Egypt

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جمهورية مصر العربية
Gumhūriyyat Misr al-Arabiyyah
Egypt rel97.jpg
Location of Egypt.png
Flag of Egypt.png
Arms of Egypt.png
Flag Coat of Arms
Capital Cairo
Government Semi-Presidential republic
Language Arabic (official)
President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi
Prime minister Mostafa Madbouly
Area 386,660 sq mi
Population 102,500,000 (2020)
GDP $366,666,666,667 (2020)
GDP per capita $3,415 (2020)
Currency Egyptian pound


Egypt is a country located in north-east Africa, and is the site of one of the oldest recorded civilizations on earth. Egypt is currently ruled by the military, after Muslim Brotherhood left office.

Name

The name "Egypt" is derived from the Greek word Aígyptos (Αίγυπτος), which was possibly a corruption from the compound word Aegaeon uptiōs (Aίγαίου υπτίως), meaning "below the Aegean" (Strabo). Ancient Egyptians referred to their land as Kemet ("black land"), in reference to the black silt deposited by the annual Nile floods.

"Misr" (مصر)is the modern Arabic name for Egypt, which is based upon the Hebrew word "Mizraim" (מִצְרַיִם); the ancient Hebrews referred to Egypt as the "land of Mizraim" after the founder of that country.

Geography

Taba Heights Egypt.jpg

Egypt has four main regions: the Eastern and Western Deserts, the Sinai Peninsula, and the Nile Valley and Delta, where about 99 percent of population lives. Modest amounts of rainfall occur along the Mediterranean coast; rainfall throughout the remainder of the country is minimal to nonexistent.



People

Egypt is the most populous country in the Arab-speaking world and the second-most populous on the African Continent. Nearly all of the country's 79 million people live in Cairo and Alexandria; elsewhere on the banks of the Nile; in the Nile delta, which fans out north of Cairo; and along the Suez Canal. These regions are among the world's most densely populated, containing an average of over 3,820 persons per square mile (1,540 per km2.), as compared to 181 persons per sq. mi. for the country as a whole.

Egypt shop owner.jpg

Small communities spread throughout the desert regions of Egypt are clustered around oases and historic trade and transportation routes. The government has tried with mixed success to encourage migration to newly irrigated land reclaimed from the desert. However, the proportion of the population living in rural areas has continued to decrease as people move to the cities in search of employment and a higher standard of living.

The Egyptians are a fairly homogeneous people of Hamitic origin. Mediterranean and Arab influences appear in the north, and there is some mixing in the south with the Nubians of northern Sudan. Ethnic minorities include a small number of Bedouin Arab nomads in the eastern and western deserts and in the Sinai, as well as some 50,000-100,000 Nubians clustered along the Nile in Upper (southern) Egypt.

The literacy rate is about 58% of the adult population. Education is free through university and compulsory from ages six through 15. Rates for primary and secondary education have strengthened in recent years. Ninety-three percent of children enter primary school today, compared with 87% in 1994. Major universities include Cairo University (100,000 students), Alexandria University, and the 1,000-year-old Al-Azhar University, one of the world's major centers of Islamic learning.

Egypt's vast and rich literature constitutes an important cultural element in the life of the country and in the Arab-speaking world as a whole. Egyptian novelists and poets were among the first to experiment with modern styles of Egyptian literature, and the forms they developed have been widely imitated. Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz was the first Egyptian to win the Nobel prize for literature. Egyptian books and films are available throughout the Middle East.

  • Population (July 2006 est.): 78,887,007.
  • Annual growth rate (2006 est.): 1.75%.
  • Ethnic groups: Egyptian, Bedouin Arab, Nubian.
  • Religions: Muslim 94%, Coptic Christian and other 6%.
  • Languages: Arabic (official), English, French.
  • Education: Years compulsory—ages 6–15. Literacy—total adult: 58%.
  • Health: Infant mortality rate (2006 est.)--31.33 deaths/1,000 live births. Life expectancy (2006 est.): 71 years.

Government and Political Conditions

Radical former President Mohamed Morsi from the Muslim Brotherhood.
Hassan Mohamed Hassan, Egypt Breaking Chains.
See also: President of Egypt

The Egyptian Constitution provides for a strong executive. Authority is vested in an elected president who can appoint one or more vice presidents, a prime minister, and a cabinet. The president's term runs for 6 years. Egypt's legislative body, the People's Assembly, has 454 members—444 popularly elected and 10 appointed by the president. The constitution reserves 50% of the assembly seats for "workers and peasants." The assembly sits for a 5-year term but can be dissolved earlier by the President. There also is a 264-member Shura (consultative) Council, in which 88 members are appointed and 174 elected for 6-year terms. Below the national level, authority is exercised by and through governors and mayors appointed by the central government and by popularly elected local councils.

Opposition party organizations make their views public and represent their followers at various levels in the political system, but power is concentrated in the hands of the President and the National Democratic Party majority in the People's Assembly and those institutions dominate the political system. In addition to the ruling National Democratic Party, there are 18 other legally recognized parties, whereas in 2004 there were only 16 other legally recognized parties.

The November 2000 elections were generally considered to have been more transparent and better executed than past elections, because of universal judicial monitoring of polling stations. On the other hand, opposition parties continue to lodge credible complaints about electoral manipulation by the government. There are significant restrictions on the political process and freedom of expression for non-governmental organizations, including professional syndicates and organizations promoting respect for human rights.

Progress was seen in the September 2005 presidential elections when parties were allowed to field candidates against President Mubarak and his National Democratic Party. In early 2005, President Mubarak proposed amending the constitution to allow, for the first time in Egypt's history, competitive, multi-candidate elections. An amendment was drafted by parliament and approved by public referendum in late May 2005. In September 2005, President Mubarak was reelected, according to official results, with 88% of the vote. His two principal challengers, Ayman Nour and No'man Gom'a, took 7% and 3% of the vote respectively. In 2011 Mubarak was overthrown by the Muslim Brotherhood and Mohamed Morsi was elected as president. As a result of protests Mursi was ousted by the military. In 2014 Abdel Fattah el-Sisi was elected as president of Egypt.[1]

Egypt's judicial system is based on European (primarily French) legal concepts and methods. Under the Mubarak government, the courts have demonstrated increasing independence, and the principles of due process and judicial review have gained greater respect. The legal code is derived largely from the Napoleonic Code. Marriage and personal status (family law) are primarily based on the religious law of the individual concerned, which for most Egyptians is Islamic Law (Sharia).

