XI. THE SIX-DAY WAR
Statement to the Security Council by Foreign
Minister Eban, 6
June 1967 :
Foreign Minister Eban left Jerusalem on 5 June to attend the meeting of the Security
Council. The next day he addressed the Council:
Mr. Eban (Israel )
I thank you, Mr. President,
for giving me this opportunity to address the Council. I have just come from Jerusalem to tell the Security Council that Israel , by its independent effort and sacrifice, has passed
from serious danger to successful resistance.
Two days ago Israel 's condition caused much concern across the humane and
friendly world. Israel had reached a somber hour. Let me try to evoke the point at which our
fortunes stood.
An army, greater than any
force ever assembled in history in Sinai, had massed against Israel 's southern frontier. Egypt had dismissed the United Nations forces which
symbolized the international interest in the maintenance of peace in our
region. Nasser had provocatively brought five infantry divisions and
two armored divisions up to our very gates; 80,000 men and 900 tanks were
poised to move.
A special striking force,
comprising an armored division with at least 200 tanks, was concentrated
against Eilat at the Negev 's southern tip. Here was a clear design to cut the
southern Negev off from the main body of our State. For Egypt had openly proclaimed that Eilat did not form part of
Israel and had predicted that Israel itself would soon expire. The proclamation was empty;
the prediction now lies in ruin. While the main brunt of the hostile threat was
focused on the southern front, an alarming plan of encirclement was under way.
With Egypt 's initiative and guidance, Israel was already being strangled in its maritime
approaches to the whole eastern half of the world. For sixteen years, Israel had been illicitly denied passage in the Suez Canal , despite the Security Council's decision of 1 September 1951 [Resolution 95 (1951)]. And now the creative
enterprise of ten patient years which had opened an international route across
the Strait of Tiran
and the Gulf of Aqaba had been suddenly and arbitrarily choked. Israel was and is breathing only with a single lung.
Iraqi troops reinforced
Jordanian units in areas immediately facing vital and vulnerable Israel communication centers. Expeditionary forces from Algeria and Kuwait had reached Egyptian territory. Nearly all the
Egyptian forces which had been attempting the conquest of the Yemen had been transferred to the coming assault upon Israel . Syrian units, including artillery, overlooked the Israel villages in the Jordan Valley . Terrorist troops came regularly into our territory
to kill, plunder and set off explosions; the most recent occasion was five days
ago.
In short, there was peril for
Israel wherever it looked. Its manpower had been hastily
mobilized. Its economy and commerce were beating with feeble pulses. Its
streets were dark and empty. There was an apocalyptic air of approaching peril.
And Israel faced this danger alone.
We were buoyed up by an
unforgettable surge of public sympathy across the world. The friendly
Governments expressed the rather ominous hope that Israel would manage to live, but the dominant theme of our
condition was danger and solitude.
Now there could be no doubt
about what was intended for us. With my very ears I heard President Nasser's
speech on 26 May. He said:
"We intend to open a
general assault against Israel . This will be total war. Our basic aim will be to
destroy Israel ."
On 2 June, the Egyptian
Commander in Sinai, General Mortagi, published his Order of the Day, calling on
his troops to wage a war of 'destruction against Israel . Here, then, was a systematic, overt, proclaimed
design at politicide, the
murder of a State.
The policy, the arms, the men
had all been brought together, and the State thus threatened with collective
assault was itself the last sanctuary of a people which had seen six million of
its sons exterminated by a more powerful dictator two decades before and the
million Jews expelled from Arab lands.
The question then widely
asked in Israel and across the world was whether we had not already
gone beyond the utmost point of danger. Was there any precedent in world
history, for example, for a nation passively to suffer the blockade of its only
southern port, involving nearly all its vital fuel, when such acts of war,
legally and internationally, have always invited resistance? This was a most
unusual patience. It existed because we had acceded to the suggestion of some
of the maritime States that we give them scope to concert their efforts in
order to find an international solution which would ensure the maintenance of
free passage in the Gulf of
Aqaba for ships of all
nations and of all flags.
As we pursued this avenue of
international solution, we wished the world to have no doubt about our
readiness to exhaust every prospect, however fragile, of a diplomatic solution
- and some of the prospects that were suggested were very fragile indeed.
But as time went on, there
was no doubt that our margin of general security was becoming smaller and
smaller. Thus, on the morning of 5 June, when Egyptian
forces engaged us by air and land, bombarding the villages of Kissufim,
Nahal-Oz and Ein Hashelosha we knew that our limit of safety had been reached,
and perhaps passed. In accordance with its inherent right of self-defense as formulated in Article
51 of the United Nations Charter, Israel
responded defensively in full strength.
