08:03 09/06/2015
Washington - Egypt summoned the US ambassador in Cairo to show
displeasure at Muslim Brotherhood figures coming to Washington for a
private conference, sources familiar with the matter said on Monday.
One
source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said US officials did not
intend to meet the group although they had met some Brotherhood figures
that came to Washington in January.
The tensions reflect a clash
between US diplomats' desire to deal with the whole political spectrum
in Egypt and a fear of alienating Egyptian President Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi who, as army chief, toppled a Muslim Brotherhood-led government
in 2013.
The sources declined to say precisely when US Ambassador
Stephen Beecroft was call in by the Egyptian government, though one said
it was in recent days. Egypt sought the meeting to make clear its
unhappiness at US dealings with the Brotherhood.
State
Department spokesperson Jeff Rathke declined to say whether Beecroft
was summoned by the Egyptian authorities or whether US officials would
meet Brotherhood figures visiting Washington, telling reporters he was
aware of media reports of such a visit but that "I don't have any
meetings to announce."
He said it continued to be US policy to engage with people from across the political spectrum in Egypt.
The
United States has had ambivalent dealings with Sisi, prizing the
stability has brought to Egypt while cautiously criticising Egypt's
human rights record and the authorities' crackdown on the Brotherhood.
Sisi,
who was elected president in a 2014 landslide but with
lower-than-expected turnout that raised questions about his mandate,
regards the Brotherhood as part of a terrorist network that poses a
threat to the Arab and Western world.
The Brotherhood says it is a peaceful movement.
The
fall of veteran autocrat Hosni Mubarak in 2011, a long-time US ally
ultimately abandoned by Washington, paved the way for the Brotherhood to
rule the most populous Arab country, something that was unthinkable for
decades.
Mohammed Morsi, who rose through the Brotherhood's ranks
before winning the presidency in 2012, was a polarising figure during
his troubled year in office. His policies alienated secular and liberal
Egyptians, who feared the Brotherhood was abusing power.
In
January, the State Department said its officials met a group of visiting
Egyptian former parliamentarians, including former members of the
Freedom and Justice Party, the Brotherhood's political wing. The
Brotherhood was banned by an Egyptian court in 2013 after Morsi was
ousted.
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