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Defence & Security News - Egypt
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Friday, November
8, 2013 08:03 AM |
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Egypt
could purchase up to $4 billion of weapons and military equipment from Russia.
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Egypt
is considering spending up to $4 billion on advanced weaponry from Russia
following the partial suspension of military aid and equipment deliveries
from the United States, a Palestinian online newspaper said Thursday,
November 7, 2013. According to Donia Al-Watan, Moscow has offered Cairo
“a historic deal giving Egypt an option to buy the most advanced
weaponry without any restrictions.”
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A
Russian military delegation led by Defense Minister Sergei
Shoigu
would
visit Serbia and Egypt on November 12-15.
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The sources cited by Donia Al-Watan, an independent
Palestine territory-based online news outlet, claim that an undisclosed
Persian Gulf country had agreed to provide financing.
The report comes on the eve of a visit to Egypt by a Russian military
delegation led by Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu. A source in the Russian
Defense Ministry told RIA Novosti on Thursday that the delegation would
visit Serbia and Egypt on November 12-15.
The source said the Russian delegation would include the first deputy
director of the Federal Service on Military-Technical Cooperation, Andrei
Boitsov, and officials from state-arms exporter Rosoboronexport.
The visit has been preempted by a bout of shuttle diplomacy between
Moscow and Cairo with exchanges of unofficial visits and behind-closed-doors
discussions in the past few weeks.
Rumors about Egypt turning toward Russia for military assistance to
meet its security needs have been circulating in the media since last
week and intensified around a recent visit to Egypt by US Secretary
of State John Kerry, which has been widely considered an attempt to
mend weakening bilateral ties and prevent potential military deals with
Russia.
For Moscow, the renewal of military ties with Egypt could signify a
return in force to the Middle East while US diplomacy is failing all
over the region.
The Soviet Union and Egypt enjoyed close ties during the 1960s and early
1970s, when the Arab country was led by Abdel Nasser. But within years
after the death of Nasser, the new president Anwar Sadat started reorienting
the country toward the West and expelled about 20,000 Russian military
advisers stationed in Egypt in July 1972. Bilateral relations have since
never warmed up to the previous friendship level.
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