WHAT WAS THE SUEZ CRISIS?
G'day folks,
The Suez Canal is an artificial sea-level waterway in Egypt,
connecting the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea through the Isthmus of
Suez. It was constructed by the Suez Canal Company between 1859 and
1869. However ...
The Suez
Crisis was precipitated by Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s decision in
July 1956 to nationalize the 120-mile Suez Canal, which had been jointly
controlled by Great Britain and France, in part to fund construction of the
Aswan Dam across the Nile River, a project that Western countries had refused
to finance. More than two-thirds of the oil used by Europe flowed through the
strategically vital waterway connecting the Mediterranean and Red Seas, and
British Prime Minister Anthony Eden vowed to reclaim the “great imperial
lifeline.”
France, which
objected to Nasser’s support of rebels in its colony of Algeria as well as the
seizure of the canal built under Frenchman Ferdinand de Lesseps in 1869, and
Israel, which had engaged in sporadic battles with Egypt along their shared
border, joined Great Britain in a tripartite invasion that began on October 29,
1956, when Israeli armed forces attacked the Sinai Peninsula. Two days later,
under the guise of protecting the canal, Anglo-French forces began bombing
Egyptian targets. On November 5, British and French paratroopers and marines
began to occupy strategic positions in the canal zone.
The United
Nations quickly passed a resolution calling for a cease-fire, and in a rare
instance of Cold War alignment, both the United States and the Soviet Union
pressured Great Britain, France and Israel to withdraw. The Soviet Union, which
had supplied arms and money to Egypt, made ambiguous—and ominous—threats about using
nuclear weapons to aid its ally, while the United States wielded its economic
power. Furious at not being informed of the attack in advance and fearful of a
wider war in the Middle East, President Dwight D. Eisenhower threatened its
NATO allies and Israel with sanctions if they did not draw back their forces.
British and French troops departed Egypt in December 1956, and weeks later Eden
resigned his office. Following Israel’s withdrawal in March 1957, Egypt
reopened the canal to commercial shipping. The Suez Crisis made clear that the
old colonial powers, Great Britain and France, had been supplanted as the
world’s pre-eminent geopolitical forces by the United States and Soviet Union.
Clancy's comment: A strategic lifeline ... Until ...
I'm ...
No comments:
Post a Comment