Egypt The 1956 War
Figure 7. Principal Military Installations in the
Sinai Peninsula, 1989
After President Gamal Abdul Nasser's seizure of the Suez Canal
in July 1956, the British, French, and Israelis began coordinating
an invasion. On October 29, 1956, the Israelis struck across Sinai
toward the canal and southward toward Sharm ash Shaykh to relieve
the Egyptian blockade of the Gulf of Aqaba. At the crossroads of
Abu Uwayqilah, thirty kilometers from the Israeli border, and at
the Mitla Pass, Egyptian troops resisted fiercely, repelling
several attacks by larger Israeli forces. British and French forces
bombed Egyptian air bases, causing Nasser to withdraw Egyptian
troops from Sinai to protect the canal. At the heavily fortified
complex of Rafah in the northwestern corner of Sinai and at other
points, the Egyptians carried out effective delaying actions before
retreating. Egypt vigorously defended Sharm ash Shaykh in the
extreme south until two advancing Israeli columns took control of
the area. At Port Said (Bur Said), at the north end of the canal,
Egyptian soldiers battled the initial British and French airborne
assault, but resistance quickly collapsed when allied forces landed
on the beach with support from heavy naval gunfire.
The performance of many of the Egyptian units was determined
and resourceful in the face of the qualitative and numerical
superiority of the invaders. Nasser claimed that Egypt had not been
defeated by the Israelis but that it had been forced to abandon
Sinai to defend the canal against the Anglo-French attacks.
According to foreign military observers, about 1,650 of Egypt's
ground forces were killed in the campaign. Another 4,900 were
wounded, and more than 6,000 were captured or missing.
Respect for the armed forces grew in response to Nasser's rise
to political preeminence in the Arab world, his widespread support
among Egyptians, hostility toward Israel, and the broadened base of
military service. But Egypt's army suffered a psychological setback
in September 1962 when it intervened unsuccessfully in a civil war
in what later became the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen)
(see Egypt and the Arab World
, ch. 1). Nasser moved large numbers of
Egyptian troops into the country after a group of Yemeni army
officers staged a coup against the royalist regime. The number of
Egyptian troops in the country rose from 20,000 in 1963 to 70,000
by 1965. The Egyptians, who were not well trained or equipped for
battle in Yemen's rugged mountain terrain, failed to defeat the
royalists. Some of Egypt's best troops were still stalemated in
Yemen when Israel attacked Egypt in 1967.
Data as of December 1990
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