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How to understand Israel's national boundaries?

As the subject, I was forced to answer the question myself, and I will delete this answer when a better answer appears. I will stay in Jerusalem for two weeks. When preparing, I noticed that the 1949 green line did not include the old city on the map, especially the MtScopus was drawn separately, and then I noticed that there were many dotted lines and dotted lines on the Israeli border. As a tourist, I want to know what these routes mean now, such as whether there are entry and exit restrictions. It would be better if we could learn about the military, administrative and political significance by the way and understand the news more accurately at ordinary times. This is purely a matter of reading maps and telling historical facts, but it has been led to politics by some people. @ 丫丫丫丫丫丫丫丫丫丫𰶯丫丫丫丫𰶯𰶯𰶯𰶯200111 In fact, he seems to know nothing-the so-called "supplement" later did not involve any lines on today's map. He questioned other people's experiences with his "feelings" under the answer of @DichErbarme. Please open another topic and vent your political hormones! ! My own answer below is based on my own investigation, @ Payson's information, and the experience of @ Dicherbame and friends around me, but it is definitely incomplete. Please be sure to add it to your friends. = = On Google Maps, the Israeli border has the following dotted lines: the border with the West Bank and the border between the southwest corner and the Gaza Strip. This is the armistice line of the first Middle East war delineated by 1949, also known as the "green line". There are two lines at the junction of the northern Golan Heights and Syria. The west is the Green Line between Syria and Israel, and the east is the armistice line of Yom Kippur War, also known as the Purple Line, which is delineated at 1974, and the Golan Heights is in between. Other parts of the Israeli border are also part of the Green Line (or other lines), but they are marked with solid lines on the map. I think this means that these boundaries are relatively less controversial, and there is no ability to sort them out, so I won't say much. These boundaries are sometimes drawn as two lines, with the neutral zone/demilitarized zone/United Nations-controlled zone in the middle. This Google map may not be rigorous enough. Compared with the information provided by @ Payson, the two closely spaced lines in the title map, one in the east is the real green line, and the other in the west is the Israeli border before the Six-Day War 1967 (actual control line? )。 In some places, the structure is complicated and I don't know what it means. In the armistice agreement of 1949, it is required to ensure "the normal operation of science and technology and the teaching of humanitarianism", so the scopes Hill area was singled out and became an Israeli enclave. The meaning of the green line (the following contents may be inaccurate and incomplete, I hope someone will add): The green line is the international line as the basis for handling disputes. It is generally recognized internationally that the Israeli occupation east of the Green Line is illegal. Israel itself calls the controlled area east of the Green Line "occupied area", not part of its own administrative division. The wall was also built with reference to the Green Line, but only 20% of it was built along the Green Line, mostly to the east of the Green Line, surrounding some major Jewish settlements. But there are a few exceptions: Israeli law recognizes Jerusalem as the capital of the whole of Israel, including Jerusalem east of the Green Line. After the Six-Day War, Jerusalem was indeed under the control of Israel. Therefore, the Green Line is only a concept in Jerusalem, and citizens and tourists can pass freely. Jewish settlements in the Golan Heights are also governed by Israeli law. But these have not been recognized by the United Nations. The old city is not within the Green Line. A friend who went to play a few years ago said that the host sent armed bodyguards, but in recent years, the public security has improved, and the friend who went said that bodyguards are no longer needed. According to @maxSonic's experience, in fact, many places east of the Green Line can be visited at will. Show all