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Egypt's Sisi expresses support for Syria's militaryhttps://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/11/egypt-sisi-expresses-support-syria-military-161123150315176.html
Egyptian leader says his priority is to support "national armies", noting a solution must be "political" in Syria.
23 Nov 2016
Sisi also says Donald Trump's plan have a database for Muslims is understandable [File: Egyptian Presidency via AP]
more on Egypt
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi says he supports the Syrian military - a position at odds with his country's Gulf benefactors such as Saudi Arabia.
The former army chief, who has overseen a warming of ties with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's main backer Russia, made the comments during an interview aired on Tuesday with Portuguese broadcaster RTP.
"Our priority is to support national armies, for example in Libya to assert control over Libyan territories and deal with extremist elements. The same with Syria and Iraq," he said, responding to a question on whether Egypt would contemplate a United Nations peacekeeping role in Syria.
Asked by the interviewer whether he meant the Syrian military, he responded: "Yes."
READ MORE: Sisi's fridge and Egypt's frosty economy
The government of Sisi, who was elected in 2014 almost a year after overthrowing president Mohamed Morsi, had been supported by billions of dollars in aid from Saudi Arabia. But ties appear to have cooled between the two countries amid disagreements over Syria.
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Saudi Arabia backs rebels trying to oust Assad, while Russia and Iran are supporting him militarily.
The kingdom
suspended oil shipments to Egypt in October, a move announced after Cairo backed a Russian-drafted resolution on Syria in the UN Security Council, angering Riyadh.
Sisi's plan In his interview, Sisi maintained Egypt's broad position on resolving the Syrian conflict, saying the solution must be "political".
"Our stance in Egypt is to respect the will of the Syrian people, and that a political solution to the Syrian crisis is the most suitable way, and to seriously deal with terrorist groups and disarm them," he said.
Sisi, who has praised Donald Trump, also said a plan floated by the US president-elect to have a database for Muslims was understandable.
"Yes," he said when asked whether he felt concerned by such rhetoric.
"But every country tries to provide security and stability for its citizen, and we understand that."
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SOURCE: AFP
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Egypt Picks Sides in the Syrian War
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/artic...des-syrian-war
How Sisi Learned to Love Assad
By
Oren Kessler
How Sisi Learned to Love Assad
By
Oren Kessler
On February 1, a military transport plane left a Russian airbase in Latakia, Syria,
landed at an airfield near Egypt’s border with Libya, then returned to Syria. For months there had been unconfirmed
reports that Cairo had sent forces to assist the Syrian regime in the country’s civil war and at first glance the flight appeared to have corroborated those suspicions. That now looks unlikely—the jet’s final destination was Russia, where it had
reportedly brought wounded fighters, loyal to the Kremlin-allied Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar, in for treatment. But the very fact that Cairo is coordinating with the Damascus-Moscow alliance on such an operation underscores one of the Middle East’s worst-kept secrets: Cairo supports the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad.
Back in November, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi essentially admitted as much. Cairo’s priority “is to support national armies, for example in Libya,” he
told Portuguese state television. “The same with Syria and Iraq.” The host then pressed Sisi over whether he meant the Syrian regime. “Yes,” Sisi
replied plainly.
It was the first time that Egypt, a longtime U.S. ally, openly acknowledged that it sides with the Syrian government. The Assad regime is not only allied with U.S. adversaries Iran and Russia but is also loathed across much of the Arab world for its scorched-earth attacks and the refugee crisis that its civil war has spawned. Sisi is now one of the only Arab leaders to explicitly back Damascus, which since late 2011 has been
suspended from the Arab League and which Al Jazeera—by far the most watched television network in the Arab world—incessantly
rails against.
Of course, hints of Sisi’s sympathy for his Syrian counterpart have been visible for years. Back in July 2013, just weeks after then-army chief Sisi led the military in removing Cairo’s Muslim Brotherhood-led government, Egypt and Syria agreed to
revive diplomatic ties. (The Brotherhood regime had cut them to protest Damascus’ heavy-handed crackdown on dissent.)