James Earl Carter Jr., also known as Jimmy Carter, the 39th president, born on October 1, 1924 in small farming town of Plains. Carter is a democrat. Georgia. James Earl Carter Sr., his father, was a businessman and a farmer. His mother, Lillian Gordy Carter, a registered nurse. He was educated at a public school called Plains, he attended collage at Georgia Southwestern College and the Georgia Institute of Technology receiving a Bachelor of Science degree from the United States Naval Academy in 1946. He married a lady named Rosalynn Smith on July 7, 1946. When his father died in 1953, he resigned his ceremony of placing a ship in active service and returned with his family to Georgia. The Camp David Accords, agreements between Israel …show more content…
As a result, he sent a special envoy to the Middle East. The American ambassador flew in and out between Tel Aviv and Cairo to search or many ways to narrow the dis agreement between both countries. They tried to come up with an agreement, but because foreign ministers failed this lead to the 1978 Camp David Accords, one of president Carters most important accomplishments as president. President Carter and the U.S. Government played leading roles together creating the opportunity for this agreement to occur. Carter and his Secretary of State, Cyrus Vance, followed intensive negotiations with Arab and Israeli leaders from the start of his administration, hoping to reconvene the Geneva Conference, on December 1973, when it was established, to seek an end to the Arab-Israeli dispute. Which followed up on earlier negotiations presented in the Middle …show more content…
In this respect, the Accords are considered a surprisingly successful endeavor and a victory for both parties. As Carter points out, years before Camp David, there were four big wars between Israel and its neighbors, mostly led by Egypt.' In the 25 years since Camp David, there has been none and The Camp David Accords were certainly a massive turning point because it was the very first time that Israel and any other Arab country were finally at peace, and it marked the first time that the Israelis peacefully gave back territory they had taken. Furthermore, Begin and Sadat demonstrated to the Arab world that diplomacy and cooperation was a viable path towards resolving the Arab-Israeli conflict, rather than hospital and bitter