Principal Government Officials

  • President--Abdel Fattah el-Sisi
  • Vice President--vacant
  • Prime Minister—Ibrahim Mahlab
  • Interior Minister--
  • Minister of Foreign Affairs—Nabil Fahmi
  • Ambassador to the United States—Ambassador
  • Permanent Representative to the United Nations—Ambassador

Foreign Relations

Geography, population, history, military strength, and diplomatic expertise give Egypt extensive political influence in the Middle East and within the Non-Aligned Movement as a whole. Cairo has been a crossroads of Arab commerce and culture for millennia, and its intellectual and Islamic institutions are at the center of the region's social and cultural development.

Avenue of Sphinxes.

The Arab League headquarters is in Cairo, and the Secretary General of the League is traditionally an Egyptian. Former Egyptian Foreign Minister Amre Moussa is the present Secretary General of the Arab League. Ex-President Mubarak has often chaired the African Union (formerly the Organization of African Unity). Former Egyptian Deputy Prime Minister Boutros Boutros-Ghali served as Secretary General of the United Nations from 1991 to 1996.

Egypt is a key partner in the search for peace in the Middle East and resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Sadat's groundbreaking trip to Israel in 1977, the 1978 Camp David Accords, and the 1979 Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty represented a fundamental shift in the politics of the region—from a strategy of confrontation to one of peace as a strategic choice. Egypt was subsequently ostracized by other Arab states and ejected from the Arab League from 1979 to 1989. Egypt played an important role in the negotiations leading to the Madrid Peace Conference in 1991, which, under U.S. and Russian sponsorship, brought together all parties in the region to discuss Middle East peace. This support has continued to the present, with Ex-President Mubarak often intervening personally to promote peace negotiations. In 1996, he hosted the Sharm El-Sheikh "Summit of the Peacemakers" attended by President Clinton and other world leaders. In 2000, he hosted two summits at Sharm El-Sheikh and one at Taba in an effort to resume the Camp David negotiations suspended in July 2000, and in June 2003, Mubarak hosted President Bush for another summit on the Middle East peace process. Throughout mid-2004, Egypt worked closely with Israel and the Palestinian Authority to facilitate stability following Israel's withdrawal from Gaza, which occurred in August and September 2005. Prior to this Egypt and Israel reached an agreement that allowed Egypt to deploy additional forces along the Philadelphi Corridor in an attempt to control the border and prevent the smuggling of weapons.

Egypt played a key role during the 1990-91 Gulf crisis. Ex-President Mubarak helped assemble the international coalition and deployed 35,000 Egyptian troops against Iraq to liberate Kuwait. The Egyptian contingent was the third-largest in the coalition forces, after the U.S. and U.K. In the aftermath of the Gulf war, Egypt signed the Damascus declaration with Syria and the Gulf states to strengthen Gulf security. Egypt continues to contribute regularly to UN peacekeeping missions, most recently in East Timor, Sierra Leone, and Liberia. In August 2004, Egypt was actively engaged in seeking a solution to the crisis in the Darfur region of Sudan, including the dispatch of military monitors. Following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, Egypt, which has itself been the target of terrorist attacks, has been a key supporter of the U.S. war against terrorists and terrorist organizations such as Osama bin Ladin and al-Qaeda, and actively supported the Iraqi Governing Council, as well as the subsequent government of Prime Minister Allawi. In July 2005, terrorists attacked the Egyptian city of Sharm El Sheikh. In the same month, Egypt's envoy to Iraq was assassinated.

In the tenure of Mohammed Morsi, the relations to Iran were improved.[2] The first time since 1979 a passenger jet left Egypt and flought to Iran.[3]

Defense

Egypt's armed forces, among the largest in the region, include the army, air defense, air force, and navy. The armed forces inventory includes equipment from the United States, France, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the former Soviet Union. Equipment from the former Soviet Union is being progressively replaced by more modern American, French, and British equipment, a significant portion of which is built under license in Egypt. To bolster stability and moderation in the region, Egypt has provided military assistance and training to a number of African and Arab states. Egypt remains a strong military and strategic partner of the United States.

Economy

The Nile in Cairo.

With the installation of the 2004 Egyptian parliament, the Government of Egypt began a new reform movement, following a stalled economic reform program begun in 1991, but moribund since the mid-1990s. In the past year, the cabinet economic team has simplified and reduced tariffs and taxes, improved the transparency of the national budget, revived stalled privatizations of public enterprises and implemented economic legislation designed to foster private sector-driven economic growth and improve Egypt's competitiveness. Despite these achievements, the economy is still hampered by government intervention, substantial subsidies for food, housing, and energy, and bloated public sector payrolls. Moreover, the public sector still controls most heavy industry.

In sectoral terms, agriculture is mainly in private hands, and has been largely deregulated, with the exception of cotton and sugar production. Construction, non-financial services, and domestic marketing are also largely private. The Egyptian economy, however, relies heavily on tourism, oil and gas exports, and Suez Canal revenues, much of which is controlled by the public sector and is also vulnerable to outside factors. The tourism sector suffered tremendously following a terrorist attack in Luxor in October 1997. The tourism sector feared a repeat of the downturn in tourist numbers when terrorists attacked resorts in the Sinai Peninsula in 2004 and 2005. So far, however, the sector has not suffered as greatly as expected.

The U.S. has a large assistance program in Egypt and provides funding for a variety of programs in addition to some cash transfers. A portion of U.S. assistance to Egypt under the 2003 Iraq war supplemental appropriations was provided in the form of bond guarantees, which were contingent upon Egyptian compliance with a series of economic conditions. Egypt met the conditions and in September 2005 issued $1.25 billion in 10-year bonds that were fully guaranteed by the United States. To support the Middle East peace process through regional economic integration, the United States permits products to be imported from Egypt without tariffs if they have been produced in Qualified Industrial Zones and 11.7% of the inputs of these products originate from Israel.

  • GDP (2005 est.): $303 billion.
  • Annual growth rate (2005 est.): 4.8%.
  • Per capita GDP (2005 est.): $4,282.
  • Natural resources: Petroleum and natural gas, iron ore, phosphates, manganese, limestone, gypsum, talc, asbestos, lead, zinc.
  • Agriculture: Products—cotton, rice, onions, beans, citrus fruits, wheat, corn, barley, sugar.
  • Industry: Types—food processing, textiles, chemicals, petrochemicals, construction, light manufacturing, iron and steel products, aluminum, cement, military equipment.
  • Trade (FY 2005): Exports--$14.3 billion: petroleum, clothing and textiles, cotton, fruits and vegetables, manufactured goods. *Major markets—EU, U.S., Middle East, Japan. Imports--$24.1 billion: machinery and transport equipment, petroleum products, livestock, food and beverages, paper and wood products, chemicals. Major suppliers—EU, U.S., Japan.

