Israel Claimed Its 1967 Land Conquests Weren't Planned. 


 


Declassified Documents Reveal Otherwise


 


Contrary to the claim that Israel [sic] suddenly found itself holding
territories after the June '67 war, 

declassified documents reveal detailed directives drawn up by the IDF ahead
of the prolonged policing mission it would be tasked with

https://www.haaretz.com/

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Adam Raz

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Jun. 3, 2021 11:12 PM

For years, most Israeli historiography maintained that the country’s
decision makers were taken by surprise by the fruits of the victory that
were harvested with lightning speed in June 1967. “The war,” Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan said, three days after its conclusion, “developed and
rolled into fronts that were not intended and were not preplanned by anyone,
including by me.” On the basis of these and other statements, the view took
root that the conquest of the territories in the war was the result of a
rapid slide down a slippery slope, a new reality that no one wanted.

However, historical documentation stored in the Israel State Archives and
the Israel Defense Forces and Defense Establishment Archives in recent years
demands that we cast doubt on the credence of that view. The information
cited here constitutes just a small part of a wide range of documentation
being held in governmental archives relating to the conquest of the
territories, and which remain classified. Long-term stubborn persistence was
necessary to effect the declassification of some of the documents on which
this article is based.

The documents describe detailed preparations that were made in the military
in the years before 1967, with the intention of organizing in advance the
control of territories that the defense establishment assessed – with high
certainty – would be conquered in the next war. A perusal of the information
indicates that the takeover and retention of these areas – the West Bank
from Jordan, the Sinai Peninsula and Gaza Strip from Egypt, and the Golan
Heights from Syria – were not a by-product of the fighting, but the
manifestation of a strategic approach and prior preparations.

The IDF’s meticulous preparations to conquer the territories had already
begun early in the 1960s. They were, in part, the product of the short and
bitter Israeli experience in the conquest – and subsequent evacuation – of
the Sinai Peninsula and the Gaza Strip in the Sinai War of 1956. It’s
against this background that we should understand the document titled
“Proposal to Organize the Military Government,” written by the head of
operations, Col. Elad Peled, in June 1961, and presented to Chief of Staff
Tzvi Tzur. Six years before the Six-Day War, the proposal consisted of
detailed, initial planning for the forces that would be needed to rule in
what would become the occupied territories.

Two years later, in August 1963, the IDF’s General Staff Branch (afterward
the Operations Branch), which was then headed by Yitzhak Rabin, drew up a
widely circulated directive regarding the organization of the military
government in the territories. This order sheds light, in its words, on
Israel’s “expected directions of expansion,” which in the assessment of the
security personnel would be the focus of the next war. These territories
included the West Bank, Sinai, the Syrian heights and Damascus, and southern
Lebanon up to the Litani River.

The August 1963 order was prepared following an evaluation two months
earlier by the
<https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium.HIGHLIGHT.MAGAZINE-how-israel-
tormented-arabs-in-its-first-decades-and-tried-to-cover-it-up-1.9433728>
military government unit that controlled the lives of Arabs within Israel.
In internal correspondence, it suggested that the future organization of
rule in the territories had been executed “hastily” to date and “does not
completely meet all the needs.”

 



 

The 1963 order. “A convenient political situation might develop which will
make it possible to retain occupied territory indefinitely.”

 

 

Called the “Organization Order – Military Government in State of Emergency,”
it stated that, “The IDF’s thrust to transfer the war to the enemy’s
territories will necessarily bring about expansion [into] and conquest of
areas beyond the state’s borders.” Based on the Israeli experience in the
period following the Sinai campaign, the document stated that it would be
necessary to install a military government quickly, because “these conquests
might last for a short time only and we will have to evacuate the
territories following international pressure or an arrangement.” The part
that followed, however, was meant for those who would be tasked with
administering the military government in the future occupied area, and it
hints at the intention of the order’s authors: “However, a convenient
political situation might develop which will make it possible to retain
occupied territory indefinitely.”

*
<https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium.HIGHLIGHT.MAGAZINE-how-israel-
tormented-arabs-in-its-first-decades-and-tried-to-cover-it-up-1.9433728> How
Israel tormented Arabs in its first decades – and tried to cover it up
*
<https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium.HIGHLIGHT.MAGAZINE-what-the-la
nd-of-israel-looked-like-before-zionism-1.9851498> What the Land of Israel
looked like before Zionism
*
<https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium.MAGAZINE-was-israeli-looting-i
n-48-part-of-a-broader-policy-to-expel-arabs-1.9873157> Was Israeli looting
in '48 part of a broader policy to expel Arabs?

Indeed, the exploitation of that “convenient situation” necessitated the
meticulous organization of the modes of military rule in the occupied
territories. Accordingly, the IDF devoted attention to training and
preparing the units and administrative bodies that would rule the
Palestinian population. They bore broad responsibility: from legal issues
attendant on the occupation of territories, to intelligence gathering about
the population and the infrastructures in the West Bank.

Whereas no one within the defense establishment disputed the IDF’s superior
power and its ability to conquer swiftly the territories from Egypt, Jordan
and Syria – before 1967, officers in the military government that existed
inside Israel were apprehensive about the preparation of the units that
would rule in the territories. Along with the military doctrine that called
for the fighting to be moved into enemy territory, a doctrine existed
concerning rule of civilians, based on the recognition that following such a
takeover, Israel would control an occupied civilian population, whose
administration would necessitate the establishment of a military government
bureaucracy.

