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Air Power and the Arab World, 1909-1955 - Volume 5: World in Crisis, 1936-1941 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R487
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Air Power and the Arab World, 1909-1955 - Volume 5: World in Crisis, 1936-1941 (Paperback)
Series: Middle East@War
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List price R588
Loot Price R487
Discovery Miles 4 870
You Save R101 (17%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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This seemingly idyllic and glamourous pre-war age of air travel
within the British Empire would be rudely overturned by the
outbreak of the Second World War. Even before this, however,
Germany's Nazi government made considerable efforts to convince the
Arab peoples and their governments - where such government existed
beyond direct French and British control - that Germany had no
territorial ambitions in the Middle East and North Africa. After
hostilities began the Nazis continued to proclaim that they and
Italy would ensure Arab independence once they won the war, an
unconvincing claim given Italy's recent behaviour in Libya and in
the Arab world's southern neighbour Ethiopia, then known as
Abyssinia. Amongst the primary targets of Nazi and to a lesser
extent Fascist propaganda was King Faruq of Egypt and those members
of Egypt's armed forces who still believed that their King could
bring true independence and dignity to Egypt. How far such
propaganda succeeded remains a matter of intense debate. From the
outbreak of the Second World War until the close of 1940 the only
Arab air forces which existed in anything more than name, those of
Egypt and Iraq, contributed towards the Allied war effort. Once
Italy entered the war in June 1940 the conflict entered Egyptian
territory and, although the Egyptian government remained nominally
neutral, the Royal Egyptian Air Force and Egyptian Army became
directly involved, though largely "behind the lines". The Royal
Iraqi Air Force was also placed on alert but, being far from the
zones of active operations, was not drawn into conflict. The Fall
of France resulted in the French mandated territories of Syria and
Lebanon passing into the control of the Vichy French government
which, though officially neutral in the wider war, became
increasingly collaborationist in its international affairs.
Elsewhere the once all-powerful British Empire seemed to be reeling
from defeat to defeat. Thus, by the end of 1940, the majority of
people in the Arab World - including in British-dominated Egypt and
Iraq - believed that Germany and Italy would win the war. This
growing opinion was also present in the Arab militaries, including
the REAF and RIrqAF. It would result in tensions, disaffection and
even defections in Egypt during 1941. In Iraq it resulted in the
First Anglo-Iraq War of May 1941, also known to the British as the
Rashid Ali Rebellion. These events will form the core of Volume Six
of Air Power and the Arab World.
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