GAMAL ABDUL NASSER IN EGYPTIAN REVOLUTION
Free Officers were mobbed by crowds in the Egyptian Revolution (on 23rd July 1952), led by Gamal Abdul Nasser. This overthrew the monarchy, changed the rule of Egypt, and the shape of the Arab World.
Gamal Abdel Nasser (1918–1970) was Egypt’s second president, serving from 1954 until his death. A key figure in Arab nationalism, he led the 1952 Egyptian Revolution, overthrowing the monarchy. Nasser’s policies, like the nationalization of the Suez Canal in 1956, sparked the Suez Crisis, asserting Egypt’s sovereignty against Western powers. His vision of pan-Arabism, land reforms, and socialist policies made him a regional icon, though his authoritarian rule and economic challenges drew criticism. He championed non-alignment during the Cold War, co-founding the Non-Aligned Movement. Nasser was praised for anti-imperialism, and critiqued for suppressing dissent.
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