Eisenhower, Suez Crisis, and Lessons for Today

    good afternoon I am Joy Murphy director
    of learning and engagement for the
    Eisenhower Presidential Library I want
    to welcome you to our monthly lunch and
    learn program this year our programming
    theme is waging peace in this series we
    are looking at some of the ways that
    presid Eisenhower stock Global Peak this
    month is focused on Eisenhower’s use of
    moral persuasion today we are pleased to
    welcome Dr Mark bunam a professor at the
    national War college in Washington DC
    who will talk to us about the Suz Canal
    Crisis before I hand it over to Dr
    Buckman please note that there are pads
    and pencils on the tables for you to jot
    down questions that you want Dr Buckman
    to answer at the end those of you live
    streaming this event will be able to
    submit questions via the chat function
    at the end of the program
    with that please welcome Dr
    Buck I want to thank thank Joy Murphy
    and also Samantha prior there at the
    library for all they’ve done to set this
    up and for inviting me today and uh I
    want to make a special shout out to John
    Anderson at kab the general 560 AM radio
    uh for a terrific interview he did the
    other day and it was terrific not
    because he was interviewing me for sure
    but because he had really done his
    homework and um and I think helped his
    audience understand the importance of of
    what we’re going to talk about today
    which is Eisenhower the Suz crisis and
    lessons for today so if we could go to
    the the next slide
    please I want to start out by
    highlighting the fact that where I work
    today at the national War college and on
    Fort McNair the home of the National
    Defense University we’ve got a a
    long um and deep connections to
    President
    Eisenhower that handsome building you
    see in the upper left is Roosevelt Hall
    that’s where I’m sitting speaking to you
    from and it was built um in it started
    in 1903 president Theodore Roosevelt
    laid the
    Cornerstone and it was to become the
    army war col major I believe went when
    he attended the army war College in the
    class of
    1928 so he he’d be well familiar with
    the building I’m speaking to you from
    and from this uh and with this
    campus at the right you see a newer
    building um and that is Eisenhower Hall
    named for the
    president and it began once upon a time
    not here on Fort McNair but I believe it
    was in the area somewhere but it started
    out as the Army industrial college and
    President
    Eisenhower attended uh the Army
    industrial College graduating in
    1933 and then staying around on faculty
    for for a year or two so um so again he
    would he would feel right at home here
    on Fort McNair and at the National
    Defense University where I
    work a couple other um items that that
    connect us with the president president
    you
    see um down at the lower left you see a
    picture of a book it called salarium at
    70 and you probably can’t read it but
    the subtitle is Project solariums
    influence on Eisenhower historiography
    and National Security
    strategy and I’ll talk a little bit more
    about that in a minute but it’s a recent
    publication it just came out in December
    and it’s part of the um one of the
    monographs that the ndu Press National
    Defense University press puts out and it
    looks at at how our understanding of
    project
    salarium impacted our understanding of
    President Eisenhower and his role in in
    history now for those who who
    um might not
    remember project salarium was was one of
    the first things that President
    Eisenhower kicked off when he became
    President when he took office
    uh with within two months in March of
    1953 he initiated this salarium project
    named for the room allegedly where he
    and John Foster dlls decided to to
    undertake it the salarium room at the
    White House the project salarium was
    actually conducted here at National War
    college at it wasn’t National War
    College back then um but but here in
    Rosevelt Hall and um they did it on a
    summer break and they did it in secet
    and what it was was um President
    Eisenhower
    commissioned three
    teams uh to look at different ways of
    doing containment and dealing with the
    Soviets in the Cold War and team a was
    was headed by the famous George Kennan
    who was the first Deputy commant here at
    the national War College back in
    1946 uh and he’s the famous Diplomat who
    wrote The Long Telegram from Moscow and
    later the X article in foreign affairs
    that talked about the sources of Soviet
    con conduct and really really started
    the whole idea of containment as a
    policy and strategy for dealing with the
    Soviet
    Union um so Kenan headed team a and they
    were going to look at continuing the
    Truman policies of containment Team B
    was going to look at a more a stricter
    type of containment if you will where we
    draw a line in the sand and and tell the
    the Soviets don’t cross that so in other
    words we weren’t going to try to push
    them back but we’re we’re going to try
    to keep the Soviets from advancing
    around the world and then team C was to
    look at roll back that was the term
    right and there had been um some
    campaigning done on this idea that that
    actually we’re unsatisfied with the
    Soviet sphere of influence in Eastern
    Europe and and and around the world and
    we want to try to roll back their
    influence Ence so this was all um
    undertaken in secret during the summer
    when the students were away from the
    national War college and it it was
    briefed out to President Eisenhower in
    July of 195 sorry
    1953 and um after hearing all the
    presentations reportedly the president
    stood up and for about 40 minutes held
    forth giving a summary of of all the
    main points that had been made and then
    explaining the way forward and that was
    eventually uh captured in the document
    you see at the bottom left there that’s
    NSC 1622 or National Security Council
    document
    1622 the title of that is the our
    national security
    policy and it really set the tone for
    the rest of the Cold War right down to
    to the end and what it did was it it put
    a higher um dependence on nuclear
    weapons for our security but it also
