---
title: "Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty Signed"
year: 1979
country: "Israel"
canonical: "https://recap.at/1979/israel-egypt-peace-treaty"
slug: "israel-egypt-peace-treaty"
recapType: "global_event"
startDate: "1979-01-01"
---

# Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty Signed

> Carter brokered peace. Begin and Sadat actually signed it.

Israel and Egypt ended three decades of war by signing a peace treaty on March 26, 1979, after intensive U.S.-brokered negotiations. The agreement required Israel to withdraw from territory it had occupied since 1967 and Egypt to formally recognize Israel as a state. It was a watershed moment in Middle Eastern history-and a decision that cost Egypt's president his life.

## Summary

On March 26, 1979, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat signed the Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty on the White House lawn, with U.S. President Jimmy Carter as witness and architect. The agreement ended the state of war between the two nations that had persisted since Israel's 1948 founding, marked by four major conflicts including the devastating 1973 Yom Kippur War. Carter had orchestrated the breakthrough during 13 days of intensive negotiations at Camp David in September 1978, where Begin and Sadat hashed out the framework that would become the treaty.

The deal's core terms were straightforward but seismic: Israel would withdraw from the Sinai Peninsula, which it had occupied since 1967, returning it fully to Egyptian control by April 1982. In exchange, Egypt formally recognized Israel's right to exist and agreed to establish diplomatic relations-a dramatic shift for the Arab world's most populous nation. The two countries would establish embassies, allow free passage through the Suez Canal, and normalize trade. For Sadat, the treaty promised economic aid and the restoration of Egyptian territory; for Begin, it meant removing Israel's largest military threat and securing its southern border.

The pact didn't come without cost. Arab nations and the Palestine Liberation Organization condemned Sadat as a traitor for negotiating separately rather than as part of a unified Arab position. The Arab League suspended Egypt's membership, and several Arab states severed diplomatic ties. Within Egypt itself, Sadat faced growing opposition from Islamic fundamentalists and nationalist hardliners who saw the treaty as capitulation. Begin, too, faced domestic criticism from Israeli right-wingers opposed to surrendering the Sinai.

Historically, the treaty proved durable. It remains the only peace agreement between Israel and an Arab state (until the Abraham Accords of 2020), and the Israeli-Egyptian border has held as one of the Middle East's most stable. The treaty earned Begin and Sadat the Nobel Peace Prize in 1978, though Sadat's embrace of peace with Israel contributed to his assassination by members of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad on October 6, 1981. Carter's role in brokering the deal stands as the defining foreign policy achievement of his presidency.

## Key facts

- **Date signed**: March 26, 1979
- **Location**: White House, Washington, D.C.
- **Israeli Prime Minister**: Menachem Begin
- **Egyptian President**: Anwar Sadat
- **U.S. President**: Jimmy Carter
- **Camp David negotiations**: September 5-17, 1978
- **Israeli withdrawal deadline**: April 25, 1982
- **Nobel Peace Prize recipients**: Begin and Sadat, 1978
- **Years of war ended**: 30 years (1948-1979)

## Timeline

- **1948-01-01** - Israel's founding triggers Arab-Israeli conflict
  Israel declares independence on May 14, 1948. Egypt, along with other Arab states, invades in response, beginning the first of four major wars between Israel and Egypt over the next 25 years.
- **1967-06-05** - Six-Day War and Sinai occupation
  Israel defeats Egypt and captures the Sinai Peninsula in a swift six-day conflict. Occupation of the territory becomes a central sticking point in future peace negotiations.
- **1973-10-06** - Yom Kippur War erupts
  Egypt launches a surprise military assault on Israel to reclaim the Sinai. The war lasts three weeks, kills thousands, and leaves both sides exhausted. It sets the stage for diplomatic opening.
- **1977-11-19** - Sadat visits Israel
  Egyptian President Anwar Sadat makes a historic trip to Jerusalem and addresses the Israeli Knesset, signaling willingness to negotiate peace directly with Israel-a dramatic break from Arab consensus.
- **1978-09-05** - Camp David negotiations begin
  President Jimmy Carter invites Begin and Sadat to Camp David, the presidential retreat in Maryland, for intensive, private peace talks. Negotiations run for 13 days.
- **1978-09-17** - Camp David Accords framework agreed
  Begin and Sadat agree on a framework for peace after Carter's mediation. The agreement outlines terms for Israeli withdrawal from Sinai and Egyptian recognition of Israel. Begin and Sadat are awarded the Nobel Peace Prize later that year.
- **1979-03-26** - Peace treaty signed at White House
  Israel and Egypt formally sign the peace treaty on the White House lawn, with Carter as witness. The treaty ends the state of war, commits Israel to Sinai withdrawal by April 1982, and establishes diplomatic relations between the nations.
- **1979-04-01** - Arab League suspends Egypt
  In response to the peace treaty, the Arab League votes to suspend Egypt's membership and calls for economic sanctions. Several Arab nations sever diplomatic ties with Egypt.
- **1981-10-06** - Sadat assassinated
  President Anwar Sadat is killed by members of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad during a military parade in Cairo. His advocacy for peace with Israel had made him a target for Islamic fundamentalists and Arab nationalists.
- **1982-04-25** - Israeli withdrawal from Sinai complete
  Israel completes its full withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula, ending 15 years of military occupation. Egypt regains full control of the territory.

