1942 Abdeen Palace incident

Last updated
Abdeen Palace Incident (1942)
Part of Egypt in World War II
Abdeenpalace.jpg
British troops at Abdeen Palace, pictured in 1942
Date4 February 1942
Location
Result King Farouk narrowly avoids resignation and Mostafa el-Nahas is appointed prime minister.
Belligerents
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom Flag of Egypt (1922-1958).svg Kingdom of Egypt
Commanders and leaders
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Miles Lampson
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Oliver Lyttelton
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Robert Stone
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Walter Monckton
Flag of Egypt (1922-1958).svg Farouk I   White flag icon.svg
Flag of Egypt (1922-1958).svg Hussein Sirri Pasha
Flag of Egypt (1922-1958).svg Mohamed Naguib
Flag of Egypt (1922-1958).svg Gamal Abdel Nasser

The Abdeen Palace Incident was a military confrontation that took place on 4 February 1942 at Abdeen Palace in Cairo, and nearly resulted in the forced abdication of King Farouk I. It is considered a landmark in the history of Egypt.

Contents

Background

Following the 1919 Egyptian revolution, Egyptian politics has been described as a three legged stool: the conservative palace led by the King and his conservative allies, the liberal Wafd Party led by Mustafa al-Nahhas since 1927 and the British. [1] [2] The popularity of the Wafd among the Egyptian masses frightened the palace and the British, who often worked together to contain and oust elected Wafdist governments. However, following the 1935-36 Egyptian protests and the Italian invasion of Ethiopia, the British became convinced that coming to an agreement with Egyptian nationalists was vital to protect British interests in the region, specifically regarding the Suez Canal. [3] The Anglo-Egyptian Treaty of 1936 was signed following a Wafdist victory in the elections of that year. The treaty limited British forces to the Suez Canal, reduced the status of the British High Commissioner - then Sir Miles Lampson - to British ambassador, and set in motion the eventual end of the capitulations system, which was achieved the following year at the Montreux Convention. [3] The treaty also required Egypt to cooperate with the British in the case of war, though it did not specify that Egypt would declare war on Britain's enemies, Around this time, King Fuad I died and was succeeded by his son, the now King Farouk.

While signing the treaty was a major victory for the Wafd, the period 1937 to 1942 saw a major decline in their power. Nahhas' government was dismissed following a series a political disagreements with the palace. In 1937, the Wafd experienced a major internal split resulting in the faction led by Ahmad Maher and Mahmoud el-Nokrashy leaving to form the Saadist Institutional Party. The 1938 elections were rigged against the Wafd, leading to a majority anti-Wafd parliament. On the other side of the political spectrum, King Farouk was supported by the conservative Ali Maher and the Grand Imam of al-Azhar Mustafa al-Maraghi. [4] [5] Maher and al-Maraghi believed that Nahhas was the main threat and supported a conservative Islamic monarchy as opposed to the secularism in the Wafd. This forced the Wafd to align closer to the British. As one British observer remarked: the Wafd is in our pockets and particularly the Ambassador's. [6]

When World War II began, Ali Maher was prime minister. While Maher cooperated with the British, he did not completely satisfy British wishes. Maher broke off all diplomatic and commercial relations with Germany, confiscated German property and interned German subjects, later breaking off relations with Italy as well. However, the British were disappointed that Maher did not commit Egypt to officially declaring war, and were suspicious of the palace, which had close relations with the local Italian community. The British could not tolerate any neutral or pro-Axis tendency, even going as far as plan for a forceful removal of the king as early as June 1940. [7]

Following the dismissal of Maher, Hassan Sabry was appointed prime minister. While Sabry was close to the British, he died in November 1940 and was succeeded by Hussein Sirri. Sirri was another pro-British politician; Lampson himself remarked that the British were lucky to have him. Yet Sirri had no real political support behind him and had to deal with a rising cost of living crisis and a hostile coalition - the Saadists under Ahmed Maher wanted Egypt to directly join the war. Meanwhile, the Wafd blamed the cost of living crisis on the British, seeking to cause a collapse of his government to make room for a Wafdist administration. The British believed that the Wafd's anti-British campaign was sponsored by the King. [8] In short;

From April to May 1941, Farouk met with political leaders to try to see if Nahhas could join a coalition government. While Nahhas offered his cooperation, the other parties refused to accept a coalition government with new elections. [12] In June 1941, Amin Osman approached the British embassy to speak for Nahhas. Three possible outcome were proposed:

  1. A pure Wafd government lead by Nahhas
  2. A united front coalition government lead by Nahhas
  3. A cabinet of independents led by Sirri with the backing a united front. [12]

Amin went further, suggesting for British intervention to bring the Wafd to power. Lampson refused to intervene at this moment, still encouraging a coalition government. [13]

