You are on page 1of 3

Six Day War:

Buy Now!

Home

Israel vs. the Arabs


June 1967
Background
By Joseph Miranda

T
he Six Day War was the culmination of a series of crises in the Middle East, mainly
focused on Israel, though also reflecting the struggle for geostrategic position among
the various Arab powers. The First Arab-Israeli War, fought in 1947-49, confirmed
the United Nations declaration of Israeli statehood. It also indirectly brought about the
overthrow of several of the Arab governments that had led their countries to defeat.
The most notable of those coups was in Egypt, where the Free Officers Movement seized pow-
er in 1952. One of that movements leaders, Gamal Abdel Nasser, became president (dictator) two
years later and began to promote radical Arab pan-nationalism. He saw Egypt as the center of the
overlapping spheres of the Arab states, the Islamic cultural realm and Africa. His objectives were to

Israeli tanks advancing on the Golan Heights during the Six-Day War.

6 MODERN WAR 4 | MAR APR 2013 MODERN WAR 4 | MAR APR 2013 7
destroy the last vestiges of European easily seized Port Said while the Israelis
colonial power, modernize Egypt and cleared the Sinai; however, US and The 1956 War
establish a unified front of former international opposition was then suf-
colonial countries in Asia and Africa. ficient to force the withdrawal of those The Six Day War wasnt the first time the Israelis fought their way across the
A major realignment of interna- forces from Egypt. With the former Sinai. In 1956, Britain, France and Israel formed an alliance to take on Egypt. The
tional power relations in the Middle imperial powers out of the way, and the governments of all three had reasons to be rid of Nasser. He had nationalized the
East ensued. Nasser cleared the British Israelis back on their side of the border, Suez Canal, a vital strategic thoroughfare for Britain, which still had imperial interests
from Egypt and nationalized the Suez Nasser staked claim to the moral around the globe. France saw Nasser as a threat due to his support of insurgents
Canal in July 1956. He also called on leadership of the entire Arab world. in their colony of Algeria. The Israelis were dealing with Palestinian guerillas who
the Soviet Union to provide military Those events ultimately led the US were infiltrating across the border from Egyptian-administered Gaza.
and economic support. Those moves into a de facto alliance with Israel, as The plan the three countries adopted was codenamed Operation Musketeer.
had considerable impact on the Cold a counterbalance to both the Soviets According to it, the Israelis would drive across the Sinai while an Anglo-French airborne
War, the undeclared conflict between and radical pan-Arab nationalism. and amphibious force, supported by both those nations fleets and airpower, would
the communist powers and the West. While Washington was moving closer land at Port Said and advance up the canal. The political and media cover story for
The United Kingdom had estab- to Jerusalem, though, the Americans that portion of the invasion was that it was a necessity in order to shield the canal
lished the Central Treaty Organization couldnt get too close for fear of fully from being engulfed in the Sinai fighting. The combined effect was hoped to be a
(CENTO) in 1955, made up of a tier alienating otherwise pro-Western destabilization of the Egyptian government that would force Nasser from office.
of states directly facing the USSR in Arab countries. If nothing else, those Musketeer began on 30 October 1956, with the Israelis driving across the Sinai
southwest Asia: Turkey, Iraq, Iran countries controlled petroleum as planned. British and French airpower then quickly destroyed the Egyptian Air Force,
and Pakistan, and supported by the resources vital to the Western world. while their airborne and amphibious units seized Port Said. As has often been the case
United States. Nasser, by bringing In 1958 Nasser masterminded historically, though, military success turned into political disaster. Internationalpar-
the Soviets into Egypt, effectively a union between Egypt and Syria, ticularly Americanpressure forced the Anglo-French expeditionary force to withdraw.
allowed Moscow to leapfrog CENTO. calling the new federation the The Israelis, thereby left isolated, then also evacuated the Sinai. A United Nations
Egyptian ports were also opened to United Arab Republic (UAR). With Emergency Force (UNEF) eventually moved into the peninsula as peacekeepers.
the Soviet Navy, thereby allowing it to the founding of the UAR came the Both sides drew lessons from the 1956 war. For the Egyptians, they proved to be the
potentially challenge the US Navys implication the other Arab states wrong ones. Nasser was hailed as a hero throughout the Arab world for having successfully
Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean. would ultimately join in order to form defied the former imperial powers of Europe. The defeat of the Egyptian Army in the Sinai
The turning point came later in one combined regional hegemon. was attributed throughout the Arab world as having been due to the need to fight Britain
1956, when Britain and France, allied Underneath the faade of unity and France as well as Israel. The deficiencies of the Egyptian armed forces were glossed
with Israel, attempted to retake the there was considerable infighting over in the euphoria about the political outcome that had won the day for Nasser.
Suez Canal in Operation Musketeer. among Syrias and Egypts leaders. As for the Israelis, they were impressed by the power of the Anglo-French

