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Egypt Protests: Obama Administration, Egypt Officials Discuss Mubarak's Immediate Exit

Mubarak Obama

First Posted: 02/03/11 11:19 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:30 PM ET

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is in talks with top Egyptian officials about the possible immediate resignation of President Hosni Mubarak and the formation of an interim government that could prepare the country for free and fair elections later this year, U.S. officials said late Thursday.

Creation of a military-backed caretaker government in Egypt is one of several ideas being discussed as anti-Mubarak protests escalate in the streets of Cairo and other Egyptian cities, the officials said. Those protests are expected to grow in size and intensity on Friday and the administration fears they may erupt into more widespread violence unless the government takes tangible steps to address the protesters' main demand that Mubarak leave office.

The officials stressed the United States isn't seeking to impose a solution on Egypt but noted that the administration had made a judgment that Mubarak has to go soon if there is to be a peaceful resolution to the crisis. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive diplomatic talks, which are continuing. The talks about Mubarak's immediate departure were first reported by The New York Times.

White House and State Department spokesmen would not discuss details of the discussions U.S. officials are having with the Egyptians. Vice President Joe Biden spoke with Egyptian Vice President Omar Suleiman on Thursday, a day after a similar conversation between Suleiman and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. Officials said neither Biden nor Clinton made a specific call for Mubarak to resign immediately but pressed for measures that would ease tensions on the streets and set the stage for democratic elections.

"The president has said that now is the time to begin a peaceful, orderly and meaningful transition, with credible, inclusive negotiations," said White House national security spokesman Tommy Vietor on Thursday night. "We have discussed with the Egyptians a variety of different ways to move that process forward, but all of those decisions must be made by the Egyptian people."

An administration official said there is no single plan being discussed with the Egyptians.

Rather, the administration is pursuing different ideas with Egyptian figures on how to proceed quickly with a process that includes a broad range of voices and leads to free and fair elections – in essence, different ways to accomplish those goals.

Among those options is a proposal for Mubarak to resign immediately – which the embattled president has refused to do – and for Mubarak to cede power to a transitional government run by Suleiman.

But the official rejected the notion that the White House was trying to impose that idea and said it was not at all clear it would happen. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.

The discussions come amid escalating violence between pro- and anti-Mubarak forces.

The United States on Thursday severely criticized what it called systematic attacks on journalists in Egypt and said they appeared to be an attempt to shut out reporting of even bigger anti-government demonstrations to come.

Clinton condemned "in the strongest terms" the pro-government mobs that beat, threatened and intimidated reporters in Cairo.

Attacks as well on peaceful demonstrators, human rights activists, foreigners and diplomats were "unacceptable under any circumstances," she said.

Clinton pointed the finger at Mubarak's government without explicitly blaming the 82-year-old president for the violence. She said, "It is especially in times of crisis that governments must demonstrate their adherence to these universal values,"

Egypt's government must hold accountable those responsible for the attacks and "must demonstrate its willingness to ensure journalists' ability to report on these events to the people of Egypt and to the world," she said.

Foreign photographers reported attacks by Mubarak supporters near Tahrir Square, the scene of vicious battles between Mubarak supporters and protesters demanding he step down after nearly 30 years in power.

The Egyptian government has accused media outlets of being sympathetic to protesters who want Mubarak to quit now rather than complete his term as he has pledged.

Among the many detained were correspondents for The New York Times, Washington Post and Al-Jazeera. Human rights groups said many activists also were taken away after a raid by the military police on a legal center in Cairo.

The Obama administration warned that the arrests and intimidation of reporters may be aimed at stopping the spread of the anti-government message ahead of a potentially critical protests Friday, when many Egyptians are expected to take to the streets after prayer services.

"It could well be that this is in anticipation of events tomorrow," State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said. "We are bracing for a significant increase in the number of demonstrators on the streets and the real prospect of a confrontation."

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs also offered a strong denunciation of reported "systematic targeting" of journalists. He said, "I think we need to be clear that the world is watching the actions that are taking place right now in Egypt."

On Capitol Hill, the Senate approved a non-binding resolution late Thursday urging Mubarak to hand over power to a caretaker government and begin a peaceful transition to a democratic society.

Amid heightened U.S. concern about rising violence in Egypt, President Barack Obama began his remarks at Thursday's National Prayer Breakfast with pointed hopes for better days ahead: "We pray that the violence in Egypt will end and the rights and aspirations of the Egyptian people will be realized."

