Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Cairo: A Crisis At Home

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Cairo: A Crisis At Home

    Egypt Today, Egypt
    March 16 2007


    A Crisis At Home

    The 1956 Suez War led to an exodus of foreign residents and empowered
    Gamal Abdel Nasser's vision of pan-Arab solidarity in the process. In
    the second of a two part series, we take a closer look at what the
    conflict meant for Egypt.

    By Fayza Hassan


    THE 1956 SUEZ Canal war, known in our part of the world as the
    Tripartite Aggression, was one of Egypt's many military debacles of
    the twentieth century. More than others, however, its consequences
    for the nation's social diversity and culture were nothing short of
    disastrous, reaching far into the future to shape the Egypt we live
    in today.


    Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalized the company that ran the Suez Canal
    on July 26, 1956, taking over its administration to the general
    acclaim not only of Egyptians, but of all the Arab countries. Here,
    finally, was a leader that Western powers would know better than to
    mess with, they said.

    The View
    We're All Armenians
    The assassination of the editor of the only Turkish-Arme...
    Dodging the Bullet
    Threatened species are thriving in Iraq's war-torn ...


    In the euphoria of the moment, Nasser believed that he got away with
    his gamble. Britain and France had protested violently and threatened
    action, but seemed to have settled for referring the case to the
    United Nations. Every day that passes lessens the chances of an
    attack, Nasser had confided to his officers; he believed that as long
    as the operation of the Canal went on smoothly, in the end there
    would be no real adverse repercussions. The Canal nevertheless
    remained closed to Israeli navigation, one of the main bones of
    contention between Egypt and Israel and one that Nasser had no
    intention of readdressing. On the other hand, the details of
    compensation for shareholders was subject to negotiation, and he was
    ready to be fair, possibly generous, on this matter.

    The poor - the majority of Egyptians - were especially ecstatic. For
    the first time in their long history of subjugation, they felt free
    and vindicated. The building of the Suez Canal had only been possible
    at the cost of hundreds of thousands of forced laborers' lives and
    now, finally, their sacrifice was benefiting their countrymen.

    Even Egyptians opposed to the Free Officers' Revolution who had hoped
    for Nasser's downfall in 1954 seemed momentarily reconciled with the
    new leader's revolutionary policies; a new era was opening up, an era
    in which they could hold their heads high. The rich may have been
    deprived of their wealth, but at least their leader was standing his
    ground, impervious to intimidation.

    Soon, rumors of Egyptian tourists being asked to leave at once from
    their European holiday destinations made the rounds of the chic
    salons. `They are afraid of us now,' the newly dispossessed would
    chuckle. Mahmoud Hassan, 14 at the time, was spending the summer
    months in Switzerland. He had no idea what was happening in Egypt
    while he was enjoying the mountain air. On the morning of July 27 as
    he was leaving the hotel, he was accosted by an elegant older
    gentleman. `You,' said the man pointing at him, `Are you Egyptian?'
    Thinking that the man wanted to know something about the Pyramids,
    the young boy replied affirmatively. The man turned red and seemed to
    choke for a second, then throwing himself at him, began to pummel him
    with all his might: `You thief, you dirty Arab thief you will give it
    back to us whether you like it or not. Give it back now, now,' he
    raved, foaming at the mouth.



    A British tank keeps watch over a street in Port Said.

    Overwhelmed and terrified, Hassan retreated, convinced that the man
    was insane. Only later did he learn that he had just been ordered to
    hand back the Suez Canal to the French. Soon after, Hassan's family
    was officially advised that they would do well to leave Switzerland
    at their `earliest convenience' and for `their own protection.'

    Foreign residents in Egypt who were not vacationing abroad did not
    seem too concerned at first. They knew little or nothing of what had
    happened in European political circles following the nationalization.
    The general consensus of the Egyptian cosmopolitan elite was that the
    Canal was going to revert to Egypt anyway, and as long as navigation
    was not interrupted, it was really no big deal. Life went on as
    usual, with its rounds of festivities in the coastal cities where
    Cairenes were in the habit of escaping to avoid the stifling heat of
    the capital.

    The Egyptian government, believing that as long as the Canal traffic
    was flowing there would be no problems, was unaware of the conspiracy
    that was meanwhile developing in Europe between the French, the
    British and the Israelis. To this day, some of the minute details of
    the affair remain hazy since all of the archives of the period have
    not yet been opened.