    took a very holistic look at security
    Eisenhower realized that it wouldn’t do
    any good to buy security in terms of
    weapons if that meant bankrupting the
    country or if it meant changing who we
    were as as a um a Democratic Republic
    and so it’s a it’s a document that um
    that we still use I’ll use it next year
    in in the first course that our students
    get next year they’ll read that document
    um as an example of of strategy done
    right so again that’s just just to
    highlight um the uh the connections that
    we have with President Eisenhower here
    at Fort McNair and the National Defense
    University and in particular the
    national War College if we could go to
    the next slide
    please all right I mentioned this little
    publication on the left salarium at 70
    it’s a SL little volume and uh just came
    out and what the the the thesis of the
    publication is
    that when the
    documents um describing San were finally
    Declassified in the 1980s it completely
    changed the history of the Eisenhower
    presidency the early
    histories of the Eisenhower presidency
    were really quite flawed and you see
    some examples there these are just
    quotes from that uh Solarium at 70
    volume uh and there are many others like
    it or several others like it I should
    say um but but for instance the Columbia
    Professor Richard noad uh in a book it
    was noted was extremely critical of
    Eisenhower’s approach and he described
    um him his um as you said eisenh in part
    of The Superficial symmetry in order uh
    and his excessively formalized system
    caused him typically to become the last
    man in his office to know tangible
    details and the last to come to grips
    with acts of choice uh etc etc um
    referring to him as being left helpless
    by by this National Security strategy
    system that he had set up at the White
    House nothing could be further from the
    truth right we know that now um another
    example Herman finer dllas over Suz
    notice is he’s giving all the all the
    attention to to President Eisenhower
    Secretary of State John Foster Dulles uh
    because that was sort of the myth that
    grew up after the Eisenhower presidency
    after President Eisenhower left the
    White House was that really the foreign
    policy was being run by by do again
    we’ll see today that that was not at all
    the the case um but um that’s the sort
    of thing that was being published in in
    the the early
    1960s since salarium has come out there
    have been a number of um of volumes and
    we’ll we’ll take a look at a couple of
    them that U that really have gone back
    and and examined Eisenhower and his
    leadership style and as I was telling
    Joy Murphy before we went on on
    air a colleague of mine here at the
    college actually put together a course
    last year it’s all focused on on
    Eisenhower and his leadership and it
    uses um his granddaughter’s excellent um
    work how Ike LED so um anyway on on to
    the next slide if we
    could all right what I’d like to do here
    is just get us in the right mental frame
    to think
    about the summer and fall of
    1956 is really not that long after World
    War II right they were still very close
    to to the events of World War II it was
    only only about um 11 or 12 years since
    the the war ended and if you look at the
    left hand side of this slide you see at
    the at the top left Cologne Germany
    utterly destroyed save the
    cathedral uh and at the bottom you see
    Tokyo in
    1945 those are just city blocks of of
    nothing of rubble just completely
    destroyed urban
    area and just to the the right of that
    you see the mushroom cloud from the
    bombing of
    Hiroshima
    now I wanted to highlight that the fact
    that as terrible as the the Hiroshima
    bomb was and the nasaki bomb was and
    they were awesome and
    devastating uh they didn’t really breach
    any new level of Destruction in World
    War
    II in fact if you look at the picture of
    Tokyo next to the mushroom cloud the
    first time I saw that picture was when I
    was looking for photographs of
    Hiroshima after the bombing and this
    picture came up on the Internet so you
    have to be careful about what you what
    you find on the internet right um and
    then later I was looking for for
    photographs of Nagasaki and I found the
    same
    picture as being evidence of the
    destruction wrought by the atomic
    bombing of Nagasaki
    and so I had to do some research to
    figure out if it was Hiroshima or
    Nagasaki and it turns out what you’re
    looking at is the sumita river that runs
    through Tokyo and that was after the
    firebombing of Tokyo in May of 1945
    several months before the atomic bomb
    was
    dropped so I I wanted to highlight the
    fact that as awesome as the atomic bombs
    of World War II were uh they’re they’re
    not nearly as powerful as the bombs
    we’re going to talk about in a minute
    and and that
    had an effect on Eisenhower I would
    argue all right moving moving along to
    the right if you look across the bottom
    of the slide you see President Truman
    and President Eisenhower and when their
    terms ran and you see also the creation
    of the United Nations there at the
    bottom in October of
    1945 above that you see the Marshall
    Plan and this is really the the start of
    the cold war between the Marshall Plan
    you see at the at the top just um left
    of center and below that the Berlin
    airlift is really sort of the firing or
    the opening shots being fired in in the
    Cold
    War uh the Berlin airlift ran from 48 to
    49 and in in there you had
    Israel recognized as a state in May of
    1948 and before the the Berlin airlift
    ended we had the creation of
    NATO before 1949 was over
    uh two other very important um
    historical events happened one was that
    the Soviets detonated their first atomic
    bomb in August of
    1949 and Ma and the Communist uh managed
    to take control of China in October of
    1949 so these are these any one of these
    things um would be a huge historical
    turning point and they’re all piled into
    this this decade leading up to to
    Suez we had the Korean War kickoff in
    1950 while that was going on Britain
    joined the nuclear club with its first
    atomic bomb
    detonation uh and then in March of
    1954 as as a result of the
