Star Knight wrote:To make it worse your forces are of poorer quality, the Arabs got the latest Soviet stuff while Israel had a mixture of French armaments and old second world war equipment.
I gotta nitpick a little here.
The Israeli air force was plane-for-plane superior in quality, even leaving aside the better trained pilots. They got air superiority right away and used it to devastating effect. Yes, they did a "sneak attack" but the Arab airplanes were nothing special. They were at least a generation behind what the Soviets were using (which means they were likely contemporary with the NATO past-generation airplanes the Israelis were using, and that means a tech edge, as the Soviets were always behind during the cold war). To make matters worse for the Arabs, the Israelis got their hands on a typical plane due to a defector and had practical experience with the limitations of the MIG-21 design.
The tanks used by the Israelis were pretty good quality post-WWII designs, the Centurion in particular had been outfitted with a very good 105mm gun and a flat trajectory which translated into a significantly better effective range. The Egyptians were using mostly WWII surplus Soviet stuff, late war models like the T34-85 and the Su-100 tank destroyer.
The difference in tech level stacked on the difference in crew quality lead to a 2-1 kill ratio in favor of the Israelis in head-to-head combat with roughly comparable numbers.
The Jordanians were using pretty much the same equipment for tanks as the Israelis, both sides having slightly aged western designs. The Jordanians did not have the benefit of the 105mm guns that the Israelis favored whenever they could cram it on a chasse. Their 24 airplanes were rated about equal to the best Israeli Mirage planes.
The Israelis didn't get the kind of crushing victory against the Jordanians they got against Egypt, but their use of air power turned slowed things down and turned it into a stalemate that lasted throughout the conflict.
The Syrians were just so bad, especially their officers, that even though they had a solid defensive setup and were well protected from air power they were pushed out anyway. That was a case of just better quality troops, as it was mostly an infantry/artillery conflict and there wasn't anything significantly different between the forces.