4.8 • 773 Ratings
🗓️ 25 April 2024
⏱️ 30 minutes
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1956 Episode 2.13 examines the final moments of peace between 25-29 October, as the conspiracy to attack Egypt and make it look like an accident developed further.
In Britain, the focus was on the legal argument still, even despite the clear problems which Britain’s legal advisors in the Foreign Office had in painting any British attack on Egypt as legally justified. While some less informed Cabinet members, like the Lord Chancellor, insisted that there was grounds for claiming that British rights were involved and intervention justified, the majority of the legal profession disagreed. Anthony Eden meanwhile sought to lie and deceive his way towards the conflict, letting no hints drop in the meantime that what was to come would profoundly affect Britain’s position in the world.
The French and Israeli governments were already actively mobilised for war, involved as each was in its own miniature struggle for supremacy which promised to tie into the Egyptian situation. For France, it was Algeria and President Nasser’s tireless support of the enemies of France. For Israel it was President Nasser’s threatening Pan-Arabism and his refusal to permit Israel to access the Suez Canal. While these schemes progressed, hints were dropped and Egyptian nerves were frayed.
Surely though, it would not be possible to initiate such a conflict – surely the UN, or the US, or NATO or something would prevent such a 19th century approach to international relations from taking place? Indeed, in this strange transition period between world war, decolonisation and the increasing focus on domestic matters, here were three powers about to turn back the clock in policy and behaviour, in the name of a plan which was soon to shatter world opinion, and dramatically alter the debate. Our story is heating up, so make sure you don’t miss a minute of this incredible instalment here!
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0:00.0 | Come to the station, jump from the train, march at the drawful down love's lane. |
0:15.0 | Dead in the glen where the roses entwined Lay down your arms |
0:22.0 | Lay down your arms |
0:24.1 | Lay down your arms |
0:26.1 | And surrender to mine Returns all to 1956, Episode 2.13. Last time, the scheming and sneakiness reached a fever pitch, |
0:41.8 | as the three concerned powers of France, Britain and Israel settled their differences and ironed out |
0:47.3 | the cracks in their unlikely alliance, with only days to spare before D-Day. It was an alliance |
0:52.9 | based on mutual interest rather than friendship. |
0:56.1 | Certainly in the Anglo-French case, such a drastic and conspiratorial action as the one they had |
1:01.6 | signed up for, would never have been countenanced in previous years had the circumstances not been so |
1:07.0 | desperate. Falling confidence in their governments, growing security concerns, a desire |
1:12.4 | for revenge against Nassar, a pressing need to hold the Suez Canal, and perhaps a wish to turn |
1:17.7 | back the clock to when Egyptian rulers did what they were told, all proved effective motivational |
1:23.6 | tools for Anthony Eden, French Premier Guy Malay, and Israeli President David Ben-Gurion. |
1:30.3 | The fix was officially in by the time everyone returned home on the 24th of October. |
1:36.3 | There seemed little indication that thousands of miles away, Budapest was alight with revolution against the Soviet Union. |
1:43.3 | But there was no talk of the Soviets here. |
1:46.6 | There was only Egypt, only Suez, that occupied the considerations of the Anglo-French-Israeli pact, set down in the Severus Protocol. |
1:55.7 | In this episode, with the plotting complete, we detail the final moments of peace, and the final acts of deliberate |
2:02.1 | sabotage, manipulation, and deceit which followed. It's a fascinating story for sure, and it's |
2:08.3 | something of a culmination of several story threads, so I hope you enjoy it. Let's go now |
2:14.3 | to late October, 1956. |
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