In Shock Recording, Nasser Acknowledged Israel’s Strength and Questioned Arab Militancy

A historic recording reveals how legendary Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser expressed a willingness for peace and acknowledged Israel’s military superiority over the Arab states.

Poster featuring Nasser, archive | Photo: Shutterstock

Egypt is in turmoil following the release of a rare recording of legendary President Gamal Abdel Nasser, published yesterday (Sunday) on the Nasser TV YouTube channel, sparking widespread media attention.
The recording, dated August 1970 — only two months shy of Nasser’s death — captures him acknowledging Israel’s military superiority, criticizing Arab militancy, and expressing a willingness to reach an agreement.

Street named after Nasser in Cairo, archive | Photo: Shutterstock

“The Jews Are Better Than Us in Every Field”
In a recorded conversation with then-Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi, Nasser is heard saying:
“The Jews surpass us in everything — on land and at sea, despite all that we have invested. If we want to achieve our goals, we must be realistic.”

He added that calls for Arab states to continue a hopeless fight were irresponsible, rejecting the illusion that Palestine could be liberated by force: “How will you liberate Palestine when Israel is supported by American money and weapons?”

Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi, archive | Photo: Shutterstock

“We Are Choosing a Defeatist Solution”
When Gaddafi proposed creating a joint Arab force to fight Israel, Nasser responded sharply:
“You are welcome to recruit forces. We will stay far away from the entire operation. Leave us out of it — we will choose a non-violent, defeatist solution. I can live with that.”

He further clarified Egypt’s position, stating that it was interested only in an agreement focusing on the withdrawal from Sinai, and not in a broader struggle for the Palestinians:
“We are not interested in secure borders or the Palestinian issue. We will only talk about Sinai.”

Nasser’s image at Tahrir Square, archive | Photo: Shutterstock

Criticism of Arab Allies
Nasser did not hold back criticism of other Arab states, accusing them of leaving Egypt to bear the burden of war alone:
“You demand that we fight alone, and then if we lose, you say — we will fight you together with the Jews.”

It is important to note that Gamal Abdel Nasser, who led Egypt since the Free Officers’ Revolution of 1952, was regarded as a symbol of uncompromising resistance against Israel.
The revelation of his sober and concessionary remarks in the conversation with Gaddafi — less than two months before his death — paints a different picture: that of a leader who recognized the limits of power and sought to avoid another defeat.

One of the recordings released:

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