Plan Dalet
Plan Dalet, or Plan D, (in Hebrew, dalet is the fourth letter, similar to "d" in English), was a plan that the Haganah in Palestine worked out during autumn 1947 to spring 1948. The purpose of the plan was, according to its Jewish planners, to defend the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine. According to Palestinian sources it was a plan with the purpose of conquering as much of Palestine as possible (Plan Dalet: Master Plan for the Conquest of Palestine, Walid, Khalidi, for example).Plan Dalet was revised in December, after the 1947 UN Partition plan, and finalized on March 10th, 1948.
The first step of the plan was initiated in April when Operation Nachshon was launched, although documents state that action wasn't intended to be undertaken before the British had left (which they did not do before (May 14th):
- This plan rests on the general assumption that during its implementation, the forces of the British authorities will not be present in the country. (Plan Dalet, Section 2b)
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2 See also 3 External links |
The plan begins with:
In Section 3b the plan describes how to deal with occupied "enemy
population centers":
Purpose of Plan Dalet
This passage has, by the Palestinian side, been interpreted to mean
that Plan Dalet was not really of defensive nature. But that the founders of the Jewish state intended to disregard the 1947 UN Partition plan and secure
positions outside the partition plans borders.
The plan assumed that most of the opposition would come from semi-irregular forces and local militia which would work in civilian
areas.See also
External links