One of the traditional Israeli narratives is one of overcoming a unified 5 nation Arab army attacking them from all sides...
Israel likes to present its David and Goliath story for the most part but in reality it was disunified Arab leaders who all had conflicting plans for the Middle East...
How is it that 5 conventional armies were defeated?...
I'll examine each countries aims separately...but for today i'll focus on the most significant and that is Jordan and King Abdullah...
Abdullah and the Zionist Movement
From the beginning of his rule in Transjordan he had relations with the Zionists mainly because Jordan was a land of few resources and had little cash...he wanted to attract Jewish capital for development...which he did in areas such as mining and electricity...
Abdullah also crucially was the only Arab head of state who had supported the 1937 Peel Commission partition plan...
The Jewish Agency met Abdullah twice in 1946...the idea was a partition plan which would lead to the creation of a Jewish state with the annexation of Arab lands to Transjordan...
Abdullah followed the Arab league in opposition to partition which is why a second meeting occurred...17th November 1947 in a meeting with Golda Meir...both sides had similar visions and were both opposed to Palestinian nationalism and a Palestinian state...and both were opposed to the mufti of Jerusalem Husayni...
This idea got British backing in the form of Foreign secretary Ernest Bevin...when the British mandate would end then Jordan can occupy the part of Palestine awarded to the Arabs...
British withdrawal was due on the 15th May 1948...and conflict had kicked off big time in Palestine...and Abdullah found that he needed to match the belligerence of the Arab League especially as Jordan had the best Arab army...it couldnt be seen to be abandoning the Palestinians...
Meir met Abdullah again on the 11th May...Abdullah said he had to engage but would not engage his forces beyond the lines stipulated by the UN partition resolution...
Relations with the Arab League
The other heads of state weren't stupid...they believed Abdullah supported the partition plan and were aware of his desires for territorial expansion...
They therefore didn't want Abdullahs Arab legion in Palestine...Husayni also didnt want the Arab legion...nor did the Syrian government...
The Arab league however especially after the massacre at Dayr Yasin felt it had to commit regular troops and with Jordan having the best army that they should also...
In short these concerns about Abdullah were fair...he had no interest in preserving Palestine for Palestinians but wanted it for himself...
And the Arab league actually then did quite the shafting job on Jordan...Abdullah was commander in chief of the Arab forces but all the national forces operated under their own commanders...the Arab league was supposed to give Jordan $3m in financial assistance and instead gave them $250k...and the Egyptian government was confiscating their arms shipments...
So in short the best Arab army had allies that werent allies, little ammunition or supplies, and no budget...
Post British Withdrawal
The Arab legion entered the West Bank...and the Jewish armies had no problem with that..however problems did arise when the Jewish army tried to take Jerusalem...part of the failed UN resolution was that Jerusalem would remain an international zone and not be part of either state...
Abdullah then ordered his troops into Jerusalem...now they were at war with Israel...they managed to secure the Old City...however an arms embargo was introduced and Britain adhered to it...so after 1 month of fighting the Arab Legion found itself 20% down in terms of soldiers, low ammunition and no chances of resupply...
Abdullah didnt want this battle...the Israelis had managed to get around the arms embargo...Jordan had taken Lydda and Ramla prior but then withdrew its forces pragmatically...Arab public opinion after this became opposed to Transjordan and the Arab legion weren't viewed as saviours of Palestine...the Egyptian government even accused them of withdrawing to put pressure on the Egyptian fighters...
Relations were strained between Egypt and Jordan so when the Egyptians requested help from the Legion and didnt really receive it...
Armistice at Rhodes...
Israelis with their growing success were becoming more demanding and Abdullah tried negotiation again...he wanted to 'unite' the remainder of Arab Palestine with Transjordan...and also sought Lydda and Ramla...the Arab part of Jerusalem would go to them and the Jewish part to the Jews...other areas were up for negotiation...what was interesting was his wording "any unacceptable results from these negotiations will bring trouble from OUR political enemies on the Arab side worse than you can imagine"...Abdullah was starting to realise how weak his position was...
