BIOGRAPHY OF YITZHAK RABIN Introduction
When Israelis voted the Labor Party into government in June 1992 with Yitzhak
Rabin at its helm, they knew well what they were getting. Here was a man who had
been in public life for more than 40 years. When he became prime minister for the
first time in 1974, he had been the first native-born Israeli (sabra) to attain the post.
His astonishingly successful military record, no-nonsense speaking style, gravelly
voice and oddly shy little smile were as familiar to Israelis as would be the
mannerisms of a favorite uncle. Yet, in a short span, they would meet a new Yitzhak
Rabin – a great war commander and implacable foe of the PLO transformed into a
soldier for peace and a Nobel laureate. And so, in November 1995, when this first-
ever sabra prime minister became the first-ever Israeli prime minister to be
assassinated in office – and by a young Jew – Israelis came to know with horror and
grief what they had lost. This was Yitzhak Rabin.
Childhood
Rabin, born in Jerusalem on March 1, 1922, was the son of Nehemiah (born in
Ukraine) and Rosa (born in White Russia), who immigrated to Palestine in 1917 and
1919, respectively, as part of the Third Aliya (immigrant wave), determined to settle
in Eretz Yisrael (Land of Israel). His father worked in the Electric Company and was
an active unionist. His mother was active in the Haganah (Jewish self-defense
organization) and in the labor movement and was a member of the Tel Aviv
Rabin attended the School for Workers’ Children in Tel Aviv, sponsored by the labor
movement, during 1928-35; the intermediary regional school at Kibbutz Givat
Hashlosha in 1935-37; and the Kadoorie Agricultural High School, located in the
Lower Galilee at the foot of Mt. Tabor, during 1937-40. While at Kadoorie, Yitzhak
Upon graduating high school in 1940 he joined the No’ar Ha’oved (Working Youth) training
program at Kibbutz Ramat Yohanan north of Haifa.
Service in the Haganah and the Palmach
In 1941 Rabin became one of the first recruits in the Palmach (Assault Companies)
founded that year, serving in Company B under Moshe Dayan based in Kibbutz
Hanita near the Labanese border. Company B joined with British forces in invading
Syria and Lebanon to block a German foothold in the region. Infiltrating into
Lebanon in June 1941, Rabin’s unit cut the electricity system between Tyre and Sidon.
He soon became a full-time commander in the Palmach, and in 1945 was appointed
deputy commander of its First Battalion.
On October 10, 1945, the First Battalion broke into the British detention camp at Atlit,
south of Haifa, in an attempt to free 200 “illegal” immigrants held there.
On June 29, 1946, a day that became known as Black Saturday, he and others,
including his father, were arrested by the British and sent to a detention camp in
Rafiah south of Gaza, where they were held for five months.
Freed in November 1946, Rabin was at once appointed commander of the Palmach’s
Second Battalion, assigned to secure the water line supplying the Negev.
War of Independence
In October 1947 he became the Palmach’s chief operations officer, responsible
primarily for supply convoys to Jerusalem, which was under siege and cut off from
In April 1948 the Palmach Harel Brigade was established with Rabin as commander.
Assigned to defend the corridor leading to Jerusalem, he played a major role in the
fierce battles there and in the liberation of the city, during which many of his friends
From July to December 1948 he served as operations officer under Commander of the
Southern Front Yigal Allon, with the rank of lieutenant colonel, masterminding a
successful campaign that drove the Egyptians and Jordanians from the Negev desert in
Operations Yoav, Lot, Assaf, Horev and Uvdah.
In 1949 he took part in the Israeli-Egyptian armistice talks in Rhodes as representative
of the Southern Command in the Israeli delegation headed by Yigael Yadin.
Service in the Israel Defense Forces
Promoted to colonel in 1949, Rabin was appointed commander of the I.D.F.’s first
course for battalion commanders, and in 1950 he was named head of the General
Staff’s Operations Division. One of the most important tasks of the division in the
early 1950s was organizing transit camps for over 100,000 new immigrants who
began streaming into Israel immediately after independence, many of them from
Rabin was promoted to the rank of major general in January 1954 and was appointed
head of the General Staff Training Division. From 1956 to 1959 he headed the
Northern Command, a period of intensive artillery bombardment of the northern
settlements in the Galilee and numerous incidents along the Jordan Valley and the
In May 1959 he became chief of the Operations Branch, the second highest position in
the I.D.F., serving under Chief-of-Staff Chaim Laskov.
In January 1961 he was named deputy chief of staff under General Zvi Zur.
Rabin was appointed the seventh chief of staff in January1964, a post he held until
January 1968. The I.D.F.’s state of readiness under his command was put to the test
in the Six-Day War of June 1967, from which it emerged with a stunning victory,
defeating Arab armies on three fronts and occupying the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan
Heights, the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
Diplomatic Service
Leaving military service in 1968, Rabin was appointed ambassador to the United
States, a post he held for five years until 1973, during the administrations of
Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon. With Cold War rivalry at its height,
Rabin considered Israel’s relationship with the U.S. of supreme importance to balance
strong Soviet Union support for the Arab countries. He focused on fostering solid
U.S.-Israel ties, including the acquisition of American arms and military equipment,
along with opening a peace process with the Arab states. He was involved in such
diplomatic initiatives as the 1969 Rogers Plan, which led to a cease-fire between Israel
and Egypt, and the search for a permanent agreement with Egypt with the mediation
of the U.S. and the assistance of U.N. Ambassador Gunnar Jarring.
