Arab Republic of Egypt

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Arab Republic of Egypt
جمهورية مصر العربية
Flag of Arab Republic of Egypt
Flag
Coat of arms of Arab Republic of Egypt
Coat of arms
Location of Arab Republic of Egypt
Capital
and largest city
Cairo
Official languagesArabic
Recognised national languagesEgyptian Arabic
Dominant mode of productionCapitalism
GovernmentUnitary semi-presidential republic
Area
• Total
1,010,408 km²
Population
• 2021 estimate
102,674,145


Egypt (مصر), officially known and recognized as the Arab Republic Egypt (جمهورية مصر العربية), is a transcontinental ('Eurafrasian'), nation in the North African, and Western Asian Region of Africa, and Asia.

History

1952 Revolution & the Egyptian Republic

The revolution of July 23, 1952, called the White Revolution, succeeded in forcing King Farouk I to abdicate the throne to Crown Prince Ahmed Fouad and leave the country on July 26, 1952, and a regency council was formed, before the monarchy was abolished, and the republic was declared on June 18, 1953.

The revolution broadcast its first statement, with the voice of Mohamed Anwar Sadat, and the revolution announced 6 principles, divided into two groups, three for destruction: the elimination of colonialism, the elimination of feudalism, capitalism and the corruption of power, and three for construction: the establishment of a national army, the establishment of social justice, and the establishment of a healthy democratic life.

According to British documents, King Farouk requested British military intervention to abort the rebellion against him, as his uncle Khedive Tawfiq did in 1882, but he did not receive an answer. He considered a "white coup" after which he would declare a "military dictatorship" ruled by decrees with the force of law and postpone any parliamentary elections indefinitely. The "Free Officers" movement, which led the July Revolution, aborted his thinking and preceded him before taking him into exile. Nasser's ability to manage critical situations was demonstrated. Farouk looked terrified, according to a cable from US Ambassador Jefferson Caffrey, who calmed him down to no avail. Another British cable sent to the Imperial General Staff in London on Monday, July 21 of the same year, read:

"The information we have is that there is widespread tension in Egyptian military units and the possibility of disobedience is contained.''

The movement's success on the morning of July 23 was marked by the possibility that British troops, amounting to 120,000 troops in Suez Canal camps, would intervene to abort them.

According to British documents, there was a ready-made plan called "Rodeo" to occupy Cairo, the Delta and Alexandria in case of a sudden emergency and was prepared to be implemented. That plan relied on abstract force without any legal cover after the abrogation of the 1936 Convention. In the first moments of the movement, before announcing its first statement, Prime Minister Najib al-Hilali, who was able to reach the young journalist at the headquarters by phone with the instinct of the press, asked: "Can you ask them if they want the ministry to resign?" There was no valuable information about the movement's orientation, nor who was in charge, and there were contradictions in conclusions and actions.

With the force of the hard documents, any talk of a connection between the Free Officers and U.S. intelligence is nonsense. Every revolution has its pros and cons, but the pros of the July 1952 revolution overshadowed its negatives.

One of the most important achievements of this revolution, at the political level, was its success in independence from the English colonizer, who was ordering and ending in the country, and returned control of the reins of power in Egypt to the hands of the Egyptians, and succeeded in abolishing the monarchy, declaring the republic, then signing the evacuation agreement, and the departure of the British from the soil of the homeland, and the subsequent abolition of the 1923 constitution, and the proclamation of Major General Mohamed Naguib, the first Egyptian president of the republic, on June 18, 1953. The July Revolution led by President Abdel Nasser achieved a political victory, despite its newness, in 1956, against the three most powerful countries, England, France and "Israel", and constituted an incentive for all developing countries to stand in the face of colonialism, and Abdel Nasser's fame spread, at the time, in the Western world, and the image of Egypt changed from an occupied country from Britain, to a powerful influential country in the world that succeeded, in the same year, in the nationalization of the Suez Canal, and return it to its sons and beneficiaries.

Nasser's revolution made Egypt an influential regional leader, translated into the establishment and establishment of the Non-Aligned Organization in 1961, the culmination of the Bandung Conference in 1955, the establishment of the Organization of African Unity in 1963, and the Organization of the Islamic Conference in 1968. Egypt under Nasser was effective at all regional and international levels, supporting decolonization movements. For example, the resistance movement for the liberation of Algeria started from Cairo in 1954, the Arab "movements for the liberation of Yemen, Iraq and the Gulf states", and the birth of the Palestinian resistance from Cairo in 1965, on the basis of the three no's: no reconciliation. No confession. There are no negotiations, and what was taken by force cannot be recovered without force


