TH€ SUEZ C}{N}{L and · ~ FREEDOM OFTH€ SE}{S WORLD PR~SS OPINION ISRAEL MINISTRY FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS INFORMATION DIVISION Jerusalem, August 1959 !Frtm tM Li8rrltJ D/ . Cantor Zvee .9lroni TH€ SUEZC~N~l ana FREEDOM OFTH€ SE~S WORLD PRES$ OPI~ION Egypt's blockad~· of Israel shipping and' commerce in the Suez Canal for more than a decade constitutes a record of lawlessness and aggression, of deliberate violation of international commitments. It flouts the 1888 Constantinople Convention which guarantees that 'the Suez Maritime Canal shall always be free and open, in time of war as in time of peace, to every vessel of commerce or of war, without distinction of flag' and that it 'shall never be subject to the exercise of the right of blockade'; it defies the resolutions of the Security Council of the United Nations calling upon Egypt 'to terminate the restrictions' on Israel shipping and goods through the Canal wherever bound and laying down the principle that 'the operation of the Canal should be insulated from the politics of any country.' It also stands in plain violation of Egypt's own pledges in the United Nations, in October 1956 and April 1957, to afford and maintain free use of the Canal by all Powers at all times, in accordance with the Constantinople Convention. Egypt has gone even further. It detains and molests vessels of all nations bound to and from Israel, and, at will, confiscates cargo of every nature consigned to and from Israel. It is universally recognized, however, that the international claim to free use of the Canal is indivisible and that the integrity of this claim cannot be vitiated .with impunity in the case of any one nation. The following collection of excerpts from the world press bears witness to this recognition in defence of Israel's indefeasible right, a right which she is determined to assert, to unimpeded trade and navigation through a vital international waterway. ARGENTINE Buenos Aires., 6 July 1959 "The Constantinople Convention, which accords free passage of the Suez Canal in time of war as in time of peace and decrees free passage through this international waterway, as well as the explicit decisions of the Security Council, will take care of all illegal interference with free navigation and will force Egypt to cease them." AUSTRALIA THE AGE Melbourne., 28 July 1959 "The President of the UAR, with all his prestige as a spokesman for Arab Nationalism, still needs to play upon fear of Israel in order to rally support for his policies. He also needs a "state of war'' with Israel to justify Egypt's obstruction of Israeli shipping in the Suez Canal." BELGIUM LA LIBRE BELGinUE Brussels., 22 June 1959 "It is said in Jerusalem that the West believes that Arab quarrels are to our advantage. That is only partly true. Lacking any other 'unifying element', the political leaders of the Middle East raise the flag of hatred of Israel every time they want to rally the Arab peoples around them. Nasser is doing this now. And it can go much further if the West continues to tolerate, without reacting, the things that Nasser does, of the type of those the ruler of UAR is now doing in the case of the Inge Toft." 3 BRAZIL 0 GLOBO Rio de janeiro_, 9 April 1959 "As to the first and most spectacular of Nasser's adions~ the arbitrary grabbing of the installations of the Canal and its military occupation by Egyptian forces, this again is not giving him the dividends of prestige and economic wealth that he had anticipated. But that does not keep Egypt from behaving in the Canal as if that international waterway, opened and maintained by foreign money and technique for almost a century, were just an Egyptian river on which traffic could be regulated at his will." CANADA CHARLO.TTETOWN GUARDIAN Charlottetown_, 3 July 1959 "To meet the 1956 cns1s the United Nations sent an emergency force to maintain peace along the EgyptianIsraeli borders. Why can not this force be used to maintain free transit through the Canal, as guaranteed at that time?" EDMONTON JOURNAL Edmonton_, 18 july 1959 "The Egyptian administration has barred the ship from using the Canal because it is carrying 5,500 tons of Israeli potash and cement. This discrimination, a direct result of Nasser's hatred of Israel, is a black blot on the Egyptian administration's record, all the more so because it is working a hardship on the Danish operators and crew of the ship." tlhe montreat Stnr Montreal_, 14 July 1959 "The Danish freighter Inge Toft is carrying an Israel cargo to the Far East, but has been detained by Egypt. The move has annoyed Israel's Asian customers with whom Nasser has himself tried to cultivate good relations. Mr. 4 Hammarskjold may have borne in on Nasser the risk he runs of losing friends in Asia for the sake of maintaining an illegal position in the Canal." THE OTTAWA CITIZEN Ottawa, 6 July 1959 "Neither Mr. Hammarskjold nor the UN itself can rest until this issue is settled, and until Egypt calls off its war against Israel. Efforts to find a solution, and to persuade Egypt that it is acting against the cause of world peace, should be pressed at every opportunity." 28 July 1959 "Despite instructions by the Security Council that all countries are entitled to untrammeled passage through the Canal, Egypt has denied the waterway to Israeli ships, or to foreign vessels carrying cargo to or from Israel.". THE TELEGRAM Toronto, 18 June 1959 "Israel's claim to the right of passage of its ships and cargoes is properly based on the principle adopted by the Security Council after Egypt's nationalization of the Canal in 1956. The most important of these stipulates that 'the operation of the Canal shall be insulated from the politics of any country.' "Nasser accepted this principle, but like other dictators in the past he · applies it as he pleases. There is no justifica~ tion for excluding Israel from his pledge to protect the vital interests of the international community in the Canal. To make an exception is to render the pledge meaningless." WINNIPEG TRIBUNE Winnipeg, I July 1959 "His (Nasser's) confiscation of Israel's cargoes is not only an affront to that country but to the UN, which ·endorsed the resolution for free and open transit in the Canal without discrimination." 5 CEYLON CEYLON OBSERVER Colombo~ 30 June 1959 "From the point of view of Ceylon three broad factors are noteworthy: 1. Ceylonese importers have lost heavily on the confiscation of the cargo. 