Agriculture

Approximately one-third of Egyptian labor is engaged directly in farming, and many others work in the processing or trading of agricultural products. Nearly all of Egypt's agricultural production takes place in some 2.5 million hectares (6 million acres) of fertile soil in the Nile Valley and Delta. Some desert lands are being developed for agriculture, including the ambitious Toshka project in Upper Egypt, but some other fertile lands in the Nile Valley and Delta are being lost to urbanization and erosion.

Egyptian Countryside.jpg

Warm weather and plentiful water permit several crops a year. Further improvement is possible, but land is worked intensively and yields are high. Cotton, rice, wheat, corn, sugarcane, sugar beets, onions, and beans are the principal crops. Increasingly, a few modern operations are producing fruits, vegetables and flowers, in addition to cotton, for export. While the desert hosts some large, modern farms, more common traditional farms occupy one acre each, typically in a canal-irrigated area along the banks of the Nile. Many small farmers also have cows, water buffaloes, and chicken, although larger modern farms are becoming more important.

The United States is a major supplier of wheat, corn, and soybean products to Egypt, almost all through commercial sales. Egypt is, in fact, traditionally the U.S.'s largest market for wheat sales. U.S. agricultural sales to Egypt average $1 billion annually. U.S. food assistance programs to Egypt ended in 1992 as Egypt became more prosperous. Egypt continues to receive modest food assistance through the World Food Program and from France.

"Egypt," wrote the Greek historian Herodotus 25 centuries ago, "is the gift of the Nile." The land's seemingly inexhaustible resources of water and soil carried by this mighty river created in the Nile Valley and Delta the world's most extensive oasis. Without the Nile, Egypt would be little more than a desert wasteland.

The river carves a narrow, cultivated floodplain, never more than 20 kilometers wide, as it travels northward toward Cairo from Lake Nasser on the Sudanese border, behind the Aswan High Dam. Just north of Cairo, the Nile spreads out over what was once a broad estuary that has been filled by riverine deposits to form a fertile delta about 250 kilometers wide (150 mi.) at the seaward base and about 160 kilometers (96 mi.) from south to north.

Before the construction of dams on the Nile, particularly the Aswan High Dam (started in 1952, completed in 1970), the fertility of the Nile Valley was sustained by the water flow and the silt deposited by the annual flood. Sediment is now obstructed by the Aswan High Dam and retained in Lake Nasser. The interruption of yearly, natural fertilization and the increasing salinity of the soil has been a manageable problem resulting from the dam. The benefits remain impressive: more intensive farming on millions of acres of land made possible by improved irrigation, prevention of flood damage, and the generation of billions of low-cost kilowatt hours of electricity.

The Western Desert accounts for about two-thirds of the country's land area. For the most part, it is a massive sandy plateau marked by seven major depressions. One of these, Fayoum, was connected about 3,600 years ago to the Nile by canals. Today, it is an important irrigated agricultural area.

Natural Resources

Woman bread egypt.jpg

In addition to the agricultural capacity of the Nile Valley and Delta, Egypt's natural resources include petroleum, natural gas, phosphates, and iron ore. Crude oil is found primarily in the Gulf of Suez and in the Western Desert. Natural gas is found mainly in the Nile Delta, off the Mediterranean seashore, and in the Western Desert. Oil and gas accounts for approximately 12% of GDP. Export of petroleum and related products (including bunker and aviation sales) amounted to $2.7 billion in fiscal year 2003-04.

Crude oil production has been in decline for several years, from a high of more than 920,000 barrels per day (BPD) in 1995 to less than 662,000 BPD as of April 2006. To minimize the growing domestic demand of petroleum products, currently estimated at 25 million metric tons per year, Egypt is encouraging the production of natural gas. Over a 5-year period, production of natural gas increased by approximately 75% to reach about 3.3 billion cubic feet per day (BCFD) by the end of FY 2003/04. Currently, gas accounts for almost 50% of all hydrocarbon usage in Egypt.

Over the last 22 years, more than 230 oil and gas exploration agreements have been signed and multinational oil companies spent more than $27 billion in exploration companions. As of September 2003, crude oil reserves were estimated at 2.8 billion barrels, and proven natural gas reserves were estimated at 62 trillion cubic feet (TCF) with probable additional reserves totaling another 40-60 TCF. Texas-based Apache Oil Company is the largest American investor in Egypt, with a total investment of more than $2.8 billion since 1996.

Egypt's excess of natural gas will more than meet its domestic demand for many years to come. The Ministry of Petroleum has determined that expanding the Egyptian petrochemical industry and increasing exports of natural gas as its most significant strategic objectives. As of September 2005, three liquefied natural gas (LNG) trains had been in operation. The first is in Damietta on the eastern side of the Delta and started exporting in early 2005. It is headed by the Spanish electric utility, Union Fenosa. The second LNG project is located at Idku on the western side of the Delta and started exporting in 2005. The first train started in April 2005, and the second in September. British Gas (BG) Group and the Malaysian state oil company Petronas are the major investors. Another project that will utilize gas for export and domestic consumption is the Mediterranean Gas Complex in Port Said where the Italian company AGIP and BP are the main shareholders. This facility will have a total cost of about $315 million and went on line in late 2004.

Egypt and Jordan established the Eastern Gas Company to export natural gas to Jordan, and then later to Syria and Lebanon. In summer 2003 Egypt began exporting gas to Jordan via a new pipeline from El Arish on Egypt's north Sinai cost to Taba on the Gulf of Aqaba, and then underwater to the Jordanian city of Aqaba. Gas exports to Jordan generated gross revenues of approximately $60 million in 2003/04 and are currently reaching $85–100 million.

Transport and Communication

Cairo, Nile River.

Transportation facilities in Egypt are centered in Cairo and largely follow the pattern of settlement along the Nile. The main line of the nation's 4,800-kilometer (2,800-mi.) railway network runs from Alexandria to Aswan. The well-maintained road network has expanded rapidly to over 21,000 miles, covering the Nile Valley and Delta, Mediterranean and Red Sea coasts, the Sinai, and the Western oases.

Egypt Air provides reliable domestic air service to major tourist destinations from its Cairo hub, in addition to overseas routes. The Nile River system (about 1,600 km. or 1,000 mi.) and the principal canals (1,600 km.) are important locally for transportation. The Suez Canal is a major waterway of international commerce and navigation, linking the Mediterranean and Red Seas. Major ports are Alexandria, Port Said, and Damietta on the Mediterranean, and Suez and Safraga on the Red Sea.

Egypt has long been the cultural and informational center of the Arab-speaking world, and Cairo is the region's largest publishing and broadcasting center. There are eight daily newspapers with a total circulation of more than 2 million, and a number of monthly newspapers, magazines, and journals. The majority of political parties have their own newspapers, and these papers conduct a lively, often highly partisan, debate on public issues.

