The Suez War of 1956
In the fall of 1948, the UN Security Council called on Israel and the Arab states to negotiate armistice agreements. Egypt agreed, but only after Israel had routed its
army and driven to El Arish in the Sinai. At that time, the British were ready to defend Egypt under an Anglo-Egyptian treaty.
Rather than accept the humiliation of British assistance, however, the Egyptians met the Israelis at Rhodes.
UN mediator Ralph Bunche brought them together at the conference table and was later honored with a Nobel Peace Prize.
He warned that any delegation that walked out of the negotiations would be blamed for their breakdown.
By the summer of 1949, armistice agreements had been negotiated between Israel and Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. Iraq, which had also fought against Israel, refused to follow suit. Bunche succeeded at Rhodes because he insisted on direct
bilateral talks between Israel and each Arab state.
Meanwhile, on December 11, 1948, the General Assembly adopted a resolution calling on the parties to negotiate peace and creating a Palestine Conciliation Commission (PCC), which consisted of the
United States, France and Turkey. All Arab delegations voted against it.
After 1949, the Arabs insisted that Israel accept the borders in the 1947 partition resolution and repatriate the Palestinian refugees before they would negotiate an end to the war they had initiated. This was a novel approach that they would use after subsequent
defeats: the doctrine of the limited-liability war. Under this theory, an aggressor may reject a compromise settlement and
gamble on war to win everything in the comfortable knowledge that, even if he fails, he may insist on reinstating the status
quo ante.
Egypt had maintained its state of belligerency with Israel after the armistice agreement was signed. The first manifestation
of this was the closing of the Suez Canal to Israeli shipping. On August 9, 1949, the UN Mixed Armistice Commission upheld Israel's complaint that Egypt was illegally
blocking the canal. UN negotiator Ralph Bunche declared: "There should be free movement for legitimate shipping and no vestiges
of the wartime blockade should be allowed to remain, as they are inconsistent with both the letter and the spirit of the armistice
agreements."
On September 1, 1951, the Security Council ordered Egypt to open the Canal to Israeli shipping. Egypt refused to comply.
The Egyptian Foreign Minister, Muhammad Salah al-Din, said early in 1954:
The Arab people will not be embarrassed to declare: We shall not be satisfied except by the final obliteration of Israel
from the map of the Middle East (Al-Misri, April 12, 1954).
A New Type of Warfare
In 1955, Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser began to import arms from the Soviet Bloc to build his arsenal for the confrontation
with Israel. In the short-term, however, he employed a new tactic to prosecute Egypt's war with Israel. He announced it on
August 31, 1955:
Egypt has decided to dispatch her heroes, the disciples of Pharaoh and the sons of Islam and they will cleanse the land
of Palestine....There will be no peace on Israel's border because we demand vengeance, and vengeance is Israel's death.
These "heroes" were Arab terrorists, or fedayeen, trained and equipped by Egyptian Intelligence to engage in hostile action on the border and infiltrate
Israel to commit acts of sabotage and murder. The fedayeen operated mainly from bases in Jordan, so that Jordan would
bear the brunt of Israel's retaliation, which inevitably followed. The terrorist attacks violated the armistice agreement
provision that prohibited the initiation of hostilities by paramilitary forces; nevertheless, it was Israel that was condemned
by the UN Security Council for its counterattacks.
The escalation continued with the Egyptian blockade of the Straits of Tiran, and Nasser's nationalization of the Suez Canal in July 1956. On October 14, Nasser made clear his intent:
I am not solely fighting against Israel itself. My task is to deliver the Arab world from destruction through Israel's
intrigue, which has its roots abroad. Our hatred is very strong. There is no sense in talking about peace with Israel. There
is not even the smallest place for negotiations.
Less than two weeks later, on October 25, Egypt signed a tripartite agreement with Syria and Jordan placing Nasser in command
of all three armies.
The continued blockade of the Suez Canal and Gulf of Aqaba to Israeli shipping, combined with the increased fedayeen
attacks and the bellicosity of recent Arab statements, prompted Israel, with the backing of Britain and France, to attack
Egypt on October 29, 1956.
