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Egyptian Artillery Corps | |
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سلاح المدفعية المصرية | |
Active | 1824 - present |
Allegiance | Egypt |
Branch | Egyptian Army |
Role | Artillery |
Garrison/HQ | Abbassia, Cairo |
Motto(s) | Valor, Pride, Honor |
Commanders | |
Current commander | Major General Ashraf Faris |
Notable commanders | Major General Abd Al-Halim Abu-Ghazala Major General Muhammad Saeed El Mahi |
The Egyptian Artillery Corps is one of the oldest branches of the Egyptian Army, formed in the early 19th century. Its most notable action was during Operation Badr in the Yom Kippur War. The Artillery Corps is responsible for unit support and more general, echelons-above-division fire support.
During Operation Badr in 1973, artillery strikes starting at 14:05 of nearly 2,000 pieces against the Bar-Lev line fortifications, and against armor concentration areas and artillery positions, using field guns, howitzers, mortars, tank guns, B-10 and B-11 recoilless rifles. The self-propelled 152 mm howitzers and 130 mm field guns were assigned counter-battery fire missions against Israeli artillery. The 53-minute-long fire preparation, one of the largest in history, was divided into four barrages. The first, fifteen minutes long, was aimed at enemy targets on the eastern bank up to a depth of 1.5 kilometers. An estimated 10,500 shells were fired against Israeli targets in the first minute alone.[1]