The Fall of the British Empire: Why Global Power Shifted — Fexingo History

Britain 1968: The Kenyan Asian Exodus and Closed Doors

8 min · 9. kesä 2026
jakson Britain 1968: The Kenyan Asian Exodus and Closed Doors kansikuva

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In 1968, Britain rushed through emergency legislation to block the entry of 60,000 Kenyan Asians holding British passports. This episode zeroes in on the 1968 Commonwealth Immigrants Act—specifically the 'Kenyan Asian crisis' that provoked it. Lucas and Luna explore the origins of the crisis in Kenya's Africanisation policy under Jomo Kenyatta, the panic in white Britain stoked by Enoch Powell, the Labour government's sharp U-turn under Harold Wilson, and the painful irony of Empire: a nation that had encouraged migration within its imperial zone now slamming the door shut. They discuss the role of the 'Asian quota' voucher system, the 1965 Race Relations Act's limits, and the moral and legal mess left by fast-tracked legislation. This is the story of how Britain's post-imperial identity was forged not in grand statements but in the desperate, unedifying scramble to keep people out. #KenyanAsians #CommonwealthImmigrantsAct1968 #HaroldWilson #EnochPowell #JomoKenyatta #Africanisation #BritishPassport #Decolonisation #RiversOfBlood #RaceRelationsAct1965 #EmpireWindrush #UKImmigrationPolicy #Kenya1968 #PostImperialBritain #EastAfrica #History #FexingoHistory #1960s Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The 1966 Sterling Devaluation That Broke Britain's Global Reach kansikuva

The 1966 Sterling Devaluation That Broke Britain's Global Reach

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the 1967 devaluation of the pound sterling under Prime Minister Harold Wilson and Chancellor James Callaghan. They trace how the defence of sterling as a reserve currency forced brutal spending cuts, including the withdrawal from East of Suez. Key figures like Denis Healey, the IMF, and the Bank of England's stance are discussed, along with the impact on Commonwealth trade and Britain's diminished global standing. The episode also covers the parallel 'gold war' with France and the rise of the eurodollar market. #SterlingDevaluation #HaroldWilson #JamesCallaghan #DenisHealey #EastOfSuez #IMF #BankOfEngland #ReserveCurrency #PoundCrisis #1967 #Commonwealth #Eurodollar #GoldWar #France #BritishEmpire #FexingoHistory #History #Economics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15. heinä 20265 min
jakson The 1961 Vanguard Rocket Failure That Symbolised Imperial Decline kansikuva

The 1961 Vanguard Rocket Failure That Symbolised Imperial Decline

In this episode of The Fall of the British Empire, Lucas and Luna explore the strange, forgotten story of the 1961 Swiss Cottage Vanguard rocket explosion—a catastrophic failure that became a metaphor for Britain's waning power. On a foggy London night, the Vanguard, a nuclear-capable missile, caught fire during a routine test, melting its own guidance system and collapsing into a heap of twisted metal. The incident exposed deep flaws in Britain's independent nuclear deterrent programme, which had been rushed after the Skybolt crisis and the 1958 US-UK Mutual Defence Agreement. Lucas walks Luna through the technical failures—the faulty oxidiser valve, the lack of a proper fire suppression system—and the political fallout: Harold Macmillan's government scrambling to save face, the growing reliance on American Polaris submarines, and the quiet admission that Britain could no longer afford to be a nuclear power on its own. The episode also touches on the wider context: the 1957 Defence White Paper, Blue Streak's cancellation, and the shifting strategy from bombers to submarines. Vanguard wasn't just a missile; it was the last gasp of an empire trying to maintain a global military posture it could no longer sustain. A revealing look at how hardware failures mirrored imperial collapse. #VanguardRocket #BritishNuclearDeterrent #BlueStreak #SkyboltCrisis #HaroldMacmillan #Polaris #1957DefenceWhitePaper #RoyalAirForce #London1961 #ColdWar #NuclearHistory #ImperialDecline #FexingoHistory #History #UKHistory #MissileFailure #SwissCottageExplosion #AngloAmericanRelations Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen8 min
jakson The 1952 Revolution That Changed Egypt Forever kansikuva

