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1952 Egyptian Revolution

The Egyptian Revolution of 1952 (Arabic: ثورة 23 يوليو),[3] also known as the 1952 coup d'état (Arabic: انقلاب 1952) [4][5][6] and 23 July Revolution,[7] was a period of profound political, economic, and societal change in Egypt. On 23 July 1952 the revolution began with the toppling of King Farouk in a coup d'état by the Free Officers Movement. This group of army officers was led by Mohamed Naguib and Gamal Abdel Nasser.[8] The Revolution ushered in a wave of revolutionary politics in the Arab World, and contributed to the escalation of decolonisation, and the development of Third World solidarity during the Cold War.

Egyptian Revolution of 1952
Part of the Decolonisation of Africa and Asia, the Cold War, and the Arab Cold War

The leaders of the Revolution, Mohammed Naguib (left) and Gamal Abdel Nasser (right) in a Cadillac
Date23 July 1952
Location
Result

Coup successful

Belligerents
 Kingdom of Egypt
Supported by:
 United Kingdom
 France
Free Officers Movement
Supported by:
United States[1]
Soviet Union[2][how?]
Commanders and leaders
Farouk
Ahmed Naguib el-Hilaly
Mohammed Naguib
Gamal Abdel Nasser
Anwar Sadat
Khaled Mohieddin
Abdel Latif Boghdadi
Abdel Hakim Amer
Gamal Salem
Salah Salem
Zakaria Mohieddin
Hussein el-Shafei
Hassan Ibrahim
Kamal el-Din Hussein
Abdel Moneim Amin

Though initially focused on grievances against King Farouk, the movement had more wide-ranging political ambitions. In the first three years of the Revolution, the Free Officers moved to abolish the constitutional monarchy and aristocracy of Egypt and Sudan, establish a republic, end the British occupation of the country, and secure the independence of Sudan (previously governed as an condominium of Egypt and the United Kingdom).[9] The revolutionary government adopted a staunchly nationalist, anti-imperialist agenda, which came to be expressed chiefly through Arab nationalism, and international non-alignment.

The Revolution was faced with immediate threats from Western imperial powers, particularly the United Kingdom, which had occupied Egypt since 1882, and France, both of whom were wary of rising nationalist sentiment in territories under their control throughout Africa, and the Arab World. The ongoing state of war with the State of Israel also posed a serious challenge, as the Free Officers increased Egypt's already strong support of the Palestinians.[10] These two issues converged in the fifth year of the Revolution when Egypt was invaded by the United Kingdom, France, and the State of Israel in the Suez Crisis of 1956 (known in Egypt as the Tripartite Aggression). Despite enormous military losses, the war was seen as a political victory for Egypt, especially as it left the Suez Canal in uncontested Egyptian control for the first time since 1875, erasing what was seen as a mark of national humiliation. This strengthened the appeal of the revolution in other Arab countries.

Wholesale agrarian reform, and huge industrialisation programmes were initiated in the first decade and half of the Revolution,[11] leading to an unprecedented period of infrastructure building, and urbanisation. By the 1960s, Arab socialism had become a dominant theme,[12] transforming Egypt into a centrally planned economy. Official fear of a Western-sponsored counter-revolution, domestic religious extremism, potential communist infiltration, and the conflict with the State of Israel were all cited as reasons compelling severe and longstanding restrictions on political opposition, and the prohibition of a multi-party system.[13] These restrictions on political activity would remain in place until the presidency of Anwar Sadat from 1970 onwards, during which many of the policies of the Revolution were scaled back or reversed.

The early successes of the Revolution encouraged numerous other nationalist movements in other countries, such as Algeria, where there were anti-imperialist and anti-colonial rebellions against European empires.[3] It also inspired the toppling of existing pro-Western monarchies and governments in the MENA region. The Revolution is commemorated each year on 23 July.[14]

Background and causes edit

Muhammad Ali dynasty edit

The history of Egypt during the 19th and early 20th centuries was defined by the vastly different reigns of successive members of the Muhammad Ali dynasty and the gradually increasing intrusion into Egyptian affairs of the Great Powers, particularly the United Kingdom. From 1805, Egypt underwent a period of rapid modernisation under Muhammad Ali Pasha, who declared himself Khedive in defiance of his nominal suzerain, the Ottoman Sultan. Within a matter of decades, Muhammad Ali transformed Egypt from a neglected Ottoman province to a virtually independent state that temporarily rivalled the Ottoman Empire itself for dominance in the Eastern Mediterranean, and the Mashreq. Muhammad Ali conquered the Sudan, invaded East Africa, and led Egypt during both the First Egyptian–Ottoman War and Second Egyptian-Ottoman War, triggering the Oriental Crisis.[15] As a result of these wars, Egypt was expelled from the Levant, but allowed to keep its Sudanese territory. After Muhammad Ali's death, his successors Abbas I and Sa'id attempted to modernize Egypt, such as starting construction of the Suez Canal. Due to conscription, taxes were raised on nobles in exchange for more land and peasants (fellahin in Arabic). Peasants continued to lose access to their land as cotton became a major cash crop in Egypt.[16]

Under Isma'il the Magnificent, Egypt went through massive modernization programmes and campaigns of military expansion in Sudan and East Africa. Isma'il greatly accelerated the enfranchisement of the Egyptian peasantry and middle class, who had been politically and economically marginalized by the wealthy elites of Egyptian society.[17] It was during this time that an Egyptian intelligentsia was formed; a social class of educated Egyptians well-read in politics and culture known as the Effendi.[18][19] Under the education minister Ali Pasha Mubarak, the public education system in Egypt grew the field of educated nationalist effendiyya.[20][21] It was during this time that Italians, Greeks, French, Armenians, Jews, and other groups immigrated to Egypt, establishing a small but wealthy and politically powerful cosmopolitan community.[22] Foreigners were not subject to Egyptian laws, but went through a separate court system known as the Mixed Courts.[23] Isma'il also established Egypt's first parliament.[24] This period of intellectualism in Egypt, and the Arab world as a whole, later became known as the Nahda. Coupled with Isma’il’s powerful espousal of Egyptian statehood, this contributed to the growth of Egyptian nationalism, particularly within the army. However, the war with Ethiopia ended in disaster, only further exasperating the Egyptian treasury. The Caisse de la Dette Publique (Public Debt Commission) was founded as a way for Egypt to pay its debts.

Isma'il's grand policies were ruinously expensive, and financial pressure eventually compelled him to sell Egypt's shares in the Universal Company of the Maritime Canal of Suez, the company that owned the 99-year lease to manage the Suez Canal. The sale of the Canal mere years after it had been constructed at the cost of some 80,000 Egyptian lives was seen as a national humiliation, particularly as it effectively granted the purchaser, the United Kingdom, a basis for interfering in Egyptian affairs. Shortly thereafter, the United Kingdom, along with the other Great Powers, deposed Isma'il in favour of his son, Tewfik Pasha.

Tewfik was seen as a puppet of the foreign powers who had deposed his father, a perception heightened by his repressive policies. Discontent with Tewfik's rule ignited the Urabi Revolt of 1881, led by nationalist soldiers under Ahmed Urabi. Urabi came from a peasant family, and his rise through the ranks of the military in spite of his humble background had been made possible by the reforms of Isma'il—reforms which he saw as being under attack by Tewfik. The prospect of revolutionary instability in Egypt, and the inferred danger to the Suez Canal, prompted the United Kingdom to intervene militarily in support of Tewfik.

British occupation under the 'Veiled Protectorate' edit

After the Anglo-Egyptian War, the United Kingdom was left in de facto control over the country, a state of affairs that became known as the veiled protectorate. In the years that followed, the United Kingdom would cement its political and military position in Egypt, and subsequently in Egypt's domains in Sudan, with the British high representative in Cairo exercising more power than the Khedive himself. In 1888, at the Convention of Constantinople, the United Kingdom won the right to protect the Suez Canal with military force, giving Britain a permanent base from which to dominate Egyptian politics.

In 1899, the United Kingdom forced Tewfik's successor as Khedive, the nationalist Abbas II, to transform Sudan from an integral part of Egypt into a condominium in which sovereignty would be shared between Egypt and the United Kingdom. Once established, the condominium witnessed ever-decreasing Egyptian control, and would for most of its existence be governed in practice by the United Kingdom through the Governor-General in Khartoum. For the remainder of his reign, this would be one of the flashpoints between the nationalist Khedive Abbas II and the United Kingdom, with Abbas seeking to arrest and reverse the process of increasing British control in Egypt and Sudan.

Egyptians nationalism was brewing under the harsh economic policies of the British.[25][26] Nationalist activists such as Mostafa Kamil Pasha, Abdullah an-Nadeem and Yaqub Sanu fought for greater autonomy for Egypt. The phrase "Egypt for the Egyptians" was a popular rallying cry among nationalists in protest to the privileges of foreigners.[27] It was during this time that the five major points of contentions among nationalists were crystalized:

  1. The political status of Sudan – which was ruled as a de-facto joint Anglo-Egyptian condominium but as a de-jure British colony after the Mahdist rebellion
  2. Ownership over the Suez Canal
  3. The status of the Egyptian army – which was demobilized after the 1882 revolt – and the stationing of British troops in Egypt
  4. The sovereignty of the Egyptian parliament: its legal powers regarding foreigners and independence from British influence
  5. The right for Egypt to establish foreign relations independent of Britain

Following the Ottoman Empire's entry in to the First World War as a member of the Central Powers in 1914, the United Kingdom deposed Abbas II in favour of his pro-British uncle, Hussein Kamal. The legal fiction of Ottoman sovereignty was terminated, and the Sultanate of Egypt, destroyed by the Ottoman Empire in 1517, was re-established with Hussein Kamal as Sultan. Despite the restoration of the nominal sultanate, British power in Egypt and Sudan was undiminished, as the United Kingdom declared Egypt to be a formal protectorate of the United Kingdom. Whilst Egypt was not annexed to the British Empire, with the British King never becoming sovereign of Egypt, Egypt's status as a protectorate precluded any actual independence for the sultanate. For all intents and purposes, the Sultanate of Egypt was as much controlled by the United Kingdom as the Khedivate of Egypt had been.

Kingdom of Egypt edit

After World War I, Egyptian nationalists tried to send a delegation (Arabic: Wafd) to the Paris Peace Conference to renegotiate for Egyptian independence. When Britain refused, nationalist anger at British control erupted into the Egyptian Revolution of 1919, prompting the United Kingdom to recognise Egyptian independence in 1922 as the Kingdom of Egypt. However, Britain still retained the rights over the Sudan, its empire in Egypt and foreigners:[28][29]

 
King Farouk I of Egypt in Parliament listening to Mustafa el-Nahhas Pasha's speech.

The leading party after the revolution was the Wafd Party, led by Sa'ad Zaghoul and his successor Mostafa al-Nahhas. The resulting 1923 Egyptian constitution created a proper – albeit flawed – constitutional monarchy.[30] Universal male suffrage allowed Egyptians to vote in parliamentary elections, however the king had the power to dismiss cabinets, dissolve parliament and appoint prime ministers.[31] Politics in Egypt were divided between the liberal Wafdists versus the conservative monarchical establishment.[32] The Wafd had little to offer outside of defending the liberal framework and negotiating for greater autonomy; Wafdist elites were still wealthy land-owning capitalists who did not offer a radical program in the traditional economic structure of peasants and landlords.[33] While the Wafd enjoyed genuine popularity among the masses, the degrading economic conditions of Egypt beginning the 1930's combined with the failure of the 1923 regime to adequately address these issues sparked the rise of socialist and labor movements.[34]

The Wafd believed that through gradual negotiations, it would be able to secure complete Egyptian independence. Egypt was successful in abolishing the Mixed courts in 1937,[35][36] repealing the Public Debt Commission in 1940, and negotiating the 1936 Anglo-Egyptian treaty. This treaty limited the extent of British troops in Egypt (except with regards to the Suez canal and the Sudan), and the creation of a proper Egyptian military.

