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Suez crisis
The Suez Crisis was a British-French-Israeli invasion of Egypt in 1956, prompted by Israel's objective to re-open the Straits of Tiran and the Gulf of Aqaba, and the UK and France's desire to depose Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser and regain control of the Suez Canal, which Nasser had nationalized. The invasion was met with heavy political pressure from the US, the Soviet Union, and the United Nations, leading to the withdrawal of the three countries from Egypt. The crisis resulted in the closure of the Suez Canal, the strengthening of Nasser's standing, and the international humiliation of the UK and France, marking the end of Britain's role as a world superpower and the beginning of the US and USSR's dominance in the Cold War.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.Israel-Palestine Conflict
- 3.British Foreign Policy
- 4.Israel Foreign Policy
- 5.Israel under Benjamin Netanyahu
- 6.2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel
- 7.Iran Foreign Policy
- 8.Ethnic tensions
- 9.French Foreign Policy
- 10.Israel-Lebanese Hezbollah Conflict
- 11.Espionage
- 12.Italian Foreign Policy
countries
- 1.Japan
- 2.Jordan
- 3.Iran, Islamic Republic of
- 4.Iraq
- 5.India
- 6.Israel
- 7.United Kingdom
- 8.Yemen
- 9.Egypt
- 10.Germany
- 11.Cyprus
- 12.China
organizations
- 1.Hamas
- 2.UN Interim Force in Lebanon
- 3.Chatham House
- 4.Centre for Conflict and Humanitarian Studies
- 5.Center for Strategic and International Studies
- 6.Carnegie Middle East Center
- 7.British International Institute for Strategic Studies
- 8.British Foreign Office
- 9.British Armed Forces
- 10.Black September
- 11.Baabda
- 12.Amal Movement
persons
- 1.Benjamin Netanyahu
- 2.Donald Trump
- 3.Masoud Pezeshkian
- 4.Hossein Ahmed Ismail
- 5.Cherine Yazbeck
- 6.Che Guevara
- 7.Celine Ghattas
- 8.Cedomir Nestorovic
- 9.Burcu Ozcelik
- 10.Ben Hubbard
- 11.Ben Gurion
- 12.Bashar Al-Assad