Speaking in Cairo on Sunday, Secretary of State John Kerry reassured Egyptian officials that the country’s human rights abuses will not get in the way of further boosts to U.S. aid, arms, and military “cooperation.”
“Egypt remains vital … to engagement and stability in the region as a whole,” said Kerry at joint appearance with Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shukri following a weekend of bilateral talks. “There are obviously circumstances where we have found reason to have grave concern and we have expressed it very publicly, but we have multiple issues that we need to work on simultaneously.”
Kerry announced that the U.S. is planning to resume “Bright Star” joint military exercises with Egypt, which President Barack Obama halted in 2013 over concerns about the government’s human rights abuses. The U.S. is also planning to boost efforts to train Egypt’s military and help the country police its border with Libya.
In a sign of this military backing, the U.S. embassy in Cairo marked Kerry’s arrival with the following announcement of a fresh arms shipment, following by the Arabic declaration, “Long live Egypt”—which has been adopted as a slogan by al-Sisi.
The U.S. has already thrown its strong support behind coup leader and current President Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, including a recent resumption in annual aid—most of which is military—that waives human rights concerns.
The backing comes as al-Sisi oversees an increase in authoritarianism that some analysts warn is the worst the country has seen in 60 years—including during the regime of former U.S.-backed President Hosni Mubarak who was toppled by a popular uprising in 2011.
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