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🗓️ 11 April 2024
⏱️ 33 minutes
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1956 Episode 2.11 finally takes us to that controversial moment when Britain, France and Israel began to move closer together.
The Sevres Protocol was neither developed nor signed in a day, and in the first two weeks of October, negotiations critically important to the later conflict were underway. At first, Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd hoped to make use of the UN Security Council to gain British satisfaction in Egypt, and for a time he was successful in this aim, because Anthony Eden was ill and unable to order his subordinate around. Once Eden recovered though, Eden ramped up the pressure, and Lloyd was encouraged, alongside his French counterpart, to torpedo the negotiations in the Security Council which had aimed at a peaceful resolution.
While this peace effort was frustrated, a looming conflict aside from all these considerations began to develop. This involved Jordan, Britain’s firm ally in the Middle East, and he difficult relationship with Israel, the newly established ally of the French. Since neither the French nor British wished to see their newfound entente drift apart, the French government determined it would be better to spill the beans on what was being agreed with Israel rather than watch the different allies initiate an unwanted war in the region. Thus, the French travelled to Chequers, Anthony Eden’s swanky manor home, on 14th October 1956, to initiate the first step of the collusion which was to become infamous. At first hesitant, Eden was soon convinced of the genius of the plan – Britain, France and Israel would work together against the common Egyptian foe, and this partnership would surely sink President Nasser once and for all.
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0:00.0 | Come to the station, jump from the train, march at the door, pull down lovers' lane, |
0:15.0 | dead in the glen where the roses entwined Lay down your arms |
0:21.6 | Lay down your arms |
0:23.6 | And surrender to mine |
0:28.6 | Hello and welcome history friends patrons all to 1956 |
0:32.6 | Episode 2.11 |
0:35.6 | Last time we saw how the lumbering march towards war continued, |
0:39.3 | and we watched how the intervention of Israel into the equation changed things up a bit, you might say. |
0:45.3 | Now that we're into October, some of the most infamous aspects of this story will come to light. |
0:52.3 | For those unaware, Suez Crisis provides one of the |
0:55.4 | most startling instances of what can happen when sources become declassified. |
1:01.5 | Forty years after the events I'll be talking about in this episode, the Severus Protocol |
1:06.4 | will be made available to the public. After years of denial and blustering, this Severus protocol contained irrefutable |
1:13.5 | proof that the Prime Minister of Britain, alongside French and Israeli allies, signed on the dotted |
1:19.5 | line to conspire against Egypt in the name of protecting the Suez Canal. |
1:24.8 | It makes for incredible reading and listening, you might even say incredulous |
1:29.0 | reading and listening, but in this episode we're going to see several threads of the story come |
1:33.3 | together, until they converge on a little-known Parisian suburb where one of the most incredible |
1:38.1 | deals of the Cold War was made. Without any further ado then, it's time to begin this story, |
1:44.0 | which begins, of all places, on the 5th of October, 1956, at the United Nations Security Council in New York. |
2:00.1 | Selwyn Lloyd and his French counterpart, Christianino sat at the horseshoe-shaped table |
2:05.8 | of the UN Security Council. The order of the day on 5th of October 1956 was to find a peaceful |
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