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Copyright
Đ2000 UnitedJerusalem.com,
Inc. P.O.BOX 18 New York, N.Y.10021
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During
the first few months of 1949, direct negotiations were conducted
under UN auspices between Israel and each of the invading
countries (except Iraq which has refused to negotiate with
Israel to date), resulting in armistice agreements which reflected
the situation at the end of the fighting. Accordingly, the
coastal plain, Galilee and the entire Negev were within Israel's
sovereignty, Judea and Samaria (the West Bank) came under
Jordanian rule, the Gaza Strip came under Egyptian administration,
and the city of Jerusalem was divided, with Jordan controlling
the eastern part, including the Old City, and Israel the western
sector.
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1956 Sinai
Campaign
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The
1949 armistice agreements had not only failed to pave the
way to permanent peace, but were also constantly violated.
In contradiction to the UN Security Council resolution of
1 September 1951, Israeli and Israel-bound shipping was prevented
from passing through the Suez
Canal; the blockade of the Straits of Tiran was tightened;
incursions into Israel of terrorist squads from neighboring
Arab countries for murder and sabotage occurred with increasing
frequency; and the Sinai peninsula was gradually converted
into a huge Egyptian military base.
Upon
the signing of a tripartate military alliance by Egypt, Syria
and Jordan (October 1956), the imminent threat to Israel's
existence was intensified. In the course of an eight-day campaign,
the IDF captured the Gaza Strip and the entire Sinai peninsula,
halting 10 miles (16 km.) east of the Suez Canal.
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A
United Nations decision to station a UN Emergency Force (UNEF) along
the Egypt-Israel border and Egyptian assurances of free navigation
in the Gulf of Eilat led Israel to agree to withdraw in stages (November
1956 - March 1957) from the areas taken a few weeks earlier. Consequently,
the Straits of Tiran were opened, enabling the development of trade
with Asian and East African countries as well as oil imports from
the Persian Gulf.
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At
the end of six days of fighting, previous cease-fire lines were
replaced by new ones, with Judea, Samaria, Gaza, the Sinai peninsula
and the Golan Heights under Israel's control. As a result, the northern
villages were freed from 19 years of recurrent Syrian shelling;
the passage of Israeli and Israel-bound shipping through the Straits
of Tiran was ensured; and Jerusalem, which had been divided under
Israeli and Jordanian rule since 1949, was reunified under Israel's
authority.
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From War to War |
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The
war over, Israel's diplomatic challenge was to translate its
military gains into a permanent peace based on UN Security
Council Resolution 242, which called for "acknowledgment
of the sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence
of every state in the area and their right to live in peace
within secure and recognized boundaries free from threats
or acts of force." However, the Arab position, as
formulated at the Khartoum Summit Conference (August 1967)
called for "no peace with Israel, no negotiations
with Israel and no recognition of Israel." In September
1968, Egypt initiated a 'war of attrition,' with sporadic,
static actions along the banks of the Suez Canal, which escalated
into full-scale, localized fighting, causing heavy casualties
on both sides. Hostilities ended in 1970 when Egypt and Israel
accepted a renewed cease-fire along the Suez Canal.
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During
the next three weeks, the Israel Defense Forces turned the tide
of battle and repulsed the attackers, crossing the Suez Canal into
Egypt and advancing to within 20 miles (32 km.) of the Syrian capital,
Damascus. Two years of difficult negotiations between Israel and
Egypt and between Israel and Syria resulted in disengagement agreements,
according to which Israel withdrew from parts of the territories
captured during the war.
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