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Ismail's son Tewfiq Pasha reformed the
Egyptian economy and relinquished
financial control to the British who began
to run the government of the country.
Egyptian nationalists, horrified at
Tewfiq's submission to the British, forced
him to appoint their leader Ahmed
Orabi as
Minister of War, but the European reaction
was swift and violent. Alexandria was
shelled and Ismailiyya occupied.
Orabi's
army was defeated at Tel
El Kabir
and the British reinstalled Tewfiq as a
puppet. Orabi
was driven into exile and Mustafa
Kamil
became the leader of the nationalist
movement.
British influence over Egypt continued to
increase. The country became an economic
colony, totally dependent upon the import
of British manufactured goods and the
export of its raw cotton.
The outbreak of the World War I brought
Egypt formally into the British Empire as
a Protectorate when the Ottoman Sultan
declared his support for the Germans
against the allies. During the war Fouad,
the sixth son of Khedive Ismail, had
become Khedive of Egypt but his authority
was to be constantly challenged by
Egyptian nationalists who fed on the
popular resentment of foreign domination.
Sa'ad Zaghloul was the leader of the
nationalist movement during and after the
first war and in
1918 he formally presented the
British High Commissioner with a demand
for complete autonomy which was rejected
out of hand. Zaghloul's eventual arrest
and deportation to Malta resulted in
widespread
anti-British riots, forcing the
British to back down.
In 1922
the British ended the protectorate and
recognized Egypt's independence, while
maintaining control over the essential
government institutions and the Suez
Canal. Fouad was proclaimed King of Egypt
in March of the same year.
The years that followed were characterized
by a triangular power struggle between the
British, the King and the nationalist Wafd
party which had the support of the
population.
Farouk, the son of King Fouad, ascended
the Egyptian throne in
1935. In
the beginning, the reign of King Farouk
was greeted with enthusiasm by both the
Wafd party and by the rapidly growing
Muslim Brotherhood. Farouk was, amazingly,
the first Egyptian ruler of the
descendants of Mohammed Ali Pasha to speak
fluent Arabic. Turkish had been the court
language of all his predecessors.
Moreover.
Farouk seemed to have nationalist
sympathies. The young ruler was,
unfortunately, too weak to defy the
British. Within a year he had signed the
Anglo-Egyptian Treaty which gave British
forces the right to remain in the Suez
Canal Zone while ostensibly ending the
British occupation of Egypt.
With the outbreak of World War II, the
Wafd Party threw its support behind the
allies on the understanding that Egypt
would gain full independence once the war
was over. But hatred towards the British
rule was so intense by this time that
clandestine support for the Germans
existed in nationalist factions like the
Muslim Brotherhood.
Egypt became a major strategic asset and
base of operations during World War II.
Cairo and Alexandria were filled with
soldiers, spies, political exiles and
government leaders. The decisive battle in
the North African campaign was the Battle
of El-Alamain
in the desert outside Alexandria. General
Montgomery's Eighth Army drove back
Rommel's Afrika Korps and the allies swept
across North Africa to victory.
With the allied victory and the end of the
war, the Wafd party called for the
immediate evacuation of British troops
from Egypt. The British were slow to
respond and Egyptian resentment exploded
in anti-British riots and strikes
instigated by the highly organized Muslim
Brotherhood under the leadership of
Hassan Al-Banna
which had grown in power and influence
during the war years.
It had always been the Muslim Brotherhood
position that the war between the allies
and the axis had nothing to do with Egypt
or Muslims. The leadership of the Muslim
Brotherhood refrained from open opposition
to Egyptian support for the allies during
the war years but lashed out at the
British presence after the war. Under
joint pressure from the Brotherhood and
the Wafd, British troops were evacuated
from Alexandria and the Canal Zone in
1947.
The following year the Arab world suffered
a shattering blow when a joint Arab
invasion of the newly declared state of
Israel was ignominiously defeated by the
smaller Israeli army. Ashamed and appalled
by the decadence and gross incompetence of
their leaders, a group of idealistic young
Egyptian officers were to emerge as
leaders of a revolution which would alter
the course of modern Arab history.
When parliamentary elections were held in
1952
the Wafd Party won the majority of seats
and Nahas Pasha as prime minister repealed
the 1936
treaty which gave Britain the right to
control the Suez Canal. King Farouk
dismissed the Prime Minister, igniting
anti-British riots which were put down by
the army.
This event compelled a secret group of
army officers, which became known as the
Free Officers, to stage a coup d'etat and
seize control of the government. King
Farouk was forced to abdicate and General
Naguib -- as the most senior officer, the
nominal leader of the group -- became
prime minister and commander of the armed
forces.
In reality a nine-man Revolutionary
Command Council (RCC) led by Colonel Gamal
Abd Al-Nasser ruled Egypt and ruled
decisively. The monarchy was abolished,
all political parties
(including the
Wafd Party) were banned and the
Constitution was nullified.
In 1953 the
Egyptian Arab Republic was declared. The
rule of the Revolutionary Command Council
seemed benign and heroic at the beginning;
their coup had been bloodless and their
reforms popular. But the RCC became
increasingly radical and when the older
Najeeb tried to exert some control over
the younger officers, he was placed under
house arrest and removed from power in
1954. Abd
Al-Nasser became acting head of state and
in 1956
officially assumed presidency of the
republic. |