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Egyptian Armed Forces

The Egyptian Armed Forces (Egyptian Arabic: القُوّات المُسَلَّحَة المِصْرِيَّة, romanized: alquwwat almusalahat almisria) are the military forces of the Arab Republic of Egypt. They consist of the Egyptian Army, Egyptian Navy, Egyptian Air Force and Egyptian Air Defense Forces.[6]

Egyptian Armed Forces
القُوّات المُسَلَّحَة المِصْرِيَّة (Egyptian Arabic)
Emblem of the Egyptian Armed Forces
MottoVictory or Martyrdom
Founded1820
Service branches Egyptian Army
 Egyptian Navy
 Egyptian Air Force
Egyptian Air Defense Forces
HeadquartersCairo
Websitewww.mod.gov.eg/ModWebSite/
Leadership
Supreme CommanderAbdel Fattah el-Sisi
Commander-in-ChiefGeneral Mohamed Ahmed Zaki
Chief of StaffLieutenant General Osama Askar
Personnel
Military age18–49
Conscription1–3 years depending on circumstances
Active personnel438,500[1]
Reserve personnel479,000[1]
Expenditures
Budget4.82 billion dollars (in addition to 1.3 billion US aid) [2]
Industry
Domestic suppliersArab Organization for Industrialization

Ministry of Military Production[3]

Alexandria Shipyard[4]
Foreign suppliers
Related articles
History
RanksMilitary ranks of Egypt

The President of the Republic serves as the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces. The Minister of Defence and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, the senior uniformed officer, is Colonel General Mohamed Zaki (since June 2018),[7] and the Chief of Staff is Lieutenant General Osama Askar (since October 2021).[8]

Senior members of the military can convene the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, such as during the course of the Egyptian Revolution of 2011, when President Mubarak resigned and transferred power to this body on February 11, 2011.[9]

The armament of the Egyptian armed forces varies between eastern and western sources through weapons deliveries by several countries, led by the United States, Russia, France, China, Italy, Ukraine and Britain. Many of the equipment is manufactured locally at Egyptian factories. The Egyptian armed forces celebrate their anniversary on October 6 each year to commemorate the Crossing of the Suez during the October War of 1973.

The modern Egyptian armed forces have been involved in numerous crises and wars since independence, from the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, Egyptian Revolution of 1952, Suez Crisis, North Yemen Civil War, Six-Day War, Nigerian Civil War, War of Attrition, Yom Kippur War, Egyptian bread riots, 1986 Egyptian conscripts riot, Egyptian-Libyan War, Gulf War, War on Terror, Egyptian Crisis, Second Libyan Civil War, War on ISIL and the Sinai insurgency.

History

In the early 1950s, politics rather than military competence was the main criterion for promotion.[10] The Egyptian commander, Field Marshal Abdel Hakim Amer, was a purely political appointee who owed his position to his close friendship with Nasser. He would prove himself grossly incompetent as a general during the Suez Crisis.[11] Rigid lines between officers and men in the Egyptian Army led to a mutual "mistrust and contempt" between officers and the men who served under them.[12] Tsouras writes that the Israelis "seized and held the ..initiative throughout the campaign and quickly destroyed the Egyptian defences."[13] In a few instances, such as at the Mitla Pass and Abu Agelia, Egyptian defences were well-organised and stubbornly held, but this did not make enough difference overall. Nasser ordered a retreat from the Sinai which allowed the Israelis to wreak havoc and drive on the Canal; on 5 November, British and French parachute landings began in the Canal Zone but by 7 November, U.S. pressure had forced an end to the fighting.[13]

Within three months of sending troops to Yemen in 1962, Nasser realized that the engagement would require a larger commitment than anticipated.[14] By early 1963, he would begin a four-year campaign to extricate Egyptian forces from Yemen, using an unsuccessful face-saving mechanism, only to find himself committing more troops. A little less than 5,000 troops were sent in October 1962. Two months later, Egypt had 15,000 regular troops deployed. By late 1963, the number was increased to 36,000; and in late 1964, the number rose to 50,000 Egyptian troops in Yemen. Late 1965 represented the high-water mark of Egyptian troop commitment in Yemen at 55,000 troops, which were broken into 13 infantry regiments of one artillery division, one tank division from the Egyptian Armoured Corps and several Special Forces as well as airborne regiments. All the Egyptian field commanders complained of a total lack of topographical maps causing a real problem in the first months of the war.[15]

Before the June 1967 War, the army divided its personnel into four regional commands (Suez, Sinai, Nile Delta, and Nile Valley up to the Sudan).[16] The remainder of Egypt's territory, over 75%, was the sole responsibility of the Frontier Corps.

In May 1967, President Nasser closed the Straits of Tiran to passage of Israeli ships.[17] Israel considered the closure of the straits grounds for war and prepared their armed forces to attack.[17] On June 3, three battalions of Egyptian commandos were flown to Amman to take part in operations from Jordan. But U.S. historian Trevor N. Dupuy, writing in 1978, argues from King Hussein of Jordan's memoirs, My "War" with Israel, that Nasser did not intend to start an immediate war, but instead was happy with his rhetorical and political accomplishments of the past weeks.[18] Nevertheless, Israel felt it needed to take action.

The Egyptian army, comprising two armored and five infantry divisions, were deployed in the Sinai.[19][20] In the weeks before the Six-Day War began, Egypt made several significant changes to its military organisation; Field Marshal Amer created a new command interposed between the general staff and the Eastern Military District commander, Lieutenant General Salah ad-Din Muhsin.[21] This new Sinai Front Command was placed under General Abdel Mohsin Murtagi, who had returned from Yemen in May 1967. Six of the seven divisions in the Sinai (with the exception of the 20th Infantry 'Palestinian' Division) had their commanders and chiefs of staff replaced. What fragmentary information is available suggests to authors such as Pollack that Amer was trying to improve the competence of the force, replacing political appointees with veterans of the Yemen war.[21]

After the war began on 5 June 1967, Israel attacked Egypt, destroyed its air force on the ground, and occupied the Sinai Peninsula. The forward deployed Egyptian forces were shattered in three places by the attacking Israelis. Field Marshal Amer, overwhelmed by events, and ignoring previous plans, ordered a retreat by the Egyptian Army to the Suez Canal.[22] This developed into a rout as the Israelis harried the retreating troops from the ground and from the air.

