For Britain, the Suez crisis of 1956 was - along with the 1938 Munich crisis - the most divisive and controversial episode of the twentieth century. Centred on a narrow man-made canal linking the Mediterranean with the Red Sea, the Suez crisis caused fighting on London's streets, split families and friendships and destroyed a prime minister. It tested the government's propaganda skills to the full and pushed the mass media's independence to breaking point. For many, 'Suez' symbolises the end of the British Empire and its spectre has haunted British governments for two generations. "Eden, Suez and the Mass Media" examines the battle for hearts and minds waged through the mass media during the Suez crisis. It explains why the British government assigned such a critical role to propaganda and charts how Prime Minister Anthony Eden sought to use the press and broadcasting as instruments to destroy Egypt's leader, Gamal Abdel Nasser. The book dispels the myth that Fleet Street and the BBC were mere ciphers for public opinion and reveals how Eden's strategy disastrously backfired, trapping him into the notorious pact of collusion with the French and Israelis.
This new edition of the definitive history of the media's role in the Suez crisis also draws interesting parallels with the contemporary Iraq War, which Shaw argues bears an uncanny resemblance to the earlier conflict.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Contents
Acknowledgements
Preface
Map
Introduction: the propaganda strategy
PART ONE The British Press
Eden and the press: the state of play in July 1956
Nationalization
'Rattling the sabre'
Losing the initiative
Collusion and war
The press: conclusino
PART TWO The BBC
Collision course
'Are they enemies of just socialists?'
Division and disunity
The crucible
The BBC: conclusion
PART THREE the Campaign in the United States
The 'special relationship' and the role of public opinion
Mobilizing American opinion
An identity of interests?
Communism versus colonialism
Going it alone
The campaign in the United States: conclusion
Conclusion and epilogue
APPENDIX A Circulation of the principal British newspapers in 1956
APPENDIX B Readership of the main British newspapers in 1956
APPENDIX C A classified index of Suez publicity and guidance material
Notes
Bibliography and sources
Index