    in super right a thermonuclear weapon
    using um Fusion as well as fision and
    uh this wasn’t the exactly the first
    test but it was the first test of a
    weaponized system or
    device and it’s it’s still to this date
    the most powerful explosion that the
    United States has set off at 15 megatons
    now it’s really hard to get your brain
    around this I I won’t try to um go into
    a lot of detail but but maybe if we
    think about it in these terms that is
    1,000 times more
    powerful than the atomic bombs dropped
    on Hiroshima and
    Nagasaki okay it’s not not 10 times more
    powerful not a 100 times more a thousand
    times more
    powerful all right within days of that
    being dropped um Joseph Stalin died I
    don’t think it was as a result of
    finding out about our test but at any
    rate he he Departed the scene and before
    long the the um the Korean war ended
    with Eisenhower in the white house
    having having campaigned on a pledge to
    end the war in Korea to go to Korea and
    then to end the war in Korea both of
    which he
    did you’ll see there in
    1955 the formation of the Warsaw pack
    there at the top between the the
    pictures of those different uh
    explosions and while it took the the
    Soviet Union five years to catch up to
    us in terms of fision weapons it only
    took them a little over two and a half
    years before they detonated their first
    thermonuclear device so by the end of
    195 55 both the United States and the
    Soviet Union have true City busting if
    you will weapons right there there’s no
    defense against these weapons if you’re
    in the vicinity of one of these things
    going off it’s a it’s game
    over and then finally at the bottom
    there you see kushev uh with sort of a
    red and a big bracket he he managed to
    consolidate control over the Communist
    Party pretty quickly but it was a long
    time before he declared himself Premier
    so he didn’t have anything close to
    Stalin’s power so as we head into the
    Suz crisis it’s important to realize
    that Kev was more of a a first among
    equals or at least among some other
    contenders or people with a voice unlike
    his predecessor Stalin he’s still
    working on consolidating power so that’s
    all backdrop to the very eventful year
    of 1956 so if we could go to the next
    slide please
    now we’ve all heard about uh or maybe
    some of us uh can remember and
    participated in ARA drills uh or or
    familiar with civil defense and civil
    defense exercises but I I suspect that
    most of the people in the audience today
    whether online or in person really have
    very little experience and no memory of
    what 1956 was like and what the Cold War
    was like it’s history to them right it’s
    something you read about in a book and
    it’s hard to get the sense for what it
    was really like how
    psychologically stressful it was to to
    live with this idea that you could be
    obliterated and there’s really not a lot
    you could do about it so what I’d like
    to highlight here uh we just talked
    about the the fact that the Soviets had
    tested a thermonuclear weapon and I
    think I think that changed everything
    now back then there were no missiles
    right so it wasn’t they weren’t going to
    get here in 30 minutes like like in the
    missile age Sputnik is still a year into
    the future after the sus
    crisis um so it it really came down to
    delivering these things um by
    bombers and there was supposedly a
    bomber Gap in which the US was Gravely
    inferior to the Soviet Union in terms of
    the number of bombers available to
    deliver these horrendous
    weapons um and across the bottom of this
    picture what you see are a couple of of
    civil defense posters and then three
    book covers
    and I show these because um they’re
    because they’re very relevant to the
    summer of 1956 in the middle you see
    eyes in the sky and that’s a book about
    the U2 Eisenhower gave permission or
    approval for the first U2 flights over
    the Union to try to find out if the
    bomber Gap was real and we’ll come back
    to that
    later uh but he was being pushed very
    hard to to take risk and to fly this
    thing over the Soviet Union by the by
    the people at the CIA who had developed
    this
    plane and then to the left of that you
    see this book ravenrock and that’s the
    one I really want to draw your attention
    to
    um I believe that the Advent of
    thermonuclear weapons really changed
    Eisenhower if you go back to
    1953 you can find quotes of Eisenhower
    saying that we need to use nuclear
    weapons just like we would any other
    weapon I don’t think I’ve ever seen uh
    where he said the same thing about
    thermonuclear weapons he really it
    really seemed to to
    um strike him deep in his core that that
    that kind of thinking was was no longer
    possible um
    and so uh ravenrock is a story
    about what the US government did to try
    to ensure that if there were a nuclear
    war that we would survive as a
    country and uh it’s got lots of great
    details lots of great history but
    important for us today is the fact that
    starting in 1955 the summer of 1955 we
    did these annual EX exercise uh or
    operation alert exercises so operation
    alert they call them opal exercises
    sometimes for short but these started in
    1955 and didn’t go well as you could
    imagine right so what’s happening the
    whole government is trying to pick up
    and move someplace else outside of the
    Washington DC area where they can be
    safe and
    um uh some of you may be familiar with
    um with uh some of the the sites that
    around the country around the DC area
    where where folks went there’s Mount
    weather where much of the federal
    government would would um relocate to in
    Western Virginia uh there was
    um site R up in
    Pennsylvania um there is a a lovely
    Greenbrier hotel just across the
    Virginia West Virginia state line and in
    the basement of that there was a nuclear
    bunker right these things were all all
    built in the 19 uh 50s and at any rate
    in
    1956 which is what we’re interested in
    they held the second ever one of these
    operation alert exercises and both the
    1955 one and the 1956 one were complete
    fiascos right as you can imagine um as
    it dawned on the spouses of government
    officials that that um the government