Egyptian ground-broadcast television (ETV) is government controlled and depends heavily on commercial revenue. ETV sells its specially produced programs and soap operas to the Arab-speaking world. In addition to Egyptian programming, the Middle East Broadcast Company, a Saudi television station transmitting from London (MBC), Arab Radio and Television (ART), Al-Jazeera television, and other Gulf stations as well as Western networks such as CNN and BBC, provide access to more international programs to Egyptians who own satellite receivers.

ETV has two main channels, six regional channels, and three satellite channels. Of the two main channels, Channel I uses mainly Arabic, while Channel II is dedicated to foreigners and more cultured viewers, broadcasting news in English and French as well as Arabic.

Egyptian Satellite channels broadcast to the Middle East, Europe, and the U.S. East Coast. In April 1998, Egypt launched its own satellite known as NileSat 101. Seven specialized channels cover news, culture, sports, education, entertainment, health, and drama. A second, digital satellite, Nilesat 102, was launched in August 2000. Many of its channels are rented to other stations.

Three new private satellite-based TV stations were launched in November 2001, marking a great change in Egyptian government policy. Dream TV 1 and 2 produce cultural programming, broadcast contemporary video clips and films featuring Egyptian and international actors, as well as soap operas; another private station focuses on business and general news. Both private channels transmit on NileSat.

Radio in Egypt almost all government controlled, using 44 short-wave frequencies, 18 medium-wave stations, and four FM stations. There are seven regional radio stations covering the country. Egyptian Radio transmits 60 hours daily overseas in 33 languages and three hundred hours daily within Egypt. In 2000, Radio Cairo introduced new specialized (thematic) channels on its FM station. So far, they include news, music, and sports. Radio enjoys more freedom than TV in its news programs, talk shows and analysis.

History

For a more detailed treatment, see Egyptian chronology.

Coffin, British Museum.

Egypt has endured as a unified state for more than 5,000 years, and archaeological evidence indicates that a developed Egyptian society has existed for much longer. Egyptians take pride in their "pharaonic heritage" and in their descent from what they consider mankind's earliest civilization. The Arabic word for Egypt is Misr, which originally connoted "civilization" or "metropolis."

View of the Sphinx with Khafra Pyramid in background (Photograph taken by Ian Sewell)

Archaeological findings show that primitive tribes lived along the Nile long before the dynastic history of the pharaohs began. Based on these time estimates, organized agriculture appeared by 6000 B.C.

In about 3100 B.C., Egypt was united under a ruler known as Mena, or Menes, who inaugurated the 30 pharaonic dynasties into which Egypt's ancient history is divided—the Old and the Middle Kingdoms and the New Empire. The pyramids at Giza (near Cairo), which were built in the fourth dynasty, testify to the power of the pharaonic religion and state. The Great Pyramid, the tomb of Pharaoh Khufu (also known as Cheops), is the only surviving monument of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Ancient Egypt reached the peak of its power, wealth, and territorial extent in the period called the New Empire (1567-1085 B.C.).


Persian, Greek, Roman, and Arab Conquerors

Pyraimid.jpg

In 525 B., Cambyses II, the son of Cyrus the Great, led a Persian invasion force that dethroned the last pharaoh of the 26th Dynasty. The country remained a Persian province until conquered by Alexander the Great in 322 BC, ushering in Ptolemeic rule Egypt that lasted for nearly 300 years. Cleopatra was the last ruler of that dynasty, but when she committed suicide after losing to Rome when her lover Marc Antony was defeated by Octavian in the Battle of Actium, Egypt became a part of the Roman Empire.

Egypt was invaded and conquered by Arab forces under Islam in 642. A process of Arabization and Islamization ensued. Although a Coptic Christian minority remained—and remains today, constituting about 10% of the population—the Arab language inexorably supplanted the indigenous Coptic tongue. For the next 1,300 years, a succession of Arab, Mameluke, and Ottoman caliphs, beys, and sultans ruled the country.

Like most of the middle east, the current population in modern Egypt is by Arabs that have Arabized the indigenous people, the Nubians and the Copts are considered to be the real natives to Egypt.

European Influence

Abu Simbel.

The Ottoman Turks controlled Egypt from 1517 until 1882, except for a brief period of French rule under Napoleon Bonaparte. In 1805, Mohammed Ali, commander of an Albanian contingent of Ottoman troops, was appointed Pasha, founding the dynasty that ruled Egypt, at least in name, until his great-great grandson, Farouk I, was overthrown in 1952. Mohammed Ali the Great ruled Egypt until 1848, writing the first chapter in the modern history of Egypt. The growth of modern urban Cairo began in the reign of Ismail (1863–79). Eager to Westernize the capital, he ordered the construction of a European-style city to the west of the medieval core. The Suez Canal was completed in his reign in 1869, and its completion was celebrated by many events, including the commissioning of Verdi's "Aida" for the new opera house and the building of great palaces such as the Omar Khayyam (originally constructed to entertain the French Empress Eugenie, which is now the central section of the Cairo Marriott Hotel).

In 1882, British expeditionary forces crushed a revolt against the Ottoman rulers, marking the beginning of British occupation and the virtual inclusion of Egypt within the British Empire. In deference to growing nationalism, the U.K. unilaterally declared Egyptian independence in 1922. British influence, however, continued to dominate Egypt's political life and fostered fiscal, administrative, and governmental reforms.

In the pre-1952 revolution period, three political forces competed with one another: the Wafd, a broadly based nationalist political organization strongly opposed to British influence; King Fuad, whom the British had installed during World War II; and the British themselves, who were determined to maintain control over the Canal. Other political forces emerging in this period included the communist party (1925) and the Muslim Brotherhood (1928), which eventually became a potent political and religious force.

During World War II, British troops used Egypt as a base for Allied operations throughout the region.

After 1947

British troops were withdrawn to the Suez Canal area in 1947, but nationalist, anti-British feelings continued to grow after the war.

Hitler's Aviso Grille in Norway, during WW2

In 1946, the "Aviso Grille" was purchased by the Arab George Arida.[4][5]

Spirit of Hitler Fighting Zionism - Egyptian Govt. linked paper headline Dec 1947
In December 1947:[6][7]
"The spirit of Hitler fights Zionism in Israel [Palestine]" - this is the headline of a long article that appeared today, in the Egyptian 'Al-Asas' [الأساس] close to the government. This article summarizes the decisions of the Arab prime ministers and recent developments.

The very fact is that the Prime Minister of Syria - Jamil Mardam - has received a message from the Syrian millionaire Arida who bought Hitler's cruise ship [yacht], that he is making it available to the [Arab] "Salvation Army" [جيش الإنقاذ] of Palestine to help preserve the Arab shores and prevent "Zionist infiltration" to the Land of Palestine [E"Y].

