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Operation Shoter

Coordinates: 32°38′41″N 34°59′17″E / 32.64472°N 34.98806°E / 32.64472; 34.98806
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Operation Shoter
Part of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War
DateJuly 24–26, 1948
Location32°38′41″N 34°59′17″E / 32.64472°N 34.98806°E / 32.64472; 34.98806
Result

Israeli victory

  • Depopulation of the Little Triangle
Belligerents
 Israel Palestinian Arabs
Commanders and leaders
Israel Ben Zion Fridan (33rd)
Strength
Reinforced battalion 800 troops
Operation Shoter is located in Mandatory Palestine
Operation Shoter
Operation Shoter
Location within Mandatory Palestine

Operation Shoter (Hebrew: מִבְצָע שׁוֹטֵר, Mivtza Shoter, lit. Operation Policeman), also Operation Jaba', was a three-day Israeli operation during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War against an area called the "Little Triangle" south of Haifa. It was launched a week after the start of the second truce imposed by United Nations. The operation was carried out by units from the Golani, Carmeli and Alexandroni brigades with supporting troops, under the overall command of Alexandroni's 33rd Battalion. Arab forces consisted of local militia which was not part of any regular army. The objective of the operation was to clear the Tel Aviv – Haifa Road, which had been closed by the Arabs to Israeli traffic. The Israelis had been forced to take a long and dangerous route to the east through Wadi Milk.

The Israeli forces attacking on July 24 and throughout July 25 failed to take the villages due to stiff resistance and poor planning. Following heavy artillery shelling and bombing from the air, the Little Triangle's defenses broke and the three villages surrendered on July 26. The operation caused the depopulation of the Little Triangle, which according to a United Nations report consisted of 8,000 people. United Nations observers toured the destroyed villages after the attack and found no evidence of a massacre as claimed by Arab sources, although they concluded that the assault on the Little Triangle was unjustified.

Background

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The Arab villages of Mount Carmel served as staging points for attacks on Jewish traffic in the three roads surrounding them, especially on the Tel Aviv – Haifa Road, during the 1947–48 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine. The road and its surrounding area was the site of frequent skirmishes between Arab and Jewish forces.[1] After the Haganah captured Haifa in April 1948, momentum shifted in its favor,[2] and it was slowly able to capture all of the villages outlooking the road: the Druze villages allied themselves with the Haganah, and Balad ash-Sheikh, Umm az-Zinat and Tantura were captured in April–May, 1948. Tira was taken on July 16.[1]

By the second truce of the war, only three villages remained, located about 20 km south of Haifa—Ayn Ghazal, Ijzim and Jaba', dubbed "The Little Triangle".[2] These villages had refused to let in the Arab Liberation Army during the civil war, but did not ally themselves with the Jewish forces.[3] During the ten days between the first and second truce, this triangle enjoyed calm, as the Alexandroni Brigade, responsible for the area, was participating in operations Danny and Betek.[4] Sniper fire from village militiamen effectively closed this road, but by the beginning of the truce they were completely cut off from other Arab forces.[5] The village residents also set up roadblocks and mines, and dug trenches and foxholes along the road. The commander of the triangle was in contact with the Iraqi Army nearby, and there was an Israeli fear that the Iraqis would attempt to connect with his forces.[1][4] The coastal road was the main traffic artery between the central and northern parts of Israel; not having access to it meant that all traffic and supplies had to go east through Wadi Milk, a dangerous route which also passed close to Arab villages.[4]

The Little Triangle 1938 1:20,000
The Little Triangle 1:250,000

Prelude

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Prior deliberations and failed assaults

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The Israel Defense Forces made attempts to capture the villages blocking the road on June 18 and July 8, but failed to overtake them, in part due to the villages' superior strategic position.[2] This put the Arab forces on high alert, and increased their morale.[1] The July 8 assault was conducted as a retaliation for a particular Arab attack on the Tel Aviv – Haifa road. The forces reported that:[6]

During the attack, the enemy showed quick orientation, good command, an aggressive spirit and a proneness to attack. An obvious trait was the abundance of automatic weaponry – especially Bren machine guns, Hotchkiss machine guns and 52 mm mortars.

On July 14, 1948, in a cabinet meeting, Finance Minister Eliezer Kaplan commented that the Little Triangle was putting lives in danger, and asked what was being done about this. Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion replied that:[7]

A ceasefire will be declared. These villages are in our pocket. We will be able to act against them also after the [start of the] ceasefire. It will be a police operation. If residents of a state fire – they are arrested. They are not considered an enemy, because the territory is ours and they are residents of the state.

