Difference between revisions of "Suez Canal" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
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===Arab-Israeli War of 1967===
 
===Arab-Israeli War of 1967===
After the [[1967 Arab-Israeli war]], the canal was closed and remained so until June 5, 1975. In 1973, during the [[Yom Kippur War]], the canal was the scene of a major crossing by the Egyptian army into Israeli-occupied Sinai. After a UN mandate expired in 1979, negotiations for a new observer force produced the [http://www.mfo.org Multinational Force and Observers] (MFO), stationed in Sinai in 1981 in coordination with a phased Israeli withdrawal. It is not there under UN [[auspices]] but under agreements between the United States, Israel, Egypt, and other nations.
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The Suez Canal was closed by the [[1967 Six-Day, Arab-Israeli War]] when Israel fought Egypt, Syrian, Jordan, and various Palestinean factions. Israel declared that it would not give up Jerusalem and that it would hold the other captured territories until significant progress had been made in Arab-Israeli relations. The end of active, conventional fighting was followed by frequent artillery duels along the frontiers and by clashes between Israelis and Palestinian guerrillas, which kept the Suez Canal closed until June 5, 1975, at the end of the Yom Kippur War in 1974.
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In 1973, during the [[Yom Kippur War]], the Suez Canal was the scene of a major crossing by the Egyptian army into Israeli-occupied Sinai. After the Yom Kippur War, Egyptian and Syrian diplomatic relations with the United States, broken since the 1967 war, were resumed, and clearance of the Suez Canal began. The 1973–74 War brought about a major shift of power in the Middle East and ultimately led to the signing of the Camp David accords.
  
 
==Operation==
 
==Operation==

Revision as of 23:30, 29 April 2007

An American warship in the Suez Canal.
1881 drawing of the Suez Canal.

The Suez Canal (Arabic: قناة السويس, Qanā al-Suways), is a large, artificial maritime canal in Egypt west of the Sinai Peninsula. It is 101 miles long and 984 feet wide at its narrowest point, and runs between Port Said on the Mediterranean Sea, and Suez on the far northern shore of the Red Sea.

The canal allows two-way, north-to-south water transportation, most importantly between Europe and Asia without circumnavigation of Africa. Before its opening in 1869, goods were sometimes offloaded from ships and carried overland between the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. The canal comprises two parts, north and south of the Great Bitter Lake, linking the Mediterranean Sea to the Gulf of Suez on the Red Sea.

If the Nile River is the "lifeblood of Egypt," then the Suez Canal is the Egypt's umbilical cord to the world. Some 7.5 percent of the world's sea trade travels the canal, as does most of Europe's oil. This strategic waterway has existed almost as long as Egyptian civlization, with digging going back to the pharaohs, followed by the Persians, and Ptolemy; even Napoleon saw its value. Many thousands were said to have died during its construction. Always a geopolitical flashpoint, international conflicts broke out at the canal in the 1950s and 60s. Today, the Suez Canal remains a key short-cut for circumnavigation of the world.

History

The ancient west-east canal

Suez Canal seen from space. The Wadi Tumilat is shown running west to east just above the Great Bitter Lake.

Perhaps as early as the Twelfth Dynasty during the reign of Pharaoh Senusret III (1878 B.C.E. - 1839 B.C.E.), a west-east canal connecting the Red Sea to the Wadi Tumilat had been created. This early canal connected the sea to the easternmost of the seven arms of the Nile—thus allowing trade indirectly from the Mediterranean. Evidence indicates its certain existence by the thirteenth century B.C.E. during the time of Ramesses II.[1]

The west-east canal later fell into disrepair, and according to the Greel historian Herodotus, Pharaoh Necho II undertook re-excavation about 600 B.C.E., but did not complete it. Repairs were finally completed by Darius I of Persia, who conquered Egypt. According to Herodotus, the completed canal was wide enough that two triremes could pass each other with oars extended, and required four days to traverse. Darius commemorated his achievement with a number of granite stelae that he set up on the Nile bank, including one near Kabret, 130 miles from Pie. The Darius Inscriptions read:

'Saith King Darius: "I am a Persian. Setting out from Persia, I conquered Egypt. I ordered this canal dug from the river called the Nile that flows in Egypt, to the sea that begins in Persia. When the canal had been dug as I ordered, ships went from Egypt through this canal to Persia, even as I intended."' Darius' Suez Inscriptions. www.livius.org. Retrieved April 28, 2007.

The west-east canal was again restored by Ptolemy II about 250 B.C.E. Over the next thousand years it was successively modified, destroyed, and rebuilt, until finally being put out of commission in the eighth century CE by the Abbasid Caliph al-Mansur.