    officials were were going off to be
    saved to carry on leaving behind their
    families well that that didn’t sit well
    with the spouses or with the government
    officials some of them flat out refused
    if there wasn’t going to be room for
    their for their spouse that they weren’t
    going to go either um the very first one
    President Eisenhower surprised his staff
    and and everybody by saying okay right
    where’s I’m gonna sign a mock executive
    order declaring martial
    law they had to go back to the days of
    Abraham Lincoln to see um uh a precedent
    and what to do about that um and so in
    in
    56 President Eisenhower is trying to get
    up to to uh the Camp David area and uh
    his limousine gets stuck behind farm
    equipment on the way up there so that
    that’s he he gets there after all of his
    uh staff and other um executive
    department members who helicoptered up
    the Secret Service didn’t want the
    president on a helicopter or in a single
    engine airplane that that changed after
    1956 as a result of this operation alert
    exercise um it’s I hope that gives you
    just a small flavor for how seriously
    our government took the threat of
    nuclear war and what it would mean for
    our country right could could we even
    survive it was it was really I think an
    open question all right with all that I
    think we’re ready now to talk about 1956
    so if we can go to the next slide
    um this was an astounding
    year on the 25th of February kushev gave
    a secret speech to the 20th party
    Congress of the Soviet Communist
    party in which he completely denounced
    Stalin this was unheard of this this
    shook the the Communist world right and
    it eventually um was was largely um a
    factor in the split between Ma and China
    and the Soviet Union but that didn’t
    develop fully for a few years but but it
    has Secret in quotes there
    because kushev while he gave this speech
    in secret he made sure that it got
    out and um and it had a very big impact
    on the Warsaw pack that is the the um
    the alliance structure opposing NATO I
    mean some of the satellite countries
    thought wow this is great we’re moving
    in a in a New Direction here maybe with
    less um control from from
    Moscow in June of that
    year in Poland industrial workers rioted
    and the Soviets had to go in and put
    that down um later uh well before we get
    to the U2 flights um you see there that
    in June 7th of June President Eisenhower
    had a elitis attack and that left him
    either in the hospital or at least out
    of Washington up in Gettysburg
    recuperating all the way through to the
    16th of July and that’s really important
    um because um his one of the first
    things he did when he came back to
    Washington a after the elitis was to
    have a meeting with John Foster Dulles
    and let dullas tell dullas he could he
    could handle the situ itu ation with
    Egypt and unfortunately his secretary of
    state Eisenhower Secretary of State
    undiplomatic told the Egyptians that
    they weren’t going to get any us funds
    to build this Aswan High
    Dam um we had first offered those funds
    even after the
    Egyptians had made a a bargain a deal to
    buy Eastern block arms they’re going to
    buy arms from the Czech Republic and in
    fact I think an attempt to woo them away
    from the Soviets and and the East block
    the the US and Britain offered to fund
    the ason higham well in
    July secretary DS told him that that
    money was not going to be forthcoming
    all right also in July we had the very
    first U2 flights and these flew over St
    Petersburg and Moscow and he took
    pictures of those those
    cities and
    um some of those pictures that were
    taken showed Soviet Fighters
    trying to climb up to intercept the u2s
    now it was believed by the president and
    others that the U2 was going to fly so
    high that that Soviet radar would not be
    able to detect it well they were
    detected on their very first
    flights um and the Soviets were were
    stuck in a way because they didn’t want
    to admit their weakness in their
    inability to intercept the u2s but they
    they didn’t want them to continue so
    they eventually on the 10th of July they
    protested the U2 flights uh but the the
    important takeaway for us is that these
    U2 flights well two things first the CIA
    didn’t tell the president that their
    U2’s flights were being intercepted he
    only found out later when the Soviets
    protested um probably not endearing the
    CIA to the president uh but but more
    importantly the the U2 flights proed
    that that there was a bomber Gap it’s
    just that it went the other way it was
    the United United States that had the
    big advantage over the Soviet Union but
    Eisenhower couldn’t tell anybody that he
    knew that he could now with confidence
    push back on those who wanted to to
    spend a lot of money building more us
    b52s but he couldn’t really share
    that as a result of that um that
    decision to to not fund the Aswan High
    Dam within a week Nasser decided to
    nationalize the Suez Canal
    and that just drove the the British and
    the French
    crazy uh the the French didn’t like
    Naser because they were fighting their
    own war in Algeria and they knew that
    NASA was supporting the Algerian
    Rebels
    um the the French sorry the British
    owned 44% of the Suz Canal company and
    something like 70% of the oil from the
    Middle East bound to Europe passed
    through that Canal um and so the French
    and the and the the British were
    spring-loaded to take a hard stand
    against Nasser and and to use
    Force President Eisenhower did not
    hesitate he he uh sent Dallas to London
    he penned a letter to to British prime
    minister Anthony Eden telling him look
    you can’t use Force yet there’s we have
    to find a different way and so that
    ultimately led to to a couple of London
    conferences the the Suez Canal
    conferences at London there was one in
    August and then another one in September
    that sort of uh bracketed the Republican
    National Convention so remember this is
    an election year
    1956
    and uh the Republican National
    Convention held out in San Francisco
    took place from the 20th to the 23rd of
    August and at that at the convention
    President Eisenhower gave a speech