Following the success at Tira on July 16 a follow-up was tried in Jaba' and Ayn-Ghazal. It was estimated that the Arab fighters who fled Tira moved to the Little Triangle. Three companies of the Guard Corps and Israel Navy were allocated, as well as a number of cannons and armored vehicles. At 10:30, the artillery and INS Wedgwood began firing at the villages, and at 14:30, the infantry forces moved on the villages. Two positions were captured by one of the companies, but an order was given to retreat. Another company met with heavy resistance and retreated. The navy suffered 2 killed and 7 wounded, with more casualties among the other units.[8]

Planning and preparations

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On July 18 two Israeli motorists were killed and the IDF informed the villagers that they must surrender or be evacuated.[5] The second truce of the war came to effect on that day, however (earlier than the Israelis had originally predicted, as indeed they had planned to attack the villages during wartime),[1] and the IDF was prevented from conducting a military operation there. Thus, the justification for such operation was that the territory in question was part of the Jewish state according to the 1947 Partition Plan and therefore a police operation was permitted there, hence the name, "Policeman" (Shoter). The plan was to besiege the triangle with armored units and artillery, while the actual capture would be made by military police, and the Alexandroni and Carmeli brigades.[9] A military police force was added to the plan to give it the appearance of a policing action. The operational planners initially assumed that the Arab force consisted of less than one company and the MPs were new recruits who had not yet completed basic training. They were used because the military police could not spare any other troops. Moshe Zadok, head of the IDF Manpower Directorate, assured the Chief MP Officer, Danny Magen, that his troops would not be engaged in combat, but would rather watch from the sidelines. The military police's planning and logistics were described as "amateurish"—the soldiers received defective helmets, their attack was set to a time when the rising sun would blind them, and command posts assigned to soldiers who had previously served in the Jewish Brigade due to a lack of qualified commanders.[9]

The Alexandroni Brigade plan, unlike military police estimates, envisioned the Arab force having about 800 highly trained and disciplined soldiers, including Iraqis and a handful of British deserters, mortars, three armored vehicles and one cannon. Their operational plan included a simultaneous attack by a Golani company from the 15th Battalion, which would attack from Atlit through Mazar in the north; and Alexandroni's 33rd Battalion from Bat Shlomo through Meir Shfeya in the south. A Carmeli battalion would block the approaches from the southeast, next to Ayn Ghazal, and eight armored vehicles along with a bulldozer and Guard Corps troops would clear obstacles on the main road and stage diversions.[4]

Between July 20 and 24, the Little Triangle came under constant bombing from the Israeli Air Force's Galilee Squadron based in Yavne'el and Ramat David. Even though many of the B-17 bombers and the Douglas DC-5 missed their targets due to the low density of the villages, and despite coming under friendly anti-aircraft fire, the bombing runs had a significant effect on the local population.[10]

Operation

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On July 24, six 65 mm Napoleonchik guns were stationed about 3 km to the west of the villages, and mortars were put to the southeast. At 22:40, a Golani company left a farm near Mazar (north of Jaba') to attack the Arab positions. They encountered an ambush and retreated after 6–9 soldiers were injured.[2][11]

At midnight, Alexandroni and Carmeli companies set out to attack Ayn Ghazal from the south, accompanied by military police forces.[9] An aerial attack commenced at 00:20, and despite a request from Alexandroni to stop, made another run at 01:10.[12] at 01:15, the six artillery pieces started to bombard the villages.[2] By 02:35 on July 25, the Alexandroni company (the 1st) had captured a hill about 1 km south of Ayn Ghazal. By 05:30, they were in control of a yet closer hilltop position, where they halted, dug in, and sent a request for food and water.[12]

At 03:20, Israeli armored vehicles attempted to clear the main road from the south, but were stopped at a roadblock at Khirbat as-Sawamir.[2] They were fired at by friendly Avia S-199 aircraft that misidentified them, although no casualties were reported.[13] Meanwhile, the Golani forces regrouped and at 19:50 set out to attack Jaba' again.[12] They captured its main position at 21:45. Also in the evening, Alexandroni sent two more companies into the battle. The 4th reinforced the first, capturing the main position of Ayn Ghazal (Position 17) between midnight and 02:20,[2][12] while the 3rd Company attacked a position between Ayn Ghazal and Ijzim at 00:10. Radio contact with the 3rd was lost at that point, until 07:00 when the company reported that it established itself on hills overlooking Jaba'.[12] By 01:00, Carmeli had captured Ijzim's main position,[2] aided by Rapide and Auster light aircraft from the Tel Aviv-based 1st Squadron.[13] Ijzim entered negotiations to surrender.[1]

By this time, most of the Arab defenders retreated to the southeast, and east through Wadi al-Matabil and Khirbat Qumbaza. A Carmeli force from Bat Shlomo, as well as Guard Corps members, intercepted one of the retreat routes.[2][14] Prisoners interrogated later are quoted, in a report to the Israeli General Staff, as claiming that fleeing villagers were "repeatedly fired on by Israeli soldiers and aircraft."[15] In all, the Arabs suffered 60 dead during their flight.[16] At 07:00 on July 26, Ayn Ghazal itself was captured by Alexandroni's 1st Company. At 07:25, after the 3rd Company occupied Jaba', all of the military positions in the triangle were under Israeli control.[2] At 09:30, a final air raid was conducted on Ijzim, and shortly afterward, the mukhtar of the village came forward to sign an unconditional surrender.[12][16]

The retreating Arabs, about 800 in number, eventually reached Iraqi lines at 'Ara and Ar'ara under the command of Khaleel Jassim, where they received good treatment and provisions. They escaped with an estimated 810 rifles and 20 Bren guns, which, according to Arab sources, were buried and not used.[1]