b
The Anglo-French expeditionary force Nassers status was also disputed by air forces as well as that demonstrated by their own mobile units on the
the heads of the other Arab countries, ground. Over the next decade the IDF built up its airpower and armor, and
many of whom had their own claims then used them as a war-winning combined arms force in 1967.
to make. For example, in 1960 the
Syrians sponsored an attempt to
assassinate King Hussein of Jordan,
who was considered by them as too
pro-Western. The attempt came close
to killing the monarch, who nearly
went to war in retaliation. Further,
Egyptian dominance of the UAR was
increasingly resented by the Syrians,
who finally withdrew from it in 1961.
As for Nasser, since hed declared
himself the moral leader of the Arab
world, he couldnt afford to back down
without loss of prestige, something
that might then easily rebound into a
coup or revolt against him in Egypt.
Consequently he upped the rhetoric
against Israel, reaffirming his creden-
tials as the most militant of the Arabs.
Even so, throughout the early 1960s
Nasser wasnt really preparing for war
against Israel. Much of the Egyptian
Army was tied down in Yemen, sup-
porting that countrys government in
a civil war against deposed royalists.
Nasser was also realistic enough to
understand that, until there was a
single united Arab military command
An Israeli armor unit mobilizing for deployment. Israeli civilian militia mobilize to guard their rural kibbutz just prior to the start of the war.

8 MODERN WAR 4 | MARAPR 2013 MODERN WAR 4 | MARAPR 2013 9


Nassers rivals exploited that Buy Now!
gap between his stated policy and
the situation on the ground. They
claimed that, while Nasser made Home
propaganda about liberating
Palestinians living under Israeli rule,
he wasnt willing to go to war over
the issue. In comparison, the Syrians
were actively supporting Palestinian
raids into Israel from their territory.
Tensions escalated to the point where,
in April 1967, the Israelis launched
some air attacks in retaliation.
Seeing the Syrians taking the lead
in the Arab world, Nasser upped the
ante. In May 1967 he ordered UNEF
out of the Sinai, and on 22 May
declared a blockade of the Straits
of Tiran in order to effectively close
Israels southern port of Eilat. He also
ordered mobilization of the Egyptian
armed forces, moving several divisions
into forward positions in the Sinai. Egyptian planes destroyed on the ground during the first Israeli air strikes.
Syria and Jordan followed suit with
their own mobilizations. Iraq, Kuwait,
Saudi Arabia and Algeria also offered lize and accept the blockade of Eilat, The Brink
troops to support the coming war. as well as the threat of Arab armies
In response the Israelis mobilized, converging on Israel, seemed only to As June 1967 began, Nasser seemed
Always a popular subject for Western photojournalists in those days: a unit of Israeli female soldiers during the initial mobilization. but in doing so they faced a dilemma. invite further aggression. The Israeli to have the upper hand, with the Arab
While the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) government, with Prime Minister world rallying behind him; however,
(preferably under Egyptian control), a him was that, in the wake of the 1956 Nations Emergency Force (UNEF). was more combat effective than its Levi Eshkol and Minster of Defense there were weaknesses in his ability to
war against Israel couldnt succeed. crisis, hed agreed to the demilitariza- With UNEF stationed along the Sinai- Arab opponents, its full mobilization Moshe Dayan in the lead, therefore actually wage war. Theoretically there
Throughout the Arab world, tion of the Sinai, withdrawing the Israeli frontier, Nasser couldnt actually couldnt be maintained for long with- decided to preemptively launch what was a United Arab Command (UAC),
Nassers rivals were maneuvering for Egyptian military from the entire launch a war against the Israelis no out considerable negative impact on already appeared inevitablewar.
position. One of the main criticisms of peninsula and allowing in the United matter how hot his rhetoric became. the countrys economy. Yet to demobi- continued on page 13

