53. Tripartite Statement Issued at London, August 2, 19561

The Governments of France, the United Kingdom and the United States join in the following statement:

1.
They have taken note of the recent action of the Government of Egypt whereby its attempts to nationalise and take over the assets and the responsibilities of the Universal Suez Canal Company. This company was organised in Egypt in 1856 under a franchise to build the Suez Canal and operate it until 1968. The Universal Suez Canal Company has always had an international character in terms of its shareholders, directors and operating personnel and in terms of its responsibility to assure the efficient functioning as an international waterway of the Suez Canal. In 1888 all the great powers then principally concerned with the international character of the Canal and its free, open and secure use without discrimination joined in the Treaty and Convention of Constantinople. This provided for the benefit of all the world that the international character of the Canal would be perpetuated for all time, irrespective of the expiration of the concession of the Universal Suez Canal Company. Egypt as recently as October 1954 recognised that the Suez Canal is “a waterway economically, commercially and strategically of international importance”, and renewed its determination to uphold the Convention of 1888.
2.

They do not question the right of Egypt to enjoy and exercise all the powers of a fully sovereign and independent nation, including the generally recognised right, under appropriate conditions, to nationalise assets, not impressed with an international interest, which are subject to its political authority. But the present action involves far more than a simple act of nationalisation. It involves the arbitrary and unilateral seizure by one nation of an international agency which has the responsibility to maintain and to operate the Suez Canal so that all the signatories to, and beneficiaries of, the Treaty of 1888 can effectively enjoy the use of an international waterway upon which the economy, commerce, and security of much of the world depends. This seizure is the more serious in its implications because it avowedly was made for the purpose of enabling the Government of Egypt to make the Canal serve the purely national purposes of the Egyptian Government, rather than the international purpose established by the Convention of 1888.

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Furthermore, they deplore the fact that as an incident to its seizure the Egyptian Government has had recourse to what amounts to a denial of fundamental human rights by compelling employees of the Suez Canal Company to continue to work under threat of imprisonment.

3.
They consider that the action taken by the Government of Egypt, having regard to all the attendant circumstances, threatens the freedom and security of the Canal as guaranteed by the Convention of 1888. This makes it necessary that steps be taken to assure that the parties to that Convention and all other nations entitled to enjoy its benefits shall, in fact, be assured of such benefits.
4.
They consider that steps should be taken to establish operating arrangements under an international system designed to assure the continuity of operation of the Canal as guaranteed by the Convention of October 29, 1888, consistently with legitimate Egyptian interests.
5.
To this end they propose that a conference should promptly be held of parties to the Convention and other nations largely concerned with the use of the Canal. The invitations to such a conference, to be held in London, on August 16, 1956, will be extended by the Government of the United Kingdom to the Governments named in the Annex to this Statement. The Governments of France and the United States are ready to take part in the conference.

[Annex]

PARTIES TO THE CONVENTION OF 1888

Egypt Italy Spain United Kingdom
France The Netherlands Turkey U.S.S.R.

Other Nations largely concerned in the use of the Canal either through ownership of tonnage or pattern of trade.

Australia Federal Republic of Germany Indonesia Norway
Ceylon Iran Pakistan
Denmark Greece Japan Portugal
Ethiopia India New Zealand Sweden
United States
  1. Source: Department of State, Central Files, 974.7301/8–256. Transmitted to the Department of State in telegram 644, August 2. The text is attached to the U.K. invitation to other governments to attend the Suez Canal Conference in London. See The Suez Canal Problem, July 26–September 22, 1956, pp. 34–35, 42.