Saturday, March 20, 2010

1967 War


During the early months of 1966, there were escalating activities against Israel. More and more Israeli civilians were killed in attacks coming from the Syrian and Jordanian borders. The Syrians, from atop the Golan Heights, shelled Israeli towns indiscriminately.

On May 15, 1967, Egyptian forces moved into the Sinai. Ironically, Egypt's move was in reaction to false Soviet information passed to Syria according to which Israel had mobilized forces on her border with Syria in preparation for an invasion of Syria.

On May 18, Egypt expelled the U.N. Peacekeeping forces from Israel's borders. On the 22nd, the Egyptians closed the Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping. On the 25th, encouraged by Egypt - Syria, Jordan, Iraq and Saudi Arabia moved their troops to Israel's borders. Two days later, on the 26th of May, President Nasser of Egypt declared, "Our basic goal is the destruction of Israel. The Arab people want to fight.... The mining of Sharm El Sheik is a confrontation with Israel".

Modeled after the November 1966 Egyptian-Syrian "defence" pact, other pacts were signed by Egypt with Jordan and Iraq on May 30th and June 4th, thereby completing the encirclement of Israel.



The buildup started because of false Soviet intelligence. But once the buildup started, Nasser couldn't quit - Field Marshal Amer Abdel Hakim and his military advisers were pressuring Nasser, along with entire Arab world which was electrified. It snowballed into a "destroy Israel" campaign with the Arab states all joining together in the United Arab Command. None of this was Israel's fault.

Caught up in Arab enthusiasm for military action and encouraged by the lack of response to the closure of the Straits, Egyptian Field Marshal Amer planned for initiating an attack on Israel in late May. He told one of his generals that "This time we will be the ones to start the war." This was counter to Nasser's strategy of pushing Israel to start the war.

6 Days War: Crucial quotes


On 25 May 1967, Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban landed in Washington to see if the U.S. would force the opening of the Straits of Tiran, and to request an official statement from the United States that an attack on Israel would be viewed as an attack on the United States. The U.S. would not.




Eshkol was still looking for a way to avoid war - he sent Meir Amit of the Israeli Intelligence Agency to see the head of the CIA in Washington - to see once again if the U.S. Navy would force the opening of the Straits of Tiran - but the U.S. would not.

With diplomatic options exhausted, focus turned to the new Minister of Defense Moshe Dayan. On June 4, Eshkol convened a critical cabinet meeting, but Dayan took charge. The cabinet voted, 12 ministers were for a pre-emptive strike and only 2 were against. Dayan wrote the official text of the decision. It reads: "It is therefore decided to launch a military strike, aimed at liberating Israel from encirclement, and to prevent an impending assault by the United Arab Command."




Egypt, Syria, and Jordan were involved in the fighting. They were aided by Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Algeria. Israel captured the Sinai peninsula from Egypt, the Golan Heights from Syria and the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan.








June, 1967 partial newsreel



















The UN Security Council understood the ‘67 border was not secure or defensible, when it adopted Resolution 242.

Since the war, Israel has consistently said that in the context of a peace agreement it was prepared to withdraw to the 1967 border "with modifications"; that is, to a new border that meets Resolution 242's requirement of being secure.

After the 1967 War, President Lyndon Johnson also rejected the idea that Israel should withdraw to the pre-war frontier: "There are some who have urged, as a single, simple solution, an immediate return to the situation as it was on June 4....this is not a prescription for peace but for renewed hostilities."

The Joint Chiefs of Staff concluded in 1967: "From a strictly military point of view, Israel would require the retention of some captured territory in order to provide militarily defensible borders." More than three decades later, Lieutenant General (Ret.) Thomas Kelly, director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the Gulf War, reiterated Israel's strategic concern: "It is impossible to defend Jerusalem unless you hold the high ground....An aircraft that takes off from an airport in Amman is going to be over Jerusalem in two-and-a-half minutes, so it's utterly impossible for me to defend the whole country unless I hold that land."





It is terrorism that prevents Israel from leaving the West Bank entirely in Palestinian hands today, for Israelis learned a lesson after leaving Gaza and South Lebanon. A negotiated settlement is still possible; it requires that Palestinian terrorists stop trying to kill Israelis, or that a Palestinian government be in place that is ready, willing, and able to prevent them from succeeding.

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