2. Six Day War Flashcards
1
Q
What was Fatah (5)
A
- Formed in 1950s
- Aimed to provide leadership for the Palestinians forced out of Palestine in 1947-9
- Carried out low level guerrilla attacks
- Leading member was Yasser Arafat
- It emerged as the largest Palestinian political faction within the Palestine Liberation Organization
2
Q
Longer term cause of the Six Day War: (3)
A
- Creation of the PLO in 1964 - was made to create a Palestinian state
- Cross border attacks by Fedayeen - from Syria, Jordan and Egypt
- Israeli vulnerability - existed for 20 years, still a small country surrounded by hostile arab states: perpetual state of tension and conflict
3
Q
Mid-short term causes of the Six Day War (2)
A
- Aggressive rhetoric/”brinkmanship” - both sides wanted to assert dominance/push the boundaries without starting war
- 1966: mutual defence pact between Syria and Egypt: followed by Syria attacks on Israel and Israel attacks on Jordan (Samu, West Bank)
4
Q
Good example: Samu incident (4)
A
- In response to a Fatah mine attack which killed 3 Israeli men on the West Bank border
- It was a large cross-border assault on the Jordanian-controlled village of Samu in the West Bank
- Israel mobilised an attack of around 3000-4000 soldiers, supported by tanks and aircraft.
- They destroyed many buildings in the In Jordan, and 18 people died and 54 people were wounded.
5
Q
Shorter causes of the Six Day War: (3)
A
- Withdrawal of UNEF (May 1967) - a military and peacekeeping operation established by the United Nations after the Suez War
- False soviet intelligence: indicated that Israel were planning campaign against Syria
- 22 May - closing of the Strait of Tiran
6
Q
What triggered the war: (1)
A
- Pre-emptive air strke against Egygtian, Syrian and Jordanian airfields
7
Q
5 June (4)
A
- Pre-emptive air assult destroying more than 90% of Egyptian air forces
- Similar attack against Syria
- Jordanian forces began shelling West Jerusalem
- Israeli troops advanced into Gaza Strip and Sinai Desert
8
Q
6 June (2)
A
- Captured Gaza strip and all of Sinai Peninsula
- Got up to East bank of the Suez canal
9
Q
7 June (2)
A
- Israeli forces drove Jordanian forces from East Jerusalem and most of West Bank
- Israel and Jordan accepted UN ceasefire
10
Q
8 June (3)
A
- Egypt accepted the ceasefire
- israeli forces won control of all of the West Bank and River of Jordan
- Israeli forces claim Hebron
11
Q
9 June (2)
A
- Syria continued to bomb villages in northern Israel
- Israel captured Golan Heights from Syria
12
Q
10 June (2)
A
- Syria accept the ceasefire
- Gaza Strip, Golan Heights and West Bank now belong to Israel
13
Q
Why did Israel win: (2)
A
- Pre-emptive strike destroyed Egyptian air (135 fighters + entire bomber force) and tank support - left ground forces vulnerable + 22 Jordanian and 55 Syrian planes were destroyed
- Speed of Israel assult - was able to make both Egypt and Jordan accept a ceasefire with 3 days so it could divert all its attention to Syria
14
Q
Israeli consequences (3)
A
- Managed to triple its size - regained East Jerusalem
- Increased security - buffer zones: Golan Heights, West Bank, Sinai
- Emerged as the strongest power in the region
15
Q
Consequences for region (3)
A
- Israel gaining territories (Gazam West Bank, East Jerusalem and Golan Heights) meant there were 1 million Palestinian Arabs living in Israel
- Soviet support for cause increased
- Pan-Arabism declined