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By the time it concluded in September 1939, more than 5,000 Arabs, over 300 Jews and 262 Britons had been killed, and at least 15,000 Arabs were wounded.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Alex Winder|newspaper=Palquest|title=Great Arab Revolt, 1936-1939|url=https://palquest.palestine-studies.org/en/highlight/158/great-arab-revolt-1936-1939|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240129095425/https://palquest.palestine-studies.org/en/highlight/158/great-arab-revolt-1936-1939|archive-date=January 29th 2024|retrieved=June 14th 2024|quote=The combined impact of Britain's military and diplomatic efforts brought the rebellion to an end in the late summer of 1939. Over the revolt's three years, some 5,000 Palestinians had been killed and nearly 15,000 wounded. The Palestinian leadership had been exiled, assassinated, imprisoned, and made to turn against one another. At the same time, the White Paper—despite its limitations—offered certain concessions to the rebels' demands. Whatever gains Palestinians might have made through the revolt, however, were quickly overtaken by the larger geopolitical processes of World War II , and the combined British-Zionist assault on Palestinian political and social life during the revolt had a long-lasting impact.}}</ref> | By the time it concluded in September 1939, more than 5,000 Arabs, over 300 Jews and 262 Britons had been killed, and at least 15,000 Arabs were wounded.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Alex Winder|newspaper=Palquest|title=Great Arab Revolt, 1936-1939|url=https://palquest.palestine-studies.org/en/highlight/158/great-arab-revolt-1936-1939|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240129095425/https://palquest.palestine-studies.org/en/highlight/158/great-arab-revolt-1936-1939|archive-date=January 29th 2024|retrieved=June 14th 2024|quote=The combined impact of Britain's military and diplomatic efforts brought the rebellion to an end in the late summer of 1939. Over the revolt's three years, some 5,000 Palestinians had been killed and nearly 15,000 wounded. The Palestinian leadership had been exiled, assassinated, imprisoned, and made to turn against one another. At the same time, the White Paper—despite its limitations—offered certain concessions to the rebels' demands. Whatever gains Palestinians might have made through the revolt, however, were quickly overtaken by the larger geopolitical processes of World War II , and the combined British-Zionist assault on Palestinian political and social life during the revolt had a long-lasting impact.}}</ref> | ||
Lastly, these strikes resulted in the further deterioration of Palestinian resistance, which gave the Zionists easy access to the Palestinian rural areas | Lastly, these strikes resulted in the further deterioration of Palestinian resistance, which gave the Zionists easy access to the Palestinian rural areas. | ||
=== Partition plan (UN Resolution 181) === | === Partition plan (UN Resolution 181) === |