ID | 177741 |
Title Proper | Fateful betrayal |
Other Title Information | how the reneging of an American commitment helped spark the 1967 War and shape the course of the Arab-Israeli conflict |
Language | ENG |
Author | David, Steven R |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In order to pressure Israel to withdraw from the lands it took following the 1956 Suez War, the United States made two key commitments. It promised Israel it would open the Straits of Tiran if Egypt reimposed a blockade and that if the blockade nevertheless persisted, Israel would have the right to act on its own to ensure free passage of Israeli ships. When Nasser closed the Straits in 1967, President Johnson reneged on both commitments. LBJ chose not to act to end the blockade and warned Israel not to act alone. The failure to live up to these commitments contributed to the outbreak of the 1967 War, hampered efforts to get Israel to give up the territories it conquered as a result of the war, and reinforced in Israel the conviction that it could not depend on others for its security. Israel and the Middle East would be very different places today if those commitments had been fulfilled. |
`In' analytical Note | Israel Affairs Vol. 27, No.2; Apr 2021: p.225-246 |
Journal Source | Israel Affairs Vol: 27 No 2 |
Key Words | Israel ; United States ; Egypt ; Suez Canal ; Dwight Eisenhower ; David Ben-Gurion ; Levi Eshkol ; Tiran Straits ; June 1967 War ; 1956 Suez War |