CYA
Last Update: Sunday, 7 July 2013 KSA 14:04 - GMT 11:04
ElBaradei calls on inclusion of Brotherhood in Egypt transition
Last Update: Sunday, 7 July 2013 KSA 11:04 - GMT 08:04
Is he or isnt he? ElBaradei appointment as Egypts PM thrown into doubt
http://www.presstv.ir/usdetail/312680.html
The White House has broken its silence over recent chaos in Egypt, rejecting Washingtons support of specific political parties in the country.
“The United States categorically rejects the false claims propagated by some in Egypt that we are working with specific political parties or movements to dictate how Egypt’s transition should proceed,” a White House statement said on Saturday.
The statement came after Farid Ismail of the Muslim Brotherhood’s political wing, the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), told Reuters that ElBaradei was “Washington’s choice,” not that of the people of Egypt.
According to the statement, U.S. President Barack Obama reiterated that the United States is not aligned with, and does not support any particular Egyptian political party or group.”
Interim Egyptian President Adly Mahmud Mansour reportedly decided to appoint leading opposition figure Mohamed ElBaradei as the interim prime minister of the country following the ouster of President Mohamed Morsi.
Meanwhile, the New York Times reported that U.S. national security advisor Susan Rice had told Morsis team that the president would leave office an hour before his ouster by the military.
(snip)
Wondering if elbaradei will die of rejection first. Ain’t no antidote to muslim rejection. 100% fatal.
http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/07/05/is-obama-back-elbaradei/
Is Obama Backing ElBaradei?
by FRANKLIN LAMB
Beirut
According to well-connected Washington sources, one being a Congressional staffer whose job description includes following political events in Egypt, it did not take Mohamed Mustafa ElBaradei, the Sharia legal scholar, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, and for 12 years the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) (1997-2009), very long at all to contact the Washington, DC law firm of Patton Boggs on 7/2/13. That is once it became evident that Egyptian President Mohamad Morsi might well be ousted by Egypts Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF). The next day, ElBaradeis representatives reportedly also made contact with the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations which claims to represent the 52 largest US based largest Jewish groups.
(snip)
ElBaradeis campaign, as reported in the 4/4/13 edition of the New York Times also worked hard to convince the White House of what he called the necessity of forcibly ousting President Morsi, presenting several arguments that included documentation that Morsi had bungled the countrys transition to an inclusive democracy and wasted a year without following thru on any of his pledges or addressing the problems of:
(snip)
(Note: NYT 4/04/13 reference is not linked. Friedman’s 4/09/13 column: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/10/opinion/friedman-the-arab-quarter-century.html)
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Morsi Spurned Deals, Seeing Military as Tamed
EXCERPTS
The foreign minister said he was acting as an emissary of Washington, the advisers said, and he asked if Mr. Morsi would accept the appointment of a new prime minister and cabinet, one that would take over all legislative powers and replace his chosen provincial governors.
(snip)
His top foreign policy adviser, Essam el-Haddad, then left the room to call the United States ambassador, Anne W. Patterson, to say that Mr. Morsi refused. When he returned, he said he had spoken to Susan E. Rice, the national security adviser, and that the military takeover was about to begin, senior aides said.
Mother just told us that we will stop playing in one hour, an aide texted an associate, playing on a sarcastic Egyptian expression for the countrys Western patron, Mother America.
(snip)
Mr. Morsis advisers had meetings with Ms. Patterson and her deputy as well as a phone call with Ms. Rice, the national security adviser. Mr. Morsis advisers argued that ousting the president would be a long term disaster for Egypt and the Arab world because people would lose faith in democracy. They said it would set off an explosion in the streets that they could not control.
And they argued that the United States was implicated: Nobody who knows Egypt is going to believe a coup could go forward without a green light from the Americans.
Last Update: Sunday, 7 July 2013 KSA 14:04 - GMT 11:04
ElBaradei calls on inclusion of Brotherhood in Egypt transition
NO NO NO NO NO!!!!
Will the military allow this???