The final decade: 1942–1952 edit

During the Second World War, Egypt was a major Allied base for the North African campaign. Egypt remained officially neutral under the closing weeks of the war, however, its territory became a battlefield between the Allies and Axis Powers. In 1942, the refusal of Egypt's young King Farouk to appoint al-Nahhas prime minister led by the Abdeen Palace Incident, where the British military surrounded Farouk's palace, and ordered him at gunpoint to appoint al-Nahhas.[37] Though nationalist army officers, including Mohamed Naguib, appealed to Farouk to resist, the deployment of British tanks and artillery outside the Royal palace forced the King to concede. This incident permanently damaged the prestige of both King Farouk's conservative clique and al-Nahhas' Wafd. The surrender to British convinced many Egyptian nationalists that only the removal of the entire 1923 system could bring an end to the United Kingdom's occupation of Egypt.[38]

 
Poster from the Egyptian nationalist Ahmed Hussein for complete independence

The historian Selma Botman describes the state of the late Wafd:[39]

In contrast to the ideologically defined programs of the nonestablishment parties, the Wafd never developed a comprehensive plan to remedy the deep social and economic problems that troubled the country. As this became increasingly apparent, the population began to lose faith in the party, especially as conditions for consumers deteriorated during wartime. Thus, even when the party passed reformist legislation between 1942 and 1944 or 1950 and 1952, it could no longer convince the majority of the population that it held the country's best interests in mind. Instead, in these years of growing politicization of the people, many believed that the Wafd harbored the fear that the nationalist movement would become too radical and go beyond the existing framework of acceptable political and economic discourse.

After decades of pseudo-independence, elitist infighting and deteriorating economic conditions, more radical politics consumed Egypt. The Muslim Brotherhood was founded in 1928, pushing for an Islamic-revival against colonialism and modernity. Leftist movements like the Egyptian Communist Party, Iskra, and the Democratic Movement for National Liberation rallied growing numbers of striking workers, especially as King Farouk's extravagant lifestyle continued to insult the millions of Egyptians living in poverty.[40] The 1945 riots in Egypt and the 1946 student protests demonstrated the need for politicians to negotiate full independence.[41][42] Prime Minister Ismail Sidky and British secretary of foreign affairs Ernest Bevin entered negotiations.[43][44] However, issues over the status of Sudan and British troops ended hopes for a successful discussion.[45][46][47] The ire of the nationalists concentrated on two issues, Sudan and the Suez.[48] By flaming the fires of nationalism, the Egyptian elites forced themselves to intervene in the civil war in Palestine.[49]

During the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, Egyptian troops fought in the southern front against Israel. Though Egypt quickly gained controlled over the Naqab desert, a successful Israeli counter-offensive left Egypt with just the Gaza Strip. During the Faluja pocket, a young Egyptian officer called Gamal Abdel-Nasser made a name for himself as a hero for holding out until the 1949 armistice agreement. Anger over corruption in the war, such as rumors of gun-smuggling leading to Egyptian troops being underequipped for battle. Returning from the war, an Egyptian commander commented: "The real battle is in Egypt.”[50]

In 1950, the Wafd formed a government for the last time.[51] After years of martial law and political chaos, the Wafd decisively won the 1950 elections on a mandate of continuing its historic political fight against Britain. al-Nahhas, who was now 70 years old, was not the national hero of 1919. Genuine economic reforms as well as a final agreement with Britain were the pressing issues of the day. A faction known as the 'Wafdist Vanguards', attempted to push reform. A new law limited landowning to 50 feddans, but was not applicable to retroactive land gains and retained ministerial immunity.[52] Wafd politician Fuad Sirageddin Pasha told the U.S. ambassador "I own 8000 feddans. Do you think I want Egypt to go communist?".[53] The CIA attempted to pressure King Farouk to adopt reforms suitable to American interests, but failed. Reformers in the party were not strong enough of pass the legislation needed to avoid a total revolution. Stubbornness and corruption made the Wafd incapable of delivering to the Egyptian people.[54]

 
Egyptian police fighting in the Battle of Ismalia

The strategic value of the Suez Canal was too valuable for Britain in the Cold War to completely surrender. In a dramatic move, the Wafd abrogated the 1936 treaty in 1951.[55] Anti-British demonstrations morphed into a small guerrilla war on the canal; 'liberation battalions' battled British forces.[56] The was rapidly losing control over the situation, as students on the Islamist right and socialist left ignited an inferno of non-violent strikes and violent battles.[57] On January 25, 1952, seven thousand British troops ordered the Egyptian police at Ismalia to surrender their weapons. When the police refused, the resulting Battle of Ismalia left 56 Egyptians and 13 British dead.[58] The next day, a series of riots engulfed Cairo. The Egyptian masses torched 750 foreign-owned stores, causing around 40-50 million Egyptian Pounds worth of damage.[58] Black Saturday was the end for the Wafd; al-Nahhas was dismissed on the next day.[59]

After al-Nahhas, three independent politicians were appointed to clean up the mess and chaos in Egypt. The three governments of Ali Maher (January 27 - March 1), Ahmad Nagib al-Hilali (March 2 - July 2) and Hussein Sirri Pasha (July 2 - July 20) each failed to solve the situation. Maher moved quickly to restore order and calm the economic situation. He created a ministry of rural affairs to study proposals for land reform and lifted curfew restrictions by February. He tried to create a unity government with the Wafd, but they denied his offer of several cabinet positions. His dealings with the Wafd, such as advocating a unity government, alienated his allies to the right and motivated Farouk to deal with him as soon as possible. He was pressured to produce a report on the Cairo Fire that implicated the Wafd as responsible, but refused. The king adjourned parliament and two palace loyalists in the cabinet resigned. The British ambassador refused to meet with Maher, forcing his resignation.[60]

Nagib al-Hilali succeeded Maher, taking a much more active approach. He decreed new anti-corruption laws and created 'purge-committees' to overhaul the bureaucracy. Hilai ordered Fuad Sirageddin under house arrest. A week later, he dissolved parliament, announcing new elections in May. By April, they were postponed indefinitely. The Egyptian journalist Ihsan Abdel Quddous criticized the government, writing "Corruption does not mean corruption of the Wafd government alone". Rumors that the King Farouk was going to sack al-Hilali led him to resign on July 2.[61]

Huseinn Sirri moved as prime minister to lift Sirageddin's house arrest, though he did not promise new elections or to lift martial law. However, events in the military soon were spiraling out of control. In January, in a dramatic election in the officers club, opposition candidates were elected to the Officers Club governing board. In mid-July, Farouk responded by annulling the election and appointing his own men to the board. With a crisis brewing, Sirri offered the War Ministry to General Muhammad Naguib, who was elected club president. When he refused, Sirri resigned on July 20, after failing to persuade Farouk to adopt a more conciliatory pose toward the army.[62]

al-Hilali returned as prime minister of July 22nd, with the promise of total freedom to select a cabinet. However, when Farouk nominated his own brother-in-law war minister, al-Hilali resigned the next day.

Free Officer Movement edit

The modern Egyptian army was established as a result of the 1936 Anglo-Egyptian treaty, which allowed the Egyptian army to expand from 398 officers to 982.[63] Nasser applied at the Obassia Military College, Egypt's leading cadet school, in 1937. Anwar Sadat graduated from the Egyptian Military Academy in 1938.[64] Sadat had been trying to form an anti-British uprising since the 1940's, but was arrested after meeting with two Nazi spies in 1942.[65] The humiliating 1942 British coup and the disaster in Palestine motivated the creation of a secret cell of revolutionary Egyptian officers. After the witnessing the 1949 Syrian coup, when Syrian military overthrew the government, whispers of a revolt spread throughout the corps. While an exact date is not known, by 1949 meetings and discussions in the homes of the officers started the beginning of the 'Free Officers' movement. While officers met with communists in the DMNL and Islamists in the Muslim Brotherhood, it was an organization independent of the pre-existing opposition.[66] Members took a vow of secrecy with one hand on the Koran and the other on a revolver, and published anonymous leaflets and articles criticizing the higher command and the government as a whole for corruption.[67][68] By 1952, it grew so large that few members knew the identities of the leaders of the conspiracy: Colonel Nasser and General Naguib.[69]

 
Major Kamal el-Din Hussein (Artillery)
 
Squadron Leader Hassan Ibrahim (Air force)
 
Major Abdel Hakim Amer (Infantry)
 
Major Salah Salem (Artillery)
 
Wing Commander Abd al-Latif al-Boghdadi (Air force)
 
Major General Muhammad Naguib (Border Guards)
 
Lieutenant Colonel Anwar El-Sadat (Military Communication)
 
Lieutenant Colonel Zakaria Mohieddin (Infantry)
 
Lieutenant Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser (Infantry)

The founder of the CIA, Miles Copeland Jr., claimed to have established contacts with the officers at this time, though the historian Said Aburish argues that America did not know about the coup until two days beforehand but did not move to stop it after verifying it was not communist.[70][71]

By the spring of the 1952, the Free Officers began plotting their coup. They had planned to overthrow the monarchy in early August, but events soon made them accelerate their plans. On July 16, King Farouk ordered the governing board of the Officers Club dissolved, causing the officers to fear their arrest was imminent.

Military coup edit

 
Members of the Free Officers gathered after the coup d'état. From left to right: Zakaria Mohieddin, Abdel Latif Boghdadi, Kamel el-Din Hussein, Gamal Abdel Nasser (seated), Abdel Hakim Amer, Muhammad Naguib, Youssef Seddik and Ahmed Shawki

By the spring of the 1952, the Free Officers began plotting their coup. They had planned to overthrow the monarchy in early August, but events soon made them accelerate their plans. On July 16, King Farouk ordered the governing board of the Officers Club dissolved, which made the officers believe their arrest was soon.[72]

On the 23rd, infantry united seized general headquarters and blocked roads leading to Cairo. Nasser and Abdel Hakim Amr, as the higher level leaders, took a car ride to visit every unit in Cairo. After arresting his commanding officer, Muhammad Abu al-Fadl al-Gizawi answered several phone calls as the man he just arrested to assure high command that everything was calm. By 3:00 A.M, Muhammad Naguib arrived at headquarters in Cairo. By seven, Sadat - who was at the movies during the coup - announced on the radio that the Free Officers had taken over; Egypt was now governed by the Revolutionary Command Council.[72]

Declaration of revolution edit

At 7:30 a.m., a broadcasting station issued the first communiqué of the coup d'état in the name of Gen. Naguib to the Egyptian people. It attempted to justify the coup, which was also known as the "Blessed Movement". The person reading the message was Free Officer and future president of Egypt Anwar Sadat.[73] The coup was conducted by less than a hundred officers – almost all of which were drawn from junior ranks — and prompted scenes of celebration in the streets by cheering mobs.[74]

Egypt has passed through a critical period in her recent history characterized by bribery, mischief, and the absence of governmental stability. All of these were factors that had a large influence on the army. Those who accepted bribes and were thus influenced caused our defeat in the Palestine War [1948]. As for the period following the war, the mischief-making elements have been assisting one another, and traitors have been commanding the army. They appointed a commander who is either ignorant or corrupt. Egypt has reached the point, therefore, of having no army to defend it. Accordingly, we have undertaken to clean ourselves up and have appointed to command us men from within the army whom we trust in their ability, their character, and their patriotism. It is certain that all Egypt will meet this news with enthusiasm and will welcome it. As for those whose arrest we saw fit from among men formerly associated with the army, we will not deal harshly with them, but will release them at the appropriate time. I assure the Egyptian people that the entire army today has become capable of operating in the national interest and under the rule of the constitution apart from any interests of its own. I take this opportunity to request that the people never permit any traitors to take refuge in deeds of destruction or violence because these are not in the interest of Egypt. Should anyone behave in such ways, he will be dealt with forcefully in a manner such as has not been seen before and his deeds will meet immediately the reward for treason. The army will take charge with the assistance of the police. I assure our foreign brothers that their interests, their personal safety [lit. "their souls"], and their property are safe, and that the army considers itself responsible for them. May God grant us success [lit. "God is the guardian of success"].

With his British support network now neutralized, King Farouk sought the intervention of the United States, which was unresponsive. By the 25th, the army had occupied Alexandria, where the King was in residence at the Montaza Palace. Terrified, Farouk abandoned Montaza and fled to Ras Al Teen Palace on the waterfront. Naguib ordered the captain of Farqouk's yacht, al-Mahrusa, not to sail without orders from the army.

