1948 Arab–Israeli War On 14 May 1948, the day on which the British Mandate expired, the
Jewish People's Council gathered at the Tel Aviv Museum and approved a proclamation that declared
the establishment of a
Jewish state in
Eretz Israel, to be known as the
State of Israel. The borders of the new state were not delineated. An official
cablegram from the Secretary-General of the League of Arab States to the UN Secretary-General on 15 May 1948 stated publicly that Arab Governments found "themselves compelled to intervene for the sole purpose of restoring peace and security and establishing law and order in Palestine" (Clause 10(e)). Further in Clause 10(e): That day, the armies of
Egypt, Lebanon,
Syria, Jordan and
Iraq invaded, launching the
1948 Arab–Israeli War. The nascent
Israeli Defense Force repulsed the Arab forces, extending the nascent state's borders beyond the original UNSCOP partition. By December 1948, Israel controlled most of Mandate Palestine west of the
Jordan River. The remainder of the Mandate consisted of what became the nation of Jordan, the area that came to be called the
West Bank (controlled by Jordan), and the
Gaza Strip (controlled by Egypt). Before and during this conflict, 713,000 Palestinian Arabs were expelled or fled, becoming
Palestinian refugees. During the war, Israel conducted a
biological warfare campaign codenamed
Cast Thy Bread to covertly poison Palestinian wells to prevent villagers from returning. Many Palestinians fled from the areas taken by Israel as a response to massacres of Arab towns by militant Jewish organizations like the
Irgun and the
Lehi (See
Deir Yassin massacre). The war came to an end with the signing of the
1949 Armistice Agreements between Israel and each of its Arab neighbors. The status of Jewish citizens in Arab states worsened during the war. Anti-Jewish riots erupted throughout the Arab World in December 1947. Jewish communities were hit particularly hard in
Aleppo, Syria and British-controlled
Aden, with hundreds of dead and injured. In
Libya, Jews were deprived of citizenship, and in
Iraq, their property was seized. Egypt expelled most of its foreign community, including Jews, after the
Suez crisis in 1956, while
Algeria deprived its French citizens, including Jews, of citizenship upon its independence in 1962. Over the course of twenty years, some
850,000 Jews from Arab countries emigrated.
1949–1967 Following Israel's victory in the
1948 Arab–Israeli War, Jews living in the West Bank or Gaza were expelled to Israel. Arabs caught on the Palestinian side of the ceasefire line could not return to their homes in Israel. Those on the Israeli side were not formally expelled, although many fled. Responsibility for the exodus remains disputed. Historian
Benny Morris claimed that the "decisive cause" of Palestinian departure was predominantly Jewish forces' actions (physical expulsions, military assaults on residential areas, fear of fighting, abandonment of nearby villages, incitement propaganda), while Arab leadership orders were decisive in only 6 of 392 villages. In 1956, Egypt closed the
Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping and blockaded the
Gulf of Aqaba, contravening the
Constantinople Convention of 1888. Israel supporters viewed this as violating the
1949 Armistice Agreements. On 26 July 1956, Egypt nationalized the
Suez Canal Company and closed the canal to Israeli shipping. Israel invaded the
Sinai Peninsula on 29 October with British and French support. During the
Suez Crisis, Israel captured the
Gaza Strip and Sinai. The United States and United Nations advocated a ceasefire. Israel then withdrew from Egyptian territory. Egypt allowed regional navigation freedom and Sinai demilitarization. The
United Nations Emergency Force (UNEF) deployed to oversee demilitarization. UNEF operated only on the Egyptian side, as Israel refused deployment on its territory. and deployed 100,000 troops in Sinai. It again closed the
Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping, reverting to 1956 blockade conditions. Jordan signed a defense pact with Egypt on 30 May 1967. Egypt mobilized Sinai units, crossed UN lines, and massed on Israel's southern border. Israel attacked Egypt on 5 June. The
Israeli Air Force destroyed most Egyptian airpower in a surprise strike, then eliminated Jordanian, Syrian, and Iraqi forces, enabling Israel's
Six-Day War victory. Abd al-Azim Ramadan argued this left war as the only option. Egypt launched the
War of Attrition in 1967 to wear down Israel and force Sinai concessions. It ended after
Gamal Abdel Nasser's 1970 death. Successor
Anwar Sadat expelled 15,000 Soviet advisors to court U.S. help to pressure Israel on territorial return. On 6 October 1973, Syria and Egypt surprise-attacked Israel on
Yom Kippur. Israel needed three days to mobilize fully. Other Arab states reinforced them and imposed an oil embargo on the U.S., Japan, and Western Europe, quadrupling prices. The
Yom Kippur War enabled U.S.–Soviet indirect confrontation. As Israel reversed momentum, the USSR threatened intervention. Fearing
nuclear escalation, the U.S. brokered a ceasefire on 25 October. Israel and Egypt signed a
peace treaty on 26 March 1979. Under its terms, the
Sinai Peninsula was returned to Egyptian hands, and the Gaza Strip remained under Israeli control. The agreement also provided for the free passage of Israeli ships through the Suez Canal and recognition of the
Straits of Tiran and the
Gulf of Aqaba as international waterways. Further terms required Egypt to severely limit the amount of troops and equipment it could deploy in the Sinai.
