Free Officers movement (Egypt)

Free Officers movement
حركة الضباط الأحرار
The flag of the Egyptian Revolution and Egypt (1953–1958)
Active1949–1953
CountriesEgypt Kingdom of Egypt
United Kingdom Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
Engagements1948 Arab–Israeli War
1952 Egyptian Revolution
Commanders
CommandersMohamed Naguib
Gamal Abdel Nasser
Abdel Hakim Amer
Abdel Latif Boghdadi
Zakaria Mohieddin
Eight men in dressed in military uniform, posing in a room around a rectangular table. All the men, except for third and fifth persons from the left are seated. The third and fifth person from the left are standing.
The Free Officers after toppling the monarchy, 1953. Counterclockwise: Zakaria Mohyeddin, Abdel Latif Boghdadi, Kamal Eddine Hessien (standing), Nasser (seated), Abdel Hakim Amer, Mohamed Naguib, Youssef Sedeek and Ahmad Shawki

The Free Officers (Arabic: حركة الضباط الأحرار, romanizedḤarakat al-dubbāṭ al-ʾaḥrār) were a group of revolutionary Egyptian nationalist officers in the Egyptian Armed Forces and Sudanese Armed Forces that instigated the Egyptian revolution of 1952. Initially started as a small rebellion military cell under Abdel Moneim Abdel Raouf, which included Gamal Abdel Nasser, Hussein Hamouda, Khaled Mohieddin, Kamal el-Din Hussein, Salah Nasr, Abdel Hakim Amer, and Saad Tawfik, it operated as a clandestine movement of junior officers who were veterans of the Palestine War of 1948-1949 as well as earlier nationalist uprisings in Egypt in the 1940s.[1][2] The nationally respected war hero Mohamed Naguib joined the Free Officers in 1949. Naguib's hero status, and influence within the army, granted the movement credibility, both within the military and the public at large. He became the official leader of the Free Officers during the turmoil leading up the revolution that toppled King Farouk in 1952. The Movement was succeeded by the Revolutionary Command Council after the overthrow of Farouk that was later succeeded by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.[3]

  1. ^ Hussein Mohamed Ahmed Hamouda, Asrār Ḥarakat aḍ-Ḍubbāṭ al-ʾAḥrār wa l-Ikhwān al-Muslimūn, al-Zahrā' al-i'lām al-'arabī (1994), Chapter 6, section 4: see http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/9434122
  2. ^ Abou-El-Fadl, Reem, ed. (2018), "The Free Officers in Opposition: Imagining Revolution", Foreign Policy as Nation Making: Turkey and Egypt in the Cold War, The Global Middle East, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 101–122, doi:10.1017/9781108566025.004, ISBN 978-1-108-47504-4, retrieved 2023-08-29
  3. ^ Stenner, David (2019). Globalizing Morocco. Stanford University Press. p. 72.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)

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