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Camp David was Jimmy Carter's lasting legacy, but it also helped to undo him

40 years ago, Egypt and Israel agreed to end the war between them. The deal’s architect believed the Jewish community ‘has never given me a break’

September 17, 2018 08:46
Watched by US President Jimmy Carter, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat embrace on the day the Camp David Accords were signed

ByRobert Philpot, Robert Philpot

4 min read

Late on the evening of Sunday 17 September 1978, Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin — watched by a beaming Jimmy Carter — signed an agreement in the East Room of the White House which brought to a close 30 years of intermittent conflict between Israel and its biggest neighbour and most dangerous enemy.

The three men had spent the previous 13 days sequestered at the presidential retreat of Camp David. Begin and Sadat refused to negotiate directly and barely spoke with one another, so the president and his team shuttled between the Egyptian and Israeli delegations, endlessly drafting and redrafting the terms of a peace agreement between the bitter foes.

While a formal agreement would not be signed for another six months — after the president had flown to Cairo and Jerusalem to seal the fraying deal — the signing of the Camp David accords 40 years ago represented the high point of Mr Carter’s tempestuous presidency and his most enduring legacy.

And yet, barely two years after that momentous day, American Jews delivered a historic snub to the president as he ran for re-election, contributing to his landslide defeat at the hands of Ronald Reagan.