256 of an Egypt enjoying the national prerogatives and inter- national position of a Sovereign State, but closely wedded to the British Empire by a treaty guarantee of common aims and interests/' Nevertheless, this con- cession of the whole principle of national sovereignty did not conceal certain very practical derogations from it. Thus the Treaty maintained British troops in Egypt. Whereas the Egyptians demanded that they should be restricted to the Canal zone. It transferred to British financial and judicial advisers—that is, to British imperial control—the international controls of the Debt Com- mission and of the Judicial Capitulations. Whereas Egyptians had come to look upon these international institutions as a protection against British imperialism. It modified the Anglo-Egyptian condominium over the Sudan by putting all the Egyptian forces there under the British Governor-General. Whereas Egyptians saw in the unworkable arrangement by which the British Governor of the Sudan was also the Commander-in- Chief in Egypt (Sirdar), a valuable survival of the sovereign rights that they claimed over the Sudan. It provided for the Egyptian interests in the Nile waters of the Sudan by a board of three Conservators representing Egypt, the Sudan, and Uganda; which, though in appearance fair enough, did actually secure to the British a permanent majority. All these provisions had not only reasonable but almost irrefutable arguments in their favour. But Egyptian nationalism, under guidance of the Wafd, was now in opposition and more concerned with asserting itself than with arranging as to conflicting rights and responsibili- ties. Opposition had also declared itself in Great Britain to a dilatory diplomatising that was being continually driven by fresh disorders into fresh discomfitures. The