In July 1972, President Anwar Sadat expelled Soviet Armed Forces advisors from Egypt.[23] The Soviet advisors had significant access and influence previously. When the Yom Kippur War began in October 1973, the Egyptians were initially successful in crossing the Suez Canal and establishing a bridgehead on the eastern bank. In the costly and brutal Battle of the Chinese Farm, the Israeli Defence Force shouldered aside portions of the Second Army on the eastern bank, then crossed the canal and rapidly advanced, destroying surface-to-air missile sites and then cutting off the Third Army. The Egyptians did stop the Israelis seizing Ismailia, however, and inflicted a "stunning defeat" on an Israeli force which had tried to hastily seize Suez City in the Battle of Suez.[24] Peace was only imposed after the United States and Soviet Union stepped in.

When Sadat and the Israelis made peace in the Camp David Accords of September 1978, part of the quid pro quo for the Egyptians accepting peace was that the U.S. would provide substantial military assistance to Egypt. Today the U.S. provides annual military assistance often quoted at some nominal $1.3 billion to the Egyptian armed forces ($1.64 billion in 2023).[25] This level is second only to Israel.[26]

Scholars such as Kenneth Pollack, DeAtkine, and Robert Springborg have identified a number of reasons why Arab (and Egyptian) armies performed so poorly against Israel from 1948 to the 1970s and afterwards; In battle against Israel from 1948, junior officers consistently demonstrated an unwillingness to manoeuvre, innovate, improvise, take initiative, or act independently.[27] Ground forces units suffered from constant manipulation of information and an inattention to intelligence gathering and objective analysis. Units from the two divisions dispatched to Saudi Arabia in 1990–91, accompanied by U.S. personnel during the 1991 Gulf War, consistently reported fierce battles even though they actually encountered little or no resistance. This occurred whether or not they were accompanied by U.S. military personnel or journalists.[28] Later researchers such as Springborg have confirmed that the tendencies identified in the 1980s and 1990s persist in the Armed Forces in the twenty-first century.[29]

Egypt is a participant in NATO's Mediterranean Dialogue forum.

Twenty-first century

 
Egyptian contingent participating in the rehearsal of Republic day parade 2023 in India

In the second decade of the 21st century, the Armed Forces enjoy considerable power and independence within the Egyptian state.[30] They are also influential in business, engaging in road and housing construction, consumer goods, resort management,[30] and own vast tracts of real estate. A significant amount of military information is not made publicly available, including budget information, the names of the general officers and the military's size (which is considered a state secret).[30] According to journalist Joshua Hammer, "as much as 40% of the Egyptian economy" is controlled by the Egyptian armed forces,[31] and other authoritative works such as Springborg reinforce this trend.

On 31 January 2011, during the Egyptian revolution of 2011, Israeli media reported that the 9th, 2nd, and 7th Divisions of the Army had been ordered into Cairo to help restore order.[32]

On 3 July 2013, the Egyptian Armed Forces launched a coup d'état against the elected government of Mohamed Morsi following mass protests demanding his resignation.[33] On 8 July 2013, clashes between the Republican Guard and pro-Morsi supporters left 61 protestors killed.[34] On 14 August 2013, the Egyptian Army along with the police carried out the Rabaa massacre, killing 2,600 people.[35][36] The total casualty count made 14 August the deadliest day in Egypt since the Egyptian revolution of 2011 which had toppled former President Hosni Mubarak.[37] Several world leaders denounced the violence during the sit-in dispersals.[38][39]

In 2018 there were no evident internal cracks within the Armed Forces. The Egyptian Armed Forces’ unrivalled dominance, both in politics and within the security apparatus, appear to be the result of three combined factors: substantial economic interests, a long-time legitimacy buttressed by the army's active involvement in welfare and development initiatives, and the reliance on universal conscription as the main avenue for the successful accommodation of class and social cleavages.[40]

On March 25, 2020, it was reported that two army generals, Shafea Dawoud and Khaled Shaltout, had died from the COVID-19 pandemic in Egypt, and at least 550 officers and soldiers had been infected with the virus.[41][42]

In March 2021, Human Rights Watch accused the EAF of violating international human rights law and committing war crimes by demolishing more than 12,300 residential and commercial buildings and 6,000 hectares of farmland since 2013 in North Sinai.[43]

Structure

The Supreme Commander-in-Chief is the President of Egypt, currently Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. All branches, forces, armies, regions, bodies, organs and departments of the Armed Forces are under the command of the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, who is at the same time the Ministry of Defence and Military Production.

The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) is composed of 23 members, chaired by the Commander-in-Chief and Minister of Defence, and is represented by the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces. Commanders of military areas (central, northern, western, southern), heads of bodies (operations, armament, logistics, engineering, training, finance, military justice, Armed Forces Management and Administration), directors of many departments (officers and Military Intelligence and Reconnaissance), and assistant secretary of defence for constitutional and legal affairs. The Secretary of the Board is the Secretary General of the Ministry of Defence.

Army

Egyptian and Indian special forces training together

Conscripts for the Egyptian Army and other service branches without a university degree serve three years as enlisted soldiers. Conscripts with a General Secondary School Degree serve two years as enlisted personnel. Conscripts with a university degree serve one year as enlisted personnel or three years as a reserve officer. Officers for the army are trained at the Egyptian Military Academy. The IISS estimated in 2020 that the Army numbered 90–120,000, with 190–220,000 conscripts, a total of 310,000.[44]

Air Force

 
Egyptian Mirage 5 at Cairo-West 1985

The Egyptian Air Force (EAF) is the aviation branch of the Egyptian Armed Forces. Currently, the backbone of the EAF is the General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon. The Mirage 2000 is the other modern interceptor used by the EAF. The Egyptian Air Force has 216 F-16s (plus 20 on order).[45] It has about 579 combat aircraft and 149 armed helicopters as it continues to fly extensively upgraded MiG-21s, F-7 Skybolts, F-4 Phantoms, Dassault Mirage Vs, and the C-130 Hercules among other planes. Egypt currently operates 24 Dassault Rafale, a French twin-engine fighter aircraft as of 2019.

