The Arab Nationalists Movement 1951-1971: From Pressure Group to Socialist Party (ص 103)

غرض

عنوان
The Arab Nationalists Movement 1951-1971: From Pressure Group to Socialist Party (ص 103)
المحتوى
96
very naive of the ANM leaders to expect this undertaking to
work, for after all Nasserism outside the U.A.R. was a
political trend and not a party. For the Arab Nationalists
to merge into Nasserism outside the U.A.R. meant to dissolve
their organizations and serve as agents of the U.A.R.
intelligence network, or in the best circumstances to bring
those organizations under the control of Nasser's intelligence
service. In fact this is how Nasser's bureaucratic machinery
interpreted the "new deal" with the ANM.
It was in the Yemen that the clash between the ANM
and the Egyptian bureaucratic machinery first errupted. On
January 13, 1966, the Egyptian officers responsible for
South Arabia affairs carried a coup against the ANM-led
National Front for the Liberation of South Yemen to impose a
forceful union with the moderate Front for the Liberation of
Occupied South Yemen (FLOSY) .?° Although the Ibrahim group
Sanctioned the Egyptian coup as an important measure to unify
all nationalist forces in the struggle against British
imperialism, the Arab Nationalists.on the spot refused any
reproachement with the mellowed Asnaj-Makkawi group who were
inclined to negotiate with the British government at a time
when the Front's revolutionary forces were forcing a showdown
with the imperialist forces. Both Nasser and the national
leadership of the ANM tried to intervene in the dispute but
little could be done, for the Arab Nationalists in Aden
announced on October 14, 1966 their withdrawal from FLOSY
35.aNM, "Houl al-ilaqat bayn al-harakah al-wataniyah
bil-jinub" [The Relations Between the Arab Nationalist
Movements in the South], p. 4.
تاريخ
1971-02-07
المنشئ
Basil R. Al-Kubaisi
مجموعات العناصر
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