The "Salvation Army" headquarters will equip the ship and will make a nucleus for the first Arab fleet.
1948 Arab-Israeli War: Bombing Jewish civilians
Egyptian air bombing of civilians - July 14, 1948

Egypt had been bombing civilian areas in Tel Aviv nearly continuously[8] since Israel declared independence on May 14, and resulting in high casualties of innocent Jews. While infamous Issa Nakhleh claimed Egyptians were invited by Arab Higher Committee for "peace."[9] On May 18, Egyptian planes dropped bombs on a crowded Tel Aviv bus station, killing 42 people, including women and children.  [10] On July 14, Egyptian air raid killed 14 and injured 40, while Syrian planes attacked Haifa.[11]

These air raids all targeted civilians. They were the 1948 equivalent of decades later "Palestinian" rocket attacks, with no military goal and only aimed at terrorizing Jews. 

An estimated 150 were killed in Egyptian air raids and shelling from the sea on Tel Aviv during the War of Independence.[12]

1952 and on

On July 22–23, 1952, a group of disaffected army officers (the "free officers") led by Lt. Col. Gamal Abdel Nasser overthrew King Farouk, whom the military blamed for Egypt's poor performance in the 1948 war with Israel. Following a brief experiment with civilian rule, they abrogated the 1923 constitution and declared Egypt a republic on June 19, 1953. Nasser evolved into a charismatic leader, not only of Egypt, but the Arab world, promoting and implementing "Arab socialism." He nationalized Egypt's economy.

Nasser helped establish the Non-Aligned Movement of developing countries in September 1961, and continued to be a leading force in the movement until his death in 1970. When the United States held up military sales in reaction to Egyptian neutrality vis-à-vis Moscow, Nasser concluded an arms deal with Czechoslovakia in September 1955.

When the U.S. and the World Bank withdrew their offer to help finance the Aswan High Dam in mid-1956, Nasser nationalized the privately owned Suez Canal Company. The crisis that followed, exacerbated by growing tensions with Israel over guerrilla attacks from Gaza and Israeli reprisals, resulted in the invasion of Egypt that October by France, Britain, and Israel. Israel occupied the Sinai Peninsula while the canal was in the hands of the France and Britain, but all withdrew under U.S. pressure.

Louvre, antiquities Egyptians.

Nasser's domestic policies were arbitrary and frequently oppressive, yet generally popular. All opposition was stamped out, and opponents of the regime frequently were imprisoned without trial. Nasser's foreign and military policies helped provoke the Israeli attack of June 1967 that virtually destroyed Egypt's armed forces along with those of Jordan and Syria. Israel wrested and occupied the Sinai Peninsula and the Gaza Strip from Egypt. Personally, Nasser never recovered from that loss. Nasser, nonetheless, was revered by the masses in Egypt and in the Arab world until his death in 1970.

After Nasser's death, another of the original "free officers," Vice President Anwar el-Sadat, was elected President. In 1971, Sadat concluded a treaty of friendship with the Soviet Union, but a year later, ordered Soviet advisers to leave. In October 1973, he launched the Yom Kippur War with Israel, in which Egypt's armed forces achieved unexpected initial successes but were defeated in Israeli counterattacks.

UAR and Nazis, Nazi-propaganda

The U.A.R. (short lived United United Arab Republic - covered territory between Egypt, including the Gaza Strip, and Syria) made a pact, by Col. Mohammed Saad el-Shazly, with Nazis in 1961, contacts began in 1960. The neo Nazis would disseminate Arab propaganda, in exchange, the U.A.R. will finance them.[13][14]

Shazly was the author of a horrific pamphlet issued to Egyptian troops during the Yom Kippur War exhorting them to "kill mercilessly" all Israeli POWs. “Hit them, kill them wherever you find them as they (the Jews) are a nation of ... character."[14][15]


Saad El-Shazly perpetuated the myth about "Greater Israel". He flatly asserted that Ariel Sharon would "aspire to conquest over an area greater even than the biblical dreams of a land from the Nile to the Euphrates" and saw air power as Israel's means to this ambitious end.[16]


In 1961, the (UAR) United Arab Republic and the Arab League of launching an anti-Semitic campaign "unmatched since Nazi times." The Arab Press was using racist material, including a Nazi film, in an international campaign against the Jews. The Committee said the film "The Jew Suss" will be televised in Egypt dining the celebration this week of the fourth anniversary of the Suez fighting.[17]


An alarming 1964 reporting on 'Neo-Nazi activities of Arab countries... an extensive anti-democratic and anti-Jewish Campaign is "being waged with greatly increased intensity" by Arab Propagandists... extremists and neo-Nazi groups, often operating jointly.' Arab hate propaganda intensified especially since Arab League (Hussein Triki) 'Nacion Arabe' launch in 1963. The United Arab Republic distributed a propaganda piece entitled "The Problem of Palestine Refugees," which is, in reality, a collation of diatribes against Zionism, Jews and Judaism. The pamphlet denies that six million Jews were destroyed by the Nazis.[18]

Camp David and the Peace Process

In a momentous change from the Nasser era, President Sadat shifted Egypt from a policy of confrontation with Israel to one of peaceful accommodation through negotiations. Following the Sinai Disengagement Agreements of 1974 and 1975, Sadat created a fresh opening for progress by his dramatic visit to Jerusalem in November 1977, the first Egyptian head of state to do so. This led to President Jimmy Carter's invitation to President Sadat and Prime Minister Begin to join him in trilateral negotiations at Camp David.

The outcome was the historic Camp David accords, signed by Egypt and Israel and witnessed by the U.S. on September 17, 1978. The accords led to the March 26, 1979, signing of the Egypt-Israel peace treaty, by which Egypt regained control of the Sinai in May 1982 and guaranteed continuous U.S. economic aid. Throughout this period, U.S.-Egyptian relations steadily improved, but Sadat's willingness to break ranks by making peace with Israel earned him the enmity of most Arab states. This enmity turned into open war between Egypt and Libya, which lasted for several months.

Domestic Change

Muslim Woman

Sadat introduced greater political freedom and a new economic policy, the most important aspect of which was the infitah or "open door." This relaxed government controls over the economy and encouraged private, including foreign, investment. Sadat dismantled much of the existing political machine and brought to trial a number of former government officials accused of criminal excesses during the Nasser era.

Liberalization also included the reinstitution of due process and the legal banning of torture. Sadat tried to expand participation in the political process in the mid-1970s but later abandoned this effort. In the last years of his life, Egypt was racked by violence arising from discontent with Sadat's rule and sectarian tensions from radical Islam, and it experienced a renewed measure of repression.

