On 11 February 2011, when President
Hosni Mubarak resigned, after 18 days of protests from the Egyptian people,
Field Marshal Tantawi transferred authority to the
Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, headed by himself. The council, overseeing issues with the Chairman of the
Supreme Constitutional Court,
Farouk Sultan, dissolved the Egyptian parliament, oversaw the
referendum over temporary constitutional amendments which took place on 19 March, and presided over summons to justice, for accountability, of
Air Chief Marshal Mubarak and many of the former regime's top figures. Tantawi with
U.S. Army General Martin Dempsey,
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 11 February 2012 On a personal level, Tantawi kept a relatively low profile since the handing over of power to the council, only making a first public appearance in an address to mark the graduation of a batch at the Police Academy on 16 May 2011. He opted to leave most public speeches and press releases to other senior members in the council; he also appointed
Prime Minister Essam Sharaf and his cabinet. Tantawi also received a number of foreign officials, including
British Prime Minister David Cameron and
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. After a new series of protests in November 2011, that escalated by 22 November to over 33 dead and over 2,000 injured in the wake of the use of force by the police to quell protests at
Tahrir Square and its vicinity, Tantawi appeared on Egyptian national television to pledge the speeding up of presidential elections – the principal demand of protesters – and that the armed forces "are fully prepared to immediately hand over power and to return to their original duty in protecting the homeland if that's what the people want, through a popular referendum if necessary." On 12 August 2012, Egypt's president Mohamed Morsi ordered Tantawi to retire as head of the armed forces and defence minister. Tantawi was decorated with the
Order of the Nile and appointed, instead, as an advisor to Morsi; there was speculation that his removal was part of a pre-arranged withdrawal by the military from political power in exchange for immunity from prosecution for earlier actions. == Criticism ==