May 14, 1948. The Secretary of State has just threatened to vote against his own president. Seven Arab nations have armies massed on their borders. The State Department is in open revolt. And Harry Truman is about to make the most controversial decision of his presidency, in eleven minutes.
What made an ordinary man from Missouri defy the most respected figure in American government to recognize a nation that didn't exist yet?
It started with a failed haberdashery. And it ended with a signature that changed the Middle East forever.
Primary research sources:
The Harry S. Truman Presidential Library & Museum, The National Archives, and contemporary diplomatic records from May 1948.
Key Historical Figures & Turning Points:
Harry Truman: The accidental president who defied his entire government
George Marshall: Secretary of State, architect of European reconstruction, and Truman's most powerful opponent
Clark Clifford: The young counsel who argued for recognition against impossible odds
Eddie Jacobson: The old friend who walked past the Secret Service to change history
Chaim Weizmann: The Zionist leader who would become Israel's first president
David Ben-Gurion: The man who declared a nation and left its borders undefined
The Oval Office Ultimatum: The threat no Secretary of State had ever made before
Eleven Minutes: The time between declaration and recognition that created a nation
1 comment:
Read "The Secret War Against the Jews" and you'll be even more amazed at how the RShO manipulated events to ensure we'd have our country back.
One wonders what would've happened if FDR was still president. Would he have refused to recognize Israel and would American Jews still have deified him?
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