Amir Drori was born in
Tel Aviv in 1937 and graduated from the IDF's Junior Command Preparatory School in
Haifa. He was drafted into the
Israel Defense Forces in 1955, where he joined the
Golani infantry brigade. During the
1956 Suez Crisis Drori led a demolition team and participated in fighting in
Rafah and the
Sinai. He was awarded the
Medal of Courage for his part in the Israeli raid on the Syrian village of Tawafiq in 1960. During the 1967
Six-Day War Drori served as deputy commander of Golani's 51st Battalion and took part in fighting on the
Golan Heights. During the subsequent
War of Attrition he commanded Golani's 13th Battalion, participating in fighting on the Golan Heights,
Beit She'an Valley, the
Jordan Valley and along the
Suez Canal. Between 1970 and 1972 he served as the chief operations officer of Israel's
Southern Command, under
Ariel Sharon. Drori served at Northern Command for another year before leaving in December 1983. He spent the next year studying in the US. Drori returned to Israel in 1984 and was assigned command of IDF ground forces, later went on to head the IDF's
Operations Directorate, and in October 1986 became the Deputy Chief of the General Staff. He retired from the IDF in 1988 following his failure to secure the post of
Chief of the General Staff. ==Civilian career==