From Sadat to Mubarak

On October 6, 1981, Islamic extremists assassinated President Sadat. Hosni Mubarak, Vice President since 1975 and air force commander during the October 1973 war, was elected President later that month. He was subsequently confirmed by popular referendum for four more 6-year terms, most recently in September 2005. Mubarak has maintained Egypt's commitment to the Camp David peace process, while at the same time re-establishing Egypt's position as a leader in the Arab-speaking world. Egypt was readmitted to the Arab League in 1989. Egypt also has played a moderating role in such international fora as the UN and the Non-Aligned Movement.

Since 1991, Mubarak has overseen a domestic economic reform program to reduce the size of the public sector and expand the role of the private sector. There has been less progress in political reform. The November 2000 People's Assembly elections saw 34 members of the opposition win seats in the 454-seat assembly, facing a clear majority of 388 ultimately affiliated with the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP). Opposition parties continue to face various difficulties in mounting credible electoral challenges to the NDP. The Muslim Brotherhood, founded in Egypt in 1928, remains an illegal organization and is not recognized as a political party (current Egyptian law prohibits the formation of political parties based on religion). Members are known publicly and openly speak their views, although they do not explicitly identify themselves as members of the organization. Members of the Brotherhood have been elected to the People's Assembly and local councils as independents, and most recently scored a major victory in 2005 parliamentary elections, winning 20% of the seats, thus forming the largest opposition group.

2011 Freedom Protests

Activist Dalia Ziada.

In January 2011, spurred by increasing food and oil prices as well as rampant corruption of the Muslim autocrats,[19] many of Egyptians gathered at Tahrir square in Alexandria in an uprising. Conservatives, irked by the inactions of the liberal president and secretary of state, have taken this as proof that the democrats implicitly support the Mubarak dictatorship.[20] American leadership to democracy, the most promising of which includes personal intervention by Alaska Governor Sarah Palin.[21]

On 11 February, Mubarak resigned from office. Vice President Omar Suleiman said: "Mubarak has mandated the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces to run the state. God is our protector and succor." The Council of Armed Forces dissolved Egypt's parliament and suspended the Constitution. Egyptians people associate Omar Suleiman with a new puppet of the US government.[22]

Egyptian Museum, Cairo.

The Egyptian Museum is situated at Tahrir square in Cairo where many of Egyptians gathered during protests; Egyptian soldiers fought off an army of looters and arrested more than 50 thieves who were trying to steal the nation's treasures. The Museum, which is home to the gold mask of King Tutankhamen and other priceless artifacts, suffered mainly at the museum shop and two mummies were damaged.[23][24]

Islamist dictatorship

After Mubarak has gone the Muslim Brotherhood was elected. The president was the Islamist Mohammed Morsi. The people protested against his dictatorship and on July 3, 2013 the military took power in Egypt and set Morsi down. Since then Adly Mansour is the president.

See also

Further reading

  • Thompson, Jason. A History of Egypt: From Earliest Times to the Present (2009) 432 pages

External links

Meidum pyramid.

References and Footnotes

  1. https://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/egypt-el-sissi-wins-election-landslide
  2. http://frontpagemag.com/2013/joseph-klein/the-emerging-egyptian-iranian-strategic-alliance/
  3. https://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/03/30/passenger-jet-leaves-egypt-for-iran-in-first-direct-flight-between-countries-in/
  4. Newsweek. (1949). United States: Newsweek, Incorporated, p. 50.
  5. The Marine News. (1951). United States: New York Marine news Company, Incorporated, p. 34.
    August, 1951 ... "Aviso (Yacht) Grille " ... She was purchased from the British Admiralty in 1946 by George Arida, who brought her to the Mediterranean.
  6. Spirit of Hitler Fighting Zionism. The Palestine Post, 16 December 1947. [1].
    CAIRO , Monday (Palcor) . — The spirit of Hitler is fighting Zionism in Palestine , read a headline in today's Al Asas which is close to Government circles, reporting the offer of a Syrian millionaire, M. Arida, to put Hitler's yacht, which he now owns, at the disposal of the "Palestine Rescue Army." The article summarized the decisions taken at the meetings of the heads of Arab Governments and explained that the yacht would be armed as the nucleus of the new Arab Fleet and used to defend Arab shores and prevent Zionist "infiltration" into Palestine.
  7. "Hitler's spirit fights the Zionists in Palestine" ha-Arets - Haaretz 16 December 1947.

    Cairo, 14 (Palcor). "The spirit of Hitler fights Zionists in Israel [Palestine]" - this is the headline of a long article that appeared today, in the Egyptian 'Al-Asas' [الأساس] close to the government. This article summarizes the decisions of the Arab prime ministers and recent developments. The very fact is that the Prime Minister of Syria - Jamil Mardam - has received a message from the Syrian millionaire Arida who bought Hitler's cruise ship, that he is making it available to the [Arab] "Salvation Army" [جيش الإنقاذ] of Palestine to help preserve the Arab shores and prevent "Zionist infiltration" to the Land of Palestine [E"Y]. The "Salvation Army" headquarters will equip the ship and will make a nucleus for the first Arab fleet.
    קאהיר, 14 פאלקור. "רוח היטלר נלחמת בציונים בא"י -- זוהי כותרתה של כתבה ארוכה שהופיעה היום, ב'אל אסאס' המצרי הקרוב לממשלה. כתבה זו מסכמת את ההחלטות של מושב ראשי-הממשלות הערביות וההתפתחויות האחרונות. עצם הידיעה היא שראש הממשלה של סוריה -- ג'אמיל מארדאם -- קיבל הודעה מאת המיליונר הסורי ערידה שקנה את אנית-הטיול של היטלר, כי הוא מעמיד אותה לרשות "צבא ההצלה" של א"י כדי שתסייע לשמירת החופים הערביים ותמנע "הסתננות ציונית" לארץ ישראל מפקדת "צבא ההצלה" תצייד את האניה ותעשנה גרעין לצי ערבי הראשון.

  8. 75 years ago: Another Egyptian air raid on Tel Aviv kills 18
  9. The Palestine Post, 16 May 1948.

    EGYPTIAN INVASION BEFORE THE U.N. SECURITY COUNCIL.

