The books begins with excerpts from the unique, lengthy reports and exchanges of radio communication from Israeli troops isolated within a bunker along the banks of the Suez Canal & their Headquarters. Communications recorded during the initial, successful Egyptian offensive which breached the surrounding Israeli positions and by-passed them. The accounts of the soldiers concerned are very illuminating and provide a first hand account of the actual fighting.
The book then breaks off into an analysis of the lead up to the conflict. The book describes the Egyptian & Syrian objectives for the Yom Kippur War as having nothing to do with the Palestinian issue or the pursuance of any `Palestinian state'. On this point I agree.
However, I take issue with the book's further elaborations of the Arab intent being, 'not to destroy Israel', but just to regain the lands lost to Israel during the 1967 conflict. This I find incredibly selective.
No mention is made in the immediate context that Israel offered to return all the lands captured in the `1967 War' immediately after the conflict in exchange for the recognition of the right of Israel to exist, secure borders and peace. All of which the Arab leaders refused at that time and even up to the Yom Kippur War itself.
The writers eventually acknowledge this on the following page, contradicting themselves and introducing an element of confusion at the outset.
Deviating from the conflict itself, the writers then refer to the obvious ambiguity of UN Resolution 242, adopted following the 1967 War.
The UN Resolution itself calling for Israeli withdrawal, but not being specific as to what the withdrawal entailed, plus the recognition of Sovereignty for all nations in the region and the freedom for all nations to live peacefully within secure borders, free from threats of force & a settlement of the refugee problem.
It is duly added that the UN Resolution was intentionally ambiguous due to the clear and present threat that any specific details would result in the veto of one or both the `super-powers' so deeply involved in the political negotiations. (Even today we see one side or the other quoting the UN Resolution in accordance with it's OWN interpretation at the expense of the other.)
A great deal of the book is then devoted to the political machinations behind the scenes and the secret military build-up and preparations for the war by the Arab nations.
The intent of the Arab onslaught was clearly to catch Israel's military totally unprepared during the most Holy time of the Jewish calendar, Yom Kippur.
To this extent the Arabs were largely successful. Yet, amidst the claims of Israeli intelligence failure in discovering the Arab plans for attack, it is shown that shortly before the Arab onslaught began, Israel was indeed aware of what was coming, yet political pressures went a long way to preventing another pre-emptive strike similar to that employed during the 1967 War.
The book reveals that shortly before the shooting began, the US told Israeli leaders in no uncertain terms that if Israel launched a pre-emptive strike against the assembled Arab forces, then the US would feel unable to supply fresh equipment which would surely be needed during the conflict's course.
However, the book quotes the US diplomatic sources as adding that "...if Israel refrained from a pre-emptive strike, allowing the Arabs to provide irrefutable proof that they were the aggressors, then America would feel morally obliged to help..."
When the book deals with the actual fighting itself, we are presented with a story of incredible courage and bravery of the soldiers/airmen on both sides, amid the high-stakes of the continuing diplomatic battles waged by the UN, the United States, and the Soviet Union, even as troops and pilots from Israel and the nine Arab states attacking it lost their lives.(Yes, there were contingents from other Arab countries involved as well, just as in 1948 and 1967.)
The ensuing Arab oil embargo is also studied in some depth plus the frantic negotiations to bring about a ceasefire before the `opposing' super-powers found themselves on the brink of a nuclear holocaust. Israeli forces being within artillery range of the Syrian capital Damascus and well on the road to the Egyptian capital Cairo & with Soviet Forces threatening to intervene.
Bearing in mind that the book initially declares that this war had nothing whatsoever to do with the Palestinians, then it does a 'commendable' account of manipulating the conflict to the Palestinian issue after it's conclusion.
If the Arab's weren't, as the book declares, fighting for the Palestinian cause, then why such a sweeping reference & sizeable section devoted to the Palestinians towards the end ?
To one who has studied the region for some time, it is clear that due to yet another military failure by the Arab world to provide a solution to the `Israeli question', then the Arab world immediately seeks another weapon to pursue it's agenda. Hence the `Palestinianisation' of the conflict then & to date.
With the greatest respect, I also feel that anyone who believes that the Arab intent during this war was 'not to destroy Israel' is not living in the real world, as the Arab military would never have stopped at any pre-determined 'border'.
Furthermore, being British, the disproportionate inclusion and support of the Palestinian issue by a representative of the British Press (Sunday Times Insight Team) is of no surprise to me.
Having said that, there is a lot to this book's credit and it is a useful reference on the Yom Kippur conflict and it's International repercussions. A far better account of this conflict is provided by Chaim Herzog in his excellent book entitled "The War of Atonement".