GIS operations which have (eventually) gone public have been much dramatized on Egyptian
TV and cinema. • The GIS caught British
MI6 agents sent to Cairo to assassinate
President Nasser in 1956. • The GIS states that it managed to plant an Egyptian agent among Jewish immigrants to Israel. That agent,
Refaat Al-Gammal, managed to live 18 years in Israel without being discovered. In those years, he established a network of spies in various fields of the Israeli community, though this is contradicted by various Israeli sources, which claim that Refaat was a double agent and helped the IDF to win the
Six-Day War. • In 1970, the GIS managed to hunt an Israeli oil rig while being shipped from Canada to Sinai (occupied at that time). Clandestine GIS agents and
frogmen succeeded in tracing the oil rig to Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, and planted sets of explosives, had them detonated and crippled the rig. Ironically, this was done while the city was full, not only of
Mossad agents protecting the oil rig, but also while it was full of
CIA agents who were guarding the
NASA astronauts during their visit to Côte d'Ivoire. This operation was published in 1985 under the name "Al-Haffar Operation" it was supervised at that time by GIS director
Amin Howeidi (1921–2009). • Perhaps a major success of the GIS was handling the Egyptian "Strategic Deception Plan", which was carried out from January 1970 to October 1973 and aimed to conceal the Egyptian plans to launch a massive operation to free occupied Sinai on 6 October 1973 starting the
October war. The plan included planting false information and hidden implied data in Egyptian president Sadat's speeches and newspapers articles. For example, the GID prepared the military operations and evacuated complete sections of Cairo hospitals to be ready for receiving war casualties. This evacuation that took place a few days before the war started, was done after declaring false information that those hospitals were infected with
Tetanus. The plan included a major operation whose details are still not published. This operation aimed at getting detailed information of American spy satellites covering the Middle East, by knowing the exact trajectories and timing of those satellites the GIS prepared complicated logistic movement schedules for all Egyptian military units to avoid moving mass troops in timings where they could be spotted by satellites. •
Gumaa Al-Shawan who used to provide the
Mossad with false information from 1967 to 1973, he also used to get the advanced transmission devices from the Mossad and give it to the GIS. • During the 1973 war with Israel, the GIS spied on Mossad weeks prior to the surprise attack on the 6 October 1973. The information derived allowed the director and his associates to identify the weakest points on the Israeli front line. A suicide mission to divert the Israeli counter-attack was initiated to halt Israeli movements into mainland Egypt. • An Egyptian spy, Amin K., who worked as a staffer in the
German government's press office had passed information to the GIS between 2010 and 2019. • Under the lead of Elhamy Aly Elsebaey, GIS scored a major success in terms of strategic field between all armies around the world. In 2021, Elhamy Elsebaey leading the informatics of GIS, defended against the largest cyberattack with his optimum system, which he supervised personally with the support of some leads in IT from all over the world. Not to mention his lead to the information cybersecurity system in the Egyptian army. Elhamy Aly Elsebaey is a very well-known name in GIS, yet the public possesses limited information about him. • On November 20, 2001, the
Wall Street Journal published a detailed investigative story on earlier CIA-orchestrated renditions to torture in Egypt. The article described the 1998 arrests of several Egyptian terrorism suspects in
Albania by local authorities. At the behest of the CIA, and the use of unmarked "CIA-chartered plane[s]" the suspects were sent to Egypt, where they were detained and interrogated under torture by GIS. Two of the men were hanged in 2000. The article's authors on WSJ were explicit about the incident's relevance, arguing that it "illuminates some of the tactical and moral questions that lie ahead in the global war on terrorism. Taking this fight to the enemy will mean teaming up with foreign security services that engage in political repression and pay little heed to human rights." ==Director of the General Intelligence==