Dayan's account
Along with Golda Meir, Defence Minister Moshe Dayan is most to blame for what happened to Israeli forces during the early hours of 6 October 1973. He was accused, among other things, of being unprepared for the joint Egyptian-Syrian offensive and, like Meir, was eventually forced to resign in 1974. His memoirs, penned in 1976, reveal a lot about the October War.
Moshe Dayan
"At four in the morning on Saturday, 6 October 1973, I was awakened by the ring of the red telephone beside my bed. This was not unusual. There was hardly a night without two or three such calls. But this time, the call was to inform me that according to information just received, Egypt and Syria would launch a war before sundown on this very day.
Dayan doesn't mention the sources, only describing them as "reliable." They had received such messages in the past when President Sadat had mobilised his forces, prompting the Israelis to do the same – at a very high price – only to back down and withdraw.
Many wrongly believed that Sadat was once again raising a false alarm. Dayan explains that responding to the reports just received was no easy task, as it required mobilising army reserves, reinforcing the fronts and evacuating children and women from frontier settlements on the Golan Heights.
He met with the prime minister and suggested a pre-emptive strike "to be directed against Syria alone, not on the front, not against the anti-aircraft missile system, but against the air bases inside Syria—and even that, not before noon."
Dayan explains: "I, for one, never imagined that the Egyptians would reconcile themselves to our being entrenched along the Suez Canal, or that the Syrians would swallow our occupation of the Golan Heights. I felt that our presence there would mean war, sooner or later."
However, he was under the impression that the 177 tanks stationed in the Golan and the 300 in the canal area, could technically – with air support – ward off a joint attack and gain time until reinforcements were called in.
The plan was based on the assumption that there would be more than 24 hours of advanced warning, so considerable reinforcements of mobilised reservists would have already reached the fronts when war broke out.
He then admits: "It must also be added that the enemy forces launched their attacks with much greater efficiency than had expected," comparing 1973 to previous Arab-Israeli wars since 1948.
"This was my fourth war. In the first, our 1948 War of Independence, I was 25 and commanded a commando battalion. It was easier. When my area of responsibility was accomplished, I could wrap my keffiyeh around my face and sink into a deep sleep."
"The Sinai Campaign of 1956 and the Six-Day War of 1967 were not difficult wars. The Egyptians were beaten and fled; the Syrians had no surface-to-air missiles, and the Jordanians had no air force."
Dayan goes on to explain – very candidly – that the main difference between 1973 and previous wars lay in Arab strength: "It was much greater and more powerful than anything the Arabs had shown in the past."
He places Arab strength as "roughly three times" what it had been six years earlier: up from 300,000 to 1 million troops, more than 5,000 tanks compared to 1,700 in 1967, more than 1,000 planes as compared to 350 in the past, and with 4,800 field guns against 1,350 in 1967.
Dayan ordered a C alert on Friday, 5 October 1973, the highest in the Israeli army, before meeting the prime minister at 9:45 AM. He bluntly told her what he thought — that Syria and Egypt would attack "within hours" — but was challenged in his assessment by Chief of Intelligence Major Eli Zeira and Chief-of-Staff David Elazer.
Israeli Chief of Staff David Elazar (2nd R) and later Israeli Premier Yitzhak Rabin (L) land near frontline positions on the Golan Heights during the 1973 October War on October 9, 1973.
"In the judgement of the intelligence chief, it was most improbable that the Egyptians would cross the canal in large forces, though they might open fire and attempt raids. The American evaluation was that neither Syria nor Egypt intended to launch an attack in the near future."
They were wrong.
"The first day of fighting was hard," he wrote.
"Our losses in men were not light as we also lost ground and positions of considerable value."
The Syrian and Egyptian armies had the advantage of the surprise attack. Still, army officers assured Golda Meir that their initial victories could be quickly reversed once reservists reached the front lines.
But things were not that simple, adds Dayan, explaining how a Syrian force penetrated Israeli lines eight miles south of Quneitra, the principal town on the Golan Heights, and advanced towards routes to the Sea of Galilee.
"Our forces were very much on the offensive. They had blocked the Syrian breakthrough, thrust the enemy back beyond our lines, and pushed them further into the heart of Syria."
"Even then, the Syrians were still putting up a stubborn fight for key positions, and when Israeli units reached the dominant hill positions of Tel Shams, on the Quneitra-Damascus road, they found it heavily defended and came under fire from…from Syrian aircraft which plastered them with rockets."
He then describes the Egyptian front as "tough, heroic, and depressing."
The 16 strongholds along the Suez Canal were the first to suffer, which consisted of what had come to be known as the Bar Lev Line.
"Each was a solitary, isolated isle, conducting a bigger and desperate struggle for life or death. I don't know if it is possible to determine in precise measures the extent to which the strongholds stood up to the enemy, even for a day or two."
And finally, Dayan admits that what made 1973 different from 1967 was that the Arabs "did not run away."
Syrian army soldiers storm Israeli positions in Syria during the 1973 October War.
In the past, he says, "flight was a common characteristic of the Arab armies. Not all. Not immediately. But as far as one can generalise, it can be said that when they were hit and badly mauled, and their front was broken wide open, they would raise their hands and heels. Not this time."