The Free Officers movement (Arabic: حركة الضباط الأحرار) was a group of Arab nationalist and Nasserist officers in the Libyan Army that planned and carried...
11 KB (1,168 words) - 04:07, 30 May 2025
Free Officers Movement can mean: Free Officers Movement (Egypt) in Egypt who overthrew the Muhammad Ali Dynasty in the Egyptian Revolution, to form the...
1 KB (153 words) - 17:19, 5 December 2023
The Free Officers (Arabic: حركة الضباط الأحرار, romanized: Ḥarakat al-dubbāṭ al-ʾaḥrār) were a group of revolutionary Egyptian nationalist officers in...
17 KB (2,013 words) - 00:01, 25 May 2025
Gaddafi became the de facto leader of Libya on 1 September 1969 after leading a group of young Libyan Army officers against King Idris I in a bloodless...
127 KB (12,924 words) - 06:12, 18 June 2025
King Idris I and resulted in the formation of the Libyan Arab Republic. The Free Officers Movement was led by Colonel Muammar Gaddafi. The government...
25 KB (2,436 words) - 07:27, 25 May 2025
Libya, officially the State of Libya, is a country in the Maghreb region of North Africa. It borders the Mediterranean Sea to the north, Egypt to the east...
224 KB (20,285 words) - 16:35, 8 June 2025
National Liberation Armed Forces of the Free Libyan Republic, formerly known as the Free Libyan Army, was a Libyan military organisation affiliated with...
57 KB (4,879 words) - 01:22, 18 June 2025
Muammar Gaddafi (redirect from 1975 Libyan coup d'état attempt)
known as the Free Officers movement which deposed the Western-backed Senussi monarchy of Idris in a 1969 coup. Gaddafi converted Libya into a republic...
236 KB (26,012 words) - 01:29, 24 June 2025
The Free Papua Movement or Free Papua Organization (Indonesian: Organisasi Papua Merdeka, OPM) is a name given to a separatist movement that aims to separate...
41 KB (4,263 words) - 06:34, 25 June 2025
the Libyan military. These unresolved issues led directly to a second civil war in Libya. Muammar Gaddafi was the head of the Free Officers Movement, a...
256 KB (22,597 words) - 02:32, 22 June 2025
seized power with a Free Officers Movement, which became the Revolutionary Command Council. Like its Egyptian counterpart, the Libyan ASU was the sole legal...
5 KB (450 words) - 15:49, 6 June 2025
The Chadian–Libyan War was a series of military campaigns in Chad between 1978 and 1987, fought between Libyan and allied Chadian forces against Chadian...
67 KB (8,677 words) - 21:10, 1 May 2025
twelve-member governing body that ruled the Libyan Arab Republic after the 1969 Libyan coup d'état by the Free Officers Movement, which overthrew the Senussi monarchy...
17 KB (1,684 words) - 21:29, 29 May 2025
is a pan-Arab tricolor flag originally adopted by the Egyptian Free Officers movement following the 1952 Egyptian revolution. The tricolor flag consists...
9 KB (878 words) - 07:53, 22 June 2025
was King of Libya from 24 December 1951 until his ousting in the 1 September 1969 coup d'état. He ruled over the United Kingdom of Libya from 1951 to...
37 KB (4,439 words) - 19:02, 30 May 2025
The Libyan crisis is the current humanitarian crisis and political-military instability occurring in Libya, beginning with the Arab Spring protests of...
52 KB (4,468 words) - 23:03, 18 June 2025
opposition movement to Col. Gaddafi's rule of Libya. After the 2011 Libyan Civil War, the group's leaders were allowed to return to Libya. However, with...
15 KB (1,447 words) - 19:26, 17 May 2025
Khalifa Haftar (category National Liberation Army (Libya))
November[citation needed] 1943) is a Libyan-American politician, military officer, and the commander of the Tobruk-based Libyan National Army (LNA). In 2015,...
94 KB (7,980 words) - 10:35, 19 June 2025
Umar Muhayshi (category Finance ministers of Libya)
a member of the group of army officers called the Free Officers Movement that brought ousted the royal regime in Libya on 1 September 1969. He was one...
11 KB (1,018 words) - 07:50, 27 March 2025
associated with the Senussi Order organized the Libyan resistance movement against Italian settlement in Libya, mainly in Cyrenaica. The rebellion was put...
51 KB (5,175 words) - 09:18, 28 May 2025
The Kingdom of Libya (Arabic: المملكة الليبية, romanized: Al-Mamlakah Al-Lībiyya, lit. 'Libyan Kingdom'; Italian: Regno di Libia), known as the United...
35 KB (3,608 words) - 02:15, 19 June 2025
distributed for free since the beginning of the campaign. 25 February 2007: The nurses and medic plead innocent to charges of slandering Libyan officers Djuma Misheri...
106 KB (11,801 words) - 19:49, 18 June 2025
Dignity. On 19 May 2014, a number of Libyan military officers announced their support for Gen. Haftar, including officers in an air force base in Tobruk, and...
218 KB (20,009 words) - 01:57, 23 June 2025
Third International Theory (category Arab nationalism in Libya)
Arab world. Similarly, in Libya, on 1 September 1969 a group of Libyan army officers belonging to the Movement of Free Officers, Unionists, and Socialists...
36 KB (4,509 words) - 19:48, 13 June 2025
into being on 27 April 1963. In 1970, after the 1 September 1969 Free Officers Movement coup, there was an administrative reorganization which gave local...
4 KB (378 words) - 17:50, 20 October 2022
the 1980s led to the dissolution of the Libyan regional Ba'athist organisation. The Libyan National Movement (LNM), an Arab nationalist organisation,...
8 KB (735 words) - 21:25, 26 February 2025
Leon Sedov Brigade (category Communism in Libya)
founded in Libya in 2012 by a group of ten to twelve Argentinians fighting against the government of Muammar Ghaddafi. After the fall of the Libyan government...
10 KB (770 words) - 19:02, 10 June 2025
Abu-Bakr Yunis Jabr (category Ministers of defence of Libya)
with Muammar Gaddafi. Later Gaddafi and Jabr became members of the Free Officers Movement which on 1 September 1969 removed King Idris from power in a bloodless...
10 KB (731 words) - 01:35, 27 June 2025
2011 Libyan Civil War, either for the Libyan army or for the rebel National Transitional Council, and returned to Mali after the war. The movement was...
47 KB (4,037 words) - 23:21, 22 May 2025
National Transitional Council (redirect from Transitional Government of Libya)
the 2011 Libyan civil war. After rebel forces overthrew the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya of Muammar Gaddafi in August 2011, the NTC governed Libya for a further...
61 KB (5,099 words) - 23:05, 23 June 2025