Middle East Timeline

  • Balfour Declaration

    Balfour Declaration
    Agreement saying that if the Jews helped support Britian during WW1 and if they win Britain would give Palestine to the Jews. It led to large migrations of Jews to Palenstine because they thought they were going to be able to live there. This incresed tension in the Middle East, more specifically between the Palestinians and the Zionists.
  • Palestine becomes British Mandate

    Palestine becomes British Mandate
    After WW1, Britian got control of Palenstine and separated it into parts for Jewish and Arab settlements. This caused more Jews to migrate in, and that made the Palestinians Arabs mad because their land was being taken away, increasing tensions in the Middle East between the two nations.
  • Holocaust

    Holocaust
    presecution of nearly 6 million Jews by Hitler and the Nazi's in WWII. This affected the Middle East because it forced Jews to get out of Eastern Europe. They went back to Palenstine which began the tensions between the Jews and Palenstinian Arabs.
  • US Relations With Israel

    US Relations With Israel
    The Us and Israel have a strong alliance with one another based at the fact that they share the same values. Whe Israel was fighting against the Palestinians the US would always help aid them in hopes to spread their democratic traditions. The US presidents continue to have a friendship with Israel and support eachother.
  • Six-Day War

    Six-Day War
    After the Suez Canal, the UN had established a presence in sensitive border areas of the Middle East. Many Arabs were angered and they didn't want international involvment in the region. Israel decided to initiate military action. Fought against neighboring countries of Egypt, Syria, and Jordan the Six Day War resulted with Palenstine losing more control of parts of their Holy Land.
  • Yom Kippur War

    Yom Kippur War
    Egyptian president Anwar Sadat decided to attack Israel on the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, Yom Kippur because he wanted to regain territory lost during the Six Day War. With the aid of U.S. weapons, Jewsih forces managed to remobilize and repulse the Arabs.
  • Arab Oil Embargo

    Arab Oil Embargo
    Israel was carved from the UN controlled territory in Palenstine. Believing that their people rightfully deserved the Holy Land, this act angered many Arabs. In years following, the US continually supported the new state during Arab-Isreal conflicts. Retaliating, OPEC prohibited the sale of oil to countries which supported Israel. This caused U.S oil shortages and sparked the start of plans for the Alaskan Pipeline.
  • Jimmy Carter becomes president

    Jimmy Carter becomes president
    During Jimmy Carter's presidency, he attempted to help relations in the Middle East. An example would be the Camp David Accords where Egypt and Israel made peace.
  • Alaskan Pipeline

    Alaskan Pipeline
    Created as an attempt to limit shortages due to the Arab Oil Embargo. Running from Prudhoe Bay in northern Alaka to Valdez in the south, the line consists of more than 800 miles of pipe. Although the Alaskan Pipeline has served to increase American domestic oil supplies, the United States today still relies primarily on exports from politically unstable countries in the middle East.
  • Camp David Accords

    Camp David Accords
    Jimmy Carter invited the Israeli Prime Minister and the Egyption President to Camp David to discuss peace between the two. This was a small step towards improving relations among the Middle East countries.
  • Iran Hostage Crisis

    Iran Hostage Crisis
    The Iran Hostage Crisis was when 52 Americans were held hostage for 444 days after a group of Iraian students took over the U.S, Embassy in Tehran. This ruptured the U.S. - Iran relations in the Middle East.
  • Soviets Invade Afganistan

    Soviets Invade Afganistan
    The Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan to support the communist government. Adding Afghanistan to the Soviet Union sphere of influence would bring Russia closer to the Middle East and influence other Arab nations.
  • Ronald Reagan Becomes President

    Ronald Reagan Becomes President
    Reagan was involved when the Iran Hostage Crisis happened. He also tried to make peace in the Middle East by having his own peace proposal for the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. This plan followed the goals established at Camp David.
  • George H.W. Bush Becomes President

    George H.W. Bush Becomes President
    As President during a period of conflict in the Middle East, George H.W. Bush greatly influenced many issues. A prime concern of his term was the Gulf War. By leading Desert Storm and sending military aid to the region after Iraq had invaded Kuwait, the U.S. commanded the withdrawal of Iraqi troops from the oil-rich nation. Successfully organizing a coalition or over 30 countries to force Iraqi retreat, Bush demonstrated that the U.S. would use its power to halt aggression in the Middle East.
  • Desert Storm

