The Suez War
By Paul Johnson
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About this ebook
First published in 1957, The Suez War walks us through a conflict that many historians feel should never have taken place, and one that Johnson argues has exposed '[t]he real weakness of Britain – never again can we play our unique and honourable role as keeper of the world's conscience.'
Paul Johnson
Paul Johnson is a historian whose work ranges over the millennia and the whole gamut of human activities. He regularly writes book reviews for several UK magazines and newspapers, such as the Literary Review and The Spectator, and he lectures around the world. He lives in London, England.
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The Suez War - Paul Johnson
Chapter 1
Prelude to Catastrophe
On the afternoon of Thursday July 19 1956, Mr John Foster Dulles, the American Secretary of State, asked the Egyptian Ambassador in Washington, Mr Ahmed Hussein, to come to his office in the State Department. When the Ambassador arrived, Mr Dulles handed him a letter, in which the United States Government announced the withdrawal of its offer to contribute $56 million towards the financing of the Egyptian High Dam at Aswan. Pale with anger, Mr Hussein hurried back to his embassy to telephone the news to his Foreign Minister, Dr Fawzi, in Cairo. He was too late; Fawzi already knew. Contrary to diplomatic practice, Mr Dulles had communicated the statement to the Press before delivering it to the country concerned.
The next morning, Sir Harold Caccia, Acting Permanent Under-Secretary at the Foreign Office, informed Mr Abdul Fetouh, the Egyptian Ambassador in London, that Britain too was withdrawing its loan—a matter of $15 million. The same evening, Mr Eugene Black, President of the World Bank, announced that, owing to the Anglo-American action, the World Bank was no longer in a position to advance the $200 million which it had promised Egypt the week before.
In his letter, Mr Dulles said the reasons for America’s withdrawal were Egypt’s failure to agree to various amendments to the plan for the dam, and doubts as to her ability to provide the sum of $700 million, which was to be her eventual share of its cost. On the first point, the letter was misleading: the American conditions had been stated in an aide-mémoire sent to Egypt in December; most of these had been accepted by Egypt in January, and only a week before the U.S. withdrawal the Egyptian Ambassador had returned to Washington from Cairo with instructions to accept the remaining ones.
On the second point, the letter was nearer to the mark. In the past ten months, Egypt had been buying ever-increasing shipments of arms from behind the Iron Curtain. In April, it was learned that she had mortgaged $200 million of cotton—as yet unplanted—in exchange for Czech-produced MIG 15s and 17s, and Stalin heavy tanks. On July 9, publication of the Egyptian budget revealed that military expenditure was to rise from 18 to 25 per cent of total appropriations. During 1957, it showed, Egypt would spend £E54 million on arms and only £E2.9 million on the dam. Egypt, it was clear to the State Department economic experts, must inevitably fall behind on its payments towards the project. But this fact, strangely enough, had not caused misgivings in the World Bank. On the contrary, on July 12 the Bank had come to a provisional agreement with Mr Hussein, which was awaiting signature when Mr Dulles made his announcement.
What, then, were the real reasons for America’s withdrawal? There were two. First, Mr Dulles was under severe pressure from Congress to cut foreign aid appropriations. The Senate, anxious to finish the business for the session and escape from the syrupy heat of Washington, was in an ugly mood. The week before, its Appropriations Committee had asked Dulles to abandon the Aswan project. He had refused—hesitantly. Then, on July 17, representatives of the Senate cotton lobby, which naturally wished to prevent the increase in Egyptian cotton production which the dam project would eventually facilitate, called on him and extracted from him the promise that he would reconsider the matter.
The fact was, Dulles was moving—in his usual haphazard and unsystematic manner—towards a major policy decision. Ever since the war, America had supported Egypt, both as a counter to British colonialism in the Middle East and as a proof of its friendship for the up-and-coming nations of Asia and Africa. The U.S. Ambassador in Cairo, Charles Byroade, was a fervent Egyptophile and well disposed to the Nasser régime. He was moreover, fully backed up by his chief in the State Department, Mr George Allen, in charge of the Middle Eastern desk. Allen, who disliked colonialism, was instrumental in preventing America from joining the British-sponsored Baghdad Pact, and in forging firm bonds of friendship with Saudi Arabia, Britain’s traditional enemy on the Persian Gulf. Together, these two men had succeeded in making support for Nasser the linchpin of America’s Middle Eastern policy.
But for some months before that fatal Thursday afternoon, Dulles had been eyeing Nasser with increasing dislike. Nasser’s decision, in September 1955, to buy Communist arms had allowed Russia, in one move, to leap over Britain’s ramshackle ‘Northern Tier’ and to become, for the first time in her history, an effective Middle Eastern Power. Dulles disliked seeing MIG 15s unloading in Alexandria. He disliked even more hearing that the Russian Embassy in Cairo had increased its staff from forty to 150, and that Russian technicians were pouring into Egypt. He disliked also being prodded and nagged at by the British for backing Nasser. He disliked too the increasing improvidence and rapacity of Nasser’s Saudi Arabian allies, who were already two years overdrawn on their oil revenues, and who had, in May, suddenly decided to increase the rent payable for the American atomic bomber base at Daihran. Dulles had been brooding on these grievances for some time. But what finally made him change his mind was the news that Nasser was to take part in a meeting on the Yugoslav island of Brioni with Nehru and Tito. It was, the Press announced, a ‘conference of the neutralist Powers’, and it was taking place without Dulles’ consent or encouragement. He read the papers, crowded with photographs of the Brioni junketings, with increasing irritation. Within a few days, he had come to a decision, and his first act was to replace Byroade in Cairo and transfer Allen.
