Although Israel's independence on May 14, 1948, triggered the first
full-scale war, armed conflicts between Jews and Arabs had been frequent
since Great Britain received the League of Nations mandate for
Palestine in
1920. From 1945 to 1948 Zionists
waged guerrilla war against British troops and against Palestinian Arabs
, and they had made substantial gains by 1948. The 1948-49 War reflected the
opposition of the Arab states to the formation of the Jewish state of Israel
in what they considered to be Arab territory. |
The 1956 War
|
The 1967 war
After a period of relative calm, border incidents between Israel and Syria,
Egypt, and Jordan increased during the early 1960s, with Palestinian guerrilla
groups actively supported by Syria. In
May, 1967, President Nasser, his prestige much eroded through his
inaction in the face of Israeli raids,
requested the withdrawal of UN forces from Egyptian territory, mobilized units
in the Sinai, and closed the Gulf of
Aqaba
to Israel. Israel (which had no UN forces stationed on its territory)
responded by mobilizing.
The escalation of threats and provocations continued until
June 5, 1967, when Israel launched a
massive air assault that crippled Arab air capability. With air
superiority protecting its ground forces, Israel controlled the Sinai peninsula
within three days and then concentrated on the Jordanian frontier, capturing
Jerusalem's Old City (subsequently annexed), and on the Syrian border, gaining
the strategic Golan Heights. The war, which ended on June 10, is known as the
Six-Day War.
The Suez Canal was closed by the war, and Israel declared that it would not
give up Jerusalem and that it would hold the other captured territories until
significant progress had been made in Arab-Israeli relations. The end of active,
conventional fighting was followed by frequent artillery duels along the
frontiers and by clashes between Israelis and Palestinian guerrillas.
The 1973 war
During 1973 the Arab states, believing that their complaints against
Israel were going unheeded (despite the mounting use by the Arabs of threats to
cut off oil supplies in an attempt to soften the pro-Israel stance of the United
States), quietly prepared for war, led by Egypt's President Anwar
Sadat . On Oct.
6, 1973, the Jewish holy day Yom Kippur, a two-pronged assault on Israel was
launched. Egyptian forces struck
eastward across the Suez Canal and pushed the Israelis back, while the Syrians
advanced from the north. Iraqi forces joined the war and, in addition, Syria
received some support from Jordan, Libya, and the smaller Arab states.
The attacks caught Israel off guard, and it was several days before the country
was fully mobilized; Israel then forced the Syrians and Egyptians back and, in
the last hours of the war, established a salient on the west bank of the Suez
Canal, but these advances were achieved at a high cost in soldiers and
equipment.
Through U.S. and Soviet diplomatic pressures and the efforts of the United
Nations, a tenuous cease-fire was implemented by Oct. 25. Israel and Egypt
signed a cease-fire agreement in November, but Israeli-Syrian fighting continued
until a cease-fire was negotiated in 1974. Largely as a result of the diplomatic
efforts of U.S. Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger , Israel
withdrew back across the Suez Canal and several miles inland from the east bank
behind a UN-supervised cease-fire zone. On the Syrian front too, Israeli
territorial gains made in the war were given up.
After the war Egyptian and Syrian diplomatic relations with the United
States, broken since the 1967 war, were resumed, and clearance of the Suez Canal
began. The 1973-74 War brought about a major shift of power in the Middle East
and ultimately led to the signing of the
Camp David Accords
.
The 1982 war
In 1978 Palestinian guerrillas, from their base in
Lebanon , launched
an air raid on Israel; in retaliation, Israel sent troops into S Lebanon to
occupy a strip 4-6 mi (6-10 km) deep and thus protect Israel's border.
Eventually a UN peacekeeping force was set up there, but occasional fighting
continued. In 1982 Israel launched a
massive attack to destroy all military bases of the
Palestine Liberation Organization
in S Lebanon and, after a 10-week siege of the Muslim sector of West
Beirut
, a PLO stronghold, forced the Palestinians to accept a U.S.-sponsored plan
whereby the PLO guerrillas would evacuate Beirut and go to several Arab
countries that had agreed to accept them. Israel withdrew from Lebanon in
1985 but continues to maintain a Lebanese-Christian-policed buffer zone north of
its border.