    speech accepting the party’s nomination
    and the theme of the speech was ex was
    principles overe
    expediency in other words America needed
    to do the right thing it needed to stand
    on principle and and not give into
    whatever seemed most expedient at the
    moment and I think this plays into as
    Joy Murphy mentioned at the beginning
    the idea this month is uh Eisenhower’s
    moral Authority right you’ll see this
    come up again and again um he really was
    a man of principle
    it was also the 100th anniversary of the
    Republican
    party and so isenhower used that to to
    play on some themes U from from
    Lincoln’s time when when the party was
    just getting started and we’ll we’ll um
    we’ll see that in a bit but the idea was
    the Republican party is the party of the
    future and if it’s going to stand for
    another 100 years and needs to do
    certain things and again we’ll come back
    to those all right moving on quickly now
    after the second London
    conference the uh what began uh some
    some people called it the worst week in
    Eisenhower’s presidency in in the first
    chapter uh or in one of the early
    chapters of his his um the second volume
    of his Memoirs right waging peace he
    talks about uh 20 busy days right but
    whether it’s a week or 20 days this was
    an extremely busy period he’s in the
    he’s in the home stretch of a reelection
    campaign and he’s got this crisis
    brewing in the in the Middle East which
    he thinks he’s he’s solved although he
    continues through YouTube flights and
    photographic evidence he contines to see
    evidence there’s trouble but he thinks
    that the British and the French are not
    going to do anything before the election
    he thinks he’s he’s kind of got that um
    under control and then on the 24th of
    October a revolution breaks out in
    Hungary and at first the Soviet take a
    fairly soft stand on this uh there there
    are a lot of people killed on the 24th
    itself but in the days that followed it
    looked like the Soviets were not going
    to crack down
    hard uh that is until prime minister NJ
    declared Hungary to be neutral that his
    country had withdrawn from the Warsaw
    pack uh and and now it looks like with
    remember the the the riots in Poland
    previously there were before even that
    there were um protests in in Germany and
    and that had to be put down violently by
    the Soviets and
    so um starting on the fourth of November
    the Soviets come in and for the rest of
    that month just brutally cracked down uh
    on the up the um Rebels the
    uprising and then on the 5th of November
    Britain and France uh launch a ground
    Invasion now I skipped over I think uh
    yeah I didn’t mention the 31st of
    October Britain and France had actually
    started bombing in Egypt but then the
    their Ground Forces go in on the 5th of
    November and so this is the day before
    the Americans go to the polls to decide
    whether or not to reelect President
    Eisenhower so you can see he’s got his
    hands full with Hungary with um Suz and
    with his
    reelection and it was on the night of
    the 5th or end of the 6th that um Nikita
    Cru CH speaking through the Soviet
    Premier oanon starts issuing so not not
    so very veiled threats about World War
    II he actually uses that terminology um
    in in a a letter to Eisenhower and talks
    about firing rockets at the British and
    the French with the implication being
    that these would be nuclear weapons and
    so uh that’s that’s all on Eisenhower’s
    plate as he as he heads into the
    election
    um but he’s got a lot of Leverage which
    we’ll talk about and uh he’s able to to
    use that bring that to Bear to get
    Anthony Eden to agree to a ceasefire on
    Election Day they had just gone in the
    day before uh the French were extremely
    disappointed um but um nonetheless the
    president was able to um to without
    using military force get the British de
    back down next slide
    [Music]
    please all right so if we look at the
    situation then when the ceasefire was
    declared we see that um the the
    Israelis have moved in and taken over
    pretty much all the Sinai and meanwhile
    the French and the British have gotten
    control over the Canal Zone um they’re
    they’re not um everywhere they’re not in
    complete control I mean that the
    operation on the ground just began on
    the fifth uh but uh the the Egyptians
    are are beaten the Egyptian Army is
    beaten um and while Eden has agreed to a
    ceasefire he still has what he wanted
    which is he’s got French and British
    forces on the ground there um in a
    better position to control the Suez
    Canal than than um than anybody else it
    should be noted that uh one of the
    reasons that the the British said that
    they were going into to Suz was
    to protect the Canal Zone protect
    traffic through the canal Zone well it
    turns out that Nasser and the Egyptians
    when they took over the Canal Zone the
    Egyptian Pilots managed to keep things
    moving and in fact there was more
    traffic flowing through the canal during
    the time that Egypt was running the
    canal than when than the months before
    when the British were running it so uh
    as a result of the attack Naser has sunk
    some ships now to block the canal so it
    it’s it’s completely the
    the dishonesty the the pretense was was
    exposed I mean from the very beginning
    um but when this when Britain went to
    war it was still in a bad shape from
    from World War II it needed money it
    remember it gets um nearly 70% of its
    oil coming up through the um through the
    canal and uh and Eisenhower could see in
    advance that they’re going to need oil
    and they’re going to need money and we
    have leverage in that regard and so um
    Eisenhower refused to meet with Eden
    even though Eden asked to have a summit
    uh he refused to send any oil to Europe
    um he he blocked an international
    monetary fund loan to the British and he
    refused to support the the pound
    sterling which was in in freef fall uh
    until
    the British agreed to remove their
    troops from Egyptian soil and that
    didn’t happen until the 3D of December
    Eden actually left the country went on
    vacation in Jamaica or someplace in the
    Caribbean and um it was McMillan running
    things back home in in the UK that