    Desert Storm
    Attempting to control the world’s oil supply, Iraqi dictator, Saddam Hussein launched an invasion of Kuwait. Bordering the country, Saudi Arabia faced the threat of Iraqi infiltration and asked for U.S. intervention. Dependent on oil, the U.S. carried out Operation Desert Shield, an effort to build troops to defend the region. When Hussain did not retract his army, the offensive developed into Operation Desert Storm. The U.S. bombed Iraqi military targets. In 42 days, Iraqi forces were defeated.
  • Clinton becomes president

    Clinton becomes president
    Clinton was actively involved in Arab and Jewish negotiations. Loss of the Holy Land and ongoing US support for Israel factored into many Arab nations refusing to recognize Israel as an independent state. During the 1993 Oslo Accords, Israel agreed to Palenstinian self-rule in the Gaza Strip and West Bank in return for Palestinian recognition of Israels right to exist. This was a fragile step toward a more peaceful co-existence in the Middle East.
  • World Trade Center 1993

    World Trade Center 1993
    In an effort to create a mass of American causalities, a group of radical Islamic fundamentalists intended to demolish both World Trade Centers. Detonating a 1,336 bomb beneath the North Tower, 6 were killed and over 1000 injured. The attack was traced to Islamic extremist Osama bin Laden. Issues from the Soviet-Afghan war and the presence of Western forces on “sacred Muslim soil” angered bin Laden. The bombing exemplified how the turmoil of the Middle East made its way onto American soil.
  • Cetrazbat 1997

    Cetrazbat 1997
    Central Asian Battalion was formed by Kazakhstan, Kygystan and Uzbekstan as a peacekeeping unit to provide peace and stability in Central Asia. It held international military exercises in Central Asia to learn the tactics of other nations. The first set of exercises were in 1997 and held in Uzbekstan and Kazakhstan where 8 countries participated.
  • Embassy Bombing in Tanzania

    Embassy Bombing in Tanzania
    Killing 11 and wounding 85, the bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Tanzania was plotted as vengeance by the Egyptian Islamic Jihad. Linked to Osama bin Laden and the Middle East terrorist group Al-Qaeda, a truck explosion damaged buildings in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The bombing marked the eight year anniversary of American forces entering Saudi Arabia. President Bill Clinton reacted to this attack by ordering Operation Infinite Reach, cruise missile strikes toward Sudan and Afghanistan.
  • Embassy bombing in Kenya

    Embassy bombing in Kenya
    This was a series of attacks on U.S Embassies by truck bomb explosions killing over 200 people. This brought terrorist group. al-Qaeda to the U.S's attention for the first time. This started anti-terrorism in the U.S where they began trying to eliminate terrorists in the Middle East
  • USS Cole

    USS Cole
    While refueling at the Yemini port of Aden, the USS Cole suffered serious damages. Due to the explosion of a nearby boat by suicide bombers, a forty foot hole marred the waterline of the Navy Destroyer. The terrorist attack killed 17 members of the ship's crew and wounded 39 others. The violence was attributed to the Islamic extremist group Al-Qaeda. Angered by Western involvement in the Middle East, the fundamentalists also resented Israeli control of the Holy Land.
  • George W. Bush Becomes President

    George W. Bush Becomes President
    Bush was president during the attacks on 9/11 by Al-Qaeda. Bush supported a plan inherited by Reagan where they tried to build a political relationship with Iraq and the Middle East where they had hopes to offset Iranian power.
  • World Trade Center

    World Trade Center
    This was a terrorist attack on the U.S. in NYC, Washington DC, and in PA where over 3,000 people were killed. The changed relations between the US and the Middle East causing US to try to promote a democratic change in the Middle East.
  • Barack Obama becomes president

    Barack Obama becomes president
    On February 2, 2009, President Obama signed a memorandum directing more than $20 million for 'urgent refugee and migration needs in Gaza. One day after Obama was sworn in as President $900 million was pledged from Hillary Clinton to help the rebuilding process in Gaza. Also in a speech addressing Muslims in Cairo, Egypt, President Obama said, "Palestinians must abandon violence.
  • Iraq 2001-Present

    Iraq 2001-Present
    Throughout recent years, many terrorist groups have had ties and operations within the middle eastern country of Iraq. For example, Al-Qaeda in Iraq, or AQI, is an affiliate of the core group responsible for the attacks agaisnt the U.S. on September 11, 2011. Originated from AQI is fundamentalist group, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS. In 2014, ISIS separated from Al-Qaeda in Iraq and is now locked in a battle of leadership of the global Jihadist Movement.
  • ISIS

    ISIS
    Islamic extremist organization that seeks the establishment of a transnational Islamic caliphate. The group controls territory in four countires, including Iraq, Syria, Libya, Nigeria and other areas in the Middle East.