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Your Daily Dose of Historical Revisionism

Bruce Anderson, a columnist at The Independent provides your daily dose of historical revisionism: The first act of the current tragedy began in 1967, after the Six-Day War. Plucky little Israel was master of the…

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Indy Bruce Anderson, a columnist at The Independent provides your daily dose of historical revisionism:

The first act of the current tragedy began in 1967, after the Six-Day War. Plucky little Israel was master of the battlefield. She had overrun a vast acreage of Arab territory. Almost immediately, even by those who had never been enthusiastic about the State of Israel, distinctions began to be drawn between the pre-'67 boundaries and the 1967 conquests. Israel had a tremendous hand of cards, strategic and moral. There was never a better moment for "in victory, magnanimity.

Israel should have announced that unlike almost every previous military victor, she did not seek territorial gains; her sole war aims were peace and justice. To secure them, she was prepared to trade her conquests, with the obvious exception of the Holy Places in old Jerusalem. On such a basis, and with huge international support, a deal would have been possible. But there were problems. At its narrowest point, pre-'67 Israel was only 12 miles wide. A tank thrust from the West Bank could have cut the country in two. Although the generals cannot be blamed for failing to predict the era of asymmetric warfare in which tank thrusts would only occur in war movies, their insistence on a demilitarised West Bank complicated matters. Then a temptation emerged, like the serpent in the Garden of Eden.

Memo to Anderson: On June 19, 1967 (a week and change after the war), the Israeli government sent a message to the U.S. it was prepared to return Gaza and the Golan in return for signed peace treaties while separate negotiations would resolve the future of the West Bank, Gaza and refugees.

History refers to the famous Arab reaction from Khartoum as The Three No's.

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