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1948 Palestine war information


1948 Palestine war
Part of the intercommunal conflict in Mandatory Palestine, the Arab–Israeli conflict, and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict

Arab fighters in front of a burning Haganah armoured supply truck near the city of Jerusalem (c. 1948)
Date30 November 1947 – 20 July 1949
(1 year, 7 months, 2 weeks and 6 days)
Location
Mandatory Palestine, Sinai Peninsula, southern Lebanon
Result
  • Israeli victory
    • Establishment of the State of Israel
  • Palestinian defeat
    • Expulsion of Palestinian Arabs from modern Israel
    • Beginning of Palestinian Fedayeen insurgency
  • Arab League strategic failure
    • Jordanian marginal victory[5][6]
    • Egyptian defeat
Territorial
changes

1949 Armistice Agreements:

  • Establishment of the State of Israel
  • Occupation of the Gaza Strip by Egypt and establishment of the All-Palestine Government
  • Annexation of the West Bank by Jordan (including East Jerusalem)
  • Syrian foothold established to the north and south of the Sea of Galilee
Belligerents

Yishuv
(before 14 May 1948)
1948 Palestine war Israel
(after 14 May 1948)


Before 26 May 1948:

  • Haganah
    • Palmach
    • Hish Corps
    • HIM Corps
  • Irgun
  • Lehi
  • 1948 Palestine war Druze militants[1][2]
  • Allied Bedouin tribes[3][4]

After 26 May 1948:

  • Israel Defense Forces
    • IDF Minorities Unit

Foreign volunteers:

  • Mahal
  • 1948 Palestine war Arab Higher Committee
    (before 15 May 1948)
  • 1948 Palestine war Arab League
    (after 15 May 1948)

  • Arab Liberation Army
  • 1948 Palestine war Holy War Army
  • 1948 Palestine war Al-Najjada
  • 1948 Palestine war Egypt
    • 1948 Palestine war All-Palestine Protectorate (after 22 September 1948)
  • 1948 Palestine war Transjordan
  • 1948 Palestine war Syria
  • 1948 Palestine war Iraq
  • 1948 Palestine war Lebanon
  • 1948 Palestine war Saudi Arabia
  • 1948 Palestine war Yemen
Commanders and leaders
  • Israel David Ben-Gurion
  • Israel Chaim Weizmann
  • Israel Yigael Yadin
  • Israel Yaakov Dori
  • Israel David Shaltiel
  • Israel Moshe Dayan
  • Israel Yisrael Galili
  • Israel Yigal Allon
  • Israel Yitzhak Rabin
  • Israel Moshe Carmel
  • Israel Aharon Remez
  • Israel Mickey Marcus 
  • Israel Gershon Zak
  • Israel Shlomo Shamir
  • Jordan King Abdullah I
  • Jordan John Bagot Glubb
  • Jordan Habis al-Majali
  • All-Palestine Protectorate Abd al-Qadir al-Husayni 
  • All-Palestine Protectorate Hasan Salama 
  • Arab League Fawzi al-Qawuqji
  • All-Palestine Protectorate Haj Amin Al-Husseini
  • Egypt King Farouk I
  • Egypt Ahmad Ali al-Mwawi
  • Egypt Muhammad Naguib
  • Arab League Abdul Rahman Hassan Azzam
Strength
Israel: c. 10,000 initially, rising to 115,000 by March 1949

Arabs: c. 2,000 initially, rising to 70,000, of which:

  • Egypt: 10,000 initially, rising to 20,000
  • Iraq: 3,000 initially, rising to 15,000–18,000
  • Syria: 2,500–5,000
  • Transjordan: 8,000–12,000
  • Lebanon: 1,000[7]
  • Saudi Arabia: 800–1,200
  • Arab Liberation Army: 3,500–6,000
Casualties and losses
6,080 killed (about 4,074 troops and 2,000 civilians)[8] Between +5,000[8] and 20,000 (including civilians),[9] among which 4,000 soldiers for Egypt, Jordan and Syria;[10] other estimate: 15,000 Arab dead and 25,000 wounded[11]

The 1948 Palestine war[a] was fought in the territory of what had been, at the start of the war, British-ruled Mandatory Palestine.[13][14][15][16][17][18] During the war, the British withdrew from Palestine, Zionist forces conquered territory and established the State of Israel, and over 700,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled. It was the first war of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and the broader Arab–Israeli conflict.

