mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-30 09:46:18 -05:00
208 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
208 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
ARAB-ISRAELI WARS
|
|
=================
|
|
|
|
Since the United Nations partition of PALESTINE in 1947 and the
|
|
establishment of the modern state of ISRAEL in 1948, there have
|
|
been four major Arab-Israeli wars (1947-49, 1956, 1967, and
|
|
1973) and numerous intermittent battles. Although Egypt and
|
|
Israel signed a peace treaty in 1979, hostility between Israel
|
|
and the rest of its Arab neighbors, complicated by the demands
|
|
of Palestinian Arabs, continued into the 1980s.
|
|
|
|
THE FIRST PALESTINE WAR (1947-49)
|
|
|
|
The first war began as a civil conflict between Palestinian
|
|
Jews and Arabs following the United Nations recommendation of
|
|
Nov. 29, 1947, to partition Palestine, then still under
|
|
British mandate, into an Arab state and a Jewish state.
|
|
Fighting quickly spread as Arab guerrillas attacked Jewish
|
|
|
|
settlements and communication links to prevent implementation
|
|
of the UN plan.
|
|
|
|
Jewish forces prevented seizure of most settlements, but Arab
|
|
guerrillas, supported by the Transjordanian Arab Legion under
|
|
the command of British officers, besieged Jerusalem. By April,
|
|
Haganah, the principal Jewish military group, seized the
|
|
offensive, scoring victories against the Arab Liberation Army
|
|
in northern Palestine, Jaffa, and Jerusalem. British military
|
|
forces withdrew to Haifa; although officially neutral, some
|
|
commanders assisted one side or the other.
|
|
|
|
After the British had departed and the state of Israel had been
|
|
established on May 15, 1948, under the premiership of David
|
|
BEN-GURION, the Palestine Arab forces and foreign volunteers
|
|
were joined by regular armies of Transjordan (now the kingdom
|
|
of JORDAN), IRAQ, LEBANON, and SYRIA, with token support from
|
|
SAUDI ARABIA. Efforts by the UN to halt the fighting were
|
|
unsuccessful until June 11, when a 4-week truce was declared.
|
|
When the Arab states refused to renew the truce, ten more days
|
|
of fighting erupted. In that time Israel greatly extended the
|
|
area under its control and broke the siege of Jerusalem.
|
|
Fighting on a smaller scale continued during the second UN
|
|
truce beginning in mid-July, and Israel acquired more
|
|
territory, especially in Galilee and the Negev. By January
|
|
1949, when the last battles ended, Israel had extended its
|
|
frontiers by about 5,000 sq km (1,930 sq mi) beyond the 15,500
|
|
sq km (4,983 sq mi) allocated to the Jewish state in the UN
|
|
partition resolution. It had also secured its independence.
|
|
During 1949, armistice agreements were signed under UN auspices
|
|
between Israel and Egypt, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon. The
|
|
armistice frontiers were unofficial boundaries until 1967.
|
|
|
|
SUEZ-SINAI WAR (1956)
|
|
|
|
Border conflicts between Israel and the Arabs continued despite
|
|
provisions in the 1949 armistice agreements for peace
|
|
negotiations. Hundreds of thousands of Palestinian Arabs who
|
|
had left Israeli-held territory during the first war
|
|
concentrated in refugee camps along Israel's frontiers and
|
|
became a major source of friction when they infiltrated back to
|
|
their homes or attacked Israeli border settlements. A major
|
|
tension point was the Egyptian-controlled GAZA STRIP, which was
|
|
used by Arab guerrillas for raids into southern Israel.
|
|
Egypt's blockade of Israeli shipping in the Suez Canal and Gulf
|
|
of Aqaba intensified the hostilities.
