As an Egyptian this makes me insanely happy We learned about it in school and the struggle of the workers who built the canal with their own sweat and blood
@@NOOBCRASTINATOR69 Farmers were kidnapped from their villages to be forced to work on it without even getting paid, estimations that thousands died because of the bad work conditions that was technically slavery, take in mind the rulers back then weren't Egyptians
@@NOOBCRASTINATOR69 One million Egyptians worked in the pit forcibly, despite the fact that the number of Egyptians at the time was only five million, meaning one-fifth of the people worked in it, and one hundred thousand Egyptians died during the excavation.
The canal is so influential to the world that if it somehow manage to lodge a comically large boat in its waterway, it would take six days to get it unstuck after being brutalized by the internet and through the efforts of a hilariously small single excavator.
Should have mentioned that the Ancient Egyptians dug a similar canal connecting the Nile with the Red Sea. It was in use for a long time before falling into disrepair by the 6th or 7th century AD
That reminds me the Muslims were also considering building the canal as soon as they conquered Egypt but opted not to because they feared that would give the (very deadly) Byzantine Navy and later other European navies such as the Spanish and the Portugese access to the Red sea, the Arabian peninsula and possibly the holy cities of Mecca and Medina
Yes but the reason it was closed was a rebellion (Mecca and Medina region was in rebellion, and so to stop supplies from being shipped there, the ruler who controlled it closed the canal)
@@mariustan9275 I actually learned from my history classes, but you can search Sokullu Mehmet Pasha Suez Canal Project for more information. Hope that helps!
@02:36 This clever transition chilled me to the bone... I worked in UAE for couple of years in places which were built on the bones of the workers who were modern-day slaves. Human rights abuses are still happening in the Gulf countries and many people are unaware of it...
Yes exactly. If there were land migration movements between both sides of the canal, they would've been completely cut off. And connecting marine ecosystems must have been impactful too.
The Red Sea is still beautiful, military check points every hour. Port saed is like a military zone .my long distance local bus from hagada to Sharm ElSheik crossed under the 2 underground tunnel under the Suez canal. I only learned that during my journey in September 2021
Because of the Suez canal, in late 1800's it opened the mind of lower and middle classes in the Philippines during the Spanish era. Because the Philippines is become a market of European products specially books about french and American revolutions, liberal minds etc.
Why is there no mention of the 'Canal of the Pharaohs'? It seems from the video that till the construction of the Suez canal there was no waterway between the Red Sea and the Mediterranean when there actually was. It was also a great opportunity to discuss the water lock that made it possible for Ptolemy 2 to tackle the height difference issue that was mentioned in the video. Other than that great video!
From a tourist perspective, the canal allows tourists to take long distance bus, which 2 of the underground tunnels under the Suez canal to the Sinai peninsular to Sharm ElSheik. The Red Sea is still pristine in September 2021. I hope it stays this way for years to come
There is a lot of human struggle and success in merging two waters between 00:59 and 1:02. Darius I and a slew of others with far fewer technological advancements attempted and succeeded in solving the problem. Despite the fact that the height difference between two bodies of water is said to cause shot downs, due to concerns about the salt of the sea reaching the Nile and possible environmental threats. There is a pattern in youtube history telling: ancient times and considering it all the same, then jumping to the 14th and 15th centuries, dismissing all human experiences except western era history; which certainly is not a professional or Ted-ed manner, considering its rich international audience.
It's strange that, as an Egyptian in school, we never learnt of the tough conditions that accompanied the building of the canal, and of how hard it was. The only thing the textbook lamented on was (yes I'm a history nerd) that ⅘ of the workers were Egyptian, and the other fifth were European engineers that only oversaw the building.
@@amraboshouk5911 I'm graduating from Prep 3 this year, and we studied this in detail. It went into great depths about how Ismail Pasha had spent too much and how much the country was in debt, and how he easily gave the French and the English powers over Egypt. The only thing it mentioned was that ⅘ of the workers were Egyptians. Nothing about disease or horrible conditions.
I'm disappointed you didn't mention the Canal of the Pharaohs, which was constructed in ancient egypt and allowed a sea passage between the indian ocean and Mediterranean for hundreds of years. It's not talked about enough.
