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Bloody Gaza
By ORI ORR
Labor
Knesset member Ori Orr recounts the brutal battle of the Rafiah
Junction, which was fought as the armored corps began its
push into Sinai. The second of three eye witness accounts
provided to 'Bamahane - IDF Magazine' by men who took part
in the key moments of the Six Day War, which helped change
the course of Jewish, Middle East and world history.
Early morning, the first soldiers of the Seventh Brigade's
elite unit get up to prepare the vehicles for "dawn alert."
The loose camouflage nets, damp with morning dew, cover the
jeeps, armored cars and tanks along the avenues of eucalyptus
on the border roads.
Shlomo, the only tank officer in the elite unit, removes
the net from the new 20-mm. cannon, and strokes the weapon.
Shlomo earned his place in the unit on the strength of his
skill in operating these cannons.
Second Lieutenant Shaul Grohag, commander of the jeep platoon,
is wide awake this morning. "Does the company commander want
a report from the night lookout?" he says, gently shaking
my shoulder. I smile. Shaul is the perfect officer, taking
care of every detail. He hardly slept all night, but the report
is ready. "What's the situation?" I ask. "All quiet," he replies.
Deputy company commander Yossi Almagis has already heated
shaving water on the camp stove - but of course, Turkish coffee
comes first."
It's 6 a.m. The whole patrol is awake. Boys who have only
heard gunfire during training exercises, and have never heard
the whistle of a shell from close by, look at me and wait
for what I have to say. They all saw me come back late at
night from the last briefing at regiment headquarters, and
are anxious to know whether it was the final briefing before
the beginning of a war. The only walkie-talkie in the company,
set for listening only, was in my armored command car. There
was complete radio silence in the whole patrol.
Every soldier knew that the code word was "Red Blanket,"
and that it meant "turn on the walkie-talkies, break radio
silence and set out immediately to lead the regiment into
battle."
Bentzi Zur, the unit's operations sergeant, is preparing
the armored command car. But even he doesn't know if today
is the last day of the long waiting period which began on
Independence Day, when the company was brought straight back
after the parade in Jerusalem. Bentzi, who has a marvelous
sense of humor and loves to sing, goes on humming the Nahal
band's songs, and turns up the volume of the walkie-talkie.
Evening, night, dawn of June 5, 1967. Quiet. No planes. Nothing
is happening, the soldiers think. Yesterday, the company commander
said it would probably begin today. 7:30 a.m. formation after
formation of planes roar past above us, heading for the Gaza
Strip and Sinai. A minute later we hear the code, "Red Blanket,"
coming sharp and clear from the company commander's walkie-talkie.
I gather the company and say: "This is it. We've learned
our objectives, we've practiced them thoroughly. I'm relying
on you. Everyone in their vehicles - we're off."
A last-minute rush. Everyone writes a few words home on postcards
while leaning on the hood of a jeep, the side of an armored
car or the hull of a tank. Someone peeks at what Yarkoni,
the armored-car platoon commander from Kibbutz Na'an, is writing,
and copies the sentence: "It's just starting. See you later."
The patrol starts to move. First goes Yossi's squad, leading
the Patton battalion. The two squads under my command begin
to overtake the Centurion battalion, so as to lead the brigade
out of the built-up area of the Gaza Strip around the Rafiah
Junction. The unit's two clerks, Sara and Nira, are left behind
in the dust, gathering up the postcards. They wave goodbye
through tears. A last memory from another world, from home.
Yossi's squad enters the approaches to Abasan Al-Kabir, in
the suburbs of Khan Yunis. Egyptian soldiers stand by the
road in amazement, watching the line go past. One waves to
our soldiers, who look cautiously back. Is this war?
Suddenly, hell opens its mouth. Artillery shells, machine
guns, anti-tank guns - everything is being shot at! The force
begins to look for a way into Khan Yunis. Yossi finds a path
leading west and begins to advance until he is stopped by
a deep anti-tank trench. Behind it is the Gurinov post, and
above it a tower.
The line stops. Yossi, standing in the first armored car,
shoots, and loads his 0.5 with a new belt, then suddenly collapses
and falls on the floor of the armored car. There is a sniper
at the top of the bullet-ridden tower, a few dozen meters
away, and he has hit Yossi. When the jeep reaches the armored
car there is nothing to do but bring Yossi's body back to
the Green Line. Our beloved deputy company commander was the
first fatality.