    Who really came up with the plot, the French, the British or the
    Israelis? It is commonly accepted that the French and the Israelis
    had been conniving before the British joined in. Be that as it may, a
    great deal of diplomatic flurry at the top level resulted in the
    secret signing of the Sèvres Protocol between the three countries who
    had vested interests in the Canal. Devised by France, Britain and
    Israel, the Sèvres Protocol was a strategy according to which Israeli
    paratroopers would launch a surprise attack on the Mitla Pass 70
    miles inside of Egypt and 30 miles from the Canal, while armored
    columns would cross into the Sinai. This would be officially
    disguised as reprisals against fidaeyeen attacks in the Rafah-Gaza
    area. Britain and France would intervene thirty-six hours later
    ostensibly to protect the navigation on the Canal but with the
    further aim of proceeding to Cairo and unseating Nasser.

    The whole venture was dreamed up by Anthony Eden, Guy Mollet and
    David Ben-Gurion who kept most of the details from their respective
    governments for the good reason that the plan was based on a major
    deception: Israel was to be seen as attacking Egypt for its own
    reasons while Britain and France would pretend to be worried about
    the good functioning of the Canal. An ultimatum would then be issued
    to the warring parties to which the Israelis would abide (although
    secretly they had planned to proceed on their own and occupy Sharm
    El-Sheikh) and which Nasser was expected to refuse, thus opening the
    way to a full-scale invasion of Egypt by Britain and France.



    French troops patrolling the streets of Port Said.

    Consultation with the United States was rejected owing to their
    preoccupation with the election campaign and the generally
    unsatisfactory level of assistance its administration was willing to
    give to any armed attack on Egypt.

    The Protocol was to remain so secret that Eden, who was facing the
    resistance of his Cabinet at home, was dismayed when he discovered
    that the Israelis had someone taking minutes of the meeting and
    typing the agreement, creating a material record of the dealings. He
    had banked on Israel and France accepting a gentlemen's agreement,
    which he could always deny in case something went awry. Now his role
    in the matter might leak and it would become known that, against
    America's desire, he had encouraged his allies to bypass the United
    Nations Security Council, which was still debating the issue of the
    nationalization and considering the application of limited sanctions
    as a first step to further action.

    Eden, elated by the scheme, seemed oblivious of the enormity of what
    was afoot: `Secretly, without the knowledge of their parliaments,
    their public and most of their civil servants and in Britain's case
    her military commanders, Britain, France and Israel had declared war
    upon Egypt,' commented W. Scott Lucas in Divided we Stand: Britain,
    the US and the Suez Crisis. Eden, however, was moved by personal
    feelings of antagonism towards Nasser, which were so strong that they
    caused him to take momentarily leave of his senses.

    On October 25 he simply informed his Cabinet for the first time of
    the gist of what had been concocted at Sèvres, without ever
    mentioning the Protocol: `In principle that, in the event of an
    Israeli attack on Egypt, the government should join with the French
    government in calling on the two belligerents to stop hostilities and
    withdraw their forces to a distance of ten miles from the Canal; and
    should warn both belligerents that if either or both of them failed
    within twelve hours to comply with these requirements, British and
    French forces would intervene to enforce compliance.' He also
    mentioned en passant that there were intelligence reports alleging
    that Israel was poised to attack Egypt sometime in the near future.

    The way was now clear for the events outlined in the Sèvres Protocol
    to unfold: Israel would launch a full-scale attack on the afternoon
    of October 29. The following day the British and French governments
    would demand that Egypt and Israel cease-fire and withdraw ten miles
    either side of the Canal while Anglo-French forces established `a
    temporary occupation of the key positions on the Canal.' The
    inevitable Egyptian refusal of the ultimatum would bring a joint
    Anglo-French attack on the morning of October 31.



    The Suez crisis made international headlines.

    An Annex, signed by France and Israel and withheld from the British,
    stated that the French fighters and pilots would be based on Israeli
    airfields and French ships would protect the Israeli coast.

