Everything about Anwar El-sadat totally explained
Muhammad Anwar El Sadat Arabic:
محمد أنور السادات (
December 25,
1918 -
October 6,
1981) was the third
President of Egypt, serving from
October 15,
1970 until his assassination on October 6, 1981. He was a senior member of the
Free Officers group that overthrew the
Muhammad Ali Dynasty in the
Egyptian Revolution of 1952, and a close
confidant of
Gamal Abdel Nasser, whom he succeeded as President in 1970.
In his eleven years as president changed Egypt's direction, departing from some of the economic and political principles of
Nasserism by reinstituting the
multi-party system and launching the
Infitah. His leadership in the
October War of 1973 and the regaining
Sinai made him an Egyptian hero. His visit to Israel and the eventual
Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty won him the Courage of Conscience award September 11, 1991, but was enormously unpopular with the
Arab world and
Islamists, and resulted in Egypt being expelled from the
Arab League.
Early life
Anwar El Sadat was born on
December 25,
1918 in
Mit Abu al-Kum, al-Minufiyah, Egypt to a poor family, one of 13 brothers and sisters. His father was
Egyptian, and his mother was
Sudanese. He spent his early childhood under the care of his grandmother, who told him stories revolving around resistance to the British occupation and drawing on contemporary history. One of his childhood heroes was Zahran, the alleged hero of Denshway, who resisted the British in a farmer protest. According to the story, a British soldier is killed. Zahran was the first Egyptian hung in retribution for the soldier's death. Stories like the Ballad of Zahran introduced Sadat to Egyptian nationalism, a value he held throughout his life. He graduated from the Royal Military Academy in
Cairo in 1938 and was appointed in the Signal Corps. He entered the army as a second lieutenant and was posted in Sudan (Egypt and Sudan were one country at the time). There, he met
Gamal Abdel Nasser, and along with several other junior officers they formed the secret
Free Officers Movement committed to freeing Egypt from
British domination and royal corruption.
During
the Second World War he was imprisoned by the British for his efforts to obtain help from the
Axis Powers in expelling the occupying British forces. Along with his fellow Free Officers, Sadat participated in the military coup known as the
Egyptian Revolution of 1952 which overthrew
King Farouk I. After the coup, he was assigned to take over the radio networks to announce the news of the revolution to the Egyptian people.
In 1964, after holding many positions in the Egyptian government, he was chosen to be
vice president by President Nasser. He served in that capacity until 1966, and again from 1969 to 1970.
During Nasser's presidency
During the presidency of Gamal Abdel Nasser, Sadat was appointed
Minister of State in 1954. In 1959, he assumed the position of
Secretary to the National Union. Sadat was the President of the
National Assembly (1960-1968) and then vice president and member of the Presidential Council in 1964. He was reappointed as vice president again in December 1969.
Presidency
After Nasser's death in 1970, Sadat succeeded him as President, but it was widely considered that his presidency would be short-lived. Viewing him as having been little more than a puppet of the former President, Nasser's supporters in government settled on Sadat as someone they could easily manipulate. Nasser's supporters were well satisfied for six months until Sadat instituted
The Corrective Revolution and purged Egypt of most of its other leaders and other elements of the Nasser era.
In 1971, Sadat endorsed in a letter the peace proposals of
UN negotiator
Gunnar Jarring which seemed to lead to a full peace with
Israel on the basis of Israel's withdrawal to its pre-war borders. This peace initiative failed as neither the United States nor Israel accepted the terms as discussed then.
Sadat likely perceived that Israel's desire to negotiate was directly correlated to how much of a military threat they perceived from Egypt, which, after the
Six-Day War of 1967, was at an all time low. Israel also viewed the most substantial part of the Egyptian threat as the presence of Soviet equipment and personnel (in the thousands at this time). It was for those reasons that Sadat expelled the Soviet military advisers from Egypt and proceeded to whip his army into shape for a renewed confrontation with Israel.
On
October 6,
1973, in conjunction with
Hafez al-Assad of
Syria, Sadat launched the
October War, known in Israel as the Yom Kippur War, a surprise attack to recapture occupied
Sinai. The Egyptian performance in the initial stages of the war (see
The Crossing) astonished both Israel and the Arab World as Egyptian forces pressed approximately 15 km into the
Sinai Peninsula beyond the
Bar Lev Line. This line is popularly thought to have been an impregnable defensive chain. Indeed the Egyptian performance was highly praised by Jewish American military strategist
Edward Luttwak in an article that appeared in the
Jerusalem Post in the wake of the
2006 Lebanon War:
As the war progressed, three divisions of the Israeli army (IDF) led by then
General Ariel Sharon had crossed the
Suez Canal, encircling the Egyptian Third Army. Prompted by an agreement between the United States and Egypt's Soviet allies, the
United Nations Security Council passed
Resolution 338 on
October 24,
1973, calling for an immediate ceasefire.