Debate broke out among the Free Officers concerning the fate of the deposed king. While some (including Gen. Naguib and Nasser) thought that the best course of action was to send him into exile, others argued that he should be put on trial or executed. Finally, the order came for Farouk to abdicate in favour of his son, Crown Prince Ahmed Fuad – who was acceded to the throne as King Fuad II[75] – and a three-man Regency Council was appointed. The former king's departure into exile came on 26 July 1952 and at 6 o'clock that evening he set sail for Italy with protection from the Egyptian army.

Consolidation edit

 
Prime minister Ali Maher and leader of the RCC Mohammad Naguib. 1952

The Revolution Command Council (RCC), made up of the previous nine-member command committee of the Free Officers in addition to five more members, chaired by Naguib, was formed. Ali Maher was asked to form a civilian government.[76] The first issue was regarding the 1923 constitution. Ali Maher's argument that "immediate return of constitutional procedure" would "leave the country saddled with a defective constitution, an unsuitable electoral system, and an inefficient, party-ridden administration" was understood by the junta.[77] A three-man regency was created to oversee palace affairs consisting of Prince Muhammad Abdel Moneim, Wafdist Bahey El Din Barakat Pasha and Colonel Rashad Mehanna.

The six principles of the RCC were:[78]

  1. the elimination of imperialism and its collaborators
  2. the ending of feudalism
  3. the ending of the monopoly system
  4. the establishment of social justice
  5. the building of a powerful national army
  6. the establishment of a sound democratic system

The officers did not want to simply remove the king and then retreat into a civilian government. The RCC believed that the entire Egyptian system needed to be overhauled, to remove 'reactionary' elements and restore stability. The RCC were not Marxists, but were receptive to the socialist critique of the traditional system. The officers moved to purge their opponents in Egypt to create a new Egypt beyond petty party politics and street violence.

The earliest reforms were populist but symbolic of a new era: the elimination of the government's summer recess to Alexandria, ending the subsidization of private automobiles for cabinet ministers, and the abolition of the honorific titles bey and pasha. Others were more economic, such as tax reforms, pay raises for the military and decreases in rent.[79] The pressing issue of the day was land reform. A ceiling on landholding of 200 feddans was agreed, to lower the price of land and therefore decrease rents. However, the junta butted heads with Ali Maher. Maher believed, like most in the political climate of Egypt, that a complete overhaul of the state was needed. By this time, many Egyptians believed that the 1923 system needed to be completely rebuilt. Maher assumed office with a mandate to further his reforms. The 'illegal-gains' legislation was to be expanded to root out corruption, and 'purge-committees' were created to 'purify' the parties. Maher refused to recall parliament or announce new elections; instead favoring martial law for at least half a year.[80] However, Maher came into conflict with the officers. The junta was skeptical of traditional politicians, and gave Maher a list of nominees to appoint for cabinet positions, which Maher refused. Maher, a landowner himself, instead believed that land redistribution would damage the economy by lowering productivity and discouraging foreign investment. He proposed a revised progressive tax structure on land and a 500 feddan limit, whereby excess land would be taxed at 80%.[81] The landowners suggested a 1,000 feddan limit, with additional exemptions of 100 feddans per wife and son and 50 feddans per daughter.[82]

A 2024 study found that in the aftermath of the coup, officials that were senior and had connections with the deposed monarch were more likely to be purged, while experienced bureaucrats and those with university education were more likely to be retained as part of the government.[83]

 
Members of the Free Officers welcomed by crowds in Cairo in January 1953. Standing in the automobile, from left to right: Youssef Seddik, Salah Salem, Gamal Abdel Nasser and Abdel Latif Boghdadi

Party 'Purification' edit

 
Former Egyptian Prime Minister Abdel Hady, 57, nonchalantly lights a cigarette, following his conviction a week before by Naguib's Military Tribunal.

On September 7, Ali Maher was dismissed, and 64 other politicians, including Foaud Sergeddin, were arrested. The following day the government decreed the 200 feddan limit. At first the Egyptian legal scholar Abd El-Razzak El-Sanhuri was considered to fill in Maher's shoes, but American concerns over Sanhuri's signature in the Stockholm appeal of 1951 led to Naguib's appointment as prime minister.[84] Rashad al-Barawi was also considered, but the American ambassador Jefferson Caffery rejected this idea, calling al-Barawi a 'commie'.[84]

The junta pressed for party reform, the removal of traditional corrupt elements within establishment parties. The Wafd hastily formed a "purge committee", expelling fourteen members, only one of which had any significant power. Old-guard Wafdists resisted the call for purification, while the younger elements supported the removal of the old-guard. On September 9, all parties were dissolved and had to apply for recertification with a list of founding members, financial statements and a party program. Anyone facing corruption charges was automatically ineligible for membership. The RCC refused to accept the Wafd's certification so long as Nahhas, who had refused to meet with Naguib so long as Sergeddin remained in prison, was listed as party president and founder. The Egyptian lawyer Sulayman Hafez summed up the RCC's feelings on Nahhas when he called him a "tumor in the body politic".[85] The September prisoners were released on December 6, the last day they could be held without charge. The case over the recertification of the Wafd went to the State Council on January 10, 1953. On the 17th, the junta announced the abolition of all political parties, where Naguib would rule in a three-year transitional period. The junta justified its decree because of the resistance to 'purification' and the opposition to land reform. The officers had underestimated the resistance by the liberal establishment, and sought to end the 'reactionary mentality' of the old system.[86]

On February 21, Naguib created the constitutional committee of fifty. Ali Maher served as president, who then divided the committee into five subcommittees and appointed a five man executive committee. By March they had approved the creation of a Republic, ending the regency. However, the committee was not a substitute for parliament; it was not taken seriously by the officers, who announced Egypt was a republic and Naguib was selected as president on June 18, without approval from the committee.[87]

By September, the Revolutionary Tribunal was formed, composed solely of three officers as judges, Abdel Baghdadi, Anwar Sadat and Hasan Ibrahim. In a speech in at Tahrir Square, Salah Salim described how colonialism in Egypt did not rule with soldiers or arms, but "traitors". Salim described the RCC as dedicated to "the struggle against imperialism and the Egyptian traitors who served it cause". Traitors were spreading rumors intending to destabilize the economy and cause hatred towards the army, especially through the universities. While he did not name anyone directly, a mocking imitation of a party leader kissing the King's hand was unmistakably evoking al-Nahhas. Salim's speech best exemplifies the RCC's mentality that student protesters and workers strikes were a part of a counter-revolutionary conspiracy.

Within a week of the speech, the government arrested eleven politicians, and placed Nahhas and his wife under house arrest. The trial of former prime minister and Sa'adist leader Ibrahim Abdel Hady over corruption and the murder of Hasan al-Banna lasted only a week before the court sentenced him to death, later commuted to life imprisonment three day later. Most defendants either received 10-15 year sentences, were stripped of property, or were fined. The most severe sentences were for British collaborators in the Suez insurgency - of the thirteen tried, eleven were convicted, four were hanged, one got a life sentence and the others were sentenced to 10-15 years.

The trial of Fouad Serageddin was more than just the charges - a £EP 5,000 bribe, arms racketeering during the 1948 war, allowing the king to transfer funds outside the country, illegally benefiting from road paving as transport minister in 1945, and conspiring to monopolize the cotton industry - the entire Wafd institution was effectively on trial. The prosecution focused mostly on Serageddin's rise to power within the Wafd and the his personal failings in the 1950 government. Serageddin's rivals, the who's who of Egypt's liberal government, took the stand to air out personal grievances. Witnesses included former prime ministers (Naguib al-Hilali, Hussein Sirri, Ali Maher), Mohammed Hussein Heikal, and Makram Ebeid. In his defence, Serageddin positioned himself as a proud nationalist, citing his order to the Ismalia police not to surrender their weapons in 1951. In the end, he received a fifteen year sentence, but was released in 1956.[88]

When political parties were banned, RCC formed the Liberation Rally, a movement that would subsume all of the preexisting political movements. While it was effective at rallies and speeches, it did not have the same institutional power as the Brotherhood, Wafd or DMNL. The rally remained as a tool for the officers, because of lack of enrollment of the other power brokers in Egypt's political arena.

In opposition to the new constitution with its overt secularism was the Muslim Brotherhood. Additionally, contrary to orders issued by the council, members of the Liberation Rally accumulated much of the seized non-Muslim property and distributed it amongst their closed networks. Angered at being left out of the political and economic spoils and seeing a continuation of secularism and modernity within the Free Officers Movement such as had existed under the King, the Muslim Brotherhood organized its street elements. From June 1953 into the following year, Egypt was wracked by street riots, clashes, arson, and civil tumult as the regime and the Muslim Brotherhood battled for popular support.

Anti-leftist crackdown edit

Relations between the RCC and the DMNL were established before the coup. DMNL leader Ahmad Hamrush met with Nasser on July 22, and charged him with mobilizing loyal troops in Alexandria.[89] The DMNL had connections within the military establishment, with around sixty-seventy officers in the military wing, including Khaled Mohieddin. Ahmad Hamrush, leader of the military wing of the DMNL, was not a member of the Free Officers but was given advance knowledge of the coup, later sharing it with the rest of the DMNL.[90]

The first clash between the officers and the labor movement started only a month after the coup. In the city of Kafr al Dawar, local workers went on strike for higher wages, paid leave, an independent elected union, and the dismissal of two members of the managerial staff.[91] Ten thousand workers in the city were on strike, shouting slogans in praise of Mohammed Naguib. The workers burned the homes of company police, destroyed employee files in company offices and medical facilities, and smashed equipment used to test productivity.[92][93][94] The police were called, surrounding the factory; the clash between the workers and police left many injured and a few dead.[95] Naguib met with Mustafa al-Khamis, one of the leaders of the strike, and offered him a lesser punishment if he were to give the name of fellow workers. He refused, and was hanged to death on factory grounds, as long with co-conspirator Ahmad al-Bakri on September 7, 1952.[96] His last words were "I was wronged, I want a re-trial."[97][98] The RCC was convinced that the strike was inspired from outside forces, though there is no evidence that the DMNL ordered the riot.[99][100]

The Egyptian Communist Party (ECP) opposed the military only a week after the coup. The ECP soon dubbed the army 'the great deception' after it failed to put the king on trial, failed to immediately abolish the monarchy, and failed to immediately restore political rights.[101] Co-founder of the party, Ismail Sabri Abdullah remarked:

We were confused first because of two contradicting things. We thought that objectively the overthrow of the King was something very positive but due to our political education we believed that nothing good and durable could come from the army. The army was a tool of oppression, conservative by definition and to us there was nothing that could be called a progressive coup d'etat. We were against coups. We were for revolution. In the first days our position was ambiguous, saluting the overthrow of the King but asking the military to fraternize with the population and form neighborhood committees and village committees of workers and soldiers ... Then there was a strike at Kafr al-Dawwar. The army intervened and two leaders of the strike were hanged. Then we said that this is a fascist regime.[102]

The DMNL, the largest of the leftist parties, was firmly against the RCC after the banning of political parties in early 1953. Public demonstrators at college campuses were detained at the military academy until 'they learned how to behave'.[103] As early as late 1952, a communist-Wafd coalition in a college student election defeated the Muslim Brotherhood, which was then supported by the RCC.[104] A wave of anti-communists arrests continued throughout 1953-1954. During a trial of ECP members on July 27, 1953, Mahmud Ghannam – the assistant secretary to the Wafd – was chief council for the defence, even demanding to subpoena Nasser, Naguib and other RCC members to question them on why the defendants should be charged for distributing leaflets, when the Free Officers also distributed leaflets before the coup. The officers did not accept this challenge. The court later heard testimony from the Grand Mufti of Egypt, who denounced communism as anti-religion and 'subservise'.[105] While the DMNL tried to create a united front with the remains of the Wafd, this was not seriously materialized. Student protests continued well into the summer of 1954.[106]

1954 edit

In January, the Muslim Brotherhood was outlawed. It remained an illegal political organization until the revolution of 2011.[citation needed] The move came in the wake of clashes between members of the Brotherhood and Liberation Rally student demonstrators on 12 January 1954. March witnessed clashes within the RCC, symbolized in the ultimately successful attempt to oust Naguib. The move faced opposition from within the army, and some members of the RCC, especially Khaled Mohieddin, favored a return to constitutional government. On 26 October, an assassination attempt suspected by the Brotherhood was directed at Nasser during a rally in Alexandria. This led to the regime acting against the Brotherhood, executing Brotherhood leaders on 9 December. Nasser subsequently cemented power, first becoming chairman of the RCC, and finally prime minister, with Naguib's constitutional position remaining vague until 14 November, when he was dismissed from office and placed under house arrest.

