The US still intends to deliver four F-16 fighter jets to Egypt, even after the army toppled the Islamist president there. The news comes as White House is still not sure of how to label Morsi’s ousting, fostering anger among Egyptians.
Senior American officials confirm they aren’t putting on hold the
delivery of F-16 fighter jets to Egypt. It’s part of an earlier
agreement to send 20 such planes to the Arab country. Cairo
already received eight of them in January. Four more are to be
supplied within the next several weeks, and the rest to be
delivered by the end of the year.
“We don’t think it would be in the best interests of the
United States to change the assistance program quickly or
immediately,” White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said.
Currently, US aid to Egypt is estimated at $1.5 billion
annually, with the bigger part of the package – $1.3 billion -
going to the armed forces. That makes Egypt one of the world's
largest recipients of US aid, which began flowing following the
1979 peace treaty with Israel.
Washington has so far been reluctant to deem the Egyptian
overhaul a 'coup' - since that would bar assistance to the
volatile state - although President Obama says the aid program
should be reviewed and Pentagon echoes the White House.
"Given the events of last week, the president has directed relevant departments and agencies to review our assistance to the government of Egypt," the Pentagon’s Wednesday statement said.
In its most critical official evaluation of the Egyptian
military’s actions to date, the US State Department said that
politically motivated arrests in Egypt make it difficult to see
how the country will be able to move beyond its current political
crisis.
“The arrests we have seen over the past several days targeting
specific groups are not in line with the national reconciliation
that the interim government and the military say they are
pursuing,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said in a
daily briefing.
“If politicized arrests and detentions continue, it is hard to
see how Egypt will move beyond this crisis,” she added.
The US’s indecisiveness does not contribute to its popularity in Egypt, as RT’s Paula Slier reports from Cairo.
Supporters of Morsi, protesting his removal, appear to carry
anti-Obama posters, with new ones being printed each day.
“I think America is dealing with things in double
standards,” Dina Zakariya, a Muslim Brotherhood supporter,
says.
And there’s equally no joy for Washington even from people who
want to live in the States. Mohammed Alaa holds both American and
Egyptian citizenships. Two months ago he sold up - ready to trade
Cairo for Texas. He feels Washington is too deeply embroiled in
internal Egyptian politics and pulls the strings from afar.
“I have no problem with American people, I have a problem with
American politics that tries to interfere with the way we want to
live and that is not right,” Alaa says.
The anti-American feeling was there long before the recent
uprising. The May report of the Washington-based Pew Research
Center concludes that about eight out of 10 Egyptians are
negative towards the US, with just 16 percent having a positive
attitude towards the United States.
When it comes to President Obama, nearly three-quarters are
unhappy with the way he handles American foreign affairs. That
sentiment's been strong since the day Obama took office back in
2009.
Egyptians are also pessimistic about their country's dependence
on US financial and military aid with more than half of the
population saying it is harming Egypt.