Jordan In October 1994, Israel and Jordan signed a
peace agreement, which stipulated mutual cooperation, an end of hostilities, formalizing the Israel-Jordan border, and resolved other issues. Their conflict had cost roughly 18.3 billion dollars. Its signing was closely linked with the efforts to create peace between Israel and the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). It was signed at the southern border crossing of
Arabah on 26 October 1994.
Iraq Israel and Iraq had been foes since 1948. Iraq participated in the
1948 Arab–Israeli War, and later backed Egypt and Syria in the 1967 and 1973 wars. In June 1981, Israel attacked and destroyed newly built Iraqi nuclear facilities in
Operation Opera. During the 1991
Gulf War, Iraq
fired 39 Scud missiles into Israel, in the hopes of uniting the Arab world against the coalition seeking to liberate
Kuwait. The United States prevailed upon, Israel to not respond to this attack in order to prevent a wider war.
Lebanon In 1970, following an extended
civil war, King Hussein expelled the
Palestine Liberation Organization from Jordan. September 1970 is known as
Black September in Arab history and is sometimes referred to as the "era of regrettable events". The violence resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of people, the vast majority Palestinians. Armed conflict lasted until July 1971 with the expulsion, when thousands of Palestinian fighters migrated to Lebanon. The PLO established a
de facto autonomous zone from which it staged raids into Israel. PLO helped destabilize Lebanon and trigger the 1975
Lebanese Civil War. In 1978, Israel launched
Operation Litani, in which it together with the
Free Lebanon Army forced the PLO to retreat north of the
Litani river. In 1981 another conflict between Israel and the PLO broke out, which ended with a ceasefire agreement. In June 1982,
Israel invaded Lebanon in alliance with Christian factions of the Lebanese government. Within two months the PLO agreed to move across the river. In March 1983, Israel and Lebanon signed a
normalization agreement. However, President
Amine Gemayel nullified the truce in March 1984 under pressure from Syria. In 1985, Israeli forces withdrew to a 15 km wide strip along Lebanon's southern border. The conflict continued on a lower scale. In 1993 and 1996, Israel launched major operations against the
Hezbollah militia. In May 2000, the new Israeli government of
Ehud Barak withdrew from Lebanon, fulfilling an election promise ahead of a deadline. The withdrawal lead to the immediate collapse of the
South Lebanon Army, and many members were either arrested or fled to Israel.
Palestinians The 1970s were marked by major, international terrorist attacks, including the
Lod Airport massacre and the
Munich Olympics Massacre in 1972, and the
Entebbe Hostage Taking in 1976, with over 100 Jewish hostages kidnapped and held in Uganda. In December 1987, the
First Intifada began. It was a Palestinian uprising against Israeli rule in the
Palestinian territories. The rebellion began in the
Jabalia refugee camp and quickly spread. Palestinian actions ranged from civil disobedience to violence. In addition to general strikes, boycotts on Israeli products, graffiti and barricades, demonstrations included youths throwing stones at Israeli soldiers. The army responded to the demonstrations with live ammunition, beatings and mass arrests, bringing international condemnation. The PLO, which had never been recognized as the Palestinians' representative, was invited to peace negotiations after it recognized Israel and renounced terrorism. ,
Bill Clinton, and
Yasser Arafat at the Oslo Accords signing ceremony on 13 September 1993 In mid-1993, Israeli and Palestinian representatives engaged in peace talks in Oslo, Norway. As a result, in September 1993, Israel and the PLO signed the
Oslo Accords, known as the
Declaration of Principles or Oslo I. In
side letters, Israel recognized the PLO as the legitimate representative of the Palestinian people, while the PLO recognized Israel's right to exist and renounced terrorism, violence and its
mission to destroy Israel. Oslo II was signed in 1995.
