Egypt Training and Education
Egyptian army members participating in joint United StatesEgyptian Exercise Bright Star, 1982
Courtesy United States Department of Defense
Army recruits followed a basic training program that included,
when necessary, some remedial literacy training. After specialized
training, recruits participated in the annual cycle of training
that commenced at the small unit level and culminated in army-wide
exercises. Individuals who volunteered to continue in service as
NCOs attended a command school followed by specialized training and
eventually became eligible for enrollment in an advanced career
school for senior NCOs. Recruits in the navy and air force followed
a similar program of basic training followed by specialized
training. The navy, however, required shipboard service before
specialization.
Five academies trained cadets (midshipmen) for commissioning as
regular officers. The academies included the Military Academy, the
Naval Academy, the Air Force Academy, the Military Technical
Academy, and the Air Defense Academy. The oldest of these, the
Military Academy, was located in Cairo, having been founded after
Egyptian independence in 1922, when British influence in the
military was still strong. In 1936 the Military Academy extended
eligibility for admission to young men of lower-middle-class and
peasant families. Graduates of the academy after the change in
admissions policy went into effect included Nasser, Sadat, and
seven others of the group known as the Free Officers who later led
the 1952 military coup that toppled Egypt's monarchy.
Candidates applying for admission to the Military Academy were
required to have a general secondary school certificate showing
above-average grades. The academy based admissions decisions on the
results of a competitive academic examination, a stringent physical
examination, and a physical fitness test. Sons of military and
police personnel and sons and brothers of men killed in action
automatically received extra points in the scoring process. The
Military Academy's curriculum included comprehensive undergraduate
training and specific training in combat arms. Graduates of the
three-year program were commissioned as second lieutenants. Newly
commissioned army officers received branch training at schools
operated by the infantry, artillery, armor, and several other
branches.
The Naval Academy, located at the Ras at Tin naval base,
offered an academic course comparable to the one offered by the
Military Academy. The program at the Naval Academy, however, also
included shipboard training during cruises that lasted from one to
three months. On graduation, midshipmen were commissioned as
ensigns. Engineers, communications specialists, and other
technicians also graduated from the Naval Academy after following
separate curricula. The Air Force Academy, about sixty kilometers
northeast of Cairo at Bilbays, had a curriculum of theoretical,
technical, and scientific subjects plus up to 200 hours of flying
instruction. In 1988 the Air Force Academy reduced the period of
study from four to three years. The academy also eased the
requirement of a superior secondary school academic record to
emphasize student's aptitude for flying through a series of tests.
On successful completion of flight training and the academic
program, graduates were commissioned as pilots or navigators; those
who did not qualify were given administrative assignments in the
air force or, in some cases, were transferred to another service.
The Military Technical Academy (also known as the Armed Forces
Technical College), was located at Heliopolis. It educated
technical officers for all armed forces and therefore reduced the
need for foreign technical advisers. The Military Technical
Academy's admissions office had more stringent entrance
requirements than the Military Academy; applicants had to have a
superior academic record in secondary-school science courses.
Applicants to the Military Technical Academy also faced more
difficult qualifying examinations in science and mathematics.
Because of their intensive curriculum, graduates were commissioned
as first lieutenants. Selected civilians who made a commitment to
government service could also enroll in the Military Technical
Academy. Under Abu Ghazala, the Military Technical Academy was
upgraded by the grant of scarce resources for research in spite of
retrenchment at civilian research facilities. The Academy of
Military Medicine trained health workers and medical professionals.
In 1986 the People's Assembly passed legislation calling for the
development of a new Military Academy for Administrative Sciences.
The Air Defense Academy, which opened in Alexandria in 1974,
required five years of study leading to a bachelor's degree in
engineering. Additional training followed on individual air defense
systems.
The Command and General Staff College was founded in Cairo in
1939 as the Army Staff College, a name still frequently used. The
school provided training in staff duties and command
responsibilities for selected officers, usually majors and junior
lieutenant colonels. The college provided intensive study of
tactics, logistics, operations planning, and administration. The
duration of the academic program was about eighteen months.
Graduates received masters' degrees in military science and were
considered qualified for assignment to staff positions at the
division level and higher or to command a battalion or brigade.
Completion of the staff college or an appropriate educational
equivalent was a prerequisite for acceptance to senior military
colleges.
Named in honor of Egypt's president at the time, the Nasser
High Military Academy was founded in 1965. It was dedicated to the
advanced education of senior officers of the armed forces and
selected civilian government officials. It encompassed both the
Higher War College and the National Defense College and was the
summit of the officer education system. Studies at the Higher War
College lasted for one year and emphasized familiarity with Egypt's
military, economic, and international situation. This institution,
which prepared students to participate in the formulation of
Egypt's foreign and defense policies, awarded its graduates
doctoral degrees in military sciences and national strategy.
Foreigners were not permitted to enroll, but special courses were
held for officers of friendly countries, such as Iraq, Somalia,
Sudan, and Tunisia. In addition, beginning in 1980 the college held
a number of symposia on African strategic issues and invited
participants from most of the African countries.
The National Defense College admitted qualified applicants who
were either senior officers or ranking civilians from state and
public-sector institutions. The college gave preference to persons
with a master's degree. The academic program, which lasted eleven
months, emphasized national strategic planning and mobilization
problems to develop a civilian's capabilities to hold a leadership
position in state agencies.
Egypt started sending selected officers abroad for advanced
training as early as the 1930s. Between the mid-1940s and mid1950s , hundreds of Egyptian officers attended schools in Britain,
France, and the United States. When the Soviet Union became the
chief supplier of Egypt's arms and equipment, it became the focal
point of foreign military training. After Egypt severed relations
with Britain and the United States in 1967, training abroad was
conducted almost exclusively in the Soviet Union, although a few
officers continued to attend French schools. Although some officers
believed that the standard of instruction in Soviet institutions
was seriously deficient, nearly all Egyptian officers below the
rank of major general at the time of the October 1973 War had
attended staff schools or received specialized training in the
Soviet Union. Since the 1970s, Egypt sent almost all of its
advanced military students to institutions in Western countries.
Data as of December 1990
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