Ex-Chief of Staff Tzvi Tzur - and Black Sabbath - Remembered (INN) ISRAEL NATIONAL NEWS) by Hillel Fendel 01/03/11)
Source: http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/141511
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This past Friday marked the sixth anniversary of the death of
Israel’s sixth IDF Chief of Staff, Tzvi Tzur – sometimes known
as “the Invisible.”
Tzur served as Chief of Staff from 1961 until 1964 – a period when
Israel fought no wars. This might explain why Tzur is so sparsely
known, says military historian Dr. Uri Milstein.
Speaking with Arutz-7’s Shimon Cohen, Milstein said, “When Tzur was
in the Givati brigade, he was involved in many incidents on the
Egyptian front, but in those days, the tone in the IDF was set by
Paratroopers Brigade 101, Arik Sharon’s unit; Tzur was not in that
group. He was close to Ben-Gurion, and when [Chaim] Laskov was forced
to resign [following differences with then-Deputy Defense Minister
Shimon Peres, who was also close with Ben-Gurion – ed.], Tzur was
named Chiefof Staff.”
Born in 1923 in Zaslav, Russia, he immigrated to Israel with his
parents at the age of 2. He joined the Haganah in 1939, and was
arrested and imprisoned for two months by the British during what
became known as Black Sabbath – a June 1946 mass raid of Haganah
strongholds in which theBritish used 17,000 soldiers to place five
Jewish cities under curfew, 30 kibbutzim and other communities under
siege, arrest hundreds of Jewish leaders,and search for and find
ammunition and weapons. The Haganah received advance word of the
operation from Tzvi Zehavi, who was tipped off by a British officer;
at great personal risk, Zehavi got the word out, enabling many Jewish
leaders to avoid arrest and hide weapons and ammunition. In response
to this massive raid, the Etzel carried out the King David Hotel
bombing three weeks later.
Tzvi Tzur is considered one of those who built the IDF, “though
Yitzchak Rabin received more credit – unjustifiably so, in my
opinion,” Milstein said. “The period before the Six Day War was quiet
from a security standpoint, and it was not utilized fully for
preparations. We didn’t sufficiently understand war, army, or who
were our opponents in the Middle East.” (© IsraelNN Syndications
01/03/11)
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