2000–2005 The
Al-Aqsa Intifada launched a
series of suicide bombings and attacks. The Israeli army launched
Operation Defensive Shield in March 2002. It was Israel's largest military operation since the Six-Day War. As violence intensified, Israel expanded its security apparatus around the West Bank by re-taking many parts of land in under the PLO's full control (
Area A). Israel established a system of roadblocks and
checkpoints to deter violence and protect
Israeli settlements. However, in 2008, the IDF began to slowly transfer authority to Palestinian security forces. Israel's then prime minister
Ariel Sharon began a policy of
disengagement from the
Gaza Strip in 2003. This policy was fully implemented in August 2005, including the mandatory evacuation of all 17 Jewish settlements there. This was the first reversal for the settler movement since 1968. The disengagement from Gaza shocked Sharon's critics both on the left and on the right. It was supported by Trade and Industry Minister
Ehud Olmert and
Tzipi Livni, the Minister for Immigration and Absorption, but Foreign Minister
Silvan Shalom and Finance Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu condemned it.
2006–present Conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon In June 2006,
Hamas militants infiltrated an IDF post near the Gaza border and abducted soldier
Gilad Shalit. Two IDF soldiers died; Shalit was wounded when his tank took an
RPG hit. Israel launched
Operation Summer Rains three days later to secure his release. Hamas held him, denying
International Red Cross access, until 18 October 2011, when he was swapped for 1,027 Palestinian prisoners. In July 2006,
Hezbollah fighters crossed into Israel, killed eight soldiers, and abducted two, igniting the
2006 Lebanon War and heavy destruction in Lebanon. A UN ceasefire took effect 14 August. The war killed over 1,000 Lebanese and over 150 Israelis, devastated infrastructure, and displaced ~1 million Lebanese and 300,000–500,000 Israelis (most later returned). Parts of
Southern Lebanon stayed uninhabitable from unexploded Israeli cluster munitions. In the
June 2007 Battle of Gaza, Hamas seized the Strip from rival Fatah in civil war. Israel then restricted borders, halted economic ties with Gaza's leadership, and—with Egypt—imposed a
blockade. On 6 September 2007, Israel bombed a suspected Syrian nuclear site in
Operation Orchard. It had
struck Syria in 2003. In April 2008, President
Bashar al-Assad told a Qatari paper that Syria and Israel discussed peace via Turkey; Israel confirmed. Talks covered the
Golan Heights. Secretary Rice criticized surging West Bank settlements (up 1.8× from 2007). A
six-month Hamas–Israel truce lapsed on 19 December 2008; renewal failed. Israel raided a suspected kidnap tunnel, killing Hamas fighters. Hamas fired >60 rockets on 24 December. Israel launched
Operation Cast Lead on 27 December. Human rights groups accused both sides of
war crimes. Israel imposed a 10-month West Bank settlement freeze in 2009. In May 2010,
Israeli naval forces raided six
Gaza Freedom Flotilla ships that refused to dock at
Ashdod. On
MV Mavi Marmara, clashes killed nine activists. Global condemnation strained Israel–Turkey ties; Israel later eased the blockade. Dozens of passengers and seven soldiers were injured, some commandos shot. After
2010–2011 talks, 13 Hamas-led groups launched a
campaign to disrupt them. Attacks rose after August, including the
killing of four civilians. Rocket fire intensified. On 2 August, militants fired seven
Katyushas at
Eilat and
Aqaba, killing one Jordanian and wounding four. Intermittent clashes persisted, including Hamas 680 rockets in 2011. On 14 November 2012, Israel killed Hamas military leader
Ahmed Jabari, starting
Operation Pillar of Defense. An Egyptian-brokered ceasefire began 21 November. Hamas rocket escalation prompted an Israeli
Gaza operation on 8 July 2014. Another
11-day round erupted in May 2021.
Hamas-led attacks in October 2023 triggered
war with massive destruction,
displacement and a
humanitarian crisis.
Syrian Civil War Israel's military role in the
Syrian Civil War was limited to missile strikes, which were officially acknowledged in 2017. While Israel
officially stayed neutral, Israel was opposed to Iran's presence in Syria. Israel
provided humanitarian aid to Syrian war victims, an effort that expanded in June 2016 when Israel launched
Operation Good Neighbour.
Hezbollah are suspected of
carrying out attacks against Israeli positions on the border between Syria and
Lebanon, and Israel is suspected of
carrying out air strikes against convoys transporting weapons to such organizations. On 9 December 2017, US President
Donald Trump announced the
United States recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, prompting
condemnation by other world leaders as well as the
2018 Gaza border protests. The
United States Embassy opened in Jerusalem on 14 May 2018.
Abraham Accords ==Notable wars and violent events==