Operation Musketeer was the invasion of Suez in 1956, a joint
British, French, Israeli operation. The immediate cause was Nasser
nationalizing the Suez Canal. It was a military success and a political failure.
All three of our regular battalions were there. 3 PARA jumped in. 1 PARA & 2
PARA went by sea so they missed out on the first and last big operational jump since World War II.
The Egyptians managed to block the canal so its value was reduced to zero for
some time.
It all happened when the Cold War
could all too easily have become a hot war. The Russians had just invaded
Czechoslovakia in August. They were busy retaking Hungary
in November
as our men were in Egypt. EOKA
was running guerrilla operations against us in
Cyprus. We wanted
Cyprus because it could spy on Kapustin Yar,
the Russian rocket testing base, one reason why the
Russians were sabre rattling. The other big issue was access to oil via the
canal.
Operation
Musketeer (1956)
ex Wiki
Suez Crisis
ex
Wiki The attack followed the President of Egypt
Gamel Abdel Nasser's decision of 26 July 1956 to
nationalize the
Suez
Canal, after the withdrawal of an offer by Britain and the
United States to fund the building of the
Aswan Dam,
which was in response to Egypt's new ties with the Soviet Union and
recognizing the
People's Republic of China during the height of tensions between China and
Taiwan. The aims of the attack were primarily to regain Western control of
the canal and precipitate the fall of Nasser from power, whose policies were
viewed as potentially threatening the strategic interests of the three
nations. The three allies, especially Israel, were
mainly successful in attaining their immediate military objectives, but
pressure from the United States and the
USSR at the
United Nations and elsewhere forced them to withdraw. As a result of the
outside pressure Britain and France failed in their political and strategic
aims of controlling the canal and removing Nasser from power. Israel fulfilled
some of its objectives, such as attaining freedom of navigation through the
Straits of Tiran. As a result of the conflict, the
UNEF would police the Egyptian-Israeli border to prevent both sides from
recommencing hostilities.
Suez
(Operation Musketeer) | ParaData 2 PARA landed by sea and advanced down the canal and dug in at El Cap. This
was the limit of the Task Force advance as World pressure was applied to end
this controversial campaign. The 3 PARA parachute insertion had meanwhile inflicted a decisive defeat on
the enemy at a cost of four killed and three officers and 29 men wounded.
Operation Musketeer
However,
in his memoirs, "Full Circle", Eden argued that his reaction to President
Nasser's seizure of the Canal had nothing to do with colonialism but much to do
with international rights. If the US had to defend her treaty rights in Panama,
would Mr Dulles regard that as colonialism? Eden says that it would be foolish
to pretend that Dulles' remarks did not represent the anti-colonial feelings of
many Americans and goes on to say that George III had much to answer for.
Forty six
years after Suez and in the midst of yet another Arab/Israeli conflict, it is
hard not to sympathise with Dulles. Eden was smarting because Britain had lost a
short cut to the east but a far bigger danger existed. Dulles genuinely feared
WW3 and had avoided supporting the uprisings in East Germany in 1953 and Hungary
in 1956, (despite his personal views on communism), which might have set the
world alight. He certainly did not want to take the risk of a world
conflagration over what he saw as a colonial adventure.
Imperial War Museum
Gives the overall picture. The consequences were not good.
Goes over the reasons rather better:-
QUOTE
The Suez Crisis, also referred to as the Tripartite Aggression,.....
was an offensive war fought by
France,
Britain, and
Israel against
Egypt beginning on October 29, 1956. Less than a day after Israel invaded
Egypt, Britain and France issued a joint ultimatum to both Egypt and Israel, and
then began to bomb Cairo. In a short time, and despite Israeli and British
denials, considerable evidence showed that the two attacks were planned in
collusion, with France as the instigator, Britain as a belated partner, and
Israel as the willing trigger. Anglo-French forces withdrew before the end of
the year, but Israeli forces remained until March 1957, prolonging the crisis.
In April, the canal was fully reopened to shipping, but other repercussions
continued.
UNQUOTE
Is about the men in the air, the men on the ground
QUOTE
French paratroopers with part of the 1st
(Guards) Independent Parachute Company were to capture two vital bridges
leading south from Port Said and isolate the town.
At 0515 GMT on 5th November 3 PARA conducted the first and last operational
parachute assault since the Second World War. Despite vigorous defensive
fire El Gamil airfield was captured in 30 minutes. Vicious close-quarter
fighting developed as the paratroopers continued the advance through a
sewage farm and cemetery nearby, rolling up Egyptian coastal defences.
Covering fire was provided to support the amphibious landings that arrived
the next day and a successful link-up with 45 Commando achieved.
UNQUOTE
A good look which comes from official papers in
the Public Record Office
QUOTE
A look at
the current media headlines answered some of the questions. The Prime Minister,
Anthony Eden, with his French counterpart, Guy Mollet, decided that the Suez
Canal had to be safeguarded. Operation MUSKETEER was the joint British/ French
operation to protect the Canal following President Nasser's takeover. Those who
looked beyond the headlines wondered why there was apparently to be no US
participation. Indeed President Eisenhower firmly disapproved of the action.
Undoubtedly, he was distracted by the US presidential elections which were only
a week away and by the Soviet Union's fierce suppression of anti-communist
uprisings in Hungary. But Eisenhower and his Secretary of State, John Foster
Dulles, feared that the Suez action would lead to WW3 and behind the scenes they
had urged Eden not to proceed with this act of colonialism.
UNQUOTE
It is sad but true.
Is a public resource. If you want access to their film, photos, papers, books
whatever you just have to ask. Film shows were very possible.