Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.) When also this happened (the tanks were British made, and actually WWII era).
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" (and King of Scotland) Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died fighting).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Amin (who then died there in exile, after his downfall following the fateful hosting of a hijacked French airliner).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" (and King of Scotland) Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died fighting).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Amin (who then died there in exile, after his downfall following the fateful hosting of a hijacked French airliner).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" (and King of Scotland) Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist with humor and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died fighting).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Amin (who then died there in exile, after his downfall following the fateful hosting of a hijacked French airliner).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist with humor and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died fighting).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Amin (who then died there in exile, after his downfall following the fateful hosting of a hijacked French airliner).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist with opinions and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died fighting).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Amin (who then died there in exile, after his downfall following the fateful hosting of a hijacked French airliner).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died fighting).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Amin (who then died there in exile, after his downfall following the fateful hosting of a hijacked French airliner).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died fighting).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Idi Amin (who then died there in exile, after his downfall following the fateful hosting of a hijacked French airliner).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died fighting).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Idi Amin (who then died there in exile after his downfall following his fateful hosting of a hijacked French airliner).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Idi Amin (who then died there in exile after his downfall following his fateful hosting of a hijacked French airliner).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Idi Amin (who then died there in exile after his downfall).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
Today Egypt is a de facto ally of Israel. And so is also Saudi Arabia, the country that once radicalised Idi Amin (who then died there in exile after his downfall).
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died there).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died there).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This included aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This includee aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This includee aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled all the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This includee aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation. (And after 2003, the Iraqis killed or expelled the Palestinians in Iraq too.)
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This includee aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation.
I hope everyone enjoyed my story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits. This includee aiding Iraq in the mentioned occupation of Kuwait, for which all the Palestinians there were then either killed or expelled after the liberation.
The story of all sorts of greatest allies.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions, and later Hamas) in the ever changing alliances and splits.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians (including rival PLO factions) in the ever changing alliances and splits.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut. (Despite Arafat's attacks on American targets.)
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians in the ever changing alliances and splits.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Also meanwhile, Arafat fought other Arabs and fellow Palestinians in the ever changing allainces and splits.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the increasing post-1972 America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation.
For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956.
It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the post 1970s America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation.
For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the post 1970s America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack on Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the post 1970s America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile, the post 1970s America support notwithstanding, was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.)
Israel meanwhile was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.) Israel meanwhile was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother died while fighting alongside him there).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.) Israel meanwhile was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother was killed while fighting alongside him there).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.) Israel meanwhile was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother was killed while fighting alongside him against the Ugandans).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.) Israel meanwhile was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother was killed while fighting alongside him in Uganda).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.) Israel meanwhile was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the self-proclaimed "Conqueror of the British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother was killed while fighting alongside him).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besieged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.) Israel meanwhile was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the "conqueror of British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother was killed while fighting alongside him).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.) Israel meanwhile was forced to ally with other international pariah states like Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation. For a while even supported the "conqueror of British Empire" Idi Amin, before Amin became an Islamist and turned on them spectacularly (and this is how Netanyahu's older brother was killed while fighting alongside him).
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
France later reoriented itself to supporting Iraq, even building Saddam that nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed. (Didn't stop France from joining the America-led attack Iraq in 1991, in defense of Kuwait.) Israel meanwhile was forced to ally with other international pariah states like and Rhodesia and South Africa, the latter of which too included a nuclear cooperation.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO/A from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt as the fighting there was going on.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy show of force, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" (and vice versa) back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made when, during the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made. During the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, when the attack took place, America was supposed to be a neutral party and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made. During the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, when the attack took place, America waa supposed to be completely neutral and yet sent the spy ship Liberty towards Egypt.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made. During the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, when the attack took place, America waa supposed to be completely neutral and yet sent the spy ship Liberty toward Egypt.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy, along with American threats of economic sanctions, that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made. During the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, when the attack took place, America waa supposed to be completely neutral and yet sent the spy ship Liberty toward Egypt.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made. During the next Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, when the attack took place, America waa supposed to be completely neutral and yet sent the spy ship Liberty toward Egypt.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made.
During the new Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, when the attack took place, America waa supposed to be completely neutral and yet sent the spy ship Liberty toward Egypt.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made. During the new Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, when the attack took place, America waa supposed to be neutram and yet sent the spy ship Liberty toward Egypt.
Even in the 1980s it was the US Navy that evacuated Arafat and the PLO from the Israeli-besiged Beirut.
Israel wasn't an "American ally" back then at all. It was even actually the US Navy that forced Israel and its allies (Britain and France) to stop invading Egypt, in the strange case of an American-Soviet ad hoc alliance back in 1956. It was also why the planes were French-made. During the new Israeli-Egyptian war in 1967, when the attack took place, America waa supposed to be neutram and yet sent the spy ship Liberty toward Egypt.