    The attack took Egypt completely by surprise. Composer and songwriter
    Sayed Hegab, who was studying at the University of Alexandria at the
    time, clearly recalls his lack of understanding. His perception of
    the events preceding the attack was that of any average Egyptian. He
    wrote in his memoirs A New Egyptian: `By the time we went back to our
    lodgings [after dinner] in the peace of the rain, war had broken out.
    The Israeli army had invaded our borders. There were threats from the
    British and French governments. How would Nasser answer them? France
    and Britain threatened to occupy Egypt unless its army stopped
    resisting the Israeli Army The next day, he answered, `We will resist
    and fight!' He had the face of an Egyptian fellah. He did not want
    war. The Egyptian people did not want war. Abdel Nasser asked the
    nation to take up arms against the aggression. I went to the faculty
    to put down my name on the list of volunteers.'

    Hegab was told to report for duty in his hometown of Mataria on Lake
    Manzala. He hastened there. `The attempts to land paratroopers at
    Port Said continued. The radio carried burning news of the situation.
    Volunteers stood on the shores of Mataria waiting for the crowds of
    refugees. In the distance, on the horizon, at night, we could see the
    lights of the fires burning in Port Said Port Said was burning.
    Fishing boats rescued the people from the fires. In the rush, fathers
    lost contact with their sons. Girls put on one shoe and forgot the
    other. Disheveled hair, extraordinary clothes, tears, children crying
    on their mothers' breasts. Boats sinking because of overloading with
    refugees. Mataria's face changed. It filled with soldiers withdrawing
    from Port Said and guerrillas infiltrating the area between Mataria
    and Port Said. Reed huts were hurriedly set up in Mataria's streets.
    The schools were crowded with refugee familiesFamilies were
    separated, torn apart, reunited `The fight in Port Said is going from
    street to street,' the radio said. If Port Said fell would Nasser
    fall? The Russians looked on. The war stopped Discussions at the
    United Nations. Condemnation of the aggression. In Port Said there
    was increasingly heroic resistance, writing on the walls, abduction
    of British soldiers. Barbed wire separated the Arab Quarter where the
    poor lived from the French Quarter where the wealthy lived and where
    the occupying forces were encamped. The darkness of war still covered
    Egyptian sky The occupying force withdrew. Nasser emerged from his
    military rout as a political victor. The refugees returned to Port
    Said. Mataria once more belonged to her citizens. We went back to the
    university. They began to rebuild Port Said. Peace.'

    In Cairo, awareness came with the blaring of the first air raid
    sirens as the airfields were bombed on October 31. At the time, no
    one realized that Egypt had lost more than half its air force in this
    first surprise strike. A curfew was installed, car lights turned a
    dreary dark blue and windowpanes were covered with sheets of heavy
    carton or simply painted blue. Schools and universities were closed.
    Young men enrolled in the civil defense and trained on the lawns of
    clubs, especially the Gezira Sporting Club, during the day and
    patrolled the streets at night, stopping cars to check on the dimming
    of their lights and reminding inhabitants of buildings to turn off
    their lights. Accusations of spying for the enemy were easy to be
    thrown at whoever did not comply at once. Foreigners were
    particularly targeted although nothing serious ever came of these
    altercations.

    A small number of students at the French School of Law and the French
    preparatory class of Propédeutique were suddenly at a loose end. The
    Law School building in Mounira had been taken over by a military
    outfit. There were rumors that all the French professors had been
    ordered out; several led to the airports in handcuffs. Some students
    had already made up their minds to enroll at the American University
    in Beirut as soon as they could leave. The dean of the Lycée
    Franco-Egyptien in Heliopolis had already disappeared. The rest of
    the student body had no idea what would happen to them. Cairo
    University? The American University? They sat idly in Groppi cafe,
    smoking, drinking coffee and thinking privately that this unexpected
    war was messing up their lives. The sons and daughters of the Cairo
    Egyptian elite, generally not politically savvy, were annoyed that
    their routine had been disturbed. Deep down, they did not mind the
    momentary excitement providing it all ended soon and did not alter
    their way of life.

    Alexandria and Port Said were a different story, with Port Said
    especially taking the brunt of the attack. More cosmopolitan than
    Cairo, the war affected the foreign population of these two cities
    first. The French and the British who were not pushed departed in a
    panic. Some complained later that the local population had turned
    against them. Foreign governments withdrew their pilots from the
    Canal Zone soon after the nationalization (in order to prove that
    Nasser was unable to run the Canal), which Europeans and Jews
    (whether Egyptians or otherwise) took as a strong hint that their
    future and that of their children did not lie on Egyptian shores.

