Some call him “Mubarak’s poodle,” but Egyptian Defense Minister Mohamed Hussein Tantawi remains a power in rapidly evolving revolutionary Egypt.

Yes, sir: U.S Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld (left) and his attentive Egyptian counterpart Mohamed Tantawi in happier days in 2002 (U.S. Department of Defense)
As popular protest engulfed the country in late January, the 75-year old soldier, spoke with U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates. When embattled President Hosni Mubarak responded to the unrest by shuffling his cabinet, he promoted the loyal Tantawi to the job of deputy prime minister. On Friday, Reuters reported that “the US government views Tantawi as a key player in any post-Mubarak administration.”
U.S. officials were not always so favorable. According to a September 2008 Wikileaks cable, independent Egyptian sources (whom the U.S. Embassy described as “valuable interlocutors”) reported that many mid-level Egyptian military officers described Tantawi as “Mubarak’s poodle.” Under his tenure, these observers said, a “culture of blind obedience” dominated the Egyptian army.
A similarly skeptical tone pervaded a March 2008 cable from the U.S. Embassy in Cairo in which the “courtly and charming” Tantawi was described as “aged and change resistant.” Six months later, Ambassador Margaret Scobey advised Washington that Tantawi’s ministry did not “hesitate to fire officers it perceives as being ‘too competent’ and who therefore potentially pose a threat to the regime.” Said the Embassy’s source, “Tantawi has become increasingly intolerant of intellectual freedom.” He reportedly decreed that the Egyptian military was “off-limits” as a subject for research.
As a U.S. ally, Tantawi is not nearly so prominent as controversial Vice President and intelligence chief Omar Suleiman. Nonetheless, Tantawi is almost as central to the Mubarak government’s bid to blunt the burgeoning popular opposition. He visited Tahrir Square on Friday, where according to Emirates 24/7, he “appealed to the crowd to give up their protest in the light of Mubarak’s pledge not to seek re-election in September.”
Tantawi is incapable of promoting change in Egypt, U.S. ambassador Francis Ricciardone concluded in early 2008. Neither he nor Mubarak had “the energy, inclination or world view to do anything differently.” The only benefit of a meeting with Tantawi, Ricciardone told Washington, was to engage his numerous aides on “how to operate as strategic partners.”
While dog-lovers worldwide object, the “poodle” epithet continues to plague politicians deemed slavishly loyal to dubious masters. Opponents of British prime minister Tony Blair assailed him as “Bush’s poodle” for his support of the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Whatever his canine qualities, Mohamed Tantawi, unlike Tony Blair, remains in power.