Aftermath

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The operation captured the final Arab pocket on the Tel Aviv – Haifa road, thereby freeing it for Israeli civilian and military traffic.[2] Roadblocks were removed by the IDF, and traffic along the coastal railway between Haifa and Hadera was also restored.[1] The operation significantly reduced the prestige of the military police in the IDF.[9]

In 1949, the villages Kerem Maharal, Ein Ayala and Geva Carmel were established in the vicinity of Ijzim, Ayn Ghazal and Jaba', although there is disagreement on whether they were established on lands belonging to these villages.[17][18]

Allegations of atrocities and ceasefire violation

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Azzam Pasha, the Secretary General of the Arab League issued a statement alleging that atrocities were committed during and after the attacks. In particular it was stated that 28 people from al-Tira were burnt alive. The IDF rejected these allegations but admitted that their soldiers had found 25–30 bodies at Ayn Ghazal in "an advanced state of decomposition" and that the soldiers made prisoners bury the remains. The IDF also buried about 200 bodies found in the three villages after the battle.[19][20]

On July 28, the United Nations peace envoy Folke Bernadotte issued a statement which said that there was "no evidence to support claims of massacre."[21] The next morning, a team of UN observers came to survey the damage and did not find any bodies; they were buried under the rubble of destroyed buildings.[20] The UN went on to see the refugees of the three villages now camped around Jenin, and found 8,111, while 63 were declared missing and 62 killed. Numerous refugees in the area, however, lied about their origins, as the combined population of the Little Triangle before the war had been 6,820.[22]

On September 8, Bernadotte produced a more detailed report, concluding that the assault on the villages was unjustified, especially in view of an offer from the villagers to negotiate, and that the attack violated the truce. It condemned the "systematic" demolition of Ayn Ghazal and Jaba'.[19] In conclusion the report demanded that Israel allow the return of the villagers and assist in the rebuilding of their homes. By the time Israel's Foreign Minister Moshe Sharett issued his response on September 28, Bernadotte had been assassinated by the militant Zionist group Lehi. His replacement, Ralph Bunche, did not pursue the matter.[19]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Lorch (1998), p. 414
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Wallach et al. (1978), p. 91
  3. ^ Gelber (2004), p. 177
  4. ^ a b c d Rivlin (1964/1992), pp. 183–184
  5. ^ a b Morris (1987), p. 213
  6. ^ IDF History Branch (1978), pp. 252–254
  7. ^ Protocol of July 14, 1948 cabinet meeting, cited in Cohen (2004), p. 674
  8. ^ Tal (1964), p. 111
  9. ^ a b c d Harel (1982), pp. 19–20
  10. ^ Cohen (2004), pp. 674–678
  11. ^ Rivlin (1964/1992), pp. 184–185
  12. ^ a b c d e f Alexandroni Operational Log for Operation Shoter, cited in Rivlin (1964/1992), pp. 185–186
  13. ^ a b Cohen (2004), p. 678
  14. ^ Khalidi (1992), p. 166
  15. ^ Morris (1987), pp. 214, 347
  16. ^ a b Morris (2004), p. 439
  17. ^ Khalidi (1992), p. 148
  18. ^ Morris (2004), p. xxii, #118
  19. ^ a b c Morris (1987), p. 214
  20. ^ a b Morris (2004), p. 440
  21. ^ Morris (1987), pp. 346–347
  22. ^ Gelber (2004), p. 252

Bibliography

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  • Cohen, Avi (2004). The History of the Israeli Air Force in the War for Independence (in Hebrew). Ministry of Defense Publishing. ISBN 965-05-1245-4.
  • Gelber, Yoav (2004). Independence versus Nakba (in Hebrew). Zmora-Bitan and Dvir publishers. ISBN 965-517-190-6.
  • Harel, Zvi (1982). "Operation Jaba'". In Schiff, Yehuda (ed.). IDF in Its Corps: Army and Security Encyclopedia (in Hebrew). Vol. 16. Revivim Publishing.
  • Israel Defense Forces General Staff Historiography Branch (1978) [First published in 1959]. History of the War of Independence (in Hebrew) (20th ed.). Israel: Ma'arakhot Publishing. S/N 501-202-72.
  • Khalidi, Walid (1992). All that Remains. ISBN 0-88728-224-5.
  • Lorch, Netanel (1998). History of the War of Independence (in Hebrew). Modan Publishing.
  • Morris, Benny (1987). The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem. ISBN 0-521-33028-9.
  • Morris, Benny (2004). The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-00967-6.
  • Rivlin, Gershon (1992) [First published in 1964]. Alexandroni Brigade in the War of Independence (in Hebrew). Ma'arakhot Publishing.
  • Tal, Eliezer (1964). Naval Operations of the Israeli War of Independence (in Hebrew). Ma'arakhot Publishing.
  • Wallach, Jeuda; Lorekh, Netanel; Yitzhaki, Aryeh (1978). "Battles of the Jordan Valley". In Evyatar Nur (ed.). Carta's Atlas of Israel (in Hebrew). Vol. 2 - The First Years 1948–1961. Jerusalem, Israel: Carta.