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Moshe Dayan was born in 1915 on Kibbutz Degania, Israel.
At an early age he joined the Haganah, the Jewish army in Palestine and
in 1936, he joined Orde Wingate's special night squads. Dayan was imprisoned
by the British from 1939 to 1941 for possessing illegal weapons. He was
released in 1941 to join special army units operating against the forces
of Vichy France in Syria and Lebanon.
During Israel's War of Independence, Dayan held the rank of Lt. Colonel,
and led the forces that captured Lod and Ramle. From 1953 to 1957, Dayan
held the position of Chief of Staff of the Israeli Defense Forces. Dayan
was the commander of the IDF during its victorious Sinai Campaign.
Several days before the outbreak of the Six Day War,
Levi Eshkol, Israel's Prime Minister, bowed to public pressure and named
Dayan Minister of Defense.
Dayan was responsible for formulating Israel's policy
on the West Bank and Gaza after those areas were captured during the Six
Day War in 1967. One of his most enduring policies was his decision to
institute what became known as "open bridges": the free flow
of people and merchandise across the Jordan River from the West Bank to
Jordan.
Dayan was Minister of Defense during the Yom Kippur War,
and many blamed him for the state of complacency that existed in Israel
prior to the war.
Dayan was forced to resign after the publication of the
"Agranot Commission Report on the Yom Kippur War." He joined
the Likud government of Menachem Begin in 1977 as Foreign Minister. He
was instrumental in formulating the Camp David Peace agreement with Egypt.
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