After 1949, although there was an armistice
between Israel and the Arab states, the conflict continued and the region
remained imperiled by the prospect of another war. This was fueled by an
escalating arms race as countries built up their military caches and prepared
their forces (and their populations) for a future showdown. In 1956, Israel
joined with Britain and France to attack Egypt, ostensibly to reverse the
Egyptian government's nationalization of the Suez Canal (then under French and
British control). Israeli forces captured Gaza and the Sinai Peninsula, but
were forced to evacuate back to the armistice lines as a result of UN pressure
led by the US and the Soviet Union (in an uncharacteristic show of cooperation
to avert further conflict in the Middle East). By the early 1960s, however, the
region was becoming a hot spot of Cold War rivalry as the US and the Soviet
Union were competing with one another for global power and influence.
In the spring of 1967, the Soviet Union
misinformed the Syrian government that Israeli forces were massing in northern
Israel to attack Syria. There was no such Israeli mobilization. But clashes
between Israel and Syria had been escalating for about a year, and Israeli
leaders had publicly declared that it might be necessary to bring down the
Syrian regime if it failed to end Palestinian commando attacks against Israel
from Syrian territory.
Responding to a Syrian request for assistance,
in May 1967 Egyptian troops entered the Sinai Peninsula bordering Israel. A few
days later, Egyptian president Gamal Abdel-Nasser asked the UN observer forces
stationed between Israel and Egypt to evacuate their positions. The Egyptians
then occupied Sharm al-Shaykh at the southern tip of the Sinai Peninsula and
proclaimed a blockade of the Israeli port of Eilat on the Gulf of Aqaba,
arguing that access to Eilat was through Egyptian territorial waters. These measures
shocked and frightened the Israeli public, which believed it was in danger of
annihilation.
As the military and diplomatic crisis continued,
on June 5, 1967 Israel preemptively attacked Egypt and Syria, destroying their
air forces on the ground within a few hours. Jordan joined in the fighting
belatedly, and consequently was attacked by Israel as well. The Egyptian,
Syrian and Jordanian armies were decisively defeated, and Israel captured the
West Bank from Jordan, the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt, and
the Golan Heights from Syria.
The 1967 war, which lasted only six days,
established Israel as the dominant regional military power. The speed and
thoroughness of Israel's victory discredited the Arab regimes. In contrast, the
Palestinian national movement emerged as a major actor after 1967 in the form
of the political and military groups that made up the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO -- click here for more information).
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