To the well informed, this was a clear portent of things to come, and the London Times made the changes its main lead-story the next day. But after seeing the cotton lobby men, Dulles decided it would be convenient to make the warning to Nasser even more explicit. The same afternoon he telephoned the President to get his agreement to scrap the Aswan project. Eisenhower, who was playing golf, and whose interest in the dam was, to say the least, dispassionate, told Dulles to go ahead. So the die was cast, and the first step taken towards the Suez catastrophe.
* * *
The American decision took London by surprise. True, neither Sir Anthony Eden nor the Foreign Office had ever liked the Aswan project. Their economic experts considered it unsound and unlikely ever to be completed. Mr Selwyn Lloyd, the Foreign Secretary, had regarded Nasser as a national enemy ever since March, when Nasser, or so he thought, had engineered the dismissal of General Glubb, Britain’s ‘strong man’ in Jordan, and had timed it to coincide with Lloyd’s State visit to Cairo. He was not enthusiastic, therefore, about a project which would undoubtedly strengthen Nasser’s régime. Still, along with the other members of the Government, he regarded the British contribution as an example of the danegeld which the West would have to pay, in ever-increasing quantities, to keep the ‘neutralist’ nations out of the Soviet orbit. Moreover, since December, the British Government had regarded the matter as settled. Sir Anthony Eden, therefore, was put out when Mr Dulles telephoned him on Wednesday July 18 to announce that he was withdrawing American aid the next day. But he had no choice except to follow America’s lead. On Friday afternoon, Mr Selwyn Lloyd announced the British withdrawal to a half-empty and apathetic House of Commons. ‘We came to the conclusion’, he said,
‘that the Egyptian Government would no longer be in a position to devote to the dam project the degree of priority necessary to secure its success.’
As has been shown, the British Government came to no such conclusion. It came to no conclusion at all. It played no part in the first move of the Suez drama. The responsibility was exclusively American.
* * *
Press comment was divided. Time magazine, forced to make a snap judgment just before going to press, hailed the Dulles withdrawal as a decisive move. It was, said Time approvingly, ‘a gambit that took the breath of professionals for its daring and won the assent of kibitzers for its instinctive rightness’. The London Times was more cautious; it accepted the governments’ reasons as valid, but added that an alternative scheme for the Nile waters should be ‘reconsidered’. Some British Leftist papers were openly critical, while the Economist, writing more in sorrow than in anger, said that ‘they [the British and American governments] cannot congratulate themselves on a brilliant stroke of policy’.
* * *
Cairo’s reactions were swift and momentous. Nasser had built his mass popularity on two castles in the sky: a war of annihilation against Israel and the Aswan Dam. He returned from Brioni, dazed with glory, having wined and dined on a footing of equality with the world’s two top neutralists, to find one of his castles snatched away. To Selwyn Lloyd Aswan was a bag of danegeld; to Dulles it was a pawn in his battle with the Senate; but to Nasser it was life or death. The project, drawn up in October 1955 by a team of British engineers, aimed at conserving 32,000 million cubic metres of water annually by creating a vast reservoir stretching over 739 square miles. It would have enabled Egypt to bring under permanent cultivation 2 million additional acres of land, to make accurate crop forecasts, and to double her electricity supply. Since Nasser had ousted General Neguib, his régime of young officers had concentrated almost entirely on building up a strong army. Beyond reducing corruption at the top governmental level, and redistributing a few thousand acres of land, they had done virtually nothing for Egypt’s 10 million fellahin. Their invariable reply to criticism was: Wait for the Aswan Dam. The dam was not merely four miles of concrete; it was the future of Egypt—and the future of Colonel Nasser.
Now the dream had vanished. Or had it? Nasser’s first move was to get on the telephone to his ambassador in Moscow. The previous autumn, Russia had criticised the conditions laid down by the West in return for their loans as ‘imperialistic’, and had offered to finance the dam herself. But her offer—couched in vague terms—smelled suspicious, and Nasser had wisely preferred to turn to the West. Now, in desperation, he appealed to Russia. But Moscow had other things on its mind, notably trouble in Poland. It shared, moreover, the doubts of Mr Dulles’ advisers as to Egypt’s capacity to carry the project through. Finally, it calculated that an enraged Nasser might prove a serious embarrassment to the West. It decided to let things ride. On Saturday July 21, Mr Shepilov, the Soviet Foreign Minister, announced that Russia would, of course, be only too willing to assist Egypt in any way it could. But, he added innocently, Russia was not ‘at the moment’ considering financing the Aswan Dam.
Nasser saw clearly that the project was now doomed. But he could not admit as much to the Egyptian people. Nor could he allow what was manifestly a deliberate slap in the face by Britain and America to go unpunished. His first act—aimed at the U.S.—was to recognise Communist China, thereby breaking his word to Byroade. But this was not enough. Searching desperately for a gesture spectacular enough to reassert his crumbling prestige, his eye fell on the Suez Canal. On Sunday afternoon he asked a group of legal