2. The Ceylon Government's pleas for the release of the cargo have been rejected -we believe on four separate occasions, and 3. The Capetan Manolis affair is of a piece with other policy decisions taken by the UAR, a course of action which seems to involve international politics of a very complex character." CHILE LA NACION Santiago~ 8 August 1959 "The detention of the Inge Toft constitutes a repudiation of the assurances given to Dag Hammarskjold and Dr. Ralph Bunche in Lausanne and in Cairo, to the effect that there would be no repetition of the above-mentioned (Suez) incidents." DENMARK Copenhagen~ 10 July 1959 "Now it is a Danish ship that has been detained for almost two months, while Nasser demonstrates apparently the only thing that may have a chance of ideologically holding together at least some of the Arab States: hatred of Israel." J\nrbuus ~tift.stibtnbt Aarhus~ 23 May 1959 "The Inge Toft episode is a matter of principle. It has 6 been a serious disappointment, which will be further ~x tended if the Egyptians carry on with their fanatical chicanery. If Nasser obtains support without having to make concessions, the West certainly can not expect anything from him. The Shah of Persia was hardly in the wrong when, during his recent visit to London, he termed Arab nationalism a danger that had to be carefully watched. It is a danger that cannot be removed simply b~ yielding." Copenhagen~ 3 July 1959 "While the Danish ship went under charter, Denmark has a direct interest in seeing an end to the Egyptians' behaviour. There· must be absolutely free and unhampered navigation of the Canal. The seafaring nations ought to stand together for recognition of this principle." ~ibeubt Copenhagen~ 12 Ju,ne 1959 "The Egyptians' seizure of the Danish cargo vessel Inge Toft, which was on her way from Haifa to ports in the Far East with a cargo of potash and cement, is against all laws and may have grave repercussions if it is accepted by the seafaring nations." 22 June 1959 "When Egypt bars Israel from the Canal, she not only acts against the Convention she has promised to accept as valid, but also defies the United Nations. Yet it was the UN itself that sowed the seeds of this crisis by clearing the Canal, after the hostilities of 1956, without demanding Egyptian guarantees for free navigation. It is a strange thing indeed that, with this issue, in general, and the fate of the Inge Toft, in particular, still in doubt, negotiations should be taking place about an Egyptian loan from the International Bank for the purpose of widening the Cana]." DAGENS NIBEDER Copenhagen~ 2 July 1959 "It must be hoped that Hammarskjold, during his forth7 coming negotiatiOns in Cairo, will do all in his power to explain to Nasser that one does not play like this in decent company, and that there will be consequences to consider, unless the Canal is immediately declared free-for Israel cargoes too." Aarhus_, 25 May 1959 "It is not too early to take steps to teach Egypt what is practice and right-in accordance with the laws of the UN. Denmark has, within UN limits, put in a special effort in the Egyptian-Israeli quarrel. It would be the natural thing for Denmark to demand of the UN's responsible organs that the piratical conditions in the Canal shall cease." POLITI KEN Copenhagen_, 12 June 1959 "In all fairness it must be said that Egypt's action is very unwise. The Israel goods are of an absolutely civilian character, and the blockade against Israel is about to defeat itself. There can be no doubt who will lose the most in the long run, both economically and politically." Soro Amtstidende Copenhagen_, 1 July 1959 "Obviously, too, international law and order would be severely undermined if Nasser were permitted unchallenged to close the Canal to Israel ships merely because he cannot bear his young neighbour State! Where are we all to end up, if this kind of policy can be enacted without opposition?" Vestkysten Esbjerg, 27 June 1959 "The ambiguous attitude displayed by the Great Powers with regard to the Danish ship is not all all becoming; it carries within it the seeds of weakness, of which the UN ought to be ashamed." 8 FRANCE L'llURORE Paris~ 8 June 1959 "At the very moment when Ben Gurion himself, more conciliatory than ever, proclaims that he would accept total disarmament in the Middle East, will they let Nasser violate the ruling on navigation in the Canal and mount a new war-machine against Israel?" J!t Paris~ 9 June 1959 "At the moment when Israel is trying to develop its relations with the young States of Africa and Asia, the Suez route is as vital for its economy as for its security. It is understandable that the Government of Ben Gurion is seeking to obtain by every means an international legal ruling supporting free passage." 2 July 1959 "The declarations which Nasser has just made in the 'AI Ahram' shatter in advance every hope of an amicable adjustment of the problem of free navigation in the Canal. "Already for several weeks the authorities of the UAR had affirmed that they would not consent to grant free passage to Israel goods. But the question had never before been handled with the finality and violence that characterised the Egyptian President's latest declarations." Le Populaire de Paris Paris~ 25 May 1959 "Today-and particularly since the seizure on 26 February 1959 of the Capetan Manolis flying the Liberian flag and of the Leal ott flying the flag of the West German Republic -it is impossible to remain indifferent to an arbitrariness which not only constitutes a flagrant interference with in9 ternational commercial relations but also directly damages the interest of the countries in Asia and Africa which need Israel products for their development. "Let us then hope, with Guy Mollet (replying last Saturday to a question of the correspondent of the French News Agency in Israel), that 'the Israelis will maintain their equaniJility'. But let us also hope that 'the United Nations take heed of the necessity to insist upon the application of the principle of the freedom of navigation in the Canal." LE POPULAIRE :OU DIMANCH'E Paris~ 21 GERMANY July 1959 "Confronting Nasser, the Captain of the Inge Toft is still today a champion of liberty. Alone, marooned on his ship, between the hostile banks of the Canal, he is holding at bay that man before whom others, far more powerful than he, have trembled. "What a lesson! A hard one no doubt for those cowards who disguise their absurdities · in the cloak of doctrines! But how refreshing for real democrats!" , DIE8WELT Hamburg, 21 March 1959 "The Egyptian authorities have stopped a German vessel in the Suez Canal and stolen its cargo. There is no other way to describe this act of force even if, for Egypt, the cargo originated in an 'enemy country'-Israel." The Birmingham Post Jinninsham f»uettt Birmingham, 8 June 1959 "The Canal is aHeged to be free for the passage of the ships of all nations, but recently the lnge Toft, a Danish freighter, has been held up by Egypt because she was carrying a cargo of cement and potash from Israel to the 10 Far East. Egypt's excuse for this and her attempted confiscation of the cargo is that she is still at war with Israelan excuse that could have dangerous implications for