Meanwhile, the RCC managed to remain united in its opposition to the British and French, specifically in regard to the Suez Canal. Despite continued calls from the RCC, in debates in the United Nations, and pressure from both the U.S. and USSR,[citation needed] the British refused to transfer control of the Canal to the new regime. The RCC began funding and coordinating ever greater attacks on the British and French in the Suez Canal Zone, and Damietta. Finally, on 19 October, Nasser signed a treaty for the evacuation of British troops from Egypt, to be completed over the following 20 months. Two years later, on 18 June 1956, Nasser raised the Egyptian flag over the Canal Zone, announcing the complete evacuation of British troops.

1956 edit

President Nasser announced a new Constitution on 16 January at a popular rally, setting up a presidential system of government in which the president has the power to appoint and dismiss ministers. An elections law was passed on 3 March granting women the right to vote for the first time in Egyptian history. Nasser was elected as the second president of the Republic on 23 June. In 1957, Nasser announced the formation of the National Union (Al-Ittihad Al-Qawmi), paving the way to July elections for the National Assembly, the first parliament since 1952.

Commemoration edit

The anniversary of the revolution is commemorated on Revolution Day, an annual public holiday in Egypt, on 23 July.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "Egypt as Recipient of Soviet Aid, 1955–1970", Karel Holbik and Edward Drachman. Zeitschrift für die gesamte Staatswissenschaft / Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics Bd. 127, H. 1. (January 1971), pp. 137–165
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  33. ^ Terry 1982, pp. 208–209: "The first generation of Wafdist leaders were then a closely inter-related group of landed aristocrats and wealthy professionals who believed the time had come for them to assume control over an independent Egyptian nation. They were committed to Parliamentary democratic forms on western models, but wanted to save the existing capitalist structures which they anticipated dominating. The Wafd secured massive popular support not because its leaders offered the people radical societal changes., but because it focused its efforts towards ousting the British. The British were viewed as the primary enemy. Once they were removed from Egyptian soil, then the far more complicated task of creating new internal structures could begin. In some respects* the Wafd was fortunate that the British proved such stubborn opponents, for as long as the British remained the focal point of hostilities, the Wafd was not under heavy pressure to formulate a domestic program for development. On the other hand, the lack of such a program gradually eroded much popular commitment to the Wafd, which was increasingly riddled with internal rivalries and charges of corruption. Gradually, the Wafd was to become another symbol of the irrelevant and politically bankrupt Egyptian government which neither answered the needs of the people nor ousted the British imperial power."
  34. ^ Goldberg, Ellis (1986). Tinker, tailor, and textile worker: class and politics in Egypt, 1930-1952. Berkeley London: University of California press. ISBN 978-0-520-05353-3.
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  39. ^ Botman 1991, p. 58.
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  41. ^ Abdalla 1985, 1946: The Climax.
  42. ^ Botman 1991, p. 47: 'Essentially, after the termination of press censorship and the abolition of martial law in August 1945, the clamor for independence began immediately. In December 1945, Prime Minister alNuqrashi called for fresh negotiations with the British, but an acceptable agreement was not forthcoming. In response to the seeming futility of thé negotiation process, demonstrations were staged in Cairo, Alexandria, and the provinces in early February 1946. On February 9, students called a massive strike. They massed by the thousands and marched from the university grounds in Giza toward Abdin Palace, chanting, "Evacuation: No negotiation except after evacuation!".'
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  49. ^ Eppel, Michael (2012). "The Arab States and the 1948 War in Palestine: The Socio-Political Struggles, the Compelling Nationalist Discourse and the Regional Context of Involvement". Middle Eastern Studies. 48 (1): 1–8. ISSN 0026-3206. JSTOR 23217085.
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  53. ^ Gordon 1992, p. 24.
  54. ^ Gordon 1989, p. 208: "The tragedy of Mustafa al-Nahhas-and it is the tragedy of his generation- is that after years of struggle his political vision remained frozen in the past. Old wounds still festered. Banishment from the power that should rightfully been theirs fostered a refusal to countenance dissent within party ranks, tolerance for corruption, and, most damning in 1950, a willingness to compromise ideals in order to rule. Stubbornness and intolerance characterized Wafdist leadership throughout the parliamentary era, but by 1950, the stakes were greater and demands for power sharing within the party louder and more compelling. The Nahhas-Sirag al-Din policy of appeasing the Palace, a cynical pose deliberately adopted to cool royal tempers and prevent a precipitate break in relations, served its purpose in the short run. By defending Palace interests, however, the Wafd cheapened its own image, even as it prolonged its hold on power. Nahhas and his colleagues may have considered the cost a small price to pay."
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  102. ^ Botman 1986, p. 354.
  103. ^ Gordon 1992, p. 79.
  104. ^ Gordon 1992, p. 75.
  105. ^ Gordon 1992, p. 96.
  106. ^ Cook, Steven A. (2012). The struggle for Egypt: from Nasser to Tahrir Square. New York: Oxford university press. pp. 80–81. ISBN 978-0-19-979526-0. Immediately following the coup, university students pledged support for the Officers. Despite this, Egypt's new leadership was unable to translate the early support of Egyptian campuses into an asset that it could leverage to its advantage against the regime's opponents. Indeed, as the Officers sought to consolidate their power and repress competing political factions, student opposition grew. While students—like virtually all Egyptians—shared the Officers' goals, many were opposed to a military dictatorship. Student activists at the time of the coup had come of age during the parliamentary period and thus believed in the virtues of civilian rule and democracy. As a result, the students at Cairo University reversed their support for the regime and established a front to oppose military rule. This is not to suggest that the regime's support on campuses dissipated completely. The Youth Bureau of the Liberation Rally, which was established in 1953, maintained a following for the new regime, but like the Rally itself, there was a distinctly contrived nature to the group. In reality, the Youth Bureau consisted of government-sanctioned thugs who sought to intimidate student Wafdists, Muslim Brothers, and leftists. In order to keep the universities in line, the RCC employed a combination of what was called the "University Guard" (policemen stationed in each university department); the Ministry of Interior's state security agents; the military police; and informants within the student body, faculty, and administrators to complement the activities of the Youth Rally. These repressive measures kept student opposition activists under constant surveillance and threat. Even so, the students proved to be tenacious. At Cairo University, for example, student opponents of the regime continued to battle for months after their adult counterparts succumbed to the Free Officers' drive to consolidate their power in March 1954. Indeed, the RCC was unable to pacify the university until well into that summer.

Bibliography edit

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External links edit

  • The Long Revolution 2005-12-12 at the Wayback Machine
  • Egyptian Royalty by Ahmed S. Kamel, Hassan Kamel Kelisli-Morali, Georges Soliman and Magda Malek.
  • L'Egypte d'antan... Egypt in Bygone Days 2019-05-22 at the Wayback Machine by Max Karkegi.

