Inside Story

‘Victory’ against Israel in 1973 war shaped Egypt but is now a fading memory

Current leader Sissi still uses conflict in effort to rally Egyptians, though figures show 85% of population was not alive at the time

People attend a presentation of a recreated war scene while visiting the "6th of October War Panorama" museum and memorial of the 1973 Arab-Israeli War in Cairo, Egypt, on October 1, 2023. (Khaled DESOUKI/AFP)
People attend a presentation of a recreated war scene while visiting the "6th of October War Panorama" museum and memorial of the 1973 Arab-Israeli War in Cairo, Egypt, on October 1, 2023. (Khaled DESOUKI/AFP)

CAIRO — Fifty years after what Egypt celebrated as its “October victory,” the memory of the 1973 war against Israel that has shaped the Arab nation’s politics and diplomacy is fading.

Successive Egyptian presidents over the course of decades drew legitimacy from their military past fighting Israel.

Egypt’s current leader, President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, is a rare exception. Having only enlisted in a military academy the year the war took place, he did not take up arms against neighboring Israel.

Yet, he has still capitalized on this chapter in national history.

On October 6, 1973, Egypt and Syria launched a surprise attack, pushing Israeli forces seemingly to the verge of defeat before they recovered, supported by a United States airlift.

Within three weeks, a United Nations-validated ceasefire had taken effect.

Egyptian troops crossing the Suez Canal on October 7, 1973 (Photo credit: Wikicommons)
Egyptian troops crossing the Suez Canal on October 7, 1973. (Wikicommons)

On the war’s 49th anniversary last year, Sissi hailed a “day of pride and dignity” that showed “the capability of the Egyptian and his superiority during the most difficult moments.”

His remarks may resonate with Egyptians living through more than a year of painful currency devaluations and inflation which has surged to record levels.

Sissi now leads a nation where young people are the majority, with official figures showing that about 85 percent of Egypt’s 105 million people were not alive to experience the 1973 war and its immediate aftermath.

Decades of war have made the Egyptian military a powerful actor in the country’s economic and business affairs, as well as security matters.

Only one president did not come from its ranks, the late Islamist leader Mohamed Morsi who was elected but deposed in 2013 by then-army general Sissi.

Anwar Sadat, Egypt’s president during the 1973 war, went on to sign a peace agreement with Israel in 1979, setting a precedent for the Arab world.

Egyptian president Anwar Sadat, US president Jimmy Carter, center, and Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin clasp hands on the north lawn of the White House as they sign the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel, March 26, 1979. (AP/Bob Daugherty)

His leadership in war earned Sadat “legitimacy that could substitute for that of his predecessor” Gamal Abdel Nasser, hero of the 1952 revolution which overthrew the monarchy, said historian Tewfik Aclimandos of the Egyptian Center for Strategic Studies.

‘Army of victory’

After Sadat’s assassination by members of an Egyptian jihadist group in 1981, Hosni Mubarak ruled for three decades and also benefited from the October war’s legacy.

Mubarak — Sadat’s air force commander in 1973 — presented himself as a “hero of the aerial campaign,” Aclimandos told AFP.

Today “all that seems quite far for the new generation,” he said.

Young Egyptians “don’t have access to serious books in Arabic on the issue,” and only “people who lived through the war remember the fear and the constraints of wartime economy,” the historian added.

Sissi’s war has not been against Israel but against “terrorism,” particularly in the Sinai Peninsula where jihadists loyal to the Islamic State group have waged a years-long insurgency.

File: Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, center, speaks in front of the state-run TV ahead of a military funeral for 30 troops killed in an assault in the Sinai Peninsula, as he stands with army commanders in Cairo, Egypt, October 25, 2014 (AP/MENA)

Israel captured the vast desert region bordering the Suez Canal during the Six-Day War of 1967, dealing a humiliating blow to Egypt and its military might.

Seeking to restore a sense of dignity as well as its image in the Arab world and the broader Cold War-era Non-Aligned Movement, Egypt made Sinai the heart of its 1973 military campaign.

On October 6, Egyptian forces crossed the Suez Canal in their surprise attack during the fast of Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement that is the holiest day in the Jewish calendar.

At the same time, Syria and other Arab allies attacked the Golan Heights — held to this day by Israel, which annexed it in a move not recognized by the UN.

Related: Yom Kippur War was a needed ‘slap in face,’ says vet who helped reverse battle’s tide

Israeli forces eventually repelled the Arab attacks.

Cairo regained some territory in Sinai during the war, but only brought the entire peninsula back into Egyptian hands under the 1979 peace deal.

The events left Egypt’s military “an army of victory, contrary to the army of defeat of 1967,” said Amr al-Shobaki, a political analyst with the Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies.

File: Egypt’s then-president Hosni Mubarak (2nd-R) and then-defense minister Mohamed Hussein Tantawi (R) review Egyptian soldiers during a military parade to mark the 25th anniversary of the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, outside Cairo, Egypt, on October 6, 1998. (Amr Nabil/AFP)

‘Right choice’

The October war confirmed Egypt’s exit from the Soviet Union’s sphere of security influence, “and secured its position within a wider security paradigm in the West,” said H. A. Hellyer of the Royal United Services Institute in London.

Egypt became one of the largest recipients of US military aid, which this year exceeds $1.2 billion.

In a “world with different poles of influence,” Egypt “doesn’t want to alienate Russia, China or India” while maintaining close ties with its US, Gulf and Western allies, Hellyer told AFP.

Cairo now is far from alone in the region in recognizing Israel, which at the time provoked anger across the Arab and Muslim world — including from the assassins who killed Sadat.

Jordan signed a peace agreement in 1994.

In 2020, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Morocco all normalized relations with Israel under US-backed deals. Washington is pushing for a similar pact between Saudi Arabia and Israel.

“Sadat wouldn’t have been surprised,” said Shobaki. “At the time, he was totally convinced he had made the right choice by signing the peace.”

But while governments may make amends, ordinary people have not been convinced. For many Egyptians, Israel remains a bitter enemy.

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