her. In any case, by this action she is defying United Nations rulings." DAILY EXPRESS London, 3 ] une 1959 "Champion of the world impudence-Abdul Gamal N asser. He stole the Canal from its rightful owners. He grabs a Danish ship carrying a cargo to Israel through this waterway. "At the same time Nasser is asking the World Bank, in which Britain has a stake, to give him a loan of £70,000,000 in order to develop the Canal. "So far as Britain's purse is concerned, it should remain obstinately closed to the Egyptian dictator. "There are a thousand projects which should rank ahead of improving a stolen Canal so that Nasser can go on using it as a blackmailing weapon." aJht llailn m-tltgraph anb .Blmllnt IJDJI London., 9 June 1959 "Israel has wisely refrained from drawing provocative attention to her growing trade through this new outlet. But the time must come when Nasser, if he is not to look increasingly foolish in Arab eyes, will try to close Israel's back door again. Mr. Hammarskjold seems to think that the less said about the Inge Toft the better. But unless the United Nations successfully maintains Israel's rights on the Canal now, it will have no influence then to restrain her from defending her own on the Gulf." 2 July 1959 "At present Egypt is treating the Canal, so far as Israeli cargoes are concerned, as a private waterway, on grounds which she could apply to any other nation with which she chose to quarrel. To emphasise the freedom of the . Canal it is unnecessary to hark back to the original challenge, when the Security Council pronounced against Egypt in 1951. Let the World Bank tie its 'strings' to the principle which the Council laid down, and Egypt herself acknow11 ledged after nationalisation: 'free arid open transit without discrimination, overt or covert'." The EcoilOinist London, 13 June 1959 "The pressure on Cairo would be much greater if the World Bank insisted before granting its loan that Egypt should honestly, and in full, carry out its obligations." THE GLASGOW HERALD Glasgow, 3 July 1959 "Mr. Hammarskjold may operate in Cairo and Jerusalem, but the key to the success or failure of his mission is in Moscow. If the Soviet Government could be persuaded to go with rather than against the Western Powers on the issue, search and seizure of any ships or cargoes in the Canal would soon cease." MANCHESTER EVENING N.EWS c Manchester, 1 July 1959 "This is what Nasser thinks of the United Nations. He has the same respect for it that he had in 1951, when the Security Council told Egypt she must stop interfering with Israeli shipping. He has simply gone on stopping the ships when it suited him. That is not all. Recently vessels belonging to Norway, Denmark and the Lebanon have been stopped with cargoes bound for Ceylon, Japan and the Philippines, and a cargo already paid for by Ceylon has been confiscated-but Nasser is getting away with it. He should be arraigned now before the United Nations. And the World Bank, which is considering a loan for Suez, must not lend a penny until there is a firm guarantee of freedom at Suez." INDIA , New Delhi, 29 July 1959 "A rational agreement on the settlement of the refugees12 the 'orphans' of the previous ·conflicts-should be more welcome to any real states~an than the shouting of war slogans and, worse, the closing of a seaway like the Suez which should be administered for the common . benefit . of all the peoples in the Middle East. Israel has come to stay and the sooner that Nasser accepts this, the better for all." New Delhi~ 31 July 1959 "President Nasser is not without responsibility for Is.r ael's militant mood, and even Afro-Asian countries friendly to the UAR have not been happy over his closure of the Canal to Israeli trade since it affects them as well. If he is not to alienate fuEther the international goodwill towards the UAR he should think in terms of a settlement with Israel." ·nm INDIAN EXPRESS Bombay~ Madras~ 11 August 1959 "President Nasser's repeated declarations that the UAR will never allow Israel to use the Suez Canal may serve as a rousing slogan for his people, but they also inevitably keep the Arab-Jewish tension in West Asia constantly · on the boil. Even those who sympathise with the UAR's aspirations and are anxious to solve the problem of Arab refugees can hardly be expected to appreciate President Nasser's implacable hostility to Israel. To put it mildly, he is flying in the face of history and harming the long-term interests of his own people. He is also mistaken if he believes that repeated denunciations of Israel will prevail upon the United Nations to revise its earlier resolutions on navigation in the Suez Canal." 26 June 1959 "His (Nasser'·s) actions therefore are contrary to fact and law. It is time that the President was once again disillusioned, and taught that by honouring his obligations he is likely to make firmer friends." 13 Calcutta_, 2 July 1959 "Though given a veneer of legality by its War Prize Commission, recent seizures by Egypt of Israeli cargoes in the Suez Canal are plainly meant to be provocative." Bombay_, 1 July 1959 "How Nasser chooses to conduct his relations with Israel is his own affair but where the Canal and the right of free passage are involved the UAR is under an obligation to consider the interests of all those engaged in peaceful navigation. Under a genuine state of war the UAR would be justified in fully exercising its sovereign rights and denying free navigation to belligerents but current relations between the Arab world and Israel, though unsatisfacto~y, cannot be described as a state of war without resorting to legal equivocation." THOUGHT New Delhi_, 1 August 1959 "The history between the Arabs and the Jews arose in history; let history look after them. In any case, let not the Suez become once again a waterway of contention." IRELAND THE IRISH TIMES Dublin, 8 June 1959 "Unfortunately, the basic cause-the fact that Egypt still regards herself as being at war with Israel-has not been removed, and until it has been, the danger of a renewal of outright hostilities always exists. The ·existence of this danger is apt to be over-shadowed by other and more immediate causes of international dispute. Yet it remains as the potential fuse of a worldwide ·explosion. The UN secretariat has made many efforts to bring the two sides 14 towards a more amicable modus vivendi, and it is high time that another approach was made." 2 july 1959 "Nasser clearly is prepared to resist any proposal which could be interpreted as reinforcing Israel's rights to use the waterway. It seems that once again, Suez is about to make major news." ITALY - COBBIEBE DELLA SEBA Milan~ 19 August 1959 "After the United States had -saved Nasser from certain collapse and persuaded Israel to withdraw from the Sinai Peninsula and the Gaza Strip, President Eisenhower made two promises: the first, on 20 February 1957: 'We should not assume that if Israel withdraws, Egypt will prevent Israeli shipping from using the Suez Canal or the Gulf of Akaba. If unhappily Egypt does hereafter violate the Armistice Agreement or other international obligations, then this should be dealt with firmly by the society of nations.' "The second promise was made on 3 March 195 7 in a letter to Ben-Gurion: 'I believe that Israel will have no cause to regret having conformed to the strong sentiment of the world community.' "Today Israel has reason to regret it." . LA NAZIONE Florence~ Milano~ 8 July 1959 "Nasser has made himself the subject of discussion again, and naturally in a provocative way. Violating the Constantinople Convention of 1888, the master of the Canal has closed it to Israel ships and to neutral ships carrying Israel cargo." 