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Wednesday, April 21, 2010 - 5:56 PM
Moshe
Dayan was born in Degania in 1915. He studied science at the
Hebrew
University in Jerusalem. Dayan helped form the Haganah
underground
militia and on the outbreak of the Second World
War was imprisoned by the British authorities in Palestine.
Dayan
was released in 1941 and was recruited into the auxiliary
force supporting
the British Army in Syria.
During the fighting
Dayan was badly wounded and this resulted in him losing his
left eye.
The
Jewish state of Israel was
established
on 14th May 1948 when the British mandate over Palestine
came
to an end. The neighbouring Arab states refused to recognize
Israel
and invaded the country on the 15th May. The war came to an
end in
March 1949. By the time the cease-fire took place Israel had
increased
the control of its land by a quarter. A close associate of David
Ben-Gurion, Dayan was chief operations officer during
the war.
Dayan
became Chief of Staff in 1953 and led the army during the Suez
Crisis in 1956. On
29th October 1956, the Israeli Army invaded Egypt.
Two days later British and French bombed Egyptian airfields.
British
and French troops landed at Port Said at the northern end of
the Suez
Canal on 5th November. By this time the Israelis had
captured
the Sinai peninsula.
President
Dwight
Eisenhower and
his secretary of state, John
Foster Dulles,
grew increasingly concerned about these developments and at
the United
Nations the representatives from the United
States and the Soviet Union
demanded
a cease-fire. When it was clear the rest of the world were
opposed
to the attack on Egypt, and on the 7th November the
governments of
Britain,
France
and Israel
agreed
to
withdraw. They were then replaced by UN troops who policed
the Egyptian
frontier.
In
1959
Dayan, a member of the Labour Party, was elected to the
Knesset and
soon afterwards David
Ben-Gurion made
him Minister of Agriculture. In 1966 Dayan left the Labour
Party to
set up the Rafi Party. The following year he was appointed
Minister
of Defence.
In
May
1967 Arab armies began assembling long the frontiers with
Israel.
At the same time General Gamal
Abdel Nasser ordered
a blockade of the Gulf of Aqaba. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire decided on a
pre-emptive
strike. On 5th June, 1967, the Israeli airforce bombed the
airfields
in Egypt, Syria, Iraq and Jordan. Egyptian tanks were also
destroyed
in Sinai and the Israeli army reached the Suez
Canal and the west bank of the Jordan river on 7th June.
Over
the next three days the Israelis captured the Golan Heights
and territory
in Syria. The Six-Day War
reopened the
Gulf of Aqaba. It also gave Israel control over the West
Bank of Jordan
and the 600,000 Arabs living in that area.
Golda
Meir became prime minister in 1969. In this post she
clashed with
Dayan who wanted to colonize the Arab territories occupied
during
the Six-Day
War. For a while Meir
wanted to
negotiate a peace settlement that would allow the return of
Sinai
to Egypt and
the Golan Heights to Syria.
However, she eventually sided with Dayan.
On
6th
October 1973, Egyptian and Syrian forces launched a surprise
attack
on Israel. Two days later the Egyptian Army crossed the Suez
Canal while Syrian troops entered the Golan Heights.
Israeli troops
counter-attacked on 8th October. They crossed the Suez Canal
near
Ismailia and advanced towards Cairo. The Israelis also
recaptured
the Golan Heights and moved towards the Syrian capital. The October
War came to an end when the United Nations
arranged a cease-fire on 24th October.
Dayan
was blamed for Israel's poor start to the war and was forced
to resign.
However, in 1977 Menachem
Begin appointed him as
Foreign
Minister and in
September 1978 arranged for Begin and Anwar
Sadat of Egypt to signed a peace treaty between the two
countries.
Dayan
published
Diary of the Sinai Campaign
(1966),
Story of My Life (1978)
and Living
With the Bible (1978). Moshe Dayan
died in 1981.
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