1964 Arab League summit (Cairo)

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Arab League summit
Arab League Summit, 1964.jpg
Arab heads of state in a meeting during the summit
Host country Egypt
Dates January 13, 1964 (1964-01-13) – January 19, 1964 (1964-01-19)
Cities Cairo

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The 1964 Arab League summit was the first summit of the Arab League, held in Cairo, Egypt, on 13–16 January 1964 and attended by all thirteen of the then member states:[1] United Arab Republic (Egypt), Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Yemen, Libya, Sudan, Morocco, Tunisia, Kuwait and Algeria.

At the summit, held on the initiative of the United Arab Republic (modern-day Egypt only, following the 1961 secession of Syria from the union), it was decided to carry out planning to resolve inter-Arab conflicts and to adopt common principles regarding the struggle against imperialism and the "aggressive policies"[2] of Israel.[2]

The key resolutions from the summit were expanded and recorded in a letter to the United Nations eight months later at the 1964 Arab League summit (Alexandria).

Background

At the time, Syria and Palestinian fedayeen called for a rematch of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, but other Arab states (most notably Egypt under Gamal Abdel Nasser) felt it was not the right moment to strike. Instead, they agreed on the non-military belligerent tactic of diverting water from the Jordan River so that Israel could not use it.[3] This diversion was called the 1964 Headwater Diversion Plan. It went against the original agreed proposals of the River Jordan by both Israel & Arabs in the 1955 Unified Johnston Plan, also known as the Jordan Valley United Water Plan. This was one of the factors that later precipitated the Six-Day War in 1967.

The immediate catalyst for the summit was Israel's proposed diversion of water from Lake Tiberias.[4] In reaction to Syria's repeated charges of Egyptian reluctance for military confrontation with Israel, Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser (1918 - 1970) championed an Arab plan to divert two sources of the River Jordan, the Hasbani River and the Banias.[4] Nasser blamed Arab divisions for what he deemed "the disastrous situation".[5] This had been the chosen option out of two proposals of the 1964 Headwater Diversion Plan. On 23 December 1963, he said:

In order to confront Israel, which challenged us last week when its chief-of-staff stood up and said "we shall divert the water against the will of the Arabs and the Arabs can do what they want", a meeting between Arab kings and Heads of State must take place as soon as possible, regardless of the conflicts and differences between them. Those with whom we are in conflict, we are prepared to meet; those with whom we have a quarrel, we are ready, for the sake of Palestine, to sit with.[6]

Resolutions and effects

On Palestine, Ahmad al-Shuqayri (1908 - 1988), a Palestinian diplomat and a former assistant secretary-general of the Arab League (1950 - 1956), was given a mandate to initiate contacts aimed at establishing a Palestinian entity,[7][8] in which role he would eventually become first chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization.

On the military front, Cairo Radio announced that the leaders of the Arab League member states agreed to set up a unified military command,[9] the United Arab Command, to be headed by an Egyptian lieutenant general, Ali Ali Amer, and with headquarters in Cairo.[9] No mention of this new body was made in the official communiqué from the summit, although the secretary-general himself, Abdel Khalek Hassouna, had stated that certain adopted resolutions would remain secret.[9]

On the water diversion plan, all thirteen member states unanimously resolved to approve Nasser's proposal.[10] The effect of the summit and the decisions taken there was to emasculate the Council of the Arab League and supersede it as the foremost decision-making body.[11] Nasser discouraged Syria and Palestinian guerrillas from provoking the Israelis, conceding that he had no plans for war with Israel.[5]

During the summit, Nasser developed cordial relations with King Hussein, and ties were mended with the rulers of Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Morocco.[12] The summit was to be the first of many: in late 1964, a second summit (1964 Arab League summit (Alexandria)) would be held in Alexandria, also in Egypt. Following this second summit, a letter was sent to the United Nations setting out the agreed resolutions.

References

  1. Brecher and Wilkenfeld 1997: 279
  2. 2.0 2.1 Osmańczyk 2003: 116
  3. Sela, Avraham. "Arab Summit Conferences." The Continuum Political Encyclopedia of the Middle East. Ed. Sela. New York: Continuum, 2002. pp. 158-160
  4. 4.0 4.1 Hof 2000: 156
  5. 5.0 5.1 Aburish 2004, pp. 222–223
  6. Kalawoun 2000: 102
  7. El-Abed 2009: xix
  8. Dasgupta 1988: 161
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Dasgupta 1988: 160
  10. Ben-Yehuda and Sandler 2002: 186
  11. Maddy-Weitzman 1993: 34 n. 39
  12. Dawisha 2009, pp. 243–244

Bibliography

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