Voice of the Arabs was not only anti-Zionist, but also anti-Semitic. Anti-Semitic thinking still shapes the Arab world today, and Arabs in other countries therefore particularly frequently kill Jews and sympathize with National Socialist ideas. One could have emphasized that precisely because Israel had so little confidence in the Osol treaties for that very reason.
Dude who manages to build a coalition spanning from the military to the Brotherhood to the Communists deserves more than a footnote in History. Great vid as always, and a happy new year 😊
Not exactly, there was a lot in common between Brotherhood and Arab communists, both are against the west specially the US and against Israel and imperialism, both were against the status quo then and pro-radical change. And the brotherhood are not concerned about the ideology as much as they are concerned about the political stand and still they are to this day. And any way later as president he wasn’t supported by them but rather he dissolved the party and imprisoned them and persecuted them.
@@ahmedkhalifa5190 Yeah their relationship (to put it mildly) wasn't good after the revolation. So the claim that he could manage a coalition between comminists and the brotherhood isn't accurate.
"We dont have problems with Russians, Russia never attacked us..." A statement and sentiment that is largely ignored/unknown on why some countries during the Cold War sided (or wanted regular normal relations) with the Soviets while not being exactly aligned with them ideologically
west media narrative is to follow where soviets russians are and say the soviets are advocating communism... in the hope that muslims religionism would kill the soviets for being communists... which didnot happen because soviets russia in those times is not to sell ideology, but, to SEEK long lasting friendships in the middle east, particularly egypt (historical) ...
@@gofar5185 yes and no, historically the USSR didn't care much about selling communism, their primary goal was to support civil wars that had communist parties involved, and sometimes like the case with Afghanistan they'd rather control the region than puppet it out right.
Nasser actually was quite a pragmatist, taking advantage wherever he could without siding with one or the other side. In Syria too the government, even when not presided by left-leaning politicians, took advantage of friendly relations with URSS. Then it became more substantial during the sixties
It's a lie that communist countries will follow the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union's best friend is India. Today, Russia's best friend is also India. China, Yugoslavia, Albania and Somalia did not completely follow the Soviet Union.
Another phenomenal video. Happy New Year to you, David & to everyone that works on the Cold War channel. I’ve stopped watching a lot of RUclips history channels this year for one reason or another. This is not one of them!
Amazing content as always. I believe you'll talk about the division off Yemen into a communist and a anti-communist state, South and North Yemen, right?
Nasser started the first ever Swahili radio station advocating for independence in eastern African nations. He supported the Algerian freedom fighters against France. What a man
جمال عبدالناصر. قانون توزيع الاراضي لشعب و ليس أخذ الأراضي من شعب كما فعل ملك مصر و جماعته جمال عبدالناصر. جعل تعليم مجاني و اول رئيس مصري يؤسس مدارس في الريف و مراكز طبية مجانية و هذا لم يكن في عصر ملكي جمال عبدالناصر أصدر قانون التأمين الصحي لعمال #هذا الأفعال تدل على أن جمال عبدالناصر رجل وطني و ليس دكتاتورية
Nasser widely supported Somalia in all fields. He helped the Somalis to get their independence, he supported Somali nationalism, and he supported Somalia in its borders problem with Ethiopia. Culturally, he sent many scientific missions to Somalia to teach the Somalis the Arabic language, and to prepare them for rule after their independence. He sent them experts in all fields to help them in understanding culture. In the military field, he helped them a great deal, giving them weapons for free as a gift from Egypt to Somalia, training Somali students in Egyptian military colleges, and sending Egyptian officers to Somalia to train the Somali officers. Economically, he supported the Somali economy, he bought his required products, sheep, bananas and incense from there, and he stood beside the Somalis in their economic crisis. He also gave a loan to the Somalis to help their economy. All that has been mentioned made Nasser their hero, so they cried at his death; sad to lose a hero who deserved that place by his works. Source: Egyptian University, which also, in this academic study, acknowledges the Land of Punt was in the long diverse coastline of Somalia, and that Somalia has been an ally of Egypt for 5000 years since the days of ancient Egypt and their commercial military cultural religious alliance with the proto-Somali Land of Punt
@@كريمإسلام-ب6ت they were most likely snm rebels being used funded and armed by ethiopia so if they were rebels then they deserved everything your traitorous family got you fool
Arabs of today, how do you feel about Pan-Arabism? Would you or your fellow countrymen wherever you are feel interested in a United Arab State...? How would it look like? Greetings from Mexico! Edit: could you like the comment so more people can see the comment and are able to voice their opinion and read what you have to say? Thanks!!!
It’s dead - I support Arab nationalism in the sense I support cooperation with neighbouring states. But the ideological determination of the past states is long gone. Also, I hate how all Arab nationalist presidents were Authoritarian jackasses to be frank. I’d rather each Arab state be independent and democratic than be unified by a Saddam or a Qaddafi Edit - also I’ve been to Mexico & love it!
My dream is an Arab union with a constitutional monarchy that defends democracy and a free market economy. The head of the monarchy should also be the Hashimite dynasty. I trust them the most.
@@viriato6525 I don’t think the Palestinians would like that - the Hashemites have a history of selling out the Palestinian cause for their own end. Although honestly, if what it takes to have a democratic, free market united Arab world is to have a symbolic Hashemite king, I would be for that 100%
Not to mention that Pan-Arabism overthrew monarchs in Libya, Iraq, Egypt, Yemen, and Tunisia. Many regional monarchies were not so fond of Pan-Arabism.
Really loving this channel as a whole and how you guys go into topics not commonly focused when discussing the Cold War. One thing I would love to see is the strange foreign policy of Mexico during the Cold War. The sole ruling party the PRI had to make a strange balance between both Washington and Moscow, and how it led to a weird direction that Mexico went compared to the rest of Latin America at the time.
It's funny you mention this topic...I was just looking at the Mexican Dirty War that started in the 1960s to see what we could put together. I think it is a topic that is largely overlooked in the greater narrative.
So, the 1950s was a also a period in which the Middle Eastern countries played a "game of thrones" with supranational projects. Such a confusing situation, is it ?
It’s something I think is really overlooked here in the US. As much tension as there was between us and the USSR, the relations between the Arab states was utterly rancid.
-"We hoped by the creation of a ring of client states, themselves insisting on our patronage, to turn the present and future flank of any foreign power with designs on the three rivers." -Lawrence of Arabia -"The Arabs are even less stable than the Turks. If properly handled they would remain in a state of political mosaic, a tissue of small jealous principalities incapable of cohesion." -Lawrence of Arabia -"My admiration for him [Ibn Saud] was deep, because of his unfailing loyalty to us.” - Churchill
The fact that the Prophet Muhammad (blessings and peace be upon him) could reunite all those arab tribes in a matter of a few years in a, possibly, much more unstable era is still beyond any human comprehension. What he achieved was truly of another level.
@@darrenrichards3351 due to the high amount of muslims no doubt the prophet muhammad (SAW) could do it within the week. The more interesting discussion would be the arrival of a man fitting the mahdi prophecy, the prophecy where a man would come during the time of weakness and inter-conflict between muslims who would lead them to re-unification.
If only nasser had paid all of his attention to internal affair and leading Egypt toward industrialization instead of going down the rabbit hole of "united Arab nation" and creating enemies left and right... But the man had no patience
Unites Arab state would have been a super power which would have lead to industrialization and more especially with oil and military etc .. that’s how you survive it seems is for people to be one whatever it’s based on like if India wasn’t so divided the British wouldn’t have colonized India..
He wanted to be a leader he wanted to be a legend missing the chance to lead a great economical revolution in Egypt especially when Egypt was a center for European tourists investors after WW2
Getting the United Arab Republic formed was pretty badass and impossible to imagine getting going today. Maybe this could have been the way the Middle East would have peace or 20 years later when its time for a new leader it all falls apart Yugoslavia style.
