A comparative Analysis of John Foster Dulles and Henry A. Kissinger and the Impact Their Personalities Had on the Formulation of American Foreign Policy


part of Germany, he sought the support of the West to guard against



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A Comparative Analysis of John Foster Dulles and Henry A. Kissing


part of Germany, he sought the support of the West to guard against 
any Coilllllunist threat. 
Britain encouraged ratification of EDC but would not join it. It 
was skeptical, even fearful, of being party to German rearmament. In 
addition, it did not wish to weaken the London-Washington axis by be­
coming part of a London/Paris/Bonn-Washington axis. Britain's refusal 
to join EDC added to the delay in the French Assembly. Without the 
British as a counterweight, France may soon find its position in EDC 
weakened if Germany came to dominate the European army. 
Dulles attempted to hasten the French decision on EDC. If EDC 
68 
was approved, a major hurdle would be overcome and the European army 
could start organizing, pending the approval by other national assemblies. 
If rejected, Dulles could work on an alternative way of unifying Europe 
and strengthening West Germany--an alternative which officially did 
not exist in Dulles' mind. In December 1953, while in Paris for a 
NATO meeting, Dulles stated that if France rejected EDC, the U.S. would 
be forced into an "agonizing reappraisal" of its European policies. 
(Drummond & Coblentz, 1960, p. 85) Such a reappraisal might include 
the withdrawal of U.S. military and economic aid to the European con­
tinent. Dulles intentionally left his threats vague. He would let 
the French assemblymen wonder about possible U.S. reaction to EDC's 
rejection. Ambiguity was also a safe way not to have to punish an ally 
and risk losing his friendship. 
Dulles did push France into making a decision, but it was not the 


69 
one he wanted. On August 30, 1954, the French National Assembly re-
jected EDC. Dulles' threats were never carried out. United States 
troops remained in Europe. Dulles and Sir Anthony Eden, then British 
Foreign Secretary, worked on an alternative to EDC. The Western European 
Union

(WEU) was formed by allowing West Germany and Italy to join the 
Brussels Pact, which consisted of Britain, France, Belgium, the Nether­
lands, and Luxembourg. Through WEU, West Germany was admitted to NATO 
in 1955. 
Massive retaliation 
When Dulles took office, the U.S. was still involved militarily 
in Korea. Truce talks were deadlocked. Dulles went to Korea with 
Eisenhower in December 1952 in fulfillment of the latter's campaign 
promise. On the return trip, Dulles told Eisenhower that he was sure 
the Chinese and North Koreans were content with the de facto truce 
which they could reconvert into open hostilities whenever it suited 
them. He said the U.S. must act to force the Communists' hand. To 
force them into an official truce, the U.S. had to threaten dangerous 
consequences if the North Koreans refused a truce. Dulles noted such 
a policy risked renewed fighting in Korea, but Eisenhower acted accord­
ing to his Secretary's advice. "Eisenhower's decision was, as he put 
it, 'let the Communist authorities understand that, in the absence of 
satisfactory progress, we intended to move decisively without inhibi­
tion in our use of weapons, and would no longer be responsible for con­
fining hostilities to the Korean Peninsula.' ... And innnediately after 
he took office he acted on his decision." (Middleton, 1965, p. 223) 


70 
The next step was to convey this policy to the Asian Communists. 
In his first State of the Union address, on February 2, 1953, Eisenhower 
announced he was rescinding a Truman order which placed the U.S. Seventh 
Fleet between Formosa and the People's Republic of China (PRC). The 
presence of the Seventh Fleet prevented any Nationalist Chinese in­
vasion against mainland China and was a deterrent to any Communist 
Chinese aggression. Critics of Eisenhower said he was "unleashing" 
Chiang Kai-shek, the Nationalist leader. Eisenhower and Dulles never 
expected Chiang to invade the mainland. Eisenhower was simply warning 
the Chinese Communists that if a truce was not arrived at in the Korean 
War, the U.S. might use Formosa as an additional base of operations and 
thus threaten to open another front against the PRC. 
On May 21, Dulles also issued a warning. In New Delhi, India, 
he told Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru that the U.S. wished to end 
the Korean War honorably, but if need be it would fight an all-out war 
and would restrict neither its effort not its weapons. Dulles knew 
Nehru would convey this message to the Chinese. 
Truce talks had been hampered by the prisoner of war problem. 
Some Communist POWs held by South Korea did not wish to return to their 
country. South Korea said they did not have to. China and North Korea 
said they did. But on June 4, two weeks after Dulles conferred with 
Nehru, the Communists proposed a plan whereby the fate of the POWs 
could be determined by the United Nations. On June 8, a POW agreement 
was signed. 
South Korean President Syngman Rhee opposed the truce talks. He 
wanted to fight until all of Korea was united under his leadership. 