Confrontation

On 6 January 1942, Sirri's government cut off diplomatic relations with Vichy France. This infuriated King Farouk, who was not consulted, and demanded the resignation of the foreign minister, eventually culminating in Sirri's resignation the first of February. [14] When Lampson asked Sirri who should replace him, he simply replied: "Send for the Wafd". [15] On 2 February 1942, Lampson presented King Farouk with four demands:

  1. We must have a government that is loyal to the terms of the Treaty and able to implement both its spirit and letter, citing especially Article 5 of the Treaty.
  2. A strong government able to govern and commanding popular and adequate support.
  3. This meant sending for Nahas as leader of the Majority Party in the country and consulting him with a view to his forming a government.
  4. That His Majesty should be held personally responsible for any disorders that might occur in the meantime. [16]

King Farouk responded that while he agreed with points 1 and 2, he was consulting with Nahhas to form a government. Nahhas still rejected the idea of a coalition at this time, since he believed a coalition with 'king's men' would restrict his ability to get things done. He was willing to form a Wafd government if instructed to by the King. On the 2nd, Lampson favored a coalition government, but by the next day he was determine to bring Nahhas to office. [17] On the fourth, Lampson gave an ultimatum to Ahmed Hassanein:

Unless I hear by 6 P.M. today that Nahas has been asked to form a Government His Majesty King Farouk must accept the consequences. [18]

Farouk had a meeting with all the party leaders, including Nahhas, to issue the following response:

In their opinion the British ultimatum is a great infringement of the Anglo-Egyptian Treaty and of the independence of the country. For this reason and acting on their advice His Majesty cannot consent to an action resulting in an infringement of the Anglo-Egyptian Treaty and of the Country. [19]

It was after Hassanein delivered this document that Lampson and Oliver Lyttleton drafted the abdication proclamation. On the night of 4 February 1942, General Robert Stone surrounded Abdeen Palace in Cairo with troops and tanks, and Lampson presented Farouk with an abdication decree drafted by Sir Walter Monckton. Farouk was going to sign until Hassanein intervened in Arabic. Farouk then asked if he could still appoint Nahhas. Lamspon agreed. As he put it:

It was sorely tempting to have insisted on King Farouk's abdication which I believe I could have extracted. But the course of wisdom seemed on the balance (very reluctantly I admit) to lie in allowing him to send for Nahas. After all if he had agreed at 6.00 p.m. we should be glad to have accepted this solution: the fact that his acceptance came three hours later would hardly have justified a different sanction of ejection however tempting. [20]

Legacy

The Wafd emerged as an anti-British and Egyptian nationalist force ever since the 1919 revolution. The fact that the British were now appointing the Wafd greatly damaged their prestige among Egyptian nationalists. After their wartime government from 1942-1944, the Wafd wouldn't enter government again until 1950. In his memoirs, Muhammad Naguib, one of the leaders of the 1952 Egyptian revolution, and Egypt's first President, cited the incident as a major factor in the rise of revolutionary, anti-monarchical sentiment in the country that contributed to the revolution ten years later. [21]

See also

References

  1. Morsy 1989, p. 86.
  2. Smith 1979, pp. 455, 473.
  3. 1 2 Smith 1979, p. 457.
  4. Tripp, Charles (2022-04-26). "Al-malik al-salih – Islam and the monarchy in 1930s Egypt". Middle Eastern Studies. 58 (3): 354–370. doi:10.1080/00263206.2022.2047659. ISSN   0026-3206.
  5. Thornhill, Michael T. (2010-06-01). "Informal Empire, Independent Egypt and the Accession of King Farouk". The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 38 (2): 279–302. doi:10.1080/03086531003743981. ISSN   0308-6534.
  6. Smith 1979, p. 458.
  7. Morsy 1989, p. 68.
  8. Morsy 1989, pp. 78–81.
  9. 1 2 Morsy 1989, p. 81.
  10. Smith 1979, p. 462.
  11. Morsy 1989, p. 82"Moreover, with their democratic tradition, which still remained unmodified, the Wafd would be gravely threatened by an Axis victory. It appeared that only Britain, with its democratic ideology, could protect them against the Fascist virus. Therefore, not on the basis of loyalty to the British but for the preservation of both Egypt and themselves, the Wafd were bound to abide loyally by the Anglo-Egyptian treaty"
  12. 1 2 Smith 1979, p. 464.
  13. Warburg 1975, pp. 26–27.
  14. Smith 1979, p. 468.
  15. Wichhart 2021, p. 77.
  16. Morsy 1989, p. 84.
  17. Smith 1979, p. 469.
  18. Smith 1979, p. 471.
  19. Morsy 1989, p. 85.
  20. Warburg 1975, p. 30.
  21. Mohammed Naguib, Egypt's Destiny: A Personal Statement (Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, 1955), pg.16.

Sources

30°02′31″N31°14′49″E / 30.042°N 31.247°E / 30.042; 31.247