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The Suez Oral History Project aimed to interview various personalities vis-à-
vis the Suez War whose transcripts are found at King’s College London. Historians
Anthony Gorst and WS Lucas interviewed Sir Donald Logan who had accompanied
Lloyd in Bahrain and was an eyewitness to the event, as he was then his Assistant
Private Secretary. He recalled that the incident was not for him a life-threatening
ordeal, as he was in either the second or third car of the procession when the attack
took place. In Logan’s account, Lloyd was in the first car accompanied by Caccia.
Logan mistakenly called the attacking mob supporters of the ‘Committee of
Education’ and not the HEC. The news of the HEC winning all seats up for election
earlier in February for the Education Council might have resulted in his confusion.
Logan firmly believed ‘that there was great suspicion that the Egyptians were
behind everything in the Gulf’. 525
Lucas, then the Residency’s employee, when interviewed as part of The
British Diplomatic Oral History Programme at Churchill College Cambridge,
suspected that the incident of stoning Lloyd’s car had ‘affected his judgment at the
time of Suez a few months later’. In Lucas’ opinion, Lloyd arrived in Bahrain feeling
that Nasser had personally ridiculed him over the issue of Glubb’s dismissal. Lloyd,
Lucas suggested, carried a ‘chip on his shoulder in Bahrain’ and when he was met
face-to-face with rioters he thought it to be ‘all part of this Nasser-inspired plot’. 526
Heikal also made the same point, believing that Lloyd (following the Bahraini
525 Donald Logan, interviewed by Anthony Gorst and W.S. Lucas, Suez Oral History Project, 1956,
GB0099 Suez OHP, 1-18.
526 Ivor Thomas Mark Lucas, interviewed by Malcolm McBain, The British Diplomatic Oral History
Programme, 25 January 2005, 7.
<https://www.chu.cam.ac.uk/media/uploads/files/Lucas.pdf> [accessed 28 November 2015].
© Hamad E. Abdulla 166