28 July 1959 "Here the law has been trampled upon by an arbitrary move; so has the principle of freedom of movement. It 15 does not matter to us that we are dealing here with an Israeli ship: this is the excuse put forward by the Nasser Government. Tomorrow the excuse may be a different one. Nor let it be said-as the spokesman of the Cairo Government has declared-that 'anyone has a right to do what he pleases in his own house'. For the Canal is not Egypt's private property in the narrow and restrictive sense of the word. It is an integral part of that great possession that is known in the parlance of the cultural world as Freedom." JAPAN The Japan Times Tokyo, 1 july I959 "Egypt's action affects the interests of all maritime nations, and the hope must be expressed that the Egyptian Government will listen to Mr. Hammarskjold's representations and agree to resume its recognition of the principle of free traffic through the Canal." ALGEMEEN HANDELSBLAD Amsterdam, II June I959 "One of· the most remarkable aspects of the problem is that during two years, from the re-opening of the Canal after the Suez affair until February of this year, ships carrying goods from or to Israel were permitted to pass through the Canal without any difficulty. But suddenly, last February, cargoes from Israel were confiscated from a Liberian and a West German ship. At the end of April, 'Ralph Bunche, Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations, talked the matter over with Nasser-but, as now appears, without result. Egypt seems to have put a stop to the tacit agreement that had existed since 1959." HAAGSCHE COURANT The Hague, 5 August I959 "In one respect the pessimists were right: free passage li through the Suez Canal has remained a dead letter, at least insofar as transportation to and from Israel is concerned. The detention of the Danish freighter Inge Toft is a recent proof of this contention. The Constantinople Convention of 1888 stipulates, in Article I, that the Suez Canal, an international waterway, must remain open in times of peace as in times of war, for the merchant vessels and the navies of all nations without distinction of flag. Nobody win be able to say that the Egyptian Government has implemented this stipulation. The contrary is true: the prize law which has been applied in the Canal for more than 11 years now is in direct contradiction to the treaty, and it is Israel which in this case is the victim." NEW ZEALAND THE DOMINION Wellington, 2 July 1959 "What Nasser appears to overlook is that the Security Council has already declared itself on the issue. As long ago as 1951 it resolved that Israeli ships had the right of unrestricted passage. But a weak-kneed United Nations has allowed Egypt to ignore that ruling with impunity. Now comes another testing time for that organisation. Successful flouting of UN authority in the past emboldens Nasser today to scatter fresh seeds of Middle East unrest." NORWAY Oslo, 2 July 1959 "The Egyptians have now put to shame all those who doubted their technical qualifications to conduct traffic in the Canal but have, on the other hand, strengthened the widespread fear that nationalization would convert the Canal into a trophy for the ambitious dictator." 17 I PERU :I.APRENSA Lima, 31 ] uly 1959 "The need of the young Israeli State to use the Canal for peaceful purposes is urgent. In the meantime, as long as Egypt denies free use of the Canal, the tension felt in · the Middle East cannot disappear." PORTUGAL . : Lisbon, 2 August 1959 "For several weeks now Cairo propaganda has been harping on the theme of improvements in the Canal which will allow the passage of super-tankers. And now a return to the familiar agenda of dispute regarding the freedom of navigation prevents the World Bank from examining seriously the question of financing the works envisaged." SWEDEN ·Arbetet Malmo, 30 June 1959 "It would be a betrayal not only of Israel but also of themselves if the Western powers and the United Nations were not to do all within their power to put an end to these acts of piracy. The Egyptians' behaviour constitutes a flagrant violation of the legal rights of the maritime nations. Thus it is not only in Israel's interest that fire be fought with fire." 18 D!GE~S URETER. Stockholm, 19 May 1959 "It would be treachery against Israel, against all obligations and declarations, if the Western countries did not uncompromisingly demand an end to Egypt's aggressive actions in the Canal and to Nasser's attempts to strangle Israel. One cannot, one must not, gamble away the opportunity to secure the peace of the Jewish State, when there is a possibility to press the man who until now has met every protest with scorn, every appeal with threats." 4 july 1959 "Faced with this spectacle, the Western powers have still remained passive or, at any rate, refrained from any official reaction. For tactical reasons, they did not raise the issue in the United Nations and, of course, waited for Hammarskjold to take action. After the welcome Hammarskjold received in Cairo, it is difficult to find any sound reasons for continued postponement. Israel, which has always been asked by Hammarskjold to be patient and to put her trust in the UN, has waited long enough: it is now the duty of the Western States to denounce Nasser's actions, both in the UN and outside it." ~~~ GOTEBOHGS HANDELS- OCH SJOFARTS·TIDNING Goteborg, 25 May 1959 "Egypt continues successfully to maintain her defiance of the United Nations. "Is the matter to be allowed to rest there? The question must be properly studied by all the nations having an interest in free passage through the Canal. Israel is not the only State having cause for protest against the blockade. The discrimination is directed also against the States under whose flags the vessels sail. No less harm is done to the Far Eastern buyers, who certainly do not purchase goods just to enjoy the spectacle of their being held up half-way to their destination. New markets are opening for Israel's export trade in that part of the world-also a praiseworthy development from a general point of ·view. The confiscation of the Inge Toft's cargo must serve as a signal for action, supported in the main by the major maritime nations, to ·e nd arbitrariness in the Canal." 