71 
To disrupt the talks, on June 18 he ordered the release of 27,000 
North Korean prisoners who said they wanted to stay in South Korea. 
The talks were off again. Dulles predicted that the Communists would 
overlook Rhee's action if they truly wanted a truce and if they were 
given assurances that South Korea would abide by an armistice agreement. 
He was correct. Talks resumed on July 10. Dulles let Rhee know that 
the U.S. would not support a South Korean solitary war with North 
Korea and offered him a security pact and economic aid, which he ac­
cepted. The armistice was signed on �uly 27, 1953. 
Dulles felt it a moral obligation to deter war. Threatening 
severe punishment to aggressors who wish to dominate others by force 
was a means to deter war. He believed that wars are created by mis­
calculation where aggressors believe they can achieve military ends 
without great risks to their own security. He felt the Korean War 
was one of miscalculation. When Secretary of State Dean Acheson and 
President Truman stated that Korea was outside the vital interests of 
the U.S., this in effect gave North Korea (and the PRC) a license to 
start a war without fear of U.S. military response. Dulles did not 
want another such miscalculation on the part of other potential ag­
gressors. He thus stated his position on how to avoid war. 
In an address to the Council on Foreign Relations on January 12, 
1954, he said, "a potential aggressor must know that he cannot always 
prescribe battle conditions that suit him." The way to deter aggres­
sion is for the free community "to depend primarily on a greater capa­
city to retaliate, i�stantly, by means and at places of our own choos­
ing ... Local defense must be reinforced by the further deterrent of 


72 
massive retaliatory power." (Divine, 1979, p. 66; Grantham, 1976, p. 
90) The doctrine of "massive retaliation" was thus introduced into the
Eisenhower Administration. Dulles enunciated this concept twice before, 
at a Paris speech and in Life magazine in 1952. In 1954, it had the 
status of foreign policy doctrine as it was an official U.S. policy 
statement. 
A particular reason for this threat of massive retaliation at that 
time was that Dulles wanted China to know that it ought not get in­
volved in fighting in Indochina. In Foreign Affairs in April 1954, 
Dulles revised his policy and described it as "selective retaliation" 
because 
massive atomic and thermonuclear retaliation is not the 
kind of power which could most usefully be evoked under 
all circumstances ..• The heart of the problem is to deter 
attack. This, we believe, requires that a potential ag­
gressor be left in no doubt that he would be certain to 
suffer damage outweighing any possible gains from aggres­
sion .•. To deter aggression, it is important to have the 
flexibility and the facilities 
__ 
which make various re­
sponses available ... The free world must have the means 
for responding effectively (to open assault by Communist 
forces) on a selective basis when it chooses .•. That does 
not mean turning every local war into a world war ••• It 
does mean that the free world must maintain the collective 
means and be willing to use them in the way which most 
effectively makes aggression too risky and expensive to be 
tempting. (Foreign Affairs, XXXII, 1954, p. 359) 
Thus, in addition to stating his desire to "have the capacity" 
to retaliate against aggression (and Dulles did not state he would 
use it under specific situations), he also emphasized the impor­
tance of local and collective defense. Collective defense systems, 
or pacts, such as NATO could be an important part of deterring aggres­
sion--especially potential Soviet aggression. These pacts would warn 


aggressors that those members of the pacts were ready to fend off 
aggression and would be aided by others--especially the United States. 
Dulles and Eisenhower faced another crisis in Southeast Asia in 
1954 and they dealt with it by considering the viability of the mas­
sive retaliation and collective defense doctrines. On March 20, 
General Paul Ely, the French Chief of Staff, asked Eisenhower for U.S. 
intervention in Indochina to help French forces under siege at Dien 
Bien Phu. The Joint Chiefs of Staff told Eisenhower that the fall of 
Indochina would precipitate the collapse of other states in the area 
and create a "Soviet position of dominance over Asia". (Divine, 1979, 
p. 67) Eisenhower concurred with this judgment but decided that the
use of limited American forces would not alter the situation and that 
the American public ·would not stand for a massive intervention. Dulles 
and Eisenhower wanted to avoid unilateral American action. They did 
endorse a united action--a plan where the U.S., Great Britain, France, 
Thailand, Australia, New Zealand and the Associated States of Indochina 
would form a coalition to resist Communist expansion in Southeast Asia. 
This was Dulles' proposal for the Southeast Asia Collective Defense 
Treaty, later known as SEATO. He wanted Britain and France to join 
SEATO before attending the Geneva Conference on Indochina in late 
April so that France would be negotiating with the Communists from a 
position of strength and with allied support. But Britain, the key 
co-participant along with the the U.S., refused to use force to help 
France in Indochina. No action--unilateral or united--was used by the 
U.S. Dien Bien Phu fell to the Communists on May 7. 
The Geneva Conference, ending the French role in Indochina, 
73 


