Arab-Israeli Wars

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Arab-Israeli Wars. Lsn 36 Courtesy of: http://ocean.otr.usm.edu/~w416373/HIS%20360/HIS%20360%20Lsn%2036%20Arab-Israeli%20Wars.ppt. ID & SIG. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Arab-Israeli Wars

Page 1: Arab-Israeli Wars

Arab-Israeli WarsArab-Israeli WarsLsn 36Courtesy of: http://ocean.otr.usm.edu/~w416373/HIS%20360/HIS%20360%20Lsn%2036%20Arab-Israeli%20Wars.ppt.

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ID & SIGID & SIGCamp David Accords, Golan

Heights, Israel, Nasser, OPEC, PLO, preemptive strike, Sadat, Sharon, Sinai, Six Day War, Suez Canal, unity of command, Yom Kippur War, War of Israeli Independence

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Importance of the Middle East Importance of the Middle East during the Cold Warduring the Cold WarColonial legaciesOil reservesIslamic, Jewish, Christian religious

rootsLocation on the southern flank of the

Soviet UnionSoviet and American client states

◦ Presence of advanced weaponsSuez Canal as a vital link between the

Red and Mediterranean Seas

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Creation of IsraelCreation of IsraelJews had long hoped to establish an

independent state in Palestine based on the covenant between Yahweh and Abraham (Genesis 17:7-8)

Arabs rejected this desire with equal passion

After the European anti-Semitism of the 1930s and the Holocaust of World War II, Jews increasingly began migrating to Palestine

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Creation of IsraelCreation of IsraelFollowing World War I and the

dismantling of the Ottoman Empire, the League of Nations’ mandate gave Great Britain control of Palestine

After World War II, the British concluded they could no longer control the escalating violence between Arabs and Jews and turned the problem over to the United Nations

In November 1947, the UN voted to partition Palestine

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Creation of IsraelCreation of Israel

British forces withdrew and on May 14, 1948 the Jews proclaimed the establishment of the state of Israel

The next day the Arabs attacked

David Ben-Guiron, first prime minister of Israel, declares Israel’s independence

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War of Israeli Independence War of Israeli Independence (1948)(1948)

At first the Egyptian air force struck Tel Aviv

Soon after that forces from Egypt, Transjordan, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia all attacked

Most analysts felt the more numerous and better equipped Arabs would overwhelm the Israelis easily

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War of Israeli Independence War of Israeli Independence (1948)(1948)Instead the Israelis fought with great

courage and skillThe Arabs on the other hand frittered

away their numerical advantage with uncoordinated attacks

The war turned into a series of disorganized clashes among small units

After four weeks of fighting, both sides accepted a UN-sponsored ceasefire

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Abdel NasserAbdel NasserIn spite of the ceasefire, tensions remained

highThey increased after 1954 when General

Abdel Nasser, a bold Arab nationalist, gained control of the Egyptian government◦ Nasser first tried to acquire weapons from the

West but when that failed he turned to the Soviet Union

◦ The USSR began indirectly supplying Egypt with weapons through Czechoslovakia

France became upset with Egypt’s providing weapons to insurgents in Algeria so France began supplying Israel

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Suez Canal (1956)Suez Canal (1956)On July 27, 1956,

Nasser unexpectedly nationalized the Suez Canal Zone, hoping to end the British presence there

The British and the French decided to intervene militarily and Israel joined them in attacking Egypt

Between 1859 and 1869, the British constructed the Suez Canal. In 1882 the

British army occupied Egypt to ensure the safety of the canal which was crucial to

British communications with India

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Suez Canal (1956)Suez Canal (1956)On Oct 28 Israel called

up its reserves and then conducted a daring airborne landing deep inside the Sinai east of Milta Pass

At the same time a small force of Israeli infantry and tanks drove across the desert and linked up with the paratroopers on Oct 30

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Suez Canal (1956)Suez Canal (1956) In the north the Israelis

bypassed the strong Egyptian defenses at Abu Agelia and attacked them from the rear

