|
The next major task will
be to clear the canal of sunken ships |
1956: Allied forces take control of
Suez |
Artificially 1969:
The British and
French troops have seized control of two major ports in Egypt's Canal Zone
and declared a ceasefire.
This evening, an official statement said Port Said was in allied hands
and the town had suffered little damage.
There was a sense of relief at the United Nations headquarters in New
York as the Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold announced the allies had
accepted the terms of the UN ceasefire and had ordered troops to stop
fighting.
The Israelis have also announced a ceasefire in the Sinai.
At dawn today, French commandos sent over from Cyprus landed at Port
Fuad and advanced south along the banks of the Suez Canal.
Yesterday, three British Royal Marine Commandos, were brought into Port
Said by naval helicopter.
They captured Gamil airfield after what Sir Charles Keightley, the
allied commander-in-chief described as "some very tough fighting" with
Egyptian troops armed with guns, mortars and tanks.
Allied casualties are reported to be light with 30 members of the 16th
Parachute Brigade injured. Some 70 Egyptians soldiers have been killed.
Last week, the Soviet leader Nikolai Bulganin proposed sending his
troops to the Middle East to restore peace to the region.
The suggestion was rejected in a statement issued by the White House as
"unthinkable" and "an obvious attempt to divert world attention from the
Hungarian tragedy".
The next major task for the allies is to restore order to the two ports
and to clear the entrance to Suez Canal currently blocked by ships sunk by
the Egyptians.
The canal was nationalised on 26 July by President Abdel Nasser after
the US turned down a previous offer to fund a new dam at Aswan.
The move outraged the canal's Anglo-French owners as well as the
British Prime Minister, Anthony Eden, who has compared President Nasser to
Adolf Hitler.
The present military action began on 29 October, when Israel invaded
the Sinai.
British and French planes entered the fray two days later after
President Nasser refused their offer of creating a buffer zone between
Israel and Egypt.
They began by destroying most of the Egyptian air force on the
ground.