I
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INTRODUCTION
|
Gamal
Abdel Nasser (1918-1970), Egyptian statesman, who rose from humble
beginnings to become president of Egypt (1956-1970) and the most influential
leader of the Arab world.
II
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EARLY CAREER
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Nasser was born in Alexandria
on January 15, 1918, the son of a postmaAn. After secondary schooling in Cairo,
he entered the Royal Military Academy, and graduated in 1938. There and in
subsequent service he formed friendships with a few fellow officers and with
them created a secret revolutionary society, the Free Officers. Egypt was ruled
at the time by a small landowning class that possessed one-third of the land
and dominated parliament; the British presence was all-pervasive, and the king,
Faruk I, was an irresponsible playboy. The Free Officers plotted to rid Egypt
of the British and the king, and the disastrous campaign against Israel in 1948
strengthened their resolve. On July 23, 1952, they staged a coup and ousted
King Faruk. Although he was the real leader, Nasser initially remained in the
background.
Radical measures were
soon instituted: landownership was limited and political parties banned. In
1953 the monarchy was abolished and a republic proclaimed. It was first headed
by General Muhammad Naguib, but in 1954 Nasser stepped out of the shadows to
assume power. He subsequently negotiated a treaty with the British, by which
Egypt was evacuated after 72 years of occupation. Nasser was officially elected
president in 1956.
III
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WORLD FIGURE
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Following the Bandung
Conference (1955), at which he emerged as a world figure, having espoused a
policy of nonalignment (see Nonaligned Movement), Nasser's relations
with the West deteriorated. In 1956 Britain and the United States withdrew
their financial support from his Aswān High Dam project. In order to obtain
funds for the project, Nasser then nationalized the Suez Canal. This brought
aggression from France and Britain in alliance with Israel. Under pressure from
the U.S., however, the three were forced to withdraw, and a United Nations
emergency force was subsequently placed as a buffer between Egypt and Israel.
By this time Nasser had
become a hero in the Arab world. In 1958 Syria and Egypt united under his
presidency, forming the United Arab Republic. The union, however, broke up in
1961 after a coup in Syria. Nasser subsequently espoused a program of Arab
socialism, in which banks and utilities were nationalized to finance a program
of industrialization.
By 1967 the Arab-Israeli
situation had deteriorated. After the UN peacekeeping force, at Nasser's
request, had been withdrawn, and Egyptian guns blockaded the Gulf of Aqaba to
Israeli ships, Israel attacked Egypt and occupied the entire Sinai Peninsula up
to the Suez Canal (see Six-Day War). Nasser, taking responsibility for
the debacle, resigned, but the people took to the streets, demanding his return
to government. He never, however, regained his previous stature. On September
28, 1970, he died suddenly of a heart attack.
IV
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EVALUATION
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Opinion about Nasser is
sharply divided. His detractors stress his police-state methods and criticize
his foreign policies, which also involved Egypt in a war in Yemen (1962-67).
Others praise his internal reforms and see him as the man who wrested Egypt from
the grasp of foreigners and a decadent monarchy and gave it back to the
Egyptians. Beyond doubt, he was the foremost Arab leader of his time, who
restored Arab dignity after the long humiliation of Western domination.
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