Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

U.S., Egypt resume security talks

Kerry meets with Egyptian officials in Cairo

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Cairo — Despite persistent human rights concerns, the United States on Sunday resumed formal security talks with Egypt that were last held six years ago and kept on hiatus until now amid the political unrest that swept the country in the wake of the Arab Spring.

Two days after the U.S. delivered eight F-16 warplanes to Egypt as part of a military support package that the Obama administra­tion is boosting to help Egypt counter an increasing terrorist threat, Secretary of State John Kerry restarted the so-called “strategic dialogue” with Egyptian officials in Cairo. The dialogue was last held in 2009 and did not occur in subsequent years due to the Arab Spring and turmoil following the ouster of Egypt’s authoritar­ian leader Hosni Mubarak in 2011.

Kerry said the administra­tion is committed to working with Egypt to enhance its military capabiliti­es as it confronts growing threats from extremists, particular­ly in the Sinai Peninsula. That aid had been on hold until earlier this year due to human rights and democracy concerns in the wake of the military overthrow of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in 2013.

Before meeting with Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, Kerry told Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry the U.S. would “continue to provide robust training to the Egyptian military, as the military seeks it and desires it, in an effort to build capacity, and also to meet the highest expectatio­ns of your military for its profession­alism.” He noted that in addition to the F-16s, the U.S. had provided Egypt with Apache helicopter­s, attack boats, armored vehicles and other weapons systems this year. More aid is on the way, he said.

At the same time, he acknowledg­ed stress in the U.S.-Egypt relationsh­ip over human rights and said Washington would continue to press Cairo on the arrests of dissidents and journalist­s and mass trials.

“Obviously, there has been a little bit of tension over certain issues,” he told reporters at a joint news conference with Shoukry that was held shortly after a court in Cairo again postponed a verdict in the trial of three Al-Jazeera English journalist­s, whose arrests on have sparked widespread condemnati­on.

Shoukry said no journalist­s have been detained in Egypt for doing their jobs, only for terrorism and other offenses, and he rejected criticism that detainees were being denied due process. He said Egypt is committed to improving its human rights conditions but noted that all countries, even mature democracie­s, have imperfect rights records.

Kerry made the case, though, that freedom of speech, assembly and peaceful political dissent must be allowed if Egypt is to successful­ly combat extremism, especially ahead of parliament­ary elections to be held later this year.

He said that fighting extremism requires more than military might and called on Egypt to adopt a strategy that would both improve the economy and accept dissent to prevent young people from embracing radical ideologies.

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