I think just like Yougoslavia the error was centralization. Europe has managed durable peace only because it has now entered a fluctuant flexible federal alliance with the EU, I did hope in 2012 the same was possible for Arab countries. How wrong was I.... :(
@@Cancoillotteman Europe is becoming increasingly centralised (or at least the EU) and, to an extent, power was always centralised in the richer founding nations like Germany and France. With regards to Yugoslavia, I'm afraid I must respectfully disagree. In every state where the national and ethnic identity is highly divided this inevitably leads to collapse and war. The same thing is happening right now in Ethiopia and has happened in many countries throughout the world. The only countries where ethnic diversity works is precisely *because* of centralisation and a common national identity. For instance, immigrants to the US will describe themselves as things like Chinese-Americans etc, where they have a separate ethnic identity whilst retaining the same national identity (and of course, even then, there are still issues). The problem is that in many countries a common national identity doesn't exist and it never will while tribal cultures create separation between them.
@@AeneasGemini Nah we don’t want to unite with Egypt, We want to unite shaam or Levant 🇸🇾🇱🇧🇵🇸🇯🇴 as it is the same historic nation divided in 1920. Also, Damascus is the capital I don’t want to have a state where Damascus is under others control. Also, Egypt discriminated a lot between Muslims and Christians, more then us.
@@suleyman8696 I agree with you on the levant unity but I have to say Levant itself was never a state that was divided, it was simply a governate or a "wilayah" a part of a bigger entity, which at that time was the Ottoman empire يعني صديقي نحنا بحياتنا ما كنا دولة وحدة، كنا محافظة أو منطقة ضمن امبراطوريات متتابعة
As an Egyptian, I believe Nasser was fairly exceptional, extremely charismatic and well loved for his era, very known all around the Arab world for his popular speeches (Nationalistic tone) but you would be surprised to hear today most modern day Egyptians are not too fond of him kinda like Peron in Argentina. He led a military coup which toppled a fairly democratic constitutional monarchy that till this day Egypt is under the very rule of the Military and police institutions he directly established. Although not very fair modern day analogy, Egyptians today like to blame him over all their endeavors and troubles from A to Z, hanging all their problems over his shoulders so they can sleep tight at night believing it is just out of their hands fixing their problems themselves, yet first chance they had after the Arab spring was calling for the military to overthrow the newly established democratic system and happily resorted back to be ruled by the army. This is what Nietzsche likes to refer to as "slave morality".
After Nasser's death his successor made a 180 degrees turn. The upper hand was the Muslim Brotherhood who wasted no time in smearing his image and radicalising the muslim Arabs. This brought about the current situation with terrorism and sectarian tensions. The Muslim Brotherhood would do anything to smear Nasser and his legacy, they actually against the nationalisation of the canal and building the high dam!
Duh? Who the fuck wants their government to be run by the Muslim Brotherhood? An organisation that is considered to be terrorists by several nations. An organisation that wanted to genocide the copts, 20% of Egypt’s population. 😂😂😂
I remember my first school dictionary with a two-page spread of world flags, and I remember wondering why the flags of Egypt, Libya and Syria looked identical. It was the time of the Federation of Arab Republics, the second attempt to creat an Arab superstate.
To me that sounds similar as recreating the Roman Empire between all romance speaking countries or re-establishing the Spanish Empire with all hispanic countries.
U have no idea the similarities and the traditions that go between all arab countries if u had to relate to it then maybe north and south Korea being unified again but the unification would happen peacefully.
Thank you so much for spreading the word of this great man, as an Egyptian it is incredibly sad how our modern era (1952 - now) is never talked about and usually when it is its about us losing something or getting bullied by isreal, britian or some other power, Nasser was an incredibly intresting person that is criminally underrated and needs to be talked about more to show that our history wasn't just in the ancient era
Well I guess th problem is that Nasser was a laic man, so is despised by current religious viewpoint tha dominates arab world. Just one of he newest comments I read said he hated Nasser for be communist.
Say what you like about Nasser was was certainly one of the more interesting World Leaders we've had. My compliments to all those who made this video a reality.
as an Arab the question is something discussed widely and these are my points: 1.Centers of Power: the center of the culture, humanity and Financial and Political are Different, Egypt and Saudi arabia each claim it, each with a wildly different Way of rule. 2. Political differences: the 22 countries each has a wildly different way of rule, from absolute Monarchies to Army centralised governments, affect the ability of creating a union without injustices. 3. Sectarianism: Arab world is Made up of Sunnis, Shiates and Christians, in which non are able to concede some power. 4. Colonial Rule and its effects: while it could be a cliche to just Blame Colonisation, but its affects in regard of splitting the countries without minding Demographical differences and the Cultural influence they applied to the people they controlled made it worse, either it is by language, cultural or the geopolitical connections they had. And lastly as a Yemeni and an arab I feel sad that we are drifting away from each other although our similarities and brotherhood are far greater than our issues and differences
I was wondering where the quote "The Soviet Union is 7500 kilometers way from us and we have never had any problem with Russians..." is from. I am doing a school project and this would be perfect for what I am trying to say. thank you
Another winner, most excellent video....a cuppa and The Cold War or Kings & Generals is an excellent way to spend some time! Happy New Year to you all! Here's to a much better 2022! 🍻
It's interesting to think that then Nasser wants an united Arab Super State with a very agressive position towards Israel and now Egipt is the most populated arab state that recognise Israel.
@@kw9296 And it doesn't bring you any good, Israelis today aren't even thinking about Egyptians, Let alone seeing them as an enemy while many are going as tourists in Sinai.
@@kw9296 - If you feel so much for your brothers and sisters than offer them citizenship and a passport, not rejection. Israel done that to all Arab Jews that have been expelled from North Africa and the Middle East. Why is the hate for who’s ‘oppressing’ your ‘brothers and sisters’ is only confined to the state of Israel? I very rarely hear the same voices that hate Israel mentioning the treatment of Chinese Muslims by the Chinese communist government … Today all Arab brothers and sisters of all faiths are aware that they have a better chance of success in education, lifestyle, freedom, healthcare and opportunities if they lived in Israel instead of living in Egypt, Yemen, Syria, Lebanon, Tunisia or Libya. Israel has 21% of its citizens that’s Arab, mostly Sunni Muslims. Some representatives in Israel parliament. How many Arab Jews in North African countries?
that's just a part of it, Nasser even sent troops to fight against Morocco in the 60s(the sand war) as Morocco was very anti-pan-Arabism it being an ancient kingdom and all saw that as a threat, the Egyptian president Mubarak was even a war prisoner in Morocco, Most arab countries were pro-Russia but Morocco was pro West and anti-comunism, the whole Western saharan problem and current threats of war with Algeria is a remnant of the cold war.
No I think it's just the most unknown to most westerner so i feels exotic and new. Like discovering a new ethnic food you've never had but really like now.
I'm sorry it may sound rude but I LOVEEEEEE cold war. I mean it explains 70% of the things you will study in history, politics and international relations. ❤️ I'm subscribing right away 😊 i wish i have discovered your channel earlier
Why would that be controversial? He already started talking about the Banana Wars. And Americans generally support believe it was necessary. So neither side wants to hide the truth, unlike Soviet apologists
@@stephenjenkins7971 A campaign of political repression and state terror involving torture and assassination of opponents is a controversial subject because people from the countries where Condor was executed don't appreciate a foreign state meddling with their democracies, specially when the dictatorships that followed the toppled democratically elected governments tortured, disappeared and assasinated approximately 100.000 people. Maybe it makes you proud to have an intelligence agency capable of something of this magnitude but not everyone thinks like you.
@@matamadariaga Nah, everyone is generally alright with this because it was necessary for the era. The Soviets were heavily engaged in Latin America and the guerillas and civil wars they sponsored took over a million lives in Latin America. I'd have to double check the numbers, but I recall reading that before. Anyway, you'd likely be blaming the US for doing nothing if the US didn't do something, and Americans understand that whether its inaction or any action; the US will be blamed for it anyway. Its the curse of being a democratic Superpower. So the obvious answer is just to do the best it can and then when the danger has passed to not needlessly aggravate fellow democracies anymore. Which is essentially modern US foreign policy. Latin America has not experienced such heavy pressure since the Cold War ended and the US has stayed hands off for a reason. But yeah, isn't really controversial. US isn't exactly hiding it and Americans aren't exactly screeching that it's fake like Turks do with the Armenian Genocide.