convened on April 26, 1954. Dulles stayed for the opening sessions, 
until May 3, and boycotted the rest of the proceedings. While at the 
Conference, he turned his back on Chinese Premier Chou En-lai's out­
stretched hand. Dulles had mixed feelings about the Conference. He 
did not wish to be seen as a party to French colonialism. Nor did 
he want to be a "cosignatory with the Communists" to an agreement 
which he knew would call for the partition of Vietnam. (Herring, 1979, 
p. 39)
The outcome of the Conference, the Geneva Accords of 1954, called 
for the partition of Vietnam at the 17th parallel. Ho Chi Minh and his 
Vietminh forces would control the north and Emperor Bao Dai would be 
the titular head in the south. This would be a temporary division 
until elections could be held in the summer of 1956 to reunify the 
nation under one ruler. Neither portion of Vietnam could join a 
military alliance. Laos and Cambodia were granted independent status. 
74 
Although the U.S. was not a signatory to the agreement, it unilat­
erally declared that it would not interfere with the Accords. Dulles 
and Eisenhower were not totally displeased with the results. If elec­
tions had been demanded immediately by the Communists, they were certain 
Ho would win a resounding victory. But, with elections two years 
away, they could build up the credibility of Bao Dai or his Premier, 
Ngo Dinh Diem, in hopes of getting a non-Communist elected to rule 
the whole country. 
These hopes, however dim, were lost when Diem ousted Bao Dai, 
set himself up as President, and refused to consider elections for 
1956. The U.S. formally recognized Ngo Dinh Diem as President of 


75 
Vietnam on October 26, 1955� (Branyan & Larsen, 1971, pp. 774-75) 
Eisenhower told Diem that he would continue to supply aid to Vietnam 
to maintain a strong state capable of resisting subversion or aggres­
sion by military means. 
To guard South Vietnam and other regional states from Communist 
aggression, SEATO was formally accepted in September of 1954 by Britain, 
France, Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Thailand, the Philipines, 
and the United States. Dulles hoped the mere existence of SEATO would 
deter the Communists from overrunning Loas, Cambodia, and South Vietnam. 
Because of the Geneva Accords, these states could not participate in 
alliances. (Herring, 1979, p. 45) If any of these Indochinese coun­
tries were invaded, SEATO provided the United States with the legal 
basis for intervention. 
Brinkmanship 
Along with "liberation", "agonizing reappraisal" and "massive re­
taliation", "brinkmanship" was another word which raised some controversy 
during Dulles' Secretaryship. Of the four phrases, brinkmanship best 
typifies his performance as Secretary of State. The term derives from 
several statements Dulles made in an interview with Life magazine 
correspondent, James Shepley: 
You have to take chances for peace just as you must take 
chances in war. Some say that we were brought to the 
verge of war. Of course we were brought to the verge of 
war. The ability to get to the verge without getting into 
war is the necessary art. If you cannot master it, you in­
evitably get into war. If you try to run away from it, if 
you are scared to go to the brink, you are lost. We've had 
to look it square in the face--on the question of enlarging 
the Korean War, on the question of getting into the Indo­
China War, on the question of Formosa. We walked to the 


brink and we looked it in the face. We took strong 
action. (Shepley, 1956, p. 78) 
Brinkmanship was deeply rooted in Dulles' philosophy. It was 
not a startling revelation. It was merely a phrase used to describe 
several ideas. Dulles wanted to deter war. By facing a potential 
aggressor at the brink of war, the U.S. was telling its adversary that 
it 
W?S 
willing to fight to protect an ally or a vital interest. By 
expressing that willingness to fight--even to the extent of a massive 
retaliatory attack--the adversary then must decide if the potential 
benefits of its aggression were worth risking. This open opposition 
to aggression would avoid wars started by miscalculation, as both 
sides to a conflict would know beforehand where the other side stood 
on the issue of a war. 
The national and international responses to the article were 
severely critical of Dulles. Adlai Stevenson, Democratic candidate 
for President in 1952 and 1956, said Dulles was playing Russian Rou­
lette. The Russians said the story "proved" Dulles' cold-warrior-
76 
like intentions against the Soviet Union and other peace-loving nations. 
"Some attacks were politically inspired. But without question, millions 
of people were alarmed by the article" and they criticized Dulles for 
risking the safety of the U.S. "One of the most distressed was John 
Foster Dulles." (Heller, 1960, p. 230) It disturbed him to think 
that millions of people regarded him as "gambling" with world peace, 
as acting recklessly, with human lives at stake. 
John Foster Dulles had committed his life to search for a just 
and durable peace. Dulles never started a war; he avoided it 