Never in the history of nations has armed force been used in a more righteous
or compelling cause.
Even when engaged with
Egyptian forces, we still hoped to contain the conflict. Egypt was overtly bent on our destruction, but we still
hoped that others would not join the aggression. Prime Minister Eshkol, who for
weeks had carried the heavy burden of calculation and decision, published and
conveyed a message to other neighboring States proclaiming:
"We shall
not attack any country unless it opens war on us. Even now, when the mortars
speak, we have not given up our quest for peace. We strive to repel all menace
of terrorism and any danger of aggression to ensure our security and our
legitimate rights."
In accordance with this same
policy of attempting to contain the conflict, yesterday I invited General Bull, the Chief of Staff of the Truce Supervision
Organization, to inform the heads of the Jordanian State that Israel had no
desire to expand the conflict beyond the unfortunate dimensions that it had
already assumed and that if Israel were not attacked on the Jordan side, it
would not attack and would act only in self-defense. It reached my ears that
this message had been duly and faithfully conveyed and received. Nevertheless, Jordan decided to join the Egyptian posture
against Israel and opened artillery attacks across the
whole long frontier, including Jerusalem . Those attacks are still in progress.
To the appeal of
Prime Minister Eshkol to avoid any further extension of the conflict, Syria answered at 12.25 yesterday morning by
bombing Megiddo from the air and bombing Degania at
12.40 with artillery fire and kibbutz Ein Hammifrats and Kurdani with
long-range guns. But Jordan embarked on a much more total assault by
artillery and aircraft along the entire front, with special emphasis on Jerusalem , to whose dangerous and noble ordeal
yesterday I come to bear personal witness.
There has been bombing of
houses; there has been a hit on the great new National Museum of Art; there has
been a hit on the University and on Shaare Zedek, the first hospital ever to
have been established outside the ancient walls. Is this not an act of
vandalism that deserves the condemnation of all mankind? And in the Knesset
building, whose construction had been movingly celebrated by the entire
democratic world ten months ago, the Israel Cabinet and Parliament met under
heavy gunfire, whose echoes mingled at the end of our meeting with Hatikvah,
the anthem of hope.
Thus throughout the day and
night of 5 June, the Jordan which we had expressly invited to abstain from
needless slaughter became, to our surprise, and still remains, the most intense
of all the belligerents; and death and injury, as so often in history, stalk
Jerusalem's streets.
When the
approaching Egyptian aircraft appeared on our radar screens, soon to be
followed by artillery attacks on our villages near the Gaza Strip, I instructed Mr. Rafael to inform the Security
Council, in accordance with the provisions of Article 51 of the Charter. I know
that that involved arousing you, Mr. President, at a most uncongenial hour of
the night, but we felt that the Security Council should be most urgently
seized.
I should, however, be less
than frank if I were to conceal the fact that the Government and people of Israel have been disconcerted by some aspects of the United
Nations role in this conflict. The sudden withdrawal of the United Nations
Emergency Force was not accompanied, as it should have been, by due
international consultations on the consequences of that withdrawal. Moreover, Israel interests were affected; they were not adequately
explored. No attempt was made, little time given, to help Israel to surmount grave prejudice to its vital interests
consequent on that withdrawal. After all, a new confrontation of forces
suddenly arose. It suddenly had to be met and at Sharm el-Sheikh at the
entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba , the Strait of Tiran , legality walked out and blockade walked in. The
peace of the world trembled. And thus the United Nations had somehow been put
into a position of leaving Sinai safe for belligerency.
It is not, I think, a
question of sovereignty that is here involved. The United Nations has a right
to ask that, when it assumes a function, the termination of that function shall
not take place in conditions that would lead to anti-Charter situations. I do
not raise this point in order to linger upon that which is past, but because of
Israel 's general attitude to the peace-keeping functions of
this Organization. And I confess that my own attitude and those of my
colleagues and of my fellow citizens to the peacekeeping functions of the
United Nations have been traumatically affected by this experience.
The United Nations Emergency
Force rendered distinguished service. Nothing became it less than the manner of
its departure. All gratitude and appreciation are owed to the individuals who
sustained its action. And if in the course of the recent combats United Nations
personnel have fallen dead or wounded - as they have - then I join my voice in
an expression of the most sincere regret.