 
An Egyptian F16C Pilot

Air Defense Forces

The Egyptian Air Defense Forces or ADF (Quwwat El Diffaa El Gawwi in Arabic) is Egypt's military service responsible for air defense. Egypt patterned its force after the Soviet Air Defence Force, which integrated all its air defence capabilities – antiaircraft guns, rocket and missile units, interceptor planes, and radar and warning installations. It appears to comprise five subordinate divisions, 110 surface-to-air missile battalions, and 12 anti-aircraft artillery brigades.[46] Personnel quality may be 'several notches below' that of the Air Force personnel.[47] The IISS estimated in 2020 that personnel numbered 80,000 active and 70,000 reserve.[44]

Its commander is Lieutenant General Aly Fahmy Mohammed Aly Fahmi.

Navy

The Egyptian Navy existed thousands of years ago, specifically during the Early Dynastic period in 2800 BC.

During the early modern era, in 1805, Muhammad Ali of Egypt became the Wali of the country forming his own autonomous rule over Egypt. To build the empire he always wished, he needed a strong military and so he managed to prepare that military starting with the army then the Navy. During his reign, the Navy already existed but it was only used for troop transportation. Its first engagement was during the Wahhabi War where it was used to transport troops from Egypt to Yanbu in Hejaz. Later in 1815, Muhammad Ali built Alexandria Shipyard to build warships not just transport ships. The Navy then participated in the Greek War of Independence where in 1827 it had over 100 warships and hundreds of transport ships. After the Second World War, some fleet units were stationed in the Red Sea, but the bulk of the force remained in the Mediterranean. Navy headquarters and the main operational and training base are located at Ras el Tin near Alexandria.

The Navy also controls the Egyptian Coast Guard. The Coast Guard is responsible for the onshore protection of public installations near the coast and the patrol of coastal waters to prevent smuggling. The IISS Military Balance 2017 listed the Coast Guard with 2,000 personnel, 14 fast patrol boats (PBF) and 65 patrol boats (including 15 Swiftships, 21 Timsah, three Type-89 and nine Peterson-class.[48]

Other agencies

The Armed Forces Medical Service Department provides many military health services. The Armed Forces College of Medicine in Heliopolis, Cairo, provides medical training. As of February 2020, the AFCM commandant was Maj. Gen. Dr. Amr Hegab.[49]

Egypt also maintains 397,000 paramilitary troops.[50] The Central Security Forces comes under the control of the Ministry of Interior. As of 2017, the Egyptian Border Guard Corps falls under the control of the Ministry of Interior as well. Circa 2020, according to the IISS Military Balance 2020, they comprised an estimated 12,000, in 18 border regiments, with light weapons only (IISS 2020, p. 375). However, that listing of numbers has remained the same at least since the 2017 edition (p375).

Military equipment and industry

 
Egyptian Mi-8 Hip helicopters after unloading troops

The inventory of the Egyptian armed forces includes equipment from the United States, France, Brazil, the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, and the People's Republic of China. This wide range of sources can cause serviceability difficulties. Equipment from the Soviet Union is being progressively replaced by more modern U.S., French, and British equipment, a significant portion of which is built under license in Egypt, such as the M1A1 Abrams tank.

Egypt is one of the few countries in the Middle East, and the only Arab state, with a reconnaissance satellite and has launched another one, EgyptSat 1 in 2007.[51]

The Arab Organization for Industrialization supervises nine military factories which produce civilian goods as well as military products. Initially, the owners of AOI were the governments of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, before the latter governments gave their shares back to Egypt in 1993, valued at $1.8 billion. AOI is now entirely owned by the government of Egypt and has about 19,000 employees out of which 1250 are engineers. AOI fully owns ten factories and shares in two joint ventures, plus the Arab Institute for Advanced Technology.

