Sunday, October 17, 2010

Hosni Mubarak, President of Egypt

I didn't know Hosni Mubarak as well, but he has been one of our most reliable partners in fighting terrorism and in trying to bring peace to the Middle East. Ours wasn't a peer-to-peer relationship. He was a very important historical figure. He had been president of Egypt since 1981, following Sadat's murder. He barely escaped assassination himself in 1995, while in Ethiopia; four years later, he escaped death again when he was nicked by an assailant's knife. He has a tremendous amount of wisdom, but although a serious man, he also had a lighter side. The October 2000 summit at Sharm el-Sheikh was an example. Umar Suleiman and I had spent the entire day locked in a room with the Palestinians and the Israelis trying to strike a security bargain. When we were through, I went off to brief Yasser Arafat on the details, while Mubarak drowsily took a seat in the corner of the room. Arafat had a way in these circumstances of looking at me as if I were speaking in an incomprehensible foreign language. This was typical of him; he was buying time to think things through. But on this occasion, the situation was not business as usual. From the corner of my eye, I saw Hosni Mubarak, the president of Egypt, host of the conference, and the closest thing Palestine had to a guarantor, looking at me and Arafat and twirling his finger beside his head, the universal symbol for "This guy you're talking to is nuts!" I went on with the briefing--I am a trained professional, after all--but it wasn't easy, especially when Mubarak dissolved into quiet laughter over his little gag.
--George Tenet, Director of Central Intelligence, At the Center of the Storm, My Years at the CIA (2007)

2 comments:

  1. This blog is taking off! And getting some much-needed diversity.

    Thanks for the humorous anecdote; I especially liked this: "Arafat had a way in these circumstances of looking at me as if I were speaking in an incomprehensible foreign language. This was typical of him; he was buying time to think things through."

    ReplyDelete
  2. Much needed diversity? What is that supposed to mean?! I'm not diverse to you?

    Glad you are here, though, Greg. Since we are apparently picking favorite sentences from your passage, here's mine: "The October 2000 summit at Sharm el-Sheikh was an example."

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.