Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Egypt’s Morsi: WALKING THE TIGHT ROPE

Egypt is a ticking bomb the explosion of which will leave the region in tatters. Morsi was chosen; he was not the original Brotherhood candidate. He was adopted by the Brotherhood. Don’t get me wrong but I have a very strong feeling that he was engineered behind the scenes by Israel/USA as a compromise candidate. Like Mahmoud Jibril of Libya; Morsi is likewise educated in USA who worked for sometimes at NASA developing the space shuttle. Two of his children were born in USA meaning they are natural born USA citizens. Is it possible that these people (Jibril/Morsi) are USA’s plants to take hold of the Arab Spring? Basically, they are no different from Karzai of Afghanistan; USA’s puppets.

Because of Israel: Egypt is a nation that USA will not; cannot leave alone. When the Supreme Military Council dissolved the Parliament that was democratically elected by the people; USA did not scream foul. It needs no rocket scientist to understand why; the elected parliament is dominated by Islamists of different political denominations meaning like it or not; the military council takes command from the White House. When Morsi called back the parliament in defiance of the military; USA screamed foul loud and clear. Morsi was being democratic; USA and its military puppets are not. Democracy is only good if it benefits uncle Sam.


Morsi will have to walk the tight rope balancing between the military (Israel/USA) and the people who sacrificed so much to bring down the Mubarak/Israel/USA dictatorship.
Gaza is the litmus test to observe if Morsi is a puppet or not. Throwing open the border crossing between Gaza and Egypt will render Israel’s blockade of Gaza irrelevant. So far; new Egypt has not done so with the Egyptian military still in full control sometimes acting more brutally than the Israel defense Forces (IDF).








US urges Morsi to "respect democratic principles" after decree
The United States urged Egypt on Monday to respect "democratic principles" a day after President Mohamed Morsiissued a decree reconvening parliament, even though the country's top court had earlier ordered it dissolved.
"Developments are unfolding quickly and we are monitoring them and in touch with Egypt's leaders," National Security Council spokesperson Tommey Vietor said. "Ultimately, though, these issues are for Egyptians to decide in a manner that respects democratic principles, is transparent, and protects the rights of all Egyptians."
The Supreme Constitutional Court ruled in June that parliament had been elected in an unconstitutional manner and should be dissolved. The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, which then held executive power, ordered the court's verdict to be implemented. 
Analysts and the Muslim Brotherhood, which occupied nearly half of parliament and still claims Morsi as a member, interpreted the decision as a politicised attack on the Brotherhood's power.

'via Blog this'

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