Interesting video. I have one question about this subject. What happened to the “All Palestine Government” in Gaza (occupied by Egypt, but not annexed) when Egypt and Syria unified to form the UAR (United Arab Republic). Did “Palestine” ever officially join the UAR?
Czechoslovakia had a good shipbuilding industry From the austrian empire's period. Bohemian Ships were the backbone of agriculture along the danube. They had a large ship building yard outside Prag which made smaller naval vessels for East Germany, Poland and Commercial ships for Austria. Egypt's Naval vessels were aimed at the Nile delta and Suez Canal region, and thus Danubian ships might have suited them well. It was Transported through Rumania to the sea then to Egypt through Istanbul.
رحمك الله يا قائدي ،افضل قائد انجبه العرب في العصر الحديث ساعد جميع الدول العربية في طرد الاحتلال مصر قدمت الغالي والنفيس في عهده ،🇮🇶 ✌🏾🇪🇬 شكرا لك جمال عبد ناصر
@@degamispoudegamis both the united states and Soviet union supported decolonization but the decolonized countries had to ally with the us or the ussr and by the way ussr wasn’t that anti imperialist all of its satalite states were basically colonies and there was this guy in North Korea who criticized both capitalism and Socialism and had a lot of support but he was purged by the soviet union.
@@degamispoudegamis But the soviets grip on eastern europe or central asia and their war crimes in Afghanistan could be considered imperialistic I think even Mao complained about Soviet imperialism. And their is no measurement for imperialism.
@@degamispoudegamis dont forget the construction of the berlin wall,Berlin blockade,aggression against Turkey, crushing the hungarian revolution ( mao complained about this) etc.
They say heaven is for the poor .thst's great!but these poor people,don't they deserve a share in this world?they need a small share in this world,and then they can give you a piece of heaven.My favorite speech, his author is Nasser.
In the Middle East and North Africa either they loved Jamal Abdel Nasser or they hated him so much and until today you mention Jamal either people pray for his soul or they spit on his soul
The game looks cool but the premium pay model scared me off. Also, I saw an Israeli spokesperson say that Israel was "a law abiding nation" and is "respected by international bodies" and I thought that was pretty funny.
@jimmy Let's be real; every President/Dictator you don't like is automatically a puppet regardless. Even if they're not. That's just a thing that people automatically believe in the region.
King Saud was forced to abdicate because of his illness, but the Nasserite political propaganda was looking for any achievement, so it fabricated this story
Hero by oppressing his people, a Stalin like cult of personality, trying to stage coups so that he can make the arab regions unstable but under his rule. Have you not seen the video? He didn't Let Syrians govern the so called "UAR" nasser is a failure in real life, hero in the dreams of left wing arab nationalists
Without Gamal Abd El Nasser, Egypt, and other arab countries wouldn't be what they became today in terms of stability and improved life standards. Rest in peace, Gamal Abd El Nasser. الله يرحمك و يجعلك مع قوم جنة الفردوس
Interesting video. Also, could we please get some videos about China **after** Mao's death? Deng Xiaoping and all the post Mao leaders that transformed China into a superpower? Not many videos are on youtube and those few are very poor quality, I myself, a Cold war enthusiast don't know anything at all about China post-Mao period, please give this a thought if possible, also happy new year.
The cold war ended in 1991, when China was poor and weak. After Mao's death, Deng Xiaoping became China's leader. Due to the Afghanistan war, President Carter lifted China's technological and trade restrictions (in the 1950s, China was blocked due to the Korean War), and China began to introduce a large number of technologies. In 1980, China formed an alliance with Japan, and Japan helped China's development. In addition, KMT (Taiwan) helped CPC (mainland) most.
The economic policy of CPC is mainly two markets (international market and domestic market) and strict foreign exchange control. Some companies accept foreign orders, buy foreign raw materials and sell their products to foreign markets(两头在外). Other companies live in the domestic market. When foreign companies want to enter the domestic market, CPC requires learning their technology(市场换技术) or high tariffs. Some companies can grow safely in the domestic market in childhood. China's development does not belong to the history of the cold war. China began its lonely road after the death of the Soviet Union (China and Vietnam broke up because of the war)
Nasser, Sukarno and these types werre of class we do not see anymore in the world. People woth visions for thr future far beyond their own borders, desires and time
Why did the Suez crisis earn Nasser so much popularity in the Arab world? From what I understand it was a crushing military defeat for Egypt, and Britain and France where only forced out by the US and USSR, basically nothing to do with Nasser. Did Nasser just have really good PR?
@@Real_Mambo en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_Suez_Crisis I'm not an expert on the history of the Suez crisis by any stretch, but reading this timeline of the war makes it seem like a pretty amazing defeat for Egypt. It took less than 2 weeks to totally conquer the entire Sinai peninsula with thousands of dead Egyptian soldiers compared to only a bit over 200 total French/British/Israeli deaths. And it wasn't as if the Egyptians where oitnumbered, they had more than double the number of soldiers of their enemies.
Those guys knew how to bond right and left There was a lot of criticism inside They were from the people, kind of violent But you know, we are very close to them as people
Gamal Abdel Nasser did not ban the parties because he is a dictator, but the parties that were in Egypt were mostly bourgeois parties, and the owners of those parties were the landowners who brought their land workers to vote for them in return for giving them what would help them live their lives as slaves, i.e. it was a system of canons. Nasser came and distributed land to the peasants, which are their land in the first place but were withdrawn from their ancestors in the past.
so... the Syrian collapse alongside CIA assistance. That hints at an interesting term from the next period of manipulating Syria: "Constructive Ambiguity." Any chance of doing an episode that follows the strategies of Kissenger's "Constructive Ambiguity." Specifically the manipulation of Hafez Al-Asad's nationalist project?
Nah we don’t want to unite with Egypt, We want to unite shaam or Levant 🇸🇾🇱🇧🇵🇸🇯🇴 as it is the same historic nation divided in 1920. Also, Damascus is the capital I don’t want to have a state where Damascus is under others control. Also, Egypt discriminated a lot between Muslims and Christians, more then us.
Some of this is wrong. Qasim did not want to join the UAR, in fact he adopted a “ wattaniya” policy which put “ Iraq first” and developed a Mesopotamian identity. He also achieved close ties with communists and the Soviet Union in 1949, leading to a coup by nasserists and Baathists, however it failed. See qasim didn’t want to Join the UAR, but his partner Abdul Salam arif was a nasserist who actually wanted to join the UAR. In 1963, qasim was overthrown by Baathists, he was killed and his regime ended, meaning the Baathists also massacred a lot of communists. But that same year arif overthrew the new Ba’ath regime and made Iraq nasserist, until 1968 ( when Ahmed Hassan Al bakr came to power ) but it didn’t matter anyways the UAR fell in 1961 following a coup in Syria opposing Nassers rule.
not fully true, the ussr especially in its end times, was truely its own imperialist force. While far less bad than the europeans to random nations, many nations were backstabbed and ruined by the ussr. For example: When somalia disobeyed some orders by the ussr, citing they were their own nation, the ussr swapped sides in the ogaden war and helped ethiopia keep somali ethnic land they were illegally given by the british. this was not only a backstab to help a faction that was against communist somalia, it showed the ussr was okay with acting the same as any other imperialist force. it also led to the somali civil war and eventually to the collapse of communism in east africa permanently.
Not particularly, you could make the argument that the communist dictatorships and regimes were just as imperial and unarguably more oppressive then the western empires. Remember Tibet, Afghanistan, Cambodia, Laos, South Vietnam, Manchuria, Taiwan and the entirety of Eastern Europe. All victims of hostile invasion/expansion attempts by communist states.
Yes. After 1967 and our horrible defeat, he gave a speech resigning, but then waves of people came into the streets telling him to go back to power. His achievements in 1956 and freedom from the Brits gave him tremendous respect in all Egyptian people’s hearts
I've seen Arabs that look as fair as Europeans from Syria, Arab as dark as Africans from Sudan and Arabs as brown as Indians in Arabia, so what defines an Arab?