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 1952 Egyptian Revolution news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Egyptian Revolution of 1952 Arabic ثورة 23 يوليو 3 also known as the 1952 coup d etat Arabic انقلاب 1952 4 5 6 and 23 July Revolution 7 was a period of profound political economic and societal change in Egypt On 23 July 1952 the revolution began with the toppling of King Farouk in a coup d etat by the Free Officers Movement This group of army officers was led by Mohamed Naguib and Gamal Abdel Nasser 8 The Revolution ushered in a wave of revolutionary politics in the Arab World and contributed to the escalation of decolonisation and the development of Third World solidarity during the Cold War Egyptian Revolution of 1952Part of the Decolonisation of Africa and Asia the Cold War and the Arab Cold WarThe leaders of the Revolution Mohammed Naguib left and Gamal Abdel Nasser right in a CadillacDate23 July 1952LocationKingdom of EgyptResultCoup successful End of rule of the Muhammad Ali dynasty The Kingdom of Egypt becomes the Republic of Egypt End of British influence in Egypt Dictatorship imposed until the 2011 revolution Independence of Sudan Beginning of the Nasser era Revolutionary wave across the Arab world Beginning of the Arab Cold WarBelligerents Kingdom of EgyptSupported by United Kingdom FranceFree Officers MovementSupported by United States 1 Soviet Union 2 how Commanders and leadersFarouk Ahmed Naguib el HilalyMohammed Naguib Gamal Abdel Nasser Anwar Sadat Khaled Mohieddin Abdel Latif Boghdadi Abdel Hakim Amer Gamal Salem Salah Salem Zakaria Mohieddin Hussein el Shafei Hassan Ibrahim Kamal el Din Hussein Abdel Moneim AminThough initially focused on grievances against King Farouk the movement had more wide ranging political ambitions In the first three years of the Revolution the Free Officers moved to abolish the constitutional monarchy and aristocracy of Egypt and Sudan establish a republic end the British occupation of the country and secure the independence of Sudan previously governed as an condominium of Egypt and the United Kingdom 9 The revolutionary government adopted a staunchly nationalist anti imperialist agenda which came to be expressed chiefly through Arab nationalism and international non alignment The Revolution was faced with immediate threats from Western imperial powers particularly the United Kingdom which had occupied Egypt since 1882 and France both of whom were wary of rising nationalist sentiment in territories under their control throughout Africa and the Arab World The ongoing state of war with the State of Israel also posed a serious challenge as the Free Officers increased Egypt s already strong support of the Palestinians 10 These two issues converged in the fifth year of the Revolution when Egypt was invaded by the United Kingdom France and the State of Israel in the Suez Crisis of 1956 known in Egypt as the Tripartite Aggression Despite enormous military losses the war was seen as a political victory for Egypt especially as it left the Suez Canal in uncontested Egyptian control for the first time since 1875 erasing what was seen as a mark of national humiliation This strengthened the appeal of the revolution in other Arab countries Wholesale agrarian reform and huge industrialisation programmes were initiated in the first decade and half of the Revolution 11 leading to an unprecedented period of infrastructure building and urbanisation By the 1960s Arab socialism had become a dominant theme 12 transforming Egypt into a centrally planned economy Official fear of a Western sponsored counter revolution domestic religious extremism potential communist infiltration and the conflict with the State of Israel were all cited as reasons compelling severe and longstanding restrictions on political opposition and the prohibition of a multi party system 13 These restrictions on political activity would remain in place until the presidency of Anwar Sadat from 1970 onwards during which many of the policies of the Revolution were scaled back or reversed The early successes of the Revolution encouraged numerous other nationalist movements in other countries such as Algeria where there were anti imperialist and anti colonial rebellions against European empires 3 It also inspired the toppling of existing pro Western monarchies and governments in the MENA region The Revolution is commemorated each year on 23 July 14 Contents 1 Background and causes 1 1 Muhammad Ali dynasty 1 2 British occupation under the Veiled Protectorate 1 3 Kingdom of Egypt 1 3 1 The final decade 1942 1952 2 Free Officer Movement 3 Military coup 3 1 Declaration of revolution 4 Consolidation 4 1 Party Purification 4 2 Anti leftist crackdown 4 3 1954 4 4 1956 5 Commemoration 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksBackground and causes editMuhammad Ali dynasty edit See also History of Egypt under the Muhammad Ali dynasty The history of Egypt during the 19th and early 20th centuries was defined by the vastly different reigns of successive members of the Muhammad Ali dynasty and the gradually increasing intrusion into Egyptian affairs of the Great Powers particularly the United Kingdom From 1805 Egypt underwent a period of rapid modernisation under Muhammad Ali Pasha who declared himself Khedive in defiance of his nominal suzerain the Ottoman Sultan Within a matter of decades Muhammad Ali transformed Egypt from a neglected Ottoman province to a virtually independent state that temporarily rivalled the Ottoman Empire itself for dominance in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Mashreq Muhammad Ali conquered the Sudan invaded East Africa and led Egypt during both the First Egyptian Ottoman War and Second Egyptian Ottoman War triggering the Oriental Crisis 15 As a result of these wars Egypt was expelled from the Levant but allowed to keep its Sudanese territory After Muhammad Ali s death his successors Abbas I and Sa id attempted to modernize Egypt such as starting construction of the Suez Canal Due to conscription taxes were raised on nobles in exchange for more land and peasants fellahin in Arabic Peasants continued to lose access to their land as cotton became a major cash crop in Egypt 16 Under Isma il the Magnificent Egypt went through massive modernization programmes and campaigns of military expansion in Sudan and East Africa Isma il greatly accelerated the enfranchisement of the Egyptian peasantry and middle class who had been politically and economically marginalized by the wealthy elites of Egyptian society 17 It was during this time that an Egyptian intelligentsia was formed a social class of educated Egyptians well read in politics and culture known as the Effendi 18 19 Under the education minister Ali Pasha Mubarak the public education system in Egypt grew the field of educated nationalist effendiyya 20 21 It was during this time that Italians Greeks French Armenians Jews and other groups immigrated to Egypt establishing a small but wealthy and politically powerful cosmopolitan community 22 Foreigners were not subject to Egyptian laws but went through a separate court system known as the Mixed Courts 23 Isma il also established Egypt s first parliament 24 This period of intellectualism in Egypt and the Arab world as a whole later became known as the Nahda Coupled with Isma il s powerful espousal of Egyptian statehood this contributed to the growth of Egyptian nationalism particularly within the army However the war with Ethiopia ended in disaster only further exasperating the Egyptian treasury The Caisse de la Dette Publique Public Debt Commission was founded as a way for Egypt to pay its debts Isma il s grand policies were ruinously expensive and financial pressure eventually compelled him to sell Egypt s shares in the Universal Company of the Maritime Canal of Suez the company that owned the 99 year lease to manage the Suez Canal The sale of the Canal mere years after it had been constructed at the cost of some 80 000 Egyptian lives was seen as a national humiliation particularly as it effectively granted the purchaser the United Kingdom a basis for interfering in Egyptian affairs Shortly thereafter the United Kingdom along with the other Great Powers deposed Isma il in favour of his son Tewfik Pasha Tewfik was seen as a puppet of the foreign powers who had deposed his father a perception heightened by his repressive policies Discontent with Tewfik s rule ignited the Urabi Revolt of 1881 led by nationalist soldiers under Ahmed Urabi Urabi came from a peasant family and his rise through the ranks of the military in spite of his humble background had been made possible by the reforms of Isma il reforms which he saw as being under attack by Tewfik The prospect of revolutionary instability in Egypt and the inferred danger to the Suez Canal prompted the United Kingdom to intervene militarily in support of Tewfik British occupation under the Veiled Protectorate edit See also History of Egypt under the British After the Anglo Egyptian War the United Kingdom was left in de facto control over the country a state of affairs that became known as the veiled protectorate In the years that followed the United Kingdom would cement its political and military position in Egypt and subsequently in Egypt s domains in Sudan with the British high representative in Cairo exercising more power than the Khedive himself In 1888 at the Convention of Constantinople the United Kingdom won the right to protect the Suez Canal with military force giving Britain a permanent base from which to dominate Egyptian politics In 1899 the United Kingdom forced Tewfik s successor as Khedive the nationalist Abbas II to transform Sudan from an integral part of Egypt into a condominium in which sovereignty would be shared between Egypt and the United Kingdom Once established the condominium witnessed ever decreasing Egyptian control and would for most of its existence be governed in practice by the United Kingdom through the Governor General in Khartoum For the remainder of his reign this would be one of the flashpoints between the nationalist Khedive Abbas II and the United Kingdom with Abbas seeking to arrest and reverse the process of increasing British control in Egypt and Sudan Egyptians nationalism was brewing under the harsh economic policies of the British 25 26 Nationalist activists such as Mostafa Kamil Pasha Abdullah an Nadeem and Yaqub Sanu fought for greater autonomy for Egypt The phrase Egypt for the Egyptians was a popular rallying cry among nationalists in protest to the privileges of foreigners 27 It was during this time that the five major points of contentions among nationalists were crystalized The political status of Sudan which was ruled as a de facto joint Anglo Egyptian condominium but as a de jure British colony after the Mahdist rebellion Ownership over the Suez Canal The status of the Egyptian army which was demobilized after the 1882 revolt and the stationing of British troops in Egypt The sovereignty of the Egyptian parliament its legal powers regarding foreigners and independence from British influence The right for Egypt to establish foreign relations independent of BritainFollowing the Ottoman Empire s entry in to the First World War as a member of the Central Powers in 1914 the United Kingdom deposed Abbas II in favour of his pro British uncle Hussein Kamal The legal fiction of Ottoman sovereignty was terminated and the Sultanate of Egypt destroyed by the Ottoman Empire in 1517 was re established with Hussein Kamal as Sultan Despite the restoration of the nominal sultanate British power in Egypt and Sudan was undiminished as the United Kingdom declared Egypt to be a formal protectorate of the United Kingdom Whilst Egypt was not annexed to the British Empire with the British King never becoming sovereign of Egypt Egypt s status as a protectorate precluded any actual independence for the sultanate For all intents and purposes the Sultanate of Egypt was as much controlled by the United Kingdom as the Khedivate of Egypt had been Kingdom of Egypt edit See also Kingdom of Egypt After World War I Egyptian nationalists tried to send a delegation Arabic Wafd to the Paris Peace Conference to renegotiate for Egyptian independence When Britain refused nationalist anger at British control erupted into the Egyptian Revolution of 1919 prompting the United Kingdom to recognise Egyptian independence in 1922 as the Kingdom of Egypt However Britain still retained the rights over the Sudan its empire in Egypt and foreigners 28 29 nbsp King Farouk I of Egypt in Parliament listening to Mustafa el Nahhas Pasha s speech The leading party after the revolution was the Wafd Party led by Sa ad Zaghoul and his successor Mostafa al Nahhas The resulting 1923 Egyptian constitution created a proper albeit flawed constitutional monarchy 30 Universal male suffrage allowed Egyptians to vote in parliamentary elections however the king had the power to dismiss cabinets dissolve parliament and appoint prime ministers 31 Politics in Egypt were divided between the liberal Wafdists versus the conservative monarchical establishment 32 The Wafd had little to offer outside of defending the liberal framework and negotiating for greater autonomy Wafdist elites were still wealthy land owning capitalists who did not offer a radical program in the traditional economic structure of peasants and landlords 33 While the Wafd enjoyed genuine popularity among the masses the degrading economic conditions of Egypt beginning the 1930 s combined with the failure of the 1923 regime to adequately address these issues sparked the rise of socialist and labor movements 34 The Wafd believed that through gradual negotiations it would be able to secure complete Egyptian independence Egypt was successful in abolishing the Mixed courts in 1937 35 36 repealing the Public Debt Commission in 1940 and negotiating the 1936 Anglo Egyptian treaty This treaty limited the extent of British troops in Egypt except with regards to the Suez canal and the Sudan and the creation of a proper Egyptian military The final decade 1942 1952 edit See also Egypt in World War II During the Second World War Egypt was a major Allied base for the North African campaign Egypt remained officially neutral under the closing weeks of the war however its territory became a battlefield between the Allies and Axis Powers In 1942 the refusal of Egypt s young King Farouk to appoint al Nahhas prime minister led by the Abdeen Palace Incident where the British military surrounded Farouk s palace and ordered him at gunpoint to appoint al Nahhas 37 Though nationalist army officers including Mohamed Naguib appealed to Farouk to resist the deployment of British tanks and artillery outside the Royal palace forced the King to concede This incident permanently damaged the prestige of both King Farouk s conservative clique and al Nahhas Wafd The surrender to British convinced many Egyptian nationalists that only the removal of the entire 1923 system could bring an end to the United Kingdom s occupation of Egypt 38 nbsp Poster from the Egyptian nationalist Ahmed Hussein for complete independenceThe historian Selma Botman describes the state of the late Wafd 39 In contrast to the ideologically defined programs of the nonestablishment parties the Wafd never developed a comprehensive plan to remedy the deep social and economic problems that troubled the country As this became increasingly apparent the population began to lose faith in the party especially as conditions for consumers deteriorated