    Andre Aciman (in Out of Egypt) recalls how late one afternoon, coming
    out of the tailor's shop with his mother, they had heard a siren
    blare, and had seen the lights of the Department Store Hanneaux
    suddenly go out. They had taken refuge in a Greek grocery store where
    there were already many people waiting to use the telephone:

    ``Soon it will be over and we will all go home,' said someone.

    `At any rate, how long do you think it could possibly take with them'
    said someone else in French, mocking the Egyptian forces.

    `A day or two at the most?' guessed another.

    `If that' said a fourth voice. `The British will clean this whole
    mess up for us; give the Egyptians the well-deserved hiding they've
    been begging for since nationalizing the Suez Canal. And in a matter
    of weeks things will be back to what they always were.'

    `Insh'Allah' said a European in Arabic.''

    These were the people who had to change their opinion - and their
    plans - in a hurry when the British, committing many technical as
    well as diplomatic blunders, did not manage to `clean the mess,' but
    instead remained mired in Port Said.

    The only exception to the exodus of foreigners were the Greeks, who
    sided with Nasser and not only lent their pilots to work alongside
    the Egyptian pilots to ensure the smooth running of the Canal but
    also kept their businesses going as usual to service the beleaguered
    population.

    As the protracted negotiations went on at the UN, the two coastal
    cities emptied of their foreign populations. By 1960 many had left
    Egypt; Nasser encouraged the European flight and furthermore did
    nothing to hang on to those who had taken Egyptian nationality, the
    Syro-Lebanese, the Armenians and the Maltese, who were particularly
    affected by his socialist legislation.

    The invasion was not going well: It had not occurred to the British
    that Nasser would decide to sink several ships in the Canal to stop
    navigation. The troops had landed in Port Said and Port Fuad but the
    British decided not to pursue their plan to invade the entire country
    partly for fear of the USSR deciding to side with Egypt, partly
    because Eden was facing fierce opposition at home and finally for
    fear of seriously alienating the Americans who were, in any case,
    about to blow their top. Eisenhower had pieced together the actions
    of Britain, France and Israel and the collusion between them had
    become apparent. He was furious and bitter words were exchanged
    between the American administration and British Prime Minister Eden.
    America, however, could not be seen as deserting its natural ally,
    Britain, and Eden on the other hand had come to realize that with the
    British depressed economy he could ill afford an occupation of Egypt
    without the help of the United States. The UN had to be relied upon
    to provide some face-saving device allowing for a Franco-British
    dignified retreat as intimated now by the United States. The problem
    was finally resolved at the UN with the sending of a peacekeeping
    mission that would take over from the British and French.

    The war had lasted six days and in the Middle East, it led to about
    everything its instigators had hoped to avoid. The Suez Canal, which
    the French and the British had wanted to safeguard, remained closed
    to navigation for over six months. While initially intending to
    protect the flow of oil to Western Europe, their actions not only
    deprived the shipping companies of their shortest route to markets,
    but also sabotaged nearly all the direct pipelines to the
    Mediterranean, forcing Britain and France to resort to petrol
    rationing. The blow to the dissemination of French and British
    culture and education in the Middle East was fatal, as fleeing
    foreigners abandoned fortunes and often their entire life's savings.
    Some foreigners, usually those who had no other alternative, remained
    but they felt suddenly unwelcome.

    For a country that had suffered a militarily crushing defeat, Egypt
    came out of the Suez crisis in a buoyant mood. On Christmas day the
    Egyptians celebrated with a final gesture of defiance: They pulled
    down the statue of de Lesseps at the entrance of the Canal, a highly
    visible symbol of foreign oppression.

    By the beginning of the 1960s the cosmopolitan society that had dwelt
    happily in Egypt for a century was no more. The Russian takeover that
    Eden claimed he feared so much never took place but Nasser's credit
    in the Arab world rose to its zenith. Arab nationalism surged with a
    vengeance and from then on, animosity grew steadily between the
    Middle East and the Western world. et

    http://www.egypttoday.com/article.aspx?ArticleID= 7126
Working...
X