77 
throughout his tenure as Secretary of State. He did, of course, take 
a tough line and spoke often of the consequences of aggression. This, 
however, was part of the game of international politics. His duty, 
as he saw it, was to warn potential aggressors that any hostilities 
they start would be met with far greater hostilities. His was a de­
terrence game. He sought to keep the peace--"wage peace"--by threaten­
ing terrible consequences to aggressors where the risks outweigh any 
possible benefit. Dulles was used to criticism from the press, but 
the fallout from the "Brink of war" article was more devastating to 
his career and to him personally than any other barrage of criticism 
he had encountered as Secretary of State. 
Dulles weathered the storm over "brinkmanship". Eisenhower had 
complete confidence in him and rejected any idea of Dulles' resigna­
tion. Eisenhower used his press conference of January 19, 1956--the 
first since his September 1955 heart attack--to endorse Dulles' posi­
tion by calling him "the best Secretary of State I have ever known" and 
by saying Dulles was devoted to peace. Public confidence in Dulles 
was at one of its lowest points over the 1956 brinkmanship article. A 
few months later, however, a Gallup Poll indicated public confidence 
in Dulles had reached a new high. This dramatic reversal resulted from 
Dulles' handling of the Suez Crisis. 
Suez 1956: A case study 
Dulles' involvement in Egypt and with Gamal Abdel Nasser began 
in his earliest months as Secretary of State. In May 1953, Dulles set 
off on a Middle East tour. He hoped to extend to this region the NATO 


system of military alliances. After SEATO was established in 1954, 
the Middle East was a gap in the defense system which needed to be 
filled. Despite his rhetoric against the Truman-Acheson policy of 
containment, Dulles still felt the need to stop the spread of Soviet 
influence (Soviet expansion has to stop before liberation can even 
begin). Cairo was sounded out by Washington on the possibility of 
starting a Middle East Defense Organization (MEDO), which would be 
allied to the West. Cairo refused. Dulles then considered a defense 
system limited to the so-called Northern Tier, which bordered on 
Russia. Dulles lobbied for this system and the Baghdad Pact was sign­
ed by Turkey and Iraq in February 1955. The United Kingdom joined the 
Pact in April. Pakistan joined in September and Iran in November. 
The United States did not join. 
There is some conjecture over why Dulles refused to join the 
Pact which he formulated. One analyst says that after giving the im­
pression (especially to Britain) that the U.S. would join, Dulles 
backed down in an attempt to "play along with Arab nationalism". 
(Goold-Adams, 1962, pp. 192-3) Another says that Dulles could not 
be associated with anti-Israel Iraq. (Drummon & Coblentz, 1960, p. 
150) A third maintains that Dulles did not want to be associated
with Britain (a colonial power) in the Middle East, where anti­
British sentiment was building in the emerging Arab nations. (Guhin, 
1972, p. 150) 
Nasser saw the Baghdad Pact as an attempt by the NATO powers to 
drive a wedge between the Arab states. He also feared that Iraq might 
be trying to take the lead in a pan-Arab movement, a movement in which 
78 


Nasser had placed himself as its leader. Britain was entangled in 
the inter-Arab conflict between Nasser and the pro-Western Prime 
Minister of Iraq, Nuri Es-Said. Now Britain was aligned with Iraq 
and others in the Baghdad Pact. And although British forces remained 
in Egypt, these were to be removed by July 19, 1956. Nasser viewed 
the Pact as perpetuating Western dominance in the region. He pre­
ferred Arabs defending themselves with arms supplied by the West. 
Nasser saw a need to defend Arabism from Zionism and not from Soviet 
expansionism, as Dulles tried to suggest. The Israeli threat to 
Egypt's security was made more visible in February 1955, when David 
Ben-Gurion returned to the Israeli Cabinet as Defense Minister and 
Israel launched a destructive reprisal on Egyptian forces in thee 
Gaza Strip. 
Nasser reacted by forming the Fedayeen, a guerilla unit 
to mount reprisals across Israel's borders. (Bowie, 1974, p. 10) 
Nasser tried to buy arms from the West in the summer of 1955. But 
these arms were not forthcoming. France, Britain, and the U.S. had 
signed the Tripartite Declaration of 1950 guaranteeing Middle East 
borders and regulating the arms flow to the region. The British used 
this declaration to refuse to sell large amounts of arms to Nasser. 
Although the British delivered previously purchased arms to Egypt, they 
did not wish to sell any more weapons fearing they would be used 
against British forces. Moreover, the French said they would supply 
arms to Nasser only if he would stop inciting and training the Alger­
ians to revolt against them. Dulles told Nasser he could have the 
arms if he joined in a Middle East defense alliance. (Bindra, 1969, 
p. 34)
79 


