NOVANEWS
The US has kept Mubarak in power, giving his regime 1.5 billion dollars in aid last year—mainly because he supported America’s pro-Israel policies, especially by helping Israel to maintain its stranglehold on Gaza.
By Paul J. Balles / STAFF WRITER
“The military was greeted warmly on the streets of Cairo. Crowds roared with approval as one soldier was carried through Tahrir square today holding a flower in his hand,” reports Democracy Now! senior producer Sharif Abdel Kouddous.
He speaks of “a great sense of pride that this is a leaderless movement organized by the people. A genuine popular revolt. It was not organized by opposition movements, though they have now joined the protesters in Tahrir.”
According to Kouddous, “The Muslim Brotherhood was out in full force today. At one point they began chanting “Allah Akbar” only to be drowned out by much louder chants of “Muslim, Christian, we are all Egyptian.”
What he describes, reflected in the TV coverage, is truly a “people’s revolution”. Will it play out that way? So far, the main concern of the protesters has been to get rid of Hosni Mubarak, Egypt’s “president” cum dictator for the past 30 years.
The US has kept Mubarak in power, giving his regime 1.5 billion dollars in aid last year—mainly because he supported America’s pro-Israel policies, especially by helping Israel to maintain its stranglehold on Gaza.
Egypt has been the number two recipient (after Israel) of US foreign aid. In both 2009 and 2010, the economic aid amounted to 250 million dollars while military aid reached 1.3 billion dollars.
US military aid to Egypt has been spent primarily on strengthening the regime’s “domestic security” and its ability to confront popular movements.