Year | Date | Event |
1948 | May 14 | Israeli Declaration of Independence: the Jewish leadership in Tel-Aviv declared the establishment of a Jewish state in Eretz Israel to be known as the State of Israel.[1] |
| The 1948 Arab-Israeli War: a large-scale war between Israel and five Arab countries and the Palestinian-Arabs. The war resulted in an Israeli victory, with Israel annexing territory beyond the borders of the proposed Jewish state and into the borders of the proposed Arab state and West Jerusalem.[2] Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and Egypt signed the 1949 Armistice Agreements with Israel. The Gaza Strip and the West Bank, were occupied by Egypt and Transjordan, respectively until 1967. In 1951, the UN Conciliation Commission for Palestine estimated that some 711,000 Palestinian refugees were displaced by the war.[3] |
| The Israeli flag became the official flag of the State of Israel. |
1949 | | The first Israeli legislative election was held in which David Ben-Gurion became Prime Minister. |
| Israel was admitted to membership in the United Nations as its 59th member.[4] |
| Prime Minister Ben-Gurion proclaimed Jerusalem as Israel's capital.[5] |
1950 | | The Knesset passed the Law of Return, which gave Jews, those of Jewish ancestry, and their spouses the right to migrate to and settle in Israel and obtain citizenship. |
1956 | | The Sinai Campaign was held. This war, followed Egypt's decision of 26 July 1956 to nationalize the Suez Canal. The war was initiated by United Kingdom and France, and conducted in cooperation with Israel, aimed at occupying the Sinai Peninsula, with the Europeans regaining control over the Suez Canal. Although the Israeli occupation of the Sinai was successful, the US and USSR forced it to abandon this conquest. However, Israel managed to re-open the Straits of Tiran and secured its southern border. |
1957 | | Moshe Dwek, a 26-year-old Yemenite-Israeli mental patient threw a hand grenade in the Knesset. The grenade blast caused severe injuries to the Minister of Religious Affairs Haim-Moshe Shapira, and lightly wounded the prime minister David Ben-Gurion, Foreign Minister Golda Meir and the Minister of Transport Moshe Carmel. |
1960 | | Four Mossad agents abducted the fugitive Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in Buenos Aires and brought him back to Israel to be tried for his part in The Holocaust. |
1962 | | Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann, one of the main people responsible for the actual implementation of the Final Solution Plan, was executed by hanging in Israel. Eichmann was the only person to have been executed in Israel on conviction by a civilian court. |
1966 | | The Knesset building was inaugurated. |
| The martial law imposed on the Israeli Arabs, since the founding of the State of Israel, was lifted completely and Arab citizens are granted the same rights as Jewish citizens under law. |
1967 | | The Six-Day War took place and was fought between Israel and all of its neighboring countries: Egypt, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, which were aided by other Arab countries. The war lasted six days and concluded with Israel expanding its territory significantly – Gaza Strip and Sinai from Egypt, the West Bank and Jerusalem from Jordan and the Golan Heights from Syria. |
| Israel declared the annexation of East Jerusalem. Arab residents of East Jerusalem were given a permanent resident status in Israel. |
| Jerusalem was reunified as Israel removed all barriers separating the Old City from the Israeli sector.[6] |
1968 | | The Israeli submarine INS Dakar sunk in the Mediterranean Sea, killing 69. |
1973 | | Libyan Arab Airlines Flight 114 (Boeing 727) was shot down by Israeli fighter aircraft over the Sinai Desert, after the passenger plane was suspected of being an enemy military plane. Only five (one crew member and four passengers) of the 113 on board survive. |
| Lillehammer affair: Israeli Mossad agents assassinated a Moroccan waiter in Lillehammer, Norway. He had been mistaken for Ali Hassan Salameh, one of the leaders of Black September, the Palestinian group responsible for the 1972's Munich Olympics Massacre, who had been given shelter in Norway. The six Mossad agents were arrested by the Norwegian authorities and the incident became known as the "Lillehammer affair". |
| The Yom Kippur War was fought. The war, which began with a surprise joint attack on two fronts by the armies of Syria (in the Golan Heights) and Egypt (in the Suez Canal), was deliberately initiated during the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur. Egypt was winning until Operation Nickel Grass was carried out by the USA to save Israel. Ceasefire was later established. |
1974 | | Mahanayim disaster: Eight Israeli soldiers were killed as a result of a collision between two helicopters over the Mahanayim Airfield. |
1976 | | Operation Entebbe: Israeli airborne commandos freed 103 hostages being held by Palestinian Arab and German hijackers of an Air France plane at Uganda's Entebbe Airport; one Israeli soldier and several Ugandan soldiers were killed in the raid. |
1977 | | Disaster of the 54: An IAF "Yasur" helicopter crashed in the Jordan Valley. 54 IDF soldiers on board were killed in the disaster. |
1978 | | Israel and Egypt signed a comprehensive peace agreement at Camp David. Egypt agreed to peace with Israel as a quid pro quo for Israel's withdrawal from Sinai. |
