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Yom Kippur War Cease-Fire Lines: October 24, 1973
The Yom Kippur War began on October 6, 1973 when the combined armies of Egypt and
Syria attacked Israel in the Suez Canal area and the Golan Heights. After a few days of
hard fighting in which Egypt established itself on the eastern side of the Suez Canal and
the Syrians captured most of the Golan Heights, the attack was halted and a counter-attack
by IDF forces succeeded in pushing back some of the Egyptian forces, crossing the Canal
and reaching within 101 kilometers of Cairo. On the Golan Heights, the Syrian forces were
repulsed completely and IDF forces captured an enclave in the northern Heights deep in
Syrian territory, as well as recapturing Mount Hermon.
A cease-fire agreement was signed by Israel and Egypt on October 24, 1973. A separation-of-forces agreement was signed on January 18, 1974 in which the sides agreed to observe
the cease-fire, made arrangements for the reduction of forces and established a UN
emergency force in the demilitarized zone. Israeli forces withdrew to a distance of 20
kilometers east of the Suez Canal, and the Egyptian army withdrew most of its forces to
the west of the Canal.
A disengagement agreement with Syria was signed in Geneva on May 31, 1974, and
included, inter alia, the establishment of UN observers in the demilitarized zone, arrangements
for prisoner exchange, and IDF evacuation of the territory it took in the Yom Kippur War as
well as the city of Kuneitra, which was captured in the Six-Day War.

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