And the administration complained Mubarak's government was failing to immediately start a process toward real democracy, continuing the U.S. pressure on its once strong ally to accept the call of hundreds of thousands of demonstrators over the past week for democratic change.

The administration's call for an immediate transition from three decades of authoritarian rule in Egypt has coincided with American hopes that reforms in Jordan and Yemen could stave off similar revolt.

All three countries have experienced instability since protesters in Tunisia chased their leader from power last month.

Separately Thursday, a senior intelligence official said Obama was warned of instability in Egypt "at the end of last year."

CIA official Stephanie O'Sullivan would provide no further detail during an open Senate confirmation hearing to be the deputy director of national intelligence.

The chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., told The Associated Press that the events "should not have come upon us with the surprise that they did."

She said the Internet's use in organizing demonstrations in Tunisia and Egypt should have provided "much more warning," and that her committee would look into how intelligence agencies performed.

"Was someone looking at what was going on the Internet?" she asked.

___

Associated Press writers Bradley Klapper and Kimberly Dozier contributed to this report.

For more background, see our Egypt revolution guide.

Have a tip you want to share? You can leave a message for HuffPost at 00-1-315-636-0962. If you know someone there and have email access, send us an email at egypt@huffingtonpost.com. Our Skype account is HuffPostReports.

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WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is in talks with top Egyptian officials about the possible immediate resignation of President Hosni Mubarak and the formation of an interim government that ...
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is in talks with top Egyptian officials about the possible immediate resignation of President Hosni Mubarak and the formation of an interim government that ...
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08:46 PM on 02/04/2011
At least the administration has started discussing the idea of pulling Egypt's aid. Hell, it could be worse...

http://politicalcandor.net/2011/02/02/cheney-woos-mubarak/
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02:40 PM on 02/04/2011
FROM ABOVE:

The chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., told The Associated Press that the events "should not have come upon us with the surprise that they did."

She said the Internet's use in organizing demonstrations in Tunisia and Egypt should have provided "much more warning," and that her committee would look into how intelligence agencies performed.

"Was someone looking at what was going on the Internet?" she asked.

MY QUESTION:

What do you want? Greater surveilance? Greater control? More contracts to your husband's company for military contracts?
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sb250guy
A Cunning Linguist
01:14 PM on 02/04/2011
Hey, do you think Obama could grow a pair and make a statement here? Maybe he could take a stand and support real people in Egypt. How much writing on the wall does there have to be before he decides to come down decisively on the side of democracy? It's pretty obvious how this will eventually play out. Why wait? Who does he work for? If he's the democratically elected leader of the United States of America, there should be no downside.
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
09:46 AM on 02/04/2011
It is difficult to envision government change by free and fair elections if the United States is involved. The US has too much of a history of candidate selection and election manipulation.
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R2D2-51
Flower Power Forever
09:35 AM on 02/04/2011
Well as expected another cookie-cut US CIA asset trainedin puppet in VP Suleiman is gonna replace anotehr one CIA US military trained gangster.
I suppose it's silly we would allow for the Eqyptian people to dictate their own self-determination.
I hope all those folks in Tahir Square reject this once again US hegemony in the region once and for all and install one of their own. I guess its a matter of how much you are willing to sacrifice everything you have t get a true sense of liberty freedom and true democracy.
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LittleSanityLeft
09:51 AM on 02/04/2011
They will have their elections and the people will vote in a hard-line extremist regime as has happened a couple times before when the US got it's way with free democratic elections in middle eastern countries. Not saying these folks don't deserve democracy, but that the outcome of such democracy seems to always backfire against US interests.
09:33 AM on 02/04/2011
Obama slams US Intelligence services for failure to advise him on uproar in Egypt and Middle East; he was advised in January 2009 by Michael Dunne.

See the published report: http://carnegieendowment.org/files/09jan_Dunne.pdf

Michele Dunne is a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace as
well as editor of the Arab Reform Bulletin, and was a Middle East specialist at the Department
of State and National Security Council; the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
10:04 AM on 02/04/2011
Good report.

Thanks.

It occurs to me after reading it that it reveals even more than it seems to reveal when held up and viewed through a mirror.
09:17 AM on 02/04/2011
Noting significant differences, I still wonder about parallels between military action against the protesters and the Veteran's March of 1932....and any upcoming protests here and what the local governors and law enforcement would do.
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
10:05 AM on 02/04/2011
Interesting thought.
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
10:11 AM on 02/04/2011
For those who don't know the reference, it is to the 1932 Bonus Army protest in Washington DC of US veterans wanting to receive the money promised them eight years earlier for their service in World War I.