Given the conditions placed on the West's sale of arms, Nasser 
turned to the Soviet bloc. By September 1955, he announced an agree­
ment to buy from Czechoslovakia a supply of arms in exchange for 
Egyptian cotton and rice. Nasser called this deal a simple commercial 
transaction. 
Dulles did not, of course, view it as such. He saw it as the 
first of many Soviet politico-military moves to infiltrate and even­
tually control the Arab world. With Nasser's announcement of a Czech 
arms deal, Dulles became a victim of self-fulfilling prophecy. He 
80 
had proposed the Baghdad Pact as a defense system to keep the Soviet 
Union from gaining a foothold in the Middle East. By his constant 
pressure on Nasser to join the alliance, Dulles achieved that which he 
sought to avoid. Nasser did not like to be pressured and he did the 
opposite of what Dulles tried to force him to do. He brought Soviet 
influence to the heart of the Middle East. But Dulles was not willing 
to forfeit the region to the Soviets without a fight. He also sought 
to aid Egypt--not on a military but on an economic basis. In December 
1955, the U.S. and Britain, together with the International Bank of 
Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank), offered to finance 
Egypt's High Aswan Dam project. The reservoir created by the dam 
would retrieve land for cultivation and add up to 25 percent to Egypt's 
arable land. The project appealed to Dulles because it would improve 
the economic conditions of the Egyptian people whereas the Communist 
aid would be military in nature. The Communists would be in Egypt 
as merchants of death; America was offering the means for growth and 
1 if e . (Mos 1 ey , 19 7 8 , p . 3 96) 


Also, the project would cost $1.3 billion and would take 12 to 
15 years to complete. Since U.S. assistance would basically be in 
loans to Egypt, the U.S. would have a long-term claim to Egypt's re­
sources. Dulles saw this as an opportunity to control Egyptian fi­
nances thus preventing Egypt from buying more arms from the Soviet 
bloc, The initial assistance offered was $56 million from the U.S., 
$14 million from Britain and $200 million from IBRD. "Negotiations 
dragged on for months, with Nasser objecting strenuously to the fiscal 
safeguards requested by the IBRD." (Bowie, 1974, p. 11) 
During the months it took for Nasser to decide if he wanted West­
ern aid with, as he saw it, so many strings attached, the U.S. and 
Britain were also wondering if they should pursue the financing or 
if they should let the.project dwindle without either rescinding their 
offer or pushing Nasser to accept. Dulles was certain Congress would 
not approve the aid package to Nasser, who was perceived as an upstart 
dictator, friendly with the Soviets and Communist China and belliger-
ent toward Israel. 
Furthermore, Dulles had doubts that Egypt could 
81 
pay back the loans, even if they were granted. Nasser insisted he could 
meet his

debts with the increased revenues from the cotton and rice 
produced from the reclaimed land. But both Dulles and Congress shared 
the view that Egypt's revenues wquld go to pay for Czech arms, leaving 
no resources to either pay back U.S. loans or to finance its portion 
of the Aswan Dam project. 
(Bowie, 1974, p. 12) 
Congress was so against the package that Dulles decided not to 
continue his fight for it. Dulles believed Dean Acheson had failed 
in his foreign policy because he did not listen to the voice of 


