Mubarak, (Muhammad) Hosni (1928- ),
military leader and president of Egypt (1981- ). He was born in
Kafr-al Meselha, the son of an inspector of the Ministry of Justice. Mubarak was
educated at Egypt's national Military Academy and Air Force Academy and at the
Frunze General Staff Academy in Moscow. Under Egyptian president Anwar al-Sadat, Mubarak served in
a number of military posts, including deputy minister of war from 1972 to 1975;
in 1975, he became vice president. After Sadat was assassinated, on October 6,
1981, Mubarak became president. He instituted a vigorous economic recovery
program; remained committed to the peace treaty with Israel (signed in 1979);
mended relations with other Arab states, which were damaged after Egypt's peace
with Israel; and initiated a policy he called positive neutrality toward the
great powers. He was reelected when his National Democratic Party won the
October 1987 elections and was thus able to nominate him as the sole candidate
for president. With serious economic problems and rising Islamic fundamental
opposition at home, Mubarak continued to seek an end to the stalemate that had
developed between Israel and Arab nations; in 1988 he visited the United States
for talks on that subject. Mubarak, supported the 1990 United Nations (UN)
sanctions against Iraq when that country invaded Kuwait, orchestrated Arab
League opposition to the invasion, committed about 38,500 troops to the
anti-Iraq coalition in the Persian
Gulf War (1991), and supported postwar efforts to achieve peace in the
Middle East. Reelected in 1993, Mubarak cracked down on Muslim fundamentalist
opposition groups after an upsurge in guerrilla violence by Islamic extremists.
Mubarak survived an assassination attempt unharmed in June 1995 in the Ethiopian
capital of Addis Ababa. Five of the assailants were killed during or after the
ambush and three escaped to Sudan, which is widely believed to have sponsored
the attack. In November 1995, just before parliamentary elections, Mubarak's
government accused the Muslim
Brotherhood of helping violent Islamic groups. Many of the Muslim
Brotherhood's members were arrested, and several who planned to run in the
elections or monitor them were tried and sentenced to prison. Critics accused
the government of trying to eliminate even peaceful opponents. In the elections
that followed, Mubarak's National Democratic Party won an overwhelming victory.
Mubarak was elected to a fourth six-year term in 1999.