egypt
Brian
7,618 Posts
been a little wild for a minute now
any egyptian strutteurs here?
speak on it
any egyptian strutteurs here?
speak on it
Comments
Seems like the people of Egypt want to move in the right direction. As a brazilian the concept of the army being on the side of the people is foreign to me, but the egyptians seem to trust them to some extent.
and there you have it folks; this thread is a wrap.
d.e.l.e.t.e.
Hi Brian
http://directorblue.blogspot.com/2013/07/15-photos-from-tahrir-square-protests.html
peace, stein. . .
Ahram is a government outlet, but I am not entirely sure what Egyptian government means today, an hour from now or tomorrow.
Egypt had one 2 years ago that ousted Hosni Mubarak. Control was given back to a civilian government, just like they promised.
I'm willing to wait and see.
Morsi and Mubarak both governed at the pleasure of the military.
That's a nice sentiment but U.S policy makers serve at the behest of the American people and we generally get the government we deserve. :-/
Not exactly dirty but there's a billion or two a year in (declared) aid every year from the US, mostly military so they carry some weight when it comes to how Egypt is run.
The new military leadership was apointed by Morsi himself however.
They are not getting things out of context, that's how 99% of the Arab world thinks like, they utterly despise the US government. They know what's really going on because they're at the receiving end of America's government foreign policies.
Coups do not have to be violent. The military gave Morsi a deadline, forced him out, picked the interim head of government and is now In the process of rounding up the Muslim Beotherhood and throwing them in jail. That's a coup.
That's because they're getting caught up in the demonstrations. If the military maintains the power to bring governments down and arrest all the ex-officials it's not a revolution.