“Consider every item within 10 feet around you, there’s a chance they sailed through the Suez Canal” Me: … My dog: *there* Me: damn bro you have a more interesting travel life than me
Btw connecting the Mediterranean with the red Sea already has been done two times before Suez canal 1.during the ancient Egyptions era thru connecting the river Nile with the red Sea 2.during the Islamic era by the khalif Omar bin elkhatab
You skipped over the canals built before the Suez canal. Ancient Egypt built a canal linking the red sea to the nile much much earlier in almost 2000BC
Ted Ed: How the suaz canal changed the world 1 WEEK LATER Ted Ed Riddles: If the ship that blocked Suaz Canal turned Right how many possible combination of ships would have been blocked
@@singularityraptor4022 what are you talking about? egypt has made several enlargements to the canal "the summer of 2014, months after taking office as President of Egypt, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi ordered the expansion of the Ballah Bypass from 61 metres (200 ft) wide to 312 metres (1,024 ft) wide for 35 kilometres (22 mi). The project was called the New Suez Canal, as it allows ships to transit the canal in both directions simultaneously.[96][97] The project cost more than E£59.4 billion (US$9bn) and was completed within one year. Sisi declared the expanded channel open for business in a ceremony on 6 August 2015.[98]" and this one after the evergiven "After the incident, the Egyptian government announced that they would be widening the narrower parts of the canal.[114] On 9 September 2021, the canal was briefly blocked again by the MV Coral Crystal. [115] However, this ship was freed within 15 minutes, presenting minimal disruption to other convoys."
Expansion work has been underway since the Evergreen incident. By July 2023, Egypt will have two separate lanes so that crossings may not be disrupted if such an incident ever recurs.
this was a firsy year topic to highschool that i clearly remembered because it was the hardest topic for me that time, god didnt did my history teacher stop for days if not weeks about this.
Have you just said "since 16th century?" the suez canal was proposed during the reign of the abbasid caliph Harun Al-Rashid, and even before that, during the 2nd Rashidun caliph reign, Umar ibn Al-Khattab
I learned that there are 2 underground tunnels passing the Suez canal! I took a long distance local bus from Hagada to Sharm ElSheik because the 3 hours ferry ride was canceled due to the pandemic for 2 years. It was a brutal 18 hours journey, full of military check points. Everyone must open their luggage on a long table for inspections. It was reported a few days ago that 12 Egyptians were killed by the Sinai resistance group. I finally understood why all the military check points every hour , even between beach resorts. When at Neweiba port, waiting for my night ferry to Aqaba Jordan, I took pictures of sunsets. The police asked for my camera and told me to delete my sunset pictures! I look 100% like a Asian tourist 😳
Do a video on how they used to do shipping before Suez. I read the Ptolemies constructed canals to link the port of Alexandria to the Nile and then from there they have caravansaries on the route to the Red Sea coast.
@@worldcitizeng6507 Timbuktu is far away from the coast right? Nile was definitely used to ship goodw from the Red Sea but didn't really took off since they can't build a port on the delta (hence why Alexandria to its west was built) by Ptolemy.
The Suez canal did not change the tectonic plate, but map makers after 1869 removed Israel from Africa. This not only changed marine life but cultures as well.
another amazing video, but the bit "helped redeem the canal's imperialist legacy"... ofc, because it wasn't the Egyptian ruler who offered his own population to forced labour imperialism never works without cooperation from within
hello sir.......the problem of widen the canal not only the budget......the main problem is that we made a barrier separating our lands sinai from the rest of egypt .......historical all our enemies come from there from ancient times until our latest war in 1973 ....... now we working on get rid of this problem by establishing big tunnels under the canal.....but we aready expand it by adding a new pranch in 2015 and make the old one deeper
Gamal Abdi Nassir was so smart that he bought all the shares from the Franch, British, and Austrian companies before nationalising the canal. That was a fair deal and Egyptian had every right to fight for it. The British and French new this and so they asked the Israelis army to attack firts, then they will act as peace makers between them so that the canal ownership would be in the negotiation. But Nassir was smart and refuse the ceasefire.
As an Egyptian this makes me insanely happy
We learned about it in school and the struggle of the workers who built the canal with their own sweat and blood
OMG same we learnt about this at school
Blood?...were leaders cruel to them while they worked or something?