"If a day, week or month in the life of a nation can be described as a milestone in its history, December 1948 is that month in the life of modern Egypt before the July 1952 revolution, in that month the most important international influence on the Egyptian decision moved from the United Kingdom to the United States, that is, from the British Empire, which grew old and dimmed its voice, to the American empire descending on the world like airplanes descend. on its landings." - Mohamed Hassanein Heikal


They included communists, nationalists of the Wafd Party, members of the Muslim Brotherhood, and aristocrats who were against the monarchy. Nasser supported anti-colonial forces in Algeria and nationalized the Suez Canal. The USA and Europe rejected Egypt's request for assistance, so it turned to the USSR. In 1956, France, Israel, and the UK attacked the Suez Canal, but Egypt successfully defended it. In 1957, Cairo hosted the Afro-Asian People's Solidarity Conference, a successor to the Bandung Conference, with delegates from 45 Asian and African countries.[1]

United Arab Republic (UAR)

United Arab States (UAS)

Federation of Arab Republics

Arab Republic of Egypt

Arab Spring

Presidency of Hosni Mubarak (Oct, 1981 - 2011)

2011 Egyptian revolution

Egyptian Crisis (2011–2014)

Muslim Brotherhood

Supreme Council of the Armed Forces

2012 Egyptian Presidential Election

Presidency of Mohamed Morsi (June, 2012 - July 2013)

Egyptian Constitution of 2012

2013 Egyptian coup d'état

Interim Presidency of Adly Mansour ( July, 2013 - June 2014)

Current Presidency of Abdel Fattah el-Sisi

Egyptian Constitution of 2014

In 2011, millions of people in Egypt rose up to overthrow the U.S.-backed police state led by Hosni Mubarak.[2] Due to the lack of a revolutionary socialist party, the capitalist Muslim Brotherhood party took power under Mohamed Morsi.[3] Morsi supported U.S. efforts to overthrow Bashar al-Assad in Syria and passed a new constitution limiting the rights of women and religious minorities.[2]

In 2013, General Abdul Fatah Saeed el-Sisi removed Morsi from power and appointed Hazem Al Beblawi as prime minister. The military has killed almost 100 supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood.[2] In 2022, General el-Sisi told poor people to "eat leaves" to survive due to food shortages.[4]

Geography

Egypt's natural borders include the Red Sea, and the Aqaba Gulf, which forms the Sinai Peninsula. The country operates the Suez Canal, which links the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean via the Red Sea. Egypt borders Libya to the west, Sudan to the south, all sharing a tri point border at the Hassanein Plateau. Other areas include the Hala'ib Triangle, which both Sudan and Egypt have a little dispute over, which covers the Elba National Park as well as the administer town of Hala'ib, a fact which both countries ''de facto'' run the region. The Bir Tawil Trapezoid is also a ''disputed'' spill of land, that both countries neither claim. In addition to disputes, Saudi Arabia also lays claim to the Tiren and Sanafir Islands, off the coast of the Red Sea. About 90%+ of the country lives on 5.5% of the country in the north region of the Nile River Delta. Egypt contains a lot of eroded rock formations, extinct volcano calderas, plateaus, mountains, oasis, sand dunes, as well as several Wadis. The country geographically is settled in the incredibly arid western Saharan and Libyan deserts, of northern Africa. With the exclusion of the Sinai Peninsula and its snowcapped mountains and average rainfall, the rest of the country rarely receives precipitation, with the rest of the country averaging around 1 inch of rain each year (2.54 cm). Landscapes like the Al-Farrafrah white desert, are of example. The most recognizable, and most distinguishable asset of the Egyptian nation, the Nile River. As the longest river in the world, at over 6.600 kms, flowing north, draining into the Mediterranean. The river has for eons, and millennia, supplied, and nourished the lands around the Egypt and its insanely arid, and dry deserts, to cultivate food, and vitalize the increasing population, therefore creating the world's first major, and early civilizations. Egyptians have rare access to fresh water which is irrigated, and has in return made the nation, the biggest cultivator of dates, and artichokes. The Nile in the south is the famous Nasser Reservoir, which was created by one of the largest dams in the world, constructed in 1971, to control floods.

References

  1. Vijay Prashad (2008). The Darker Nations: A People's History of the Third World: 'Cairo' (pp. 51–53). [PDF] The New Press. ISBN 9781595583420 [LG]
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Mazda Majidi (2013-07-20). "U.S. imperialism and the coup in Egypt" Liberation News. Archived from the original on 2019-07-14. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  3. "How can we make a revolution? Lessons of Egypt and Occupy" (2014-07-06). Liberation School. Archived from the original on 2021-05-05. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  4. Dejan Kukic (2022-07-08). "Sisi says “let them eat leaves” as food crisis sharpens class lines in Egypt" In Defence of Marxism. Archived from the original on 2022-07-09. Retrieved 2022-07-16.