The [proof as it stood at time of writing this answer][1] attempted to prove something that did not hold with the hypothesis that it then stated, which did not include
$$(\;p\text{ and }q\text{ are primes}\;)\text{ and }(\;p\ne q\;\text{ or }\;\gcd(m,pq)=1\;)$$
which happens to be a necessary condition in RSA (illustration: try $p=q=5$, $e=3$, $m=10$; encryption followed by decryption yields $0$ rather than $10$ ).

Arguably $p$ and $q$ primes is an implicit hypothesis; and now $p\ne q$ is made explicit. But it is not apparent where these hypothesis are used.

Not coincidentally, the proof still has a serious gap at the point where $1^k$ appears, which implicitly uses that  $m^{\phi(pq)}\equiv1\pmod{pq}$, because:

- This proposition is wrong for some $m$, including $m=p$
- [Fermat's little theorem][2] is invoked as a justification, but an hypothesis in FLT is that the modulus is prime, but $pq$ is not.
- FLT makes no mention of $\phi$.
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Independently: it is used, but not stated, that the definition of RSA considered uses $d$ such that $ed\equiv1\pmod{\phi(pq)}$. Another popular definition uses $ed\equiv1\pmod{\lambda(pq)}$ , where $\lambda$ is the [Carmichael function][3]. That definition is used in PKCS#1 et FIPS 186-4. It is mathematically satisfying, for it is necessary and sufficient, when $ed\equiv1\pmod{\phi(pq)}$ is merely sufficient.

Also: the proof would be clearer if it was restated a number of other things:

- $p$ and $q$ are primes;
- $N=pq$ ;
- hypothesis on $m$ (that is $0\le m<N$, which would need to be restricted to $\gcd(m,N)=1$ if the condition $p\ne q$ was not used);
- use of textbook RSA encryption $m\to c=m^e\bmod N$ ;
- use of textbook RSA decryption $c\to m'=c^d\bmod N$ (with a distinct notation for the original message and deciphered messages);
- what's to be demonstrated (that is $m'=m$ ).

Also: there's a missing bit of reasoning, going from $m'\equiv m\pmod N$ to $m'=m$.

Finally: textbook RSA is not a secure encryption algorithm (assume encryption of the name of someone in the public class roll, which will be interrogated tomorrow, and how one can easily determine if that's her/him).


  [1]: https://crypto.stackexchange.com/revisions/51284/5
  [2]: http://mathworld.wolfram.com/FermatsLittleTheorem.html
  [3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmichael_function