71. Israel has endlessly struggled to reconcile its dual role as the Jewish state and a democratic state.
72. Israel objects because it believes a flood of Palestinian refugees would change the very nature of the Jewish state.
73. It is a divide that has everything to do with how the Jewish state defines itself.
74. It is clear that the Palestinians attacked Israeli positions guarding the entrance to the Jewish state.
75. Israel fears the inquiry will become a witch hunt manipulated by pro-Palestinian contingents in the international body, which has a history of hostility toward the Jewish state.
76. Israel maintains that Jerusalem is the eternal and indivisble capital of the Jewish state.
77. Israeli Jews have long agreed that Israel is a Jewish state, but they disagree on what that means.
78. Israelis regard it as the eternal and indivisible capital of the Jewish state.
79. Israelis say that would undermine their Jewish state.
80. Israelis say they will not allow the return of the more than three million Arab refugees, something that would change the very nature of the Jewish state.