The war had two main phases, the first being the 1947–1948 civil war, which began on 30 November 1947,[19] a day after the United Nations voted to adopt the Partition Plan for Palestine, which planned for the division of the territory into Jewish and Arab sovereign states. During this period the British still maintained a declining rule over Palestine and occasionally intervened in the violence.[20][21] Towards the end of the civil war phase, Zionist forces executed Plan Dalet, an offensive operation conquering territory for the planned establishment of a Jewish state.[22]

The second phase of the war began on 14 May 1948, with the termination of the British Mandate and the declaration of the establishment of the State of Israel. The following morning, the surrounding Arab armies invaded Palestine, beginning the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. The Egyptians advanced in the south-east while the Jordanian Arab Legion and Iraqi forces captured the central highlands. Syria and Lebanon fought with the Israeli forces in the north. The newly formed Israel Defense Forces managed to halt the Arab forces and in the following months began pushing them back and capturing territory. By the end of the war, the State of Israel had captured about 78% of former territory of the mandate, the Kingdom of Jordan had captured and later annexed the area that became the West Bank, and Egypt had captured the Gaza Strip. The war formally ended with the 1949 Armistice Agreements, which established the Green Line demarcating these territories.

During the war, massacres and acts of terror were conducted by and against both sides. A campaign of massacres and violence against the Arab population, such as occurred at Lydda and Ramle and the Battle of Haifa, led to the expulsion and flight of over 700,000 Palestinians, with most of their urban areas being depopulated and destroyed. This violence and dispossession of the Palestinians is known today as the Nakba (Arabic for "the disaster")[23] and resulted in the beginning of the Palestinian refugee problem.