The Arabs are really the people of Arabian peninsula (Saudi Arabia, Yemen and the Gulf states), as well as southern Iraq and southern Jordan.. Outside the peninsula there are Arab minorities of course, but they are never a majority outside of Arabia. As for the rest of the countries, they are influenced by Arab culture. Of course, the main reason is the Islamic religion in addition to the Arab caliphs. In the period of the Umayyad Caliphate, Arabic speakers outside the peninsula were rare, and they increased the period of the Abbasid Caliphate until the Arabic language became the dominant language in those countries, but of course they were not true Arabs despite their speaking Arabic, and they were affected by Arab culture and their one religion. This is the main reason for the failure of the idea of a united state in the Arab world. For it was a terrible detraction of all the races in those countries, which unfortunately it was those races themselves that detracted from themselves.
There are some mistakes in this documentary like King Saud "abdicating" because of nasir's accusations and whatnot which never happened. King Saud abdicated because he was too old and sick in hospitals to continue his role and job.
He was a dictator and imprisoned two of my family members. IF Education wasn't allowed to the poor how come Nasser whose father was a post man entered school and the army ? The division of land was made as a bribe to the farmers in order to buy their votes to him . Salah Nase , the Egyptian intelligence leader , made a lot of women ( actresses, dancers , and high class women ( married or not ))work as whores to the politicians in order to control them . The Leader of the military prison Hamza Albasyouni challenged god himself and said that he could prison him and when he died his coffin didn't enter the mosque no matter what , he once forced a prisoner to walk on his four limbs as a dog and naked in front of his wife and daughter
@@MrJoeSomebody Hello, I am Lebanese. From what I understand allot of young Egyptians these days don't necessarily see him as a good leader. What are the reasons for this?
@@dodovomitory3496 what would you expect after 50 years of American European Gulf Israeli funded and liberal /conservative / opportunist sponsored propaganda to associate the man with everything bad in the minds of the masses... he was a true threat to their interests and that's why he had to be defamed and historically killed even after his real death ...
@@ahmedkhalifa5190 The US doesn't mind him, Europe doesn't care outside of seeing him as a pawn by the US/USSR, and idk about Israel. Point is that Arabs have a habit of blaming anything they don't like on Westerners. Whether it be ideas, governments, or leaders. Don't like peoppe not liking who you like? MUST BE WESTERN PROPAGANDA! In reality the West has more important things to worry about.
So Nasser’s UAR project was from 58-61 but couldn’t work because Syria was a mess and his defeat in the ‘67 war showed that he wasn’t strong enough to lead it? 🙃
15:50 No one: Nasaer: I think Saud was traynna kill me … Saudi societ: Say no more *Attempts to force the king of their country to resign, in favor of a foreign president* My God this guy 😂
King Saud admitted doing it and there was his signature on the cheques for the head of security in Syria to kill Nasser by a bomb. Simply the people reacted towards the man they believed he was truely serving them, not himself or a royal family enslaving the whole nation.
I might of missed it but I don’t think it was mentioned that the dialects of Arabic are very different from each other. I heard that was a major problem too.
Dialects are really not an issue in the Eastern Arab world. Egyptians, gulf Arabs, Levantines, Iraqis, and Yemenis can understand each other dialects with no problem. Wester dialects are a little bit harder to understand but it was never a problem when spoken clearly.
Our new channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCwqY9GjXBdSYeUZiinbFXyQ
Why is Morocco map cut in half?
Can you do video on Abd Al Kareem Qassim
Voice of the Arabs was not only anti-Zionist, but also anti-Semitic. Anti-Semitic thinking still shapes the Arab world today, and Arabs in other countries therefore particularly frequently kill Jews and sympathize with National Socialist ideas. One could have emphasized that precisely because Israel had so little confidence in the Osol treaties for that very reason.
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The best way to start the new year is discussions on Arab Nationalism
Yes
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Holy shit haha that's great. God help us perpetually single people lol
Beats all those New Year resolutions which we all know we are never going to keep. Such as I am not getting drunk like that again.
@@bigblue6917 keep it halal bro.
Dude who manages to build a coalition spanning from the military to the Brotherhood to the Communists deserves more than a footnote in History. Great vid as always, and a happy new year 😊
Common enemies always make for strange bedfellows.
Not exactly, there was a lot in common between Brotherhood and Arab communists, both are against the west specially the US and against Israel and imperialism, both were against the status quo then and pro-radical change. And the brotherhood are not concerned about the ideology as much as they are concerned about the political stand and still they are to this day. And any way later as president he wasn’t supported by them but rather he dissolved the party and imprisoned them and persecuted them.
@@AbdullahS469 what kind of a sick man doing this to those who tried to assassinate him ...
@@ahmedkhalifa5190 Yeah their relationship (to put it mildly) wasn't good after the revolation.
So the claim that he could manage a coalition between comminists and the brotherhood isn't accurate.
While being supported by the CIA for a coup in the biggest country in the middle east.
Then literally running her dry ...
"We dont have problems with Russians, Russia never attacked us..." A statement and sentiment that is largely ignored/unknown on why some countries during the Cold War sided (or wanted regular normal relations) with the Soviets while not being exactly aligned with them ideologically
west media narrative is to follow where soviets russians are and say the soviets are advocating communism... in the hope that muslims religionism would kill the soviets for being communists... which didnot happen because soviets russia in those times is not to sell ideology, but, to SEEK long lasting friendships in the middle east, particularly egypt (historical) ...
@@gofar5185 Bingo
@@gofar5185 yes and no, historically the USSR didn't care much about selling communism, their primary goal was to support civil wars that had communist parties involved, and sometimes like the case with Afghanistan they'd rather control the region than puppet it out right.
Nasser actually was quite a pragmatist, taking advantage wherever he could without siding with one or the other side.
In Syria too the government, even when not presided by left-leaning politicians, took advantage of friendly relations with URSS. Then it became more substantial during the sixties
It's a lie that communist countries will follow the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union's best friend is India. Today, Russia's best friend is also India. China, Yugoslavia, Albania and Somalia did not completely follow the Soviet Union.
Another phenomenal video.
Happy New Year to you, David & to everyone that works on the Cold War channel.
I’ve stopped watching a lot of RUclips history channels this year for one reason or another. This is not one of them!
HNY! Glad you've stuck around...there are lots of great channels out there too...make sure to give them a chance
Amazing content as always. I believe you'll talk about the division off Yemen into a communist and a anti-communist state, South and North Yemen, right?
definitely on the list...
@@TheColdWarTV how long is that list now, in Astronomical Units ? 😉
Nasser started the first ever Swahili radio station advocating for independence in eastern African nations. He supported the Algerian freedom fighters against France.
What a man
He was a dictator and imprisoned two of my family members
@@كريمإسلام-ب6ت were they innocent? Why were they imprisoned?
If he was a dictator what is Sisi or Mubarak?
It's sad whenever innocents suffer
@@Klopp2543 Mubarak and Alsisi are dictators as well and these people were incarcerated for no crime
جمال عبدالناصر. قانون توزيع الاراضي لشعب و ليس أخذ الأراضي من شعب كما فعل ملك مصر و جماعته
جمال عبدالناصر. جعل تعليم مجاني و اول رئيس مصري يؤسس مدارس في الريف و مراكز طبية مجانية و هذا لم يكن في عصر ملكي
جمال عبدالناصر أصدر قانون التأمين الصحي لعمال
#هذا الأفعال تدل على أن جمال عبدالناصر رجل وطني و ليس دكتاتورية
@@كريمإسلام-ب6ت I trust Nasser, as far as I'm concerned your family members belong in prison
Nasser widely supported Somalia in all fields. He helped
the Somalis to get their independence, he supported
Somali nationalism, and he supported Somalia in its
borders problem with Ethiopia. Culturally, he sent many
scientific missions to Somalia to teach the Somalis the
Arabic language, and to prepare them for rule after their
independence. He sent them experts in all fields to help
them in understanding culture. In the military field, he
helped them a great deal, giving them weapons for free
as a gift from Egypt to Somalia, training Somali students
in Egyptian military colleges, and sending Egyptian
officers to Somalia to train the Somali officers.
