The conflict resulted in a military victory for the Coalition, but a political victory for Egypt.
Israel In the context of the
massive armament of Egypt via Czechoslovakia, Israel had been expecting an Egyptian invasion in either March or April 1957, as well as a Soviet invasion of Syria, neither of which occurred after this war. The fight over the canal also laid the groundwork for the
Six-Day War in 1967 due to the lack of a peace settlement following the 1956 war and rising of tensions between Egypt and Israel. The Israel Defense Forces gained confidence from the campaign. . The
Straits of Tiran, closed by Egypt since 1950, were re-opened to Israeli shipping. The Israelis also secured the presence of UN Peacekeepers in Sinai. Operation Kadesh bought Israel an eleven-year lull on its southern border with Egypt. In addition, its refusal to withdraw without guarantees, even in defiance of the United States and United Nations, ended all Western efforts, mainly American and British ones, to impose a political settlement in the Middle East without taking Israel's security needs into consideration. In October 1965 Eisenhower told Jewish fundraiser and Republican party supporter
Max M. Fisher that he greatly regretted forcing Israel to withdraw from the Sinai peninsula.
Nikita Khrushchev's much publicised threat expressed through letters written by
Nikolai Bulganin to begin rocket attacks on 5 November on Britain, France, and Israel if they did not withdraw from Egypt was widely believed at the time to have forced a ceasefire. Accordingly, it enhanced the prestige of the Soviet Union in Egypt, the Arab world, and the Third World, who believed the USSR was prepared to launch a
nuclear attack on Britain, France, and Israel for the sake of Egypt. Though Nasser in private admitted that it was American economic pressure that had saved him, it was Khrushchev, not Eisenhower, whom Nasser publicly thanked as Egypt's saviour and special friend. Shortly after it reopened, the canal was traversed by the first
Soviet Navy warships since
World War I. The Soviets' burgeoning influence in the Middle East, although it was not to last, included acquiring Mediterranean bases, and supporting the budding
Palestinian liberation movement. , a Frenchman who was lead developer in the construction of the Suez Canal, being removed following the nationalisation of the Suez Canal in 1956 Khrushchev took the view that the Suez crisis had been a great triumph for Soviet nuclear
brinkmanship, arguing publicly and privately that his threat to use nuclear weapons was what had saved Egypt. Therefore, a long period of crises began, starting with the
Berlin crisis, beginning later in November 1958, and culminating in the
Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. The Soviet Union was able to avoid most repercussions from its concurrent violent suppression of the
rebellion in Hungary, and were able to present an image at the United Nations as a defender of small powers against
imperialism.
United States The crisis may also have hastened
decolonisation, as many of the remaining British and French colonies gained independence over the next few years. Some argued that the imposed ending to the Crisis led to over-hasty
decolonisation in Africa, increasing the chance of civil wars and military dictatorships in newly independent countries. US secretary of state
John Foster Dulles perceived a
power vacuum in the Middle East, and he thought the United States should fill it. In order to prevent further Soviet expansion in the region, Eisenhower asked Congress on 5 January 1957 for authorisation to use military force if requested by any Middle Eastern nation to check aggression and, secondly, to set aside $200 million to help Middle Eastern countries that desired aid from the United States. Congress granted both requests and this policy became known as the
Eisenhower Doctrine. The American historian
Arthur L. Herman said that the episode ruined the usefulness of the United Nations to support American geopolitical aims.
Europe The Bulganin letters showcased Europe's dependence upon the United States for security against Soviet nuclear threats while at the same time seeming to show that the American nuclear umbrella was not as reliable as had been advertised. As a result, the French became determined to acquire their own nuclear weapons rather than rely upon the Americans, while Germany became even more interested in the idea of a European "Third Force" in the Cold War. This helped to lead to the formation of the
European Economic Community, which was intended to be the foundation of the European "Third Force".
Egypt (left) and Gamal Abdel Nasser (right) clasp hands in front of jubilant crowds in
Damascus days after the union of Syria and Egypt into the
United Arab Republic, 1958 Egypt kept control of the Suez Canal. The British historian
D. R. Thorpe wrote that the outcome gave Nasser "an inflated view of his own power", thinking he had overcome the combined forces of the United Kingdom, France and Israel, failing to attribute their withdrawal to pressure from the superpowers. American historian Derek Varble commented, "Although Egyptian forces fought with mediocre skill during the conflict, many Arabs saw Nasser as the conqueror of European colonialism and Zionism, simply because Britain, France and Israel left the Sinai and the northern Canal Zone."
