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Photo: Reuters
Egyptian president Sisi
Photo: Reuters

Sisi: Egypt could send troops to future Palestinian state

Egyptian president says Cairo willing to coordinate with PA, Israel on security ahead of his first European trip.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said in an interview published Sunday that he would be prepared to send troops to a future Palestinian state to help stabilize it.

 

 

Sisi, who begins his first European trip on Monday since ousting his Islamist predecessor, made the comments in an interview with Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera. He is scheduled to visit France and Italy, where he will meet with Catholic leader Pope Francis.

  

The Egyptian leader said he would send forces to a future Palestinian state in coordination with Israel and the Palestinian authority."We are ready to send military forces into a Palestinian state," he said.

 

Egyptian president Sisi (Photo: AP)
Egyptian president Sisi (Photo: AP)

 

"We would help the local police and reassure the Israelis through our role as guarantor. Not forever, of course – for the time necessary to reestablish confidence. But first a Palestinian state must exist for troops to be sent."

 

Sisi said he had spoken of the idea with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.

 

Speaking of neighboring Libya, Sisi described the country as having descended into "chaos" and said "extremely dangerous jihadist bases" were being established there.

 

"The international community must make a very clear and joint choice in favor of the Libyan national army and no one else," Sisi said. "Aid, equipment, training must be sent to it exclusively."

 

Sisi also said Egypt had not intervened militarily in Libya. Egypt has denied reports that it facilitated air strikes by the United Arab Emirates, a close ally, against militias in Libya.

 

The Egyptian leader overthrew president Mohammed Morsi in July 2013, prompting a wave of violence between Morsi supporters and security forces that drew rebukes from the United States and Europe.

 

But Egypt has come began to ends its diplomatic isolation since Sisi's landslide election win earlier this year, boosted by its increasingly central role in combating regional Islamist militancy.

 


פרסום ראשון: 11.23.14, 14:05
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