Israeli Ambassador to the UN Abba Eban explained the provocations to the Security Council on October 30:
During the six years during which this belligerency has operated in violation of the Armistice Agreement there have occurred
1,843 cases of armed robbery and theft, 1,339 cases of armed clashes with Egyptian armed forces, 435 cases of incursion from
Egyptian controlled territory, 172 cases of sabotage perpetrated by Egyptian military units and fedayeen in Israel.
As a result of these actions of Egyptian hostility within Israel, 364 Israelis were wounded and 101 killed. In 1956 alone,
as a result of this aspect of Egyptian aggression, 28 Israelis were killed and 127 wounded.
One reason these raids were so intolerable for Israel was that the country had chosen to create a relatively small standing
army and to rely primarily on reserves in the event of war. This meant that Israel had a small force to fight in an emergency,
that threats provoking the mobilization of reserves could virtually paralyze the country, and that an enemy's initial thrust
would have to be withstood long enough to complete the mobilization.
Israel Routs Egypt
When the decision was made to go to war in 1956, more than 100,000 soldiers were mobilized in less than 72 hours and the
air force was fully operational within 43 hours. Paratroopers landed in the Sinai and Israeli forces quickly advanced unopposed
toward the Suez Canal before halting in compliance with the demands of England and France. As expected, the Egyptians ignored
the Anglo-French ultimatum to withdraw since they, the "victims," were being asked to retreat from the Sinai to the west bank
of the Canal while the Israelis were permitted to stay just 10 miles east of the Canal.
On October 30, the United States sponsored a Security Council resolution calling for an immediate Israeli withdrawal, but
England and France vetoed it. The following day, the two allies launched air operations, bombing Egyptian airfields near Suez.
Given the pretext to continue fighting, the Israeli forces routed the Egyptians. The IDF's armored corps swept across the desert, capturing virtually the entire Sinai by November 5. That day, British and French paratroops
landed near Port Said and amphibious ships dropped commandoes on shore. British troops captured Port Said and advanced to
within 25 miles of Suez City before the British government abruptly agreed to a cease-fire.
The British about-face was prompted by Soviet threats to use "every kind of modern destructive weapon" to stop the violence
and the United States decision to make a much-needed $1 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund contingent on a
cease-fire. The French tried to convince Britain to fight long enough to finish the job of capturing the Canal, but succeeded
only in delaying their acceptance of the cease-fire.
Though their allies had failed to accomplish their goals, the Israelis were satisfied at having reached theirs in an operation
that took only 100 hours. By the end of the fighting, Israel held the Gaza Strip and had advanced as far as Sharm al-Sheikh
along the Red Sea. A total of 231 Israeli soldiers died in the fighting.
Ike Forces Israel to Withdraw
President Dwight Eisenhower was upset by the fact that Israel, France and Great Britain had secretly planned the campaign
to evict Egypt from the Suez Canal. Israel's failure to inform the United States of its intentions, combined with ignoring
American entreaties not to go to war, sparked tensions between the countries. The United States subsequently joined the Soviet
Union (ironically, just after the Soviets invaded Hungary) in a campaign to force Israel to withdraw. This included a threat to discontinue all U.S. assistance, UN sanctions and expulsion from the UN (see exchanges between Ben-Gurion and Eisenhower).
U.S. pressure resulted in an Israeli withdrawal from the areas it conquered without obtaining any concessions from the
Egyptians. This sowed the seeds of the 1967 war.
One reason Israel did give in to Eisenhower was the assurance he gave to Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion. Before evacuating Sharm al-Sheikh, the strategic point guarding the Straits of Tiran, Israel elicited a promise that the
United States would maintain the freedom of navigation in the waterway. In addition, Washington sponsored a UN resolution
creating the United Nations Emergency Force (UNEF) to supervise the territories vacated by the Israeli forces.
The war temporarily ended the activities of the fedayeen; however, they were renewed a few years by a loosely knit
group of terrorist organizations that became know as the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO).
Source:
www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org