1948
Jewish settlers proclaim the state of
Israel
(May). British troops leave. Fighting breaks out with Arab neighbours, ending in
October 1949.
Some 700,000 Palestinians flee or
are driven
from what had been
British-mandate Palestine.
Israel
annexes large tracts of land. Jordan and Egypt hold onto the West Bank and Gaza
Strip respectively. Control of Jerusalem is split between
Israel
in the west and Jordan in the east.
1956
Egypt nationalises Suez Canal (July). Britain, France conspire to recapture the
canal with Israeli help.
Israel
invades Sinai
in October: Britain and France
"intervene" and occupy canal zone, but withdraw under US pressure (November).
5 June 1967
Israel
seizes Egyptian, Syrian and Jordanian territory in a pre-emptive attack that
became known as the Six Day War. The
Sinai
Peninsula and Gaza Strip are captured from Egypt, the Golan Heights from Syria
and the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan.
Israel's
successes doubled the size of the territory it controlled.
6 October 1973
Egypt and Syria attack Israeli
forces in Sinai
and Golan Heights on Jewish fast
of Yom Kippur. They make initial gains but retreat after Israeli
counter-attacks.
September 1978
Egypt, Israel
and the United States sign Camp
David accords.
Israel
agrees to hand back
Sinai
to Egypt in return for peace and normalisation.
Full Text: Camp David
Accords
(From
Israel
embassy site)
6
June 1982
Israel
re-invades Lebanon
to drive out Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Liberation Organisation.
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The crisis also greatly improved Nasser's standing in the Arab world and helped to promote pan-Arabism. It also hastened the process of decolonization as the remaining colonies of both Britain and France became independent over the next several years. In reaction to the war, the Egyptian government expelled almost 25,000 Egyptian Jews and confiscated their property, and sent approximately 1,000 more Jews to prisons and detention camps.[1]
Several Egyptian "security experts" and "political analysts" interviewed by Arab TV stations after the Sharm e-Sheikh bombings on Saturday claimed that Israel and Jews were behind the carnage.
The accusations were made despite a claim of responsibility by a group citing ties to al-Qaida, according to a statement posted on an Islamic Web site.
Similar charges have been made against Israel in the past, particularly after the suicide attack at the Taba Hilton Hotel in October 2004 and after the 9/11 attacks in New York and Washington.
However, most Egyptian government officials refrained from accusing Israel, pointing out that extremist Muslim groups were most likely responsible for the attacks.
Shortly after the attacks, Egypt's state-run television interviewed retired army general Fuad Allam. He said that he was almost certain that Israel was behind the attacks at Sharm e-Sheikh and Taba.
According to Fuad, investigations have shown that the mastermind of the Taba attack was a Palestinian "apparently linked to Israel's security forces." He added: "I'm almost certain that Israel was also behind this attack because they want to undermine our government and deal a severe blow to our economy. The only ones who benefit from these attacks are the Israelis and the Americans."
Allam's remarks were reaired several times during
the day by Egyptian TV. Other
commentators who made similar charges against Israel included political figures
and prominent journalists.
Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya, the Arab world's leading satellite TV stations,
also hosted a number of commentators who claimed that Israel was behind the
latest wave of terror in Egypt.
Dia Rashwan, an expert on Islamic terror
groups, said in a phone interview with Al-Arabiya from Cairo: "Israel is the
only country that benefits from this."
Dismissing the theory that al-Qaida was behind the attacks, Rashwan explained: "We are giving al-Qaida more credit than it deserves. What happened here negates the possibility that the attacks were carried out by ordinary elements. This is the work of an extraordinary element – one that benefits from such attacks. All the available details indicate that only the Israelis could have done this."
Majdi Birnawi, another "security expert," told Al-Jazeera that "I believe that Mossad or some other [Israeli] security organization carried out this attack."
