The respective parties and their allies expressed starkly differing views concerning the motive of the attack and, consequently, its appropriate designation. While Egyptian and Arab sources regard the attack as a deliberate massacre and
war crime intended to impose a
ceasefire, Israeli and Western sources consider it to be a
human error on the Israeli side made under the impression that the school was an Egyptian military installation. The bombing of Bahr El-Baqar was defended by then Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan, and Israeli envoy to the UN
Yosef Tekoah. When asked about the incident, Moshe Dayan said: "We have checked and re-checked and there was no mistake this time" and "Maybe the Egyptians put elementary students in a military base." Speaking about the incident, Egyptian commander
Abdelatim Ramadan said: "Actually, two targets were hit by the Israelis. The first target was a group of military bases about 30 km from the Suez Canal, which were targeted before, on the night of 18–19 December 1969. The second target was the Bahr El-Baqar primary school." The townspeople denied that there was any military presence in the town at the time of the bombing. The attack is considered a contributing factor to Israel's decision to suspend other deep strikes originally planned in operation Priha. ==References==