Military schools

 
Egyptian Military Police

There is an undergraduate military school for each branch of the Egyptian Armed Forces, and they include:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b IISS The Military Balance 2022, p.337
  2. ^ IISS The Military Balance 2022, p.336
  3. ^ "Military Factory". Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  4. ^ "Yearender 2018: Egypt's burgeoning domestic arms industry". Retrieved 2019-12-31.
  5. ^ "Arab involvement in Crimean War 'erased from history'". 2 March 2014.
  6. ^ "Egypt's military: Key facts". Retrieved 2017-04-12.
  7. ^ "Minister of Defence". www.mod.gov.eg.
  8. ^ "Egypt's Sisi appoints new armed forces chief of staff - presidency". Reuters.
  9. ^ Murdock, Heather (February 11, 2011). "Crowds rejoice as Egypt's Mubarak steps down, hands power to military". The Washington Times. Retrieved February 11, 2011.
  10. ^ Varble 2003, p. 17.
  11. ^ Varble 2003, Pollack 2002
  12. ^ Varble 2003, p. 18.
  13. ^ a b Tsouras 1994, p. 127.
  14. ^ "How Yemen was once Egypt's Vietnam". Washington Post.
  15. ^ Aboul-Enein, Youssef (2004-01-01). "The Egyptian–Yemen War: Egyptian Perspectives on Guerrilla Warfare". Infantry Magazine. No. Jan–Feb, 2004. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
  16. ^ John Keegan, World Armies, Second Edition, MacMillan, 1983, p.165 ISBN 978-0-333-34079-0
  17. ^ a b Dupuy 1978, p. 228.
  18. ^ Dupuy 1978, p. 229-230.
  19. ^ Tsouras 1994, p. 191.
  20. ^ Dupuy (1978) lists the 2nd, 3rd, 7th Infantry Division, 6th Mechanised, 20th Palestinian, and 4th Armoured, plus an armoured task force. Dupuy, 239–240.
  21. ^ a b Pollack 2002, p. 60.
  22. ^ Dupuy 1978, p. 267–9.
  23. ^ Colonel E.V. Badolato (March–April 1984). "A Clash of Cultures: The Expulsion of Soviet Military Advisors from Egypt". Naval War College Review. 37 (2): 69–81. JSTOR 44642308.
  24. ^ [1] 2020-01-26 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ . US Department of State. 2009-05-19. Archived from the original on 2011-01-27.
  26. ^ David Costello (February 1, 2011). "Nation locked in a deadly stalemate". The Courier-Mail. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  27. ^ Pollack 2002, p. 146.
  28. ^ Pollack 2002, p. 144.
  29. ^ Springborg, Robert. "Learning from failure: Egypt." The Routledge Handbook of Civil-Military Relations. London: Routledge (2013): 93–109.
  30. ^ a b c Cambanis, Thanassis (11 September 2010). "Succession Gives Army a Stiff Test in Egypt". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 September 2010.
  31. ^ Egypt: Who Calls the Shots? Joshua Hammer| nybooks.com| 18 August 2011| (free online article not complete, does not include quoted portion)
  32. ^ "צפו: סיור וירטואלי במוקדי המהפכה". 30 January 2011. Retrieved 27 August 2016.
  33. ^ Wedeman, Ben (4 July 2013). "Coup topples Egypt's Morsy; deposed president under 'house arrest'". CNN. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  34. ^ "Egypt: Rab'a Killings Likely Crimes against Humanity". Human Rights Watch. 12 August 2014.
  35. ^ "Egypt's Brotherhood to hold 'march of anger'". Al Jazeera. 16 August 2013. from the original on 16 August 2013. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  36. ^ . World Bulletin. 14 August 2013. Archived from the original on 2 October 2013. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  37. ^ Hauslohner, Abigail; Sharaf al-Hourani (14 August 2013). "Scores dead in Egypt after security forces launch assault on protesters' camp". The Washington Post. from the original on 15 August 2013. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
  38. ^ "Global condemnation of Egypt crackdown". Al Jazeera. 15 August 2013. from the original on 25 August 2013. Retrieved 7 September 2013.
  39. ^ "Most world states condemn Egypt's violence". Al-Ahram. 15 August 2013. from the original on 23 August 2013. Retrieved 7 September 2013.
  40. ^ Hussein & Martino 2019.
  41. ^ "Coronavirus hits Egyptian army amid allegations of a cover-up". Middle East Monitor. 2020-03-25. Retrieved 2021-09-17.
  42. ^ "Coronavirus: Egypt's army introduces strict measures to control spread among soldiers". Middle East Eye. Retrieved 2020-04-19.
  43. ^ "Egypt: Massive Sinai Demolitions Likely War Crimes". Human Rights Watch. 17 March 2021. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  44. ^ a b IISS The Military Balance 2020, p.372
  45. ^ "Military Database - Scramble". www.scramble.nl. Retrieved 2019-03-05.
  46. ^ Touchard 2017, p. 58.
  47. ^ Touchard 2017, p. 77.
  48. ^ IISS. The Military Balance 2017. London: Routledge. p. 374.
  49. ^ "News Details". Armed Forces College Of Medicine. 2020-02-29. Retrieved 2021-09-17.
  50. ^ IISS 2020, p. 372.
  51. ^ "Egypt to launch first spy satelllite". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
  52. ^ "Technical Institute of Nursing military of the Egyptian armed forces - Cairo, Cairo Governorate, Egypt - College & University | Facebook". www.facebook.com.
  • Dupuy, Trevor N. (1978). Elusive Victory: The Arab-Israeli Wars, 1947–1974. London: MacDonald and Jane's. p. 228. ISBN 0-356-08090-0.
  • Hussein, Ebtisam; Martino, Claudia De (2019). "Egypt's Military Post-2011: Playing Politics without Internal Cracks". Contemporary Arab Affairs. 12 (1): 55–74. doi:10.1525/caa.2019.121004. ISSN 1755-0912. S2CID 150597455. Retrieved 2021-09-17.
  • International Institute for Strategic Studies (14 February 2020). The Military Balance 2020. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-367-46639-8.
  • Pollack, Kenneth M. (2002). Arabs at War: Military Effectiveness 1948-91. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-3733-2. See also book reviewed in International Security, Vol. 28, No.2.
  • Touchard, Laurent (2017). Forces Armees Africaines 2016–2017. Paris: Laurent Touchard. ISBN 9781545499801.
  • Tsouras, Peter G. (1994). Changing Orders: The Evolution of the World's Armies, 1945 to the Present. New York: Facts on File.
  • Varble, Derek (2003). Essential Histories: The Suez Crisis 1956.

Further reading

  • Norvell deAtkine, 'Why Arabs Lose Wars,' Middle East Quarterly, 6(4).
  • CMI Publications, "The Egyptian military in politics and the economy: Recent history and current transition status". www.cmi.no. Retrieved 2016-01-21.
  • Maj Gen Mohammed Fawzy, The Three-Years War (in Arabic)
  • Ferris, Jesse, Egypt, the Cold War, and the Civil War in Yemen, 1962–1966, Princeton University. ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 2008. 3332407.
  • H.Frisch, Guns and butter in the Egyptian Army, p. 6. Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 5, No. 2 (Summer 2001).
  • International Institute for Strategic Studies (2019). The Military Balance 2019. Routledge. ISBN 978-1857439885.
  • Dr Mohammed al-Jawadi, In Between the Catastrophe: Memoirs of Egyptian Military Commanders from 1967 to 1972 (in Arabic)
  • Hazem Kandil, 'Soldiers, Spies, and Statesmen: Egypt's Road to Revolt,' Verso, 2012
  • Maj Gen Abed al-Menahim Khalil, Egyptian Wars in Modern History (in Arabic)
  • Andrew McGregor, A military history of modern Egypt: from the Ottoman Conquest to the Ramadan War, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006
  • "The Egyptian Armed Forces and the Remaking of an Economic Empire". Carnegie Middle East Center. Retrieved 2016-01-21.
  • Lt Gen Saad el-Shazly, The Crossing of the Suez
  • Witty, David M. "A regular Army in counterinsurgency operations: Egypt in North Yemen, 1962-1967." The Journal of Military History 65, no. 2 (2001).

