Listen "The Rumor That Toppled Egypt’s King — with Chloe Bordewich and Lydia Wilson"
Episode Synopsis
In May 1948, at the onset of the Arab-Israeli War, Egyptian soldiers crossed into Palestine at Rafah as military leaders promised a swift victory. Yet despite their defeat by the year’s end, this war would give way to military rule less than four years later. “A military loss was not what Egyptians expected,” historian Chloe Bordewich tells New Lines Magazine's Lydia Wilson in The Lede. Egyptian media carried images and footage of successful operations, helping to reinforce pronouncements of imminent victory. But victory never materialized. In the face of official obfuscation, alternative explanations for why the war had been lost began to circulate among the public and in the press. One rumor in particular began to take on a life of its own — “that Egypt had lost the war in Palestine because political leaders had procured, profited from and knowingly supplied their own troops with dysfunctional weapons.” The rumor tapped into something that resonated deeply with the Egyptian public. As time went on, it migrated from page to screen and into popular memory. The government’s reputation never recovered, and in 1952, a group of mid-ranking officers overthrew the king. Produced by Christin El-Kholy
More episodes of the podcast The Lede
The Pillars of China’s Global Rise
03/11/2025
Why Is Gen Z Protesting Across Africa?
27/10/2025
Is It Really Peace in the Middle East?
20/10/2025
Britain’s Summer of the Right
29/09/2025
How To Fix America’s Political Violence
22/09/2025
China’s Rise, American Reckoning
08/09/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.