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incident) ‘thought that Nasser was playing a cat and mouse game with him and that

                   Bahrein was the final act of the cat attacking the mouse’. 527


                          In Shuckburgh’s diary entry of 3 March he claimed to have been approached


                   by Eden who asked him to contemplate earnestly the idea of reoccupying Suez as a

                   move to respond to Glubb Pasha’s sacking.  As the issue was being discussed news


                   arrived of Lloyd’s stoning in Bahrain.  Shuckburgh felt that everything was in a state

                   of a mess, ‘and the Arabs [were] hating us more and more’.  Eden’s excitement at


                   recent developments later prompted him to ask Shuckburgh to arrange a ‘weekend

                   [of] meetings at Chequers’ on the situation in Bahrain and a tour d’horizon of the


                   overall defence of the Gulf region.  Shuckburgh thought that the weekend meetings

                   were most unnecessary.   528   Nutting described Eden at that time as behaving ‘like an


                   enraged elephant charging senselessly at invisible and imaginary enemies in the

                   international jungle’. 529


                          Conservative MP Julian Amery voiced his opinion on recent developments in

                   Bahrain and the Middle East.  Amery was joint leader with Captain Charles


                   Waterhouse of the Suez Group informal body consisting of about fifty MPs aimed to

                   counter policies of appeasement towards Nasser and reversing what they saw as


                   diminishing British influence in the region. 530   Amery’s letter to The Times on 5

                   March viewed the dismissal of Glubb and stoning of Lloyd’s car in Bahrain as signs


                   of ‘the bankruptcy of the policy of appeasement in the Middle East’.  He linked these




                   527  Heikal, Nasser: The Cairo Documents, 84-85.
                   528  Descent to Suez, 3 March 1956, 345.
                   529  Nutting, No End of a Lesson, 32.
                   530  Lucas, Britain and Suez: the Lion’s Last Roar, 59; V. Rothwell, Anthony Eden: A Political Biography
                   1931-57 (Manchester: 1992), 209; and Carlton, Britain and the Suez Crisis, 13.



                   © Hamad E. Abdulla                       167
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