Egyptian Revolution

Re: Why The U.S. Keeps Sending Weapons To Egypt

Why The U.S. Keeps Sending Weapons To Egypt (13:07)
August 23, 201310:04 PM

As the Egyptian military cracked down on protesters last week, U.S.-made Apache helicopters flew overhead. The Egyptian military also uses American made tanks, fighter jets and bullets.

This is the product of the $1.3 billion in military aid the U.S. provides to Egypt every year. In polls, a majority of Egyptians say they want that aid to end. And it's become unpopular among some powerful Americans as well. Yet, so far, the aid hasn't stopped flowing.

On today's show: Why it's so hard for the U.S. to stop sending military aid to Egypt.

http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2013...82-why-the-u-s-keeps-sending-weapons-to-egypt


Economy Fucked Up, This Is One Reason
 
Egypt Declares Muslim Brotherhood a Terror Group After Bombing

Egypt Declares Muslim Brotherhood a Terror Group After Bombing
By Salma El Wardany
Dec 25, 2013 12:17 PM CT

Egypt’s military-backed interim government designated the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist group, in an escalation that may bring a harsher crackdown.

The decision criminalizes the group’s activities and punishes those who belong to the group, finance it or promote the group’s activities, Deputy Prime Minister Hossam Eissa said at a Cairo press conference today.

“It’s not possible for the state or the people of Egypt to submit to the terrorism of the Muslim Brotherhood,” he said. “The group has exceeded all limits in yesterday’s crime in Mansoura.”

The move came after after a car bomb ripped through a security headquarters in the Nile Delta city of Mansoura, killing at least 16 people. The Brotherhood said it condemns the attack. Since the military pushed Islamist president Mohamed Mursi, who hails from the Brotherhood, from power in a July coup, security forces have rounded up and prosecuted Brotherhood leaders and thousands of followers and killed hundreds of supporters.

“The move is an escalation that gives authorities more power to a now-justified crackdown on the group” said Ziad Akl, a senior researcher at the Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies in Cairo. “It also gives the government a further push to isolate the movement ahead of the constitutional referendum.”

Next month, Egypt is scheduled to hold a referendum on a new constitution, meant to pave the way for parliamentary and presidential elections.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-...brotherhood-a-terror-group-after-bombing.html
 
Egypt army says its chief Sisi must run for president

Egypt army says its chief Sisi must run for president
By Samer Al-Atrush, Jay Deshmukh | AFP
10 hrs ago

Cairo (AFP) - Egypt's top military body Monday backed its commander Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to run for the presidency, which he is assured to win after ousting the democratically elected leader in July.

Sisi, wildly popular for overthrowing Islamist president Mohamed Morsi, is now expected to resign as army chief and put himself forward as a candidate in the election scheduled to be held by mid-April.

The army's announcement came after a weekend in which dozens were killed in street clashes between Morsi's supporters and police and militant attacks, underscoring the difficulties Sisi will face.

It comes nearly seven months after the army overthrew Morsi on July 3 following mass protests demanding the resignation of Egypt's first civilian president who hails from the Muslim Brotherhood movement.

A victory for the 59-year-old Sisi, who will have to give up his military uniform to stand for election, would continue a tradition of Egyptian presidents drawn from the armed forces.

The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces said "the people's trust in Sisi is a call that must be heeded as the free choice of the people".

The statement said Sisi thanked the military leadership for allowing him "the right to respond to the call of duty".

Washington deflected questions about Sisi's plans, but White House spokesman Jay Carney stressed it was important to maintain "checks and balances" between the military and government.

State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said $1.5 billion in US aid that was frozen after Morsi's ouster remained on hold.

To his supporters, Sisi is the best option for ending three years of instability following the 2011 uprising that ended the presidency of Hosni Mubarak, another former military officer.

"Two years ago I was the first one to say down with military rule. I even had it as a ringtone on my cellphone," said Ibrahim Mohamed, a history teacher.

"But today, after what we saw with Morsi and the Brotherhood, the country needs a military man," he said.

On Saturday, thousands poured into Cairo's Tahrir Square to back Sisi's candidacy, after he said he required "public demand" to stand in the election.

Elsewhere that day, at least 49 people were killed as police clamped down on protests by Morsi's supporters and anti-military activists.

The violence showed how bitterly polarised the country is. More than 1,000 people, mostly Islamists have been killed in street clashes, and thousands imprisoned, since Morsi's overthrow.

And a militant insurgency in Sinai appears to have spiralled out of control, as jihadists downed a military helicopter in the peninsula and set off bombs in Cairo at the weekend.

A senior military official told AFP Sisi would step down from his command within days and run in the election.

"He will then sit down, study a programme" to implement after he wins the election, the general said.

Sisi "wants to unite the people, restore security and Egypt's international standing," he said.

Egyptians want 'strong man'

Sisi's aides have said he hesitated before choosing to run for president because he wanted to be sure he would be an effective leader.

Hours before the army's announcement, interim president Adly Mansour, whom Sisi had appointed to replace Morsi, promoted the army chief to the top rank of field marshal.

Although easily the most popular leader in Egypt presently, Sisi's bid will draw opposition not only from most Islamists but also some liberals.

"I would have preferred a presidential election comprising civilian candidates to install a civilian democracy," said Alfred Raouf of the liberal Al-Dostour party.

"But I can understand that people want Sisi to be candidate, as given their security fears they want a strong man" to head the country.

Sisi, if he stands and wins, could influence the outcome of parliamentary elections by forming a party that would attract leading candidates, analysts said.

"There are no doubts that the (new) president will announce his preferences and his political tendencies," said Gamal Abdel Gawad Soltan of the American University in Cairo.

"The political currents which the (new) president says are closer to him will benefit from it."

But the general, accused by Morsi supporters of carrying out a coup, faces a determined opposition and a semi-insurgency.

Militants in Sinai blew up a pipeline supplying gas to Jordan Monday. Officials said there were no immediate reports of injuries but witnesses saw ambulances rushed to the scene.

Five soldiers were killed Saturday when a military helicopter was shot down with a surface-to-air missile, an unprecedented attack claimed by Ansar Beit al-Maqdis (Partisans of Jerusalem).

The Al-Qaeda-inspired group also claimed responsibility for a car bombing Friday outside police headquarters in Cairo that killed four people.

The interim-backed authorities have lumped in Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood movement, which renounced violence decades ago, with the Sinai-based jihadists.

The Brotherhood, now blacklisted as a terrorist group, has called for further protests in the coming days.

http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-army-chief-sisi-promoted-field-marshal-presidency-113143874.html
 
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