Egypt foreign ministry denies troops deployed in Syria

Egypt on Sunday denied Arab media reports claiming that it had a
military presence in Syria, days after President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi expressed
his support for the Syrian army.

“These claims only exist in the imagination of those
who promote them,” the foreign ministry said in the statement.

On Thursday, the Lebanese newspaper As-Safir said that 18
Egyptian air force pilots had been deployed on a military base in the Syrian
central province of Hama.

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It added, however, that it was “unclear” whether
they were taking part in any military operations.

Sisi, the former army chief who was elected president in
2014, expressed support for the Syrian military during an interview aired
Tuesday with Portuguese broadcaster RTP.

“Our priority is to support national armies, for
example in Libya to assert control over Libyan territories and deal with
extremist elements. The same with Syria and Iraq,” he said, responding to
a question on whether Egypt would contemplate a UN peacekeeping role in Syria.

Asked by the interviewer whether he meant the Syrian
military, Sisi, who has overseen a warming of ties with Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad’s main he responded: “Yes.”

Syrian security services chief Ali Mamluk made a surprise
visit to Cairo in October and met Egyptian officials, in his first public
foreign visit in five years.

Sisi, who was elected in 2014 almost a year after
overthrowing his Islamist predecessor Mohamed Morsi, has cracked down on
Islamists and is battling a deadly jihadist insurgency.

His government had been supported by billions of dollars in
aid from Saudi Arabia, but ties appear to have cooled between the two countries
amid disagreements over Syria.

Saudi Arabia backs rebels trying to oust Assad, while Russia
and Iran are supporting him militarily.

Saudi Arabia suspended oil shipments to Egypt in October, a
move announced after Cairo backed a Russian-drafted resolution on Syria in the
UN Security Council, angering Riyadh.

And while Egypt has on paper been part of a Saudi-led Arab
coalition in Yemen backing pro-government forces against Shiite Huthi rebels,
analysts say that behind the scenes, Egypt has been reluctant to engage. 

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