From saving Israel to pressuring it
Henry Kissinger – the shrewd and cunning US Secretary of State – saw the opportunity presented by the October War.
Capitalising on it demanded a transformation. The US needed to move from being Israel's saviour at the war's outset to a mediator, adeptly brokering the initial agreements during the early phases of the peace process in 1974 and 1975.
Kissinger was arguably the one who saved Israel during the surprise Egyptian and Syrian joint attack on 6 October 1973.
At the annual UN General Assembly in New York, he received the alarming news at 7 a.m. local time. His assistant, Joseph Sisco, urgently delivered a message from Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir, warning of an imminent attack. The news spread even faster than Meir had anticipated. It reached Kissinger within minutes.
Kissinger had emerged as the most influential figure in Washington following the Watergate scandal. He had to respond swiftly. After informing President Nixon, he coordinated with military leaders to establish an airlift bridge to supply Israel with desperately needed weaponry and equipment.
This was an attempt to offset the Egyptian military's early dominance, amid substantial Israeli losses, including hundreds of tanks and dozens of aircraft. The airlift bridge commenced operations on 7 October, delivering anti-tank missiles and ammunition, followed by additional weapons in the ensuing days.
Kissinger's intervention was timely and decisive and had a tangible impact, averting a potentially far more significant Israeli defeat.
A month after the war, Kissinger again demonstrated his knack for foresight and quick decision-making. He seized the opportunity to move from being Israel's saviour to the broker of a broader peace.
In a discreetly conveyed letter from President Sadat – sent through a covert channel just before the war's end – Kissinger found his starting point for this transformation. He embraced the role and hastened the transition from conflict to peace using a careful, step-by-step methodology.
Strategically, Kissinger allowed Israel to capitalise on its military gains in the Defreswar area, enhancing its military and political standing.
This does not imply that the US role as a mediator erased its bias towards Israel. Instead, Kissinger worked diligently in his peacemaking efforts to ensure Israel's security and maintain its status, creating an impression that Israel had not suffered a defeat in the war.
In Sadat, he found a partner whose responsiveness exceeded all expectations. In his recent book Leadership: Six Studies in World Strategy, published last year, Kissinger lauds Sadat as a man with a strategic vision that went beyond existing situations and transformed them.