during wartime Thus even when the party passed reformist legislation between 1942 and 1944 or 1950 and 1952 it could no longer convince the majority of the population that it held the country s best interests in mind Instead in these years of growing politicization of the people many believed that the Wafd harbored the fear that the nationalist movement would become too radical and go beyond the existing framework of acceptable political and economic discourse After decades of pseudo independence elitist infighting and deteriorating economic conditions more radical politics consumed Egypt The Muslim Brotherhood was founded in 1928 pushing for an Islamic revival against colonialism and modernity Leftist movements like the Egyptian Communist Party Iskra and the Democratic Movement for National Liberation rallied growing numbers of striking workers especially as King Farouk s extravagant lifestyle continued to insult the millions of Egyptians living in poverty 40 The 1945 riots in Egypt and the 1946 student protests demonstrated the need for politicians to negotiate full independence 41 42 Prime Minister Ismail Sidky and British secretary of foreign affairs Ernest Bevin entered negotiations 43 44 However issues over the status of Sudan and British troops ended hopes for a successful discussion 45 46 47 The ire of the nationalists concentrated on two issues Sudan and the Suez 48 By flaming the fires of nationalism the Egyptian elites forced themselves to intervene in the civil war in Palestine 49 During the 1948 Arab Israeli war Egyptian troops fought in the southern front against Israel Though Egypt quickly gained controlled over the Naqab desert a successful Israeli counter offensive left Egypt with just the Gaza Strip During the Faluja pocket a young Egyptian officer called Gamal Abdel Nasser made a name for himself as a hero for holding out until the 1949 armistice agreement Anger over corruption in the war such as rumors of gun smuggling leading to Egyptian troops being underequipped for battle Returning from the war an Egyptian commander commented The real battle is in Egypt 50 In 1950 the Wafd formed a government for the last time 51 After years of martial law and political chaos the Wafd decisively won the 1950 elections on a mandate of continuing its historic political fight against Britain al Nahhas who was now 70 years old was not the national hero of 1919 Genuine economic reforms as well as a final agreement with Britain were the pressing issues of the day A faction known as the Wafdist Vanguards attempted to push reform A new law limited landowning to 50 feddans but was not applicable to retroactive land gains and retained ministerial immunity 52 Wafd politician Fuad Sirageddin Pasha told the U S ambassador I own 8000 feddans Do you think I want Egypt to go communist 53 The CIA attempted to pressure King Farouk to adopt reforms suitable to American interests but failed Reformers in the party were not strong enough of pass the legislation needed to avoid a total revolution Stubbornness and corruption made the Wafd incapable of delivering to the Egyptian people 54 nbsp Egyptian police fighting in the Battle of IsmaliaThe strategic value of the Suez Canal was too valuable for Britain in the Cold War to completely surrender In a dramatic move the Wafd abrogated the 1936 treaty in 1951 55 Anti British demonstrations morphed into a small guerrilla war on the canal liberation battalions battled British forces 56 The was rapidly losing control over the situation as students on the Islamist right and socialist left ignited an inferno of non violent strikes and violent battles 57 On January 25 1952 seven thousand British troops ordered the Egyptian police at Ismalia to surrender their weapons When the police refused the resulting Battle of Ismalia left 56 Egyptians and 13 British dead 58 The next day a series of riots engulfed Cairo The Egyptian masses torched 750 foreign owned stores causing around 40 50 million Egyptian Pounds worth of damage 58 Black Saturday was the end for the Wafd al Nahhas was dismissed on the next day 59 After al Nahhas three independent politicians were appointed to clean up the mess and chaos in Egypt The three governments of Ali Maher January 27 March 1 Ahmad Nagib al Hilali March 2 July 2 and Hussein Sirri Pasha July 2 July 20 each failed to solve the situation Maher moved quickly to restore order and calm the economic situation He created a ministry of rural affairs to study proposals for land reform and lifted curfew restrictions by February He tried to create a unity government with the Wafd but they denied his offer of several cabinet positions His dealings with the Wafd such as advocating a unity government alienated his allies to the right and motivated Farouk to deal with him as soon as possible He was pressured to produce a report on the Cairo Fire that implicated the Wafd as responsible but refused The king adjourned parliament and two palace loyalists in the cabinet resigned The British ambassador refused to meet with Maher forcing his resignation 60 Nagib al Hilali succeeded Maher taking a much more active approach He decreed new anti corruption laws and created purge committees to overhaul the bureaucracy Hilai ordered Fuad Sirageddin under house arrest A week later he dissolved parliament announcing new elections in May By April they were postponed indefinitely The Egyptian journalist Ihsan Abdel Quddous criticized the government writing Corruption does not mean corruption of the Wafd government alone Rumors that the King Farouk was going to sack al Hilali led him to resign on July 2 61 Huseinn Sirri moved as prime minister to lift Sirageddin s house arrest though he did not promise new elections or to lift martial law However events in the military soon were spiraling out of control In January in a dramatic election in the officers club opposition candidates were elected to the Officers Club governing board In mid July Farouk responded by annulling the election and appointing his own men to the board With a crisis brewing Sirri offered the War Ministry to General Muhammad Naguib who was elected club president When he refused Sirri resigned on July 20 after failing to persuade Farouk to adopt a more conciliatory pose toward the army 62 al Hilali returned as prime minister of July 22nd with the promise of total freedom to select a cabinet However when Farouk nominated his own brother in law war minister al Hilali resigned the next day Free Officer Movement editSee also Free Officers Movement Egypt The modern Egyptian army was established as a result of the 1936 Anglo Egyptian treaty which allowed the Egyptian army to expand from 398 officers to 982 63 Nasser applied at the Obassia Military College Egypt s leading cadet school in 1937 Anwar Sadat graduated from the Egyptian Military Academy in 1938 64 Sadat had been trying to form an anti British uprising since the 1940 s but was arrested after meeting with two Nazi spies in 1942 65 The humiliating 1942 British coup and the disaster in Palestine motivated the creation of a secret cell of revolutionary Egyptian officers After the witnessing the 1949 Syrian coup when Syrian military overthrew the government whispers of a revolt spread throughout the corps While an exact date is not known by 1949 meetings and discussions in the homes of the officers started the beginning of the Free Officers movement While officers met with communists in the DMNL and Islamists in the Muslim Brotherhood it was an organization independent of the pre existing opposition 66 Members took a vow of secrecy with one hand on the Koran and the other on a revolver and published anonymous leaflets and articles criticizing the higher command and the government as a whole for corruption 67 68 By 1952 it grew so large that few members knew the identities of the leaders of the conspiracy Colonel Nasser and General Naguib 69 nbsp Major Kamal el Din Hussein Artillery nbsp Squadron Leader Hassan Ibrahim Air force nbsp Major Abdel Hakim Amer Infantry nbsp Major Salah Salem Artillery nbsp Wing Commander Abd al Latif al Boghdadi Air force nbsp Major General Muhammad Naguib Border Guards nbsp Lieutenant Colonel Anwar El Sadat Military Communication nbsp Lieutenant Colonel Zakaria Mohieddin Infantry nbsp Lieutenant Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser Infantry The founder of the CIA Miles Copeland Jr claimed to have established contacts with the officers at this time though the historian Said Aburish argues that America did not know about the coup until two days beforehand but did not move to stop it after verifying it was not communist 70 71 By the spring of the 1952 the Free Officers began plotting their coup They had planned to overthrow the monarchy in early August but events soon made them accelerate their plans On July 16 King Farouk ordered the governing board of the Officers Club dissolved causing the officers to fear their arrest was imminent Military coup edit nbsp Members of the Free Officers gathered after the coup d etat From left to right Zakaria Mohieddin Abdel Latif Boghdadi Kamel el Din Hussein Gamal Abdel Nasser seated Abdel Hakim Amer Muhammad Naguib Youssef Seddik and Ahmed ShawkiBy the spring of the 1952 the Free Officers began plotting their coup They had planned to overthrow the monarchy in early August but events soon made them accelerate their plans On July 16 King Farouk ordered the governing board of the Officers Club dissolved which made the officers believe their arrest was soon 72 On the 23rd infantry united seized general headquarters and blocked roads leading to Cairo Nasser and Abdel Hakim Amr as the higher level leaders took a car ride to visit every unit in Cairo After arresting his commanding officer Muhammad Abu al Fadl al Gizawi answered several phone calls as the man he just arrested to assure high command that everything was calm By 3 00 A M Muhammad Naguib arrived at headquarters in Cairo By seven Sadat who was at the movies during the coup announced on the radio that the Free Officers had taken over Egypt was now governed by the Revolutionary Command Council 72 Declaration of revolution edit At 7 30 a m a broadcasting station issued the first communique of the coup d etat in the name of Gen Naguib to the Egyptian people It attempted to justify the coup which was also known as the Blessed Movement The person reading the message was Free Officer and future president of Egypt Anwar Sadat 73 The coup was conducted by less than a hundred officers almost all of which were drawn from junior ranks and prompted scenes of celebration in the streets by cheering mobs 74 Egypt has passed through a critical period in her recent history characterized by bribery mischief and the absence of governmental stability All of these were factors that had a large influence on the army Those who accepted bribes and were thus influenced caused our defeat in the Palestine War 1948 As for the period following the war the mischief making elements have been assisting one another and traitors have been commanding the army They appointed a commander who is either ignorant or corrupt Egypt has reached the point therefore of having no army to defend it Accordingly we have undertaken to clean ourselves up and have appointed to command us men from within the army whom we trust in their ability their character and their patriotism It is certain that all Egypt will meet this news with enthusiasm and will welcome it As for those whose arrest we saw fit from among men formerly associated with the army we will not deal harshly with them but will release them at the appropriate time I assure the Egyptian people that the entire army today has become capable of operating in the national interest and under the rule of the constitution apart from any interests of its own I take this opportunity to request that the people never permit any traitors to take refuge in deeds of destruction or violence because these are not in the interest of Egypt Should anyone behave in such ways he will be dealt with forcefully in a manner such as has not been seen before and his deeds will meet immediately the reward for treason The army will take charge with the assistance of the police I assure our foreign brothers that their interests their personal safety lit their souls and their property are safe and that the army considers itself responsible for them May God grant us success lit God is the guardian of success With his British support network now neutralized King Farouk sought the intervention of the United States which was unresponsive By the 25th the army had occupied Alexandria where the King was in residence at the Montaza Palace Terrified Farouk abandoned Montaza and fled to Ras Al Teen Palace on the waterfront Naguib ordered the captain of Farqouk s yacht al Mahrusa not to sail without orders from the army Debate broke out among the Free Officers concerning the fate of the deposed king While some including Gen Naguib and Nasser thought that the best course of action was to send him into exile others argued that he should be put on trial or executed Finally the order came for Farouk to abdicate in favour of his son Crown Prince Ahmed Fuad who was acceded to the throne as King Fuad II 75 and a three man Regency Council was appointed The former king s departure into exile came on 26 July 1952 and at 6 o clock that evening he set sail for Italy with protection from the Egyptian army Consolidation edit nbsp Prime minister Ali Maher and leader of the RCC Mohammad Naguib 1952The Revolution Command Council RCC made up of the previous nine member command committee of the Free Officers in addition to five more members chaired by Naguib was formed Ali Maher was asked to form a civilian government 76 The first issue was regarding the 1923 constitution Ali Maher s argument that immediate return of constitutional procedure would leave the country saddled with a defective constitution an unsuitable electoral system and an inefficient party ridden administration was understood by the junta 77 A three man regency was created to oversee palace affairs consisting of Prince Muhammad Abdel Moneim Wafdist Bahey El Din Barakat Pasha and Colonel Rashad Mehanna The six principles of the RCC were 78 the elimination of imperialism and its collaborators the ending of feudalism the ending of the monopoly system the establishment of social justice the building of a powerful national army the establishment of a sound democratic systemThe officers did not want to simply remove the king and then retreat into a civilian government The RCC believed that the entire Egyptian system needed to be overhauled to remove reactionary elements and restore stability The RCC were not Marxists but were receptive to the socialist critique of the traditional system The officers moved to purge their opponents in Egypt to create a new Egypt beyond petty party politics and street violence The earliest reforms were populist but symbolic of a new era the elimination of the government s summer recess to Alexandria ending the subsidization of private automobiles for cabinet ministers and the abolition of the honorific titles bey and pasha Others were more economic such as tax reforms pay raises for the military and decreases in rent 79 The pressing issue of the day was land reform A ceiling on landholding of 200 feddans was agreed to lower the price of land and therefore decrease rents However the junta butted heads with Ali Maher Maher believed like most in the political climate of Egypt that a complete overhaul of