The problem of the future
role of a United Nations presence in conflicts such as these is being much
debated. But we must ask ourselves a question that has arisen as a result of
this experience. People in our country and in many countries ask: What is the
use of a United Nations presence if it is in effect an umbrella which is taken
away as soon as it begins to rain? Surely, then, future arrangements for
peace-keeping must depend more on the agreement and the implementation of the
parties themselves than on machinery which is totally at the mercy of the host
country, so totally at its mercy as to be the instrument of its policies,
whatever those policies may be.
We have lived through three
dramatic weeks. Those weeks, I think, have brought into clear view the main
elements of tension and also the chief promise of relaxed tension in the
future. The first link in the chain was the series of sabotage acts emanating
from Syria . In October of 1966, the Security Council was already
seized of this problem, and a majority of its member States found it possible
and necessary to draw attention to the Syrian Government's responsibility for
altering that situation. Scarcely a day passed without a mine, a bomb, a
hand-grenade or a mortar exploding on Israel 's soil, sometimes with lethal or crippling effects,
always with an unsettling psychological influence. In general, fourteen or
fifteen such incidents would accumulate before a response was considered
necessary, and this ceaseless accumulation of terrorist sabotage incidents in
the name of what was called "popular war", together with responses
which in the long run sometimes became inevitable, were for a long period the
main focus of tension in the Middle
East .
But then there came a graver
source of tension in mid-May, when abnormal troop concentrations were observed
in the Sinai Peninsula . For the ten years of relative stability beginning
with March 1957 and ending with May 1967, the Sinai Desert had been free of Egyptian troops. In other words, a
natural geographic barrier, a largely uninhabited space, separated the main
forces of the two sides. It is true that in terms of sovereignty and law, any
State has a right to put its armies in any part of its territory that it
chooses. This, however, is not a legal question: it is a political and a
security question.
Experience in many parts of
the world, not least in our own, demonstrates that massive armies in close
proximity to each other, against a background of a doctrine of belligerency and
accompanying threats by one army to annihilate the other, constitute an
inflammatory situation.
We were puzzled in Israel by the relative lack of preoccupation on the part of
friendly Governments and international agencies with this intense concentration
which found its reflection in precautionary concentrations on our side. My
Government proposed, I think at least two weeks ago, the concept of a parallel
and reciprocal reduction of forces on both sides of the frontier. We elicited
no response, and certainly no action.
To these grave sources of
tension - the sabotage and terrorist movement, emanating mostly from Syria , and the heavy troop concentrations accompanied by
dire, apocalyptic threats in Sinai - there was added in the third week of May
the most electric shock of all, namely the closure of the international
waterway consisting of the Strait of Tiran and the Gulf of Aqaba . It is
not difficult, I think, to understand why this incident had a more drastic
impact than any other. In 1957 the maritime nations, within the framework of
the United Nations General Assembly, correctly enunciated the doctrine of free
and innocent passage through the Strait.
Now, when that doctrine was
proclaimed - and incidentally, not challenged by the Egyptian representative at
that time - it was little more than an abstract principle for the maritime
world. For Israel it was a great but still unfulfilled prospect; it was
not yet a reality. But during the ten years in which we and the other States of
the maritime community have relied upon that doctrine and upon established
usage, the principle has become a reality consecrated by hundreds of sailings
under dozens of flags and the establishment of a whole complex of commerce and
industry and communication. A new dimension has been added to the map of the
world's communications, and on that dimension we have, constructed Israel 's bridge towards the friendly States of Asia and Africa ,
a network of relationships which is the chief pride of Israel in the second decade of its independence.
All this, then, had grown up
as an effective usage under the United Nations flag. Does Mr. Nasser really
think that he can come upon the scene in ten minutes and cancel the established
legal usage and interests of ten years?
There was in this wanton act
a quality of malice. For surely the closing of the Strait of Tiran gave no benefit whatever to Egypt except the perverse joy of inflicting injury on
others. It was an anarchic act, because it showed a total disregard for the law
of nations, the application of which in this specific case had not been
challenged for ten years. And it was, in the literal sense, an act of
arrogance, because there are other nations in Asia
and East Africa , that trade with the Port of Eilat , as they have every right to do, through the Strait of Tiran and across the Gulf of Aqaba . Other sovereign States from Japan to Ethiopia , from Thailand to Uganda , from Cambodia to Madagascar , have a sovereign right to decide for themselves
whether they wish or do not wish to trade with Israel . These countries are not colonies of Cairo . They can trade with Israel or not trade with Israel as they wish, and President Nasser is not the
policeman of other African and Asian States .
Here then was a wanton
intervention in the sovereign rights of other States in the eastern half of the
world to decide for themselves whether or not they wish to establish trade
relations with either or both of the two ports at the head of the Gulf of
Aqaba.
