October 6 War hero Hosni Mubarak’s biography
Hosni Mubarak, the former president of Egypt,
died
on Tuesday. He was 91. His death was confirmed by his son on twitter today.
Mubarak had entered the intensive care unit after
undergoing surgery two weeks ago.
Last October, he made a rare appearance in a video
published on YouTube where he shared his memories of Egypt’s 1973 war against
Israel, when he commanded Egypt’s air force. It was the first time he had
spoken before a camera since years.
Mubarak said that youth must know the role the
generation that witnessed the October War played to erase the agony of defeat
and restore confidence in the Egyptian Armed Forces.
He had survived multiple assassination attempts. Mubarak
became a president when Islamist radicals in the military shot and killed his
predecessor, Anwar el-Sadat, as he sat reviewing a military parade.
Mohammed Hosni Mubarak was born on May 4, 1928, in
the village of Kafr el-Museiliha in the Nile Delta governate of Minufiya, a
fertile agricultural area.
Mubarak’s father was an official in the Ministry of
Justice, and the son was admitted to the military academy. Mr. Mubarak received
fighter-pilot training in the Soviet Union and in 1972 became deputy war
minister as well as air force commander in chief.
Before becoming president, Mubarak was the commander
of the Egyptian Air Force between 1972-1975. In 14 October 1981, Mubarak was sworn in as
the fourth president of Egypt, after the assassination of his predecessor Anwar
Sadat by Islamists.
In Egypt’s surprise attack on Israeli forces in
1973, the air force under General Mubarak mounted strikes against targets in
support of Egyptian ground forces crossing the Suez Canal to the Sinai
Peninsula.
Mubarak was a war hero for many Egyptians, because
he served as commander of the Egyptian Air Force during the October 6 War in
1973.
El-Sadat, in his 1978 book “In Search of Identity:
An Autobiography,” commended General Mubarak “the complete and stunning success”
of the opening airstrikes.
Mubarak rejected nepotism and
shunned corruption. His early successes were substantial, especially in foreign
policy. He
helped to bring Egypt back into the Arab fold while also calling for peace
between Arab nations and Israel. In the mid-1990s, he helped forge agreements
with Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization, hoping to foster a
Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza.
When he took office Egypt’s external debt was about
$50 billion, compared with a gross domestic product of just $20 billion. Mr.
Mubarak set about improving Egypt’s infrastructure and helped, initially, to
reschedule debt and stabilize the economy. He was also a friend of Washington,
which gave Egypt as much as $2 billion a year in military and economic aid. In
1991, he helped to organize the coalition of Arab armies that had agreed to
join the United States in the Persian Gulf war to push Saddam Hussein out of
Kuwait.