the state was needed By this time many Egyptians believed that the 1923 system needed to be completely rebuilt Maher assumed office with a mandate to further his reforms The illegal gains legislation was to be expanded to root out corruption and purge committees were created to purify the parties Maher refused to recall parliament or announce new elections instead favoring martial law for at least half a year 80 However Maher came into conflict with the officers The junta was skeptical of traditional politicians and gave Maher a list of nominees to appoint for cabinet positions which Maher refused Maher a landowner himself instead believed that land redistribution would damage the economy by lowering productivity and discouraging foreign investment He proposed a revised progressive tax structure on land and a 500 feddan limit whereby excess land would be taxed at 80 81 The landowners suggested a 1 000 feddan limit with additional exemptions of 100 feddans per wife and son and 50 feddans per daughter 82 A 2024 study found that in the aftermath of the coup officials that were senior and had connections with the deposed monarch were more likely to be purged while experienced bureaucrats and those with university education were more likely to be retained as part of the government 83 nbsp Members of the Free Officers welcomed by crowds in Cairo in January 1953 Standing in the automobile from left to right Youssef Seddik Salah Salem Gamal Abdel Nasser and Abdel Latif BoghdadiParty Purification edit nbsp Former Egyptian Prime Minister Abdel Hady 57 nonchalantly lights a cigarette following his conviction a week before by Naguib s Military Tribunal On September 7 Ali Maher was dismissed and 64 other politicians including Foaud Sergeddin were arrested The following day the government decreed the 200 feddan limit At first the Egyptian legal scholar Abd El Razzak El Sanhuri was considered to fill in Maher s shoes but American concerns over Sanhuri s signature in the Stockholm appeal of 1951 led to Naguib s appointment as prime minister 84 Rashad al Barawi was also considered but the American ambassador Jefferson Caffery rejected this idea calling al Barawi a commie 84 The junta pressed for party reform the removal of traditional corrupt elements within establishment parties The Wafd hastily formed a purge committee expelling fourteen members only one of which had any significant power Old guard Wafdists resisted the call for purification while the younger elements supported the removal of the old guard On September 9 all parties were dissolved and had to apply for recertification with a list of founding members financial statements and a party program Anyone facing corruption charges was automatically ineligible for membership The RCC refused to accept the Wafd s certification so long as Nahhas who had refused to meet with Naguib so long as Sergeddin remained in prison was listed as party president and founder The Egyptian lawyer Sulayman Hafez summed up the RCC s feelings on Nahhas when he called him a tumor in the body politic 85 The September prisoners were released on December 6 the last day they could be held without charge The case over the recertification of the Wafd went to the State Council on January 10 1953 On the 17th the junta announced the abolition of all political parties where Naguib would rule in a three year transitional period The junta justified its decree because of the resistance to purification and the opposition to land reform The officers had underestimated the resistance by the liberal establishment and sought to end the reactionary mentality of the old system 86 On February 21 Naguib created the constitutional committee of fifty Ali Maher served as president who then divided the committee into five subcommittees and appointed a five man executive committee By March they had approved the creation of a Republic ending the regency However the committee was not a substitute for parliament it was not taken seriously by the officers who announced Egypt was a republic and Naguib was selected as president on June 18 without approval from the committee 87 By September the Revolutionary Tribunal was formed composed solely of three officers as judges Abdel Baghdadi Anwar Sadat and Hasan Ibrahim In a speech in at Tahrir Square Salah Salim described how colonialism in Egypt did not rule with soldiers or arms but traitors Salim described the RCC as dedicated to the struggle against imperialism and the Egyptian traitors who served it cause Traitors were spreading rumors intending to destabilize the economy and cause hatred towards the army especially through the universities While he did not name anyone directly a mocking imitation of a party leader kissing the King s hand was unmistakably evoking al Nahhas Salim s speech best exemplifies the RCC s mentality that student protesters and workers strikes were a part of a counter revolutionary conspiracy Within a week of the speech the government arrested eleven politicians and placed Nahhas and his wife under house arrest The trial of former prime minister and Sa adist leader Ibrahim Abdel Hady over corruption and the murder of Hasan al Banna lasted only a week before the court sentenced him to death later commuted to life imprisonment three day later Most defendants either received 10 15 year sentences were stripped of property or were fined The most severe sentences were for British collaborators in the Suez insurgency of the thirteen tried eleven were convicted four were hanged one got a life sentence and the others were sentenced to 10 15 years The trial of Fouad Serageddin was more than just the charges a EP 5 000 bribe arms racketeering during the 1948 war allowing the king to transfer funds outside the country illegally benefiting from road paving as transport minister in 1945 and conspiring to monopolize the cotton industry the entire Wafd institution was effectively on trial The prosecution focused mostly on Serageddin s rise to power within the Wafd and the his personal failings in the 1950 government Serageddin s rivals the who s who of Egypt s liberal government took the stand to air out personal grievances Witnesses included former prime ministers Naguib al Hilali Hussein Sirri Ali Maher Mohammed Hussein Heikal and Makram Ebeid In his defence Serageddin positioned himself as a proud nationalist citing his order to the Ismalia police not to surrender their weapons in 1951 In the end he received a fifteen year sentence but was released in 1956 88 When political parties were banned RCC formed the Liberation Rally a movement that would subsume all of the preexisting political movements While it was effective at rallies and speeches it did not have the same institutional power as the Brotherhood Wafd or DMNL The rally remained as a tool for the officers because of lack of enrollment of the other power brokers in Egypt s political arena In opposition to the new constitution with its overt secularism was the Muslim Brotherhood Additionally contrary to orders issued by the council members of the Liberation Rally accumulated much of the seized non Muslim property and distributed it amongst their closed networks Angered at being left out of the political and economic spoils and seeing a continuation of secularism and modernity within the Free Officers Movement such as had existed under the King the Muslim Brotherhood organized its street elements From June 1953 into the following year Egypt was wracked by street riots clashes arson and civil tumult as the regime and the Muslim Brotherhood battled for popular support Anti leftist crackdown edit Relations between the RCC and the DMNL were established before the coup DMNL leader Ahmad Hamrush met with Nasser on July 22 and charged him with mobilizing loyal troops in Alexandria 89 The DMNL had connections within the military establishment with around sixty seventy officers in the military wing including Khaled Mohieddin Ahmad Hamrush leader of the military wing of the DMNL was not a member of the Free Officers but was given advance knowledge of the coup later sharing it with the rest of the DMNL 90 The first clash between the officers and the labor movement started only a month after the coup In the city of Kafr al Dawar local workers went on strike for higher wages paid leave an independent elected union and the dismissal of two members of the managerial staff 91 Ten thousand workers in the city were on strike shouting slogans in praise of Mohammed Naguib The workers burned the homes of company police destroyed employee files in company offices and medical facilities and smashed equipment used to test productivity 92 93 94 The police were called surrounding the factory the clash between the workers and police left many injured and a few dead 95 Naguib met with Mustafa al Khamis one of the leaders of the strike and offered him a lesser punishment if he were to give the name of fellow workers He refused and was hanged to death on factory grounds as long with co conspirator Ahmad al Bakri on September 7 1952 96 His last words were I was wronged I want a re trial 97 98 The RCC was convinced that the strike was inspired from outside forces though there is no evidence that the DMNL ordered the riot 99 100 The Egyptian Communist Party ECP opposed the military only a week after the coup The ECP soon dubbed the army the great deception after it failed to put the king on trial failed to immediately abolish the monarchy and failed to immediately restore political rights 101 Co founder of the party Ismail Sabri Abdullah remarked We were confused first because of two contradicting things We thought that objectively the overthrow of the King was something very positive but due to our political education we believed that nothing good and durable could come from the army The army was a tool of oppression conservative by definition and to us there was nothing that could be called a progressive coup d etat We were against coups We were for revolution In the first days our position was ambiguous saluting the overthrow of the King but asking the military to fraternize with the population and form neighborhood committees and village committees of workers and soldiers Then there was a strike at Kafr al Dawwar The army intervened and two leaders of the strike were hanged Then we said that this is a fascist regime 102 The DMNL the largest of the leftist parties was firmly against the RCC after the banning of political parties in early 1953 Public demonstrators at college campuses were detained at the military academy until they learned how to behave 103 As early as late 1952 a communist Wafd coalition in a college student election defeated the Muslim Brotherhood which was then supported by the RCC 104 A wave of anti communists arrests continued throughout 1953 1954 During a trial of ECP members on July 27 1953 Mahmud Ghannam the assistant secretary to the Wafd was chief council for the defence even demanding to subpoena Nasser Naguib and other RCC members to question them on why the defendants should be charged for distributing leaflets when the Free Officers also distributed leaflets before the coup The officers did not accept this challenge The court later heard testimony from the Grand Mufti of Egypt who denounced communism as anti religion and subservise 105 While the DMNL tried to create a united front with the remains of the Wafd this was not seriously materialized Student protests continued well into the summer of 1954 106 1954 edit In January the Muslim Brotherhood was outlawed It remained an illegal political organization until the revolution of 2011 citation needed The move came in the wake of clashes between members of the Brotherhood and Liberation Rally student demonstrators on 12 January 1954 March witnessed clashes within the RCC symbolized in the ultimately successful attempt to oust Naguib The move faced opposition from within the army and some members of the RCC especially Khaled Mohieddin favored a return to constitutional government On 26 October an assassination attempt suspected by the Brotherhood was directed at Nasser during a rally in Alexandria This led to the regime acting against the Brotherhood executing Brotherhood leaders on 9 December Nasser subsequently cemented power first becoming chairman of the RCC and finally prime minister with Naguib s constitutional position remaining vague until 14 November when he was dismissed from office and placed under house arrest Meanwhile the RCC managed to remain united in its opposition to the British and French specifically in regard to the Suez Canal Despite continued calls from the RCC in debates in the United Nations and pressure from both the U S and USSR citation needed the British refused to transfer control of the Canal to the new regime The RCC began funding and coordinating ever greater attacks on the British and French in the Suez Canal Zone and Damietta Finally on 19 October Nasser signed a treaty for the evacuation of British troops from Egypt to be completed over the following 20 months Two years later on 18 June 1956 Nasser raised the Egyptian flag over the Canal Zone announcing the complete evacuation of British troops 1956 edit President Nasser announced a new Constitution on 16 January at a popular rally setting up a presidential system of government in which the president has the power to appoint and dismiss ministers An elections law was passed on 3 March granting women the right to vote for the first time in Egyptian history Nasser was elected as the second president of the Republic on 23 June In 1957 Nasser announced the formation of the National Union Al Ittihad Al Qawmi paving the way to July elections for the National Assembly the first parliament since 1952 Commemoration editThe anniversary of the revolution is commemorated on Revolution Day an annual public holiday in Egypt on 23 July See also edit nbsp Egypt portal nbsp Politics portalProject FF Nasserism Egyptian Revolution of 1919 2011 Egyptian revolution June 2013 Egyptian protests History of modern Egypt List of modern conflicts in the Middle East List of Chiefs of the General Staff of EgyptReferences edit Wilford Hugh 2013 America s Great Game The CIA s Secret Arabists and the Making of the Modern Middle East Basic Books pp 135 139 ISBN 978 0465019656 whether or not the CIA dealt directly with the Free Officers prior to their July 1952 coup there was extensive secret American Egyptian contact in the months after the revolution Egypt as Recipient of Soviet Aid 1955 1970 Karel Holbik and Edward Drachman Zeitschrift fur die gesamte Staatswissenschaft Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics Bd 127 H 1 January 1971 pp 137 165 a b Stenner David 2019 Globalizing Morocco Stanford University Press doi 10 1515 9781503609006 ISBN 978 1 5036 0900 6 S2CID 239343404 Military seizes power in Egypt 1952 The revolution and the Republic T R L 1954 Egypt since the Coup d Etat of 1952 The World Today 10 4 140 149 JSTOR 40392721 Matthew Holland 1996 America and Egypt From Roosevelt to Eisenhower United States Praeger p 27 ISBN 0 275 95474 9 Gordon 1992 Lahav Pnina July 2015 The Suez Crisis of 1956 and its Aftermath A Comparative Study of Constitutions Use of Force Diplomacy and International Relations Boston University Law Review 95 4 15 50 Chin John J Wright Joseph Carter David B 13 December 2022 Historical Dictionary of Modern Coups D etat Rowman amp Littlefield p 790 ISBN 978 1 5381 2068 2 Rezk Dina 2017 The Arab world and Western intelligence analysing the Middle East 1956 1981 Intelligence