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Mohamed Abdel Ghani el Gamasy

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President
  
Anwar El-Sadat

Name
  
Mohamed Ghani

Succeeded by
  
Kamal Hassan Ali

Years of service
  
1941—1978


Allegiance
  
Egypt

Died
  
2003, Cairo, Egypt

Preceded by
  
Ahmed Ismail Ali

Role
  
Commander-in-chief

Service/branch
  
Egyptian Army

Mohamed Abdel Ghani el-Gamasy httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Prime Minister
  
Abd El Aziz Muhammad Hegazi Mamdouh Salem

Born
  
9 September 1921 (
1921-09-09
)

Awards
  
24 Order, Medal and Ribbon from Egypt and other countries

Battles and wars
  
World War II, Suez Crisis, Six-Day War, Yom Kippur War

Similar People
  
Ahmad Ismail Ali, Saad el‑Shazly, Mohammed Aly Fahmy, Anwar Sadat, Golda Meir

Education
  
Egyptian Military Academy

Mohamed Abdel Ghani el-Gamasy (Arabic: محمد عبد الغني الجمسي, 9 September 1921 – 7 June 2003) was an Egyptian Field Marshal (Mushir) and The Commander in Chief of The Armed Forces.

Contents

Early life

El Gamasy was born on 9 September 1921 in Batanoon, Monufia Governorate, Egypt. He was one of two brothers and five sisters. After high school, El Gamassy joined the Egyptian Military Academy and was commissioned in 1941 in an infantry regiment. As a Major, he was GSO-II of an infantry battalion during the 1948 War.

October War

During the War of Attrition, on March 1969, then-President Gamal Abdel Nasser appointed el-Gamasy as commander of the Second Field Army. His appointment was part of a process of rooting out former general commander Abdel Hakim Amer's mostly incompetent loyalists with capable commanders, including Abdul Munim Riad, Saad el-Shazly and Ahmed Ismail. El-Gamasy later wrote that Nasser should have deconstructed Amer's autonomous web of control in the armed forces following the Egyptian military failure during the Suez Crisis in 1956.

El-Gamasy was well known for being the Chief of Operations for all Ground Forces participating in the 1973 October War. He was also appointed by Anwar Sadat as the head of the group that participated in the disengagement talks on 28 October, at "Kilometer 101". Reportedly, he was sad for the lost souls at the war when the American secretary of state Henry Kissinger announced that the president Sadat agreed to pull the main part of the Egyptian forces from the east side of the Suez Canal in exchange of the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the west side of the Suez Canal and retreat back into the depth of Sinai.

Death

On 7 June 2003, El Gamasy died in a hospital in Cairo after a long battle with illness.

Honors

  • Honor Military Star.
  • 1952 Liberation decoration.
  • 1958 United Republic decoration.
  • El-Gamsy was chosen as one of the best 50 military leaders in the world military history.
  • References

    Mohamed Abdel Ghani el-Gamasy Wikipedia