Napoleon's plan

At the end of the eighteenh century, Napoleon Bonaparte, while in Egypt, contemplated the construction of a canal to join the Mediterranean and Red Seas. But his project was abandoned after a first survey erroneously concluded that the Red Sea was 32.8 feet higher than the Mediterranean, making a giant, locks-based canal much too expensive and too long to construct.

The Suez Canal Company

Construction of the canal

In 1854 and 1856, Ferdinand de Lesseps, a former French diplomat with friendly connections with Egyptian authorities, obtained a concession from Said Pasha, the Ottoman viceroy of Egypt, to create a company to construct a maritime canal open to ships of all nations, according to plans created by Austrian engineer Alois Negrelli. The company was to operate the canal by leasing the relevant land for 99 years from its opening, for navigation purposes only. The Suez Canal Company came into being on December 15, 1858.

The excavation took nearly 11 years, mostly through the forced labor of Egyptian workers—a form of labor which was not unique to the French, nor the British before them. Some sources estimate that over 30,000 people were forced to work on the canal, while others estimate that as many 120,000 people, both forced and hired laborers, died from the work. [2]

Labor controversy

The British recognized the canal as an important trade route and perceived the French project as a direct menace to their geopolitical and financial interests. The British Empire was the major global naval force of this era, and its power had increased during the American Civil War. The British government officially condemned the forced labor and enouraged armed bedouins to start a revolt among workers. Involuntary labor on the project ceased, the Viceroy soon condemned it as slavery, and the project stopped.[3]

One of the first traverses in the 19th century.

Angered by this intervention, de Lesseps sent a letter to the British government remarking on the British lack of remorse only a few years earlier when 80,000 Egyptian forced workers allegedly died in similar conditions while building a British railroad in Egypt.

At first, international opinion about the project was skeptical, and the Suez Canal Company shares did not sell well overseas. Britain, United States, Austria, and Russia did not buy any shares. However, French shares were quickly purchased in French markets.

The Canal opens

The canal finally opened to traffic on November 17, 1869. Although numerous technical, political, and financial problems had been overcome, the final cost was more than double the original estimate.

The canal had an immediate and dramatic effect on world trade. Combined with the American Transcontinental Railroad completed six months earlier, it allowed the entire world to be circled in record time. It also played an important role in increasing European penetration and colonization of Africa. External debts forced Said Pasha's successor, Isma'il Pasha, to sell his country's share in the canal for 8 million dollars to the United Kingdom in 1875. France, however, still remained the majority shareholder.

Britsh control

British troops moved in to protect the canal during a civil war in Egypt in 1882, and the Convention of Constantinople in 1888 declared the canal a neutral zone under the protection of the United Kingdom. Under the Anglo-Egyptian Treaty of 1936, the UK insisted on retaining control over the canal. However, after World War II, in 1951, Egypt repudiated the treaty, and by 1954 the UK had agreed to pull out.

Canal conflicts

Suez Crisis

Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalized the Canal in 1956, after the UK and the United States withdrew their pledge to support the construction of the Aswan Dam. Naser intended to finance the dam project using revenue from the Canal. This provoked the week-long Suez Crisis, in which a military alliance between the UK, France, and Israel invaded Egypt. The threat of intervention on behalf of Egypt by the Soviet Union and pressure from Lester B. Pearson, then the Prime Minister of Canada, ended the crisis. For this, Pearson won the Nobel Peace Prize.

As a result of damage and sunken ships, the canal was closed until April 1957, when it had been cleared with United Nations assistance. A UN force (UNEF) was established to maintain the neutrality of the canal and the Sinai Peninsula.

Arab-Israeli War of 1967

The Suez Canal was closed by the 1967 Six-Day, Arab-Israeli War when Israel fought Egypt, Syrian, Jordan, and various Palestinean factions. Israel declared that it would not give up Jerusalem and that it would hold the other captured territories until significant progress had been made in Arab-Israeli relations. The end of active, conventional fighting was followed by frequent artillery duels along the frontiers and by clashes between Israelis and Palestinian guerrillas, which kept the Suez Canal closed until June 5, 1975, at the end of the Yom Kippur War in 1974.

In 1973, during the Yom Kippur War, the Suez Canal was the scene of a major crossing by the Egyptian army into Israeli-occupied Sinai. After the Yom Kippur War, Egyptian and Syrian diplomatic relations with the United States, broken since the 1967 war, were resumed, and clearance of the Suez Canal began. The 1973–74 War brought about a major shift of power in the Middle East and ultimately led to the signing of the Camp David accords.

Operation

Ships moored at El Ballah during transit.