19 I 6 June 1959 "We now have Radio Cairo's assertion that the UAR has decided to confiscate any Israel cargo found on vessels passing through the Canal, without regard to flag. The blockade will now be a total one. Already it had constituted a flagrant violation of the Constantinople Convention and open defiance of a Security Council resolution. Egypt unabashedly repudiated her previous declarations, which included a promise to honour the Convention. Pertinent in this connection are the words of the Egyptian representative who often spoke before the Security Council about Egypt's 'tolerance' with regard to her treatment of Israel shipping. On 14 O·c tober 1954, he said: 'Egypt has not only displayed tolerance but has also observed absolute silence and has refrained from any interference with vessels conveying goods to Israel or coming from Israel ports and passing through the Canal.' "Five years later, the question should be put to the United States and other maritime nations: How much longer are you going to put up with this?" 2 July 1959 ~ "It certainly is possible to speak to Nasser in the language he understands and that is apt, besides, to put him in a position where he will be compelled to consent to free passage in the Canal to 'every vessel ol commerce or of war, without distinction of flag'." STOCKHOLMS-TIDNINGEN Stockholm:~ 5 June 1959 "Now it is proclaimed in Cairo that, regardless of nationality, any vessel carrying Israel cargo will have it confiscated. Egyptian promises have become worthless. This arbitrary and capricious practice with regard to obligations undertaken cannot but arouse deep concern in the industrial Western countries, which are very much dependent on the Canal. Undoubtedly guarantees that navigation will in point of fact proceed freely are required. If Israel takes the question to the United Nations, she ought to be able to count on firm support for her action on the part of all States for which the Canal serves as an important link of communiqttion.'' 2 july 1959 " ... Another result will be that no one will dare believe that Egypt is going to honour the freedom of navigation in 20 I I the Canal, in accordance with the 1888 Convention. Today it is Israel, and to some extent Denmark, that have been affected. Tomorrow it is liable to be some other country that will be made to feel the Arabs' wrath." SWITZERLAND 6emer lilgbloU Berne, 11 June 1959 "For three weeks the Captain of the Inge Toft, lying in Port Said, has defied the orders of the Nasser dictatorship, whose henchmen are boycotting the ship and denying it drinking water. "It seems in place to point to the stand taken by this unknown seaman in the face of great temptation to resort to opportunism: he is fighting for a right-a right not to be granted or restricted by mere whim or fancy. "This applies to passage in the Canal as well as to the Western Powers remaining in West Berlin. The case of the Inge Toft could be taken up by the Israel Government to challenge Cairo's revived practice of piracy on an international level, if only to be able once more to pin down the guilt of a lawbreaker for all the world to see." JOURNAL DE GENEVE Geneva, 3 July 1959 "By reviving the conflict with Israel which had to some extent died down, the President of UAR is essaying a massive political operation. He is trying to remake the unity of the Arab nations which had been seriously dismembered of late. Now the only cement that can join them together is their permanent hostility towards the State of Israel. And besides, Nasser is out for a personal operation: he is endeavouring to regain the leadership of the Arab world and restore his prestige." LA TRIBUNE DE GEIVEVE Geneva, 8 June 1959 "The Egyptians have constantly resisted the passage of 21 ships flying the Israel flag: they have on the other hand allowed goods of Israel origin or destination to go through on several occasions, most recently in March, when a Greek cargo was concerned. The Inge Toft was the first again to demand liberty of passage through the Canal. In this affair Israel has right on her side. The Constantinople Convention of 1888 and the resolution passed by: the Security Council in 1951, but flouted by Cairo, condemn every contravention of the freedom of passage. In this particular case Egypt cannot invoke the argument of legitimate defence either. It is impossible not to think that the quarrel, which will probably be taken to the Security Council, has been deliberately sought. Why?" URUGUAY :CL P.A.IS Montevideo, 3 August 1959 "The boastful dictator of the United Arab Republic thinks of himself as master of the future, consequently as master of the Canal and probably of the Mediterranean as well. He forgets that the Canal and its continuation to the West were very near to losing him his job when, after his Sinai 'victory,' which consisted only of shooting, he left his shoes behind so as to run more quickly barefooted. "If he then found Cairo free, it was only because the people who took over the Canal decided to stop for international reasons." EL PLATA Montevideo._, 5 August 1959 "In the light of these precedents ... one has to take the words of the Egyptian ruler at their face value and view them as a most serious threat to the security of Israel and international peace. The position taken by the UAR stands as a olear contradiction to the principles of humanity and international behaviour, and is a plain violation of the UN Charter." 22 Montevideo:~ 1 August 1959 "If the Egyptian 'gets away' with it this time, the way has been paved for further arrogance, further withdrawals of unhindered passage, and the Canal, instead of being a road, would become a private alley-way for only certain States and certain peoples, and this would undoubtedly reflect on the economy of the Middle and Near East." U.S.A. Boston:~ Mass.:~ 9 June 1959 "For Israel the cargo is a vital matter. The struggling economy of the country cannot afford such seizures, which are little better than piratical. The United Nations has twice declared that no state of war exists beween Egypt and Israel, such as Egypt likes to claim. "The sequel is obvious, the rights of foreign ships carrying Israeli cargo through the Canal must be defined and upheld." · THE BOSTON HERALD Boston:~ Mass.:~ 24 June 1959 "Nasser's bad-boy tactics in Suez threaten to create another crisis if they are not stopped. Israel cannot afford the luxury of patience, as we found out to our sorrow two years ago. The guarantors of the 1957 armistice should step in before there is another explosion." Boston:~ Mass.:~ 22 June 1959 "Nasser is acting like a little boy playing with boats in a bathtub. And little boys need discipline when they splash around too much." 23 BROOKLYN DAILY Brooklyn~ N.Y.