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The Suez Crisis

The History of the Suez Canal’s Nationalization by Egypt and the War that Followed

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The Suez Crisis

By: Charles River Editors
Narrated by: Dan Gallagher
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“Nobody was kept more completely in the dark than the President of the United States.” - Anthony Nutting, British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs

World War II changed the dynamics of colonization irrevocably. India was granted independence in 1947, and that set the tone for decolonization across the European imperial spectrum. But as it turned out, decolonization was preempted in Egypt by a military coup in 1952. On January 25, 1952, British forces in the Suez Canal region took aggressive action when it ordered a police post in Ismailia to surrender for alleged support of anti-British activities. When the commander of the police post refused and mounted defenses, the British attacked, killing approximately 40 and injuring 70 Egyptian policemen. Outrage spilled out onto the streets in the form of protests and riots, leading to violence, looting, and the burning down of foreign businesses in Cairo.

This coup, a minor revolutionary movement, had begun with the limited objective of overthrowing King Farouk, the incumbent ruler, but it became a far larger, anti-West, anti-imperialist and non-aligned nationalist movement. The country fell under the control of an armed forces council known as the Free Officers Movement, and the coup was initially led by Major General Mohammed Naguib, but it would bring about the rise of Nasser.

Naturally, Nasser’s disdain and distrust of the British and French was wholly reciprocated. The French were fighting insurgencies in Algeria and Morocco, which Nasser was openly supporting, while the British were attempting to adjust to its vastly reduced relevance in the post-war world.

©2018 Charles River Editors (P)2018 Charles River Editors
20th Century Egypt Middle East Modern Africa War Military Royalty Morocco
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Despite the US not taking an active part in any of the events of the Suez Crisis, the viewpoint is presented as completely American - not only is there a theme in this book that the UK and France should have "sought permission" from Eisenhower to take military action in this case, extensive reference is also made to other international affairs and the assumed requirement for the US to "approve" action taken by other states. Whilst this is irritating, this viewpoint completely occludes the function of explaining the events; the book only skims over a description of what happened (at a very superficial level of detail), with no attempt to analyse or explain. My honest assessment is that the Wikipedia article for the Suez Crisis provides a better overview of what happened than this book.

Disappointingly superficial and US Centric

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