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King David Hotel bombing ( July 22 , 1946 ) was a Bombing attack against the British government of Palestine by members of Irgun —a militant Zionist group. The Irgun exploded a bomb at the , 41 Arab , 17 Jew ish, and 5 other. Around 45 people were injured. The attack was initially ordered by David Ben Gurion , who was in the United States . Both Ben Gurion and Menachem Begin , head of the Irgun, would later become Israel i Prime Ministers. The attack was commanded by Yosef Avni and Yisrael Levi . The attack on the hotel was the largest attack against the British in the history of the Mandate. Some claim this act should be considered in light of the escalating violence in the region, and the continuing conflict between the three main forces in the region: British, Jewish, and Arab. In particular, the attack was made in retaliation for the British mass arrest programme Operation Agatha of June 29 1946, when British troops raided the Jewish Agency and confiscated large quantities of documents, such as information about Jewish Agency operations, including intelligence activities in Arab countries. At about the same time, more than 2,500 Jews from all over Palestine were placed under arrest. A large number of seized documents were taken to the hotel. However, the bombing operation had already been planned before then. THE ATTACK Moshe Sneh , the chief of the Haganah General Headquarters, sent a letter to Menachem Begin, the leader of the Irgun, with instructions. Text in ''(bracketed italics)'' has been inserted to clarify some of the references. The original letter can be found in the Jabotinsky Institute Archives (k-4 1/11/5).
Despite its initial approval, repeated delays of the operation were requested by the Haganah in response to the changing political situation. The plan consisted of Irgun men, dressed as hotel employees and carrying the explosives which were concealed in milk cans, entering the building from a Cafe at the ground floor, and placing the charges below the Hotel Wing where the British institutions were located. Finally it was decided the attack would take place on July 22 at 11:00 (as at this time the Cafe would be relatively empty). The attack used approximately 350kg of explosives spread across six charges. Due to a delay the operation started at 12:00, and a minor gunfight ensued with two British military men who became suspicious and tried to intervene. After placing the bombs, the Irgun men quickly escaped and detonated a small explosive in the street outside the hotel to keep passer-byes away from the area. A warning message was delivered to the telephone operator of the King David Hotel before the attack, and also delivered to the French consulate and the Palestine Post newspaper. According to Irgun sources, the message read "I am speaking on behalf of the Hebrew underground. We have placed an explosive device in the hotel. Evacuate it at once - you have been warned." Irgun representatives have always claimed that the warning was given well in advance so that adequate time was available to evacuate the hotel. Menachem Begin writes (p. 221, ''The Revolt'', <1951> ed.) that the telephone message was delivered 25 - 27 minutes before the explosion. The British authorities denied for many years that there had been a warning at all, but the leaking of the internal police report on the bombing during the 1970s proved that a warning had indeed been received. However, the report claimed that the warning was only just being delivered to the officer in charge as the bomb went off. RESPONSES TO THE ATTACK The British House Of Commons responded:
The Chief Secretary for the Government of Palestine, Sir John Shaw , declared in a broadcast:
The Jewish leadership publicly condemned these attacks. The Jewish agency expressed "their feelings of horror at the base and unparalleled act perpetrated today by a gang of criminals". In fact, the Irgun was acting in response to direct instructions from the United Resistance , as described in the letter from Moshe Sneh cited above. The Irgun issued an initial statement accepting responsibility for the attack, blaming the British for the deaths due to failure to respond to the warning, and mourning the Jewish victims. A year later, on July 22 1947 , they issued a new statement saying that they were acting on instructions from "a letter from the headquarters of the United Resistance, demanding that we carry out an attack on the center of government at the King David Hotel as soon as possible". The British army commander in Palestine, General Sir nature". See also: Israeli Terrorism , Terrorism Against Israelis , Terrorism EXTERNAL LINKS
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