Occupation of the Gaza Strip by Egypt : 1947 - October 1956; March 1957 - June 1967.
1948 and United Nations partition
According to the
United Nations'
1947 UN Partition Plan, proposing a partition of the
British Mandate of Palestine, the areas of the
Gaza Strip and the
West Bank were to become part of a new
Arab state. However, the
Arab members of the U.N. stated that the plan was unjust and contrary to the U.N. Charter, and that they would not abide by it, presaging the
1948 Arab-Israeli War. (See also
Proposals for a Palestinian state.) The "All-Palestine Government" was recognised by
Egypt,
Syria,
Lebanon,
Iraq,
Saudi Arabia, and
Yemen, but not by Jordan or any other country in the world. However, it was little more than a facade under Egyptian control and had negligible influence or funding. Palestinians living in the Gaza Strip or Egypt were issued with All-Palestine passports until 1959, when
Gamal Abdul Nasser, president of Egypt, annulled the All-Palestine government by decree.
Egyptian control of the Gaza Strip was confirmed by the 1949 Armistice Agreements between Israel and Egypt, signed on February 24. The main points were:
- The armistice line was drawn along the international border (dating back to 1906) for the most part, except near the Mediterranean Sea, where Egypt remained in control of a strip of land along the coast, which became known as the Gaza Strip.
- The Egyptian forces besieged in the Faluja Pocket were allowed to return to Egypt with their weapons, and the area was handed over to Israel.
- A zone on both sides of the border around Uja al-Hafeer (Nitzana) was to be demilitarized, and became the seat of the bilateral armistice committee.
King Farouk, General Naguib, and President Nasser
King
Farouk of Egypt was overthrown in 1952 by the
Free Officers Movement led by General
Muhammad Naguib.
Gamal Abdel Nasser launched a
coup d'état in 1954 and became prime minister and then president of Egypt. A strong supporter of
pan-Arabism, he advocated a union of all Arab countries including Palestine, and called for this union not only as an end in itself but as a means towards what he saw as freeing Arab Palestine by defeating the
State of Israel. In accordance with this ideology, he eliminated the legal fiction of the "All-Palestine" government in Gaza, and created the
United Arab Republic together with his ally
Syria.
1956 Suez War aftermath
On
October 29,
1956,
Israel invaded the Gaza Strip and Sinai Peninsula with French and British cooperation. The invasion was a military success, but a political failure: the
United States forced the attackers to withdraw. See main article
Suez Crisis.
In 1964, with Nasser's support, the PLO was established, led by Ahmed Shukeiri. Yassir Arafat became a prominent figure in the PLO, and eventually became its leader in 1969.
Six Day War
On
June 5,
1967, in an overheated political atmosphere, weeks after Egypt blockaded the
Straits of Tiran and cut off Israeli shipping, Israel launched a
preemptive attack against
Egypt, beginning the
Six Day War. It rapidly defeated the surrounding Arab states and took control of, among other areas, the
Gaza Strip. International pressure mounted on Israel to withdraw from the territories. On November 22, 1967, the
UN Security Council adopted
U.N. Security Council Resolution 242, the "land for peace" formula, which called for Israeli withdrawal from territories it captured in 1967 in return for peace with its Arab neighbors.
Egypt-Israel peace
In 1978, Israel and Egypt signed the historic
Camp David Accords (1978) which brought an official end to the strife between them. The second part of the accords was a framework for the establishment of an autonomous regime in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Egypt thus signaled an end to any ambitions to control the Gaza Strip itself; from then on, the Gaza Strip's status would be discussed as part of the more general issue of
proposals for a Palestinian state.
See also
External links
Arab-Israeli conflict | History of Egypt | Palestinian history | Occupations of Palestine