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August 01

The Suez crisis




                  The Suez crisis

An affair to remember

Jul 27th 2006

From The Economist print edition

The Suez crisis of 50 years ago marked the end of an era, and the start of another, for Europe, America and the Middle East

 

ON JULY 26th 1956 Gamal Abdul Nasser, president of Egypt, addressed a huge crowd in the city of Alexandria. Broad-shouldered, handsome and passionate, Nasser stunned even this gathering of enthusiastic supporters with the vehemence of his diatribe against British imperialism. Britain had ruled Egypt, one way or another, from 1882 to 1922, when the protectorate gained nominal independence, and continued to influence Egyptian affairs thereafter, maintaining troops there and propping up the decadent monarchy overthrown by Nasser in 1952.

In that speech in Alexandria, though, Nasser chose to delve back even further into history, in a long digression on the building of the Suez canal a century earlier. That gave him the chance to mention the name of the Frenchman who had built the canal, Ferdinand de Lesseps. This he did at least 13 times. e Lesseps? it turned out, was the codeword for the Egyptian army to start the seizure, and nationalisation, of the canal. It also launched the start of a new era in the politics of Europe, the Middle East and America.

The Suez crisis, as the events of the following months came to be called, marked the humiliating end of imperial influence for two European countries, Britain and France. It cost the British prime minister, Anthony Eden, his job and, by showing up the shortcomings of the Fourth Republic in France, hastened the arrival of the Fifth Republic under Charles de Gaulle. It made unambiguous, even to the most nostalgic blimps, America's supremacy over its Western allies. It thereby strengthened the resolve of many Europeans to create what is now the European Union. It promoted pan-Arab nationalism and completed the transformation of the Israeli-Palestinian dispute into an Israeli-Arab one. And it provided a distraction that encouraged the Soviet Union to put down an uprising in Hungary in the same year.

It also divided families and friends, at least in Britain and France, with a degree of bitterness that would not be seen in a foreign-policy dispute until the invasion of Iraq in 2003. If that is difficult to understand, remember that the world was a different place then. Many European politicians still believed their countries had a right to run the affairs of others. Many were also scarred by memories of appeasement in the 1930s. Faced with a provocation, even an entirely legal one involving the nationalisation of a foreign-owned asset like the Suez canal, the instinct of such Europeans was to go to war. They and their Israeli partners-in-invasion were restrained, eventually, by the United States, led by a Republican president and war hero, Dwight Eisenhower. The venture involved intrigue, lies, nemesisnd no end of a lesson. How did it come about?


 

In Egypt, the British had become so resented for their racist, arrogant ways that by the early 1950s even Winston Churchill, the grand old imperialist who had returned as prime minister in 1951, felt he could resist the tide of nationalism no more. After 1951 the British were confined to the Suez canal zone, harassed by Egyptian irregulars who wanted them out altogether. By June 1956 the last British soldiers had left even the canal zone.

Yet Anglo-Egyptian relations did not improve. Nasser was enraged by America's withdrawal of its offer of loans to help pay for the building of a dam on the Nile at Aswan. This project was central to his ambitions to modernise Egypt. But John Foster Dulles, the American secretary of state, thought the dam would place too much strain on the resources of newly independent Egypt.

For their part, the British, mistrustful of Nasser and feeling the pinch, were also ready to withdraw their loan offer. So, thought Dulles, best to let the Russians take on the dam, as he knew they would if the West backed out. He did not, however, bargain for Nasser's immediate responsehe nationalisation of the Suez canal, whose revenues, Nasser argued, Egypt now needed to replace the loans promised by Britain and America for the dam.

The reaction in Britain was unanimous in condemning rabber Nasser? as the Daily Mirror put it. Comparisons were immediately made to Hitler and Mussolini in the 1930s: if he got away with this, where would hend other emboldened post-colonial leaderstop? Eden, who had succeeded Churchill as prime minister the year before, argued that the canal was Britain's reat imperial lifeline? especially for oil. Nasser could not be allowed to have his hand n our windpipe?