The initial Egyptian and Syrian victories in the war restored popular morale throughout Egypt and the Arab World, and for many years after Sadat was known as the "hero of the Crossing". Israel recognized Egypt as a formidable foe, and Egypt's renewed political significance eventually led to regaining and reopening the Suez Canal through the peace process.
On
November 19,
1977, Sadat became the first Arab leader to officially visit Israel when he met with Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem Begin, and spoke before the
Knesset in
Jerusalem about his views on how to achieve a comprehensive peace to the
Arab-Israeli conflict, which included the full implementation of
UN Resolutions 242 and 338. He made the visit after receiving an invitation from Begin and once again sought a permanent peace settlement. This visit went against the U.S. and Soviet Union’s intentions, which were to revive the international
Geneva Conference. In 1978, this resulted in the
Camp David Peace Agreement, for which Sadat and Begin received the
Nobel Peace Prize.
The action, which gained wide support among Egyptians was extremely unpopular in the Arab World and the wider Muslim World. His predecessor Nasser had made Egypt an icon of Arab nationalism, an ideology that appeared to be sidelined by an Egyptian orientation following the 1973 war (see
Egypt#Identity). By signing the accords, many non-Egyptian Arabs believed Sadat had put Egypt's interests ahead of Arab unity, betraying Nasser's
pan-Arabism, and destroyed the vision of a united "Arab front" and elimination of the "Zionist Entity." Sadat's shift towards a strategic relationship with the U.S. was also seen as a betrayal by many. In the United States, his peace moves gained him popularity among some
Evangelical circles. He was awarded the Prince of Peace Award by
Pat Robertson (External Link
)
In 1979, the
Arab League expelled Egypt in the wake of the Egyptian-Israel peace agreement, and the League moved its headquarters from
Cairo to
Tunis. It wasn't until 1989 that the League re-admitted Egypt as a member, and returned its headquarters to Cairo. Many believed that only a threat of force would make Israel negotiate over the
West Bank and
Gaza Strip, and the Camp David accords removed the possibility of Egypt, the major Arab military power, from providing such a threat. As part of the peace deal, Israel withdrew from the Sinai peninsula in phases, returning the entire area to Egypt on
April 25,
1982.
In January 1977, a series of "Bread Riots" protested Sadat's economic liberalization and specifically a government decree lifting price controls on basic necessities like bread. 120 buses and hundreds of buildings burned in Cairo alone. Dozens of nightclubs on the famous Pyramids Street were sacked by Islamists. Following the riots the government reversed itself and recontrolled prices.
Unpopularity and conspiracy theories
The last years of Sadat's reign were marked by turmoil and there were several allegations of corruption against him and his family.
Near the end of his presidency, most of Sadat's advisors resigned in protest of his internal policies. The deaths of the Defense Minister Ahmed Badawi and 13 senior Egyptian Army officers in a helicopter crash on
March 6 1981 near the
Libyan border increased the public anger at Sadat and his policy.
Islamists were enraged by Sadat's Sinai treaty with Israel, particularly the radical
Egyptian Islamic Jihad. According to interviews and information gathered by journalist
Lawrence Wright, the group was recruiting military officers and accumulating weapons, waiting for the right moment to launch "a complete overthrow of the existing order" in Egypt. Chief strategist of El-Jihad was Aboud el-Zumar, a colonel in the military intelligence whose "plan was to kill the main leaders of the country, capture the headquarters of the army and State Security, the telephone exchange building, and of course the radio and television building, where news of the Islamic revolution would then be broadcast, unleashing - he expected - a popular uprising against secular authority all over the country."
In February 1981, Egyptian authorities were alerted to El-Jihad's plan by the arrest of an operative carrying crucial information. In September, Sadat ordered a highly unpopular roundup of more than 1500 people, including many Jihad members, but also intellectuals and activists of all ideological stripes, imprisoning communists, Nasserists, feminists, Islamists, homosexuals, Coptic Christian clergy, university professors, journalists and members of student groups.
The round up missed a Jihad cell in the military led by Lieutenant Khaled Islambouli, who succeeded in assassinating Anwar Sadat that October.
According to Tala'at Qasim, ex-head of the Gama'a Islamiyya interviewed in
Middle East Report, it wasn't Islamic Jihad but the Islamic Group that organized the assassination and recruited the assassin (Islambuli). Members of the Group's 'Maglis el-Shura' ('Consultative Council') - headed by the famed 'blind shaykh' - were arrested two weeks before the killing, but they didn't disclose the existing plans and Islambuli succeeded in assassinating Sadat.