  1. ^ Nisan, Mordechai (2015). Minorities in the Middle East: A History of Struggle and Self-Expression, 2d ed. McFarland. p. 284. ISBN 978-0-7864-5133-3. This Jewish-Druze partnership was often referred to as a "covenant of blood," in recognition of the common military yoke carried by the two peoples for the security of the country.
  2. ^ "The Druze in Israel: Questions of Identity, Citizenship, and Patriotism" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  3. ^ Palestine Post, "Israel's Bedouin Warriors", Gene Dison, August 12, 1948
  4. ^ AFP (24 April 2013). "Bedouin army trackers scale Israel social ladder". Al Arabiya. Archived from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  5. ^ Anita Shapira, L'imaginaire d'Israël : histoire d'une culture politique (2005), Latroun : la mémoire de la bataille, Chap. III. 1 l'événement p. 91–96
  6. ^ Benny Morris (2008), p.419.
  7. ^ Pollack, 2004; Sadeh, 1997
  8. ^ a b Sandler, Stanley (2002). Ground Warfare: An International Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 160. ISBN 978-1-57607-344-5. Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 23 April 2019.
  9. ^ Esber, Rosemarie (2009). Under the Cover of War. Arabicus Books & Media. p. 28.
  10. ^ "Military Casualties in Arab-Israeli Wars | Jewish Virtual Library". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Archived from the original on 10 January 2017. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  11. ^ Clodfelter, Micheal (2017). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 (4th ed.). McFarland. p. 572. ISBN 978-0-7864-7470-7.
  12. ^ Cite error: The named reference :0 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  13. ^ Middle East Institute. The Palestinian Nakba: What Happened in 1948 and Why It Still Matters. Archived from the original on 17 October 2022. Retrieved 17 October 2022 – via YouTube.[unreliable source?]
  14. ^ Michael R. Fischbach, an American scholar of the archives of the United Nations Conciliation Commission for Palestine, estimates that, in all, Palestinians lost some 6 to 8 million dunams (1.5 to 2 million acres) of land, not including communal land farmed by villages or state land. Mattar, Philip (2005). "Al-Nakba". In Mattar, Philip (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Palestinians. Infobase. ISBN 9780816069866. Archived from the original on 28 November 2022.
  15. ^ Firestone, Reuven (2012). Holy War in Judaism: The Fall and Rise of a Controversial Idea. Oxford University Press. pp. 10, 296. ISBN 978-0-19-986030-2. Archived from the original on 28 November 2022. To Jews, the Jewish-Arab war of 1947–1948 is the War of Independence (milchemet ha'atzma'ut). To Arabs, and especially Palestinians, it is the nakba or calamity. I therefore refrain from assigning names to wars. I refer to the wars between the State of Israel and its Arab and Palestinian neighbors according to their dates: 1948, 1956, 1967, 1973, and 1982.
  16. ^ Caplan, Neil (2011). The Israel-Palestine Conflict: Contested Histories. John Wiley & Sons. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-4443-5786-8. Perhaps the most famous case of differences over the naming of events is the 1948 war (more accurately, the fighting from December 1947 through January 1949). For Israel it is their 'War of Liberation' or 'War of Independence' (in Hebrew, milhemet ha-atzama'ut) full of the joys and overtones of deliverance and redemption. For Palestinians, it is Al-Nakba, translated as 'The Catastrophe' and including in its scope the destruction of their society and the expulsion and flight of some 700,000 refugees.
  17. ^ Caplan, Neil (1997). Futile Diplomacy: The United Nations, the Great Powers, and Middle East Peacemaking 1948–1954. Vol. 3. Frank Cass & Co. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-7146-4756-2. Although some historians would cite 14 May 1948 as the start of the war known variously as the Israeli War of Independence, an-Nakba (the (Palestinian) Catastrophe), or the first Palestine war, it would be more accurate to consider that war as beginning on 30 November 1947.
  18. ^ "nakba" نكبة. Almaany. p. 1. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  19. ^ Morris (2008), p.77
  20. ^ Morris (2008), pp. 77–79
  21. ^ Tal (2003), p.41
  22. ^ Khalidi, Walid (1 October 1988). "Plan Dalet: Master Plan for the Conquest of Palestine". Journal of Palestine Studies. 18 (1): 4–19. doi:10.2307/2537591. ISSN 0377-919X. JSTOR 2537591. 'Plan Dalet' or 'Plan D' was the name given by the Zionist High Command to the general plan for military operations within the framework of which the Zionists launched successive offensives in April and early May 1948 in various parts of Palestine. These offensives, which entailed the destruction of the Palestinian Arab community and the expulsion and pauperization of the bulk of the Palestine Arabs, were calculated to achieve the military fait accompli upon which the state of Israel was to be based.
  23. ^
    • Morris, Benny (2004). The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited. Cambridge University Press. pp. 602–604. ISBN 978-0-521-00967-6. It is impossible to arrive at a definite persuasive estimate. My predilection would be to opt for the loose contemporary British formula, that of 'between 600,000 and 760,000' refugees; but, if pressed, 700,000 is probably a fair estimate
    • Memo US Department of State, 4 May 1949. Foreign Relations of the United States. 1949. p. 973. Archived from the original on 12 July 2019. One of the most important problems which must be cleared up before a lasting peace can be established in Palestine is the question of the more than 700,000 Arab refugees who during the Palestine conflict fled from their homes in what is now Israeli occupied territory and are at present living as refugees in Arab Palestine and the neighbouring Arab states.
    • Memorandum on the Palestine Refugee Problem, 4 May 1949. Foreign Relations of the United States. 1949. p. 984. Archived from the original on 12 July 2019. Approximately 700,000 refugees from the Palestine hostilities, now located principally in Arab Palestine, Transjordan, Lebanon and Syria, will require repatriation to Israel or resettlement in the Arab states.


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