This was happening as the Egyptians were getting battered...and this what eventually lead to the armistice agreement brokered by the British...the Jordanians wanted the Egyptians to lose and sign the agreement...it would mean the elimination of two rivals, King Faruq of Egypt and Husayni...also it would be good on the PR side because the Egyptians would have to be the first to openly come to terms with Israel...
Abdullah had two aims as the war was reaching its end...he wanted to retain the territory under Legion control...and wanted to extend control of the Northern part of the West Bank which at that point was being held by the Iraqi army...
It was quite successful...they made sure the Iraqis didnt provoke the Israelis and then negotiated a handover by the Iraqis to them...the Iraqis having seen what happened to Egypt preferred to return home without being defeated, without recgnising Israel and without having to negotiate an armistice...
Transjordan argued with Israel over the Negev desert...this was assigned to Israel in the Partition resolution but was under Transjordan control...Abdullah though realised he wasnt in a position to call the shots with the Israelis being stronger and the Legion withdrew...it didnt have much of a population so it didnt raise a furore...
Abdullah also gave up the area North of Tel-Aviv...this unlike Negev had 35,000 people...and this did lead to fury in the Arab world and Palestine because it was another occasion that Transjordan gave up without a fight...and allowed for people to be turned into refugees...
Conclusion
In return Abdullah was allowed to keep the West Bank...or occupy it...the Palestinians had no choice but to seek refuge in Jordan and unlike the other Arab countries they were given refuge...
Transjordan became a bi-national state with Abdullah claiming the West Bank and the refugees who settled...there was therefore a concerted effort to build unity between the two factions...
The Arab nationalist narrative has naturally attacked Abdullah for his secret dealings with Israel...some others view him as a pragmatist and realist...territorial expansion wasn't just Abdullahs aim...the other Arab nations had their own national interests too...
Unfortunately the story of Arab nations colluding against each other is as old as these nations themselves and continues to this day...
1948 and the creation of Israel was made possible due to this fact...
Israel likes to present its David and Goliath story for the most part but in reality it was disunified Arab leaders who all had conflicting plans for the Middle East...
How is it that 5 conventional armies were defeated?...
I'll examine each countries aims separately...but for today i'll focus on the most significant and that is Jordan and King Abdullah...
Abdullah and the Zionist Movement
From the beginning of his rule in Transjordan he had relations with the Zionists mainly because Jordan was a land of few resources and had little cash...he wanted to attract Jewish capital for development...which he did in areas such as mining and electricity...
Abdullah also crucially was the only Arab head of state who had supported the 1937 Peel Commission partition plan...
The Jewish Agency met Abdullah twice in 1946...the idea was a partition plan which would lead to the creation of a Jewish state with the annexation of Arab lands to Transjordan...
Abdullah followed the Arab league in opposition to partition which is why a second meeting occurred...17th November 1947 in a meeting with Golda Meir...both sides had similar visions and were both opposed to Palestinian nationalism and a Palestinian state...and both were opposed to the mufti of Jerusalem Husayni...
This idea got British backing in the form of Foreign secretary Ernest Bevin...when the British mandate would end then Jordan can occupy the part of Palestine awarded to the Arabs...
British withdrawal was due on the 15th May 1948...and conflict had kicked off big time in Palestine...and Abdullah found that he needed to match the belligerence of the Arab League especially as Jordan had the best Arab army...it couldnt be seen to be abandoning the Palestinians...
Meir met Abdullah again on the 11th May...Abdullah said he had to engage but would not engage his forces beyond the lines stipulated by the UN partition resolution...
Relations with the Arab League
The other heads of state weren't stupid...they believed Abdullah supported the partition plan and were aware of his desires for territorial expansion...
They therefore didn't want Abdullahs Arab legion in Palestine...Husayni also didnt want the Arab legion...nor did the Syrian government...
The Arab league however especially after the massacre at Dayr Yasin felt it had to commit regular troops and with Jordan having the best army that they should also...
