Avoiding Medical Errors
Healthy Eating
Vitamins
Angel Flights
Healthy Foods
Site Map
|
Moshe Dayan
include("http://www.cancertreatmentbooks.com/inserts/gogle1.html");
?>
Moshe Dayan (May 20, 1915 - October 16, 1981), was an Israeli military
leader and politician.
Moshe Dayan was born in the kibbutz Daganya Alef, then still part of the
Ottoman Empire, near Lake Kinneret (Sea of Galilee). His parents were
Shemuel and Devorah, and he was the first child born in the
newly-established community,
Aged 14 he joined the Haganah at a very early stage. He was arrested by the
British ten years later (when the Haganah was outlawed), but released after
two years as a part of Haganah's renewed cooperation with the British. In
one of the operations against the French mandate of Syria (then under
control of the Vichy France government) he lost his left eye and began
wearing an eyepatch that would become his trademark.
During the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Dayan occupied various positions of
importance, first as the commander over the defensive effort in the Jordan
valley; he was then given command over a number of military units on the
central front. After the war, Dayan began to rise rapidly in ranks. In
1955-1958 he was the Chief of Staff of the IDF. In this capacity, he
commanded the Israeli forces during the Suez Crisis.
In 1959, a year after he retired from the IDF, Dayan joined MAPAI, the
leftist block in Israeli politics, then left by David Ben-Gurion. Until 1964
he served as the minister of agriculture. Levi Eshkol, the following Prime
Minister disliked Dayan; however when tensions began to rise in early 1967,
Eshkol decided to hand over the position of Minister of Defense (previously
also occupied by him, in spite of Eshkol's never serving in the army) to the
charismatic Dayan. Although Dayan did not take part in most of the planning
before the Six-Day War of June 1967, his apointment contributed to the
Israeli success. Following the war, Dayan, whose traits did not include
particular modesty, invested PR efforts to take credit for much of the
fighting to himself.
After Golda Meir became Prime Minister in 1969, Dayan became the Minister of
Defense in her government. He was still in that job when the Yom Kippur War
has catastrophically began on October 6, 1973. As the most high-ranking
official responsible for military planning, and in particular for examining
the intelligence apparatus, it is of little doubt that Dayan, who became the
symbol of victorious complacency following the Six-Day War, bears a part of
responsibility for Israeli leadership's missing the signs for the upcoming war.
In the hours preceding the war, Dayan opted for not carrying out a full
mobilization or carrying out a preemptive strike against the Egyptians and
the Syrians; he assumed that Israel would be able to win easily even if
Arabs had attacked and didn't want Israel to appear as the agressor.
Following the heavy defeats of the first two days, Dayan's views experienced
a radical turn; he was close to announcing "the downfall of the Third
Temple" at a news conference, but was luckily forbidden to speak by Meir.
To Dayan's credit, he had managed to recover his self-control and direct
Israel's fighting during the rest of the war. Although the Agranat Committee
Report published after the war did not lay substantial responsibility on the
political layer - to which Moshe Dayan belonged, a wave of public protests
led to the resignation of both him and Golda Meir.
According to those who knew him, the war deeply depressed Dayan. He left the
leftist MAPAI/Labor, his political home for 15 years, for the rightist
Likud. In 1977, he became Foreign Minister in the government led by Menachem
Begin. As Prime Minister Menachem Begin's foreign minister, he was
instrumental in drawing up the Camp David Accords, a peace agreement with
Egypt. Dayan withdrew in 1980 (joined by Ezer Weizman who then defected to
Labor), because of his disagreement with Begin over whether the Palestinian
territories were an Israeli internal matter (the Camp David treaty included
provisions for future negotiations with the Palestinians; Begin, who didn't
like the idea, did not put Dayan in charge of the negotiation team).
In 1981, Dayan formed a new party, Telem, which advocated unilateral
separation from West Bank and Gaza Strip. The party received 2 seats in the
Tenth Knesset (elections took place on June 30, 1981) but Dayan died shortly
thereafter, in Tel Aviv, from colon cancer. He is buried in Nahalal in the
kibbutz where he was raised.
Dayan was undoubtedly a very complicated and controversial individual; his
opinions were never strictly black and white. He had few close friends; his
mental brilliance and charismatic manner were often combined with cynicism
and lack of restraint. Ariel Sharon noted about Dayan:
He would wake up with a hundred ideas. Of them ninety-five were
dangerous; three more were bad; the remaining two, however, were
brilliant.
Dayan, also an author and an amateur archaeologist, combined a kibbutznik's
secular identity and pragmaticism (reportedly, having seen rabbis flocking
on the Temple Mount shortly after Jerusalem was captured in 1967, he asked
"what is this Vatican?" then handed the keys to the Waqf, the Muslim trust)
with a deep sense of love and appreciation to Jewish legacy and the land of
Israel, apparent in his writing.
Cancer -
List of Famous Cancer Patients -
Medical Topics -
Medical_Terms -
Medicine -
Alternative Therapies -
This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Links - HOME - Help build the worlds largest free encyclopedia.
|