1985 in Israel

Incumbents

Events

  • 7 January - The Israeli government establishes the Bejski Commission, a committee of inquiry charged with investigating the 1983 Israel bank stock crisis.
  • 16 February – Israel begins withdrawing troops from Lebanon.
  • 10 March – Twelve IDF soldiers are killed in a suicide car attack near Metulla.
  • 22 April - Israel signs a Free Trade Agreement with the United States.[1]
  • 11 June – HaBonim disaster: 22 people, including 19 children, are killed when a train collides into a school bus at a railway crossing near HaBonim.
  • 1 July - The Israeli government introduces the Economic Stabilization Plan to counter the dire economic situation and rapidly growing inflation.[2]
  • July – The 1985 Maccabiah Games are held.
  • 4 September – The Israeli new shekel (NIS) is introduced. It does not replace the old shekel as Israel's official currency until 1 January 1986.
  • 5 October – Ras Burqa massacre: An Egyptian soldier shoots and kills seven Israeli vacationers (including four children) at Ras Burqa, a beach resort in the Sinai peninsula.
  • 21 November – Jonathan Pollard, a US naval intelligence analyst who spied for Israeli intelligence, is arrested by the FBI at the gates of the Israeli Embassy in Washington while trying to seek asylum there.

Israeli–Palestinian conflict

The most prominent events related to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict which occurred during 1985 include:

Notable Palestinian militant operations against Israeli targets

The most prominent Palestinian Arab terror attacks committed against Israelis during 1985 include:

  • 9 April – A Palestinian Arab suicide car bomber drives an explosive-laden vehicle into an Israeli army patrol, killing 2 soldiers.[3]
  • 21 May - The Jibril Agreement - Israel releases 1,150 security prisoners being held in Israeli prisoners in exchange for three Israeli soldiers captured during the 1982 Lebanon War.
  • 25 September – An Arab terrorist cell takes over an Israeli yacht off the coast of Larnaca, Cyprus and kills its three Israeli occupants. An elite section of the PLO known as Force 17 claims responsibility for the attack.
  • 7 October – The Italian cruise ship MS Achille Lauro is hijacked in the Mediterranean Sea by Palestinian Arab militants. The hijackers' original aim was to use the ship to slip into Israel. However, crew members discover them cleaning weapons, and the group then seizes control of the ship; holding the passengers and crew hostage, they direct the vessel to sail to Tartus, Syria, and demand the release of 50 Palestinian Arabs then in Israeli prisons. During the incident, the militants kill the passenger Leon Klinghoffer, a 69-year-old wheelchair-bound Jewish American, and throw him overboard.
  • 27 December – Palestinian Arab militants from Abu Nidal's militant group open fire at the counters of El Al in the airports of Rome and Vienna. 18 Israelis were killed and 40 were injured.[4]

Notable Israeli military operations against Palestinian militancy targets

The most prominent Israeli military counter-terrorism operations (military campaigns and military operations) carried out against Palestinian militants during 1985 include:

Unknown dates

Notable births

Notable deaths

  • 18 January – Mordechai Bentov (born 1900), Russian (Poland)-born Israeli journalist and politician.
  • 31 January – Menachem Bader (born 1895), Austro-Hungarian (Galicia)-born Haganah member and Israeli politician.
  • 24 April – Yitzhak Kahan (born 1913), Austro-Hungarian (Galicia)-born Israeli jurist, sixth President of the Supreme Court of Israel.
  • 29 September – Yona Wallach (born 1944), Israeli poet.
  • 6 October – Noah Moses (born 1912), publisher and editor of Yedioth Ahronoth.
  • 7 December – Shlomo Rosen (born 1905), Austro-Hungarian (Austrian Silesia)-born Israeli politician and minister.
  • 30 November – Joseph Zaritsky (born 1891), Russian (Ukraine)-born Israeli painter.
  • Full date unknown
    • Benjamin Akzin (born 1904), Russian (Latvia)-born early Zionist activist and Israeli university professor.
    • Moshe Rudolf Bloch (b 1902), German-born Israeli scientist.
    • Moshe Rachmilewitz (born 1898), Russian (Belarus)-born leading Israeli doctor.
    • Eliezer Smoli (born 1901), Russian (Ukraine)-born Israeli writer, famous for his children's books.

Major public holidays

See also

References

  1. Israel-US Free Trade Area Agreement
  2. The Economy of Modern Israel: Malaise and Promise, Assaf Razin and Efraim Sadka, p. 29-30
  3. The Cult of the Suicide Bomber
  4. "Major Terror Attacks (1952-2003)."
  5. Hiltermann, Joost R. (1991) ‘’Behind the Intifada. Labor and Women’s Movements in the Occupied Territories.’’ Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-07869-6 p 114

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