The French reacted just as strongly, but for different reasons. First, they had a stake in the Paris-based company that ran the canal. Second, they were fighting an increasingly nasty little colonial war in Algeria. The new government of Guy Mollet was resolved to put down an Arab uprising there with all the force that the Fourth Republic could muster. By the summer of 1956 France had about 400,000 soldiers in Algiers. Nasser backed the Arab insurgents, so the French were as eager as the British to see the back of him. Accordingly, Britain and France started to co-ordinate plans for a military invasion of Egypt and a reoccupation of the canal zone.

But their bellicosity was matched by the scepticism of the Americans, and of Eisenhower in particular, who from the beginning was against the use of force by his two main allies. One concern for him was the presidential election due that November, which he intended to win as the incumbent  eace?president. He knew that the voters would not thank him for taking them into a foreign imbroglio in which America had no direct interest.

Eisenhower was also motivated by an anti-imperialism rooted in the attitudes that had made Americans break free from the British empire. Intensifying his scepticism was a fear that, in the new cold war, any British and French bullying of Egypt would alienate Arabs, Asians and Africans and drive them towards the communist camp. To head off Anglo-French military action, Eisenhower and his secretary of state ensnared the Europeans in a fruitless round of talks and conferences.

Aware that they were on shaky legal ground for an invasion, the British and French reluctantly played along. But they were losing the momentum for military action, which was the American intention. The increasingly histrionic Eden, in particular, wanted not only the reversal of the canal's nationalisation but also regime change: he wanted Nasser estroyed?

The Israelis provided a way out. On September 30th a delegation secretly presented the French with a fabricated casus belli: Israel would invade Egypt and race to the canal. The French and British could then invade, posing as peacekeepers to separate the two sides, and occupy the canal, ostensibly to guarantee the free passage of shipping. When this plan was presented to Eden, he jumped at it. Thus was collusion born. The details were agreed on at a secret meeting in S鋦res, outside Paris. Not for nothing is the Suez crisis known in Egypt as the ripartite aggression?

The British and French forces now had a pretext to invade. For the Israelis, it would punish Egypt for its escalating incursions into Israel from Gaza. It would also hitch the major European powers to the cause of Israel: up to that point, the French had tried to be even-handed between Israel and its neighbours; the British had leaned towards the Arab states.


Only a handful of people were let in on the collusion. Most of them thought it was mad from the start, arguing, quite correctly, that the cover for the invasion was so flimsy it would soon be blown. To disguise what was going on, the British, in particular, were drawn ever deeper into a bog of lies and deception, particularly with the Americans. Parliament was also deceived. Both Eden and Selwyn Lloyd, his foreign secretary, told the House of Commons that, as Lloyd put it, here was no prior agreement?with Israel.

On October 29th, Israeli paratroopers, led by a zealous officer called Ariel Sharon, were dropped into Sinai to fulfil their side of the bargain. Feigning surprise, the British and French issued an ultimatum to both sides to cease fire. When the Egyptians rejected this, British planes started bombing the Egyptian air force on the ground and on November 5th Anglo-French troops went ashore to begin the invasion of the canal zone and, it was hoped, topple Nasser.

Eisenhower, kept completely in the dark, felt utterly betrayed by his erstwhile allies.  've just never seen great powers make such a complete mess and botch of things,?he told his aides. He determined to put a stop to the whole enterprise.

America struck at Britain's fragile economy. It refused to allow the IMF to give emergency loans to Britain unless it called off the invasion. Faced by imminent financial collapse, as the British Treasury saw it, on November 7th Eden surrendered to American demands and stopped the operation, with his troops stranded half way down the canal. The French were furious, but obliged to agree; their troops were under British command.

