The Crossing
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The Crossing is a term used in Egypt to refer to the west to east crossing of the Suez Canal by the Egyptian army at the start of the Yom Kippur War in 1973. It is also a term used by some Israelis to refer to the east to west counter-attack crossing of the Suez Canal by the Israeli army spearheaded by Colonel Danny Matt and his paratroop battalion later in that war. That term is translated from the word which means "The Crossovering" in Egyptian, that was particularly used to indicate the highlight of the Yom Kippur war surprise attack that was initiated by the frontline infantry in contrast to the expected routine airborne start.
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[edit] Background
New Egyptian president Anwar Sadat's regime was quite unstable and threatened by student demonstrations. They were unable to force through economic reforms that they felt were necessary to Egypt's survival.
In an attempt to restore Egyptian morale and secure the regime's position President Sadat decided to attempt to defeat Israel on the battlefield. Egypt had, for many years, suffered repeated defeat at the hands of the Israelis, most dramatically in the Six-Day War of 1967 where much of the Egyptian military had been destroyed and the Sinai peninsula across the Suez Canal had been taken by Israel.
President Sadat hoped to overwhelm the Israeli forces stationed there. His Soviet advisors thought otherwise and argued that it would take many days of fighting and a 50% casualty rate for Egypt to capture the canal, but he decided to proceed anyway.
[edit] Egyptian attack
Egypt, in cooperation with Syria, launched the attack on October 6, 1973. At 14:00 sharp the Egyptian Airforce with all its fighters crossed the Suez canal attacking the control points for the Israeli army destroying 95% of it, and at the same time open the way for the Egyptian soldiers to cross the canal. Then the Egyptian infantry starts to make a fire cover over the troops while crossing the canal. Initially, it was a spectacular success. Within hours over 80,000 Egyptian soldiers crossed the canal. The Israelis had constructed a massive line of fortifications along the canal called the Bar Lev Line, which they considered impregnable. The heart of these defences were massive sand banks with a series of 43 manned installations. The Israelis had calculated that blasting through the sand barriers would take several hours, however the Egyptians solved this problem by using pressurized water to quickly erode the hills. The Israeli's back-up plan had been to redirect the nearby oil pipeline into the canal and set it alight. However, the night before Egyptian commandos had managed to disable the pipeline. In the initial attack only 200 Egyptians lost their lives, while more than 1,200 Israelis were killed or captured. It was the first Arab victory over the Israelis in a generation. Behind the initial defensive line the Israelis had a large armoured reserve. These were immediately dispatched to contain the breach. However they were sent without infantry or air support (due to heavy SAM cover provided by batteries situated on the Western side of the canal) and the tanks took very heavy losses from Egyptian infantry armed with new Soviet-supplied anti-tank guided missiles and rocket-propelled grenade launchers. The Egyptian forces rushed north into the Sinai.
[edit] Israeli counterattack
After the assault, Egyptian forces dug-in and tried to hold defensive positions in the Sinai. This proved unsuccessful because Israeli forces, with its reserves now fully mobilized and on the offensive and helped by an American resupply airlift , forced the Egyptians to retreat in some of the northern areas near the canal, and in the southern areas, under General Ariel Sharon the Israelis were able to counter-attack and cross the Suez Canal to the Western bank into Egypt. The crossing also marked the first time in history that the IDF had waged war on African soil. Eventually the Israelis managed to surround and cut off the Egyptian Third Army on the Southeastern side of the canal and were thus in a position to destroy it. It was only after US pressure to spare the Third Army that the Israelis agreed not to destroy the besieged force. President Sadat nearly lost his gamble. However, other parties were now in play, the Soviet Union threatened to mobilize its forces, the UN made strong appeals, OPEC started the 1973 oil crisis and the precarious situation of the Egyptian Third Army which was in dire need of resupply since it was running short of food and water led Israel and Egypt to agree to a cease-fire. However, had it not been for the aid of the US, the outcome of the war would have been very different.
[edit] Analysis
Egypt's crossing had achieved President Sadat's aims, although in somewhat unexpected ways. It had forced the two superpowers to once again focus more intensely on the Middle East. Egypt's initial victory also greatly reinforced President Sadat's domestic position. For the rest of his life he was referred to as "The Hero of the Crossing," and this status helped his regime to stay in power until his assassination in 1981, on the eighth anniversary of the attack. Combined with pressure from the United States, it also brought Israel to the negotiating table and in 1977 the Camp David Accords, a comprehensive Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty, was signed, which among other things saw the Sinai eventually returned to Egypt in return for Egypt's official recognition of the State of Israel and the establishment of normal diplomatic relations with Israel, and a commitment to live in peace with the Jewish state.