Washington does not considering the military coup and the removal of the legally elected Egyptian President Muhammad Mursi from power as a coup d'etat, and claims the situation ambiguous. This was announced at a press briefing by a White House spokesman Carney.
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According to him, the American government will cooperate with the putschists (a so-called "transitional government") in a "quick and effective return to full democracy", when much more peaceful Muslims are to be murdered, according to democratic norms and traditions.
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"The US objective here is to assist the Egyptian people in their transition to democracy and to remain faithful to our national security interests", he claimed.
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The adoption of hasty decisions are not in the American interests, and Washington takes a while to decide what is happening in Egypt. Subsequently, according to its political interests, America will reconsider the decision to provide aid to Egypt, said Carney.
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The spokesman said his American government was "concerned" about the true democratic army opening fire on peaceful protesters during the recent democratic mass murders, and condemns every kind of aggression directed against the civilian population.?It is to be recalled that the putschists shot at praying Muslims.?Dozens were killed and more than one thousand injured.
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Meanwhile, Carney called on western puppets among "religious and political leaders of Egypt to be a bridge between the warring parties".?However, he went as far as saying that "the Egyptian people will not recover from this crisis unless they come together to find a non-violent and inclusive path forward".
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"The path to democracy is thorny and consists of a set of formidable steps", sais Carney quoting his black boss Obama.
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He claimed the transition to democracy will provide them with a "peaceful and free life and will have a positive impact not only on the country itself, but also throughout the Middle East and the US allies".?
It is to be recalled that the United States offered through intermediaries in the Arab world the elected Egyptian president Mohammed Mursi to change all his cabinet members to keep his own post, the New York Times writes, referring to Mursi's advisers.
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According to employees of the president, in the last hours of his presidency, Mursi was contacted by a foreign minister of an Arab country.
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"The foreign minister said he was acting as an emissary of Washington, the advisers said, and he asked if Mr. Morsi would accept the appointment of a new prime minister and cabinet, one that would take over all legislative powers and replace his chosen provincial governors", the newspaper writes.
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The newspaper explains that Mursi, in response, pointed at his neck, making it clear that he would rather get killed than accept these conditions.
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Immediately after this conversation, the leading Mursi's assistant for foreign policy Essam el-Haddad called the American ambassador Anne Patterson and informed her about the Mursi'a refusal.
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El-Haddad came back to the room and said he spoke with the advisor of the American president's chief for national security, Susan Rice, and that he was aware of impending military action aimed against Mursi and an attempt to oust him from power, the newspaper said citing Mursi's aides.
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It is to be recalled that on Saturday, Obama issued a statement that Washington was supposedly "not involved in the events in Egypt".
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Department of Monitoring
Kavkaz Center
Source: http://www.kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2013/07/09/18029.shtml
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