@@NOOBCRASTINATOR69 Many people died throughout the operation of making thia canal back in the days
@@NOOBCRASTINATOR69 Farmers were kidnapped from their villages to be forced to work on it without even getting paid, estimations that thousands died because of the bad work conditions that was technically slavery, take in mind the rulers back then weren't Egyptians
@@NOOBCRASTINATOR69 One million Egyptians worked in the pit forcibly, despite the fact that the number of Egyptians at the time was only five million, meaning one-fifth of the people worked in it, and one hundred thousand Egyptians died during the excavation.
The canal is so influential to the world that if it somehow manage to lodge a comically large boat in its waterway, it would take six days to get it unstuck after being brutalized by the internet and through the efforts of a hilariously small single excavator.
Lmfao the Ever Given memes
This is what the world calls "Trouble in the Suez!".
And what Europeans call a "Well I guess we'll have to find another way to India" situation.
👀
And the effects would still be felt a year later!
Yep
Yep
I'd love to learn more about how the exchange between the Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea affected the wildlife and environments of both seas
seconded!
@@rodrigoborges3876 thirded!
Isn't this the reason invasive species like the lionfish got into the Mediterranean?
@@nunyabiznes33 yes but not the only reason. lion fish are often spread when cargo ships displace their water
Yes please!!
Should have mentioned that the Ancient Egyptians dug a similar canal connecting the Nile with the Red Sea. It was in use for a long time before falling into disrepair by the 6th or 7th century AD
That reminds me the Muslims were also considering building the canal as soon as they conquered Egypt but opted not to because they feared that would give the (very deadly) Byzantine Navy and later other European navies such as the Spanish and the Portugese access to the Red sea, the Arabian peninsula and possibly the holy cities of Mecca and Medina
Yes but the reason it was closed was a rebellion (Mecca and Medina region was in rebellion, and so to stop supplies from being shipped there, the ruler who controlled it closed the canal)
Fun fact: the canal was called sesostris
@@oldtv5389 what's funny about it ?
Gosh yes, learned that at school.
Ottoman Empire actually did try to do the Suez Canal. But inner conflicts made it impossible. And then the Empire fell.
Source?
@@mariustan9275 I actually learned from my history classes, but you can search Sokullu Mehmet Pasha Suez Canal Project for more information. Hope that helps!
@@frfras7 Yeah):
Sokullu Mehmet Pasha was a great guy who never forgot his origins. :D
@@ghostdross1660 Oh thank you!
A story filled with passion, friendship, and repentance. I will never forget those days.
That is the fastest coverage of the Suez Crisis I ever heard!
@02:36 This clever transition chilled me to the bone... I worked in UAE for couple of years in places which were built on the bones of the workers who were modern-day slaves. Human rights abuses are still happening in the Gulf countries and many people are unaware of it...
I’d be interested to see them make a video about the environmental impact at the Suez and or Panama Canal
Yes exactly. If there were land migration movements between both sides of the canal, they would've been completely cut off. And connecting marine ecosystems must have been impactful too.
i wouldnth
The Red Sea is still beautiful, military check points every hour. Port saed is like a military zone .my long distance local bus from hagada to Sharm ElSheik crossed under the 2 underground tunnel under the Suez canal. I only learned that during my journey in September 2021
I’m proud to be Egyptian 🥰 god bless our country 🥰
Proud to be Egyptian ♥️
Proud to be broke
Are there Egyptians in real life?
Proud of being poor so poor like what your president said 🤣🤣 🤣
@@ShahJr
Sure :)
@@-ZSOX
God help us all : )
Few people know that the unitary state of Italy exists because of the Suez Canal. It’s a long story but look it up
Really? COuld you show me a link?
ruclips.net/video/dQw4w9WgXcQ/видео.html
Really ?
could you tell me more
Really?
Are you some kind of Internet Wise-Guy
Really?
That's so smart.
Because of the Suez canal, in late 1800's it opened the mind of lower and middle classes in the Philippines during the Spanish era. Because the Philippines is become a market of European products specially books about french and American revolutions, liberal minds etc.
4:25 RIP Gamal Abdelnasser we shall never see your like again
This has gotta be the best advertisement for EVERGREEN ever.
As a map lover I could kiss you after you figured out how to make a proper map with borders while simplifying it and starting with not much detail
Why is there no mention of the 'Canal of the Pharaohs'? It seems from the video that till the construction of the Suez canal there was no waterway between the Red Sea and the Mediterranean when there actually was. It was also a great opportunity to discuss the water lock that made it possible for Ptolemy 2 to tackle the height difference issue that was mentioned in the video.
