Ben-Gurion led Israel during its
War of Independence. He became
Prime Minister on
may 14, 1948 and would remain in that post until 1963, except for a period of nearly two years between 1954 and 1955. As Premier, he oversaw the establishment of the state's institutions. He presided over various national projects aimed at the rapid development of the country and its population:
Operation Magic Carpet, the airlift of Jews from Arab countries, the construction of the
National Water Carrier, rural development projects and the establishment of new towns and cities. In particular, he called for pioneering settlement in outlying areas, especially in the
Negev.
According to Benni Morris during the
1948 Arab-Israeli War Ben-Gurion ordered the expulsion of Palestinians
from Lydda and from villages attacked during
Operation Hiram. He adds that "Ben-Gurion was right [to order the expulsions]. If he had not done what he did, a state would not have come into being. That has to be clear. It is impossible to evade it. Without the uprooting of the Palestinians, a Jewish state would not have arisen here".
In 1953 Ben-Gurion announced his intention to withdraw from government and settle in the
Kibbutz Sde-Boker, in the Israeli Negev. He had a major role in the reprisal operations that lead to the
Qibya massacre at the end of 1953. He returned to office in 1955 assuming the post of Defense Minister and later prime minister.
Returning to government, Ben-Gurion raided Gaza - still under Egyptian rule - in retaliation for the Palestinian guerrilla attacks Israel was sustaining, killing 38 Egyptian soldiers in the process. Egypt's President
Gamal Abdel Nasser, angered by this hit to Egyptian pride, started building up his arms with the help of the Soviet Union. This scared the Israelis and they started arming themselves with help from the
French. Then Nasser ordered the
nationalization of the Suez Canal, which was seen as very threatening action toward Israel, France, and Britain. These countries needed the trade route under international control again and so Ben-Gurion collaborated with the British and French to plan the
1956 Sinai War in which Israel stormed the
Sinai Peninsula thus giving British and French forces a pretext to intervene in order to secure the
Suez Canal. Intervention by the
United States and the
United Nations forced the British, French and Israelis to back down.
Ben-Gurion was among the founders of
Mapai which governed Israel during the first three decades of its existence. He stepped down as prime minister for what he described as personal reasons in 1963, and chose
Levi Eshkol as his successor. A year later a rivalry developed between the two on the issue of the
Lavon Affair. Ben-Gurion broke with the party in June 1965 over Eshkol's handling of the Lavon affair and formed a new party,
Rafi which won ten seats in the
Knesset. After the Six-Day War, Ben-Gurion was in favor of returning all the occupied territories apart from
Jerusalem, the
Golan Heights and
Mount Hebron.
In 1968, when Rafi merged with Mapai to form the
Alignment, Ben-Gurion refused to reconcile with his old party. He favored electoral reforms in which a constituency-based system would replace the chaotic proportional representation method. He formed another new party, the
National List, which won four seats in the
1969 election. Ben-Gurion retired from politics in 1970 and spent his last years living in a modest home on the
kibbutz. Ben-Gurion is buried alongside his wife Paula in Sde Boker.