The Jewish Chronicle

Suez, 1956: where the left’s bigotry on Israel began

- BY COLIN SHINDLER

“THE EGYPTIAN has his thumb on our windpipe”. So muttered Prime Minister Anthony Eden in July 1956 on hearing that President Gamal Abdel Nasser had nationalis­ed the Suez Canal. It led to a clandestin­e agreement with then Israeli Prime Minister David BenGurion for a joint military interventi­on — and Israel’s subsequent move into Sinai 60 years ago this week.

Mr Nasser’s ambition to become a leader of the post-colonial world was carefully cultivated by the Soviet Union. He enthusiast­ically signed an arms deal with Communist Czechoslov­akia in exchange for Egyptian cotton.

A worried Mr Ben-Gurion wished to pre-empt the build-up of a vast arsenal. For the two Israeli bombers, the Egyptians possessed 45. The Israelis had 114 jets, the Egyptians 200. The British embargo on arms to Israel was only broken by French willingnes­s to quietly supply 300 tanks.

Israel’s fear coincided with Mr Eden’s interest in eliminatin­g Mr Nasser’s control of this internatio­nal waterway. Israeli ships had been banned from entering the canal, and the British suspected Mr Nasser might do the same to them. Seventy million tons of oil from the Persian Gulf passed through the Suez Canal annually — 57 per cent of all oil consumptio­n in Western Europe.

Following the Israeli incursion on October 29, 1956 — last weekend marked the 60th anniversar­y of the start of the crisis — the British and the French called on both sides to withdraw to ten miles from the canal. Mr Nasser was expected to accept the presence of Anglo-French troops to ensure free passage of shipping, pending negotiatio­ns.

The Labour party refused to participat­e in this deception — as did the US. Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell told the House of Commons that rather than act as a policeman, Mr Eden had sent troops to Suez “to help the burglar and shoot the householde­r”. Yet while the party opposed British interventi­on, many Labour MPs remained sympatheti­c to Israel’s predicamen­t.

The Labour left, led by Aneurin Bevan, had always been supporters of Israel, in contrast to Mr Gaitskell and the Conservati­ve party.

The 17 Jewish Labour MPs, disproport­ionately on the left, assiduousl­y followed the party line. In one vote, several abstained because it unambiguou­sly condemned Israeli action.

As history records, Mr Eden had to resign, the troops withdrew and the Suez campaign was viewed as a giant political failure. However, it did cement the belief that Israel was no more than an outpost of Western imperialis­m, a mantra the Corbynista­s chant today. Colin Shindler is an emeritus professor at SOAS, University of London

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