worked for the nearly 70-year old conflict between the two nations of people. This paper concludes that the best course of action is to encourage the countries and their people to work together and only together, ignoring any outside parties that will likely halt the peace process and potentially further ignite a near century long pattern of war and conflict.

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