The presidential retreat at Camp David, Maryland, was the setting
for a historic moment in September, 1978.
With the help of U.S. President Jimmy Carter, the leaders of Egypt and
Israel reached agreements that would end a 30-year state of war between their
countries.
Israel was created by the United Nations in 1948 as a homeland
for the Jewish people. But Arab
countries, including Egypt, denied its right to exist. Arab armies attacked, but the outnumbered
Israelis threw them back. In the
Six-Day War of 1967, Israel gained control of the Sinai Peninsula from
Egypt. All peace efforts failed.
Then, in 1978, Carter invited Egyptian Premier Anwar Sadat and
Israeli Premier Menachem Begin to Camp David to restart a stalled round of
talks. After 12 days, two accords were
reached. One was a plan for the return of
the Sinai to Egypt and for peace between the countries. The second called for self-rule for the
Palestinian Arabs in other Israeli-occupied territories.
A treaty based on the first accord was signed in March,
1979. Egypt became the first Arab
country to recognize the first Arab country to recognize Israel. Because the second accord involved Arabs who
did not agree to it, it was not carried out at that time.
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