    LAKE SUCCESS , Saturday . — Israel today appealed to an emergency meeting of the Security Council to order a halt to Arab invasions into Palestine and, if necessary, to impose economic and military sanctions. Dr. Mordechai Eliahu, representing the day-old Jewish State, appealed to the Council to act fast against the invading Arab States, because every hour counts. He stated that King Abdullah of Trans-Jordan, through the instrument of the Arab Legion, was clearly committing an act of aggression. At the beginning of the session, Dr. Issa Nakhleh, of the Arab Higher Committee, declared that Egyptian forces had been invited by the A. H. C. to assist in the establishment of law and order. He asked: What right has the Jewish Agency, which represents world Jewry, to complain against this action before the Security Council?
  10. Sybil Ehrlich, Last tickets, please", The Jerusalem Post, Aug 6, 2009
    on May 18, 1948, the bus station was bombed by the Egyptian air force, resulting in 42 persons killed - including four members of the Dan cooperative - and 100 wounded, as well as considerable damage. 
  11. EGYPTIAN AIR RAID KILLS 14 IN TEL AVIV. The Palestine Post, July 14, 1948.

    TEL AVIV , Tuesday . — Fourteen people were killed and 40 were wounded in indiscriminate bombing of Tel Aviv this morning. The raiders — Egyptian Dakotas escorted by Spitfires — dropped their bombs from various levels on residential and business quarters about 10 minutes after the alert had been sounded just before noon. Most of the casualties were in upper stories of houses, although one woman who refused to leave place in a kerosene queue was killed by a bomb splinter. One of the Egyptian fighter pilots dived low to spray a street and killed a horse .

    An old man sitting at a kiosk was unhurt when a bomb fell 3 metres away and failed to explode. It was later removed by the Army. Bombs were dropped on Tel Aviv and nearby during four other alerts. The dead are: Z . Bograshov , Freda Sirkis , Moshe Bosher. Avraham Buchsbaum, Gershon Buchsbaum, Yona Wigshon, Moshe Yarkoni, Rivka Briger, David Mahmias (a boy of about ten), Shmuel Sirnos (13), and a baby two women and a man, who have not yet been identified. Anti-aircraft guns were operated against the raiders.

    HAIFA BOMBED FOR FIRST TIME

    Tuesday . — Haifa was bombed late today for the first time in this war by a twin-engined plane, described as Syrian. Half an hour after the first raid, the craft returned and dropped more bombs on Haifa. Neither casualties nor damage were reported. Enemy planes were prevented from bombing Affula by anti-aircraft which shot guns down one plane near Zarin. Kfar Yehezkiel was bombed from the air and one settler was killed.
  12. When the Egyptians Bombed Tel Aviv, Amit Naor, IL Library blog, 03.02.2020. Despite its somewhat hedonistic and detached image, the city of Tel Aviv faced its share of difficulties during the War of Independence. So what does Leonard Bernstein have to do with all this?
  13. B'nai B'rith Messenger⁩⁩, 17 September 1965 — ⁨World Press In A Nutshell.

    World Press In A Nutshell

    By OSCAR GAVRILOVICH

    COMPILED AND WRITTEN EXCLUSIVELY FOR THE B'NAI B'RITH MESSENGER

    Arab Links With Nazi Underworld

    LATELY European papers exposed Arab backing of global nazi and neo-nazi organizations.

    One of the periodicals, devoting several pages to this unsavory partnership was Paris La Terre Retrouvee.

    It contends that the first inkling of such a unison came in 1960. when the now deceased former SS-officer Karl-Heinz Priester invited 300 leaders of neo-nazi groups to come to Wiesbaden, West Germany, for an organizational meeting of a world-wide neo-nazi party.

    West German authorities, however, prohibited this assembly and seized the documents which Priester had brought with him.

    From these it was established that Priester, a co-founder of the Fascist Internationale at Malmo Sweden, was also one of the Arab League's top agents in Europe.

    Digging farther into the links between Arabs and nazis, the name of Mohammed Al-Shazli popped up. He was a colonel on the United Arab Republic's general staff, and a former military attache to London The Fuehrers of the English nazi party, Colin Jordan and John Tyndall, readily admitted to the London Daily Telegraph their intention of carrying on an anti-Semitic propaganda with the financial support of the United Arab Republic.

    ACTUALLY COL. AL-SHAZLI and the two nazi leaders formally agreed that the English nazi party would dissiminate Arab propaganda material against Israel. In exchange the U. A. R. would finance the anti-Jewish nazi campaign in England. The Arabs and nazis, however, made the mistake of putting their agreement Into writing which then came into the wrong hands.

    La Terre Retrouvee has published the entire text of the accord between the English nazi party and the UAR marked top secret. It stresses the need of a joint fight against the organized forces of Zionism and the World Jewry to be financed by the United Arab Republic.

    The agreement then enumerates the appropriations which the UAR would grant to the nazi party for specific services , for the publication of propaganda bulletins , leaflets and books, and for the distribution of already existing hate material against Israel and the Jews.

    Thus, says the French periodical, the myth that Arabs are not antiJewish, only anti-Zionist finally has been dispelled.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Shazly Appointment Raises Storm, JTA, January 14, 1974.

    A storm is brewing here over the Foreign Office’s anticipated acceptance of Gen. Saad el-Shazly as the new Egyptian Ambassador to Britain. Informed sources told the Jewish. Telegraphic Agency yesterday that approval of Shazly’s appointment is expected next week despite the general’s known association with British neo-Nazis when he served in London as a military attache in 1963 and the recent revelation that he was the author of a pamphlet issued to Egyptian troops during the Yom Kippur War exhorting them to kill captured israeli soldiers.

    The JTA was told that the Foreign Office wants to avoid what it describes as a major political row with Egypt even though it is “somewhat annoyed” with Cairo for having announced the designation of Shazly before his accreditation was confirmed, a move contrary to standard diplomatic practice. The Foreign Office had refused to confirm or deny that Shazly was the Egyptian Ambassador-designate even after the news was out in Cairo. But on Friday, a Foreign Office spokesman finally admitted that an application for accreditation of Shazly had been received from the Egyptian government.

    ASSOCIATION WITH NEO-NAZIS CITED

    The announcement prompted Michael Fidler, a Conservative MP and past president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, to send a letter of protest to Foreign Secretary Sir Alex Douglas-Home. The text of Fidler’s letter, made available to the JTA today, said in part: “It would be infamous if Gen. Shazly, with his record eleven years ago in London of close association with the National Socialist Movement and/or other fascist organizations in Britain should now be permitted to come here in such capacity. The entire British community would be shocked to think that a person who could act in this fashion should now be coming again in this capacity.”

    Fidler enclosed a copy of a news item from the Daily Express “which quotes more recent sentiments expressed by Shazly in connection with the killing of Jews–whether Israeli prisoners of war or other.”

    The notorious Shazly pamphlet was brought to the attention of members of Parliament of all parties and British veterans and student groups last week by Moshe Barneah, secretary of the Israeli branch of Amnesty international. He noted that thousands of them were distributed to Egyptian soldiers by the Army information Service with instructions signed by Shazly who was chief of staff of the Egyptian Army at the time of the Yom Kippur War.

