Monday, August 19, 2019
The Suez Crisis Of 1956 Essay -- Arab-Israeli Conflict History Arabs I
The Suez Crisis of 1956      Introduction    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Among the most important foundations in the continuing Arab-Israeli  conflict was the seeds that were sown in the aftermath of the 1956 Sinai  Campaign, or the Suez Crisis. Whatever the operation is referred to as, its  consequences involving both relations internal to the Middle East and with the  world are impossible to ignore. Looked at simply as an objective event in  history, one could note several key outcomes of the war. It marked the  beginning of the end of British and French colonial leadership in the region,  and the start of an increasingly high American and Soviet involvement. The war  also proved to the Arab nations of the area that the Israeli military machine  was not one to be taken lightly, a lesson which would be forgotten and retaught  in the 1967 "Six Day War". The positive impact that the United Nations would  have on ending the conflict, through Canada's idea of creating a UN peacekeeping  force to help enforce the ceasefire, was another important outcome.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  This paper, however, will not have the goal of examining these specific  events in relation to the war, nor will it try to determine which factors were  most significant. My aim will be to gain a more complete understanding of the  effect of the crisis by reviewing key events of the war from two different  perspectives: the Israeli and the Arab points of view, plus the experiences of  the European powers as well. Through a brief comparison of both the coverage of  the War by the differing authors and the varying interpretations seen throughout  my study, I will be best able to make an informed evaluation on how the event  was, and is today, seen in the political and historical forum.    Comparison of Coverage    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The war, which was begun on October 29, 1956 when the Israelis moved  their units into the Sinai peninsula, has had its origins traced back to many  historical events. Which is the most important of these is a point of contention  for the authors I have studied. There does seem to be for all parties involved  a consensus that the ascent to power of Gamal Abdel Nasser to President of Eqypt  in 1956 , and his move to nationalize the Suez Canal as the main precipitating  factor in setting off the conflict.Ã  Why Nasser did this, however, is where  my various sources diverge.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Quite predictably, sources used from...              ...tter idea of how the Egyptian army forces  viewed and dealt with the crisis.    To help in a general rounding of the Israeli view of the crisis, I used Yitzak Shamir's  autobiography (Shamir, Yitzhak; "Summing Up"; London; Weidenfeld and Nicolson  Press; 1994.), a man who was to play an integral role in the Arab-Israeli  conflict as the Prime Minister of Israel in the 1980s.     My search for an Israeli military perspective was quite arduous, but finally settled on the work of Chaim Herzog in "The Arab-Israeli Wars" (1982). As Herzog was a major-general in the crisis of 1956, he not only provided me with detailed information of the  invasion itself, but of the various meanings and causes behind it.     In trying to find Jewish academic sources, I eventually settled on the works of Itamar Rabinovich's "Seven Wars and One Peace Treaty" (1991), and M.E. Yapp's "The Near East Since the First World War" (1991). While Rabinovich was based in Tel Aviv and had  stronger pro-Israeli views, Yapp, who was a professor in London, England, who's  ideas were a little more moderate and yet, at least in this author's perspective,  seemed to lean quite distinctly towards the Jewish State's cause.                         
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