Economically, he supported the Somali economy, he
bought his required products, sheep, bananas and
incense from there, and he stood beside the Somalis in
their economic crisis. He also gave a loan to the Somalis
to help their economy. All that has been mentioned made
Nasser their hero, so they cried at his death; sad to lose
a hero who deserved that place by his works.
Source: Egyptian University, which also, in this academic study, acknowledges the Land of Punt was in the long diverse coastline of Somalia, and that Somalia has been an ally of Egypt for 5000 years since the days of ancient Egypt and their commercial military cultural religious alliance with the proto-Somali Land of Punt
He was a dictator and imprisoned two of my family members
@@كريمإسلام-ب6ت they were most likely snm rebels being used funded and armed by ethiopia so if they were rebels then they deserved everything your traitorous family got you fool
Arabs of today, how do you feel about Pan-Arabism? Would you or your fellow countrymen wherever you are feel interested in a United Arab State...? How would it look like? Greetings from Mexico!
Edit: could you like the comment so more people can see the comment and are able to voice their opinion and read what you have to say? Thanks!!!
It’s dead - I support Arab nationalism in the sense I support cooperation with neighbouring states. But the ideological determination of the past states is long gone. Also, I hate how all Arab nationalist presidents were Authoritarian jackasses to be frank. I’d rather each Arab state be independent and democratic than be unified by a Saddam or a Qaddafi
Edit - also I’ve been to Mexico & love it!
My dream is an Arab union with a constitutional monarchy that defends democracy and a free market economy. The head of the monarchy should also be the Hashimite dynasty. I trust them the most.
@@viriato6525 I don’t think the Palestinians would like that - the Hashemites have a history of selling out the Palestinian cause for their own end.
Although honestly, if what it takes to have a democratic, free market united Arab world is to have a symbolic Hashemite king, I would be for that 100%
I 100% support it, a social democratic Pan-Arab Federation is what this region desperately needs
I don't support us becoming one state but I don't mind a union similar to the EU, something like the Arab league but with more power
Not to mention that Pan-Arabism overthrew monarchs in Libya, Iraq, Egypt, Yemen, and Tunisia. Many regional monarchies were not so fond of Pan-Arabism.
Those monarchies were installed by the British empire as colonial protectorates.
@@KonstantinTsiolkovsky-iv8fwnot really
Awesome content! Will you guys be making a video on the Six Day War?
We will absolutely cover the Six Day War but don't forget that @kingsandgenerals have a great video covering how the war itself was fought
@@TheColdWarTV don't forget the Syrian Crisis of 1957. That deserves a video too.
Such a good video for the first day of 2022.
thank you!
This channel is fantastic. Keep up the good work.
Really loving this channel as a whole and how you guys go into topics not commonly focused when discussing the Cold War. One thing I would love to see is the strange foreign policy of Mexico during the Cold War. The sole ruling party the PRI had to make a strange balance between both Washington and Moscow, and how it led to a weird direction that Mexico went compared to the rest of Latin America at the time.
It's funny you mention this topic...I was just looking at the Mexican Dirty War that started in the 1960s to see what we could put together. I think it is a topic that is largely overlooked in the greater narrative.
What a channel thanks for all the quality videos, the ending gave me a great chuckle btw!
So, the 1950s was a also a period in which the Middle Eastern countries played a "game of thrones" with supranational projects. Such a confusing situation, is it ?
It’s something I think is really overlooked here in the US. As much tension as there was between us and the USSR, the relations between the Arab states was utterly rancid.
You should make a video about about the failed union between Tunisia and Lybia. This subject is little known and still in the scope of this channel
Even while viewing old black and white footage of his, one can see that Nasser must have been extremely charismatic and charming
He was a dictator and imprisoned two of my family members
@@كريمإسلام-ب6ت not a dictator ya sa7bi
Love this channel. A video on Gaddafi and pan-Africanism would be interesting
Never felt the urge to make a donation to a RUclips channel until this day, such quality content keep it up
Really interesting! Thanks and have a good new year!
-"We hoped by the creation of a ring of client states, themselves insisting on our patronage, to turn the present and future flank of any foreign power with designs on the three rivers."
-Lawrence of Arabia
-"The Arabs are even less stable than the Turks. If properly handled they would remain in a state of political mosaic, a tissue of small jealous principalities incapable of cohesion."
-Lawrence of Arabia
-"My admiration for him [Ibn Saud] was deep, because of his unfailing loyalty to us.”
- Churchill
i like your avatar
The fact that the Prophet Muhammad (blessings and peace be upon him) could reunite all those arab tribes in a matter of a few years in a, possibly, much more unstable era is still beyond any human comprehension.
What he achieved was truly of another level.
@@darrenrichards3351 due to the high amount of muslims no doubt the prophet muhammad (SAW) could do it within the week.
The more interesting discussion would be the arrival of a man fitting the mahdi prophecy, the prophecy where a man would come during the time of weakness and inter-conflict between muslims who would lead them to re-unification.
The Arabs have too many traitors
Excellent Video .Thanks David
Thanks for looking at Nasser and pan-Arabism.
I really enjoy your delivery style. Thanks for your videos.
If only nasser had paid all of his attention to internal affair and leading Egypt toward industrialization instead of going down the rabbit hole of "united Arab nation" and creating enemies left and right... But the man had no patience
Unites Arab state would have been a super power which would have lead to industrialization and more especially with oil and military etc .. that’s how you survive it seems is for people to be one whatever it’s based on like if India wasn’t so divided the British wouldn’t have colonized India..
He wanted to be a leader he wanted to be a legend
missing the chance to lead a great economical revolution in Egypt especially when Egypt was a center for European tourists investors after WW2
I have waited for this thank you!!!
Hope you enjoyed it!
@@TheColdWarTV of course I did, I had heard of the Union but I didn’t know much about it, thank you for enlightening me
Getting the United Arab Republic formed was pretty badass and impossible to imagine getting going today. Maybe this could have been the way the Middle East would have peace or 20 years later when its time for a new leader it all falls apart Yugoslavia style.
I think just like Yougoslavia the error was centralization. Europe has managed durable peace only because it has now entered a fluctuant flexible federal alliance with the EU, I did hope in 2012 the same was possible for Arab countries. How wrong was I.... :(
@@Cancoillotteman Europe is becoming increasingly centralised (or at least the EU) and, to an extent, power was always centralised in the richer founding nations like Germany and France.
With regards to Yugoslavia, I'm afraid I must respectfully disagree. In every state where the national and ethnic identity is highly divided this inevitably leads to collapse and war. The same thing is happening right now in Ethiopia and has happened in many countries throughout the world.
The only countries where ethnic diversity works is precisely *because* of centralisation and a common national identity. For instance, immigrants to the US will describe themselves as things like Chinese-Americans etc, where they have a separate ethnic identity whilst retaining the same national identity (and of course, even then, there are still issues). The problem is that in many countries a common national identity doesn't exist and it never will while tribal cultures create separation between them.
the MEC from BF2 lol
@@AeneasGemini Nah we don’t want to unite with Egypt, We want to unite shaam or Levant 🇸🇾🇱🇧🇵🇸🇯🇴 as it is the same historic nation divided in 1920. Also, Damascus is the capital I don’t want to have a state where Damascus is under others control. Also, Egypt discriminated a lot between Muslims and Christians, more then us.
@@suleyman8696
I agree with you on the levant unity but I have to say Levant itself was never a state that was divided, it was simply a governate or a "wilayah" a part of a bigger entity, which at that time was the Ottoman empire
يعني صديقي نحنا بحياتنا ما كنا دولة وحدة، كنا محافظة أو منطقة ضمن امبراطوريات متتابعة
Great video, a lot of people have never heard of this. So inspiring to hear about one man's ability to enchant millions of oppressed people.