Boaz, the jeep platoon commander, takes command of the unit
and carries on the assault, leading the Patton battalion through
Khan Yunis toward Rafiah.
The two squads under my command carry on, and confront the
sights of war for the first time. Fallen enemy soldiers near
an eliminated post. A dead donkey. An old peasant running
away. A little boy waving a white flag. Amos and Eli's two
squads navigate past the huts to the outskirts of Rafiah,
passing the UN camps and the Centurion battalion, and begin
to lead the brigade. Everyone stops and raises visors. I run
up to the brigade commander and receive permission to lead
the advance.
Quiet in the area of the junction. Nothing is visible. The
whole area is covered with linseed bushes. Everything confirms
the unit's advance information about outposts north of the
junction. Eli begins to deploy west of the junction, with
his tanks in the lead. I begin to deploy with Amos's squad,
tanks and jeeps, toward the ridge that commands the whole
junction.
Suddenly shooting breaks out, with heavy shelling on all
sides. While we are deploying, two tanks hit mines but go
on shooting.
This encounter is a complete surprise. None of us knew about
the area north of the junction. Enemy soldiers begin appearing
on all sides. Along the whole area, Egyptian T-34 tanks take
up positions and begin heavy fire. A 20-mm. armored car is
hit by a shell before it can get off the road.
Lieutenant Shlomo, the car's commander, gets out quickly
to rescue the driver, but while he is opening the dented door,
the armored car receives a direct hit. Later, the extent of
the disaster became clear: all eight soldiers in the car were
killed when the shell hit.
The rest of the tanks, jeeps and armored cars, including
mine, begin moving away from the main road - which is within
range of the heavy fire - and begin the assault.
At 150 meters in front of the line of Egyptian positions,
we realize we are going through a minefield, including anti-tank
mines. As I call for a halt, my own armored car hits a double
mine and turns on its side. I have no choice but to continue
on foot, since turning back now would have caused many casualties.
Gabi (today talk-show host Gabi Gazit), hits a mine with
his jeep. He is wounded in the face from machine-gun fire,
and his foot is shattered by the mine. The other soldiers
in the jeep join the assault. Yarkoni, the jeep commander,
jumps into the trench with his Uzi and begins mopping it up.
A wounded Egyptian, whom he left behind, aims his Kalachnikov
at Yarkoni's back and squeezes the trigger.
Amos, the team commander, and Muki lift Yarkoni onto the
jeep and begin to take him back, still under fire. Yarkoni
smiles crookedly at Amos and says, "Amos, this is the end."
The battle for the Rafiah junction is heated. In a surprise
battle, the patrol on its own, without any alternative, conquers
almost the entire area north of the junction. The toll is
heavy, and includes Yarkoni.
The patrol squads organize quickly to carry on moving. Yossi's
team arrives from Khan Yunis, and the company becomes two
squads instead of three. All the dead and wounded are evacuated
to the Rafiah railway station - the company's assembly point,
where the elite unit had volunteered to assemble the wounded
of all the other units.
Shaul Grohag, wearing an Australian bush hat he found lying
around, circulates among the soldiers, some of whom are still
in shock, patting them on the shoulder and encouraging them.
Operations Sergeant Bentzi comes up to me with a request.
"Can I join Shaul in the lead jeep? The armored command car
hit a mine, and I can't go with you anyway." Shaul's jeep
goes after the team's tanks to the Jarda area, on the way
to El-Arish. A tank is hit by a shell and stops. Shaul stops
the jeep and asks the tank company commander if he needs any
help. Before he receives an answer, the jeep receives a direct
hit and bursts into flames. Shaul, Bentzi and Yoram are killed
on the spot.
On the first night of the war, June 5, the patrol stops
at El Arish. I look at the survivors, trying to work out who
was wounded and who was killed. The men gather quietly, loading
ammunition, filling up gas tanks, eating rations in little
groups with sooty faces. They make almost no sound, trying
to huddle together and protect one another - children who
have been forced to grow up in just one day.
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The Golan capture
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Avihu Bin-Nun:
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A defender of Jerusalem
Ori Orr: Bloody
Gaza
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Live from the Western Wall
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Mike Ronen: "They were a different
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The War Nobody Wanted
View from the Nile
The third day: A personal account
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