~ 14 June 1959 "It is to Israel's credit that she has not thus far sent a martial note to Nasser demanding he stop his hostile actions. Israel does not seek a war-she needs and desires peace to fulfil her destiny as a sovereign nation. "But the United Nations is sadly remiss in allowing this international conflict to continue. We call on that body to step into the picture and set things to right in the Suez area!" BUFFALO EVENING NEWS Buffalo~ N.Y.~ 16 June 1959 "Nasser persists in detaining vessels passing through the Canal with cargoes for Israel in violation of a Security Council resolution ordering him to fulfil provisions of the pact guaranteeing unobstructed passage to ships of all nations in peace or war." I CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER Cleveland~ Ohio~ 14 June 1959 "Nasser has again been stopping shipping in the Canal. These have been foreign ships carrying cargoes to and from Israel. .This is a violation of the six-point agreement, reached tacitly rather than explicitly, when the United Nations and the United States ended the Sinai campaign of the Israelis and the Suez invasion of the British and French." DAILY,m NEWS New York~ 5 June 1959 '~Nasser has now taken to grabbing an occasional nonIsrael ship passing through the Canal with an Israeli cargo aboard. "The latest incidents occurred 21 May, when the Danish freighter Inge Toft, carrying Israeli goods for the Far East, was halted at Port Said. The captain is still refusing to obey an Egyptian court order to surrender the cargo. "We would call this situation a clear case for the United Nations to handle, if it can. The United Nations has been maintaining peace between Israel and Egypt for quite a 24 while now, and here is a chance for it to keep up the good work." lJ tmtt tral;, Rochester, N.Y., 25 June 1959 "Nasser's new role as a pirate is characteristic. He has been rudely set back in Iraq. He has been disillusioned with Moscow. He had expected by now to have Jordan and Lebanon in his camp. He cannot believe that he is losing his grip-what grip he had-on the Arab world. In desperation he is groping for a way to rehabilitate himself as a hero to the Arabs. It will not be easy." DENVER POST Denver, Colo., 11 June 1959 "If the UAR were to be swayed by legal arguments, it would have allowed Israeli ships and cargoes through long ago. "The Egyptians' unilateral declaration of 195 7, when Egypt reassumed control of the Canal after the BritishFrench-Israeli invasion, paid tribute to the Constantinople Convention of 1888, which declares that the Canal shall remain open in peace or war to all ships of ·every nation. "But in relation to Israel, the UAR paid as little attention to that clause as it did to the Security Council order in 1951 to admit Israeli vessels to the Canal." EVENING STAR Washington, 16 August 1959 "The ban on Israeli shipping, now extended to ships of other nations carrying Israeli goods, is based on the Egyptian claim that, officially, a state of war still exists between Egypt and Israel. Whatever the legalistic merits of this claim, and it is disputed by Israel, the plain fact is that it results in a situation which is hurting Israel, which is of no benefit to Egypt and which is prejudicial to the outlook for peace in the Middle East. There seems little prospect at the moment that this deadlock can be resolved. Still, political harangues aside, it would be to Egypt's advantage to resolve it. So it may be that a government which was intelligent enough to see the advantages of efficient operation of the Canal will also come to see the advantages in abandoning this pointless discrimination." 25 Hartford:~ Conn..) 18 June 1959 ''Control of the Canal is being misused by Egypt in a way that violates the rules of civilized nations. Only a war would justify barring of cargo ships from the Canal. And to justify its hostile actions, Egypt claims to be at war with Israel. This is a legal fiction without basis in fact. It should not be accepted by other nations." THE MIAMI NEWS Miami) Fla.) 17 June 1959 "This is embarrassing to the United Nations not only because its officials engineered the original agreement, but because failure to restore the flow of trade will let Israel know that she cannot rely on international protection of her rights. And it will let Nasser know that he can take increasingly bold steps in his bid for power. Such a failure must be averted." THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL Milwaukee) Wis.) 26 June 1959 "Whatever the reason, the United Nations and nations party to the Suez agreements have a vital interest here. Egypt is defying them as well as Israel." MONTGOMERY JOURNAL Montgomery:~ Ala.:~ 16 June 1959 "Too proud to make peace and too spiritless to wage war, the Arabs maintain an in-between status, enlivened by border .raids and such incidents as seizure of the Israeli cargo recorded above. This is indeed a far cry from the days of Arab greatness. There are some who believe that the Arabs will one day resume active warfare and smother Israel by sheer weight of numbers; but history amply attests that numbers alone are not decisive." THE MORNING CALL Allentown) Pa.:~ 26 June 1959 "Mr. Hammarskjold has ironed out many difficulties by behind-the-scenes conferences. It is particularly important that he bring about the release of the Danish ship, its skipper, and its cargo, and that the acknowledged rights of a little nation shall not be violated. Otherwise an example for the perpetration of indignities to other small, law-abiding countries, and even to the greater powers, is provided." Newark> N.J.> 13 June 1959 "Israel's developing trade with the Far East demands that Israeli cargoes pass freely through the Suez. Israel's determination that this should be so cannot be treated lightly." New York> N.Y.> 14 June 1959 "Cairo has laid it squarely on the line in the case of the Danish freighter carrying an Israeli cargo that has been halted in the Canal. Minister of State Aly Sabri's declaration that 'the United Arab Republic cannot allow Israeli shipping free passage, as this would expose this vital waterway to sabotage and delay' is an open challenge to the United Nations." 17 June 1959 "Whatever the Egyptian logic, impeding traffic in the Canal is an inflammatory proceeding. The fedayin raids across Israel's borders, unchecked by the United Nations, finally goaded Israel into the Sinai campaign that all but set the entire Middle East blaze. To-day quiet is maintained along the borders by troops of the United Nations Emergency Force. They might serve a similarly productive purpose by riding ships through the Canal when necessary. Whatever form the answer takes, it becomes increasingly evident that the United Nations will have to meet this new challenge at Suez." 20 June 1959 "It would be reciting ancient history to point out that free passage of all ships, in war no less than peace, is guaranteed by the 1888 Suez Convention and reinforced by United Nations resolutions." 