Assassination and aftermath
On
October 6,
1981, the month after the crackdown, Sadat was assassinated during the annual 6th October victory parade in Cairo. A
fatwā approving the assassination had been obtained from
Omar Abdel-Rahman, a cleric later convicted in the U.S. for his role in the
1993 World Trade Center bombing. Sadat was protected by four layers of security and the army parade should have been safe due to
ammunition-seizure rules. However, the officers in charge of that procedure were on
hajj to
Mecca.
As air force
Mirage jets flew overhead, distracting the crowd, a troop truck halted before the presidential reviewing stand, and a lieutenant strode forward. Sadat stood to receive his salute, whereupon the assassins rose from the truck, throwing grenades and firing
assault rifle rounds. The attack lasted about two minutes. The lead assassin
Khalid Islambouli shouted "Death to
Pharaoh!" as he ran towards the stand and shot Sadat. After he fell to the floor people around Sadat threw chairs on his body to try to protect him from the bullets. 11 others were killed, including the
Cuban ambassador and a
Coptic Orthodox bishop, and 28 were wounded, including
James Tully, the
Irish Minister for Defence, and four U.S. military liaison officers. Sadat was then rushed to a hospital, but was declared dead within hours. This was the first time in Egyptian history that the head of state had been assassinated by an Egyptian citizen. Two of the attackers were killed and the others were arrested by military police on-site. Islambouli was later found guilty and was executed in April 1982.
In conjunction with the assassination, an insurrection was organized in Asyut in Upper Egypt. Rebels took control of the city for a few days and 68 policemen and soldiers were killed in the fighting. Government control wasn't restored until paratroopers from Cairo arrived. Most of the militants convicted of fighting received light sentences and served only three years in prison.
Sadat was succeeded by his vice president
Hosni Mubarak, whose hand was injured during the attack. Sadat's funeral was attended by a record number of dignitaries from around the world, including a rare simultaneous attendance by three former U.S. presidents:
Gerald Ford,
Jimmy Carter and
Richard Nixon. No Arab heads of state attended the funeral, apart from Sudan's President
Gaafar Nimeiry. Only 2 of 24 states in the
Arab league sent representatives at all (Somalia and Oman). Sadat was buried in the unknown soldier memorial in Cairo.
Over three hundred Islamic radicals were indicted in the trial of assassin Khalid Islambouli, including
Ayman al-Zawahiri, Omar Abdel-Rahman and
Abd al-Hamid Kishk. The trial was covered by the international press and Zawahiri's knowledge of English made him the de facto spokesman for the defendants. Zawahiri was released from prison in 1984, before travelling to
Afghanistan and forging a close relationship with
Osama Bin Laden.
Despite these facts, the nephew of the late President, Talaat al-Sadat, claimed that the assassination was an international conspiracy. On
October 31,
2006, he was sentenced to a year in prison for defaming Egypt's armed forces, less than a month after he gave the interview accusing Egyptian generals of masterminding his uncle's assassination. In an interview with a Saudi television channel, he also claimed both the United States and Israel were involved: "No one from the special personal protection group of the late president fired a single shot during the killing, and not one of them has been put on trial," he said.
Family
Sadat was married twice. He was first married to Ehsan Madi at age 22, and divorced her ten years later, just 17 days after the birth of their third daughter, Camelia. He then married Jehan Raouf (later known as
Jehan Sadat), who was barely 16 at the time, on
May 29,
1949, and they'd one son. Jehan Sadat was the 2001 recipient of the
Pearl S. Buck Award
. Anwar Sadat's
autobiography,
In Search of Identity, was published in the USA in 1977. Currently, Mrs. Sadat is an Associate Resident Scholar at the University of Maryland where The Anwar Sadat Chair for Development and Peace was established and fully endowed in 1997 to honor her husband's legacy. A nephew,
Talaat Sadat, was imprisoned in October 2006 for accusing the Egyptian military of complicity in his uncle's assassination.
Media portrayals of Anwar Sadat
In 1983,
Sadat, a miniseries, aired on U.S. television with
Oscar-winning actor
Louis Gossett, Jr. in the title role, though it was temporarily banned by the Egyptian government due to historical inaccuracies as reported by a former officer in the Ministry of the Interior,
Ahmed Y. Zohny, who was a
Ph.D. candidate at the
University of Pittsburgh at the time. The two-part series earned Gossett an
Emmy nomination.
The first Egyptian depiction of Sadat's life came in 2001, when
Ayam El-Sadat (English: Days of Sadat) was released in Egyptian Cinemas. The movie was a major success in Egypt, and was hailed as
Ahmed Zaki's greatest performance to date.
Bibliography
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