Numbers

The relative sizes of the forces engaged in the Six Day War for static defense. All told, then, the Arabs had the edge in 1967 Armed Forces Comparisons
appeared to give the advantage to the Arab powers. There were the number of divisions, but that seeming superiority was
numerous other factors, however, which mitigated against that. deceptive due to the reasons described in the main article.
Among all the Arab countries, only Egypt, Syria and Jordan were As for equipment, both sides had various advantages and Country Military Manpower Tanks Combat Aircraft Artillery Pieces Warships
fully committed to the war, and even the Egyptians had a portion of disadvantages. For example, the Egyptians deployed modern
their armed forces off fighting in Yemen suppressing an insurgency. Soviet armored fighting vehicles, while the Israelis made do Israel 264,000 800 250 200 22
The Iraqis committed the equivalent of a division, along with a few with World War II-era American halftracks. Again, though,
aircraft, to fight on the Jordanian front. The Saudis, Algerians and that simple comparison doesnt account for the vastly Egypt 240,000 1200 450 600 60
Kuwaitis sent only token forces that had no impact on the fighting. superior Israeli training in handling their older vehicles.
Among the opposing ground forces a good comparison can be The Israelis had another advantage in superior logistics. Syria 50,000 400 120 315 15
made in terms of divisional equivalents, the common combined For example, around half the tanks in the Syrian Army were
arms independent maneuver formation for that era. The Egyptians out of commission at any one time, even during peacetime, Jordan 50,000 200 40 72 0
had seven divisions in the Sinai. The Syrians fielded three owing to maintenance issues. The IDF was able to keep
brigade groups, which were administrative agglomerations a higher percentage of its vehicles up and running. Iraq 70,000 400 200 500 15
of brigades each roughly equivalent in size (but not combat Such discrepancies were especially noticeable when it
effectiveness) to divisions. The Jordanians didnt use the division came to airpower. The Israeli Air Force was highly trained and Saudi Arabia 50,000 100 20 ? ?
echelon but, figuring three brigades as being roughly equal to well supported logistically. Each aircraft could fly a mission,
one division, they could put together roughly three divisions. land, be serviced, and then be ready to fly again more quickly Algeria 60,000 100 100 ? ?
The Israelis had available about 25 brigades. From them than any of the Arab air forces. Often single Israeli aircraft flew

b
they organized five ugdah (division-sized task forces averaging up to six sorties (missions) per day. That was further facilitated Kuwait 5000 24 9 ? ?
three brigades each), with various other brigades committed by the Israelis having more than one pilot per aircraft, thereby
independently. They could also mobilize several more brigades minimizing the impact of pilot exhaustion. In comparison, Arab Note. Numbers vary depending on sources. Israeli combat aircraft include converted trainers. Warships includes patrol boats.
from reservists, as well as using kibbutz (communal farm) militia aircraft were doing well if they could fly two sorties per day.

10 MODERN WAR 4 | MARAPR 2013 MODERN WAR 4 | MARAPR 2013 11

You might also like