As an Egyptian, I believe Nasser was fairly exceptional, extremely charismatic and well loved for his era, very known all around the Arab world for his popular speeches (Nationalistic tone) but you would be surprised to hear today most modern day Egyptians are not too fond of him kinda like Peron in Argentina. He led a military coup which toppled a fairly democratic constitutional monarchy that till this day Egypt is under the very rule of the Military and police institutions he directly established. Although not very fair modern day analogy, Egyptians today like to blame him over all their endeavors and troubles from A to Z, hanging all their problems over his shoulders so they can sleep tight at night believing it is just out of their hands fixing their problems themselves, yet first chance they had after the Arab spring was calling for the military to overthrow the newly established democratic system and happily resorted back to be ruled by the army. This is what Nietzsche likes to refer to as "slave morality".
After Nasser's death his successor made a 180 degrees turn. The upper hand was the Muslim Brotherhood who wasted no time in smearing his image and radicalising the muslim Arabs. This brought about the current situation with terrorism and sectarian tensions. The Muslim Brotherhood would do anything to smear Nasser and his legacy, they actually against the nationalisation of the canal and building the high dam!
@@Idontknow-ov5qx
What legacy? 😂
Apart from failure in 1967
Duh? Who the fuck wants their government to be run by the Muslim Brotherhood? An organisation that is considered to be terrorists by several nations. An organisation that wanted to genocide the copts, 20% of Egypt’s population. 😂😂😂
Excellent video!
I had a globe when I was young with the United Arab Republic on the globe. I always wondered was it was about.
I remember my first school dictionary with a two-page spread of world flags, and I remember wondering why the flags of Egypt, Libya and Syria looked identical. It was the time of the Federation of Arab Republics, the second attempt to creat an Arab superstate.
Thanks
To me that sounds similar as recreating the Roman Empire between all romance speaking countries or re-establishing the Spanish Empire with all hispanic countries.
U have no idea the similarities and the traditions that go between all arab countries if u had to relate to it then maybe north and south Korea being unified again but the unification would happen peacefully.
No, it’s not…
Bolivarianism
Thanks for your accurate details
Gamal Abdel Nasser was loved by the poor and honorable, and he hated traitors and those who preferred their interests to the interests of the nation
Amazing video 📹
Lots of knowledge
Thanks a lot
Thank you so much for spreading the word of this great man, as an Egyptian it is incredibly sad how our modern era (1952 - now) is never talked about and usually when it is its about us losing something or getting bullied by isreal, britian or some other power, Nasser was an incredibly intresting person that is criminally underrated and needs to be talked about more to show that our history wasn't just in the ancient era
Well I guess th problem is that Nasser was a laic man, so is despised by current religious viewpoint tha dominates arab world.
Just one of he newest comments I read said he hated Nasser for be communist.
Bullied by Israel 😂
@@TeranJero well, we traded the sainai for giving them a house in gaza, either they have a rock for a brain or anwar el sadat was a genuis salesman
@Omar El zabelawey USA forced them to accept the treaty due to the arab oil block.
@@adamnesico oh, i didnt know that
Happy New Year from Valladolid Spain
¡Próspero Año Nuevo
Say what you like about Nasser was was certainly one of the more interesting World Leaders we've had. My compliments to all those who made this video a reality.
He was a dictator and imprisoned two of my family members
@@كريمإسلام-ب6ت ----Sorry he did that
@@كريمإسلام-ب6ت why don't you tell us why they were imprisoned? let me guess they were Muslim brotherhood right?
as an Arab the question is something discussed widely and these are my points:
1.Centers of Power: the center of the culture, humanity and Financial and Political are Different, Egypt and Saudi arabia each claim it, each with a wildly different Way of rule.
2. Political differences: the 22 countries each has a wildly different way of rule, from absolute Monarchies to Army centralised governments, affect the ability of creating a union without injustices.
3. Sectarianism: Arab world is Made up of Sunnis, Shiates and Christians, in which non are able to concede some power.
4. Colonial Rule and its effects:
while it could be a cliche to just Blame Colonisation, but its affects in regard of splitting the countries without minding Demographical differences and the Cultural influence they applied to the people they controlled made it worse, either it is by language, cultural or the geopolitical connections they had.
And lastly as a Yemeni and an arab I feel sad that we are drifting away from each other although our similarities and brotherhood are far greater than our issues and differences
I was wondering where the quote "The Soviet Union is 7500 kilometers way from us and we have never had any problem with Russians..." is from. I am doing a school project and this would be perfect for what I am trying to say. thank you
Another winner, most excellent video....a cuppa and The Cold War or Kings & Generals is an excellent way to spend some time!
Happy New Year to you all! Here's to a much better 2022! 🍻
It's interesting to think that then Nasser wants an united Arab Super State with a very agressive position towards Israel and now Egipt is the most populated arab state that recognise Israel.
Yet almost all the population is still anti israel.
@@kw9296 And it doesn't bring you any good, Israelis today aren't even thinking about Egyptians, Let alone seeing them as an enemy while many are going as tourists in Sinai.
@@itzikashemtov6045
Would'nt you hate someone who's oppressing and killing your brothers and sisters?
@@kw9296 - Maybe but that’s wrong.
@@kw9296 - If you feel so much for your brothers and sisters than offer them citizenship and a passport, not rejection. Israel done that to all Arab Jews that have been expelled from North Africa and the Middle East. Why is the hate for who’s ‘oppressing’ your ‘brothers and sisters’ is only confined to the state of Israel? I very rarely hear the same voices that hate Israel mentioning the treatment of Chinese Muslims by the Chinese communist government … Today all Arab brothers and sisters of all faiths are aware that they have a better chance of success in education, lifestyle, freedom, healthcare and opportunities if they lived in Israel instead of living in Egypt, Yemen, Syria, Lebanon, Tunisia or Libya.
Israel has 21% of its citizens that’s Arab, mostly Sunni Muslims. Some representatives in Israel parliament. How many Arab Jews in North African countries?
I love the creative ways he says "press the "button"
You forgot to mention about the Federation of Arab Republics with Libya dear Comrade
Oh thanks for this video :)
I'm not even Arab but what a legend
Big fan of this channel, I would love a video about Dhofar Rebellion in Oman. Most of the people don't know much about it.
‘Arab unity’ sounds like ‘Egyptian dominance’
Isn't Egypt the most important Arab country?
When Egypt is the largest Arab country, yeah
@@DerDop nope
@@sbevexlr848 well, elaborate. Algeria?
@@DerDop what do you mean by important 1stly
Good video
The Middle East is by far the most interesting part of the Cold War, IMO.
that's just a part of it, Nasser even sent troops to fight against Morocco in the 60s(the sand war) as Morocco was very anti-pan-Arabism it being an ancient kingdom and all saw that as a threat, the Egyptian president Mubarak was even a war prisoner in Morocco, Most arab countries were pro-Russia but Morocco was pro West and anti-comunism, the whole Western saharan problem and current threats of war with Algeria is a remnant of the cold war.
No I think it's just the most unknown to most westerner so i feels exotic and new. Like discovering a new ethnic food you've never had but really like now.
@@blackphillip564 Textbook definition of interesting
I'm sorry it may sound rude but I LOVEEEEEE cold war. I mean it explains 70% of the things you will study in history, politics and international relations. ❤️ I'm subscribing right away 😊 i wish i have discovered your channel earlier
Arab unity lasts right until the question of who will be in charge is first asked.
Thanks Mate ❣️
Are you going to cover operation Condor or is it too "controversial"?
Why would that be controversial? He already started talking about the Banana Wars. And Americans generally support believe it was necessary. So neither side wants to hide the truth, unlike Soviet apologists
@@stephenjenkins7971 A campaign of political repression and state terror involving torture and assassination of opponents is a controversial subject because people from the countries where Condor was executed don't appreciate a foreign state meddling with their democracies, specially when the dictatorships that followed the toppled democratically elected governments tortured, disappeared and assasinated approximately 100.000 people. Maybe it makes you proud to have an intelligence agency capable of something of this magnitude but not everyone thinks like you.
