After
World War II, the
Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee (JAC) grew increasingly influential to the post-
Holocaust Soviet Jewry, and was accepted as its representative in the
West. As its activities sometimes contradicted official Soviet policies (see
The Black Book of Soviet Jewry as an example), it became a nuisance to Soviet authorities. The
Central Auditing Commission of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union concluded that the JAC continued the line of the
Bund. In January 1948, the JAC's head, the popular actor and world-famous public figure
Solomon Mikhoels, died; his death was officially a car accident but some historians allege it to be a targeted assassination. The USSR voted for the 1947
United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine and in May 1948, it recognized the
establishment of the state of Israel there, subsequently supporting it with weapons (via
Czechoslovakia, in defiance of the embargo) in the
1948 Arab–Israeli war. Many Soviet Jews felt inspired and sympathetic towards Israel and sent thousands of letters to the (still formally existing) JAC with offers to contribute to or even volunteer for Israel's defence. In September 1948, the first Israeli ambassador to the USSR,
Golda Meir, arrived in Moscow. Huge enthusiastic crowds (estimated 50,000) gathered along her path and in and around
Moscow synagogue when she attended it for
Yom Kippur and
Rosh Hashanah. These events corresponded in time with a visible upsurge of Russian nationalism orchestrated by official propaganda, the increasingly hostile
Cold War and the realization by the Soviet leadership that
Israel had chosen the Western option. Domestically, Soviet Jews were being considered a security liability for their
Western connections, especially to the United States, and growing national awareness. With the United States becoming the opponent of the Soviet Union by the end of 1948, the USSR switched sides in the
Arab–Israeli conflict and began supporting the Arabs against Israel, first politically and later also militarily. For his part
David Ben-Gurion declared support for the United States in the
Korean War, despite opposition from left-wing Israeli parties. From 1950 on, Israeli–Soviet relations were an inextricable part of the Cold War—with implications for Soviet Jews supporting Israel, or perceived as supporting it. == Persecution of Jewish creatives and intelligentsia ==