yes they give something to the us
Briefly, it was an attempt by Great Britain, France, and Israel to take control of the Suez Canal from Egypt in 1956. Militarily it was a success, but politically it was a failure, and the US intervened on behalf of Egypt until the invading forces withdrew.
Egypt gave us the knowledge of the pyramids , deserts etc;
The United States was willing to give Egypt aid only if Egypt did not buy weapons from Communists.
These protests in Egypt have already affected the stock markets and our economy. Look at the Oil Prices. They have raised significantly as these protests have sparked so much attention and chaos that people worry that they're going to shut down or disrupt any transporting or use on the Suez Canal. To give you an idea, 2 million barrels a day pass through the Suez Canal and adjacent pipelines.
The Suez crisis is also known as the Suez war and it was a war that was fought by Britain, France and Israel against Egypt. The war followed Egypt's decision of 26th July 1956 to nationalize the Suez canal. This was after the withdrawal of an offer by Britain and the US to fund the building of the Aswan dam, which was partly in response to Egypt siding with China during the tensions between China and Taiwan.
If by "Suez Struggle" the question is asking about the Suez Crisis of 1956, also called the Arab-Israeli War of 1956, the Sinai Campaign of 1956, or the Tripartite War of 1956, then the question is easy to answer: the US had no ally in that war since the US served the function of peacemaker in that conflict. The US opposed both Egypt for having nationalized the canal without giving useful assurances of its neutrality in operation (i.e. to hold by the Convention of Constantinople) and Israel, the UK, and France for having invaded Egypt to force the Egyptians' hand.
Prior to the British, French, and Israeli Invasion, the State Department already had a few objectives as concerns Egypt. They wanted to prevent a second Arab-Israeli War and they wanted to keep the Suez Canal in European hands since its nationalization could have a negative impact on the passage of freight (and petroleum) from the Persian Gulf to Europe and the Americas. In 1956, Nasser, President of Egypt, decided to nationalize the Suez Canal. It was in retaliation that the British, French, and Israelis invaded Egypt in an attempt to compel Egypt to return the Canal to European control. US President Eisenhower's response was to attempt to negotiate a compromise where Egypt would be allowed to maintain control over the Suez Canal provided that they paid the British compensation for the nationalization and did not restrict trade (meaning that they would follow the Constantinople Convention of the Suez Canal of 1888). However, Eisenhower was opposed to any military action in the Middle East and compelled the British, French, and Israeli forces to withdraw from sovereign Egyptian territory. These events led to the Eisenhower Doctrine, which pledged that the US would distribute economic and military aid and, if necessary, use military force to contain communism in the Middle East.
The US gave Egypt 186 F-16's
It's common sence...Egypt won. It was taking on 3 countries at a time, israel, U.k and France. At first it was harsh for Egypt but they don't give up and had Russia supply them. But this war ended due to the U.n's peace keepers and Lester B. Pearson.
Nothing really. They give us something to enjoy during the summer. They also give us something to look forward to in the spring.
In my opinion: The Egypt that Jesus leads us out of is the inability to achieve salvation. Jesus enabled people to go to heaven. However, unlike the story of the Jews' escape from Egypt, not all of us will escape to paradise. We must give to the least of his people is he is to save us.
Eisenhower did not use American troops to support the revolt and NATO did not intervene when USSR crushed the revolution. One problem was that Britain and France were fighting Egypt over the Suez at this time and the US backed them.