"So, all right, Nasser made a mistake and Hussein made a mistake," Sarid said. "So why do we have to fall into the trap of their mistake and turn our lives into an ongoing hell? Forty years, 40 years, we have been living in an ongoing hell because of this cursed occupation."Among the little-known facts mentioned in the documentary: The Egyptians were planning their own preemptive strike against Israel for about a week prior to Israel’s attack; it was canceled when the Soviets strongly advised against it. IDF Chief of Staff Yitzhak Rabin suffered a nervous breakdown – one might also describe it to be a loss of nerve – after being warned against going on the offensive by David Ben-Gurion in a private visit he made to the retired prime minister in his home at Kibbutz Sdeh Boker. And Israel’s response to Jordan’s opening of hostilities from the West Bank (hitting hundreds of buildings, killing 20 civilians and injuring “hundreds”) was so effective, that local commanders seized the West Bank entirely on their own initiative, without government authorization.
This prompted journalist Tom Segev to lament on the pages of the New York Times and Haaretz, this past week, that if only Hussein had not succumbed to the blandishments of Nasser in going to war or that Israel had responded in a more limited way to Jordan’s initial aggression, Israel’s situation would be much better today without having occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
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