Saad Mamoun

Saad Mamoun
Birth name Mohammed Sa'ad Ma'moun
Born 14 May 1922
Alexandria, Egypt
Allegiance  Egypt
Service/branch Egyptian Army
Years of service 1943 - 1983
Rank Lieutenant General
Unit 11th Infantry Regiment
Commands held 17th Mechanized Division (1968-72)
Second Field Army (1972-75)
Central Military Zone (1975-1979)
Director of Military Operations Staff and Assistant Minister of Defence for Morale Affairs(1979-1983).
Battles/wars Suez War
Six Day War
Yom Kippur War

Lieutenant General Mohammed Saad Eddin Mamoun, usually known in English as Saad Mamoun (14 May 1922 – 28 October 2000), is an Egyptian war hero and was the commander of the Egyptian Second Army during the Yom Kippur War. He was commissioned in an infantry regiment in 1943 after graduating from the Egyptian Military Academy. He was wounded in action during the 1956 war as an the commander of an infantry anti-Tank battalion. Along with Mohamed Abdel Ghani el-Gamasy, Hosni Mubarak, Helmy Afify Abd El-Bar and Kamal Hassan Ali, he was one of the heavyweight and close members of President Sadat's inner circle. During the 1977 protests in Egypt, as commander of the Central Military Zone, he is known to have refused to use deadly force against protestors in Cairo and to convince President Sadat to accede to some of the popular demands. After he retired from the Egyptian Army, he served as Governor of Cairo until 1987.[1]

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