    eventually um worked through the cabinet
    and announced that they would in fact
    remove their forces so that was that was
    all Eisenhower’s doing or or planning or
    or thinking all right next slide please
    all right so
    um in the in the
    final seven or eight minutes here before
    we go to question and answers I just
    wanted to highlight a couple of really
    really good
    books on uh on Eisenhower one on the
    crisis the sus crisis the other just on
    Eisenhower himself the the age of
    Eisenhower I think is is a terrific book
    um and these these are just examples of
    some of the more recent history
    that completely
    overturn the the unfair uninformed
    inaccurate histories from the early
    1960s the the Eisenhower and the Suez
    Crisis 1956 is really a case study and
    Leadership that’s what it’s all about
    how did Eisenhower make the best use of
    of his his staff his cabinet his
    intelligence people’s military and and
    all throughout these books and others uh
    you can find based on unclassified what
    have now been unclassified documents you
    see things like um in the bottom if you
    can see uh you’ve got Alan Dulles and
    Richard pel from the CIA there was a lot
    of pressure uh on the president to fly
    the U2 over the Soviet Union and
    Eisenhower was really really careful
    about about how he used that he had no
    problem pushing back uh on on these
    loyal um but but maybe a little too
    eager
    subordinates it comes clear too
    throughout the telling of the story that
    Eisenhower was in charge of foreign
    policy and dollis was a loyal
    subordinate it wasn’t that that Dallas
    was leading Eisenhower around and
    deciding it was foreign policy it was
    definitely the president in charge and
    then with the Joint Chiefs
    there their response to the Suz crisis
    was we we should let Israel go it’s
    going to be a fate compete they’re going
    to quickly um take SI and defeat the
    Egyptians and we should back
    the British and the
    French um because they’re our NATO
    allies and so we we that’s important to
    us and so we should back them and so
    Eisenhower overruled them all and and
    did it his way so next slide
    [Music]
    please so so back to the idea of moral
    persuasion I think you can see
    throughout the biographies of of
    Eisenhower his
    Memoirs uh
    of course he had a deep familiarity and
    importance of War right um like any
    American he also opposed colonialism or
    imperialism um and you see in his chance
    for peace speech uh after the death of
    Stalin his understanding of what it what
    it really truly cost in terms of our
    quality of lives and our values to have
    to fund an enormous military and
    and um going to war was even much much
    more expensive than than than that sort
    of thing so um if we move on there to to
    the speech he gave at the Republican
    National Convention on the 23rd of
    August 1956 you’ve got some quotes from
    the speech he finally again this is a a
    speech about the party of the future on
    the 100 anniversary of the the founding
    of the party um and says we have to be
    completely dedicated to to peace and I
    like this this quote that I’ve
    highlighted here we are in the era of
    the thermonuclear bomb that can
    obliterate cities and can be delivered
    across continents with such weapons War
    has become not just tragic but
    Preposterous with such weapons there can
    be no victory for anyone plainly in the
    objective now must be to see that such a
    war does not occur at
    all right
    um after the Israelis invaded Egypt
    the president went on TV for a
    15minute speech that he gave to the
    American public and then he said there
    can be no peace without law and there
    can be no law if we invoke one code of
    international conduct for those who
    oppose us and another for our friends
    and so again this is these are just
    all um among the many examples of
    Eisenhower standing on principle um and
    not doing what some of his advisers were
    telling him uh and and that goes for the
    last bullet on this slide too which is
    there are several instances of
    Eisenhower telling people that you know
    if I lose the election don’t you can
    feel sorry for whever you want but not
    don’t feel sorry for me and uh he he
    clearly cared less about the outcome of
    the election than in maintaining peace
    and especially uh heading off anything
    that might head towards World War I and
    let me just read to you a really brief
    uh excerpt from his his Memoir um waging
    peace
    um this is this is at a time when
    Hungary is in in Uprising the Soviets
    are cracking down and the Soviet Union
    is threatening World War III and
    threatening to attack Britain and
    France
    um he said he
    wrote the Soviets I went on seeing their
    he’s referring to back to what he said
    at the time in his Memoir seeing their
    failure in the satellites might be ready
    to undertake any wild
    adventure they are as scared and Furious
    as Hitler was in his last days there’s
    nothing more dangerous than a
    dictatorship in that frame of
    mind so in Eisenhower’s
    mind in the days before the
    election there really was a threat of of
    nuclear war with the Soviet Union a
    threat of slipping into um a war that
    would eventually involve the United
    States fighting against the Soviet Union
    and that would likely lead to nuclear
    war next slide
    please all right these are these are
    some lessons for today I think that that
    uh any politician or Statesman could
    could contemplate think about um we’ve
    forgotten since the end of the Cold War
    how to think about nuclear weapons and
    deterrence and where I teach we’re
    working very hard at the direction of
    the joint chesa staff to try to help our
    students these Rising National Security
    Professionals to understand that
    um how devastating nuclear weapons are
    and and how to think about deterrents
    it’s again something we haven’t done for
    for about a quarter of a century
    um we also are are reminded did
    something that that fiddies wrote about
    a long long time ago and that our
    Founders our nation’s Founders
    understood clearly because they read
    their deities which is that um great
    powers can be drawn into war with one
    another through the actions of their
