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It is seven in the evening on July 26, 1956, in the sultry heat of the Sinai Desert in Egypt. A young colonel sits in an open jeep, listening to the radio. Mahmoud Yunus is waiting for a signal to start the secret operation that will change his country's fortunes. In front of Yunus lies the harbor of Port Ismailia on the west bank of the Suez Canal. In the distance he can see the lights of a convoy of four giant ships heading south towards the Red Sea. To his left are the grand French colonial style offices of the canal's European managers. Surrounded by wrought iron fences and a lush palm garden, lamps shine through the full height windows. This waterway is a round the clock operation with over 15,000 ships using the canal every year. The broadcast he's listening to comes from 200 miles away in Alexandria in Manshea Square. The country's charismatic president is addressing 100,000 of his people through through the airwaves. The crowd roar as the president describes the global importance of the very waterway Yunus can see through his windscreen. President Nasser's impassioned voice rises as he describes how the canal was dug by their Egyptian ancestors, yet is run by colonial powers. And now he names the French diplomat who made the canal a reality a century ago. Ferdinand de Lesseps. It's the code word Colonel Yunus has been waiting for. It's time. He jumps out of the jeep towards the gate protecting the canal company hq. His soldiers smash through the padlock. Eunice leads running through the formal gardens until they come to the imposing front door. They bang on it until it's opened, then push past two bewildered guards. A British official challenges them, but lets them pass when he sees the 10 soldiers are all armed. They tear up the stone staircase towards the main office where a handful of Egyptian and European men work under the slow circle of ceiling fans. Yunus orders them to raise their hands while his soldiers search the building for weapons or members of staff who might try to fight back. Fear and heat are making the employees sweat through their shirts but they won't loosen their ties. Only when everyone is gathered does Yunus explain. As of now, the Suez Canal is back in Egyptian hands. Shareholders will be compensated and operations will run as normal, with one exception. There will be no more communication with Paris or London. Yunus, an engineer by training, is now in charge. When a French official argues that Yunes doesn't have the authority, the colonel asks them if they have a radio. When one is found, he turns it on in time to hear the President confirming that from tonight the canal will be run for the benefit of Egypt and her people. His rousing final words are drowned out by applause and cheers. Once he's set up in the grandest office, Yunus contacts teams elsewhere on the canal. Their commanding officers confirm their missions have been successful. Even better, no blood has been shed. His work done, the adrenaline of the operation drains away. Exhausted, Yunus lays a blanket on the cool marble floor of his new office and lies down to sleep. Though today he has helped topple an imperial force, tomorrow will be a new dawn for his country. But as word spreads further afield, presidents and prime ministers are in for a very sleepless night. In nearby Israel, the news is met with alarm. In Europe, where NASA is seen as a grave threat, the British and French fear the implications of the takeover. The events that follow will bring the world to the brink of nuclear war. It'll trigger an outrageous secret plot that'll speed up the transition from colonial rule to a new set of superpowers. But why does a glorified ditch dug through a desert become the focus for an international crisis? Who helped to turn a pharaoh's daydream into a vital shipping route running through one of the most disputed parts of the world? And why does a 19th century waterway still hold the key to trade in the 21st century? I'm John Hopkins from Noiser. This is a short history of the Suez. Can you. The Sinai Peninsula is a triangle of land lying between the Mediterranean in the north and the Red Sea in the south. Measuring 60,000 square kilometers, this region of Egypt is mostly mountainous desert. But its location is pivotal. It borders Israel, Palestine, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, and links Africa with Asia. The 78 mile strip of land where the two continents meet is known as the Isthmus of Suez. Since the age of the pharaohs, Egyptians have dreamed of creating a waterway here to allow ships to carry goods and people between east and West. Around 4,000 years ago, several small canals were built linking the Nile to the Red Sea. But over the millennia, these have dried out. Yet the concept never completely disappears When Napoleon sends his army to invade Egypt in 1798. He also orders his engineers to study how a canal could be constructed. But they conclude it's not feasible because the differing sea levels would require enormous locks. But it turns out that they're wrong. In the middle of the 19th century, a retired French diplomat decides to try again. Ferdinand de Lesseps is mourning his wife and son when he visits an old friend, Said Pasha, who has just become the Ottoman ruler or Viceroy of Egypt. They originally met 20 years earlier. The legend goes that when Said was 13, his father tried to get him to lose weight by forcing him to exercise and restricting his diet. But Lesseps took pity on Said and secretly fed the boy plates of pasta. The early friendship now pays off when in November 1854, 49 year old Lesseps returns to Alexandria and explains that he wants to build the longed fort canal within days. Said grants him the exclusive concession to make it happen. The land will still be Egyptian, but Lesseps and his successors will be allowed to run the proposed canal for 99 years from completion. Engineers will incorporate existing lakes along the isthmus to reduce the amount of arduous digging needed. This also means once the canal is finished, ships will wait in the lakes until it's their turn to travel along the single lane waterway. But work won't actually begin for another five years. Getting over the technical and diplomatic barriers calls for all Lesseps determination and energy. The British protest, fearing the French run canal will undermine their dominance of global trade. Many respected engineers, Protestant believe that mud and sand will block the waterway as soon as it's created. Money is an issue too, but Lesseps gets the support of his influential relative, Empress Eugenie of France, who whips up excitement to encourage ordinary French people to buy shares totaling 100 million francs. Lesseps hopes America, Russia and Britain will invest the rest of the. But when those nations show little interest, the Egyptian government takes out loans to buy the unsold shares. Even once the funds have been raised. Building a canal in an empty desert brings unprecedented challenges. Sal Mecoliano is a former merchant mariner and an associate professor of history at Campbell University.
