ʿAzīz Ṣidqī (born July 1, 1920, Cairo, Egypt—died Jan. 26, 2008, Paris, France) was an Egyptian politician who was prime minister of Egypt from 1972 to 1973.
An engineering graduate of Cairo University with a doctorate in economic planning from Harvard University, Ṣidqī became a university teacher. Shortly after the revolution that deposed the Egyptian monarchy, he was appointed a technical adviser to the prime minister’s office. He later served as a full-time member of the services board until 1956, when Pres. Gamal Abdel Nasser brought him into the government as minister of industry to supervise the Soviet-financed industrialization program. In 1957 Ṣidqī launched a five-year industrialization plan, which was later merged into the general five-year development plan (1961–65). Promoted deputy prime minister for industry and mineral resources and minister of minerals and petroleum in 1964, he earned the reputation of an all-out economic expansionist. In November 1970 he became deputy prime minister for production and trade.
Following Maḥmūd Fawzī’s resignation, Ṣidqī became prime minister of Egypt on Jan. 16, 1972. The new government was described as a cabinet of confrontation (with Israel), but the emphasis was on strengthening the home front. Ṣidqī enjoyed good relations with the Soviets and compared the terms of communist aid favourably with aid from Western countries. The failure of his mission to Moscow in July 1972, which it was hoped would secure deliveries of advanced Soviet weapons, followed by Pres. Anwar el-Sādāt’s expulsion of the Soviet advisers from Egypt, appeared to discredit his views, although Soviet economic aid to Egypt continued. However, when he revisited Moscow several months later a Soviet-Egyptian rapprochement ensued, marked by the replacement of Egyptian war minister Muḥammad Aḥmad Ṣādiq by the pro-Soviet Aḥmad Ismāʿīl.