External links

  • CIA World Factbook
  • FAS
  • GlobalSecurity
  • Department of State, Academics see the military in decline, but retaining strong influence, 23 September 2009 (US Embassy Cables, The Guardian, 2011)
  • Egypt’s Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, The New York Times, February 10, 2011
  • Egypt's military leadership, Aljazeera English, February 11, 2011

egyptian, armed, forces, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, arabic, april, 2019, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, point, trans. This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Arabic April 2019 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 375 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Arabic Wikipedia article at ar القوات المسلحة المصرية see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated ar القوات المسلحة المصرية to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Egyptian Armed Forces Egyptian Arabic الق و ات الم س ل ح ة الم ص ر ي ة romanized alquwwat almusalahat almisria are the military forces of the Arab Republic of Egypt They consist of the Egyptian Army Egyptian Navy Egyptian Air Force and Egyptian Air Defense Forces 6 Egyptian Armed Forcesالق و ات الم س ل ح ة الم ص ر ي ة Egyptian Arabic Emblem of the Egyptian Armed ForcesMottoVictory or MartyrdomFounded1820Service branches Egyptian Army Egyptian Navy Egyptian Air ForceEgyptian Air Defense ForcesHeadquartersCairoWebsitewww wbr mod wbr gov wbr eg wbr ModWebSite wbr LeadershipSupreme CommanderAbdel Fattah el SisiCommander in ChiefGeneral Mohamed Ahmed ZakiChief of StaffLieutenant General Osama AskarPersonnelMilitary age18 49Conscription1 3 years depending on circumstancesActive personnel438 500 1 Reserve personnel479 000 1 ExpendituresBudget4 82 billion dollars in addition to 1 3 billion US aid 2 IndustryDomestic suppliersArab Organization for Industrialization Ministry of Military Production 3 Alexandria Shipyard 4 Foreign suppliersCurrent Brazil China Czech Republic France Germany Italy Poland Russia South Africa Ukraine United Kingdom United StatesFormer Czechoslovakia Soviet UnionRelated articlesHistoryList of engagementsEgyptian Saudi War First Saudi State Egyptian conquest of Sudan 1820 1824 Greek War of IndependenceEgyptian Ottoman War 1831 1833 1838 Druze RevoltEgyptian Ottoman War 1839 1841 Crimean War 5 Cretan Revolt 1866 1869 Serbian Turkish Wars 1876 1878 Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 Egyptian Ethiopian War Urabi revoltAnglo Egyptian WarMahdist WarAnglo Egyptian conquest of SudanWorld War IAnglo Egyptian Darfur Expedition1919 Revolution of EgyptWorld War II1948 Arab Israeli WarEgyptian Revolution of 1952Tripartite AggressionNorth Yemen Civil WarSix Day WarNigerian Civil WarWar of AttritionOctober WarShaba IEgyptian Libyan War1986 Egyptian conscripts riot1999 East Timorese crisisGulf WarWar on TerrorEgyptian revolution of 20112013 Egyptian coup d etatSinai insurgencyYemeni Civil War 2014 present Egyptian involvement in the Second Libyan Civil WarRanksMilitary ranks of EgyptThe President of the Republic serves as the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces The Minister of Defence and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces the senior uniformed officer is Colonel General Mohamed Zaki since June 2018 7 and the Chief of Staff is Lieutenant General Osama Askar since October 2021 8 Senior members of the military can convene the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces such as during the course of the Egyptian Revolution of 2011 when President Mubarak resigned and transferred power to this body on February 11 2011 9 The armament of the Egyptian armed forces varies between eastern and western sources through weapons deliveries by several countries led by the United States Russia France China Italy Ukraine and Britain Many of the equipment is manufactured locally at Egyptian factories The Egyptian armed forces celebrate their anniversary on October 6 each year to commemorate the Crossing of the Suez during the October War of 1973 The modern Egyptian armed forces have been involved in numerous crises and wars since independence from the 1948 Arab Israeli War Egyptian Revolution of 1952 Suez Crisis North Yemen Civil War Six Day War Nigerian Civil War War of Attrition Yom Kippur War Egyptian bread riots 1986 Egyptian conscripts riot Egyptian Libyan War Gulf War War on Terror Egyptian Crisis Second Libyan Civil War War on ISIL and the Sinai insurgency Contents 1 History 1 1 Twenty first century 2 Structure 2 1 Army 2 2 Air Force 2 3 Air Defense Forces 2 4 Navy 2 5 Other agencies 3 Military equipment and industry 4 Military schools 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory EditIn the early 1950s politics rather than military competence was the main criterion for promotion 10 The Egyptian commander Field Marshal Abdel Hakim Amer was a purely political appointee who owed his position to his close friendship with Nasser He would prove himself grossly incompetent as a general during the Suez Crisis 11 Rigid lines between officers and men in the Egyptian Army led to a mutual mistrust and contempt between officers and the men who served under them 12 Tsouras writes that the Israelis seized and held the initiative throughout the campaign and quickly destroyed the Egyptian defences 13 In a few instances such as at the Mitla Pass and Abu Agelia Egyptian defences were well organised and stubbornly held but this did not make enough difference overall Nasser ordered a retreat from the Sinai which allowed the Israelis to wreak havoc and drive on the Canal on 5 November British and French parachute landings began in the Canal Zone but by 7 November U S pressure had forced an end to the fighting 13 Within three months of sending troops to Yemen in 1962 Nasser realized that the engagement would require a larger commitment than anticipated 14 By early 1963 he would begin a four year campaign to extricate Egyptian forces from Yemen using an unsuccessful face saving mechanism only to find himself committing more troops A little less than 5 000 troops were sent in October 1962 Two months later Egypt had 15 000 regular troops deployed By late 1963 the number was increased to 36 000 and in late 1964 the number rose to 50 000 Egyptian troops in Yemen Late 1965 represented the high water mark of Egyptian troop commitment in Yemen at 55 000 troops which were broken into 13 infantry regiments of one artillery division one tank division from the Egyptian Armoured Corps and several Special Forces as well as airborne regiments All the Egyptian field commanders complained of a total lack of topographical maps causing a real problem in the first months of the war 15 Before the June 1967 War the army divided its personnel into four regional commands Suez Sinai Nile Delta and Nile Valley up to the Sudan 16 The remainder of Egypt s territory over 75 was the sole responsibility