The Contemporary Middle East. A Documentary History

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tinian guerrillas, usually from the West Bank, which at the time was held by Jordan.
Also, Syrian shelling of farms in northern Israel had led on April 7, 1967, to an air
battle in which Israel destroyed six of Syria’s Soviet-supplied warplanes.
Responding in part to criticism by Arab leaders for failing to counter Israeli
“aggression,” Nasser on May 16–17, 1967, demanded that the United Nations Emer-
gency Force (UNEF), a peacekeeping outfit, withdraw from its positions in Egypt
along the armistice lines created after the 1948 war. When the UN forces withdrew,
Nasser heightened the sense of crisis by moving some 100,000 troops into position at
Egypt’s border with Israel. Nasser then announced on May 22 that the Strait of Tiran
would be closed to Israeli shipping, reversing one of Israel’s chief gains from the Suez
conflict eleven years earlier. With escalating rhetoric, the Egyptian leader on May 26
said, “If Israel wants war—well, then, Israel will be destroyed.” In a speech to the
Egyptian National Assembly three days later, Nasser signaled that war was at hand:


ARABS AND ISRAELIS 95

Port
Said

Suez

Gaza

Jerusalem

Tel Aviv

Haifa

Aqaba

Eilat

Sharm
el-Sheikh

Cairo

EGYPT


JORDAN


LEBANON


SYRIA


SAUDI


ARABIA


Dead Sea

Nile River

Gulf of
Suez

Suez
Canal

Mediterranean Sea

Strait
of
Tiran

Red Sea

Gulf of Aqaba

100 KM

100 Miles

0

0

Occupied
by Israel

ISRAEL


Afterma h of he 1967 War.
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