Ariel Sharon

prime minister of Israel
print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Also known as: Ariel Sheinerman, Arik Sharon
Quick Facts
Byname:
Arik Sharon
Original name:
Ariel Scheinerman
Born:
February 26, 1928, Kefar Malal, Palestine [now in Israel]
Died:
January 11, 2014, Ramat Gan, Israel (aged 85)
Also Known As:
Ariel Sheinerman
Arik Sharon
Title / Office:
prime minister (2001-2006), Israel
Founder:
Kadima
Political Affiliation:
Kadima
Likud

Ariel Sharon (born February 26, 1928, Kefar Malal, Palestine [now in Israel]—died January 11, 2014, Ramat Gan, Israel) was an Israeli general and politician, whose public life was marked by brilliant but controversial military achievements and political policies. He was one of the chief participants in the Arab-Israeli wars and was elected prime minister of Israel in 2001, a position he held until he was incapacitated by a stroke in 2006.

Early life and military career

Born Ariel Scheinerman—like many Israelis, he Hebraized his name in the early years of the state—Sharon grew up in a family of Russian immigrants in then British-ruled Palestine. His early years were marked by experiences in the secular, socialist Labour Zionist movement and in the Haganah, the underground Zionist militia, which he joined at age 14. In December 1947 he became a full-time soldier. In 1948, Sharon fought as a junior officer in the battle of Laṭrūn; when Israeli forces there were routed by Jordanian troops, Sharon’s platoon was destroyed, and he was seriously injured. He later said that he was “eaten up by despair and the shame of the defeat.” After the war he remained in uniform and served as an intelligence officer while studying Middle Eastern history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

In July 1953 Sharon was appointed the head of Unit 101, a commando group charged with conducting reprisal raids against Jordanian border villages in response to incursions by Arab irregulars. Sharon was accorded considerable independence of action, to which he added a natural impetuosity and recklessness. In October one such operation, a retaliatory attack against the village of Qibyā (in the West Bank), left 69 civilians dead, many of them women and children. The episode evoked criticism both in Israel and abroad. Israeli foreign minister Moshe Sharett, who had opposed any such retaliation, decried the raid as having exposed Israel before the world “as a gang of bloodsuckers, capable of mass murder.” But Sharon was protected by the country’s combative first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, who described the young Sharon as original and visionary. In his diary Ben-Gurion also noted, “Were he to rid himself of his faults of not speaking the truth and to distance himself from gossip, he would be an exceptional military leader.”

In 1955 Sharon led another raid, this time directed at the Egyptian forces that were occupying the Gaza Strip. The incident, in which 38 Egyptians and 8 Israelis were killed, heightened tensions between Israel and Egypt. In late October 1956 the crisis culminated in the invasion of Egypt by Israel, in secret alliance with Britain and France (see Suez Crisis). In the ensuing campaign, Sharon commanded paratroopers who captured the strategic Mitla Pass in the central Sinai Peninsula. He exceeded orders and sustained heavy losses, again garnering a mixture of praise for his military ability and criticism of his headstrong leadership.

In 1957 he was sent to Staff College in Camberley, England, for officer training. Later he studied part-time at what was then the Tel Aviv branch of the Hebrew University and graduated with a law degree in 1966.

In late May 1967 Egypt remilitarized the Sinai and declared a blockade against Israeli ships passing through the Strait of Tiran. When the Israeli government appeared to hesitate about its response to Egypt’s actions, Sharon proposed to the chief of staff, Yitzhak Rabin, that the military high command take power and hold the cabinet in detention while the armed forces launched a preemptive attack on Egypt. A few days later, however, the government itself decided to go to war.

Sharon, by then a major general, commanded one of three armoured divisions operating against Egypt in the Six-Day War of June 1967. After the Israeli air force destroyed most of Egypt’s warplanes on the ground in the first day of the conflict, Israeli ground forces again swept across the Sinai, where they encountered little opposition. Sharon was hailed as a military hero.

Are you a student?
Get a special academic rate on Britannica Premium.

After the war, Sharon opposed the construction of the Bar-Lev Line (a chain of fortifications built to defend against Egyptian assault) along the Suez Canal. He favoured a more mobile, activist strategy in the face of Egyptian pinprick attacks, but he was overruled. As General Officer Commanding, Southern Command (1969–72), Sharon held the line against Egypt’s War of Attrition along the Suez Canal. In 1971–72 he was responsible for crushing incipient Palestinian resistance to continued Israeli occupation of the Gaza Strip, often resorting to brutal methods.

Amid charges of impulsiveness, uncontrollability, and dogmatism, Sharon made many enemies and was kept from the top army position that his military exploits might otherwise have gained for him. In July 1973 he resigned from the army and retired to raise sheep, lambs, and horses on Sycamore Farm, a ranch in the northern Negev desert region.