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On 27 September Nasser publically announced his Soviet arms deal by saying
that the Czechs had actually delivered military supplies and equipment. 396 The deal
involved the Egyptians supply to the Russians with staggered payments of cotton
and rice in return. 397 The agreement was estimated to be worth between ninety and
two hundred million US dollars, according to Eisenhower. The US President also
asserted that following the conclusion of the arms arrangement, the Soviets offered
the Israelis their own arms deal. The Israelis had rejected the Soviet offer, he
said. 398
Britain’s initial reaction was to call this ‘Egyptian blackmail’. In a minute by
Sir Robert Hadow and Sir Harold Caccia the two noted that ‘Whatever policy we
adopt must avoid giving the other Arab States the impression that blackmail and
neutralism pay’. 399
Ghaleb, in an interview with Al-Jazeera in 2008, recalled a discussion with Ali
Sabry, Nasser’s aide, who said that he believed that the arms supplied by the Soviets
would enable Egypt to defeat Israel in military confrontation. Ghaleb, in return
expressed to Sabry, his belief that the objective of the arms supplied was not to
initiate a conflict with the Israelis as such an escapade would result in strong and
dire consequences for Egypt from the West, a matter the Soviets well understood. In
396 As the process of Soviet arms to Egypt reached its conclusion Copeland reported that K Roosevelt
met with Nasser. The Egyptian Prime Minister informed him of the Soviet offer and his acceptance.
To Nasser’s surprise K Roosevelt’s reaction was positive as he saw it as a way to increase the
Egyptian leader’s popularity and by doing so a peace settlement with Israel could be reached through
Nasser. Both K Roosevelt and Copeland assisted Nasser in drafting the speech in which he would
announce in it his arms deal. K Roosevelt went further as he suggested to Nasser to claim that the
arms were brought from Czechoslovakia. See Copeland, The Game of Nations, 156-60.
397 Nutting, Nasser, 101.
398 D.D. Eisenhower, The White House Years 1956-61: Waging Peace (London: 1966), 25.
399 BDEEP, Series B, Part III, vol. 4, ‘Egypt and the Defence of the Middle East’ 1953-1956. Doc. 600:
FO 371/113675, ‘Egypt and Russian arms’: minutes by Sir Robert Hadow and Sir Harold Caccia on
the importance of designing a common response with the Americans, 23 September 1955.
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