America also proved adept at working through the UN. On November 2nd an American resolution demanding a ceasefire was passed by a majority of 64 to five, the Russians voting with the United States. And to sidestep Anglo-French vetoes at the Security Council, for the first time the General Assembly met in emergency session (where no country held a veto) and took up a Canadian suggestion to assemble an international emergency force to go to the canal and monitor the ceasefire. These were to be the first lue hat?UN peacekeepers. The organisation was one of the clear winners of the crisis, gaining an enhanced role in the world. For the other participants in the drama, the consequences were more mixed.

The French drew the clearest lessons. Suez showed that they could never rely on perfide Albion. Britain, then Europe's strongest power, would, it seemed, always put its pecial?relationship with America above its European interests. And the Americans, to the French, were both unreliable and annoyingly superior.

So the French would have to look elsewhere for more durable allies search that was, by one account, short. The story goes that on the evening of November 6th, when Mollet got the call from Eden that he was aborting the invasion, he happened to be with the German chancellor, Konrad Adenauer. The French foreign minister, Christian Pineau, records Adenauer as saying that rance and England will never be powers comparable to the United States...Not Germany either. There remains to them only one way of playing a decisive role in the world: that is to unite Europe...We have no time to waste; Europe will be your revenge.?/FONT>

Thus was born the six-country European common market, which has now become the 25-country European Union. The founding Treaty of Rome was signed the very next year, in 1957. And the French, particularly Charles de Gaulle in the 1960s, kept the British, America's Trojan horse, out of it for as long as they could, until 1973. France had by then made itself truly independent of American military power (unlike the British) by building its own nuclear deterrent from scratch and, in 1966, leaving NATO's integrated command structure.

It should have been no surprise, then, that in the months before the invasion of Iraq in 2003, it was the French who played the American role of 1956, though Jacques Chirac could hardly deliver the coup de gr歊e, as Eisenhower had done in 1956. In reaction to Suez, France had constructed a new identity as the ostensible leader of Europe, upholding a set of universal values in competition with the Americans.

The British were hurt most by Suez. Eden resigned soon afterwards, his health wrecked, his reputation in tatters, his lies and evasions damaging the country's always tendentious reputation for fair play. The crisis exploded Britain's lingering imperial pretensions, and hastened the independence of its colonies.

Some talked of a  uez syndrome? where, in Margaret Thatcher's words, Britain's rulers ent from believing that Britain could do anything to an almost neurotic belief that Britain could do nothing? Certainly, much of Mrs Thatcher's prime ministership, particularly the retaking of the Falklands in 1982, was an essay in exorcising the demons of Suez. Tony Blair has not been afraid to take advantage of her success, by deploying British power in Sierra Leone, the Balkans and Iraq.

But never without the Americans' support. The major lesson of Suez for the British was that the country would never be able to act independently of America again. Unlike the French, who have sought to lead Europe, most British politicians have been content to play second fiddle to America.

Eden recuperated from the crisis in Ian Fleming's house, Goldeneye, in Jamaica. It was an appropriate choice, as it was Fleming who was to mythologise the new relationship in his James Bond novels. The first, asino Royale? was published to little attention in 1953, but the series took off in the years after the Suez crisis, offering some sort of literary consolation to a country coming to terms with its new, humbler status. The partnership between Bond and Felix Leiter, a CIA agent, reflected the way the British now liked to see things, the one suave, smart and endlessly resourceful, the other with a lot of money and a slightly plodding manner.

Eisenhower won his election in America. The crisis affirmed the country's new status as the global superpower, challenged only by the Soviet Union. Suez was also to be the last incident in which America was to take strong action against Israel. As Eisenhower had feared, the Russians moved into the Middle East to fill the gap left by the disorderly retreat of the British, so the Americans felt compelled to get in as well. Thus the cold war spread to north Africa and Egypt (the Russians duly stepped in to finance the Aswan dam, and much else), and Israel became ever more closely tied to the United States.

