Answer:
A. Six Day War and Yom Kippur War
- After enormous tensions between Israel and its neighbors, the war began in early June 1967 in which Israel occupied the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt, the West Bank and East Jerusalem of Jordan, and the Golan Plateau of Syria in just six days.
- This conflict is known as the Six-Day or the June War and was fought from June 5 to June 10, 1967, between Israel on one side and Egypt, Jordan and Syria on the other.
- The Yom Kippur War, also known as the Ramadan War or the October War was fought between Israel and a coalition of Arab countries led by Egypt and Syria between October 6 and 26, 1973. They invaded the Sinai and the Golan Heights, occupied by Israel in 1967.
B. According to the Camp David Accords, the Israeli Prime Minister has pledged to withdraw from the entire Sinai Peninsula and to recognize the "Land for Peace" principle. The treaty provided for temporary, limited autonomy for the Palestinians as a transitional solution on the way to their own state. But for the sake of general rejection, this did not happen. Only 14 years later, in Oslo, the Palestinians were ready for a similar deal with Israel.
- Politicians from around the world attended the signing of a peace treaty at the White House.
- There was a lack of representatives of the Arab world: above all a representative of the Palestinians.
- The Palestinians opposed the treaty, condemning it as a separate peace and boycotting Egyptian President Sadat. But he did not allow it to be shaken.
E. He was killed.
- Two years after the signing of the Camp David Accords, Egyptian President Anwar Es-Sadat was killed by Islamist opponents of peace in Cairo.
- Still, Camp David is a historic event, and peace between Israel and Egypt continues to this day.
- No love was born of it, but there was a twisted relationship between the two countries.
its wealth from oil made it difficult to gain independence and maintain good relations with the West
Answer:
Lizette Alvarez is a journalist living in Miami.
As the daughter of Cuban refugees, I was raised to resist oppression and champion liberty. But when the Black Lives Matter movement roared into South Florida, asking us to end systemic racism and police brutality, I was caught off guard. I hadn’t fully realized the subtle ways that racism thrives in Miami, my hometown, a place dominated by a white Latino supermajority. We are a community built by people who have fled despotism in our home countries, yet we have ignored injustice in black neighborhoods a few miles away. And I — educated, liberal, supposedly enlightened — have been as guilty as anyone.
Yes.
<span>He implemented a set of fair laws that set the basic structure for many governing bodies form thousands of years.</span>
Answer:
honestly the translation of this made no sense so show the full question.
Explanation: