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Forty years have now passed since the "Six Day War"
which resulted in Israeli control over the Sinai Peninsula, Gaza Strip, West
Bank, eastern Jerusalem and the Golan Heights. Some media reports already refer to the fortieth
anniversary of the "occupation."
The goal of this special report is to remind
HonestReporting subscribers of the events of 1967
and Israel's administration of the disputed territories. We ask that you PRINT
OUT AND PASS ON
this special report to help you respond to some of the bias and misconceptions
that will inevitably flood the international media over the coming weeks.
How Did the War Begin?
While June 5 marks the day that Israel
initiated its military operation, it is important to note that the immediate
Arab threats to wipe out Israel began in the preceding months. It is also critical to
take the causes of
the Six Day War into account before analyzing the resulting status of land taken
as a result. International Law makes a clear distinction between
land "occupied" during a war of aggression and land taken as a result of a
defensive war.
This distinction explains why so many enemies of Israel are
using this anniversary to rewrite history and falsely claim that the Six Day War
was initiated by Israel in order to illegally capture land.
Who
Initiated Hostilities?
Egypt and Syria Demand War:
"We aim at the destruction of
the State of Israel. The immediate aim: perfection of Arab military might. The
national aim: the eradication of Israel."
Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser,
1965
"Our
forces are now entirely ready not only to repulse the aggression, but to
initiate the act of liberation itself, and to explode the Zionist presence in
the Arab homeland. The Syrian army, with its finger on the trigger, is
united....I, as a military man, believe that the time has come to
begin a battle
of annihilation."
Syria's Defense Minister Hafez Assad (later to be Syria's President)
Israel Reaches Out for Peace:
"Even as the cannons roar we
shall not cease from longing for peace. Our only desire is to remove from
our borders any threat of sabotage and every danger of aggression, to safeguard
our security and the fullness of our rights."
Israeli Prime Minister Levy Eshkol, June 5, 1967
Israel's Arab neighbors
unquestionably made clear their intentions to attack Israel. Their stated goal
had nothing to do with a border dispute, but rather the
destruction of the State of Israel. Yet, Israel's response was always the same:
A
simple desire to live in peace.
Prior to the war Israel was the
victim of numerous terrorist attacks launched from
Jordan, the Gaza Strip and Lebanon. Continuous Syrian shelling from the Golan
Heights on to Israeli towns and villages further highlighted Arab intentions.
(For more details on these military and terrorist attacks against Israel,
see resources appearing at the end of this report.)
All along the 1948 armistice
lines, Arab armies engaged in an enormous military build-up. Egypt ordered
United Nations peacekeepers stationed in the Sinai to leave. Shortly
before the start of the war, Israel was confronted by an Arab force of some
465,000 troops, over 2,880 tanks and 810 aircraft. The armies of Kuwait,
Algeria, Saudi Arabia and Iraq were also contributing troops and arms to the
Egyptian, Syrian and Jordanian fronts.
Israel is
Attacked and Captures Territory
Egypt Initiates War With
Israel: Israel Captures Sinai and Gaza
Egypt
chose to further escalate hostilities. The narrow Straits of Tiran were closed to Israeli shipping
creating a naval blockade, preventing Israeli ships from reaching the port of Eilat -
in violation of international law and an act of war.
The United States was clear in its policy. According to U.S. President
Johnson:
If a single act of folly was more
responsible for this explosion than any other it was the arbitrary and dangerous
announced decision that the Strait of Tiran would be closed. The right of
innocent maritime passage must be preserved for all nations.
Faced with potential annihilation, Israel chose to launch a pre-emptive strike, destroying the Egyptian and Syrian air forces while still on the ground.
Syria Initiates War With
Israel: Israel Captures the Golan Heights
From the start of the war, Syria
took part in the fighting with planes and artillery, continuously shelling
Israeli villages near the border and attacking some of them with infantry and
armour. There were no serious Israeli counter attacks until 9 June, when the
Israel Defense Forces, now freed from other fronts, attacked the Syrian army
entrenched on the Golan Heights. In fierce fighting, they stormed the Heights
and occupied the town of Kuneitra on the afternoon of June 10.
Jordan Initiates War With Israel:
Israel Captures Jerusalem and the West Bank
Despite the many terrorist attacks
that had emanated from the Jordanian-occupied West Bank, Israel specifically told King
Hussein that Jordan would not be attacked unless Jordan chose to enter the war.
As the fighting raged, Prime Minister Levy Eshkol sent the following message to
King Hussein of Jordan:
We are engaged in defensive
fighting on the Egyptian sector, and we shall not engage ourselves in any action
against Jordan, unless Jordan attacks us. Should Jordan attack Israel, we shall
go against her with all our might.
However, upon receiving
information (later proving false) that Israel was being defeated, King Hussein
ordered that Israel be attacked. On June 5:
-
civilian suburbs of Tel-Aviv were
shelled by artillery;
-
Israel's largest military
airfield, Ramat David, was shelled;
-
Jordanian warplanes attacked the
central Israeli towns of Netanya and Kfar Saba;
-
thousands of mortar shells rained
down on West Jerusalem hitting civilian locations indiscriminately, including
the Hadassah Hospital and the Mount Zion Church;
-
Israel's parliament building (the
Knesset) and the Prime Minister's office, each in Israeli-controlled West
Jerusalem, were targeted;
-
20 Israelis died in these
attacks; 1000 were wounded. 900 buildings in West Jerusalem were damaged.
Only after coming under
fire and sustaining casualties did the Israeli military respond, resulting in the
re-unification of
Jerusalem and control of the entire West Bank. The record is clear, this acquisition of
land was the direct result of Jordanian, not Israeli military aggression.
One week
later, having successfully defended herself, Israel was in control
of the West Bank, the Sinai Peninsula, the Gaza Strip, and the Golan Heights.
The Legal
Status of Land Taken in 1967
1) Israel's Legitimate Claims:
Some
parts of the West Bank would have been part of Israel as defined by the
UN Partition Plan, but were overrun in 1948. There were Jewish communities such as Kfar Etzion, not
to mention the Old City of Jerusalem, that fell in the fighting of 1948. Jews were either killed or expelled from
these areas conquered by invading Arab armies.
The League of Nations Mandate explicitly recognized
the right of Jewish settlement in all territory allocated to the Jewish national
home in the context of the British Mandate. The British Mandate covered the area
that is currently Israel, all the disputed territories (and even what is now
Jordan). These rights under the British
Mandate were preserved by the United Nations, under Article 49 of the UN Charter.
2) Defensive War:
Military
control of the West Bank was clearly the result of a defensive war. According to
Dr. Dore Gold, Director of the
Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs:
International jurists generally
draw a distinction between situations of "aggressive conquest" and territorial
disputes that arise after a war of self-defense. Former State Department Legal
Advisor Stephen Schwebel, who later headed the International Court of Justice in
the Hague, wrote in 1970 regarding Israel's case: "Where the prior holder of
territory had seized that territory unlawfully, the state which subsequently
takes that territory in the lawful exercise of self-defense has, against that
prior holder, better title."
3) Forced Transfer of Civilian
Populations:
There are mistaken claims that
Israel's control of these territories violates the Fourth Geneva Convention. The
Fourth Geneva Convention was adopted August 12, 1949 by the international
community in response to Nazi atrocities during World War II. It
outlaws the resettlement by an occupying power of its own civilians on territory
under its military control, specifically "individual or mass forcible
transfers."
The only forced mass transfers
were against Jewish communities in 1948. After the Six Day War, Israel did not
expel a single Arab community from land it now controlled.
The "Occupying Power" may also
not "deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population" to
territories taken in conflict. Israel has never forced Jews to move to the
territories. However, there is no obligation for Israel to prevent
voluntary settlement by its civilian population.
4) United Nations
Security Council Resolution 242
After the war, there were many
opinions as to what a peace agreement should require of the parties. The view of
the Soviet Union and Arab bloc was that Israel should be forced to withdraw
from all lands taken in the war. However, this view did not prevail in the
United Nations.
According to the
American Israel Cooperative Enterprise:
The most controversial clause in
Resolution 242 is the call for the "Withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from
territories occupied in the recent conflict." This is linked to the second
unambiguous clause calling for "termination of all claims or states of
belligerency" and the recognition that "every State in the area" has the
"right to live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries free from
threats or acts of force."
The resolution does not make Israeli withdrawal a prerequisite for Arab action.
Moreover, it does not specify how much territory Israel is required to give
up. The Security Council did not say Israel must withdraw from "all the"
territories occupied after the Six-Day war. This was quite
deliberate. The
Soviet delegate wanted the inclusion of those words and said that their
exclusion meant "that part of these territories can remain in Israeli hands."
The Arab states pushed for the word "all" to be included, but this was rejected.
The Arab League then rejected the entire resolution. Nonetheless, it was
approved by the Security Council.
The resolutions clearly call on the Arab states to make peace with Israel. The
principal condition is that Israel withdraw from "territories occupied" in 1967,
which means that Israel must withdraw from some, all, or none of the territories
still occupied. Israel withdrew from 95% of the territories when it
gave up the Sinai and then Gaza. It has already partially, if not wholly,
fulfilled its obligation under 242.
In addition, the Arab reaction to
the resolution was not to make peace but instead the "Three No's" of the
Khartoum Conference of August 1967:
Forty Years of Suffering?
Since
launching a terror war in 2000, Palestinian living standards have undoubtedly
declined as the Palestinian leadership adopted violence ahead of nation building
and investing in civil society. Contrary to some claims in the media,
"occupation" is not the primary reason for the current plight of the
Palestinians. As Dr Mitchell Bard, Director of the
Jewish
Virtual Library points out:
When Israel captured the West
Bank and Gaza Strip in 1967, officials took measures to improve the conditions
that Palestinians had lived under during Jordan's 19-year occupation of the West
Bank, and Egypt's occupation of Gaza. Universities were opened, Israeli
agricultural innovations were shared, modern conveniences were introduced, and
health care was significantly upgraded. More than 100,000 Palestinians were
employed in Israel, and were paid the same wages as Israeli workers, which
stimulated economic growth.
Despite the collapse of the PA economy from the last five years of war,
Palestinian Arabs are still better off than many of their neighbors. The most
recent Human Development Report from the United Nations ranked the PA 102nd in
terms of life expectancy, educational attainment and adjusted real income out of
the 177 countries and territories in the world, placing it in the "medium human
development" category along with most of the other Middle Eastern states (only
the Gulf sheikdoms are ranked "high"). The PA was ranked just 12 places below
Jordan and one behind Iran; it was rated ahead of Syria (#105), Algeria (#108),
Egypt (#120), and Morocco (#125).
Forty Years
On
Forty years after a war of
survival left it in control of disputed territories, Israel continues to seek a
negotiated peace with both the Palestinians and the Arab world.
Israel had every legal and moral
right to defend herself in 1967 and has legitimate rights within the territory
that is under her control today. If you see a media report that
misrepresents the events of 1967, use this primer and the following links to
respond to media bias:
The
Jewish Virtual Library
Palestine Facts
Camera's Six Day War Website
www.sixdaywar.co.uk
British
Israel Communications and Research Center
(BICOM)
HonestReporting. com
Thank you for your involvement in responding
to media bias.