27 I 25 ,June 1959 "Mr. Hammarskjold's trip should be able to determine whether the UAR hopes to use its blockade of the Canal as a bargaining weapon or whether it means to choke off Israel's growing trade with the East. In either case, he must make it plain to the UAR that its actions are illegal, and that the object of his visit is less to obtain the release of a single cargo than to make certain that the Canal remains open to ships of all nations at all times." 29 July 1959 "The UAR is wrong in using the Canal as a weapon in its economic blockade against Israel. The blockade itself is mere spite-work, which harms the countries participating as much as the country against which it is directed. But to bar the Canal-still international in many aspects despite its nationalization-is illegal." New Vorl~ I1Dos1· New York, N.Y., 5 June 1959 "In 1951 the Security Council dealt with Egypt's barring of Israeli ships in the Canal. The Council very emphatically rejected Egypt's claim that it could exercise belligerent rights against Israel in the face of the armistice agreement. "Egypt blandly disregarded that decision of the Council, even though as a signatory of the United Nations Charter it contracted 'to accept. and carry out the decisions of the Security Council.' "What reason is there to believe it will show greater respect for a decision of the International Court of Justice?" 7 June 1959 ·"The seizure of Israeli cargoes on neutral freighters in the Canal may be a way by which Nasser hopes to extort blackmail aid from the West, in return for a promise to cease and desist; or it may be an ·e ffort on his part to win fanatical support in his struggle with Kassem. On either score it is an intolerable act which conceals piracy under the forms of sovereignty." 21 June 1959 "Efforts by Hammarskjold to make the Egyptians see reason have been fruitless. His messages to Cairo have received no responsive replies. The recent statement by Minister of State Aly Sabri that Israeli cargoes would not 28 be allowed to pass 'regardless of the consequences' reflects an irresponsible truculence that bodes ill for the world." 24 June 1959 "Authorities of the United Arab Republic certainly do not seem to be carrying out their original projection of allowing all ships of all nations to pass through the Canal. Not long ago they stopped a second ship within a month which they suspected of carrying an Israeli cargo. "It is a pity that they apparently have a feeling that Israel must be denied access to foreign trade through the Canal. Such action will make many people doubtful of the wisdom of allowing one nation to control any waterway built for international navigation. "Many thinking people will begin to wonder whether all such waterways should not be controlled by the United Nations and belong to the people of the World, not to any one nation." (Eleanor Roosevelt) 1 July 1959 "Nasser is apparently determined to remain unreasonable about Israel's rights in the Canal. With Hammarskjold due in Cairo this week to discuss the problem, the U AR leader has announced that 'regardless of consequences' he will not let the Israelis use the waterway. " 'Regardless of consequences' is a phrase as ominous as it is irresponsible. It can only augment the world's anxiety about Nasser's course. To declare, as he does, that ships owned or chartered by Israel pose a threat to the Canal is a patent nonsense, and we suspect that Nasser knows it. His harassment of Israeli commerce, exemplified currently by his detention of the Danish freighter Inge Toft with an Israeli cargo, adds nothing to the security of his country; it does threaten the peace of the entire area." New York_, N.Y._, 29 March 1959 "Nasser is using the Canal as his own private reserve fo~ his own private purposes. The issue should he aired in the Security Council without delay." 19 June 1959 "Nasser's argument that he is still at war with Israel and is entitled to act in the Canal as a 'belligerent' has been specifically thrown out by the United Nations as contrary to fact and law. 29 "He seems to believe that in view of the Western preoccupation with the Soviet challenge and his own verbal quarrel with the Soviets he can now count on greater Western toleration and help. He should be disillusioned on that point until he learns to honour his international obligations." Oakland~ Gal.~ 15 June 1959 "Again in 1957, the Egyptian Government reaffirmed its obligation to observe the Canal Convention of 1888 which specifically provides for freedom of navigation for all nations and also its adherence to the orders of the Security Council. Yet in the instance of the Danish ship carrying an Israeli cargo the Egyptian Government has flouted not only the United Nations but also its own declarations of honorable intent. "Well, that has happened, so now the onus of enforcing international law and the sanctity of agreements rests directly on the United Nations." 22 June 1959 "In any case, it is now up to the United Nations to implement and enforce its 1951 resolution calling for an end to the ban on Israeli shipping. There is no other way without violating the basic rules of international comity." Portland~ 20 June 1959 "The United States took a firm position, as did the Soviet Union, in United Nations opposition to the attack on the Suez and the Sinai Peninsula by Britain, France and Israel in 1956. It has an equally sound obligation to bring the UAR government before the United Nations bar of justice now to force it to respect its own pledges and the Suez Convention. If the nations of the world fail to make Nasser play by the rules, how can they expect Israel to keep turning the other cheek?" PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac~ Mich.~ 29 June 1959 "At a time when Western relations with Egypt have been 30 improving and when it seemed that Nasser was more aware of the Communist menace to his country, the blockade is a setback. It is a denial of his pledged word to respect covenants which govern the international character of the Canal. The whole world is vitally interested in the outcome of the current negotiations in Cairo." ~bt ~robibmct Journal Providence~ R.I.~ 17 July 1959 "There is no reason to expect that Nasser will pay any more attention to further United Nations injunctions than he has in the past or that he will bring to the administration of a great international waterway the , responsibility that should govern its use. In the meantime, Israel is put under serious disadvantage in its attempt to share in world trade." SACREMENTO BEE Sacramento~ Cal.