He was a member of the central committee of the
PPA-
MTLD in 1947 and served as the
general secretary (who included the
Pied-Noir mayor of Algiers,
Jacques Chevallier), when he joined the new
National Liberation Front. He became an adviser to
Abane Ramdane in Algiers. In August 1956 the
Congress of Soummam appointed him a member of the Algerian National Revolutionary Council and the Committee of Action and Co-ordination of the
Provisional Government of the Algerian Republic (GPRA) along with Abane, Dahlab
Larbi Ben M'hidi, and
Krim Belkacem. He, Abane and Ben M'hidi comprised the political and military triumvirate which directed the revolutionary
Autonomous Zone of Algiers had become the capital of the resistance. He and Abane were responsible for the creation of many projects such as the newspaper
El Moudjahid, the creation of the
General Union of Algerian Workers (UGTA) and the writing of
Kassaman, which would become the national anthem of Algeria. He went abroad in the name of the Liberation front and accomplished much for the organisation such as visiting the capitals of the
Arab states in 1957–58,
London in 1959,
Yugoslavia in 1961 where he attended the
1st Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement as a delegate representing a sovereign state,
Latin America in 1960 and two visits to
China. On August 9, 1961 he was appointed the president of the provisional government and completed negotiations with France, which were started by
Ferhat Abbas. A
cease-fire was proclaimed the day before France officially recognised the national integrity of Algeria. He was welcomed as the country's leader by a jubilant Algerian population on July 3, 1962, the day that independence was recognised officially by France. == Later political career ==