82 
Congress and he would not make the same mistake. The dam was not worth 
risking his effectiveness as foreign policy formulator, especially since 
his "brinkmanship" interview of January 1956 had dealt a harsh blow to 
his image. 
Britain was also uncertain about its offer. In early February 
1956, Sir Anthony Eden, the British Prime Minister, and Selwyn Lloyd, 
Foreign Secretary, arrived in Washington for three-day talks with 
Eisenhower and Dulles. Dulles, Eden and Lloyd agreed that Nasser would 
not be able to finance his portion of the Aswan Dam project and that, 
due to his pledging of Egyptian cotton for Czech arms, he would not 
be able to keep the Egyptian economy viable during the construction 
period. More important, however, Nasser was not playing ball with the 
West. He not only refused to join the Baghdad Pact, he continued to 
verbally attack it. He mounted pressure on Jordan, which subsequently 
refused to join the Pact in December 1955. And he did not lessen his 
support for Algeria in its struggle for independence from France. The 
Americans and British both decided not to go through with their offer 
of aid. The intention was to let the offer die without public announce­
ment about the change in plans. 
When, on March 1, King Hussein of Jordan dismissed General 
Glubb ("Pasha"), a British subject in charge of Jordan's Arab Legion, 
Eden was sure his decision was correct. He would not aid the "fascist" 
Nasser, who was accredited with Glubb's dismissal. (Dooley, 1976, p. 
10) Hussein dismissed Glubb as pro-Nasser Jordanians accused Glubb of
portraying himself as the real ruler of Jordan. Some Jordanians 
started "whispering campaigns ridiculing the King as a weak, ineffective 


parody of a monarch who would not remain on his throne for one day if 
Glubb's Legion were not there to support him." (Robertson, 1964, p. 
26) 
Dr. Ahmed Hussein, Egyptian Ambassador to Washington, returned to 
Cairo in the summer of 1956 to tell Nasser that opposition to the 
Aswan Dam project was mounting in Congress and "that if he wanted to 
go through with it, it was now or never. To his astonishment, Nasser, 
who had procrastinated so adroitly,now instructed him to go back to 
the U.S. and gave him carte blanche to accept all Foster Dulles' con­
ditions." (Mosley, 1978, p. 400) Nasser had been hinting that the 
Soviet Union had also made him an offer to finance the Dam. But the 
bid had not been made public. 
The news of the Egyptian Ambassador's impending visit with Dulles 
preceded him to the U.S. and it made headlines in many newspapers. 
Dulles called a meeting with his staff to discuss how to handle Ahmed 
Hussein. It was decided to withdraw the U.S. offer instead of "ne­
gotiating· the thing to death," as Robert Bowie wanted to do .

Dulles 
feared that Bowie's plan would give Congress a false impression that 
83 
the Secretary of State still hoped to pursue the offer. He did not 
wish to do this. Dulles privately informed Eden and Lloyd that he was 
going to withdraw his offer. The advance notice was conveyed to London 
by Henry Cabot Lodge, then U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. He told Anthony 
Nutting, Britain's U.N. delegate, that Dulles was ready to act. Eden 
and Lloyd made no attempt to dissuade Dulles. In the meantime, Britain 
had completed its Suez base evacuation five days early on June 13, 1956. 
Ahmed Hussein landed in New York on July 17 and spoke to the press--


84 
who already knew of his planned acceptance. On July 19, 1956 Hussein 
met with Secretary of State Dulles for about one hour. Hussein an­
nounced Egypt's acceptance and added that he hoped the Americans were 
not planning to renege on their offer because, if they did, he had a 
promise from the Soviet Union to finance and build the dam instead. 
This gave Dulles the opportunity to fake a loss of temper over this 
"insult" and withdraw his offer. He told Hussein that conditions had 
changed since the offer was made and he implied that he did not think 
Egypt was credit-worthy. He also tried to color his rejection by 
saying that who ever builds the dam would earn the hatred of the 
Egyptian people because the burden would be crushing. He said Americans 
did not wish to be hated in Egypt and he was leaving that "pleasure" 
to the Soviet Union--if they really wanted to do it. (Mosley, 1978, 
p. 402)
Even if there was a Soviet offer, Dulles believed the Soviet econ­
omy was too weak to finance the whole project. At about the same time 
that Dulles spoke to Hussein, the press was issued a State Department 
communique outlining the U.S. decision to reject the Aswan project. 
By this act, Dulles gave Nasser an additional rebuff and also demon­
strated U.S. impatience with neutrals seeking to exploit East-West 
rivalries. 
Within 24 hours of the U.S. move, Britain also withdrew its offer 
to help finance the Aswan Dam. 
On July 26, 1956 at a rally celebrating the fourth anniversary 
of the Young Officers' coup which overthrew King Farouk, Nasser announced 
the nationalization (or Egyptianization) of the Suez Canal Company. 