Before 1956, Israel had been militarily vulnerable, but, beyond the Arab world, morally and politically unassailable. The Israeli occupation of Sinai (and Gaza) in 1956 began the gradual inversion of this state of affairs, as it marked the first expansion of Israel beyond its original borders, with all the subsequent criticisms of its occupation of Arab or Palestinian land. In 1956 the Israelis were quickly forced to withdraw from Sinai by American (and Russian) pressure. Never again, however, would an American president face down Israel as Eisenhower had done at Suez.


The chief victor of Suez, in the short term, was Nasser. Before the crisis he had faced lingering opposition in Egypt, not only from the former ruling class but also from communists and the radical Islamists of the Muslim Brotherhood.  ulling the Lion's tail? and getting away with it, proved wildly popular. As dissidents fled, fell silent or filled its jails, Nasser's Egypt projected itself as the vanguard of Arab nationalism and a beacon to liberation movements across the third world.

Puffed up by his own success, Nasser launched misguided adventures such as a short-lived political union with Syria and disastrous nationalisations of Egyptian industry. And the Nasserist dream inspired a wave of pan-Arab nationalism that helped install lookalike leaderships, with similar flags, propaganda and secret police, across much of the Arab world. Saddam Hussein was one who drew inspiration. Nasser himself was largely discredited by Israel's crushing victory in the 1967 war, but the institutions of Nasserism still lived on, in Egypt and elsewhere, as effective systems of political control.

Nasser's 1956 triumph endured in Arab memory as a moment of cathartic liberation. It inspired, to some extent, Saddam's dramatic moves, such as invading Iran and later Kuwait. A famous Egyptian film, asser 56? lingers nostalgically over the Egyptian leader. Amid rousing music, he is portrayed in black and white, shrouded in pensive solitude by a swirl of cigarette smoke, reaching his momentous decision to nationalise the canal. But the film jumps to the happy outcome, ignoring the fact that Nasser's victory was not won by this new Arab superman, but delivered by superpower intervention.

A wider lesson lies in the interpretation of history. Eden, who had honourably resigned as foreign secretary in 1938 in disapproval of the appeasement of Hitler and, especially, Mussolini, was nonetheless haunted by Neville Chamberlain's readiness to yield to tyrants. His impulses at Suez were surely complex. Eden was far from anti-American or indifferent to American concerns. He had resigned in 1938 partly because he thought his prime minister, Chamberlain, had treated Roosevelt shabbily. Yet he saw Nasser as a ussolini?and was plainly determined to avoid any charge of appeasement, even though the essential features of Munich and Suez were wholly different. Instead of saying that those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it, George Santayana might have better said that those who misinterpret the past are condemned to bungle the present.

 

哈比人的冥想


選舉到了,你還在為「台灣人」,「中國人」,「原住民」傷腦筋嗎?科學界的旗艦期
刊「自然」雜誌,本週以印尼弗洛瑞斯島(Flores)挖掘出的「哈比人」作為封面故事(
謔喻自電影「魔戎」,科學家稱為弗洛瑞斯人,Homo floresiensis) 。人類的起源一
直是科學界好奇與努力的目標,只要挖出一副夠老夠好,雙腳直立的人化石,往往可以
一舉成名成為全球的科學頭條新聞。1974年發現的著名「露西」距今約320萬年,傳統
的見解是直立人約在200萬年前從非洲分散開來,之後的路徑或許可由喬治亞所發堀的
180萬年化石及稍後的爪哇人及北京人略窺一二。 而「哈比人」最令人掉下巴的發現在
於她甚至稱不上是化石,她只是稍老的骨骸,距今只有1萬8千年,哈比人身高約1公尺
,腦容量只有800立方公分(和黑猩猩相似,只有現代智人的三分之一),也許是島嶼
的隔離、食物的缺乏及近親繁衍造成哈比人特有的演化路徑。科學家甚至預測現代智人
的祖母(或稱粒線體夏娃)在十萬年前遠離非洲之後,曾經遭遇哈比人,甚至也可能是
促成他們滅種的原因。