~ 16 June 1959 "By such interference Egypt violates the 1957 armistice agreement, following the flash war between Egypt and Israel, after the Cairo government had seized the Canal. . "And what is more, President Eisenhower, in a nationwide address to the American people, gave assurance Egypt had bound itself to maintain the Canal as an open and free water passage. He said any violation of that pledge 'should be dealt with firmly by the society of nations.' " ST. PAUL PIONEER PRESS St. Paul~ Minn.~ 14 June 1959 "There never has been a satisfactory explanation why President Nasser allowed 40 ships bearing cargoes to and from Israel through the Canal between April 1957 and March 1959 without trouble and has since seized three vessels." SALT LAKE CITY NEWS & TELEGRAM Salt Lak.e City~ Utah, 26 June 1959 "Mr. Hammarskjold can greatly strengthen the co-operative spirit that has developed if he can help smooth out 31 the Inge Toft affair and reassure Israel and other nations that open and 'effective use of the Canal will continue." Y!bt inlt tnkt gtribunt Salt Lake Santa New City:~ Utah:~ 16 June 1959 "The Middle East has been relatively quiet of late--and the rest of the world would like very much to keep it so for its own peace of mind. "But that may be the trouble. Dictatorial governments such as Egypt's seem to require trouble and tension to maintain a semblance at least of popular support." Monica:~ Cal.:~ 15 June 1959 "Nasser should not be allowed to get away with this. He should be made to keep his promises and the American Government should play an affirmative role in seeing that he does. We were largely instrumental in getting Britain and France to pull back so that Nasser could take over the Canal, and we need to make amends for that decision that not only strained the relations between us and our major allies, but gave Nasser the power he now wields over the Canal." Bedford:~ 9 June 1959 "Governments of seafaring nations would do well to marshal support of Israeli counteraction in this matter, for it involves highhanded interference with international trade, expropriation without payment, and the operation of an important waterway on the basis of political prejudice." STAR- TELEGRAM Fort Worth (Tex.):~ 30 July 1959 "The Canal can not be considered an international waterway open to all nations if it can be closed by Nasser to any nation with which he may happen to be displeased. "The issue is broader than the discovery of some expe32 diency by which Israel can move its freight. To yield to such an offer as Nasser is reported to have made would be to yield a fundamental transit right, and this Israel should not be obliged to do." Columbia, S.C., 28 June 1959 "All nations which would ship through the Canal are concerned in a settlement, not only because their shipping is subject to the caprice of the Egyptian ruler but because the prestige and authority of the United Nations is also at stake." STATE JOURNAL Lansing, Mich ., 3 July 1959 "Nasser professes to fear that Israel, if permitted to use the Canal, will undertake destructive acts. While Israel may take the position that it is no longer at war with Egypt, Nasser makes it clear that he is still at war with Israel and apparently is using control of the Canal as an economic weapon." THE SUN Baltimore, Md., 8 June 1959 " . . . The Inge Toft case does serve to remind us that interests beyond the interests of Israel and the United Arab Republic are involved. For the European maritime nations, commerce with the countries east of Suez is economically important. And these countries to-day include not only the regions of South Asia. They include Israel ai well." Portland, 13 June 1959 "The UAR's seizure of Israel's cargoes is an affront not only to that tiny country but to all other nations, parti- cularly those engaged in mant1me commerce. It is time the issue was 'dealt with firmly by the society of nations.'" ... _···-·-YEN·~~ ffXx ~.O.U·N 1 Y- ..-··-··-··- _?-:::.:..E.···--·---·---·---- --t·----···-·-----=-~-~~ s· · -·~~a~r-~~~ :;:r~e=== =~:l!~~e=s-~s Ventura_, Cal._, 27 June 1959 "Why Nasser should be looking for trouble with the West at a moment when he is trying to lessen his dangerous dependence on the Soviets puzzles all who would be his friends. Whatever his motives, he should be reminded of the words spoken by President Eisenhower immediately following the Suez crisis: 'If, unhappily, Egypt does hereafter violate the armistice agreement or other international obligations, then this should be dealt with firmly by th~ society of nations.' "And perhaps Ike himself should do the reminding." VALLEY TIMES North Hollywood_, 8 June 1959 "General guessing is that he (Hammarskjold) feels that there is no justification or right to close the Canal to any nation-notwithstanding the status of Egyptian-Israel affairs." fl!bt tllasl}ipgton Jlost Qrimes1ll?tralil Washington) D.C.) 7 June 1959 "Whatever the Israeli purposes, the U AR action can scarcely stand the scrutiny of either international law or sound international policy. Freedom of transit in the Canal is meaningful only if it applies to everyone. "Understandably some governments may be reluctant to irritate the United Arab Republic at a time when relations between Cairo and non-Communist capitals have happily improved. The hope is that the matter may be settled through negotiation. But the world community cannot in good conscience avoid facing the fundamental problem. Equivocation in similar instances prior to 1956 helped create armed conflict. Forthrightness now may avoid new troubles." 2 August 1959 "Nations which helped to restore the Canal can scarcely be indifferent to a Cairo decision that some countries are more equal than others in use of the Canal. The unresolved state of theoretical war between the Arab States and Israel-an unrealistic condition that has existed for more than 10 years-does not alter the basic situation. The Security Council has explicitly recognized the right of Israel to use the Canal. The present controversy does not even concern ships of Israeli registry. Evidently, however, the Nasser government regards capricious interference as a weapon of economic warfare against Israeli commerce ... "Unless the freedom of transit is confirmed soon, there will be no honorable alternative but to bring the matter again before the Security Council, or the General Assembly, fo_r public discussion and action-including the imposition of sanctions if necessary. The painful" experience of 1956 argues strongly for a check on such abuses before they erupt into major international trouble." 35 Printed in Israel at The Jerusalem Post Press, Jerusalem Lay out and cover design by !manuel Grau Publis hed by the Government Printe r 1959
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