Egypt
As tens of thousands of chanting protesters packed Tahrir Square on the 18th day of Egypt’s uprising, the armed forces appeared on Friday to endorse President Hosni Mubarak’s proposal to remain in power until elections are held, delegate some unspecified authority to Vice President Omar Suleiman and oversee constitutional change. –
New York Times
President Hosni Mubarak’s refusal to step down on Thursday, after a day of rumors galvanized the crowds in Cairo, confronts the Obama administration with a stark choice: break decisively with Mr. Mubarak or stick to its call for an “orderly transition” that may no longer be tenable. –
New York Times
The Obama administration struggled Thursday to keep pace with events in Egypt and retool its strategy there after a defiant President Hosni Mubarak lashed out at what he described as foreign
intervention. –
Washington Post
Caught off guard by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's efforts to cling to power, President Obama on Thursday condemned Mubarak's latest concessions to protesters as inadequate and again warned against a violent crackdown. –
Los Angeles Times
Read the President’s
statement on Egypt.
The U.S. director of national intelligence sought Thursday to defend the intelligence community against criticism that it had failed to more clearly warn of the recent crisis in Egypt, saying that the buildup of potentially explosive pressures had been amply reported but that the specific triggers to action were far harder to predict. –
New York Times
CIA Director Leon Panetta helped touch off an avalanche of erroneous expectations Thursday when he testified that there was a "strong likelihood" that Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak would step down by the end of the day. –
Washington Post
The U.S. intelligence community is closely monitoring the state of Egypt‘s highest security prisons, trying to track dozens of senior members of al Qaeda, the Islamic Group and Egyptian Islamic Jihad to find out whether any have escaped and where they have gone. –
Washington Times
Egyptian Vice President Omar Suleiman, a man intimately tied to the 30-year rule of Hosni Mubarak, appeared to be charged Thursday night with overseeing the transition from the very same regime. How Mr. Suleiman manages the crisis now, and whether he has the credibility to lead negotiations, will go a long way to determining how Egypt emerges from its turmoil. –
Wall Street Journal
The standoff between the protest leaders and Mr. Mubarak, hours before major demonstrations set for Friday, could pose a new dilemma for military commanders. Mr. Suleiman called for an end to demonstrations, and Human Rights Watch said this week that some military units had been involved in detaining and abusing protesters. But by most accounts, army units deployed in Cairo and other cities have shown little appetite for using force to clear the streets. –
New York Times
The Egyptian opposition's takeover of the area around the parliament this week began with a trick—the latest example of how, for more than two weeks, young activists have outwitted Egypt's feared security forces to spur an uprising many here had long thought impossible. –
Wall Street Journal
Democrats and Republicans sternly warned the Obama administration on Thursday that it must prevent the Muslim Brotherhood from taking power in Egypt. –
The Hill
FPI Executive Director Jamie Fly writes: After pursuing what one commentator here at the Herzliya Conference described as a “zigzag” policy toward the unrest in Egypt in recent weeks, the Obama administration now has no choice. It must side wholeheartedly and unabashedly with the protesters. It is time for the United States to suspend all military aid to Egypt and to publicly call on Mubarak to step aside immediately. A continuation of the rhetorical dance deployed to date will only deny Ghonim and his fellow freedom fighters the U.S. support that they will desperately need in the days to come. –
The Weekly Standard Blog
Jose Maria Aznar writes: The duty of democrats should be to do whatever is necessary for freedom to prevail. We must therefore support those seeking to establish democracy and freedom in their countries, where men and women will have equal rights and dignity, leading to prosperity and stability. And we must be equally vigilant about the possibility of these autocracies being replaced by theocratic regimes that will be hostile, dangerous, and even more oppressive. –
Wall Street Journal (subscription required)
Israel
As Israel faces what many fear could turn into its most serious national security threat in decades, fault lines are widening over how it should respond and some critics say the government appears ill prepared. –
Los Angeles Times
Jordan
Some of America’s Middle East allies are pressing the Obama administration to go easy on Egypt‘s embattled leader and allow for a gradual transition of power. –
Associated Press
Iran
One of Iran's most prominent opposition leaders was placed under house arrest Thursday, with security agents posted at the entrance saying they would stay there until a possible anti-government protest has passed, the cleric's Web site reported. –
Washington Post
Some 700 civil activists have signed a statement condemning the sentencing of a prominent Iranian human rights lawyer to 11 years in jail and calling for her immediate release, RFE/RL'S Radio Farda reports. –
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Lebanon
U.S. authorities ordered sanctions against a Lebanese bank that the U.S. says helped drug traffickers launder money and finance the Lebanese group Hezbollah. –
Wall Street Journal
Yemen
Opposition parties kept most demonstrators off the streets Thursday, ending for the time being a spate of large-scale protests here calling for economic and political overhauls. –
Wall Street Journal (subscription required)
Iraq
As unrest shakes Egypt, Iraq is seizing the moment to make an audacious pitch to thousands of its citizens living abroad: Come back — we’re stable by comparison. –
New York Times
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Islamists and opposition activists have launched a political party in a rare challenge to the absolute monarchy, asking King Abdullah for a voice in the Gulf Arab state's governance, its organizers said Thursday. -
Reuters