When we examine, then, the
implications of this act, we have no cause to wonder that the international
shock was great. There was another reason too for that shock. Blockades have
traditionally been regarded, in the pre-Charter parlance, as acts of war. To
blockade, after all, is to attempt strangulation; and sovereign States are
entitled not to have their trade strangled. To understand how the State of
Israel felt, one has merely to look around this table and imagine, for example,
a foreign Power forcibly closing New York or Montreal, Boston or Marseille, Toulon
or Copenhagen, Rio or Tokyo or Bombay harbor. How would your Governments react?
What would you do? How long would you wait?
But Israel waited because of its confidence that the other
maritime Powers and countries interested in this new trading pattern would
concert their influence in order to re-establish a legal situation and to
liquidate this blockade. We concerted action with them not because Israel 's national interest was here abdicated. There will
not be, there cannot be, an Israel without Eilat. We cannot be expected to return to a
dwarfed stature, with our face to the Mediterranean alone.
In law and in history, peace and blockades have never co-existed. How could it
be expected that the blockade of Eilat and a relaxation of tension in the Middle East could ever be brought into harmony?
These then were the three
main elements in the tension: the sabotage movement; the blockade of the port;
and, perhaps more imminent than anything else, this vast and purposeful
encirclement movement, against the background of an authorized presidential
statement announcing that the objective of the encirclement was to bring about
the destruction and the annihilation of a sovereign State.
These acts taken together -
the blockade, the dismissal of the United Nations Emergency Force, and the
heavy concentration in Sinai - effectively disrupted the status quo which had
ensured a relative stability on the Egyptian-Israel frontier for ten years. I
do not use the words "relative stability" lightly, for in fact while
those elements in the Egyptian-Israel relationship existed there was not one
single incident of violence between Egypt and Israel for ten years. But suddenly this status quo, this
pattern of mutually accepted stability, was smashed to smithereens. It is now
the task of the Governments concerned to elaborate the new conditions of their
co-existence. I think that much of this work should be done directly by these
Governments themselves. Surely, after what has happened we must have better
assurance than before, for Israel and for the Middle East , of
peaceful co-existence. The question is whether there is any reason to believe
that such a new era may yet come to pass. If I am a little sanguine on this
point, it is because of a conviction that men and nations do behave wisely once
they have exhausted all other alternatives. Surely the other alternatives of
war and belligerency have now been exhausted. And what has anybody gained from
that? But in order that the new system of inter-State relationships may
flourish in the Middle East , it is important that certain principles be applied
above and beyond the cease-fire to which the Security Council has given its
unanimous support.
Let me then say here that Israel welcomes the appeal for the cease-fire as formulated
in this Resolution. But I must point out that the implementation depends on the
absolute and sincere acceptance and co-operation of the other parties, which,
in our view, are responsible for the present situation. And in conveying this
Resolution to my colleagues, I must at this moment point out that these other
Governments have not used the opportunity yet to clarify their intentions.
I have said that the
situation to be constructed after the cease-fire must depend on certain
principles. The first of these principles surely must be the acceptance of Israel 's statehood and the total elimination of the fiction
of its non-existence. It would seem to me that after 3,000 years the time has
arrived to accept Israel 's nationhood as a fact, for here is the only State in the
international community which has the same territory, speaks the same language
and upholds the same faith as it did 3,000 years ago.
And if, as everybody knows to
be the fact, the universal conscience was in the last week or two most
violently shaken at the prospect of danger to Israel, it was not only because
there seemed to be a danger to a State, but also, I think, because the State
was Israel, with all that this ancient name evokes, teaches, symbolizes and
inspires. How grotesque would be an international community which found room
for 122 sovereign units and which did not acknowledge the sovereignty of that
people which had given nationhood its deepest significance and its most
enduring grace.
No wonder, then, that when
danger threatened we could hear a roar of indignation sweep across the world,
that men in progressive movements and members of the scientific and humanistic
cultures joined together in sounding an alarm bell about an issue that vitally
affected the human conscience. And no wonder, correspondingly, that a deep and
universal sense of satisfaction and relief has accompanied the news of Israel 's gallant and successful resistance.
But the central point remains
the need to secure an authentic intellectual recognition by our neighbours of Israel 's deep roots in the Middle Eastern reality. There is
an intellectual tragedy in the failure of Arab leaders to come to grips,
however reluctantly, with the depth and authenticity of Israel 's roots in the life, the history, the spiritual
experience and the culture of the Middle East .