Other than that great video!
It could also be a whole video in and of itself
운하에 관한 내용은 언제 봐도 신기한 것 같습니다. 바다를 잇는 강을 인공적으로 만들다니 참 대단하다고 생각합니다. 그러나 공사 도중 많은 사람들이 착취당했다는 사실을 아니 마음이 안좋아지네요. 앞으로는 이런 일들이 없기를 바랍니다.
From a tourist perspective, the canal allows tourists to take long distance bus, which 2 of the underground tunnels under the Suez canal to the Sinai peninsular to Sharm ElSheik. The Red Sea is still pristine in September 2021. I hope it stays this way for years to come
♥️
There is a lot of human struggle and success in merging two waters between 00:59 and 1:02. Darius I and a slew of others with far fewer technological advancements attempted and succeeded in solving the problem. Despite the fact that the height difference between two bodies of water is said to cause shot downs, due to concerns about the salt of the sea reaching the Nile and possible environmental threats.
There is a pattern in youtube history telling: ancient times and considering it all the same, then jumping to the 14th and 15th centuries, dismissing all human experiences except western era history; which certainly is not a professional or Ted-ed manner, considering its rich international audience.
Can you type more clearly
They Probably want to credit the West for everything, lol. Maybe it's a Western Propaganda Machine
@@gamingforfun8662 it was concise
...well i mean they did not solve it until Europeans came around..
It's strange that, as an Egyptian in school, we never learnt of the tough conditions that accompanied the building of the canal, and of how hard it was. The only thing the textbook lamented on was (yes I'm a history nerd) that ⅘ of the workers were Egyptian, and the other fifth were European engineers that only oversaw the building.
It's just some schools, some other schools teach well about it
You just didn't study your lessons well enough, We had it in detail in grades 4, 6, and 8.
فعلا
@@amraboshouk5911 I'm graduating from Prep 3 this year, and we studied this in detail. It went into great depths about how Ismail Pasha had spent too much and how much the country was in debt, and how he easily gave the French and the English powers over Egypt. The only thing it mentioned was that ⅘ of the workers were Egyptians. Nothing about disease or horrible conditions.
Because the school system in Egypt and around the world sucks.
Saying Hi from suez itself😂❤️
I m crossing Suez canal today
I'm disappointed you didn't mention the Canal of the Pharaohs, which was constructed in ancient egypt and allowed a sea passage between the indian ocean and Mediterranean for hundreds of years. It's not talked about enough.
The sizoctrece canal you mean
“Consider every item within 10 feet around you, there’s a chance they sailed through the Suez Canal”
Me: …
My dog: *there*
Me: damn bro you have a more interesting travel life than me
item?!
@@hgfkowgxnfkpeosuvjgosa4431 item
@@bbernie the only item here is you, and you’re about to be disposed of
proudly i am Egyptian girl Alhmdullah❤❤❤
I love how you say the Suez Canal Crisis was.... "resolved" 😂
This was pretty interesting,but very good to understand what really happened
"Dramatically changing local ecosystem and cuisine,"
Now I am curious about this. can we get a video on this topic? how Suez Canal affect marine life?
Btw connecting the Mediterranean with the red Sea already has been done two times before Suez canal
1.during the ancient Egyptions era thru connecting the river Nile with the red Sea
2.during the Islamic era by the khalif Omar bin elkhatab
I just have to say that i LOVE her soothing voice!
ربما تنام وعشرات الدعوات تُرفع لك، من فقير أعنته أو جائع أطعمته، أو حزين أسعدته أو مكروب نفست عنه، فلا تستهن بفعل الخير. 🌭
-ابن القيم.
You should do Edmund Fitzgerald and other Great Lakes wrecks.
Vừa vào đã nổi cả da gà 藍giọng a Phúc hayyy quá, mong sẽ tiếp tục cover ạ ❤️
You skipped over the canals built before the Suez canal. Ancient Egypt built a canal linking the red sea to the nile much much earlier in almost 2000BC
TED-ED can you do a History On Trial Of Mao Zedong.
Ted Ed: How the suaz canal changed the world
1 WEEK LATER
Ted Ed Riddles: If the ship that blocked Suaz Canal turned Right how many possible combination of ships would have been blocked
So true, I feel like this is very likely
@@mariustan9275 Seriously
The boat getting stuck was the funniest thing to ever happen. My country was in lockdown and it was the only thing getting me through.