General MacArthur led tanks through the streets on July 28 to attack and evict the protesters.
10:35 AM on 02/04/2011
The timing of that PBS episode, I think before Cairo but after Tunisia?? just struck me.

Also reminds me of how the GOP would like to continue cutting veteran health care in addition to active duty and military family care....freakin sick
David Dem
End the War
09:16 AM on 02/04/2011
Nice work from Hillary Clinton and President Obama on this crisis. Most of the world wants democracy instead of fascism if they are given awareness.
09:11 AM on 02/04/2011
What they are discussing is how to ease Mubarak out of the optics and keep his clone Suleiman and the military regime in place. Our business as-usual-president is negotiating the business-as-usual sellout of the people in Egypt who want real reform - the very last thing our government wants or will permit if they can help it.
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
09:21 AM on 02/04/2011
fanned - status quo. Not willing to actually propose changes that would perhaps benefit the people, but keeping the military in charge of suppressing the fight for democracy and free elections. Of course our government will push for "deja vu all over again" -
09:00 AM on 02/04/2011
I don't know how I feel about the US taking such a large role in Egyptian talks...I feel like it's going to backfire. Last thing we need is another Iran.
Either way, Obama will get blamed. Ugh :/
08:52 AM on 02/04/2011
So, rather than give Sec. Clinton and Pres. Obama credit for their courageous attempts to uphold freedom, liberty and democracy, Chris Matthews (on Morning Joe) wants to spin the notion that the US is somehow NOT a good friend to their "friends" (despite the ugliness of the truth - that the "friend" is acting like a devil...?

What about threats to behead journalists, Mr. Matthews?
Is that FRIENDLY behavior?
What about acts of harassment to round up FOREIGNERS, Mr. Matthews?
FRIENDLY BEHAVIOR?
How about HIRING THUGS to BEAT UP journalists, to confiscate their cameras, to suppress freedom of speech and freedom of the press? Friendly, Chris?
How about subjecting the UNARMED Egyptian people to egregious acts of human abuse, subjecting children to violence? Is that good behavior, Mr. Matthews?

Matthews is a coward and apparently thinks the person who needs cuddling is the dictator, while he KICKS his own president and Sec. of State - for upholding DEMOCRACY, while ignoring that his DICTATOR BUDDY inflicted human rights abuses on his own people, then failing to protect them when he claimed to be willing to CHANGE and respond to their needs, while continuing to act like a TYRANT denying them dignity, basic human decency, and democracy.

A sleezy performance by Matthews.
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provgrays1
08:51 AM on 02/04/2011
Why is the U,S. playing a direct hand in Mubarak's departure? I know we have serious interests there but it's not our revolution.
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LittleSanityLeft
10:01 AM on 02/04/2011
Mubarak has to go, it's obvious. How much blood would you let spill into the streets knowing you were capable of stopping it? Maybe democracy isn't the answer in Egypt but what other answer is the leader of the worlds most powerful democracy supposed to give?
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provgrays1
06:28 PM on 02/04/2011
Little,

We should support Mubarak's departure but is it Pax Americana?
Do we have to meddle with and control to such an extent?
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provgrays1
10:17 PM on 02/05/2011
Little,

I'm not saying the U.S. should be indifferent and we can use our "moral authority", if that even exists any more. I'm just saying that Egypt is a sovereign nation that is working out its own destiny and it's theirs, not ours.
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08:49 AM on 02/04/2011
"United States isn't seeking to impose a solution" hahahaha . Who is that kidding?
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bbrecht
"pray for the dead, fight like hell for the liv
08:42 AM on 02/04/2011
Senator Feinstein wonders if any intelligence agency officials in the US were watching the internet-- how did the US fail to see this coming?

Here's a larger question and more fundamental: How can you not see that a foreign policy based on propping up brutal dictators might lead to this and in the long run will leave the US with little influence over the region.
08:57 AM on 02/04/2011
They did not fail to see it, and were aware of the potential.
They could not predict that the young man on the street would set himself on FIRE - something being ignored, and not clearly linked to the impetus that catapulted this event into motion.

And why did the young man set himself on fire?
It's because the savage thugs involved in corruption on Mubarak's police force were attempting to force him to pay more bribes...and he set himself on fire in complete despair and hopelessness. But I guess that was ok with Chris Matthews who holds Mubarak in the highest regard because I guess dictators are nice people in his book?