    allies right and so um that’s something
    that we we see the risk of just pregnant
    in the in the whole sua
    situation Wars are are are very much
    expensive and they they can cause
    Nations to to fall and in fact the Suz
    crisis was a real turning point right
    Britain and France were never the same
    after the Suez Crisis they were already
    in Decline but that that decline quickly
    accelerated in in all Wars It’s the
    politics that’s Central the political
    aim not who wins the battles because the
    French I mean this the sus crisis the
    French and the British won their battles
    they won militarily but they
    it was a debacle politically for them
    okay um world affairs are highly
    interconnected it’s it’s really hard to
    divorce one part of the world from
    another or isolate it wall it off right
    and um we see that today uh as there’s
    continued turmoil in the Middle East and
    it and it does reverberate in how we act
    and deal with other
    situations with uh with all the current
    concern about climate change I think
    we’ve lost sight of the concern for
    energy security but the importance of
    energy security and sound National
    finances come across loud and clear in
    in this case
    study um Eisenhower used non-military
    instruments and so it’s a great case
    study for understanding how to use
    diplomacy and
    economics U politics does not stop at
    the water’s
    edge uh um Adie Stevenson’s and and his
    campaign were merciless in in attacking
    Eisenhower politically during these
    crises there was no rallying around the
    flag or uniting behind the president um
    and then
    lastly the years in which America holds
    its presidential elections are very
    tempting for foreign opportunists very
    tempting to to take actions believing
    that the any Administration would be
    paralyzed so we can go to the next slide
    we’ll wrap up um this is just from from
    President Eisenhower’s speech about the
    future of the party that he gave at the
    Republican National Convention in August
    of
    1956 right he quoted Lincoln quoting the
    Bible about A House Divided and the last
    last segment there it’s sometimes
    forgotten Lincoln followed this
    quotation with a note of Hope for this
    troubled country I do not expect the
    house to fall he said but I do expect it
    will cease to be divided and I think if
    President Eisenhower with us here today
    that would still be his hope both for
    our country to be less divided uh and
    for the world to be less divided so let
    me stop there and we’ll move on to to
    questions and
    answers all right thank you so much for
    that great presentation uh we will be
    taking questions from the audience if
    you we have any um and also there are
    some questions in the chat so we’ll
    start there um the first question says
    what was the significance of the Su
    Canal for international trade and Global
    politicism in the mid 20th
    century yeah it was it was uh certainly
    Central um if if you uh one one of the
    other interests I have um is energy and
    energy security and uh if you look at
    World Bank
    studies economic development tracks in
    tandem with
    um with the use of energy I mean that
    that’s what makes today different from
    the pre-industrial era we’ve replaced
    the energy of our muscles or animal
    power um or or windmills um to some
    degree um we’ve replaced that with
    fossil fuels with nuclear energy with
    other forms of more modern energy um
    that completely underpins economics and
    our well-being and our standard of
    living
    right Europe was getting 70% of its
    energy or nearly 70% of its its the oil
    that it needed to run its economy for
    transportation from the Middle East and
    so it was extremely important in that
    regard um as far as as other sorts of
    trade it was obviously
    important um the British no longer had
    India as part of their empire so there
    wasn’t that strategic concern that
    Britain had had but but the the
    trade um that that flowed between Europe
    and
    Asia uh without the canal is going is
    going to have to go all the way around
    Africa the southern tip of Africa right
    adding huge cost to transportation and
    that sort of thing so so it was it was
    quite important
    but I should remind you um when when um
    when Nasser sees the canal President
    Eisenhower was not that concerned I mean
    he he didn’t like it but he pointed out
    to the British and the French that this
    was not illegal as long as Egypt justly
    compensated the the the stockholders of
    the the Suez Canal company um there was
    nothing wrong with him nationalizing it
    under international law law he could do
    that what as long as he maintained the
    flow of traffic through the canal and in
    fact flow of traffic went up under the
    Egyptian
    Pilots so
    um so so
    there there really wasn’t um ever didn’t
    it didn’t appear there really wasn’t a
    threat Eden perceived it differently he
    didn’t he he saw it as giving Nasser a
    thumb on the British jugular right that
    he could he could close it any time he
    wanted to um but um yeah that it was an
    important uh trade route but but um much
    more so for the British and for the
    Europeans than for
    America I do want to Circle back to that
    but first there’s another question in
    the chat um it says did President
    Eisenhower’s inter intermittent poor
    health during this time impacted his
    response to the crisis of the zth
    canal I don’t think it did I mean it
    it’s other than the the um recuperation
    from iltis that took him out of the
    picture in the early summer but but
    really most of the the really um
    problematic things came after that and
    he was able to deal with them now that’s
    not to say that he was feeling great
    while he did it but it didn’t seem to
    stop him a couple of the the
    the books I read on this suggest that he
    was um by one Observer he was talking to
    his doctor Dr
    Schneider every couple of
    hours right because he was having he did
    have some um high blood pressure some
    episodes of high blood pressure
    irregular heartbeat and some discomfort
    from his abdominal surgery the after
    effects of that so those were were
    plaguing him troubling him during this
    time but but didn’t seem to stop him