Political Service
Joining the Labor Party in September 1973, Rabin was chosen 23rd on its list for the
Knesset elections in December 1973 and was considered a candidate for minister of
defense. With the electoral victory of Labor, he was appointed minister of labor in
Prime Minister Golda Meir’s government in March 1974. However, in the wake of
the Agranat Commission Report on deficient preparedness in the Yom Kippur War of
1973, Meir resigned in April 1974. Rabin was elected head of the Labor Party and its
candidate to take over the role of prime minister, beating Shimon Peres. Gaining a
vote of confidence in the Knesset, he became prime minister on June 3, 1974.
Main Events in Rabin’s First Term as Prime Minister, 1974-77
Rabin conducted stubborn and exhausting negotiations over post-war interim
agreements with Egypt and Syria, mediated by U.S. Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger in his famous shuttle diplomacy. The second interim agreement with Egypt,
signed in September 1975, in which Israel withdrew from part of the strategic passes
and the oil fields in Sinai, marked the beginning of the process that eventually led to
Israel also signed an understanding with the U.S. guaranteeing American support for
Israeli interests in the international arena and the renewal of American aid.
A series of secret meetings were held between Prime Minister Rabin and King Husayn
of Jordan and with King Hassan of Morocco in efforts to promote peace.
The Entebbe Operation in July 1976, during which Israeli hostages on a plane
hijacked by the P.L.O. were rescued from Uganda by the I.D.F., demonstrated Israel’s
In April 1977, Yitzhak Rabin resigned as prime minister in the wake of the revelation
that his wife, Leah, retained a bank account in the U.S. from the time her husband had
served as ambassador there. (At the time, operating a foreign currency account was a
misdemeanor under Israeli currency law.)
In the Opposition
Rabin, at his own request, was placed in the 20th slot in the Labor list for the Knesset
elections, serving in the background as a member of Knesset until 1984. He lost the
position of leader of the party to Shimon Peres before the Knesset elections of 1981.
During this period he devoted a great deal of time to his family and to writing essays
on current affairs, politics and strategy.
As Minister of Defense, 1984-90
The national unity government agreed upon in 1984 chose Rabin as minister of
defense, a post he held for six years until the collapse of the second unity government
in 1990. One of his major tasks was disengaging the I.D.F. from a war of attrition in
Lebanon, where it had become mired, and establishing a narrow security zone in
southern Lebanon. He also canceled the Lavi aircraft project developed by Israel
Aircraft Industries and constricted the defense budget as part of efforts to stabilize the
The outburst of the Intifada (the Palestinian uprising in the occupied territories) in
December 1987 caught Israel by surprise and rapidly escalated to alarming
proportions. Rabin initially adopted an iron-fist policy to suppress the uprising and
instructed the I.D.F. to respond to Palestinian assaults with determination. When King
Hussein unexpectedly announced that Jordan was relinquishing its sovereignty over
the West Bank, Rabin realized that only the Palestinians could be the real partners in
Seeking credible channels of communication with them, he joined Shimon Peres’s
peace efforts, including a meeting with King Hussein in 1988 during which the
London Document (an outline for a proposed peace treaty between Jordan and Israel)
was drawn up. Early in 1989 he presented his plan for negotiations with the
Palestinians, which became the foundation for the Madrid International Peace
Conference and the start of the peace process. The basic idea was to reach an
agreement with the local Palestinian population based on elections and broad
autonomy during an interim period, in return for an end to the Intifada. The plan was
adopted by Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir.
Prime Minister, 1992-95
The Labor Party, led by Yitzhak Rabin, won the Knesset elections of June 1992.
Once in office, he immediately focused on the prospect of a peace agreement with the
Palestinians as his top priority. Although top-secret negotiations between Israel and
the Palestinians in Washington failed, in late1992 and early 1993 further negotiations
gathered momentum in Oslo, resulting, on August 20, 1993, in the signing of the Oslo
On September 13, 1993, the historic Israeli-Palestinian Declaration of Principles was
signed at the White House in Washington. Known as the Oslo-A Agreement, as well
as “Gaza-Jericho First,” the Declaration guaranteed Palestinians self-rule in the
territories for a period of five years. In the first phase Israel would pull out of the
Gaza Strip and Jericho city, and would later leave agreed areas of the West Bank, and
The Gaza-Jericho Agreement, which granted the Palestinians autonomy in Gaza and
Jericho, was signed on May 4, 1994. The I.D.F. evacuated the areas agreed.
A tripartite summit in Washington between Yitzhak Rabin, King Husayn of Jordan
and U. S. President Bill Clinton, held in Washington on July 25, 1994, resulted in the
Washington Declaration, which marked the official end of hostilities between Israel
and Jordan. The signing of a comprehensive peace treaty between the two countries
was held on October 12, 1994, at the Arava borderline between them.
On December 10, 1994, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Yitzhak Rabin,
The signing of the Oslo-B Agreement by Israel and the P.L.O. in Washington on
September 28, 1995 expanded the West Bank areas under the control of the new
On Saturday night, November 4, 1995, at the close of a peace rally at Kings of Israel
Square in Tel Aviv attended by tens of thousands, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was
assassinated by gunshot by a young Jewish student.
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