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Nasser
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Prior to founding Meeting Insites International, Nasser was the director of the Eastern Region for Conferon, Incorporated where soon after joining the organization in 1991, he assumed responsibilities for the start-up, management and operation of the company's Washington, DC office. As an active leader in the industry, he has taught several meeting management and hospitality courses in the forum of UCLA's Continuing Education Program and in 1990, received the designation of Master Teacher from the University. Nasser is an active member in several industry associations including: Meeting Professionals International (MPI), Professional Convention Management Association (PCMA), International Association for Exhibition Management (IAEM), and American Society of Association Executives (ASAE). In pursuit of international business interests as well as leisure experience, Nasser has traveled extensively throughout Europe and the Middle East. He is a graduate of the University of California in Los Angeles (UCLA), where he received his BA degree in Mathematics.
Nasser's life-long strategy was neutral Pan-Arabism (and indeed consolidation among the developing nations). In spite of initially good relations with the Western powers, Nasser gradually began to lose their favor and inclined more and more towards the Soviet bloc. On January 16, 1956, Nasser vowed to reconquer Palestine and, in summer 1956, he announced the nationalisation of the Suez canal, which made him unpopular with Great Britain and France, who had shares in the Canal. With the help of Israel (which suffered from Egyptian-led and funded fedayeen raids into its territory) they waged war upon Egypt. However, due to pressure from both the United States and the Soviet Union, the British and the French had to withdraw with their demands unanswered. Though Israel did achieve the cessation of Fedayeen raids (in return for Israeli withdrawal from the Sinai peninsula), Arabs of all countries regarded Nasser's lack of compromise as a victory over the "imperialist enemy", and support for him rose considerably.
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At the end of World War II, Nasser had no combat experience, having never been stationed on an actual battlefield; he would gain battle experience during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, capturing an area called the Faluja Pocket and its surrounding. After WWII, he secured a post as an instructor at the Military Academy in Cairo.[9] For the next several years, Nasser worked to organize his group of other reform minded officers and recruit new members. freedom and the restoration of their country’s dignity”.[11]
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Nasser and King Hussein of Jordan signing defense agreement. During this period, Nasser continually stated his intention to attack Israel, and declared that other Arab nations should support him. Israel responded preemptively to the imminent attack in what became known as the Six Day War. The first wave of attacks by the Israeli air force destroyed most of the Egyptian (and other allied Arab) air forces on the ground. A withdrawal order was issued by the defense minister Abdel Hakim Amer which was a disaster to the Egyptian troops. Most of the Egyptian losses were during this withdrawal. The loss in the Six Day War was one of the most disastrous political blows in Egyptian history and a humiliation to the leaders and people of Egypt.
Buoyed by obtaining Suez, Nasser launched a bold bid for Egyptian leadership of the Arab world and laid the groundwork for an ambitious program of domestic change. On 1 February 1958, Syria voluntarily united with Egypt to form the United Arab Republic (UAR), which was later joined by Yemen. Although the union lasted only until 1961, it gave substance to the rhetoric of pan-Arabism. Nasser blamed the breakup of the UAR on reactionaries and responded by intensifying the revolution at home. A Charter of National Action then committed Egypt to socialism and announced the formation of a new mass political organization, the Arab Socialist Union.
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Nasser was born in Alexandria in January 1918. At the age of fifteen, he took part in anti-British demonstrations. Those who protested ... targeted some in the royal family who it was believed tacitly supported the power Britain still maintained over Egypt by its joint-ownership of the Suez Canal. It was felt by some that the Royal Family was willing to accept this as long as no attempt was made by the British to weaken the family's power within Egypt itself. In 1935, Nasser was wounded in the head by the British during an anti-British demonstration. In 1938, Nasser graduated from the Royal Military Academy and joined the Egyptian Army.
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