Monday, August 17, 2009

Mubarak to visit Washington, meet with Obama, American Jewish leaders

Mubarak to visit Washington, meet with Obama, American Jewish leaders


Mubarak to visit Washington, meet with Obama, American Jewish leaders
hilary leila krieger, jpost.com correspondent in washington , THE JERUSALEM
POST Aug. 16, 2009
www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1249418612562&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is set to begin his first Washington visit
in half a decade this week as he seeks to reset US-Egypt relations and put
the years of discord under the Bush administration firmly in the past.

Mubarak has a meeting scheduled with Jewish leaders Monday, where he is
slated to discuss the Israeli-Palestinian peace process and the threat of
Iran, before discussing these and other topics with US President Barack
Obama on Tuesday.

The intra-Palestinian situation is expected to be a particular focus, as
Hamas has been reevaluating its relationship with Fatah after the latter's
recent Congress brought in several new leaders.

Egypt has been crucial in unity talks between the two parties which until
now have not succeeded.

The two countries will also be trading notes on Iran, as the US reviews its
outreach policy following the disputed Iranian elections, even as a deadline
for Iran to take up America's offer for engagement looms next month. Egypt
is looking to resume its strategic dialogue with the US as part of the
visit.

The Obama administration has already indicated it is seeking to reinvigorate
the relationship with Egypt, as Obama chose Cairo as the destination for his
long-anticipated address to the Arab world in June and met with Mubarak
there.

Moreover the Egyptians have been eager to take advantage of a new face in
the White House to reengage with Washington, indicating that they have
turned over a new page.

The Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram reported this week that "A press statement
issued this week by the Foreign Ministry squarely blamed the tensions that
have marred recent relations between Cairo and Washington on the policies of
the Bush administration. Egyptian officials now hope that the worst is over,
and bilateral ties can be placed on a new footing."

The US is also eager to count Egypt as an ally in shaping its Middle East
agenda, as it has a peace treaty with Israel and shares strategic concerns
about the role of Iran and its proxies.

The Al-Ahram story also quoted an Egyptian official as saying that this was
possible because there had been "a significant change" in the kinds of
questions now being asked by the US administration about domestic affairs,
including democratization, freedom of worship and expression, and
"allegations of human rights violations."

The official was quoted as saying, "I am not saying that we get no
questions. What I am saying is that the aggressive language in which such
questions used to be couched has been abandoned."

But Middle East expert Tamara Wittes of the Washington-based Saban Center
for Middle East Policy warned that Mubarak might be disappointed if expects
he won't get any pushback from the administration on these issues.

She pointed out that Egypt right now is facing some of its biggest
challenges from members of Congress who have expressed "a lot of skepticism
about the value of a partnership which is one in which the United States
invests $2 billion every year."

Several members of Congress have questioned the long-standing aid allocation
given Egypt's poor record on human rights, democratization, protection of
minority faiths and ending the smuggling into Gaza.

Wittes noted that Mubarak will be visiting Washington at a time when
Congress isn't in session, so he will be able to sidestep meetings on the
Hill in which he could have faced unpleasant questions. Mubarak was
originally scheduled to fly to Washington in May on the heels of visits by
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Palestinians President Mahmoud Abbas,
but that trip was postponed due to the sudden death of Mubarak's grandchild.
Wittes noted that trip too was scheduled to coincide with a Congressional
recess.

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