從達爾文的演化樹圖看來,人類的起源不像階梯,一棒接一棒,反倒像是灌木叢般的演
化,數種同時存在,彼此競爭適者生存。不只是童話的「白雪公主」存有七矮人,現存
的許多民族都有小矮人的傳說,我們台灣島上也有矮黑人的傳說;信口開河的呂秀蓮可
能矇對了,但也惹了一身腥,哈比人的出現讓人類學的研究版塊,從非洲的衣索比亞、
肯亞一舉轉移到西太平洋的島嶼,同屬於這條島鏈的台灣也有豐富的南島文化,將來要
是能挖出個2萬年骨骸也不令人驚訝,令人害怕的反而是現今人民反智與放任政客斷章
取義的遲滯傾向。

今年也是愛因斯坦提出「相對論」的第一百年,百年來對宇宙的起源,「大爆炸」理論
,「時間」和「距離」的理解,隨著科學教育的普遍,一般不懂天文物理的外行人現在
也能有不等程度的體會;我們從哈伯望遠鏡傳回的煙火似照片,清楚的看到了遙遠星系
的牽扯碰撞,星星正如人一樣有誕生和死亡的演化。狹義的相對論固然沒有多少人能說
得清楚,但哲學語意的相對論說不定可以給我們這個專擅怪力亂神的媒體與社會、巧取
豪奪意識型態掛帥的島民一些啟發。宇宙約150億年前誕生,而我們所在的地球約45億
歲,約莫是在中老年紀,化石中大量存在的三葉虫盛行在5億年前,縱貫生存了3億年而
終結於「寒武紀大滅絕」。耳熟能詳的恐龍出現在2億4千萬年前,繁榮了約1億5千萬年
,而可能毀於一顆類似1994年撞向木星的一顆殞石。古生物學家做了一個生動的比喻:
水平舉起你的手臂,假如地球的歷史從鼻尖算起,我們存在的時間大約只在指尖的位置
;只要一把銼指刀稍為一磨就磨去了人類歷史,恐龍稱霸的時間比人超過一百倍,而我
們還自誇是萬物之靈。

的確,假如我們只看最近十年,我們會看到台灣意識的覺醒,民主政權的嬰兒期更替,
如果我們看五十年,我們看到了島上去日本殖民化和中國文化復興,如果我們看四百年
,我們看到了航海世紀的東西文明衝擊與貿易爭奪,如果我們看二千年的文明,我們見
識了不同文明的各自擅場,與基督文明的勝出。假如我們上看六千年,我們看到了不同
文明的圖騰文字與金字塔。但在文明曙光之前,人類許多遺蹟仍鎖在不同的黑暗角落,
等待發堀與重見光明!人類的存在不是上帝的選擇,我們和哈比人的血緣如何? 現代智
人能否和哈比人繁殖正如小矮人能否讓白雪公主懷孕一樣耐人尋味,假如哈比人的骨骸
重現能給我們一點啟發的即是;只要將時間的膠囊釋出,將時間拉長,判斷的解晰度將
大為增加,而你必不會再相信你只是「台灣人」或「中國人」而已。

好花總是插在牛糞上

    闖蕩江湖的混混不乏「無怨無悔」的姑娘為他生子為他等待,殺頭的革命家身旁也總有紅顏,雖然女人一向富憐憫心,愛幻想,還是很難認為她們有「樂透」式的期待感,何況開獎後莊家永遠才是大贏家,是聖雄,是「國父」,是「民族救星」,紅顏多半只淪落成蛋糕上的小櫻桃而已,而古往今來,人們不時有許多感觸,難以解釋為何有「美女和野獸」,為何「巧婦總伴拙夫眠」而好花總是插在牛糞上?
 
