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(1918–70), Egyptian statesman, who rose from humble beginnings to become president of Egypt (1954–70) and the most influential leader of the Arab world. Early Career. Nasser was born in Alexandria on Jan. 15, 1918, the son of a postman. After secondary schooling in Cairo, he entered the Royal Military Academy, and graduated in 1938. There and in subsequent service he formed friendships with a few fellow officers and with them created a secret revolutionary society, the Free Officers. Egypt was ruled at the time by a small landowning class that possessed one-third of the land and dominated parliament; the British presence was all-pervasive, and the king, Faruk I, was an irresponsible playboy. The Free Officers plotted to rid Egypt of the British and the king, and the disastrous campaign against Israel in 1948 strengthened their resolve. On July 23, 1952, they staged a coup and ousted King Faruk. Radical measures were soon instituted: Landownership was limited and political parties banned. In 1953 the monarchy was abolished and a republic proclaimed. It was first headed by Gen. Muhammad Naguib, but in 1954 Nasser stepped out of the shadows to take titular command as president. He subsequently negotiated a treaty with the British, by which Egypt was evacuated after 72 years of occupation. World Figure. Following the Bandung Conference (1955), at which he emerged
as a world figure, having espoused a policy of nonalignment (see By this time Nasser had become a hero in the Arab world. In 1958 Syria and Egypt united under his presidency, forming the United Arab Republic. The union, however, broke up in 1961 after a coup in Syria. Nasser subsequently espoused a program of Arab socialism, in which banks and utilities were nationalized to finance a program of industrialization. By 1967 the Arab-Israeli situation had deteriorated. After
the UN peacekeeping force, at Nasser’s request, had been
withdrawn, and Egyptian guns blockaded the Gulf of Aqaba to Israeli
ships, Israel attacked Egypt and occupied the entire Sinai Peninsula
up to the Suez Canal (see Evaluation. Opinion about Nasser is sharply divided. His detractors cite
his police-state methods and criticize his foreign policies. Others
praise his internal reforms and his wresting of Egypt from the grasp
of foreigners and a decadent monarchy. Beyond doubt, he was the
foremost Arab leader of his time. For further information on this person, see the section Nasser, Gamal Abdel.
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NASSER, Gamal Abdel
NASSER, Gamal Abdel. (1918–70), Egyptian statesman, who rose from humble beginnings to become president of Egypt (1954–70) and the most influential leader of the Arab world. Nasser was born in Alexandria . . .
On February 20, 1957, U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower appeared before his nation to discuss the on-going crisis in the Middle East and to win popular support for the Eisenhower Doctrine, a congressional bill that would authorize the deployment of