You talk about the exchange of invasive species from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea like it is a good thing
Nice video.
How much has Egypt invested in increasing the capacity of the canal to meet more modern demands?
It can't be done without closing the canal, which will be obv impossible.
@@singularityraptor4022 what are you talking about? egypt has made several enlargements to the canal
"the summer of 2014, months after taking office as President of Egypt, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi ordered the expansion of the Ballah Bypass from 61 metres (200 ft) wide to 312 metres (1,024 ft) wide for 35 kilometres (22 mi). The project was called the New Suez Canal, as it allows ships to transit the canal in both directions simultaneously.[96][97] The project cost more than E£59.4 billion (US$9bn) and was completed within one year. Sisi declared the expanded channel open for business in a ceremony on 6 August 2015.[98]"
and this one after the evergiven
"After the incident, the Egyptian government announced that they would be widening the narrower parts of the canal.[114] On 9 September 2021, the canal was briefly blocked again by the MV Coral Crystal. [115] However, this ship was freed within 15 minutes, presenting minimal disruption to other convoys."
@@singularityraptor4022 wasn't it closed during the wars with israel?
Expansion work has been underway since the Evergreen incident. By July 2023, Egypt will have two separate lanes so that crossings may not be disrupted if such an incident ever recurs.
@@morewealth23 Expansion started before that, no?
Thanks a lot from the bottom of my heart 💓💓💓💓💓💓💓💓💓💓💓 Ted Ed
I feel like the Suez Canal could have been an inspiration behind the Spice in Dune
I closed and replayed the video at the start for 10 times to avoid damned ads. This is not fckin normal
When it shut the world was thrown in disarray. We had to sail around the cape and took another two weeks at the time going through the Panama Canal!
Blood, sweat, & tears of those who perished from the creation of the canal never got the recognition they deserve.
this was a firsy year topic to highschool that i clearly remembered because it was the hardest topic for me that time, god didnt did my history teacher stop for days if not weeks about this.
I loved it. thank you.
Please please
Do make a Ted Ed video on the topic
How exactly do tress absorb sound?
Omg my name is Lucia!! Lol great work!
If you're having a bad day, imagine being the guy that blocked the Suez Canal
Yeay I doubt he'll be hire to drive any boat except for fishing.
Have you just said "since 16th century?" the suez canal was proposed during the reign of the abbasid caliph Harun Al-Rashid, and even before that, during the 2nd Rashidun caliph reign, Umar ibn Al-Khattab
Amazing video 👍
Can we get some videos on the Bengali Culture from India?
Will look forward to that!
At lease there wasn’t a crab like monster..
(To those who get the reference to the monument mythos, I thank you,)
hey bro, nice reference
Hey from Port Said 💁♀
I learned that there are 2 underground tunnels passing the Suez canal! I took a long distance local bus from Hagada to Sharm ElSheik because the 3 hours ferry ride was canceled due to the pandemic for 2 years. It was a brutal 18 hours journey, full of military check points. Everyone must open their luggage on a long table for inspections. It was reported a few days ago that 12 Egyptians were killed by the Sinai resistance group. I finally understood why all the military check points every hour , even between beach resorts. When at Neweiba port, waiting for my night ferry to Aqaba Jordan, I took pictures of sunsets. The police asked for my camera and told me to delete my sunset pictures! I look 100% like a Asian tourist 😳
Sinai resistance group!!! Its ISIS my friend they are terrorist groups
sorry you went through that.
Who would win?
A globally viral and huge canal that is an engineering Marvel
OR
One thicc floaty boi
1:42 actually it was called the khedivate of Egypt.
khedivate is another ottoman title for vallayet
@@starcapture3040 huh, did not know that.
I think all of us can agree Suez canal crisis of 1956 was last nail in the coffin of GBR
I am here for some evergreen jokes.
There's 120,000 Egyptians died because of Suez Canal
Now America wants to bypass it. Causing a huge fight in the middle east
Do a video on how they used to do shipping before Suez. I read the Ptolemies constructed canals to link the port of Alexandria to the Nile and then from there they have caravansaries on the route to the Red Sea coast.
