Israel's entry into the West Bank in 1967 was an act of self-defence.  Its
presence there originated as a result, not of Israeli aggression, but of
Jordanian aggression.



1967: why Israel entered the West Bank 
London - published on 21 October 2004  
Beyond Images Briefing 103
www.beyondimages.info



Summary:

It is often alleged that Israel conquered the West Bank in 1967 in an act of
premeditated territorial expansion.  In fact, the truth is the opposite.
Israel only entered the West Bank when Jordan ignored its appeals to avoid
hostilities on the first day of Israel's war with Egypt, and instead began
intensive bombardment of Israeli civilian locations.  Israel's entry into
the West Bank in 1967 was an act of self-defence.  Its presence there
originated as a result, not of Israeli aggression, but of Jordanian
aggression.

This Briefing elaborates on the points made above.  The information is
extracted from Dr Michael Oren's book 'Six Days of War: June 1967 and the
Making of the Modern Middle East' (Oxford University Press: 2002), which has
been hailed as a definitive historical account of the war. The book is based
on an exhaustive analysis of the archives, the published literature, and
interviews with many of the main players, in Israel, Arab states, the USA
and Russia.    

  
The West Bank 1949 - 1967

Ø After Israel's War of Independence against several Arab states (1948-9),
the West Bank and East Jerusalem came under the control of Jordan.

Ø In 1950 Jordan annexed the West Bank and East Jerusalem, which became
sovereign Jordanian territory. Only Britain and Pakistan recognised this
annexation.  

Ø Many infiltrations by Palestinian terrorist groups into Israel occurred
from the West Bank before 1967.  

Ø Despite these attacks, Israel never permanently moved into the West Bank
for security reasons, let alone to fulfil expansionist ambitions.  (Indeed
its counter-terrorist operation in the West Bank village of Samu in November
1966 was controversial both in Israel and outside).  

   
The build-up to the Six-Day War of June 1967
  
Israel's war against Egypt and Syria in June 1967 was the culmination of
several years of tension, including sustained shelling by Syria of civilian
Israeli targets in the Galilee and unrelenting terrorist attacks against
Israeli civilians by Palestinian groups operating from Syria. 

The immediate causes of the war were, however, various steps taken by Egypt,
led by President Gamel-Abdel Nasser, in May 1967:-

Ø he demanded the withdrawal of UN peacekeepers from the Sinai desert  (the
UN complied). These peacekeepers had been there since shortly after the Suez
war of 1956, acting as a buffer between Egypt and Israel;

Ø he ordered a blockade of the Straits of Tiran, preventing ships from
accessing Israel's southern port of Eilat; and

Ø he ordered a massive Egyptian army to take up forward positions in the
Sinai desert, and accompanied this with frenzied public speeches against
Israel - "we know that closing the Straits of Tiran meant war with Israel….
If war comes it will be total and the goal will be Israel's destruction…"  

Israel perceived these moves to be a prelude to war. Diplomacy aimed at
averting war failed.  By 4 June 1967 combined Arab forces confronting Israel
numbered 900 combat aircraft, 5,000 tanks and 500,000 soldiers. War between
Egypt and Israel broke out on June 5 1967.    


Moshe Dayan's Order: no war with Jordan 

Days before the outbreak of the war, Jordan entered into a mutual defence
treaty with Egypt, and also permitted thousands of Iraqi soldiers to mass on
its territory (Iraq and Israel do not share a border).  Said Iraqi President
Ar'ef: "our goal is clear - to wipe Israel off the face of the map…."

Yet Israel's newly-appointed Defence Minister Moshe Dayan, wishing to
confine hostilities if possible to the imminent battles against Egypt,
ordered the Israeli Army not to open a second front with Jordan in the West
Bank in the event of war.

On 3 June he instructed the head of the Israeli Army  Central Command: "You
must not do anything to entangle Israel with the Jordanians….." (Oren p155)


Israel's appeals to Jordan to avoid war

War broke out on 5 June when Israel responded to the Egyptian military
build-up by launching a surprise attack on Egypt's air force, destroying
most of it on the ground within a matter of hours. 

That same morning, Israel sent a message to Jordan's leader King Hussein via
the US State Department, the UN and the British Foreign Office, saying that,
despite the outbreak of war, it would not attack the West Bank if Jordan
maintained quiet on that front. 


Jordan's offensive against Israel on the first day of the war 

Jordan ignored Israel's appeal to avoid conflict.

That morning, King Hussein received false information from Egypt denying
Egyptian losses and claiming a massive and successful Egyptian attack
against Israel.  Emboldened by this information, Jordan launched immediate
multiple attacks on Israel:-

Ø civilian suburbs of Tel-Aviv were shelled by artillery;

Ø Israel's largest military airfield, Ramat David, was shelled;

Ø Jordanian warplanes attacked the central Israeli towns of Netanya and Kfar
Sava;

Ø thousands of mortar shells rained down on West Jerusalem hitting civilian
locations indiscriminately, including the Hadassah Hospital and the Mount
Zion Church;

Ø Israel's parliament building (the Knesset) and the Prime Minister's
office, each in Israeli-controlled West Jerusalem, were targeted;

Ø 20 Israelis died in these attacks; 1000 were wounded.  900 buildings in
West Jerusalem were damaged. 

"Jerusalem is totally engulfed in war…" reported the British Consul-General
that morning. 

All this happened before Israel reacted militarily against Jordan, or moved
at all into the West Bank. 


Israel responds 

In face of this intensive bombardment that Israel responded, launching
attacks on Jordanian airfields and on Jordanian forces in the Northern West
Bank, and  in the outskirts of Jerusalem.  Thus Israel had to open a second
front in the war, while still fighting the Egyptian army in the Sinai
desert. 

After three days of fighting between Israel and the Jordanians, Israel
conquered the West Bank, and East Jerusalem (including the Old City). It
destroyed much of the Jordanian army and air force and drove the remainder
of the Jordanian military from the West Bank across to the East Bank of the
Jordan.  Thousands of West Bank Palestinians came under Israeli military
control. 


Conclusion

Israel's entry into the West Bank in June 1967 was not part of a
premeditated Israeli plan for territorial expansion.  Quite the opposite:
Israel's own Defence Minister instructed the army not to fight the
Jordanians, or move into the West Bank.  

That position only changed as a result of Jordan's disregard for Israeli
appeals to avoid hostilities, and by its intensive bombardment of Israeli
targets.  

Israel's entry into the West Bank was an act of self-defence.  Its presence
there originates as a result, not of Israeli aggression, but of Jordanian
aggression. 






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