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  1. "Aftermath" no longer would have the "aftermath of the suez crisis" meaning, but would instead be "aftermath of the military action". - Thaimoss ( talk ) 01:24, 19 December 2009 (UTC) Narson , layout of dates okay?

  2. The American historian Arthur L. Herman wrote about the aftermath of Suez in 2006: Suez destroyed the United Nations as well. By handing it over to Dag Hammarskjöld and his feckless ilk, Eisenhower turned the organization from the stout voice of international law and order into at best a meaningless charade; at worst, a Machiavellian cesspool.

  3. The Suez Crisis (known as the Suez War or 1956 War, commonly known in the Arab world as the Tripartite aggression; other names include the Sinai war, Suez-Sinai war, 1956 Arab-Israeli War, the Second Arab-Israeli War, Suez Campaign, Sinai Campaign, Kadesh Operation, and Operation Musketeer) (Arabic: أزمة السويس - العدوان الثلاثي Hebrew: מבצע קדש) was a war fought ...

  4. The Suez crisis is often claimed to be a watershed in postwar British history. The operation to retake the Suez Canal was among the most significant British military ventures in the twentieth century, and it was perhaps the most humiliating. The belief, both at home...

  5. The Khan Yunis massacre took place on 3 November 1956, perpetrated by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) in the Palestinian town of Khan Yunis and the nearby refugee camp of the same name in the Gaza Strip during the Suez Crisis.

  6. Suez Crisis of 1956-57 [ change | change source ] In the early 1950s, Egypt's president Gamal Abdel Nasser and his government planned to build a new dam in the country.

  7. On 10 December 1956 Moorhouse had led a raid in Port Said on the premises of an Egyptian dentist and arrested seven Egyptian commandos. [2] On the following morning, he returned to the scene alone and without military authority [3] where he was surrounded in his army Land Rover by a crowd of Egyptians, one of whom took his pistol and looting personal belongings like his watch and chain.