of the Frontier Corps In May 1967 President Nasser closed the Straits of Tiran to passage of Israeli ships 17 Israel considered the closure of the straits grounds for war and prepared their armed forces to attack 17 On June 3 three battalions of Egyptian commandos were flown to Amman to take part in operations from Jordan But U S historian Trevor N Dupuy writing in 1978 argues from King Hussein of Jordan s memoirs My War with Israel that Nasser did not intend to start an immediate war but instead was happy with his rhetorical and political accomplishments of the past weeks 18 Nevertheless Israel felt it needed to take action The Egyptian army comprising two armored and five infantry divisions were deployed in the Sinai 19 20 In the weeks before the Six Day War began Egypt made several significant changes to its military organisation Field Marshal Amer created a new command interposed between the general staff and the Eastern Military District commander Lieutenant General Salah ad Din Muhsin 21 This new Sinai Front Command was placed under General Abdel Mohsin Murtagi who had returned from Yemen in May 1967 Six of the seven divisions in the Sinai with the exception of the 20th Infantry Palestinian Division had their commanders and chiefs of staff replaced What fragmentary information is available suggests to authors such as Pollack that Amer was trying to improve the competence of the force replacing political appointees with veterans of the Yemen war 21 After the war began on 5 June 1967 Israel attacked Egypt destroyed its air force on the ground and occupied the Sinai Peninsula The forward deployed Egyptian forces were shattered in three places by the attacking Israelis Field Marshal Amer overwhelmed by events and ignoring previous plans ordered a retreat by the Egyptian Army to the Suez Canal 22 This developed into a rout as the Israelis harried the retreating troops from the ground and from the air In July 1972 President Anwar Sadat expelled Soviet Armed Forces advisors from Egypt 23 The Soviet advisors had significant access and influence previously When the Yom Kippur War began in October 1973 the Egyptians were initially successful in crossing the Suez Canal and establishing a bridgehead on the eastern bank In the costly and brutal Battle of the Chinese Farm the Israeli Defence Force shouldered aside portions of the Second Army on the eastern bank then crossed the canal and rapidly advanced destroying surface to air missile sites and then cutting off the Third Army The Egyptians did stop the Israelis seizing Ismailia however and inflicted a stunning defeat on an Israeli force which had tried to hastily seize Suez City in the Battle of Suez 24 Peace was only imposed after the United States and Soviet Union stepped in When Sadat and the Israelis made peace in the Camp David Accords of September 1978 part of the quid pro quo for the Egyptians accepting peace was that the U S would provide substantial military assistance to Egypt Today the U S provides annual military assistance often quoted at some nominal 1 3 billion to the Egyptian armed forces 1 64 billion in 2023 25 This level is second only to Israel 26 Scholars such as Kenneth Pollack DeAtkine and Robert Springborg have identified a number of reasons why Arab and Egyptian armies performed so poorly against Israel from 1948 to the 1970s and afterwards In battle against Israel from 1948 junior officers consistently demonstrated an unwillingness to manoeuvre innovate improvise take initiative or act independently 27 Ground forces units suffered from constant manipulation of information and an inattention to intelligence gathering and objective analysis Units from the two divisions dispatched to Saudi Arabia in 1990 91 accompanied by U S personnel during the 1991 Gulf War consistently reported fierce battles even though they actually encountered little or no resistance This occurred whether or not they were accompanied by U S military personnel or journalists 28 Later researchers such as Springborg have confirmed that the tendencies identified in the 1980s and 1990s persist in the Armed Forces in the twenty first century 29 Egypt is a participant in NATO s Mediterranean Dialogue forum Twenty first century Edit Egyptian contingent participating in the rehearsal of Republic day parade 2023 in India In the second decade of the 21st century the Armed Forces enjoy considerable power and independence within the Egyptian state 30 They are also influential in business engaging in road and housing construction consumer goods resort management 30 and own vast tracts of real estate A significant amount of military information is not made publicly available including budget information the names of the general officers and the military s size which is considered a state secret 30 According to journalist Joshua Hammer as much as 40 of the Egyptian economy is controlled by the Egyptian armed forces 31 and other authoritative works such as Springborg reinforce this trend On 31 January 2011 during the Egyptian revolution of 2011 Israeli media reported that the 9th 2nd and 7th Divisions of the Army had been ordered into Cairo to help restore order 32 On 3 July 2013 the Egyptian Armed Forces launched a coup d etat against the elected government of Mohamed Morsi following mass protests demanding his resignation 33 On 8 July 2013 clashes between the Republican Guard and pro Morsi supporters left 61 protestors killed 34 On 14 August 2013 the Egyptian Army along with the police carried out the Rabaa massacre killing 2 600 people 35 36 The total casualty count made 14 August the deadliest day in Egypt since the Egyptian revolution of 2011 which had toppled former President Hosni Mubarak 37 Several world leaders denounced the violence during the sit in dispersals 38 39 In 2018 there were no evident internal cracks within the Armed Forces The Egyptian Armed Forces unrivalled dominance both in politics and within the security apparatus appear to be the result of three combined factors substantial economic interests a long time legitimacy buttressed by the army s active involvement in welfare and development initiatives and the reliance on universal conscription as the main avenue for the successful accommodation of class and social cleavages 40 On March 25 2020 it was reported that two army generals Shafea Dawoud and Khaled Shaltout had died from the COVID 19 pandemic in Egypt and at least 550 officers and soldiers had been infected with the virus 41 42 In March 2021 Human Rights Watch accused the EAF of violating international human rights law and committing war crimes by demolishing more than 12 300 residential and commercial buildings and 6 000 hectares of farmland since 2013 in North Sinai 43 Structure EditThe Supreme Commander in Chief is the President of Egypt currently Abdel Fattah el Sisi All branches forces armies regions bodies organs and departments of the Armed Forces are under the command of