7/3/13, "Despite Obama Administration’s Entreaties, Egyptian Military Deposes Morsi," Daily Beast, Ely Lake, Josh Rogin
"Despite a series of private and public warnings in the last 48 hours from top Obama administration officials to Egypt’s generals not to depose the country’s first elected leader, the military sprung into action Wednesday and unseated the Muslim Brotherhood aligned president, Mohammed Morsi.
The actions from the military lay
bare the limited influence the Obama administration has over the
leadership of an Egyptian military that gets $1.3 billion a year in aid
from the United States and relies on American spare parts and training
to function, while also perhaps suggesting that the private warnings
delivered from top Obama officials like Gen. Martin Dempsey, the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Secretary of Defense Chuck
Hagel could have been stronger.
“There
was a press to avoid the kind of turbulence we have seen today,” one
U.S. official involved in reacting to the crisis in Egypt told the Daily
Beast. “But the jury is out on precisely what the next steps are. We
will see what the process as defined by the military and their statement
leads to.”
In
public, the Obama administration Wednesday was careful not to take
sides in the political conflict that has subsumed Egypt in the last
three days. Nonetheless, Obama condemned the military coup and said his
administration would begin to review its foreign aid to Egypt in light
of the events....
The situation is chaotic in Egypt
for the United States. All non-essential personnel were being evacuated
late Tuesday from the U.S. embassy in Cairo. The State Department issued
a warning urging Americans to avoid travel to the country and asked
American Fulbright scholars studying in Egypt to return home.
In
the initial hours after the coup, the U.S. government has yet to make a
formal determination that such an event even happened. If the White
House does determine that the events in Egypt constitute the military
overthrow of an elected leader, U.S. law would require the suspension of
military aid.
Senator
Patrick Leahy, the chairman of the Senate subcommittee that determines
the foreign aid budget, said on Wednesday that he would review the $1.5
billion in annual assistance the country sends to Egypt. “Egypt’s
military leaders say they have no intent or desire to govern, and I hope
they make good on their promise,” a statement from Leahy said. “In the
meantime, our law is clear: U.S. aid is cut off when a democratically
elected government is deposed by military coup or decree.” Psaki on
Wednesday declined to characterize the events inside Egypt as a coup.
Rep. Ed Royce, the Republican chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs was mainly critical of Morsi in a statement Wednesday. “It is unfortunate that Morsi did not heed popular demands for early elections after a year of his incompetent leadership and attempting a power grab for the Muslim Brotherhood,” he said. “Morsi was an obstacle to the constitutional democracy most Egyptians wanted.”" via Lucianne
.
Amy Hawthorne, an Egypt expert and a
senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, said Egypt’s military has
calculated that Obama needs the military more than the military needs
Obama. “They’ve watched our reaction at several points and they probably
came to the conclusion that they could take this action without a great
risk that they would rupture the relationship with the United States,”
she said.
One
factor that may have led Egypt’s military to conclude there would be no
consequence for deposing Morsi is Obama’s history of fighting attempts
from members of Congress to impose restrictions on the annual U.S. aid package to Egypt.
Steven
A. Cook, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, said the
coup in some ways was not surprising. The circumstances inside the
country, including massive street demonstrations “made it so that the
military couldn’t not intervene at this point,” he said. “Morsi’s
defiance and the mass mobilization of Egyptians really did threaten
social stability and national security.” Cook added that the military
had made clear that “if these things are in jeopardy, they would
intervene.”Rep. Ed Royce, the Republican chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs was mainly critical of Morsi in a statement Wednesday. “It is unfortunate that Morsi did not heed popular demands for early elections after a year of his incompetent leadership and attempting a power grab for the Muslim Brotherhood,” he said. “Morsi was an obstacle to the constitutional democracy most Egyptians wanted.”" via Lucianne
.
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