Crackdown on Egyptian Jews In October 1956, Nasser brought in a set of sweeping regulations abolishing civil liberties and allowing the state to stage mass arrests without charge and strip away
Egyptian citizenship from any group it desired; these measures were mostly directed against the
Jews of Egypt. As part of its new policy, 1,000 Jews were arrested and 500 Jewish businesses were seized by the government. A statement branding the Jews as "Zionists and enemies of the state" was read out in the mosques of Cairo and Alexandria. Jewish bank accounts were confiscated and many Jews lost their jobs. Lawyers, engineers, doctors and teachers were not allowed to work in their professions. Thousands of Jews were ordered to leave the country. They were allowed to take only one suitcase and a small sum of cash, and forced to sign declarations "donating" their property to the Egyptian government. Some 25,000 Jews, almost half of the Jewish community, left Egypt, mainly for Israel, Europe, the United States and South America. By 1957, the Jewish population of Egypt had fallen to 15,000.
Britain , 1960 The political and psychological impact of the crisis had a fundamental impact on
British politics.
Anthony Eden was accused of misleading parliament and resigned from office on 9 January 1957. Though British influence continued in the Middle East, Suez was a blow to British prestige in the Near East from which the country never recovered. Britain evacuated all positions
East of Suez by 1971, though this was due mainly to economic factors. Eden's successor, Harold Macmillan, accelerated the process of decolonisation and sought to restore Britain's special relationship with the United States. Benefiting from his personal popularity and a healthy economy, Macmillan's government increased its Parliamentary majority in the
1959 general election. In 1973, Prime Minister
Edward Heath refused the US permission to use any of the UK's air bases to resupply during the
Yom Kippur War, or to allow the Americans to gather intelligence from
British bases in Cyprus. However, the British relationship with the United States did not suffer lasting consequences from the crisis. The
Sputnik Crisis, combined with Britain's first
hydrogen bomb test
Operation Grapple both of which took place the following year, led to the
1958 US–UK Mutual Defence Agreement. Six years after the crisis, the Americans sold Britain state-of-the-art missile technology at a moderate cost, which became the
UK Polaris programme. The war led to the eviction of
GCHQ from several of its best foreign
signals intelligence collection sites.
France Risse-Kappen argued that
Franco-American ties never recovered from the Suez crisis. Previously there had already been strains in the Franco-American relationship triggered by what Paris considered US betrayal of the French war effort in Indochina in 1954. From the point of view of General
Charles de Gaulle, the Suez events demonstrated to France that it could not rely on its allies. The British had initiated a ceasefire in the midst of the battle without consulting the French, while the Americans had opposed Paris politically. The damage to the ties between Paris and Washington, D.C., "culminated in President de Gaulle's 1966 decision to withdraw from the military integration of NATO". The crisis also galvanised France to accelerate its
own nuclear weapons program in the hope of returning to a global power. The following year French president
René Coty decided on the creation of the
C.S.E.M., a new nuclear testing facility in the then
French Sahara.
Gerboise Bleue was successfully tested in 1960. Much of the French Army officer corps felt that they had been "betrayed" by politicians in Paris when they were on the verge of victory, just as they believed they had been "betrayed" in Vietnam in 1954, and accordingly became more determined to win the war in Algeria, even if it meant overthrowing the
Fourth Republic to do so. The Suez crisis thus helped to set the stage for the military disillusionment with the Fourth Republic, which was to lead to the
collapse of the republic in 1958.
Canada Lester B. Pearson, who would later become the
prime minister of Canada, was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize in 1957 for his efforts in creating a mandate for a United Nations Peacekeeping Force, and he is considered the father of the modern concept of
peacekeeping. The Suez Crisis contributed to the adoption of a new national
flag of Canada in 1965, as the Egyptian government had objected to
Canadian peacekeeping troops on the grounds that their flag at that time included a
British ensign.
Military thought The military lesson that was reinforced by the Suez War was the extent that the desert favoured highly fluid, mobile operations and the power of aerial interdiction. To operate in the open desert without air supremacy proved to be suicidal for the Egyptian forces in the Sinai. The Royal Marine helicopter assault at Port Said "showed promise as a technique for transporting troops into small landing zones". Egyptian urban warfare tactics at Port Said proved to be effective at slowing down the Allied advance. == See also ==