The 1952 Revolution That Changed Egypt Forever

In 1952, a group of young Egyptian military officers known as the Free Officers overthrew the monarchy in a swift, nearly bloodless coup. This episode dives into the internal dynamics of the Free Officers movement—how a disparate group of colonels, majors, and lieutenants, many from humble backgrounds, organized in secret cells across Egypt's garrisons. We explore the role of Muhammad Naguib, the figurehead who became Egypt's first president; the rising influence of Gamal Abdel Nasser, the true mastermind; and the critical support of the Muslim Brotherhood and communists. We also examine the immediate aftermath: the land reform decrees, the dissolution of political parties, and the uneasy alliance with the old Wafd Party. Why did the coup succeed where earlier uprisings failed? How did the Free Officers maintain unity amid competing ideologies? This episode traces the coup's minute-by-minute planning, the crucial seizure of radio stations, and the fate of King Farouk, exiled to Italy. A story of determination, secrecy, and the birth of modern Egypt. #EgyptianRevolution1952 #FreeOfficers #MuhammadNaguib #GamalAbdelNasser #KingFarouk #MuslimBrotherhood #WafdParty #ArabNationalism #MilitaryCoup #Cairo #Alexandria #RaselTin #LandReform #AnwarSadat #ZakariaMohieddin #KhalidMohieddin #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen7 min
jakson The 1947 Burma Independence and the Messy End of Empire in Southeast Asia kansikuva

The 1947 Burma Independence and the Messy End of Empire in Southeast Asia

When we think of the end of the British Empire in Asia, we tend to focus on India and the Raj. But just months after Partition, Britain granted independence to another colony it had held since the 1880s—Burma. The handover was abrupt, chaotic, and left behind a legacy of ethnic conflict that still echoes today. This episode walks through the events of January 4, 1947, when the Union of Burma was born, and the surprising role of Aung San, the charismatic independence leader assassinated just months before his country's freedom. We talk about the Panglong Agreement, the Frontier Areas, the Karen and Shan minorities, and the peculiar way Britain essentially washed its hands of a region it had administered for decades. Why was Burma treated so differently from India? And how did that rush to exit plant the seeds for decades of civil war? This is the story of a forgotten independence, one that complicates the neat narrative of the British Empire's peaceful retreat. #FexingoHistory #History #BritishEmpire #BurmaIndependence #AungSan #PanglongAgreement #Myanmar #Karen #Shan #FrontierAreas #EndOfEmpire #SoutheastAsia #Decolonization #1947 #Burma #CivilWar #EthnicConflict #BritishWithdrawal Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The 1961 Kuwait Operation: Britain's Last Middle Eastern Intervention kansikuva

The 1961 Kuwait Operation: Britain's Last Middle Eastern Intervention

In June 1961, just days after Kuwait gained independence from Britain, Iraq's Prime Minister Abd al-Karim Qasim threatened to annex the tiny oil-rich emirate. Britain responded with a rapid military deployment—Operation Vantage—landing troops by air and sea to deter an Iraqi invasion. This episode digs into the forgotten crisis that exposed the contradictions of imperial withdrawal: a newly independent state asking its former coloniser for protection, the Arab League's divided response, and the quiet diplomacy that forced Qasim to back down. We look at the role of the Trucial Oman Scouts, the RAF's Hunter jets at Kuwait Airport, and the delicate positioning of Kuwait's ruler, Sheikh Abdullah al-Salim al-Sabah. Why did Britain, in the middle of decolonisation, rush back to defend a Gulf sheikhdom? And how did this intervention set the pattern for later British and American involvement in the region? This is the story of the last time British troops deployed in the Middle East under the old imperial framework—and the last time it seemed to work. #Kuwait1961 #OperationVantage #AbdAlKarimQasim #SheikhAbdullahAlSalim #TrucialOmanScouts #RAF #BritishEmpire #Decolonisation #MiddleEast #IraqKuwait #ArabLeague #HaroldMacmillan #JohnHare #Fisherman'sWar #GulfHistory #ColdWar #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13. heinä 20268 min