surveillance and secret warfare Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 9891 2 Hanna Sami A Gardner George H 1969 Arab Socialism al Ishtirakiyah Al ʻArabiyah A Documentary Survey University of Utah Press ISBN 978 0 87480 056 2 Abd El Nasser Gamal 1954 The Philosophy of the Revolution Cairo Dar Al Maaref Babar Sadia 2022 07 23 Egypt celebrates 70th anniversary of Revolution Day The Diplomatic Insight Retrieved 2023 08 27 Egypt Muhammad Ali 1805 48 countrystudies us Retrieved 2023 11 01 Egypt Social Change in the Nineteenth Century countrystudies us Retrieved 2023 11 01 Hunter Frederick R 1999 The Dismantling of Khedivial Absolutism Egypt under the Khedives 1805 1879 from household government to modern bureaucracy 1 publ ed Cairo American University in Cairo Press pp 179 226 ISBN 978 977 424 544 2 Vatikiotis Panayiotis J 1992 Modern education and the first Egyptian intellectuals The history of modern Egypt from Muhammad Ali to Mubarak 4th ed 2 printing ed Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press pp 90 123 ISBN 978 0 8018 4215 3 Ryzova Lucie 2014 01 30 The Age of the Efendiyya Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199681778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 968177 8 ʿAli Pasha Mubarak Egyptian statesman reformer amp educator Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2023 11 01 Shouman Mariam Ahmad 1999 06 01 Ali Pasha Mubarak s Philosophy of Education and its Relationship to the Emergence of a Modern Bureaucracy in Egypt Archived Theses and Dissertations Tignor Robert July 1980 The Economic Activities of Foreigners in Egypt 1920 1950 From Millet to Haute Bourgeoisie Comparative Studies in Society and History 22 3 416 449 doi 10 1017 S0010417500009427 ISSN 0010 4175 Hoyle Mark S W 1986 The Mixed Courts of Egypt 1875 1885 Arab Law Quarterly 1 4 436 451 doi 10 2307 3381423 ISSN 0268 0556 JSTOR 3381423 Viceroy Monarchy Colonialism amp Representation Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2023 11 01 Booth Marilyn Gorman Anthony 2014 The long 1890s in Egypt colonial quiescence subterranean resistance Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 7012 3 Mitchell Timothy 2003 Colonising Egypt Repr ed Berkeley Calif Univ of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07568 9 Scholch Alexander 1981 Egypt for the Egyptians the socio political crisis in Egypt 1878 1882 St Antony s Middle East monographs 1st ed London Published for the Middle East Centre St Antony s College Oxford by Ithaca Press ISBN 978 0 903729 82 6 Blaustein Albert P Sigler Jay A Beede Benjamin R eds 1977 Independence Documents of the World Vol 1 Dobbs Ferry NY Oceana Publications pp 204 205 ISBN 978 0 379 00794 7 Archives The National 2022 03 17 The National Archives 100 years ago Egypt is declared to be an independent sovereign State The National Archives blog Retrieved 2023 11 01 Botman 1991 pp 5 6 Ghazi Aly Afify Aly 2013 Egypt s 1923 Constitution A Constitution of National Unity Tabayyun in Arabic 1 3 109 122 ISSN 2305 2465 Whidden James 2013 Monarchy and modernity in Egypt politics Islam and neo colonialism between the wars Library of Middle East history London GB I B Tauris pp 25 26 ISBN 978 1 84885 706 3 Terry 1982 pp 208 209 The first generation of Wafdist leaders were then a closely inter related group of landed aristocrats and wealthy professionals who believed the time had come for them to assume control over an independent Egyptian nation They were committed to Parliamentary democratic forms on western models but wanted to save the existing capitalist structures which they anticipated dominating The Wafd secured massive popular support not because its leaders offered the people radical societal changes but because it focused its efforts towards ousting the British The British were viewed as the primary enemy Once they were removed from Egyptian soil then the far more complicated task of creating new internal structures could begin In some respects the Wafd was fortunate that the British proved such stubborn opponents for as long as the British remained the focal point of hostilities the Wafd was not under heavy pressure to formulate a domestic program for development On the other hand the lack of such a program gradually eroded much popular commitment to the Wafd which was increasingly riddled with internal rivalries and charges of corruption Gradually the Wafd was to become another symbol of the irrelevant and politically bankrupt Egyptian government which neither answered the needs of the people nor ousted the British imperial power Goldberg Ellis 1986 Tinker tailor and textile worker class and politics in Egypt 1930 1952 Berkeley London University of California press ISBN 978 0 520 05353 3 Convention Regarding Abolition of Capitulations in Egypt The American Journal of International Law 34 4 201 225 1940 doi 10 2307 2213462 ISSN 0002 9300 JSTOR 2213462 P E 1937 The Abolition of the Capitulatory Regime in Egypt Bulletin of International News 13 24 3 7 ISSN 2044 3986 JSTOR 25639661 Warburg Gabriel 1975 Lampson s Ultimatum to Faruq 4 February 1942 Middle Eastern Studies 11 1 24 32 ISSN 0026 3206 JSTOR 4282554 Botman 1991 p 46 Botman 1991 p 58 The Egyptian Jewels of King Farouk Farouking Fabulous www gemselect com Retrieved 2023 11 01 Abdalla 1985 1946 The Climax Botman 1991 p 47 Essentially after the termination of press censorship and the abolition of martial law in August 1945 the clamor for independence began immediately In December 1945 Prime Minister alNuqrashi called for fresh negotiations with the British but an acceptable agreement was not forthcoming In response to the seeming futility of the negotiation process demonstrations were staged in Cairo Alexandria and the provinces in early February 1946 On February 9 students called a massive strike They massed by the thousands and marched from the university grounds in Giza toward Abdin Palace chanting Evacuation No negotiation except after evacuation TIMES Special to THE NEW YORK 1946 10 19 Egypt s Strategic Status Surveyed in Talks Between Bevin and Sidky Pasha at London The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 11 01 Terry 1982 p 297 McNamara Robert 2004 Britain Nasser And The Balance Of Power In The Middle East 1952 1977 Taylor amp Francis Group pp 17 18 ISBN 9780203495308 Slonim Shlomo 1987 Origins of the 1950 Tripartite Declaration on the Middle East Middle Eastern Studies 23 2 137 ISSN 0026 3206 JSTOR 4283168 14 Anglo Egyptian Sudan 1922 1956 uca edu Retrieved 2023 11 01 Ginat Rami 2007 Egypt s Efforts to Unite the Nile Valley Diplomacy and Propaganda 1945 47 Middle Eastern Studies 43 2 193 222 ISSN 0026 3206 JSTOR 4284537 Eppel Michael 2012 The Arab States and the 1948 War in Palestine The Socio Political Struggles the Compelling Nationalist Discourse and the Regional Context of Involvement Middle Eastern Studies 48 1 1 8 ISSN 0026 3206 JSTOR 23217085 Morgan David Sunday Times Reporter Interview with President Gamal Abdel Nasser nasser bibalex org Retrieved 2023 11 01 Gordon 1989 Gordon 1989 p 198 Gordon 1992 p 24 Gordon 1989 p 208 The tragedy of Mustafa al Nahhas and it is the tragedy of his generation is that after years of struggle his political vision remained frozen in the past Old wounds still festered Banishment from the power that should rightfully been theirs fostered a refusal to countenance dissent within party ranks tolerance for corruption and most damning in 1950 a willingness to compromise ideals in order to rule Stubbornness and intolerance characterized Wafdist leadership throughout the parliamentary era but by 1950 the stakes were greater and demands for power sharing within the party louder and more compelling The Nahhas Sirag al Din policy of appeasing the Palace a cynical pose deliberately adopted to cool royal tempers and prevent a precipitate break in relations served its purpose in the short run By defending Palace interests however the Wafd cheapened its own image even as it prolonged its hold on power Nahhas and his colleagues may have considered the cost a small price to pay Terry 1982 pp 300 301 MilitaryHistoryOnline com Egypt s Canal Zone Guerrillas The Liberation Battalions and Auxiliary Police 1951 1954 www militaryhistoryonline com Retrieved 2023 11 01 Abdalla 1985 pp 78 79 a b Mason Michael 1993 The decisive volley The battle of Ismailia and the decline of British influence in Egypt January July 1952 The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 19 1 45 64 doi 10 1080 03086539108582828 ISSN 0308 6534 Countries E rulers org Retrieved 2023 11 01 Gordon 1992 p 34 Gordon 1992 p 35 Gordon 1992 p 36 Gordon 1992 p 41 Sadat 1978 p 16 Sadat 1978 pp 17 41 Gordon 1992 p 12 The Free Officers were not ideologues Their ideology to the extent they had one reflected general views of nationalism and social reformism that crossed all political lines views shared by a generation that had grown disaffected from the country s political elders Despite organizational links to Muslim Brotherhood and communist cells in the military their movement since its founding in late 1949 remained fiercely independent Gordon 1992 p 50 Aburish 2004 p 38 Gordon 1992 p 48 Copeland 1970 p 65 Aburish 2004 p 51 57 a b Gordon 1992 p 52 Ibrahim Sammar Profile Anwar Al Sadat Archived 25 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine Egypt State Information Service Retrieved 20 July 2008 Tarek Osman 2010 Egypt on the Brink Yale University Press p 40 Hilton Proctor Goss and Charles Marion Thomas American Foreign Policy in Growth and Action 3rd ed Documentary Research Division Research Studies Institute Air University 1959 p 273 Gordon 1992 p 60 Gordon 1992 p 61 Botman 1988 p 116 Gordon 1992 p 62 Gordon 1992 p 65 Gordon 1992 p 66 Gordon 1992 p 67 Ketchley Neil Wenig Gilad 2024 Purging to Transform the Post Colonial State Evidence From the 1952 Egyptian Revolution Comparative Political Studies doi 10 1177 00104140231209966 ISSN 0010 4140 a b Gordon 1992 p 167 Gordon 1992 p 73 Gordon 1992 p 68 78 Gordon 1992 p 84 Gordon 1992 p 85 91 Gordon 1992 p 55 Botman 1988 p 119 Beinin amp Lockman 1988 pp 419 431 Gordon 1992 pp 62 63 TIMES Special to THE NEW YORK 1952 08 22 EGYPT TO SENTENCE RIOTERS TOMORROW The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 11 13 NEW RIOTING IN EGYPT 12 Dead 200 Hurt in Clash Stern Warning Barrier Miner 1952 08 14 Retrieved 2023 11 13 Botman 1986 pp 355 358 Botman 1988 pp 125 130 Ide Derek November 2015 From Kafr al Dawwar to Kharga s Desert Hell Camp the repression of Communist workers in Egypt 1952 1965 International Journal on Strikes and Social Conflicts 1 7 55 via Academia edu Beinin amp Lockman 1988 p 423 Botman 1988 p 130 Foreign Relations of the United States 1952 1954 The Near and Middle East Volume IX Part 2 eds Paul Claussen Joan M Lee Carl N Raether John P Glennon United States Government Printing Office 1986 Egypt Document 1002 Gordon 1992 p 94 Botman 1986 p 354 Gordon 1992 p 79 Gordon 1992 p 75 Gordon 1992 p 96 Cook Steven A 2012 The struggle for Egypt from Nasser to Tahrir Square New York Oxford university press pp 80 81 ISBN 978 0 19 979526 0 Immediately following the coup university students pledged support for the Officers Despite this Egypt s new leadership was unable to translate the early support of Egyptian campuses into an asset that it could leverage to its advantage against the regime s opponents Indeed as the Officers sought to consolidate their power and repress competing political factions student opposition grew While students like virtually all Egyptians shared the Officers goals many were opposed to a military dictatorship Student activists at the time of the coup had come of age during the parliamentary period and thus believed in the virtues of civilian rule and democracy As a result the students at Cairo University reversed their support for the regime and established a front to oppose military rule This is not to suggest that the regime s support on campuses dissipated completely The Youth Bureau of the Liberation Rally which was established in 1953 maintained a following for the new regime but like the Rally itself there was a distinctly contrived nature to the group In reality the Youth Bureau consisted of government sanctioned thugs who sought to intimidate student Wafdists Muslim Brothers and leftists In order to keep the universities in line the RCC employed a combination of what was called the University Guard policemen stationed in each university department the Ministry of Interior s state security agents the military police and informants within the student body faculty and administrators to complement the activities of the Youth Rally These repressive measures kept student opposition activists under constant surveillance and threat Even so the students proved to be tenacious At Cairo University for example student opponents of the regime continued to battle for months after their adult counterparts succumbed to the Free Officers drive to consolidate their power in March 1954 Indeed the RCC was unable to pacify the university until well into that summer Bibliography editWatry David M 2014 Diplomacy at the Brink Eisenhower Churchill and Eden in the Cold War Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press ISBN 9780807157190 Gordon Joel 2006 Nasser Hero of the Arab Nation Oneworld Publications ISBN 9781851684113 Aburish Said K 2004 Nasser The Last Arab St Martin s Press ISBN 9780312286835 Mitchell Richard P 1993 The Society of the Muslim Brothers Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195084375 Gordon Joel 1992 Nasser s Blessed Movement Egypt s Free Officers and the July Revolution PDF 1st ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195069358 Botman Selma 1991 Egypt from independence to revolution 1919 1952 Contemporary issues in the Middle East Syracuse N Y Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 2530 8 Gordon Joel 1989 The False Hopes of 1950 The Wafd s Last Hurrah and the Demise of Egypt s Old Order International Journal of Middle East Studies 21 2 193 214 ISSN 0020 7438 JSTOR 163074 Botman Selma 1988 The Rise of Egyptian Communism 1939 1970 Syracuse University Press ISBN 9780815624431 Beinin Joel Lockman Zachary 1988 Workers on the Nile Nationalism Communism Islam and the Egyptian Working Class 1882 1954 1st ed Princeton University Press ISBN 9781850430766 Botman Selma July 1986 Egyptian Communists and the Free Officers 1950 54 Middle Eastern Studies 22 3 350 366 JSTOR 4283127 via JSTOR Terry Janice J 1982 The Wafd 1919 1952 Cornerstone of Egyptian political power 1st ed Third World Centre for Research and Pub ISBN 9780861990009 Abdalla Ahmed 1985 The Student Movement and national politics in Egypt 1923 1973 Al Saqi books London Al Saqi Books ISBN 978 0 86356 117 7 Sadat Anwar as 1978 In search of identity an autobiography 1st ed New York Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 013742 7 Copeland Miles 1970 The Game of Nations The Amorality of Power Politics Simon and Schuster ISBN 9780671205324 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1952 Egyptian revolution Egyptian revolution 25 01 11 The Long Revolution Archived 2005 12 12 at the Wayback Machine Egyptian Royalty by Ahmed S Kamel Hassan Kamel Kelisli Morali Georges Soliman and Magda Malek L Egypte d antan Egypt in Bygone Days Archived 2019 05 22 at the Wayback Machine by Max Karkegi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1952 Egyptian Revolution amp oldid 1201777568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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