1979 | | The peace treaty with Egypt was signed by the Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, the Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and U.S. President Jimmy Carter. |
1980 | | The Shekel replaced the Israeli lira. |
| Israel's Knesset passed the Jerusalem Law. |
1981 | | Operation Opera: Eight Israeli F-16s, escorted by F-15s, severely damaged Osirak, an Iraqi nuclear reactor under construction near Baghdad, which Israeli military intelligence maintained was built by the regime of Saddam Hussein for the purpose of plutonium production to further an Iraqi nuclear weapons program.[7] Israeli intelligence also believed that the summer of 1981 would be the last chance to destroy the reactor before it would be loaded with nuclear fuel. |
1982 | | The evacuation of the Israeli settlement Yamit in the Sinai Peninsula began in accordance with the Egyptian–Israeli Peace Treaty. |
| Israel completes its withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula in accordance with the Egyptian–Israeli Peace Treaty. |
| Shlomo Argov, Israel's ambassador in London, was severely injured when shot at by Palestinian Arab militant belonging to the Abu Nidal Organization. Argov's assassination attempt led to the Operation Peace for Galilee. Argov eventually died of his injuries in 2003. |
| The First Lebanon War took place during which Israel invaded southern Lebanon due to the constant terror attacks on northern Israel by the Palestinian guerrilla organizations resident there. The war resulted in the expulsion of the PLO from Lebanon, and created an Israeli Security Zone in southern Lebanon. |
1984 | | The Kav 300 affair |
| Operation Moses: IDF forces conducted a secret operation in which approximately 8,000 Ethiopian Jews were brought to Israel from Sudan. (to 1985) |
1987 | | The First Intifada: The first Palestinian uprising took place in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank against the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories. (to 1991) |
| Israel's government canceled the IAI Lavi programme. |
1989 | | Mount Carmel forest fire: One of the largest forest fire in Israel's history. The fire extended over 6,000 dunam (1,500 acres), devastated 3,200 dunam (790 acres) of natural forest areas of Aleppo pine on Mount Carmel in northern Israel, close to the city of Haifa.[8] |
1991 | | Gulf War: Three Scuds and one Patriot missile hit Ramat Gan in Israel, wounding 96 people; three elderly people die of heart attacks. |
| Operation Solomon: IDF forces conduct a secret operation in which approximately 14,400 Ethiopian Jews were brought to Israel within 34 hours in 30 IAF and El Al aircraft. |
1992 | | The Bijlmerramp disaster: El Al Flight 1862, a Boeing 747 freighter, crashed into high-rise apartment buildings in Amsterdam after two of its engines detach from the wing. A total of 43 people were killed, consisting of the plane's crew of three and a non-revenue passenger in a jump seat, plus 39 persons on the ground. Many more were injured.[9][10][11] |
| Israel deported 415 Hamas activists to Lebanon. |
1993 | | The first Oslo Accords were signed at an official ceremony in Washington in the presence of Yitzhak Rabin for Israel, Yasser Arafat for PLO and Bill Clinton for the United States. |
1994 | | The Peace agreement between Israel and Jordan was signed. |
1995 | | Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated by right-wing Israeli radical Yigal Amir. |
1997 | | 1997 Israeli helicopter disaster: Two IAF troop-transport CH-53 Sea Stallion helicopters collided in darkness near the remote She'ar Yashuv kibbutz, in northern Israel, killing 77 IDF soldiers. |
| Maccabiah bridge collapse - A pedestrian bridge collapsed over the Yarkon River killing four and injuring 60 Australian athletes who are visiting Israel to participate in the Maccabiah Games. |
1999 | | A joint U.S.–Israeli search team found the wreck of the long-lost Israeli submarine INS Dakar in the Mediterranean sea. |
2000 | | Israel withdrew IDF forces from the "security zone" in southern Lebanon, in compliance with U.N. Resolution 425, to the international border after 22 years in which the area was occupied by Israeli forces. Several thousand members of the South Lebanon Army (and their families) withdrew to Israel as well with the Israeli forces. Syria and Lebanon insisted that the withdrawal is incomplete, claiming the Shebaa Farms as Lebanese and still under occupation. Nevertheless, the UN certified full Israeli withdrawal. |
| October 2000 events: Solidarity demonstrations are held by Arab citizens of Israel escalated into clashes with Israeli police and Israeli Jewish citizens. Twelve Israeli Arabs and one Palestinian Arab from the Gaza Strip were shot and killed by the Israeli police.[12] One Israeli Jewish civilian was killed by a rock thought to have been thrown by an Arab citizen. |
| 2000 Hezbollah cross-border raid: Three Israeli soldiers are abducted by Hezbollah while patrolling the Israeli administered side of the Israeli-Lebanese border[13] and Northern Israel is shelled in an attempt to ignite the Israeli-Lebanese border too, but Israelis decide on limited response. |
| The Second Intifada: The second Palestinian uprising took place in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank against the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian Territories. The uprising which began as massive protests carried out by Palestinians in the Palestinian Territories, soon turned into a violent Palestinian guerrilla campaign which included numerous suicide attacks carried out against Israeli civilians within the state of Israel. (to 2005) |