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Naguib, the figurehead of the RCC, was its first President. 118   In the same year Nasser

                   published his infamous book The Philosophy of the Revolution, a vade mecum for


                   young and aspiring Arab nationalists in the Middle East.  In reality the publication


                   was an ‘adolescent document’ as Jean Lacatoure, the French historian described it.

                   It was made up of the memoirs and visions of this ambitious Egyptian military


                   officer. 119   Sir Anthony Parsons, Britain’s Political Agent in Bahrain from 1965 to

                   1969, commented on Nasser’s work, saying that it ‘must be either for children or for


                   foreigners with limited knowledge of Arabic’. 120   The publication prompted Sir

                   Anthony Nutting, the British Minister of State, to suggest to Nasser he avoid writing


                   any further books. 121   Eden, on the other hand, compared the work to ‘Hitler’s Mein

                   Kampf’. 122   According to Copeland’s assertion the actual author of Nasser’s book was


                   his friend, journalist, and historian Mohammed H Heikal.  123   The book was a means

                   for Nasser to introduce himself to Egyptians and the Arab World, preparing the way


                   for his takeover of power and the eclipse of Naguib.

                          July 1953 marked the start of the Cairo-based Sawut Al-Arab (Voice of the


                   Arabs) radio station broadcast to the Arab World.  The Egyptian Ahmed Al-Saeed

                   was to become the leading voice of the network and its Director.  He believed that


                   part of the purpose behind the station ‘was to inform Arabs of their own

                   governments’ sins’.  The name, Sawut Al-Arab, was borrowed from a short broadcast







                   118  ‘Egypt Now a Republic; Naguib Her President’, New York Times, 19 June 1953, 1.
                   119  J. Lacatoure, Nasser, 145.
                   120  A. Parsons, They Say the Lion (London: 1986), 60.
                   121  A. Nutting, I Saw for Myself: The Aftermath of Suez, 95, hereafter The Aftermath of Suez.
                   122  A. Eden, The Memoirs of Sir Anthony Eden: Full Circle (London: 1960), 543, hereafter Full Circle.
                   123  Copeland, The Game of Nations, 65.


                   © Hamad E. Abdulla                        39
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