    from doing what he thought he needed to
    do we are having a little bit of um
    audio concerns however we’re gonna try
    to power through we’re almost finished
    um so first I’ll ask are there any
    questions in our inperson
    audience from our inperson
    audience good
    afternoon my question is you had said
    earlier that war is very expensive and
    since France and England was already at
    War and their funds were being taken up
    by the War uh who funded the US Canal
    did us do it by
    themselves
    um I’m I’m not I’m not sure exactly what
    you mean by that let me try to take a
    stab at an answer but but please come
    back at me if I missed missed the point
    so the operating of the Suez Canal pays
    for itself right the the the um ship
    shipping companies that used the canal
    paid fees just like you and I would pay
    a toll on on a on a toll road or cross a
    bridge that had a toll right and so the
    canal was a money maker so so nobody had
    to fund the operation of the canal um it
    it was it was self self-funding it was a
    money
    maker but but I but maybe I missed your
    your
    question you you’re my second question
    is that you stated that Israel am I
    wrong that Israel attacked Egypt is that
    correct yes that’s right um
    so part and this was only a few years
    after I’m sorry yeah yeah right this was
    only a few years after Israel became a
    country right so what what happened the
    history of that that is is that
    when Israel declared itself a country
    the US quickly recognized that and
    Israel was IM immediately attacked by
    its neighbors and so the first Arab
    Israeli War began in May of 1948 with
    with Israel becoming a
    country this is often called the
    second uh Arab Israeli War that is the
    Suz War now
    um doesn’t mean there was peace in
    between time the Gaza Strip was
    used by uh
    Palestinian um entities who were not
    happy with Israel and wanted to make
    Israel pay for for
    having taken taken area that they
    thought was theirs and so there are
    these fetene who attacked regularly out
    of the Gaza Strip and sometimes fled
    back across the Egyptian border into the
    SI so Israel had a an an and actually
    Nasser the Egyptian president actually
    wanted to kind of help Israel he didn’t
    want to go to war with Israel he he sort
    of didn’t really want these these fetene
    um using his territory to provoke
    Israel but they did they continued to
    and Nasser really couldn’t control them
    and so it wasn’t that is Israel decided
    on its own to go to go attack Egypt what
    happened
    was um the British and the French went
    to Israel and put put Israel up to this
    the British and the French at a meeting
    in sever
    France um on the 22nd of October I
    believe like very close to the event the
    fact that they tried to pull this off on
    such a short timeline it’s just
    mindboggling but they they went to
    Israel and convinced Israel listen you
    attack and then we’ll use that as as our
    excuse to come in and say hey we’re just
    here to break up the the fighters the
    the the you know th those who are
    fighting and you know and when we do
    that then we’ll we’ll have to keep the
    peace and we’ll that way we we’ll
    establish our military presence there on
    the canal so it wasn’t like Israel was
    was on its own going out to pick a fight
    with Egypt um and in fact on the 1 of
    November
    Israel agreed to a
    ceasefire and Egypt tentatively agreed
    to the ceasefire and yet it was still
    almost a week later was it was the sixth
    before Eisenhower pressured Eden enough
    to finally get the British to agree to a
    ceasefire so the whole reason that they
    were going in there in the first place
    to secure the canal and and to bring to
    keep the the the combatants apart and
    bring stability was was completely shown
    to be a lie from the get-go
    but yeah they they were all the Israelis
    were in cahoots with the British and the
    French the British and the French put
    them up to it it was the British and the
    French idea and they used the Israelis
    to to help execute their
    plan all right so again we continue to
    have some audio um issues so I’m
    actually going to go ahead and wrap us
    up uh right now so first of all let me
    say thank you again to Dr Buckman for uh
    your wonderful
    presentation
    um and thank you to each and every one
    of you for joining us today we do have a
    few closing
    announcements you’ll just bear with
    us all right our 2024 public programs
    are made possible by the Eisenhower
    foundation and the Jeff Co Memorial
    Foundation we are certainly appreci
    appreciative to both both of these
    organizations because without them we
    would not be able to continue to provide
    these programs for
    you and we would like to invite you back
    for next month for our uh next two
    programs um our evenings at ease which
    will be um sort of a mini version of um
    a hilarious that Dr
    Buck bucknam talked about earlier today
    so we would love for you to join us for
    that um and then of course our our lunch
    and learn will we will welcome David Hay
    uh if you’d like to learn more about our
    programs you can join our email list we
    are happy to get that information out to
    you thank you so much I hope that you
    enjoyed your our programming today and
    have a wonderful afternoon

    Guest speaker Dr. Mark Bucknam will join us virtually from the National War College located in Washington, DC. Professor Bucknam will talk about President Eisenhower and the Suez crisis of 1956 in context of the Cold War. Coming in the final days of Eisenhower’s reelection campaign, the Suez crisis also coincided with a Soviet crackdown in Hungary and turmoil across North Africa and the Levant. Eisenhower strove to restrain Israel, Britain, and France as they mobilized for war. He took a principled stand against military aggression by Israel and America’s allies despite warnings it could cost him at the polls. President Eisenhower’s handling of the Suez crisis powerfully illustrates his use of moral persuasion and holds valuable lessons for political leaders and statesmen of today.

    The 2024 Waging Peace program series is made possible courtesy of the Eisenhower Foundation with generous support from the Jeffcoat Memorial Foundation.

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