Col. Yehoshua Verbin, in his capacity as commander of the military
government inside Israel until 1966, with extensive experience in operating
the mechanisms of supervision and control over Israel’s Palestinians, played
a central role in preparations for executing the order to establish a
military government in the conquered territories. In a moment of frankness,
in December 1958, he admitted to a ministerial committee that had convened
to discuss the future of the military government within Israel, “I haven’t
even decided for myself whether we are doing them more harm or good.”
However, as a senior commanding officer, in June 1965, he warned his
superior, Haim Bar-Lev, that the command structures of the administration
for ruling occupied territories were insufficiently qualified to carry out
their future mission. “Very little progress has been made on this subject.”
He added, “It appears that the commands of the administration in occupied
territories will not be suited to fulfill their tasks.” This was two years
before the war.


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Involving officers of the military government that had been imposed on
Israel’s Palestinian citizens since 1948 in the planning was logical,
because the organizational and military framework that operated vis a vis
that community constituted the basis for rule in the territories that would
be conquered in a war. In 1963, the units of the military government already
had 15 years of experience in imposing “order” and supervision over those
Palestinian citizens, by means of a strict regime of permits. From a
military perspective, it made sense for this body to serve as the model for
the structure of rule in the territories that would be conquered in the next
war.

However, after the 1967 war, Defense Minister Dayan rejected the proposal of
Shin Bet security service chief Yosef Harmelin to replicate the forms of
control of the military government in Israel in the territories (a stance
that for years was cited to demonstrate Dayan’s supposed enlightened view).
However, even though Dayan generally refrained from appointing former
military governors from within Israel as governors across the Green Line,
the normalization of the “enlightened occupation” bore a character similar
to that of the military government that had existed within Israel.
Accordingly, the vaguer the temporariness of the occupation became, the
cruder and more violent it became.

To illustrate the direct line that connected the military government that
existed within Israel (until December 1966) to that operating in the
territories after the June 1967 war, it’s sufficient to look at the
metamorphosis its official branches underwent. In the months following the
war, the unit that had operated the military government in Israel was
rebranded as the “department of military administration and territorial
security.” Today it’s known by a different, catchier name: “Coordinator of
Government Activities in the Territories.”

Adam Raz is a researcher at the Akevot Institute for Israeli-Palestinian
Conflict Research.

 

 
<https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-israel-said-67-land-conquests-
weren-t-planned-declassified-documents-say-otherwise-1.9873297?utm_source=ma
ilchimp&utm_medium=email&utm_content=author-alert&utm_campaign=Adam%20Raz&ut
m_term=20210603-23:13> Israel claimed its 1967 land conquests weren't
planned. Declassified documents reveal otherwise - Israel News - Haaretz.com

 

 

 

JPLO Note: This is an historic document. I was myself subject to detention
from the COGAT military occupation. When leaving an anti-annexation walk
down in the Jordan Valley we were detained by the military escort, held on a
military base hands tied, blinded without sleep or meals until the police in
the morning released us without charge 26 hours later. The two other
internationals with us were from France and Spain. 

 

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

R E C O N C I L I A T I O N     C O N F ER E N C E     L I S T

قائمة مؤتمر المصالحة

since 1994  by the

Jewish   People’s  Liberation  Organization

End  Zionism  &  Judaeophobia

abraham Weizfeld PhD  moderator-founder   <mailto:[email protected]>
[email protected] 

 <mailto:[email protected]>
[email protected] 

political declaration   JPLO   ( a Bundist chapter )

 
<https://www.academia.edu/45689019/Jewish_Peoples_Liberation_Organization_J_
PLO_Organisation_pour_la_liberation_du_Peuple_Juif_OLP_J_a_Non_Zionist_Decla
ration_v4_2_3_Jewish_Bundist_Organization_?email_work_card=abstract-read-mor
e>
https://www.academia.edu/45689019/Jewish_Peoples_Liberation_Organization_J_P
LO_Organisation_pour_la_liberation_du_Peuple_Juif_OLP_J_a_Non_Zionist_Declar
ation_v4_2_3_Jewish_Bundist_Organization_?email_work_card=abstract-read-more

 <http://bundist-movement.org/about-us.html>
http://bundist-movement.org/about-us.html

the books

Sabra and Shatila  (1984)  2009

 
<http://bookstore.authorhouse.com/Products/SKU-000255066/Sabra-and-Shatila.a
spx>
http://bookstore.authorhouse.com/Products/SKU-000255066/Sabra-and-Shatila.as
px 

The End of Zionism :  and the liberation of the Jewish People  1989

 
<http://www.academia.edu/11243333/THE_END_OF_ZIONISM_and_the_liberation_of_t
he_Jewish_People>
http://www.academia.edu/11243333/THE_END_OF_ZIONISM_and_the_liberation_of_th
e_Jewish_People 

Nation, Society and the State : the reconciliation of Palestinian and Jewish
Nationhood

 
<https://www.academia.edu/40349204/VOLUME_I_SECOND_EDITION_THESIS_NATION_SOC
IETY_AND_THE_STATE>
https://www.academia.edu/40349204/VOLUME_I_SECOND_EDITION_THESIS_NATION_SOCI
ETY_AND_THE_STATE 

 
<https://www.academia.edu/40349264/VOLUME_TWO_SECOND_EDITION_THESIS_METHODOL
OGY_OF_NATIONAL_IDENTITY>
https://www.academia.edu/40349264/VOLUME_TWO_SECOND_EDITION_THESIS_METHODOLO
GY_OF_NATIONAL_IDENTITY

 

The Federation of Palestinian and Hebrew Nations

 
<https://www.academia.edu/38380122/The_Federation_of_Palestinian_and_Hebrew_
Nations>
https://www.academia.edu/38380122/The_Federation_of_Palestinian_and_Hebrew_N
ations

 <https://www.cambridgescholars.com/product/978-1-5275-1313-6>
https://www.cambridgescholars.com/product/978-1-5275-1313-6

 

 

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

 

 



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