Education
From 1957-1959 he studied in the Soviet Union the concepts and practicals of Air Defense, and came back to command an Air Defense Brigade.
From 1957-1959 he studied in the Soviet Union the concepts and practicals of Air Defense, and came back to command an Air Defense Brigade.
He was commissioned in a cavalry unit and initially commanded armored platoons and squadrons of the Cruiser Mk I, Mk II, Crusader and Sherman Tanks. In 1952 he was in command of an armored battalion at Alexandria and was crucial during the July coup. In 1953, he was made an executive staff officer in the Defense Ministry.
In 1954 he was promoted to the rank of Colonel.
From 1955 onwards he became interested in the concept of Air Defense and proposed to President Nasser to further extend the existing Air Defense units in the Army. Since the 1930s, Air Defense was considered to be a combat arm of the regular Army.
He was made a Major General in 1963. In 1964, he completed a Doctor of Philosophy in the Soviet Union on Air Defense strategy and became the commander of one of the only two Air Defense Divisions in the Army.
He participated in World World War II, the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, the Suez Crisis, the Six-day War, the War of Attrition and the Yom Kippur War.
After the debacle of 1967, he prevailed upon Nasser to make the Air Defense a separate branch of the Armed Forces, on the Soviet model. Between 1968 and 1971 he raised five new Air Defense Brigades and two new Air Defense Divisions, plus established an Air Defense Academy in 1970 for the training of young officers and conscripts. He was the first commander of the Egyptian Air Defense Command from September 1968 to January 1975 and chief-of-staff of the Egyptian Armed Forces from January 1975 to October 1978.
In this capacity he was also the Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces and a close aide to President Sadat.
He is mostly known for his planning and management of the Egyptian Air Defense Command during the Attrition War and 6 October war and for building "the Egyptian Missile Wall". He resigned as Chief-of-Staff of the Armed Forces owing to opposition with Egypt"s rapprochement with Israel and due to his conflict and rivalry with Hosni Mubarak, a man several years his junior but becoming more important than him in the corridors of power during the Sadat era.
He retired to live in Iraq from 1980 onwards.