| Morsi Or Not, the US Empire Has A Stranglehold on Egypt 
 
 John Glaser,  				July 03, 2013
 
 
 antiwar.com
 
 
 In the midst of continuing anti-government protests, Egyptian  President Mohamed Morsi has rejected the Egyptian Army’s 48-hour  ultimatum (by now passed) to either call for early elections or step  down. On Monday,  I noted  the acknowledgement of the Morsi regime that the military won’t pursue  this effective coup without approval from their American overlords.  Here’s Foreign Policy‘s John Reed with  more on why that’s true:
 
 
 Oddly enough, this might be good news for the Pentagon,  which largely built the modern Egyptian armed forces. In fact, the  Egyptian Army — as the entire military is colloquially known there — may  be one of the U.S. government’s best friends in the entire Arab world.  American presidents have been encouraging stability in the region for  more than 30 years by making the Egyptian military the muscle behind a  regional superpower — one built and trained by Washington.Keep in mind that, as Egyptian blogger and activist Mohamed El Dahshan wrote this week, “this is the same army that, just a few months ago, was responsible for the  Maspero massacre, that unleashed  angry mobs against the peaceful protesters who objected to its rule, that conducted  virginity tests on Egyptian women, and that subjected  12,000 civilians to military trials.”  Furthermore, if estimates that “up to 40 percent of the Egyptian  economy is controlled by the military” are correct, then the military  itself is responsible for much of the discontent of the Egyptians in  Tahrir Square right now, which is focused almost entirely on economic  despair.
 In addition to buying Egypt weapons like 1,200 M1 Abrams tanks and  hundreds of F-16 fighter jets, the United States spends millions of  dollars annually to train Egyptian troops in war games in the Middle  East. Egypt’s  current defense chief, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, is an alum of the U.S. Army War College in Pennsylvania while the  head of Egypt’s air force, Reda Mahmoud Hafez Mohamed, did a tour in the United States as a liaison officer, and the  recently retired head of the Egyptian navy,  Mohab Mamish, did a bunch of tours in the United States . Their cases  are hardly unique; more than 500 Egyptian military officers train at  American military graduate schools every year. There’s even a special  guesthouse on T Street in northwest Washington, D.C., where visiting  Egyptian military officials stay when in the American capital.
 
 All this gives the United States quite a bit of leverage when it  comes to the Egyptian military, one of the most powerful forces in  Egyptian society. (Some estimate that up to 40 percent of the Egyptian  economy is controlled by the military.)
 
 
 
 Egyptians are largely viewing the military as a temporary bulwark  against the loathed Morsi government, so they welcome the Army’s  ultimatum, whether it worked or not. The key lesson here, though, is  that Egypt is tightly within the grip of the U.S. Empire and while  political leaders may change, the people are unlikely to be satisfied  with
 |