Egypts intel chief flies to Washington for talks
CAIRO, Egypt - Egypts powerful chief of intelligence, who acts as a key diplomatic link with the United States and Israel, flew to Washington on Sunday for talks with administration officials on bilateral ties and Mideast issues, officials said. The visit by Omar Suleiman came amid friction between Egypt and the US because of increasing criticism by the Bush administration and Congress over President Hosni Mubaraks lack of democratic reforms.
Suleiman did not speak to reporters on departure, but Egyptian officials said he would meet with top officials at the White House, the State Department and the CIA. Bolstering bilateral relations will be top on his agenda, said one official.
Relations between the two allies took a dip after the US House of Representatives tabled legislation last month to withhold US$200 million in military aid until Cairo takes steps to curb police abuses, reform its judicial system and stop arms smuggling into the neighboring Gaza Strip. Under the draft, the aid would be withheld from the total of US$1.3 billion that Egypt is due to receive in military aid from the US in 2008. The legislation has yet to be approved by Congress or signed by President George W. Bush.
Egypt also receives vast US civilian subsidies, and is the second largest recipient of American aid in the world after Israel.
The Egyptian government blasted the proposed US legislation as an unacceptable interference in Egypts internal affairs.
No problemo: don't take our money. | Last week, Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit paid visits to US Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and warned Washington of the Egyptian peoples wrath if it continued meddling in Egypts internal affairs.
Bush angered Mubaraks government and parts of the Egyptian media when he met last month with leading human rights activist Saad Eddin Ibrahim and criticized the jailing of opposition leader Ayman Nour.
Ibrahim has been advocating cuts in US military aid as an instrument to press Egypt for democratic reforms. Nour is serving a five-year prison sentence for allegedly forging signatures on petitions to register his political party. He challenged Mubarak for the presidency in 2005, finishing a distant second in Egypts first contested presidential elections.
Posted by: Steve White 2007-07-16 |