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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, November 29, 2016
Suez: The End of Europe’s Empires

Israel
turned its future strategic attention from Sinai to the Jordanian-ruled
West Bank. The Suez invasion made Nasser into a hero to the entire Arab
and Third World. America ranked right behind as the Arabs saw the US as
a liberator from colonialism.
( November 27, 2016, New York City, Sri Lanka Guardian) Sixty
years ago, I was home after school, sitting in our living room on New
York’s Central Park West, reading a history of Rome and listening to
Dvorak’s splendid cello concerto when the announcer on WQXR broke into
announced, “Israeli armored forces are thrusting deep into Egypt’s Sinai
Peninsula.”
So began the 1956 Arab-Israeli Suez war, a conflict that is now all but
forgotten though it was a major historic turning point for all
concerned.
Algeria has risen up against French colonial rule. A ferocious guerilla
war was raging. The Socialist government in Paris was too arrogant to
admit that anyone could revolt against the glories of French rule.
Instead, Paris blamed the revolt on machinations by Egypt’s nationalist
strongman, Gamal Abdel Nasser. In fact, Egypt’s role was minor.
Great Britain believed its last remaining colonies and protectorates in
the Mideast – Iraq, Kuwait, the emirates, Oman, Libya, Jordan, and even
Saudi Arabia – were being threatened by a rising tide of Arab
nationalism inspired by Egypt’s fiery Nasser.
The new state of Israel worried that Nasser might indeed unite the Arabs and champion the recently expelled Palestinians.
France’s Socialists led by Guy Mollet took the lead in plotting with
Britain and Israel to seize the Suez Canal, which Nasser had
nationalized in July 1956, overthrow Nasser and impose joint
Franco-British rule on Egypt.
A secret plan called for an Israeli invasion of the Sinai Peninsula and a
phony Franco-British ultimatum to Egypt that was designed to be
rejected. Then the British and French would attack Egypt, march on
Cairo, and depose Nasser. Israel would occupy Sinai and parts of the
Suez Canal.
The British and French imperialists never asked themselves how they
planned to garrison populous Egypt when they could not control much less
populous Algeria. Guy Mollet and British PM Anthony Eden were both
steeped in the colonial era: they could not understand that the world
had changed. Nor that Britain and France were no longer major military
or economic powers.
Meanwhile, France secretly supplied Israel with large quantities of
modern arms and nuclear weapons technology that laid the basis of
Israel’s current large nuclear arsenal, estimated at 100-200 warheads.
A vicious, British-led propaganda attack was launched against Nasser,
calling him ‘Hitler on the Nile’ and a threat to mankind. We would hear
similar propaganda against subsequent Mideast enemies of the western
powers: Khadaffi, Saddam, Ahmadinejad, bin Laden.
In the event, the tripartite attack on Egypt proved a monumental fiasco.
Paris and London didn’t know what to do after their troops seized the
Canal. The bombastic Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev, threatened to
launch nuclear-armed missiles at London and Paris if they didn’t stop
their invasion. Only Israel could claim military success against the
feeble Egyptian Army – but even that was short-lived.
A national uprising in Hungary against Soviet rule had erupted on 23 Oct
1956. London and Paris chose to invade Egypt as the world was seeing
horrifying pictures of Soviet tanks crushing Hungarian freedom-fighters.
Even worse, US President Dwight Eisenhower was outraged that his nation
had not been consulted by the British and French about the planned
invasion. The normally unflappable Ike warned London and Paris that he
would wreck their currencies if they didn’t withdraw from Egypt at once.
The deeply humiliated British and French pulled out of Egypt with their
tails between their legs as the Arabs hooted derision at their former
masters. Anthony Eden and Guy Mollet were show up as the fools that they
were. Their political careers ended in ignominy.
Israel, their accomplice, wasn’t as quick to retreat from Sinai, which
it had long coveted. After a lot of foot-dragging, Israel reluctantly
withdrew from Sinai after Eisenhower ordered it to get out…or else. This
was the last time a US president was able to give orders to Israel.
After 1956, a powerful US pro-Israel lobby was created to ensure that Israel dominated Congress, the media, and US Mideast policy.
Israel turned its future strategic attention from Sinai to the
Jordanian-ruled West Bank. The Suez invasion made Nasser into a hero to
the entire Arab and Third World. America ranked right behind as the
Arabs saw the US as a liberator from colonialism.
But America would later suffer its own Suez-style fiasco and humiliation
under George W. Bush when he invaded Iraq. In the Mideast, lessons are
seldom learned, or quickly forgotten.
Copyright Eric S. Margolis 2016