the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces who is at the same time the Ministry of Defence and Military Production The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces SCAF is composed of 23 members chaired by the Commander in Chief and Minister of Defence and is represented by the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces Commanders of military areas central northern western southern heads of bodies operations armament logistics engineering training finance military justice Armed Forces Management and Administration directors of many departments officers and Military Intelligence and Reconnaissance and assistant secretary of defence for constitutional and legal affairs The Secretary of the Board is the Secretary General of the Ministry of Defence Army Edit source source source source source source source Egyptian and Indian special forces training together Conscripts for the Egyptian Army and other service branches without a university degree serve three years as enlisted soldiers Conscripts with a General Secondary School Degree serve two years as enlisted personnel Conscripts with a university degree serve one year as enlisted personnel or three years as a reserve officer Officers for the army are trained at the Egyptian Military Academy The IISS estimated in 2020 that the Army numbered 90 120 000 with 190 220 000 conscripts a total of 310 000 44 Air Force Edit Egyptian Mirage 5 at Cairo West 1985 The Egyptian Air Force EAF is the aviation branch of the Egyptian Armed Forces Currently the backbone of the EAF is the General Dynamics F 16 Fighting Falcon The Mirage 2000 is the other modern interceptor used by the EAF The Egyptian Air Force has 216 F 16s plus 20 on order 45 It has about 579 combat aircraft and 149 armed helicopters as it continues to fly extensively upgraded MiG 21s F 7 Skybolts F 4 Phantoms Dassault Mirage Vs and the C 130 Hercules among other planes Egypt currently operates 24 Dassault Rafale a French twin engine fighter aircraft as of 2019 An Egyptian F16C Pilot Air Defense Forces Edit The Egyptian Air Defense Forces or ADF Quwwat El Diffaa El Gawwi in Arabic is Egypt s military service responsible for air defense Egypt patterned its force after the Soviet Air Defence Force which integrated all its air defence capabilities antiaircraft guns rocket and missile units interceptor planes and radar and warning installations It appears to comprise five subordinate divisions 110 surface to air missile battalions and 12 anti aircraft artillery brigades 46 Personnel quality may be several notches below that of the Air Force personnel 47 The IISS estimated in 2020 that personnel numbered 80 000 active and 70 000 reserve 44 Its commander is Lieutenant General Aly Fahmy Mohammed Aly Fahmi Navy Edit See also List of naval ships of Egypt The Egyptian Navy existed thousands of years ago specifically during the Early Dynastic period in 2800 BC During the early modern era in 1805 Muhammad Ali of Egypt became the Wali of the country forming his own autonomous rule over Egypt To build the empire he always wished he needed a strong military and so he managed to prepare that military starting with the army then the Navy During his reign the Navy already existed but it was only used for troop transportation Its first engagement was during the Wahhabi War where it was used to transport troops from Egypt to Yanbu in Hejaz Later in 1815 Muhammad Ali built Alexandria Shipyard to build warships not just transport ships The Navy then participated in the Greek War of Independence where in 1827 it had over 100 warships and hundreds of transport ships After the Second World War some fleet units were stationed in the Red Sea but the bulk of the force remained in the Mediterranean Navy headquarters and the main operational and training base are located at Ras el Tin near Alexandria The Navy also controls the Egyptian Coast Guard The Coast Guard is responsible for the onshore protection of public installations near the coast and the patrol of coastal waters to prevent smuggling The IISS Military Balance 2017 listed the Coast Guard with 2 000 personnel 14 fast patrol boats PBF and 65 patrol boats including 15 Swiftships 21 Timsah three Type 89 and nine Peterson class 48 Other agencies Edit The Armed Forces Medical Service Department provides many military health services The Armed Forces College of Medicine in Heliopolis Cairo provides medical training As of February 2020 the AFCM commandant was Maj Gen Dr Amr Hegab 49 Egypt also maintains 397 000 paramilitary troops 50 The Central Security Forces comes under the control of the Ministry of Interior As of 2017 the Egyptian Border Guard Corps falls under the control of the Ministry of Interior as well Circa 2020 according to the IISS Military Balance 2020 they comprised an estimated 12 000 in 18 border regiments with light weapons only IISS 2020 p 375 However that listing of numbers has remained the same at least since the 2017 edition p375 Military equipment and industry EditMain article Egyptian Military Industry Egyptian Mi 8 Hip helicopters after unloading troops The inventory of the Egyptian armed forces includes equipment from the United States France Brazil the United Kingdom the Soviet Union and the People s Republic of China This wide range of sources can cause serviceability difficulties Equipment from the Soviet Union is being progressively replaced by more modern U S French and British equipment a significant portion of which is built under license in Egypt such as the M1A1 Abrams tank Egypt is one of the few countries in the Middle East and the only Arab state with a reconnaissance satellite and has launched another one EgyptSat 1 in 2007 51 The Arab Organization for Industrialization supervises nine military factories which produce civilian goods as well as military products Initially the owners of AOI were the governments of Egypt Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates before the latter governments gave their shares back to Egypt in 1993 valued at 1 8 billion AOI is now entirely owned by the government of Egypt and has about 19 000 employees out of which 1250 are engineers AOI fully owns ten factories and shares in two joint ventures plus the Arab Institute for Advanced Technology Military schools Edit Egyptian Military Police There is an undergraduate military school for each branch of the Egyptian Armed Forces and they include Commanders and Staff College Reserve Officer College supervised by General Gamal Elsabrouty Nasser Higher Military Academy Egyptian Military Academy Egyptian Air Academy Egyptian Naval Academy Egyptian Air Defence Academy Egyptian Military Technical College Armed Forces Technical Institute Armed Forces Institute for NCOs Egyptian GIS counter strike school supervised by Lieutenant Colonel Elhamy A Elsebaey Armed Forces Institute for Nursery 52 Thunderbolt School Airborne School Egypt See also EditFlags of the