On 23 September 1945, after the end of
World War II, the Egyptian government demanded the modification of the treaty to terminate the British military presence, and also to allow the annexation of the
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. In 1946, Britain agreed to withdraw all remaining troops in Egypt into the Suez Canal Zone. Following the Wafd Party's victory in the boycotted
1950 election of Egypt, the new Wafd government unilaterally abrogated the treaty on October 15th 1951. Three years later, and with new government leadership under
Gamal Abdel Nasser, the UK agreed to withdraw its troops in the
Anglo–Egyptian Agreement of 1954; the British withdrawal was completed in June 1956. This date is seen as when Egypt gained full independence, although Nasser had already established an
independent foreign policy that caused tension with several
Western powers. Following the abrupt withdrawal of an offer by
Britain and the
United States to fund the building of the
Aswan Dam, Egypt nationalised the
Suez Canal on 26 July 1956, ostensibly to pay for the dam, although in reality the Soviets provided most of the funding. The nationalization was technically in violation of the international agreement that Nasser had signed on 19 October 1954, although he agreed to pay compensation to the shareholders. Some months later,
France,
Israel and Britain
colluded to overthrow Nasser, and the
Suez Crisis ensued. After international pressure and threats from the 2 new superpowers (the United States and the USSR), Britain, France and Israel were all forced to withdraw from Egypt, and the canal remained under Egyptian control. == Sources ==