In short these concerns about Abdullah were fair...he had no interest in preserving Palestine for Palestinians but wanted it for himself...
And the Arab league actually then did quite the shafting job on Jordan...Abdullah was commander in chief of the Arab forces but all the national forces operated under their own commanders...the Arab league was supposed to give Jordan $3m in financial assistance and instead gave them $250k...and the Egyptian government was confiscating their arms shipments...
So in short the best Arab army had allies that werent allies, little ammunition or supplies, and no budget...
Post British Withdrawal
The Arab legion entered the West Bank...and the Jewish armies had no problem with that..however problems did arise when the Jewish army tried to take Jerusalem...part of the failed UN resolution was that Jerusalem would remain an international zone and not be part of either state...
Abdullah then ordered his troops into Jerusalem...now they were at war with Israel...they managed to secure the Old City...however an arms embargo was introduced and Britain adhered to it...so after 1 month of fighting the Arab Legion found itself 20% down in terms of soldiers, low ammunition and no chances of resupply...
Abdullah didnt want this battle...the Israelis had managed to get around the arms embargo...Jordan had taken Lydda and Ramla prior but then withdrew its forces pragmatically...Arab public opinion after this became opposed to Transjordan and the Arab legion weren't viewed as saviours of Palestine...the Egyptian government even accused them of withdrawing to put pressure on the Egyptian fighters...
Relations were strained between Egypt and Jordan so when the Egyptians requested help from the Legion and didnt really receive it...
Armistice at Rhodes...
Israelis with their growing success were becoming more demanding and Abdullah tried negotiation again...he wanted to 'unite' the remainder of Arab Palestine with Transjordan...and also sought Lydda and Ramla...the Arab part of Jerusalem would go to them and the Jewish part to the Jews...other areas were up for negotiation...what was interesting was his wording "any unacceptable results from these negotiations will bring trouble from OUR political enemies on the Arab side worse than you can imagine"...Abdullah was starting to realise how weak his position was...
This was happening as the Egyptians were getting battered...and this what eventually lead to the armistice agreement brokered by the British...the Jordanians wanted the Egyptians to lose and sign the agreement...it would mean the elimination of two rivals, King Faruq of Egypt and Husayni...also it would be good on the PR side because the Egyptians would have to be the first to openly come to terms with Israel...
Abdullah had two aims as the war was reaching its end...he wanted to retain the territory under Legion control...and wanted to extend control of the Northern part of the West Bank which at that point was being held by the Iraqi army...
It was quite successful...they made sure the Iraqis didnt provoke the Israelis and then negotiated a handover by the Iraqis to them...the Iraqis having seen what happened to Egypt preferred to return home without being defeated, without recgnising Israel and without having to negotiate an armistice...
Transjordan argued with Israel over the Negev desert...this was assigned to Israel in the Partition resolution but was under Transjordan control...Abdullah though realised he wasnt in a position to call the shots with the Israelis being stronger and the Legion withdrew...it didnt have much of a population so it didnt raise a furore...
Abdullah also gave up the area North of Tel-Aviv...this unlike Negev had 35,000 people...and this did lead to fury in the Arab world and Palestine because it was another occasion that Transjordan gave up without a fight...and allowed for people to be turned into refugees...
Conclusion
In return Abdullah was allowed to keep the West Bank...or occupy it...the Palestinians had no choice but to seek refuge in Jordan and unlike the other Arab countries they were given refuge...
Transjordan became a bi-national state with Abdullah claiming the West Bank and the refugees who settled...there was therefore a concerted effort to build unity between the two factions...
The Arab nationalist narrative has naturally attacked Abdullah for his secret dealings with Israel...some others view him as a pragmatist and realist...territorial expansion wasn't just Abdullahs aim...the other Arab nations had their own national interests too...
Unfortunately the story of Arab nations colluding against each other is as old as these nations themselves and continues to this day...
1948 and the creation of Israel was made possible due to this fact...