new
عدد الرسائل : 891 العمر : 47 الموقع : perfspot.com/koky4u5000 تاريخ التسجيل : 06/08/2011
| موضوع: نيويورك تايمز: عنان سيلعب دوراً محورياً فى مستقبل مصر الأربعاء 27 يونيو 2012 - 13:33 | |
|
نيويورك تايمز: عنان سيلعب دوراً محورياً فى مستقبل مصر نشرت صحيفة «نيويورك تايمز» الأمريكية تقريراً عن أعضاء المجلس العسكرى بمناسبة قرب تسليمهم السلطة رسمياً للرئيس المنتخب، وركزت الصحيفة على 6 من أعضاء المجلس، بينهم الفريق سامى عنان الذى وصفته الصحيفة بأنه الجنرال «المفضل» للمؤسسة العسكرية الأمريكية، وأضافت أنه رجل عسكرى تقليدى ركز كل نشاطه فى الماضى على تحديث الجيش المصرى، وسيلعب دوراً مركزياً فى مستقبل الحكم فى مصر، ويعتبره مسئولون أمريكيون حلقة وصل مهمة بين واشنطن والقاهرة. The Leaders of the Egyptian Military Council
Egypt’s ruling military council is made of up 23 senior officers. Six of them dominate the decision making in the council.
Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi
Chairman of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces
Field Marshal Tantawi is the head of the military council that took power on Feb. 11, 2011, after President Hosni Mubarak stepped down. It is Field Marshal Tantawi, perhaps more than any other single person, who is now driving events in Egypt. He was a trusted ally of Hosni Mubarak for more than 20 years. A leaked diplomatic cable from the American Embassy in Cairo to Washington in 2008 described Field Marshal Tantawi as “charming and courtly” but “aged and change-resistant.” The cable also reported that midlevel officers in the Egyptian Army referred to him as “Mubarak’s poodle” — incompetent and old-fashioned but intensely loyal.
Lt. Gen. Sami Hafez Enan
Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces
General Enan is a favorite of the American military, and the second in command among the group of generals ruling Egypt. He is considered a traditional military man focused on army operations and modernization, and he will play a central role in Egypt’s future government. American officials say General Enan has become a crucial link for the United States as it navigates the rocky course ahead with Cairo.
Maj. Gen. Mamdouh Shahin
Assistant Defense Minister for Legal Affairs
General Shahin is the military council’s legal and constitutional adviser, and the military’s representative in the current constitutional assembly. After dissolving the Muslim Brotherhood-dominated Parliament and seizing all legislative power on June 14, 2012, General Shahin sought to defend the military’s actions in a televised news conference. In May 2011, he said that the military should be given ”some kind of insurance, so that it is not under the whim of a president."
The New York Times
Maj. General Hassan al-Roueini
Commander of Central Military Zone
General Roueini is the military commander for the Cairo area who is responsible for the closed-door military tribunals that 7,000 to 10,000 people were brought before after Mr. Mubarak’s resignation. The Democratic Alliance, a coalition of political parties formed during the revolution, accused General Roueini, among others, of instigating the killings of protesters. A day before former Mr. Mubarak resigned, General Roueini famously appeared before a crowd of antigovernment protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square and said, “All your demands will be met."
Maj. General Mohamed al-Assar
Assistant Defense Minister
In a news conference aimed at defending the military’s dissolution of Parliament, General Assar said, “We will give the president of the republic his complete powers.” He also said he would transfer power to the president in a “grand ceremony” by the end of June. Appearing on a popular talk show months after the protests, General Assar called Mr. Mubarak’s overthrow “the greatest revolution in the history of Egypt.”
Maj. General Mukhtar al-Mulla
Assistant Defense Minister
In a December 2011 news conference, General Mulla appeared to believe that the old Constitution — built for one-party rule, lacking clear separation of powers or judicial independence — might not need much fixing. He also said the now-dissolved Parliament dominated by elected Islamists could not be representative of the public. “Do you think that the Egyptians elected someone to threaten his interest and economy and security and relations with international community?” General Mulla asked. “Of course not.”
| |
|