In the south the Israelis attacked Sharm el-Sheikh, the strategic point at the mouth of the Gulf of Aquaba

On Oct 31, British and French bombers began attacking Egyptian airfields and destroyed most of the Egyptian air force

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Suez Canal (1956)Suez Canal (1956)Nasser began fearing his forces

would be cut off in the Sinai and ordered a withdraw

The Israelis continued to advance and halted about 15 km east of the Suez Canal

The British and French landed one and a half infantry divisions near the northern mouth of the canal on Nov 6 and started advancing down the canal

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Suez Canal (1956)Suez Canal (1956)Soon after they began moving, the

British and French accepted a UN ceasefire

It was a decisive Israeli, French, and British victory

Nonetheless, the US, and then the USSR, began demanding the Israelis relinquish the captured Egyptian territory◦ Both the US and Russia were concerned

about the explosiveness of the situation◦ One Soviet diplomat wrote President

Eisenhower, “If this war is not curbed, it… can develop into a third world war.”

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Suez Canal (1956)Suez Canal (1956) In the face of this

international pressure, Israel had no choice but to withdraw

The intervention also cost the British and the French much of their influence in the region

Eisenhower announced the “Eisenhower Doctrine” saying, “The existing vacuum in the Middle East must be filled by the United States before it is filled by Russia.”

President Eisenhower was upset by the Israeli, French, and British actions surrounding the Suez Crisis

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The Six Day War (1967)The Six Day War (1967)

A fragile peace lasted until May 1967 when the Soviet Union informed Nasser (incorrectly as it turned out) that Israel was massing forces for a strike against Syria

Nasser responded to this report by mobilizing his reserves and moving troops into the Sinai

He also pressured the UN to withdraw its peacekeeping forces from the Sinai and soon occupied Sharm el-Sheikh

Nasser and Soviet premier Khrushchev

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The Six Day War (1967)The Six Day War (1967)

With Sharm el-Sheikh in his control, Nasser cut off Israeli shipping through the Gulf of Aquaba

To correct previous problems, the Arabs tried to establish unity of command under Egyptian control◦ In reality there was no

true unity of command of the diverse forces

King Hussein of Jordan and Nasser signing a mutual defense treaty

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The Six Day War (1967)The Six Day War (1967)Israel realized the serious situation,

mobilized its reserves, and launched a preemptive air strike on June 5

The strike hit eleven Egyptian airfields and in a matter of hours destroyed most of the Egyptian air force

Then Israel turned its attention to the other Arab countries◦ By the evening of the second day of the

strike, Israel had destroyed over 400 Arab aircraft and lost only 26 of its own

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The Six Day War (1967)The Six Day War (1967) Israel then used its

central position to defeat first the Egyptians and the Jordanians, and then the Syrians◦ Israel attacked

through the Sinai and reached the Suez Canal, captured Jerusalem, and seized the Golan Heights

On June 10 a UN ceasefire went into effect

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The Six Day War (1967)The Six Day War (1967)

Controlling the Golan Heights, the West Bank, and the Sinai gave Israel depth in its defense that it had never had before

Its highly skilled and coordinated air and ground attacks were in stark contrast to the tentative and piecemeal Arab efforts

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The Six Day War (1967)The Six Day War (1967)However the stunning

Israeli success increased superpower involvement in the region as the US increased its diplomatic support for Israel and Russia began directly shipping weapons to Arab states rather than funneling them through Czechoslovakia

Arab frustration and tensions also gave rise to more activity of the Palestinian Liberation Organization which increasingly used terrorist tactics against the Israelis

In 1969 Yasser Arafat became chairman of the PLO executive committee

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The Yom Kippur War The Yom Kippur War (1973)(1973)In 1970 Nasser died and Anwar