    The instructions ordered Egyptian soldiers to “kill mercilessly” all Israeli POWs. “Hit them, kill them wherever you find them as they (the Jews) are a nation of [sic] treacherous character. They pretend to give up only to kill you in treacherous ways,” the pamphlets said.

    A spokesman for the Egyptian Embassy here “strongly denied” yesterday that the former Egyptian chief of staff had at any time given orders to kill Israeli POWs. The spokesman claimed that such orders bearing Shazly’s Lame were forged by Israeli veterans organizations.
  15. Dershowitz, Alan M.. Defending Israel: The Story of My Relationship with My Most Challenging Client. United States: St. Martin's Publishing Group, 2019.

    Documents discovered by Israeli troops during the war showed that Egyptian general Saad el-Shazly had distributed written orders to kill Israeli soldiers even after they surrendered...

    that “racist ideology, which brought the destruction of the Jewish communities at the hands of the Nazis.
  16. Saad El-Shazly, The Arab Military Option (San Francisco: American Mideast Research, 1986), pp. 17, 31.; Daniel Pipes, (Supposed) Imperial Israel: The Nile-to-Euphrates Calumny, Middle East Quarterly, March 1994.
    Long after Abdel Nasser's death, and through years of Egypt's peace with Israel, his acolytes continued to warn against Greater Israel. General Saad El-Shazly flatly asserted that Ariel Sharon would "aspire to conquest over an area greater even than the biblical dreams of a land from the Nile to the Euphrates" and saw air power as Israel's means to this ambitious end.
  17. [⁨⁨https://www.nli.org.il/en/newspapers/austjewisherald/1961/01/06/01/article/64 The Australian Jewish Herald⁩ 6 January 1961].

    U.A.R in extensive anti-Semitic drive 

    PARIS (JCNS). — The European office of the Ameri can Jewish Committee last week accused the United Arab Republic and the Arab League of launching an anti-Semitic campaign "unmatched since Nazi times." According to the A.J.C. the Arab Press was using racist material, including a Nazi film, in an international campaign against the Jews. The Committee said the film "The Jew Suss" will be televised in Egypt dining the celebration this week of the fourth anniversary of the Suez fighting. An Arab Magazine is quoted as saying that "Arabs will see in this film the rapacity, baseness, hypocrisy and ignominy of the most vile of races, the J.. whom [Allah] has cursed." The Committee’s statement added that other Arab newspapers reported the opening of an office to spread the slogan: "The Jew is, the [sic]enemy of humanity," and that they had accused "both candidates for the United States Presidency" of being "in the pay of [sic]Jews."
  18. The Jewish Press, June 5, 1964, p. 4:

    Samuel Caber of AJC Neo-Nazi Activities of Arab Countries

    Omaha. May 23 . An extensive anti-democratic and anti-Jewish Campaign is "being waged with greatly increased intensity" by Arab Propagandists, right-wing extremists and neo-Nazi groups, often operating jointly, in South America and Europe. Samuel L. Gaber, National Field Secretary of the American Jewish Committee said here today. Mr. Gaber reported on anti-democratic and anti-Jewish activities abroad during the course of the past year to a meeting sponsored by the Omaha Unit of the American Jewish Committee held here today... the report was based on material provided by the Committee's overseas offices and representatives...

    Mr. Gaber declared that three chief developments in Arab and Neo-Nazi agitation are cause for serious concern. These developments are:

    1. A highly accelerated campaign by Arab League offices and personnel in South America backed by "unlimited funds and carried out with top level propaganda skill," which is fomenting a massive campaign of hatred mot only against Israel but also of a general anti-Semitic character.

    2. Efforts by European Neo-Nazi and extreme right-wing groups to renew notorious anti-Semitic themes, particularly in relation to the forthcoming third session of the Ecumenical Council in Rome. Arab propagandists are intensifying their activities in Eurooe, particularly West Germany.

    3. The growth of "anti-Semitic publication network", which has made significant gains during the past year with the appearance of Neo-Nazi anti-Semitic publications in Western Germany, France and Spain.

    Mr. Gaber cited data and reports provided by the Committee's European office, which has conducted a study of Neo-Nazi activities in Europe during the past year...

    In Western Germany, extremist and Neo-Nazi groups "seek to play on the fear that any lessening of tensions between the United States will be at the expense of Germany. These groups also advance racist theories in Germany labeling African and Asiatic nationalists movements... determined to wipe out the white race.

    Both in France and in West Germany Arab propagandists are maintaining economic and other pressures on "those who do business with or show friendship toward Israel." In Western Germany this year, the Information Office of the United Arab Republic has distributed a propaganda piece entitled "The Problem of Palestine Refugees," which is, in reality, a collation of diatribes against Zionism, Jews and Judaism. The pamphlet denies that six million Jews were destroyed by the Nazis.

    European Neo-nazi organization, accordingvto Mr. Gaber "are taking encouragement from developments in South America in the hope that economic and political difficulties there will create new opportunities for extremists."

    Turning to the situation in Latin America. Mr. Gaber drew particular attention to what he called "a massive campaign of hatred conducted by the Arab League with huge unlimited funds and a generous supply of all kinds of mass media resources." At the meantime, however, he pointed out, the Argentine government has taken strong measures against Tacuara, the underground Neo-Nazi fascist group which is working jointly with the Arab League in "spreading hate and creating so much divisiveness among the Argentine people."

    Mr. Gaber said that the Arab League campaign has mainly two objectives:

    1. The development of wide-spread support within the ranks of the Arab community.

    2. An intensified propaganda program to spread anti-Jewish material to every major level of Latin American society.

    Major tactic of the Arab League have included:

    1. The establishment in 1963 of the Nacion Arabe, sold cheaply at practically every newsstand in major Argentine cities and distributed free of charge to civic leaders and opinion molders. No foreign embassy or information center in Argentina has ever "launched such a large circulation propaganda magazine in Argentina." ... Each version of Nacion Arabe manages to features anti-semitic and anti-Israel slurs.

    2. Publication of books and pamphlets which invariably include attacks against Israel and Judaism as well as a steady flow of pressure conferences and many forms of lobbying which maintain a high-pitched validate of denunciation of Jews without respite in the press and other mass media.

    3. Concealed censorship of anti-Jewish activities by extremist groups and setting up of front organizations which attack Israel and Judaism.
  19. Egyptian revolution, the Guardian.
  20. Obama silent as Egypt erupts, American Spectator.
  21. As Egypt descends in chaos, Palin should support a US led invasion Christwire
  22. Mubarak setting thugs loose on people.
  23. Protesters defended Cairo's Egyptian Museum from looters; archeological warehouses raided.
  24. Egypt crisis: Looters destroy mummies in Cairo museum.


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