Simultaneously, Egyptian troops moved into the Canal area to insure 
the movement of traffic through the Canal. The announcement was not 
unexpected but the swiftness of the action caught Western officials 
85 
off guard. These officials had discussed the possibility of such a 
move, given Nasser's nationalistic tendencies. Indeed, Nasser had 
asked an advisor to study the Canal issue as early as 1954. And Nasser 
told U.S. Ambassador to Egypt, Henry Byroade (after the nationalization) 
that he had decided to nationalize the Canal if the West dropped its 
offer to finance the Dam project. 
Dulles was in Peru for an inauguration of a new President when 
news came of Nasser's move. He sent Robert Murphy, Assistant Under­
secretary of State, to London to gauge the likely British-French re­
sponse. Britain and France not only owned virtually all shares in the 
Suez Canal Company, those countries also depended on the Canal for their 
existence as maritime and industrial powers. If their oil imports were 
not allowed to flow through the Canal, their industrial production could 
be seriously impaired. Eden told the U.S. charge' d'affaires it was in­
tolerable for Nasser "to have his thumb on our windpipe". (Finer, 
1964, p. 62) 
As Dulles admitted later, his purpose during the early days of 
the Suez Crisis was to gain time in the hope of defusing the situa­
tion and relieving the pressure on the British and French. Dulles and 
Eisenhower were dead set against the use of force. They feared the 
use of force in the region would be a "dangerous spark which was 
likely to set off the Third World War". 
(Goold-Adams, 1962, p. 207) 
They also had to consider the fact that Eisenhower was involved in 


an upcoming election, and "peace" was part of Eisenhower's campaign 
slogan--peace, prosperity and progress. Dulles also firmly believed 
in the U.N. and its ability to work for peace. He wanted to use the 
U.N., not force to resolve the dilernna. If diplomacy failed, "world
opinion" reflected in the U.N. would produce a solution. Dulles, how­
ever, did not immediately move the issue before the U.N. The Secretary 
feared for world peace if the U.N. were used first and failed to solve 
the Suez Crisis. He knew he could not prevent Britain and France from 
using force if the U.N. failed and he attempted to buy time. 
British and French leaders decided to go along with Dulles' diplo­
matic efforts. They also needed time to develop a military plan. 
These secret plans went forward as the Tripartite powers met at the 
Foreign Office in London: Murphy for the U.S., Christian Pineau for 
France, Lloyd for the United Kingdom. But Murphy soon learned of the 
Anglo-French military program and he reported to Dulles that Paris and 
London were determined to use force. Dulles flew irnrnediately to 
London. 
Dulles also recognized the British-French resolve to not only 
force the Canal out of Nasser's control, but also to force Nasser out 
of power. Dulles showed sympathy for the European position and he 
argued that Nasser should be made to "disgorge" the Canal. (Finer, 
1964, p. 97) Nevertheless, Dulles was steadfastly against the use of 
force. Within Britain there was division of opinion over the use of 
force. Opposition Leader Hugh Gaitskell denounced any use of force 
as a means to achieve "justice". In France, however, public opinion 
supported Prime Minister Guy Mollet and Foreign Minister Pineau. Many 
86 


87 
Frenchmen believed Nasser's destruction would also solve the problem 
in Algeria by reducing support for the insurgents. American public 
opinion, however, was against the use of force and it reinforced 
Dulles' diplomatic efforts. 
During the discussions in London, Dulles formulated a plan for the 
international operation of the Suez Canal. The three powers then 
called a Conference of 24 maritime nations with special interest in 
the Canal. The Conference opened in London on August 16. Twenty-four 
countries were invited; two did not attend--Egypt and Greece. 
The British and French rested their legal right to justice on the 
Constantinople Convention of 1888 which governed the status of the 
Canal. The Convention guaranteed free passage to all vessels at all 
times and left the operation of the Canal to the Universal Suez Canal 
Company, an international organization. Nasser had already violated 
this agreement even before he nationalized the Canal by refusing free 
passage to Israeli ships. Under the terms of the Convention, the Canal 
was to revert to Egyptian control in 1968. 
"Eden relied on the international character of the Canal Company, 
which 'although ..• registered in Egypt, is of course an international 
organization.' Accordingly, the normal right of a state to nationalize 
could not properly be exercised to take over such an international 
public utility." 
(Bowie, 1974, p. 23) At the London Conference, 
Dulles spoke of the need for "a permanent operation of the Canal under 
an international system which will in fact give confidence to those 
who would normally wish to use the Canal ... Confidence is what we seek; 
and for this it is indispensable that there should be an administration 