Sadat became president of EgyptSadat was more moderate than

Nasser but that still didn’t keep him from going to war with Israel

However, Sadat’s objective was not the decisive defeat of Israel◦Sadat instead sought a limited

military victory designed to gain larger political objectives

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The Yom Kippur War The Yom Kippur War (1973)(1973)

Sadat had greatly improved Egypt’s military in terms of weapons and quality of soldiers

He also improved coordination with Syria and Jordan

Sadat’s plan was to fight a set-piece battle in which superior Arab numbers would wear down the Israelis Anwar Sadat

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The Yom Kippur War The Yom Kippur War (1973)(1973)Egypt attacked along the entire front

of the Suez Canal on Saturday, Oct 6, both the Jewish Sabbath as well as the holy Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur)

Syria simultaneously attacked in the Golan Heights

By Oct 9 the Egyptians had bridgeheads 10 to 12 km across the canal

There they halted, established a strong air defense umbrella, and waited for the Israeli counterattack

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The Yom Kippur War The Yom Kippur War (1973)(1973)

The Israelis attacked with three armored brigades without infantry or artillery support

The Egyptians were able to defeat these with their Russian Sagger antitank missiles

Israeli tank driving by wounded soldiers

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The Yom Kippur War The Yom Kippur War (1973)(1973)On Oct 14 the Egyptians attacked out

of their bridgeheads The Egyptians penetrated about 15 to

18 kilometers but diluted their effort by attacking in six major thrusts

They also suffered from moving outside of their protective air defense umbrella

Moreover the Israelis benefited from newly arrived TOW antitank missiles from the US◦The Egyptians lost 200 tanks

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The Yom Kippur War The Yom Kippur War (1973)(1973)

With the tide of the battle turning, Israel went on the offensive

Brigadier General Ariel Sharon cleared a corridor through the Egyptian defenses to the east bank of the canal and Israeli divisions began crossing the canal

Israel was also experiencing success in the Golan Heights and captured Mount Hermon on the north end of the heights but could not advance further into Syria

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The Yom Kippur War The Yom Kippur War (1973)(1973)As an Israeli victory became

apparent, both the US and the USSR called for a ceasefire

Russia, fearing the complete destruction of Arab forces threatened to act “unilaterally” and to send troops to enforce a ceasefire

US forces worldwide were placed on alert

On Oct 24, the Israelis reluctantly agreed to a ceasefire

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The Yom Kippur War The Yom Kippur War (1973)(1973)

Israel won the war but Egypt won the peace

Sadat had had enough battlefield success to achieve his strategic objective of destroying the aura of Israeli invincibility

The conflict also showed the political and economic power of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)◦ To punish the US for

supporting Israel, OPEC shut off the flow of oil to the US

Gas lines during the oil embargo

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The Yom Kippur War The Yom Kippur War (1973)(1973)

The superpowers realized how serious the volatile Middle East situation had become and could not afford to let things get worse

The Camp David Accords of 1978 normalized relations between Egypt and Israel and resulted in the signing of a peace treaty in 1979

The Multinational Force and Observers, of which the US is a participant, is the peacekeeping force that helps supervise the Israel-Egypt peace agreement

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Continued ViolenceContinued ViolenceHowever the Israel-Egypt peace treaty

did not solve the longterm problem or end the violence

The PLO has increased in influence and terrorist activity

The PLO and Hezbollah paramilitary forces became increasingly active in Lebanon where a civil war broke out in 1975

In 1978, 1982, and 2006 Israel attacked Lebanon

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Beirut BombingBeirut Bombing

On Sept 29, 1982, US military forces were inserted in Lebanon as part of a multinational peacekeeping force

The Marines were first welcomed but steadily became perceived as being pro-Israeli

The violence culminated on October 23, 1983 with a terrorist bombing that claimed the lives of 241 service members

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Continuing IssuesContinuing IssuesOilIn 2005 Iranian President

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad stated that Israel should be “wiped out from the map”

Palestinian self government and statehood

TerrorismDesert Storm and the Iraq War

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Falklands War