Two days before the collapse of Hosni Mubarak's regime in Egypt, one man
gathered the courage to tell the president the truth: he would be killed
in his palace if he did not step down. What came next revealed the
bitter power struggles atop the most populous country in the Middle East
at its most vulnerable moment in six decades.
But it was too late. As street protests swelled into the hundreds of
thousands across the country, decision-making at the highest levels
broke down and Mubarak fled to the resort city of Sharm el Sheikh.
This is the inside story of the final days of Egypt's modern-day
pharaoh, who ruled with near autocratic powers for three decades before
being forced to resign on February 11, 2011.
Cairo-based journalist Bradley Hope interviewed more than two dozen
eyewitnesses, from current and former officials to Mubarak's long-time
make-up artist, to tell the dramatic story of the president's downfall.