  生物學家說女人因為要生育,所以傾向慎選伴侶,習慣依附可以保護她及小孩的男人,但是當今「生物演化」的定律早被強勢女人的「社會演化」趨勢顛覆後,未來男女關係會是什麼局面,誰也說不準。但當台灣有錢的名模歌星祭出她們的擇偶條件時,大家赫然才發現其中竟然包括更有錢的男人,而她們還天真的喃喃自囈,幻想男人的愛情,才情?此時白雪公主的鏡子縱使不跳出巫婆,也早堆了一層灰,響遍了一陣訕笑,而生物學者終於可以寬心;畢竟社會演化也始終跳脫不了生物原則!
  
  演化學者則認為女人為了讓她的後代有最好的基因,所以演化出一種策略,簡而言之:和有錢有勢的男人在一起,隱藏排卵的徵象,伺機再和完美的情人受孕。假如我們的遠老祖母俱是這般德性,倒也不難解釋目前社會以及自己許多難以理解的生物現象。
最後解剖學家表示,問題出在「情人眼裏出西施」,每個人眼球的弧度多少都有些許差異,就如同你家裏的幾面鏡子,你會發現每面的你都有一點點不一樣,也許你會偏好在某面鏡子前搔首弄姿而不自知,嚴重一些就變成那西塞斯(Narcissus):希臘神話裏自戀湖中倒影而溺死的帥哥。
 
  下次如果看見二八美女手挽著帶金鑽錶,挺著啤酒肚的禿頭中年人,一齊撞進賓士車時…,如果不方便懷疑她眼睛的話,至少可以擦擦自己的眼鏡,不是嗎?  
May 11

快樂是短暫的,姿勢是可笑的,後果是悲慘的

Lord Chesterfield quotes: 
Sex: the pleasure is momentary, the position
ridiculous, and the expense  damnable. 
「快樂是短暫的,姿勢是可笑的,後果是悲慘的」。 

This is a better translation :「姿勢可笑,快樂短暫,而代價驚人」。


 I prefer :「姿勢可笑,快樂短暫,而代價真是他x的」。


 ( or 代價是可被詛咒的  ) 


 

A fast word about oral contraception. I asked a girl to go to bed with me, she said 'no'.

  

Marriage is the death of hope.

 

Love is the answer, but while you're waiting for the answer, sex raises some pretty interesting questions.

 

An intellectual is a person who has discovered something more interesting than sex. Aldous Huxley (1894 - 1963)

 

Women need a reason to have sex. Men just need a place. Billy Crystal

 

God created sex. Priests created marriage. Voltaire (1694 - 1778)

 

Philosophy is to the real world as masturbation is to sex. Karl Marx (1818 - 1883)

 

Chastity always takes its toll. In some it produces pimples; in others, sex laws. Karl Kraus (1874 - 1936)

 

 

For flavor, instant sex will never supercede the stuff you have to peel and cook.

 

Sex is not the answer. Sex is the question. 'Yes' is the answer.

 

 

Chastity: the most unnatural of the sexual perversions. Aldous Huxley (1894 - 1963)

 

Sex: the thing that takes up the least amount of time and causes the most amount of trouble. John Barrymore (1882 - 1942)

 

 

 


 


February 26

疑懼天道的無神論者

「我愛看的是,事物危險的邊緣。誠實的小偷,軟心腸的刺客,
疑懼天道的無神論者。」

 To you I'm an atheist; to God, I'm the Loyal Opposition.  

There are two types of people in this world, good and bad. The good sleep better, but the bad seem to enjoy the waking hours much more.  

You can fool too many of the people too much of the time. James Thurber (1894 - 1961), New Yorker, Apr. 29, 1939 "The Owl who was God"

 

 

Oscar Wilde

 Oscar Wilde

One should always play fairly when one has the winning cards. 

 

It is a curious fact that people are never so trivial as when they take themselves seriously

 

-Oscar Wilde. Irish Poet, Novelist, Dramatist and Critic, 1854-1900

 

 

Never forget that only dead fish swims with the stream.  (Try to be different!)

 

 
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