Rumy ignored Ike like Israel-UK 50 yrs 2day

Fifty years ago today (Oct. 29), Israel attacked Egypt in collusion with the UK and France; in early November, the UK and France entered the conflict militarily, as had been secretly agreed among the three allied nations. UK forces seized the Suez Canel ( photo), which all along had been the real purpose of the three-nation assault on Egypt.

This invasion of an Arab country was in defiance of international law and world opinion. The US did not support the invasion. In fact, the US response forced the UK troops to withdraw in humiliation. Recently, Geoffrey Wheatcroft of The Boston Globe wrote about this in light of the invasion of Iraq.

From the article:

[UK Prime Minister] Tony Blair has quite enough worries. But he might still find time to reflect on the events of 50 years ago, when an attack on an Arab country--involving a conspiracy to misrepresent the real reasons--brought a dismal end to the career of [Prime Minister] Sir Anthony Eden.
.....

In 1956, not only did London and Paris act in secret collusion with Tel Aviv, the United States was almost hostile to Israel--and toward ill-considered Western adventures in the Middle East. Today, Blair might ponder whether he should have acted as President Bush's candid friend, in the way that Eisenhower did with Eden, counseling the president against a rash enterprise rather than grandiosely supporting him ``to the last."

.....
[At the time, Prime Minister Eden] was reminded in friendly but forceful terms of the sheer unwisdom of ``the use of force" against an Arab country-which would, ``it seems to me, vastly increase the area of jeopardy." The ``appeaser" in this case was General Dwight David Eisenhower, the 34th president of the United States, in the day when things were different in the White House and the Republican Party. If Eden persevered in his folly, Ike wrote to the prime minister on Sept. 3, 1956, in words just as chilling today, not only the peoples of the Middle East but ``all of Asia and Africa, would be consolidated against the West to a degree which, I fear, could not be overcome in a generation."

So, Ike knew: for the British to invade an Arab nation then, without the support of other nations, would turn the world and particularly the Islamic world against the UK. So, Ike knew: Don't do it.

In this regard, I like Ike. I think Rev. Bu$h & NeoCon Republicans, Inc. (Donald Rumsfeld, Chairman of the Board), may not.



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Re: Rumy ignored Ike like Israel-UK 50 yrs 2day (none / 0)

Great Diary.  

Eden' stratospheric blunder ended the UK's tenure as a great power, something that had lasted for nearly 300 years, at least since the time of the Glorious Revolution in 1688 or 89.  It seems odd to say this, but FDR accused Ike of paying too much attention to Churchill.  The UK, of course, had 10 million of its men and women in uniform at that time, a number finally surpassed by the US just prior to D Day (despite the fact that the US had about 2.5 times the population of the UK at the time).

Ike knew the difference between bluff and blunder on the one hand and power and policy on the other hand.  Rummy and friends are mostly bluff asand blunder and don't know the difference.

 


by David Kowalski on Sun Oct 29, 2006 at 02:33:55 PM EST


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