Nile river, maybe Timbuktu 🤔 many documentary on RUclips
@@worldcitizeng6507 Timbuktu is far away from the coast right? Nile was definitely used to ship goodw from the Red Sea but didn't really took off since they can't build a port on the delta (hence why Alexandria to its west was built) by Ptolemy.
They really should expand the Suez Canal..... I dont think such an important canal would hard to find funds to expand it further.
Yeah some years ago, a new Suez Canal was made next to the first one. Its name is literally The New Suez Canal.
Ted ed can u do a video on british empire atrocities
Yes. Along with other empires atrocities
We already hear that everywhere. What we need is, contributions of all empires to humanity and how much colonialism accelerated progress.
Thanks for the info❤️❤️
Amazing video
The Suez canal did not change the tectonic plate, but map makers after 1869 removed Israel from Africa. This not only changed marine life but cultures as well.
Palestine was always part of asia..stop that Afrocentrics sh*t
another amazing video, but the bit "helped redeem the canal's imperialist legacy"... ofc, because it wasn't the Egyptian ruler who offered his own population to forced labour
imperialism never works without cooperation from within
Imperialism is what makes great projects
It does, you just have to kill a lot more people
OK, but what's your point? It is still imperialism!
@@FairMiles His point is loud and clear. What's your point?
@@orionfernandes4587 imperialism is slavery and human right abuse which will be hidden from the general population of the imperialist nations
Informative!
Hey Ted Ed what's the exception paradox
I wish the Egyptian government gets this
Port Tawfik is the Asian part of Port Said, while the city south of the Canal is called Suez City
TED-ED can you do a video on Bengal Famine
TUGS predicted this in the episode “Trapped”
4:52 ah yess one long boi is a strong reminder of what just a singular boi can do to the world
The person who planned Suez also tried to make Panama if I remember correctly
can we go back to when turning a boat was the world's biggest problem
i havent seen the video but i already know, the suex canal crab is the reason, it was big news on twit R
As a Law student who wanted to study History, Psychology and Philosophy, this channel tells me yo go against my parents wishes everyday 😃😃🤝🏾🫂
What are you trying to say?
0:15 *_“Step-Ship, I Am Stuck !!!”_*
Container ship: 'say no more'
Ah yes, the big chungus of ships.
@3:30 map is wrong it shows modern countries like Israel which did not exist in 1866. Please make a correction.
Yeah it was all ottoman empire but i think they are giving a general view of modern times
Pls do history vs Sultan Abdulhamid II or history vs Queen Victoria II, pls.
0:20 I thought the green was land and that a ship got beached until 0:26 💀💀💀
Good job to that little excavator
just out of curiosity, what would it take to widen the canal? what's the magnitude of the budget?
hello sir.......the problem of widen the canal not only the budget......the main problem is that we made a barrier separating our lands sinai from the rest of egypt .......historical all our enemies come from there from ancient times until our latest war in 1973 ....... now we working on get rid of this problem by establishing big tunnels under the canal.....but we aready expand it by adding a new pranch in 2015 and make the old one deeper
The place is already getting widen pal, 2.5 cm per year.
The amazing thing is that this is the first of two things TUGS predicted.
I think it is interesting.
120 000, One hundred twenty thousand Egyptians had died in the digging of the Suez Canal.
no. only around 7,000.
Anybody noticed that title has carryminati in it
I would like to know more 3:58 especially about the cuisine
Interesting
Did they just say at 3:07 "giving rise to a flourishing economy of restaurants, BROTHELS and smuggled goods!"
WHAT'S GOING ON IN THIS WORLD!!!!
Imagine NOT having two canals to prevent a single ship blocking all sea traffic
~~This post is made by the Panama Canal gang
A man, a plan, a canal, Panama
@@violenceisfun991 Damn you cracked the code, next bioshock takes place in the panama canal then
Wait, it's already a year?
I know the Evergreen incident was a serious issur, but I was unable to not find it funny 😹😹😹
Gamal Abdi Nassir was so smart that he bought all the shares from the Franch, British, and Austrian companies before nationalising the canal. That was a fair deal and Egyptian had every right to fight for it. The British and French new this and so they asked the Israelis army to attack firts, then they will act as peace makers between them so that the canal ownership would be in the negotiation. But Nassir was smart and refuse the ceasefire.
A wind blew it off course? If you look at its course of travel. It shows they didn't have control of it and a computer guides it through the canal.
Should also include how many souls were taken in this canal construction.