@@matamadariaga Nah, everyone is generally alright with this because it was necessary for the era. The Soviets were heavily engaged in Latin America and the guerillas and civil wars they sponsored took over a million lives in Latin America. I'd have to double check the numbers, but I recall reading that before. Anyway, you'd likely be blaming the US for doing nothing if the US didn't do something, and Americans understand that whether its inaction or any action; the US will be blamed for it anyway. Its the curse of being a democratic Superpower.
So the obvious answer is just to do the best it can and then when the danger has passed to not needlessly aggravate fellow democracies anymore. Which is essentially modern US foreign policy. Latin America has not experienced such heavy pressure since the Cold War ended and the US has stayed hands off for a reason.
But yeah, isn't really controversial. US isn't exactly hiding it and Americans aren't exactly screeching that it's fake like Turks do with the Armenian Genocide.
Amazing video but can you leave the name of the soundtracks that you used in the videos especially the last one at the end of the video?
Interesting video. I have one question about this subject. What happened to the “All Palestine Government” in Gaza (occupied by Egypt, but not annexed) when Egypt and Syria unified to form the UAR (United Arab Republic). Did “Palestine” ever officially join the UAR?
Not really. The all Palestine gov was half dissolved except for the position of prime minister, which continued under the UAR until the 6 day war
Technically not all Palestine but only gaza strip administrated by UAR and west bank including the old east Jerusalem annexed by kingdom of Jordan
@@СахерСалама the name of the gov was called “all Palestine government” even though it only controlled Gaza
@@eca3101 Did they not give them full sovereignty because they feared israel would just occupy it?
@@jonathan13co Gaza did not have full sovereignty…
I just finished watching The Spy on netflix with sacha baron cohen so this is a great time!
I thought that show was very well done. What did you think?
Egypt buying ships from Czechoslovakia brings a smile to my face. I can only imagine they were flown in and inflated on the spot.
Czechoslovakia had a good shipbuilding industry From the austrian empire's period. Bohemian Ships were the backbone of agriculture along the danube. They had a large ship building yard outside Prag which made smaller naval vessels for East Germany, Poland and Commercial ships for Austria.
Egypt's Naval vessels were aimed at the Nile delta and Suez Canal region, and thus Danubian ships might have suited them well.
It was Transported through Rumania to the sea then to Egypt through Istanbul.
@@CoolMan-ig1ol pwnd
Looking forward to this.
Hope you enjoyed it!
رحمك الله يا قائدي ،افضل قائد انجبه العرب في العصر الحديث ساعد جميع الدول العربية في طرد الاحتلال مصر قدمت الغالي والنفيس في عهده ،🇮🇶 ✌🏾🇪🇬 شكرا لك جمال عبد ناصر
Great idea
'The fight between two anti imperialist superpowers unless it was Their Imperialism ' summaries the cold war perfectly.
@@degamispoudegamis both the united states and Soviet union supported decolonization but the decolonized countries had to ally with the us or the ussr and by the way ussr wasn’t that anti imperialist all of its satalite states were basically colonies and there was this guy in North Korea who criticized both capitalism and Socialism and had a lot of support but he was purged by the soviet union.
@@degamispoudegamis But the soviets grip on eastern europe or central asia and their war crimes in Afghanistan could be considered imperialistic I think even Mao complained about Soviet imperialism. And their is no measurement for imperialism.
@@degamispoudegamis dont forget the construction of the berlin wall,Berlin blockade,aggression against Turkey, crushing the hungarian revolution ( mao complained about this) etc.
@@degamispoudegamis sorry if I offended you.
@@degamispoudegamis but us denounced apartheid regime even though it supported them sometimes
20 guys in a room each saying "sounds great, but what if *I* was the guy who ran it?"
They say heaven is for the poor .thst's great!but these poor people,don't they deserve a share in this world?they need a small share in this world,and then they can give you a piece of heaven.My favorite speech, his author is Nasser.
In the Middle East and North Africa either they loved Jamal Abdel Nasser or they hated him so much and until today you mention Jamal either people pray for his soul or they spit on his soul
respect for nasseer
The game looks cool but the premium pay model scared me off.
Also, I saw an Israeli spokesperson say that Israel was "a law abiding nation" and is "respected by international bodies" and I thought that was pretty funny.
I'm from Egypt and very proud of our President and Leader Nasser, Who free Egypt from British colonialism
Thank you for this episode ❤
Yep, why be dominated by foreign dictators when you can be dominated by local dictators *and* be xenophobic at the same time, Win win right?
@jimmy Let's be real; every President/Dictator you don't like is automatically a puppet regardless. Even if they're not. That's just a thing that people automatically believe in the region.
@@AeneasGemini so what is your preferred solution?
Nasser started the first ever Kurdish radio station for the Kurds when no other nation was willing to accept them
The abdication of king Saud has nothing to do with Abdulnasser.
King Saud was forced to abdicate because of his illness, but the Nasserite political propaganda was looking for any achievement, so it fabricated this story
Nasser's pan-Arab vision might have worked if a federal state had been created because each state could keep their autonomy, while remaining united.
Thanks for covering this topic. Nasser is an unsung hero of the Arab people and a warrior of Non Aligned Movement.
Oh yeah so non-alighted by taking weapons from the Soviets…
@@kayzeaza Yeah, after US refused to approve arms sale to Egypt. Non alignment is about neutrality, not isolation
Congrats on the weight loss
@@marsillinkow thanks
Hero by oppressing his people, a Stalin like cult of personality, trying to stage coups so that he can make the arab regions unstable but under his rule. Have you not seen the video? He didn't Let Syrians govern the so called "UAR" nasser is a failure in real life, hero in the dreams of left wing arab nationalists
You can find more about Nasser and his time, and a general critic of modern arabism in "Disordered World", by Amin Maaluf
Without Gamal Abd El Nasser, Egypt, and other arab countries wouldn't be what they became today in terms of stability and improved life standards.
Rest in peace, Gamal Abd El Nasser.
الله يرحمك و يجعلك مع قوم جنة الفردوس
Interesting video. Also, could we please get some videos about China **after** Mao's death? Deng Xiaoping and all the post Mao leaders that transformed China into a superpower? Not many videos are on youtube and those few are very poor quality, I myself, a Cold war enthusiast don't know anything at all about China post-Mao period, please give this a thought if possible, also happy new year.
The cold war ended in 1991, when China was poor and weak. After Mao's death, Deng Xiaoping became China's leader. Due to the Afghanistan war, President Carter lifted China's technological and trade restrictions (in the 1950s, China was blocked due to the Korean War), and China began to introduce a large number of technologies. In 1980, China formed an alliance with Japan, and Japan helped China's development. In addition, KMT (Taiwan) helped CPC (mainland) most.
中华人民共和国和日本国和平友好条约,Signed on August 12, 1978.
China get a good chance in the trade war between the United States and Japan.
The economic policy of CPC is mainly two markets (international market and domestic market) and strict foreign exchange control. Some companies accept foreign orders, buy foreign raw materials and sell their products to foreign markets(两头在外). Other companies live in the domestic market. When foreign companies want to enter the domestic market, CPC requires learning their technology(市场换技术) or high tariffs. Some companies can grow safely in the domestic market in childhood. China's development does not belong to the history of the cold war. China began its lonely road after the death of the Soviet Union (China and Vietnam broke up because of the war)
In fact, after the 1970s, many countries abandoned the planned economy and began the market economy, this is a fascinating topic.
99% at a referemdum... and said with a strait face XDD
Nasser, Sukarno and these types werre of class we do not see anymore in the world. People woth visions for thr future far beyond their own borders, desires and time
History of the Arabic world is the most fascinating amongst all..... Well done again!!!!
Why did the Suez crisis earn Nasser so much popularity in the Arab world?
From what I understand it was a crushing military defeat for Egypt, and Britain and France where only forced out by the US and USSR, basically nothing to do with Nasser.
Did Nasser just have really good PR?
it wasn't a crushing military defeat as he hrld out way longer than the French and British expected which allowed the UN to intervene
@@Real_Mambo
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_Suez_Crisis
I'm not an expert on the history of the Suez crisis by any stretch, but reading this timeline of the war makes it seem like a pretty amazing defeat for Egypt.
