The "Camp David Accords" was orchestrated by the Carter Administration in order to attempt to C) end the era of hostility between Israel and Egypt.
The Camp David Accords, officially titled the “Framework for Peace in the Middle East", was a series of agreements between Israel and Egypt signed on September 17, 1978, at the U.S. presidential retreat at Camp David, Maryland.
The president Jimmy Carter served as an intermediary to establish the treaties that ended the era of hostility between Israel and Egypt. The following years, Israel withdraw from Sinai, and Egypt promised to establish normal diplomatic relations between the two countries and open the Suez Canal (a waterway in Egypt) to Israeli ships.