## Relationships

- **evolved from**: camp-david-accords-1978 - The March 1979 Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty was the direct outcome of negotiations and framework established at Camp David in September 1978; Carter's mediation produced both the accords and the bilateral treaty as complementary documents.
- **responded to**: israeli-independence - Egypt's recognition of Israel in the 1979 treaty reversed 31 years of Arab League rejection of Israeli sovereignty; the treaty represented the first formal Arab acceptance of Israel's legitimacy since 1948.
- **responded to**: suez-crisis - The 1979 treaty resolved the territorial dispute that triggered the 1956 Suez Crisis; Israeli withdrawal from Sinai by 1982 finally settled the territorial question that had dominated Israeli-Egyptian relations since 1948.

## Consequences

- **1982 - Israeli withdrawal from Sinai Peninsula**: Israel completed its phased withdrawal from the Sinai, returning territory captured in the 1967 Six-Day War. The process involved evacuating Israeli settlements and military positions, fundamentally altering Israel's strategic posture.
- **1979 - Egypt's suspension from Arab League**: Arab states suspended Egypt's membership in the Arab League in response to the peace treaty, isolating Sadat's government politically within the Arab world for over a decade.
- **1979 - Camp David framework enables Palestinian autonomy talks**: The same accords established a framework for Palestinian self-governance negotiations, though these talks ultimately stalled and never resulted in a final agreement.
- **1981 - Anwar Sadat's assassination**: Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, the treaty's primary architect, was assassinated by members of the Islamic Jihad organization who opposed the peace agreement and his secular governance.
- **1979 - U.S. military aid to Egypt increases significantly**: The United States became Egypt's largest military donor, providing billions in aid as part of the peace dividend, cementing Egypt's strategic alignment with the West.
- **1982 - Regional arms race and Palestinian resistance intensification**: The treaty's bilateral nature left Palestinian concerns unresolved, contributing to the rise of the PLO's armed struggle and Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon in response to cross-border attacks.

## Then vs now

- **Israeli-Egyptian military clashes**: 1979: Four major wars since 1948 → 2024: Cold peace with no large-scale combat since 1973 - The treaty eliminated the primary existential threat Israel faced from its most populous Arab neighbor.
- **U.S. military aid to Egypt (annual)**: 1978: Minimal; Egypt aligned with Soviet Union → 2024: $1.3 billion annually - Egypt became one of the largest recipients of U.S. military assistance, second only to Israel.
- **Arab League membership status**: 1979: Suspended following treaty signature → 2024: Full member since 1989; Egypt hosts Arab League headquarters - Egypt's readmission signaled broader Arab acceptance of the peace framework.
- **Israeli settlements in disputed territories**: 1979: Roughly 50,000 Israelis in Sinai and West Bank combined → 2024: Approximately 600,000 in West Bank; Sinai evacuated per treaty - The treaty succeeded in Sinai but failed to arrest settlement expansion elsewhere.
- **Palestinian statehood progress**: 1979: Camp David framework promised autonomy negotiations → 2024: No independent Palestinian state; autonomy remains incomplete - The bilateral nature of the treaty left the Palestinian question unresolved for 45 years.

## Impact

On March 26, 1979, Israel and Egypt signed a peace treaty at the White House, ending three decades of warfare and fundamentally reshaping the Middle East. The agreement, brokered by U.S. President Jimmy Carter at Camp David, was the first peace accord between Israel and an Arab nation, breaking the unified Arab opposition that had defined regional politics since 1948.

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Canonical: https://recap.at/1979/israel-egypt-peace-treaty