Eighty years ago this week insurgency in Palestine intensifies
Jewish insurgents responded to the British decision not to accept the recommendation of the Anglo-American Committee that 100,000 Jews should be allowed to settle in Palestine. In one night ten bridges carrying major transport links were severed. The attempt to destroy an eleventh bridge failed after a firefight in which 14 Haganah fighters were killed. Separately, five British officers were kidnapped with the threat that they would be killed if death sentences passed on two insurgents for their part in the raid on Sarafand Camp (in which there had been no fatalities) were carried out. The Labour Party conference came out decisively against the extreme left. A motion to block affiliation by the Communist Party of Great Britain was passed. The Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin emphatically defeated left-wing critics of his foreign policy who asserted that he was merely carrying out traditionally Conservative policies. They wanted him to purge the Foreign Office of anyone ...