|
|
|
|
These escalating tensions converged with the SUEZ CRISIS caused
|
|
by the nationalization of the Suez Canal by Egyptian president
|
|
Gamal NASSER. Great Britain and France strenuously objected to
|
|
Nasser's policies, and a joint military campaign was planned
|
|
against Egypt with the understanding that Israel would take the
|
|
initiative by seizing the Sinai Peninsula. The war began on
|
|
Oct. 29, 1956, after an announcement that the armies of Egypt,
|
|
Syria, and Jordan were to be integrated under the Egyptian
|
|
commander in chief. Israel's Operation Kadesh, commanded by
|
|
Moshe DAYAN, lasted less than a week; its forces reached the
|
|
eastern bank of the Suez Canal in about 100 hours, seizing the
|
|
Gaza Strip and nearly all the Sinai Peninsula. The Sinai
|
|
operations were supplemented by an Anglo-French invasion of
|
|
Egypt on November 5, giving the allies control of the northern
|
|
sector of the Suez Canal.
|
|
|
|
The war was halted by a UN General Assembly resolution calling
|
|
for an immediate ceasefire and withdrawal of all occupying
|
|
forces from Egyptian territory. The General Assembly also
|
|
established a United Nations Emergency Force (UNEF) to replace
|
|
the allied troops on the Egyptian side of the borders in Suez,
|
|
Sinai, and Gaza. By December 22 the last British and French
|
|
troops had left Egypt. Israel, however, delayed withdrawal,
|
|
insisting that it receive security guarantees against further
|
|
Egyptian attack. After several additional UN resolutions
|
|
calling for withdrawal and after pressure from the United
|
|
States, Israel's forces left in March 1957.
|
|
|
|
SIX-DAY WAR (1967)
|
|
|
|
Relations between Israel and Egypt remained fairly stable in
|
|
the following decade. The Suez Canal remained closed to
|
|
Israeli shipping, the Arab boycott of Israel was maintained,
|
|
and periodic border clashes occurred between Israel, Syria, and
|
|
Jordan. However, UNEF prevented direct military encounters
|
|
between Egypt and Israel.
|
|
|
|
By 1967 the Arab confrontation states--Egypt, Syria, and
|
|
Jordan--became impatient with the status quo, the propaganda
|
|
war with Israel escalated, and border incidents increased
|
|
dangerously. Tensions culminated in May when Egyptian forces
|
|
were massed in Sinai, and Cairo ordered the UNEF to leave Sinai
|
|
and Gaza. President Nasser also announced that the Gulf of
|
|
Aqaba would be closed again to Israeli shipping. At the end of
|
|
May, Egypt and Jordan signed a new defense pact placing
|
|
Jordan's armed forces under Egyptian command. Efforts to
|
|
de-escalate the crisis were of no avail. Israeli and Egyptian
|
|
leaders visited the United States, but President Lyndon
|
|
Johnson's attempts to persuade Western powers to guarantee free
|
|
passage through the Gulf failed.
|
|
|
|
Believing that war was inevitable, Israeli Premier Levi ESHKOL,
|
|
Minister of Defense Moshe Dayan, and Army Chief of Staff
|
|
Yitzhak RABIN approved preemptive Israeli strikes at Egyptian,
|
|
Syrian, Jordanian, and Iraqi airfields on June 5, 1967. By the
|
|
evening of June 6, Israel had destroyed the combat
|
|
effectiveness of the major Arab air forces, destroying more
|
|
than 400 planes and losing only 26 of its own. Israel also
|
|
swept into Sinai, reaching the Suez Canal and occupying most of
|
|
the peninsula in less than four days.
|
|
|
|
King HUSSEIN of Jordon rejected an offer of neutrality and
|
|
opened fire on Israeli forces in Jerusalem on June 5. But a
|
|
lightning Israeli campaign placed all of Arab Jerusalem and the
|
|
Jordanian West Bank in Israeli hands by June 8. As the war
|
|
ended on the Jordanian and Egyptian fronts, Israel opened an
|
|
attack on Syria in the north. In a little more than two days
|
|
of fierce fighting, Syrian forces were driven from the Golan
|
|
Heights, from which they had shelled Jewish settlements across
|
|
the border. The Six-Day War ended on June 10 when the UN
|
|
negotiated cease-fire agreements on all fronts.
