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Opinion

Without forgetting the Yom Kippur War, it is time to let it go

It is important to remember that Israel’s prosperity and status as a world leader in tech are built on hard-fought wars, but the country’s newfound power comes with responsibilities

November 4, 2021 16:58
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3 min read

In October 1973, at the height of the Yom Kippur war, the US secretary of state Henry Kissinger had some typically uncompromising advice for Israel’s ambassador to Washington. “You have to win,” the master of realpolitik told Simcha Dinitz.

It really was that simple. Israel had to win, which meant their hastily reinforced defensive lines had to hold. Allow the Syrians and Egyptians to break through to Tel Aviv or Jerusalem and all bets were off. Would America have risked war with the Soviet Union to bail Israel out? Would prime minister Golda Meir have dared to exercise the “Samson option” and launch a nuclear strike on Damascus, as her defence secretary Moshe Dayan reportedly advocated? The counterfactuals are all horrifying.

And yet as Valley of Tears, the pulsating new series that starts tonight on Channel 4 illustrates, the war was a perilously closely run thing. Valley of Tears — or Emek Habakha — is a grim and compelling journey through the darkest days of Israeli history. Coming as I do from a generation that didn’t live through the existential struggles of Israel’s early decades, it is also a priceless history lesson in why Israel still needs to be strong today, and perhaps why it can also afford to be a little more magnanimous.

What do we really remember from 1973? I recall as a child hearing mythical tales of Ariel Sharon’s exploits in the Sinai and Leonard Cohen flying in to serenade the troops. And as a teenager, meeting a burly politician called Avigdor Kahalani and hearing his memories of the desperate tank battle on the Golan.