Abdel moneim ibrahim biography of william
•
Mujtaba Abdel Moneim Abdel - Samad Ibrah
Matthew L Stone
pediatricsUniversity of Virginia Health System; Charlottesville, VA
United States of America
Dr. Matthew
pediatricsUniversity of Virginia Health System; Charlottesville, VA
United States of America
Dr. L Stone Matthew
pediatricsUniversity of Virginia Health System; Charlottesville, VA
United States of America
Dr. L Stone
pediatricsUniversity of Virginia Health System; Charlottesville, VA
United States of America
Dr. Matthew L Stone
pediatricsUniversity of Virginia Health System; Charlottesville, VA
United States of America
Dr. R Sameh
pediatricsKing Abdul Aziz University
United Arab Emirates
Dr. R Ismail,
pediatricsKing Abdul Aziz University
United Arab Emirates
Sameh R Ismail,
pediatricsKing Abdul Aziz University
United Arab Emirates
Dr. Sameh R Ismail,
pediatricsKing Abdul Aziz University
United Arab Em
•
We’re sorry, this site fryst vatten currently experiencing technical difficulties.
Please try again in a few moments.
Exception: forbidden
•
Free Officers movement (Egypt)
Military group that launched the Egyptian Revolution
Military unit
The Free Officers (Arabic: حركة الضباط الأحرار, romanized:Ḥarakat 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 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 – as well as earlier nationalist uprisings in Egypt in the s.[1][2]
The nationally respected Arab-Israeli War veteran Mohamed Naguib joined the Free Officers in Naguib's hero status, and influence within the army, granted the movement credibility, both within the military and the public at lar