|
|
|
|
The Six-Day War increased severalfold the area under Israel's
|
|
control. Through the occupation of Sinai, Gaza, Arab
|
|
Jerusalem, the West Bank, and Golan Heights, Israel shortened
|
|
its land frontiers with Egypt and Jordan, removed the most
|
|
heavily populated Jewish areas from direct Arab artillery
|
|
range, and temporarily increased its strategic advantages.
|
|
|
|
OCTOBER WAR (1973)
|
|
|
|
Israel was the dominant military power in the region for the
|
|
next six years. Led by Golda MEIR from 1969, it was generally
|
|
satisfied with the status quo, but Arab impatience mounted.
|
|
Between 1967 and 1973, Arab leaders repeatedly warned that they
|
|
would not accept continued Israeli occupation of the lands lost
|
|
in 1967.
|
|
|
|
After Anwar al-SADAT succeeded Nasser as president of Egypt in
|
|
1970, threats about "the year of decision" were more frequent,
|
|
as was periodic massing of troops along the Suez Canal.
|
|
Egyptian and Syrian forces underwent massive rearmament with
|
|
the most sophisticated Soviet equipment. Sadat consolidated
|
|
war preparations in secret agreements with President Hafez
|
|
al-ASSAD of Syria for a joint attack and with King FAISAL of
|
|
Saudi Arabia to finance the operations.
|
|
|
|
Egypt and Syria attacked on Oct. 6, 1973, pushing Israeli
|
|
forces several miles behind the 1967 cease-fire lines. Israel
|
|
was thrown off guard, partly because the attack came on Yom
|
|
Kippur (the Day of Atonement), the most sacred Jewish religious
|
|
day (coinciding with the Muslim fast of Ramadan). Although
|
|
Israel recovered from the initial setback, it failed to regain
|
|
all the territory lost in the first days of fighting. In
|
|
counterattacks on the Egyptian front, Israel seized a major
|
|
bridgehead behind the Egyptian lines on the west bank of the
|
|
canal. In the north, Israel drove a wedge into the Syrian
|
|
lines, giving it a foothold a few miles west of Damascus.
|
|
|
|
After 18 days of fighting in the longest Arab-Israeli war since
|
|
1948, hostilities were again halted by the UN. The costs were
|
|
the greatest in any battles fought since World War II. The
|
|
Arabs lost some 2,000 tanks and more than 500 planes; the
|
|
Israelis, 804 tanks and 114 planes. The 3-week war cost Egypt
|
|
and Israel about $7 billion each, in material and losses from
|
|
declining industrial production or damage.
|
|
|
|
The political phase of the 1973 war ended with disengagement
|
|
agreements accepted by Israel, Egypt, and Syria after
|
|
negotiations in 1974 and 1975 by U.S. Secretary of State Henry
|
|
A. KISSINGER. The agreements provided for Egyptian
|
|
reoccupation of a strip of land in Sinai along the east bank of
|
|
the Suez Canal and for Syrian control of a small area around
|
|
the Golan Heights town of Kuneitra. UN forces were stationed
|
|
on both fronts to oversee observance of the agreements, which
|
|
reestablished a political balance between Israel and the Arab
|
|
confrontation states.
|
|
|
|
Under the terms of an Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty signed on
|
|
Mar. 26, 1979, Israel returned the Sinai peninsula to Egypt.
|
|
Hopes for an expansion of the peace process to include other
|
|
Arab nations waned, however, when Egypt and Israel were
|
|
subsequently unable to agree on a formula for Palestinian
|
|
self-rule in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. In the 1980s
|
|
regional tensions were increased by the activities of militant
|
|
Palestinians and other Arab extremists and by several Israeli
|
|
actions. The latter included the formal proclamation of the
|
|
entire city of Jerusalem as the Israeli capital (1980), the
|
|
annexation of the Golan Heights (1981), the invasion of
|
|
southern Lebanon (1982), and the continued expansion of Israeli
|
|
settlement in the occupied West Bank. DON PERETZ
|
|
|