|
|||||||||
| :: Opinions > Other Opinions | |||||||||
Aid Conditions
I concluded my article last week with a question about the US attempt to make its military aid to Egypt contingent upon conditions relating to democracy. In the following lines, I cast doubt on the effectiveness of such condition. I’m convinced that the national forces have nothing to do but to reject it.
|
|||||||||
| Saturday, September 20,2008 10:07 | |||||||||
|
|||||||||
|
I concluded my article last week with a question about the 1- The However, the 2- President Hosni Mubarak and the ruling elite reject any detriment to military aid and see it as a right gained from the strategic alliance between 3- Apart from the official discourse, the regime has no intention to make genuine democratic changes. So Congress attempts to make military aid conditional upon free elections, independence of the judiciary, human rights … etc. This is a line that should not be crossed. The national forces that seek genuine democratic change realize that the regime"s foreign allies protect it and enable it to continue its authoritarian practices. 4- More importantly, the military aid has very serious internal and regional goals. It turned during the past decades into a main guarantee for the stability of the Egyptian military establishment. It has also enabled
|
|||||||||
|
Posted in Other Opinions |
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
| Related Articles | |||||||||
|
|