The canal has no locks because the terrain through which it passes is flat. Despite calculations made during Napoleon's time, the sea level at both ends is virtually the same. The canal allows the passage of ships of up to some 150,000 tons displacement, with cargo. It permits ships of up to 53 feet draft to pass, and improvements are planned to increase this to 72 feet by 2010 to allow supertanker passage. Presently, supertankers can offload part of their cargo onto a canal-owned boat and reload at the other end of the canal. There is one shipping lane with several passing areas.

On a typical day, three convoys transit the canal, two southbound and one northbound. The first southbound convoy enters the canal in the early morning hours and proceeds to the Great Bitter Lake, where the ships anchor out of the fairway and await the passage of the northbound convoy. The northbound convoy passes the second southbound convoy, which moors to the canal bank in a by-pass, in the vicinity of El Qantara. The passage takes between 11 and 16 hours at a speed of around 8 knots. The low speed helps prevent erosion of the canal banks by ship's wakes.

Egypt's Suez Canal Authority (SCA) reported in 2003 that 17,224 ships passed through the canal. The canal averages about eight percent of the world shipping traffic. By 1955 approximately two-thirds of Europe's oil passed through the canal. About 7.5 percent of world sea trade is carried via the canal today. Receipts from the canal July 2005 to May 2006 totaled $3.25 million. In 2005, 18,193 vessels passed through the canal. [1]

Connections between the shores

Listed from north to south, connections acorss the canal are:

The Suez Canal Bridge.
  • The Suez Canal Bridge, also called the Egyptian-Japanese Friendship Bridge, is a high-level, fixed-road bridge at El Qantara. It has a 230-foot clearance over the canal and was built with assistance from the Japanese government.
  • El Ferdan Railway Bridge 12.42 miles north of Ismailia was completed in 2001 and is the longest swing span bridge in the world, with a span of 1100 feet. The previous bridge was destroyed in 1967 during the Arab-Israeli conflict.
  • Ahmed Hamdi Tunnel south of the Great Bitter Lake was built in 1983. Because of leakage problems, a new water-tight tunnel was built inside the old one, from 1992 to 1995.
  • The Suez Canal overhead line crossing powerline was built in 1999.

A railway on the west bank runs parallel to the canal for its entire length.

Timeline

Egypt: Site of Suez Canal.
  • Circa 1799 — Napoleon I of France conquered Egypt and ordered a feasibility analysis, which reported a supposed 32.8-foot difference in sea levels. Because of high estimated costs, the project was set on standby.
  • Circa 1840 — A second survey demonstrated nearly identical sea levels at both ends of the proprose canal, meaning that a direct link between the Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea would be possible and would not be as expensive as expected.
  • Circa 1854 — The French consul in Cairo, Ferdinand Marie de Lesseps, created the "Compagnie Universelle du Canal Maritime de Suez."
  • April 25, 1859 — The French were officially allowed to begin the canal construction (Said Pacha acquired 22 percent of the Suez Canal Company, the rest of the shares were controlled by French private holders).
  • November 16, 1869 — The Suez Canal opened; operated and owned by Suez Canal Company.
  • November 25, 1875 — Britain became a minority share holder in the Suez Company, acquiring 44 percent of the Suez Canal Company. The rest of the shares were controlled by French syndicates.
  • August 25, 1882 — Britain took control of the canal.
  • March 2, 1888 — The Convention of Constantinople guaranteed right of passage of all ships through the Suez Canal during war and peace.
  • November 14, 1936 — Suez Canal Zone established, under British control.
  • June 13, 1956 — Canal Zone restored to Egypt.
  • July 26, 1956 — Egypt nationalized the Canal.
  • November 5-22, 1956 — French, British, and Israeli forces occupied the Suez Canal Zone.
  • December 22, 1956 — Canal was restored to Egypt.
  • June 5, 1967 to June 5, 1975 — Canal closed and blockaded by Egypt.
  • April 10, 1975 — Canal reopened.

Notes

  1. Suez Canal. www.1911encyclopedia.org. Retrieved April 28, 2007
  2. Suez news.bbc.co.uk.
  3. Le canal de Suez. www.arte.tv. Retrieved April 28, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Burchell, S.C. Building the Suez Canal, HarperCollins, 1966. ISBN 978-0060209162
  • Karabell, Zachary. Parting the Desert: The Creation of the Suez Canal, Vintage, 2004. ISBN 978-0375708121
  • Schonfield, Hugh Joseph. The Suez Canal in World Affairs, Philosophical Library, 1953. ASIN B0007F4QTY
  • Stewart, Gail. Building History-The Suez Canal, Lucent Books, 2001. ISBN 978-1560068426
  • Varble, Derek. The Suez Crisis 1956, Osprey Publishing, 2003. ISBN 978-1841764184

External links

Coordinates: {{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:30|42|18|N|32|20|39|E|region:EG_type:waterbody | |name= }}

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