of the Canal which is non-political in its operation ... The Canal should 
not be allowed to become an instrument of the policy of any nation or 
any group of nations." (Finer, 1964, p. 153) 
The Conference formulated a plan, the 18-Nations Proposal, which 
was largely of Dulles' making. The Soviet Union, India, Indonesia, 
and Ceylon did not support the plan. Nevertheless, it was presented 
to Nasser as a basis for negotiating a more formal agreement. It 
was not looked upon as an ultimatum. The proposal called for: inter­
national operation of the Canal; respect for Egypt's sovereignty; a 
fair return to Egypt by the users of the Canal; compensation to the 
Universal Suez Canal Company; negotiable Canal tolls; and greater de­
velopment of the Canal. 
Dulles refused to lead the mission that offered the 18-Nations 
Proposal to Nasser. Some analysts assert Dulles felt the mission was 
doomed to fail anyway and that he did not want to have his reputation 
wrapped up in the proposal. Dulles, however, felt the proposal satis­
fied all parties. He wanted it to succeed because it promised to keep 
the peace. Dulles also knew Nasser was bitter toward him after the 
United States withdrew its Aswan Dam offer. By going to Nasser Dulles 
could risk the defeat of the proposal. He therefore urged the Confer­
ence to send a strong leader, one who did not represent the Tripa�tite 
powers. Robert Menzies, Prime Minister of Australia, was selected for 
this task and he led the mission to persuade Nasser to negotiate a 
peaceful solution to the Suez dispute. Nasser said he would meet the 
mission on Tuesday, September 4. 
While Menzies was in Cairo, Eisenhower held a news conference at 
88 


which he said, "We are connnitted to a peaceful settlement of the dis­
pute, nothing else." (Finer, 1964, p. 189) When his words reached 
Cairo, the Menzies mission was doomed. Nasser felt no great need to 
negotiate a settlement of the dispute. By Eisenhower's words, he knew 
the U.S. would not support the use of force against Egypt and there-
fore Egypt was under no threat to resolve the crisis to Britain's or 
France's satisfaction. Even before Nasser heard of Eisenhower's state-
ment, he had not been willing to give Britain and France what they 
wanted. Eisenhower's news conference merely reassured him that he 
would not have to face U.S. military retaliation. Menzies reported 
to Dulles after leaving Cairo: 
I had been making some impression on Nasser by keeping him 
guessing as to whether the United Kingdom and France would 
actually resort to force. Then came newspaper reports of 
Eisenhower's statements. That did it ... Nasser became cool, 
confident and impossible to deal with. (Robertson, 1964, 
p. 87)
Nasser rejected the 18-Nations Proposal outright and the mission 
returned to London having achieved absolutely nothing. 
Dulles tried again to find a peaceful and final solution to the 
problem--and if that failed, at least he would gain time to defuse 
the tense situation. His new idea was the Suez Canal User's Associa-
tion (SCUA). Dulles' reasoning was that "since the 1888 Convention 
entitled the users to transit the Canal, they could band together to 
form a co-operative to exercise their rights under the Convention." 
(Bowie, 1974, p. 43) The users could hire their own pilots to navi­
gate the ships through the Canal, organize convoys, collect dues, and 
pay Egypt its due compensation for tolls. Dulles saw SCUA as 
89 


provisional, but it might lead to alternatives for solutions. 
Mollet was not happy with the proposal as it was premised on 
Egypt's cooperation. But Eden accepted SCUA and presented the plan 
90 
to the House of Commons on September 12. Amid cries of "deliberate 
provocation" and "You are talking about war!", Eden told the House that 
if Nasser rejected SCUA, "Her Majesty's Government and others concerned 
will be free to take such further steps as seem to be required either 
through the U.N., or by other means, for the assertion of their rights." 
(Finer, 1964, p. 226) Eden saw SCUA as a certain failure. But he 
could say, when it did fail� that he exhausted diplomatic efforts. 
Moreover, given the U.N. 's inability to resolve the crisis, Eden felt 
justified in using force. 
Dulles' view of SCUA was different than Eden's or Mollet's. He 
viewed it as provisional until a more permanent peaceful solution was 
found. It was not an effort to merely go through the motions or a 
prelude to force. He said if Egypt rejected SCUA, the U.S. would 
divert its ships around the Cape of Good Hope. And the U.S. did not 
intend to shoot its way through the Canal. Nasser denounced SCUA on 
September 15, four days before the Second London Conference met to 
decide on whether to use SCUA as a basis for further negotiations with 
Nasser. Nevertheless, the confer�nce met from September 19 to the 
22nd and the 18 nations (the same nations which agreed on the 18-
Nations Proposal) agreed to set up SCUA on October 1. In reality, 
however, SCUA was stillborn since Egypt refused to recognize or deal 
with it. 
Britain and France had decided to appeal to the U.N. if SCUA 


failed to secure a satisfactory settlement. But Dulles "advised that 
at all costs Britain and France should avoid reference to the United 
Nations until 

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