Birnawi said he believed Saturday's attacks were in response to the attack at the Taba Hilton, in which 12 Israelis were killed. "Everyone knows that there are no Israelis in Sharm e-Sheikh," he said. "There are only Western tourists there. That's why it's wrong to assume that the perpetrators were targeting Israelis."
Egyptian experts say Mossad could be behind bombings |
7/25/2005 3:12:00 PM GMT |
Several Egyptian security experts and political analysts said that the Mossad, Israel's spy agency, was behind Saturday's attacks on the Red Sea resort of Sharm al-Sheikh. Similar accusations were made against Israel in the past, particularly after last year's attack at the Taba Hotel in October and after the 9/11 attacks in the United States. Saturday's pre-dawn blasts killed more than 64 people, according to Egypt's health ministry, although hospital officials put the toll as high as 88. Many Egyptian security officials said at least one car used in the bombings had special plates indicating it had come from the Israeli border at Taba on the Sinai peninsula. On Saturday, Egypt's state-run television interviewed retired army general Fuad Allam, who said that he was confident that Israel played a key role in Sharm al-Sheikh bombings. Fuad also said that investigations showed that the mastermind of the Taba attack, which killed more than 34 people, was a Palestinian "apparently linked to Israel's security forces." He added: "I'm almost certain that Israel was also behind this attack because they want to undermine our government and deal a severe blow to our economy. The only ones who benefit from these attacks are the Israelis and the Americans." Other Egyptian political figures and prominent journalists and editors interviewed by Arabic TV channels made similar accusations. Dia Rashwan, a political expert, said that Israel is the only country that benefits from such attacks. Dismissing the idea that "al-Qaeda" was behind the bombings, Rashwan explained: "We are giving al- Qaeda more credit than it deserves. What happened here negates the possibility that the attacks were carried out by ordinary elements. This is the work of an extraordinary element – one that benefits from such attacks. All the available details indicate that only the Israelis could have done this." Majdi Birnawi, another security expert, said that the Mossad was behind the attacks. "I believe that Mossad or some other [Israeli] security organization carried out this attack," Birnawi said he believed the Sharm el-Sheikh bombings were related to the Taba attacks, in which 12 Israelis were killed. "Everyone knows that there are no Israelis in Sharm e-Sheikh," he said. "There are only Western tourists there. That's why it's wrong to assume that the perpetrators were targeting Israelis." Six Pakistani suspects Meanwhile, news agencies reported that Egyptian police are searching for six Pakistani citizens in connection with Sharm el-Sheikh bombings. They have distributed photographs of the six men. Egyptian authorities have already arrested close to 100 people in connection with the attacks, and Interior Minister Habib al-Adly said investigators already had leads. The deadly bombings were strongly condemned by the Egyptian public. More than 1,000 Egyptian hotel workers, bedouin sheikhs and foreign dive school instructors rallied through Sharm el-Sheikh yesterday to denounce the attacks. "There is no God but God and terrorism is the enemy of God," chanted the Egyptian protesters, including hotel chefs, technicians and road sweepers, as they marched along the main road of Sharm el-Sheikh. Source |
The Egyptian analyst also added that Israel wants undermine its own
disengagement plan - yet another reason, he said, to carry out attacks in Egypt.
The analyst told Al-Jazeera there is an
abnormal concentration of Israelis visiting in Sinai and that they pose a
security threat.
"Why are Israelis able to enter Sinai without undergoing stringent security
checks?" the analyst asked.
He went on to add that the United States also has a motive to carry out such an
attack.
The analyst closed his Al-Jazeera interview by saying that Israel wants to prove
what he described as its fallacious claim that terrorism is spreading throughout
the region.
Following the bombings, rumors spread across Egypt indicating that the
bomb-laden cars used to attack the Sinai
resorts sported Israeli license plates.
Egyptian security sources said at least one
car that blew up on Saturday had special plates indicating it had
crossed over from Israel at the Taba border
terminal on the Sinai Peninsula. The veracity of this report was not
confirmed.