It took less than 2 weeks to totally conquer the entire Sinai peninsula with thousands of dead Egyptian soldiers compared to only a bit over 200 total French/British/Israeli deaths.
And it wasn't as if the Egyptians where oitnumbered, they had more than double the number of soldiers of their enemies.
What could've been.. 😔
راح يتم هذا التوحد رغم انوف كل الحاقدين
We will unite and this dream will come true
I've never heard of this person until today. What a fascinating man!
You don't know History if you don't know Nasser
Those guys knew how to bond right and left
There was a lot of criticism inside
They were from the people, kind of violent
But you know, we are very close to them as people
Gamal Abdel Nasser did not ban the parties because he is a dictator, but the parties that were in Egypt were mostly bourgeois parties, and the owners of those parties were the landowners who brought their land workers to vote for them in return for giving them what would help them live their lives as slaves, i.e. it was a system of canons. Nasser came and distributed land to the peasants, which are their land in the first place but were withdrawn from their ancestors in the past.
Just admit that communism is a dictatorship.
so... the Syrian collapse alongside CIA assistance. That hints at an interesting term from the next period of manipulating Syria: "Constructive Ambiguity." Any chance of doing an episode that follows the strategies of Kissenger's "Constructive Ambiguity." Specifically the manipulation of Hafez Al-Asad's nationalist project?
Nah we don’t want to unite with Egypt, We want to unite shaam or Levant 🇸🇾🇱🇧🇵🇸🇯🇴 as it is the same historic nation divided in 1920. Also, Damascus is the capital I don’t want to have a state where Damascus is under others control. Also, Egypt discriminated a lot between Muslims and Christians, more then us.
Some of this is wrong. Qasim did not want to join the UAR, in fact he adopted a “ wattaniya” policy which put “ Iraq first” and developed a Mesopotamian identity. He also achieved close ties with communists and the Soviet Union in 1949, leading to a coup by nasserists and Baathists, however it failed. See qasim didn’t want to Join the UAR, but his partner Abdul Salam arif was a nasserist who actually wanted to join the UAR. In 1963, qasim was overthrown by Baathists, he was killed and his regime ended, meaning the Baathists also massacred a lot of communists. But that same year arif overthrew the new Ba’ath regime and made Iraq nasserist, until 1968 ( when Ahmed Hassan Al bakr came to power ) but it didn’t matter anyways the UAR fell in 1961 following a coup in Syria opposing Nassers rule.
Yes, the Cold War was a war against both the “2nd” and “3rd worlds,” an imperialist war against development and self-determination…
not fully true, the ussr especially in its end times, was truely its own imperialist force.
While far less bad than the europeans to random nations, many nations were backstabbed and ruined by the ussr.
For example: When somalia disobeyed some orders by the ussr, citing they were their own nation, the ussr swapped sides in the ogaden war and helped ethiopia keep somali ethnic land they were illegally given by the british.
this was not only a backstab to help a faction that was against communist somalia, it showed the ussr was okay with acting the same as any other imperialist force.
it also led to the somali civil war and eventually to the collapse of communism in east africa permanently.
Not particularly, you could make the argument that the communist dictatorships and regimes were just as imperial and unarguably more oppressive then the western empires. Remember Tibet, Afghanistan, Cambodia, Laos, South Vietnam, Manchuria, Taiwan and the entirety of Eastern Europe. All victims of hostile invasion/expansion attempts by communist states.
12:42 شخبوط بن سلطان، يعل مثاك الجنه❤️
I love how nasser was still popular among egyptians even though he lost three wars ( i am not sure and no offense to egyptian)
Yes. After 1967 and our horrible defeat, he gave a speech resigning, but then waves of people came into the streets telling him to go back to power. His achievements in 1956 and freedom from the Brits gave him tremendous respect in all Egyptian people’s hearts
@@balclava4937 what a chad
@@SHAHIDKC You asked, I replied
@@balclava4937 thanks.
@@balclava4937 and I was not insulting naseer
A lesson to all .. if you decide to follow your dogma without scientific basis and a gradual process, failure is what you should expect
I've seen Arabs that look as fair as Europeans from Syria, Arab as dark as Africans from Sudan and Arabs as brown as Indians in Arabia, so what defines an Arab?
Good question.
One Language, One Religion , One History and Fraternal Relations.
The Arabs are really the people of Arabian peninsula (Saudi Arabia, Yemen and the Gulf states), as well as southern Iraq and southern Jordan.. Outside the peninsula there are Arab minorities of course, but they are never a majority outside of Arabia. As for the rest of the countries, they are influenced by Arab culture. Of course, the main reason is the Islamic religion in addition to the Arab caliphs. In the period of the Umayyad Caliphate, Arabic speakers outside the peninsula were rare, and they increased the period of the Abbasid Caliphate until the Arabic language became the dominant language in those countries, but of course they were not true Arabs despite their speaking Arabic, and they were affected by Arab culture and their one religion. This is the main reason for the failure of the idea of a united state in the Arab world. For it was a terrible detraction of all the races in those countries, which unfortunately it was those races themselves that detracted from themselves.
@@meshal5864 thanks for the explanation
@@commandofact7636 sounds like the Jewish community
There are some mistakes in this documentary like King Saud "abdicating" because of nasir's accusations and whatnot which never happened. King Saud abdicated because he was too old and sick in hospitals to continue his role and job.
He was a dictator and imprisoned two of my family members. IF Education wasn't allowed to the poor how come Nasser whose father was a post man entered school and the army ? The division of land was made as a bribe to the farmers in order to buy their votes to him . Salah Nase , the Egyptian intelligence leader , made a lot of women ( actresses, dancers , and high class women ( married or not ))work as whores to the politicians in order to control them . The Leader of the military prison Hamza Albasyouni challenged god himself and said that he could prison him and when he died his coffin didn't enter the mosque no matter what , he once forced a prisoner to walk on his four limbs as a dog and naked in front of his wife and daughter
This is surprisingly very UNBIASED from the Arab/ MENA POV.
Nasser was a real good leader that fought for his people and his country!
Even when he admitted he totally fucked up the Yemen situation, his people still wanted him to remain in power. THAT’S what I called respect.
@@MrJoeSomebody Hello, I am Lebanese. From what I understand allot of young Egyptians these days don't necessarily see him as a good leader. What are the reasons for this?
lol Nasser was an idiot
@@dodovomitory3496 what would you expect after 50 years of American European Gulf Israeli funded and liberal /conservative / opportunist sponsored propaganda to associate the man with everything bad in the minds of the masses... he was a true threat to their interests and that's why he had to be defamed and historically killed even after his real death ...
@@ahmedkhalifa5190 The US doesn't mind him, Europe doesn't care outside of seeing him as a pawn by the US/USSR, and idk about Israel. Point is that Arabs have a habit of blaming anything they don't like on Westerners. Whether it be ideas, governments, or leaders. Don't like peoppe not liking who you like? MUST BE WESTERN PROPAGANDA!
In reality the West has more important things to worry about.
So Nasser’s UAR project was from 58-61 but couldn’t work because Syria was a mess and his defeat in the ‘67 war showed that he wasn’t strong enough to lead it? 🙃
Didn't Egypt keep the title UAR until it was dropped by Sadat?
15:50
No one:
Nasaer:
I think Saud was traynna kill me …
Saudi societ:
Say no more
*Attempts to force the king of their country to resign, in favor of a foreign president*
My God this guy 😂
King Saud admitted doing it and there was his signature on the cheques for the head of security in Syria to kill Nasser by a bomb.
Simply the people reacted towards the man they believed he was truely serving them, not himself or a royal family enslaving the whole nation.
Thank you.^_^
I might of missed it but I don’t think it was mentioned that the dialects of Arabic are very different from each other. I heard that was a major problem too.
*might have
The dialect thing can be overlooked. It's Nasser's treating Syria as an Egyptian colony that led to the divorce.
Dialects are really not an issue in the Eastern Arab world. Egyptians, gulf Arabs, Levantines, Iraqis, and Yemenis can understand each other dialects with no problem.
Wester dialects are a little bit harder to understand but it was never a problem when spoken clearly.