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Opinion: Egypt remains confused by White House policy | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry arrives in Cairo, Sunday, Nov. 3, 2013. Kerry is in Cairo pressing for reforms during the highest-level American visit to Egypt since the ouster of the country’s first democratically elected president (AP)


There is consensus among Egypt’s political elite that no alternative alliance could replace the strategic relationship with the United States. At the same time, the corridors of power in Egypt are filled with a strong sense of disappointment towards the Obama White House. After being in Egypt for two weeks and having conducted numerous meetings with senior government officials and major political figures, it seems clear that Egypt’s government remains determined to maintain a strong relationship with Washington.

The recent simultaneous visit of both the Russian defense and foreign ministers to Cairo has raised many questions about the broader strategic significance of this move for the US–Egyptian relationship. Egyptian–Russian cooperation ought not to be seen as a pivot away from Washington, but it should also not come as a surprise, especially after the White House decision to suspend major portions of military aid to Egypt during the government shutdown debacle, which naturally forced Egypt to broaden its security cooperation ties with other countries to preserve its basic national security priorities. Even if Obama’s decision is meant to impact the course of domestic politics in Egypt, all senior Egyptian government officials have made it clear he had made a huge miscalculation. There are mutual strategic justifications that guide the US–Egyptian security relationship, which the suspension of aid does not help move forward.

The Egyptian military has been entrenched in a critical and difficult fight in Sinai against major terrorist cells, which were allowed to establish a major stronghold there during the year-long rule of the Muslim Brotherhood. This reality directly jeopardized both Egyptian and Israeli national security, and threatened regional stability. In August, two buses carrying 25 Egyptian soldiers were ambushed by terrorists and killed, execution style. This reality should have dictated stronger support from Washington for the efforts by the Egyptian military in combating terrorism in the Sinai. However, the exact opposite happened when the White House decided to suspend military aid and the delivery of weapons, which included Egypt’s weapon of choice, the Apache attack helicopters used in the fight against terrorism in Sinai. Even if not all weapons are directly used in the fight against terrorism, the suspension affects cooperation and trust between the two countries. Egypt’s political leadership is confused by the White House’s actions.

The Obama administration has not specified criteria for the resumption of military aid. In fact, it seems to have purposely kept its policy vague. Different messages are communicated to the Egyptian government from the Pentagon and the State Department on the one side and the White House on the other. This is understandable, given that there are huge tensions between National Security Adviser Susan Rice and Secretary of State John Kerry concerning policy towards Egypt. This kind of ambiguity in US policy only serves to undermine the strategic US–Egyptian relationship and jeopardize mutual interests at a time when the region faces great upheaval. The pillar of the US–Egyptian relationship has always depended on military and security cooperation, and using this partnership as a bargaining chip to shape Egyptian domestic politics has been counterproductive and has only hurt mutual interests in the region.

If the rationale of the Obama administration’s policy is based on the fact that it views the removal of Mursi as an undemocratic step, it is important to realize the Brotherhood regime was not a democratic one in the first place. Mursi’s constitutional declaration of November 2012, which granted him absolute powers and put him above the law, violated all principles of democracy. Washington ignored the subsequent violent crackdown on protesters who opposed Mursi’s authoritarian powers. At that time, the Obama administration stood by silently and did not preach to the choir on what democracy meant to Mursi. It also did not suspend military aid to Egypt. The White House has taken contradictory positions over the past three years, sometimes putting principles above interests or vice versa—hence the confusion in Cairo.

For democracy to really flourish in Egypt, patience is key. It will take time. But the close strategic security relationship between the United States and Egypt should not be hindered by dictats concerning domestic politics, especially nowadays, when many Egyptians are satisfied with the removal of the Muslim Brotherhood from power. Washington should not put itself in the driver’s seat as the main advocate for the future of the Brotherhood in Egyptian politics, as it will only put more tension on the US–Egyptian relationship. Washington’s policy toward Egypt ought to preserve its strategically important geopolitical interests and let Egyptians determine their own domestic political future.