
Nasser, Gamal Abdel (1918-1970), President of Egypt (1956-1970) and President of the Syrian Egyotian
union of the United Arab Republic (1958-1961). Nasser rose from humble
beginnings to become the most influential leader of the Arab world.
Nasser was born in Alexandria on January 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. Although he
was the real leader, Nasser initially remained in the background.
Following the Bandung Conference (1955), at
which he emerged as a world figure, having espoused a policy of nonalignment, Nasser's relations with the West deteriorated. In 1956
Britain and the United States withdrew their financial support from his Aswan
High Dam project. In order to obtain funds for the project, Nasser then
nationalized the Suez Canal. This brought aggression from France and Britain in
alliance with Israel. Under pressure from the U.S., however, the three were
forced to withdraw, and a United Nations emergency force was subsequently placed
as a buffer between Egypt and Israel.
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 After the UN peacekeeping force, at Nasser's request, had been withdrawn, and Egyptian guns blockaded the Gulf of Aqaba to Israeli ships, Israel attacked Egypt and occupied the entire Sinai Peninsula up to the Suez Canal (see Six-Day War). Nasser, taking responsibility for the debacle, resigned, but the people took to the streets, demanding his return to government. He never, however, regained his previous stature. On September 28, 1970, he died suddenly of a heart attack.