This, then, is the first
axiom. A much more conscious and uninhibited acceptance of Israel's statehood
is an axiom requiring no demonstration, for there will never be a Middle East
without an independent and sovereign State of Israel in its midst.
The second principle must be
that of the peaceful settlement of disputes. The Resolution thus adopted falls
within the concept of the peaceful settlement of disputes. I have already said
that much could be done if the Governments of the area would embark much more
on direct contacts. They must find their way to each other. After all, when
there is conflict between them they come together face to face. Why should they
not come together face to face to solve the conflict? And perhaps on some
occasions it would not be a bad idea to have the solution before, and therefore
instead of, the conflict.
When the Council discusses
what is to happen after the cease-fire, we hear many formulas: back to 1956,
back to 1948 - I understand our neighbors would wish to turn the clock back to
1947. The fact is, however, that most clocks move forward and not backward, and
this, I think, should be the case with the clock of Middle Eastern peace - not
backward to belligerency, but forward to peace.
The point was well made this
evening by the representative of Argentina , who said: the cease-fire should be followed
immediately by the most intensive efforts to bring about a just and lasting
peace in the Middle East . In a similar sense, the representative of Canada warned us against merely reproducing the old
positions of conflict, without attempting to settle the underlying issues of
Arab-Israel co-existence. After all, many things in recent days have been mixed
up with each other. Few things are what they were. And in order to create
harmonious combinations of relationships, it is inevitable that the States
should come together in negotiation.
Another factor in the harmony
that we would like to see in the Middle
East relates to external
Powers. From these, and especially from the greatest amongst them, the small
States of the Middle East - and most of them are small -ask for a rigorous
support, not for individual States, but for specific principles; not to be for
one State against other States, but to be for peace against war, for free
commerce against belligerency, for the pacific settlement of disputes against
violent irredentist threats; in other words, to exercise an even-handed support
for the integrity and independence of States and for the rights of States under
the Charter of the United Nations and other sources of international law.
There are not two categories
of States. The United Arab
Republic , Iraq , Syria , Jordan , Lebanon - not one of these has a single ounce or milligram of
statehood which does not adhere in equal measures to Israel itself.
It is important that States
outside our region apply a balanced attitude, that they do not exploit
temporary tensions and divergencies in the issues of global conflict, that they
do not seek to win gains by inflaming fleeting passions, and that they strive
to make a balanced distribution of their friendship amongst the States of the Middle East . Now whether all the speeches of all the Great Powers this evening
meet this criterion, everybody, of course, can judge for himself. I do not
propose to answer in detail all the observations of the representative of the Soviet Union . I had the advantage of hearing the same things in
identical language a few days ago from his colleague, the Soviet Ambassador in Israel . I must confess that I was no more convinced this
evening than I was the day before yesterday about the validity of this most
vehement and one-sided denunciation. But surely world opinion, before whose
tribunal this debate unrolls, can solve this question by posing certain
problems to itself. Who was it that attempted to destroy a neighboring State in
1948, Israel or its neighbors? Who now closes an international
waterway to the port of a neighboring State ,
Israel or the United
Arab Republic ? Does Israel refuse to negotiate a peace settlement with the Arab
States, or do they refuse to do so with it? Who disrupted the 1957 pattern of
stability, Israel or Egypt ? Did troops of Egypt , Syria , Jordan , Iraq , Lebanon , Kuwait and Algeria surround Israel in this menacing confrontation, or has any
distinguished representative seen some vast Israel colossus surrounding the area between Morocco and Kuwait ?
I raise these points of
elementary logic. Of course, a Great Power can take refuge in its power from
the exigencies of logic. All of us in our youth presumably recounted La
Fontaine's fable, "La raison du plus fort est toujours la meilleure." But here, after all,
there is nobody who is more or less strong than others; we sit here around the
table on the concept of sovereign equality. But I think we have an equal duty
to bring substantive proof for any denunciation that we make, each of the
other.
I would say in conclusion
that these are, of course, still grave times. And yet they may perhaps have a
fortunate issue. This could be the case if those who for some reason decided so
violently, three weeks ago, to disrupt the status quo would ask themselves what
the results and benefits have been. As he looks around him at the arena of
battle, at the wreckage of planes and tanks, at the collapse of intoxicated
hopes, might not an Egyptian ruler ponder whether anything was achieved by that
disruption? What has it brought but strife, conflict with other powerful
interests, and the stem criticism of progressive men throughout the world?
I think that Israel has in recent days proved its steadfastness and
vigor. It is now willing to demonstrate its instinct for peace. Let us build a
new system of relationships from the wreckage of the old. Let us discern across
the darkness the vision of a better and a brighter dawn.
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