- Mushir
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Military ranks of Egypt Turco-Egyptian
ranks (until 1958)Modern
Egyptian ranksU.S. Army
equivalentsOfficers Mushir
مشيرQaid amm
قائد عام5-star general Sirdar
سردارFariq awwal
فريق أول4-star general Fariq
فريقFariq
فريقLieutenant General Liwa
لواءLiwa
لواءMajor General Amirilay
أمير آلايAmid
عميدBrigadier general Qaimaqam
قائم مقامAqid
عقيدColonel Bimbashi
بكباشيMuqaddam
مقدمLieutenant colonel Sagh
صاغRaid
رائدMajor Yuzbashi
يوزباشيNaqib
نقيبCaptain Mulazim awwal
ملازم أولMulazim awwal
ملازم أولFirst Lieutenant Mulazim thani
ملازم ثانيMulazim
ملازمSecond Lieutenant Non-commissioned officers Shawish
شاويشRaqib
رقيبSergeant Ombashi
أونباشيArif
عريفCorporal Soldiers Askari
عسكريJundi
جنديPrivate A Mushir (Arabic: مشير) (Marshal) is the highest rank in most militaries of the Middle East. It is the equivalent to the ranks of General of the Army, Field Marshal, and Fleet Admiral.
Iraq
In Iraq under the rule of Saddam Hussein, the Iraqi navy maintained a fleet admiral rank known as Mushir. A Mushir was the most senior of all naval officers and the rank was rarely bestowed. The sleeve insignia was the same as a British Admiral of the Fleet.
The rank of Mushir in Iraq is known as "Muhib" and is used in all official and unofficial addresses. Saddam Hussein as commander-in-chief of the armed forces was an honorary "staff muhib" (مهيب ركن) in the Iraqi army, and the uniform which he typically wore was that of a staff muhib. He was the only muhib in the Iraqi army, for the minister of defence and the chief of staff held the rank of "Fariq awal rukun" (فريق اول ركن), or "staff general". (Hussein never actually served in the Iraqi Army but commanded as ruler of Iraq.) After Saddam Hussein's fall in the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the rank of Mushir became obsolete in the new Iraqi military.
Saudi Arabia
In Saudi Arabia, the rank of Mushir is typically held ceremonially by the Saudi Royal Family , and translated as "First class Field Marshal".
See also
Categories:- Military ranks
- Middle East stubs
- Military rank stubs
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