Egyptian Armed ForcesReferences Edit a b IISS The Military Balance 2022 p 337 IISS The Military Balance 2022 p 336 Military Factory Retrieved 21 April 2020 Yearender 2018 Egypt s burgeoning domestic arms industry Retrieved 2019 12 31 Arab involvement in Crimean War erased from history 2 March 2014 Egypt s military Key facts Retrieved 2017 04 12 Minister of Defence www mod gov eg Egypt s Sisi appoints new armed forces chief of staff presidency Reuters Murdock Heather February 11 2011 Crowds rejoice as Egypt s Mubarak steps down hands power to military The Washington Times Retrieved February 11 2011 Varble 2003 p 17 Varble 2003 Pollack 2002 Varble 2003 p 18 a b Tsouras 1994 p 127 How Yemen was once Egypt s Vietnam Washington Post Aboul Enein Youssef 2004 01 01 The Egyptian Yemen War Egyptian Perspectives on Guerrilla Warfare Infantry Magazine No Jan Feb 2004 Retrieved 5 August 2016 John Keegan World Armies Second Edition MacMillan 1983 p 165 ISBN 978 0 333 34079 0 a b Dupuy 1978 p 228 Dupuy 1978 p 229 230 Tsouras 1994 p 191 Dupuy 1978 lists the 2nd 3rd 7th Infantry Division 6th Mechanised 20th Palestinian and 4th Armoured plus an armoured task force Dupuy 239 240 a b Pollack 2002 p 60 Dupuy 1978 p 267 9 Colonel E V Badolato March April 1984 A Clash of Cultures The Expulsion of Soviet Military Advisors from Egypt Naval War College Review 37 2 69 81 JSTOR 44642308 1 Archived 2020 01 26 at the Wayback Machine Scenesetter President Mubarak s visit to Washington US Department of State 2009 05 19 Archived from the original on 2011 01 27 David Costello February 1 2011 Nation locked in a deadly stalemate The Courier Mail Retrieved 2011 02 11 Pollack 2002 p 146 Pollack 2002 p 144 Springborg Robert Learning from failure Egypt The Routledge Handbook of Civil Military Relations London Routledge 2013 93 109 a b c Cambanis Thanassis 11 September 2010 Succession Gives Army a Stiff Test in Egypt The New York Times Retrieved 11 September 2010 Egypt Who Calls the Shots Joshua Hammer nybooks com 18 August 2011 free online article not complete does not include quoted portion צפו סיור וירטואלי במוקדי המהפכה 30 January 2011 Retrieved 27 August 2016 Wedeman Ben 4 July 2013 Coup topples Egypt s Morsy deposed president under house arrest CNN Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 8 April 2021 Egypt Rab a Killings Likely Crimes against Humanity Human Rights Watch 12 August 2014 Egypt s Brotherhood to hold march of anger Al Jazeera 16 August 2013 Archived from the original on 16 August 2013 Retrieved 18 August 2013 NSF spokesman quits over Rabaa Nahda massacres World Bulletin 14 August 2013 Archived from the original on 2 October 2013 Retrieved 18 August 2013 Hauslohner Abigail Sharaf al Hourani 14 August 2013 Scores dead in Egypt after security forces launch assault on protesters camp The Washington Post Archived from the original on 15 August 2013 Retrieved 14 August 2013 Global condemnation of Egypt crackdown Al Jazeera 15 August 2013 Archived from the original on 25 August 2013 Retrieved 7 September 2013 Most world states condemn Egypt s violence Al Ahram 15 August 2013 Archived from the original on 23 August 2013 Retrieved 7 September 2013 Hussein amp Martino 2019 Coronavirus hits Egyptian army amid allegations of a cover up Middle East Monitor 2020 03 25 Retrieved 2021 09 17 Coronavirus Egypt s army introduces strict measures to control spread among soldiers Middle East Eye Retrieved 2020 04 19 Egypt Massive Sinai Demolitions Likely War Crimes Human Rights Watch 17 March 2021 Retrieved 17 March 2021 a b IISS The Military Balance 2020 p 372 Military Database Scramble www scramble nl Retrieved 2019 03 05 Touchard 2017 p 58 Touchard 2017 p 77 IISS The Military Balance 2017 London Routledge p 374 News Details Armed Forces College Of Medicine 2020 02 29 Retrieved 2021 09 17 IISS 2020 p 372 Egypt to launch first spy satelllite The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 2009 03 31 Technical Institute of Nursing military of the Egyptian armed forces Cairo Cairo Governorate Egypt College amp University Facebook www facebook com Dupuy Trevor N 1978 Elusive Victory The Arab Israeli Wars 1947 1974 London MacDonald and Jane s p 228 ISBN 0 356 08090 0 Hussein Ebtisam Martino Claudia De 2019 Egypt s Military Post 2011 Playing Politics without Internal Cracks Contemporary Arab Affairs 12 1 55 74 doi 10 1525 caa 2019 121004 ISSN 1755 0912 S2CID 150597455 Retrieved 2021 09 17 International Institute for Strategic Studies 14 February 2020 The Military Balance 2020 Routledge ISBN 978 0 367 46639 8 Pollack Kenneth M 2002 Arabs at War Military Effectiveness 1948 91 Lincoln and London University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 3733 2 See also book reviewed in International Security Vol 28 No 2 Touchard Laurent 2017 Forces Armees Africaines 2016 2017 Paris Laurent Touchard ISBN 9781545499801 Tsouras Peter G 1994 Changing Orders The Evolution of the World s Armies 1945 to the Present New York Facts on File Varble Derek 2003 Essential Histories The Suez Crisis 1956 Further reading EditNorvell deAtkine Why Arabs Lose Wars Middle East Quarterly 6 4 CMI Publications The Egyptian military in politics and the economy Recent history and current transition status www cmi no Retrieved 2016 01 21 Maj Gen Mohammed Fawzy The Three Years War in Arabic Ferris Jesse Egypt the Cold War and the Civil War in Yemen 1962 1966 Princeton University ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 2008 3332407 H Frisch Guns and butter in the Egyptian Army p 6 Middle East Review of International Affairs Vol 5 No 2 Summer 2001 International Institute for Strategic Studies 2019 The Military Balance 2019 Routledge ISBN 978 1857439885 Dr Mohammed al Jawadi In Between the Catastrophe Memoirs of Egyptian Military Commanders from 1967 to 1972 in Arabic Hazem Kandil Soldiers Spies and Statesmen Egypt s Road to Revolt Verso 2012 Maj Gen Abed al Menahim Khalil Egyptian Wars in Modern History in Arabic Andrew McGregor A military history of modern Egypt from the Ottoman Conquest to the Ramadan War Greenwood Publishing Group 2006 The Egyptian Armed Forces and the Remaking of an Economic Empire Carnegie Middle East Center Retrieved 2016 01 21 Lt Gen Saad el Shazly The Crossing of the Suez Witty David M A regular Army in counterinsurgency operations Egypt in North Yemen 1962 1967 The Journal of Military History 65 no 2 2001 External links EditEgyptian Armed Forces CIA World Factbook FAS GlobalSecurity Department of State Academics see the military in decline but retaining strong influence 23 September 2009 US Embassy Cables The Guardian 2011 Egypt s Supreme Council of the Armed Forces The New York Times February 10 2011 Egypt s military leadership Aljazeera English February 11 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Egyptian Armed Forces amp oldid 1142207522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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