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Changes Atop Egypt\'s Government Create Uncertain Path for United States

By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

During the first months of Barack Obama's stint in the United States Senate and the beginning of President George W. Bush's second term, an Egyptian general wrote a thesis for the Army War College in Carlisle Barracks, Pa., offering American policy makers advice about how to manage relations with the Middle East.

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The author, Brigadier General Sedky Sobhy, was elevated to chief of staff of Egypt's military this week as part of reshuffle of top defense officials by President Mohamed Morsi, Egypt's first democratically elected leader and the candidate of the Muslim Brotherhood. General Sobhy now helps oversee the military institution that has been the closest United States ally in Egypt and the region. And his paper, first reported by the journalist Issandr el Amrani on his blog the Arabist, and which we wrote about in Friday's Times, is a vivid reminder of how fast the landscape of the region is changing in ways that may challenge whoever occupies in the White House.

United States policies in the Middle East were contradictory and unsustainable, General Sobhy wrote. Opposition to America's military presence in the Gulf, its interventions in the Muslim countries and its “one-sided” support for Israel had inspired an endless recruiting pool of Islamist radicals and “immersed” Washington in an “asymmetrical” global war against terrorists with no foreseeable goal or endpoint. United States policies and the Western hostility to Islam belied Washington's stated commitment to democracy. The best solution, the general wrote, was an all but complete withdrawal of United States forces from the region, to be accompanied by economic assistance, more forceful support for the Palestinian peace process, and “the impartial application of international law.”

Neither Mr. Obama nor Mitt Romney have ever publicly considered such a sweeping reconfiguration of America's role in the region; for one thing, it would shock and alarm United States allies like Israel and Saudi Arabia because it would remove a potential check on Iranian power. At the same time, however, General Sobhy's views reflect the overwhelming Egyptian (and Arab) public as well as the past positions of the new president. So his War College essay is useful reminder of the complexities Arab democracies present to American strategy in the region.

Indeed, just as the United States campaign turned briefly to the foreign policy dilemmas of the changing Middle East - with Mr. Romney visiting Jerusalem on the heels of two cabinet secretaries shoring up the Obama administration's support in Tel Aviv - events on the ground in both Egypt and Syria were already revising the strategic questions arising from the Arab spring.

This update to the Agenda project will take stock of the changes in Egypt and another one will turn to Syria.

General Sobhy's appointment as Army chief of staff capped a dizzying week in Egypt. It began with the worst attack by Islamist terrorists in more than a decade and ended in consolidation of power by Egypt's main Islamist group, Mr. Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood.

The terrorist attack, killing 16 Egyptian soldiers near the Sinai border with Israel, set off the first crisis of Mr. Morsi's two-month-old presidency. But some analysts, including some in the Obama administration speaking on condition of anonymity, argue that the response bodes well for the young government. Although the Muslim Brotherhood issued a statement at least suggesting that Israel may have been responsible for the attacks - playbook political demagoguery in Egypt - Mr. Morsi resisted that temptation. He vowed to crack down on the Islamist militants responsible and Hamas - the militant Palestinian offshoot of the Brotherhood that controls the Gaza strip - denounced the attacks as well.

In a sign of regional stability, Israeli leaders did not allow themselves to be baited into a conflict with Egypt, an obvious potential goal of the attack near the border. And some Israeli analysts praised Mr. Morsi for standing against the militant Islamists, though scholars of the Muslim Brotherhood note that it has opposed the use of violence since Egypt's 1952 revolution against the British-backed monarchy.

The political aftershocks of the attack, however, have also brought United States policy makers closer than ever to a confronting a situation that has haunted American relations with Egypt for more than 30 years: a government truly controlled by the Islamists of the Muslim Brotherhood. Before the attacks, Egypt's top military leaders - traditionally Washington's closest allies in Cairo - had drastically constrained the power of Mr. Morsi and the Brotherhood. In the final days of martial law, the generals used the pretext of a court decision to dissolve the parliament and then issued a decree granting to themselves all budgetary and lawmaking power.

But amid the military's embarrassment over the attack, Mr. Morsi, with the consent of the top generals, appeared to redouble his own power. He announced that the defense minister and the former chief of staff would leave their posts and become his advisers. And he rescinded the military's power grab, claiming most power for himself until the election of a new parliament.

In public statements, the Obama administration called the reshuffle a welcome sign that Mr. Morsi and the generals were sharing power effectively. A shift of authority from the Mubarak-appointed generals to the newly elected president is, after all, a step toward democracy. But what checks on Mr. Morsi may remain are now thoroughly obscured from view, in shadowy, behind-the-scenes negotiations with the generals, including the former defense officials-turned-pr esidential advisers, Field Marshall Mohamed Hussein Tantawi and his chief of staff, General Sami Anan.

Already some in Washington are raising alarms about what the ascent of the Muslim Brotherhood will mean for United States interests in the region. Some have suggested that the 2005 essay by the new chief of staff, General Sobhy, augurs a meeting of the minds between the military and the Brotherhood on a turn away from Washington.

“If historical precedent is any guide, Morsi's shake-up at the Egyptian Ministry of Defense will be followed by a strategic realignment between Cairo and Washington,” the scholar Steven A. Cook wrote on the Web site of the journal Foreign Affairs.

“It thus stands to reason that Morsi's sacking of Egypt's top national security and defense officials might in part represent a shift in Egyptian foreign policy away from the United States,” Mr. Cook wrote. “Toward what country, however, remains unclear. There is no other power that could be Egypt's patron, yet Cairo might not need one. Egypt, representing a quarter of the Arab world and strategically located on the Suez Canal and Afro-Asian rift - is a power in its own right.”

The military appointments “might signal a desire to pursue a foreign policy more befitting of Egypt's prestige, an approach to the world that does not privilege any particular foreign relationship over another and that is geared toward maximizing Egypt's national interests in contrast to what many perceive to be the record of the last three decades.” If so, the United States should begin to expect Cairo to be more of a strategic gadfly than a reliable ally, Mr. Cook said, much as it was during the Arab nationalist era of Gamal Abdel Nasser- when Egypt drifted closer to the Soviet Union as Washington stood by Israel.

This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: August 17, 2012

A previous version of this post refer red incorrectly to the college where the Egyptian general Sedky Sobhy wrote a paper on American foreign policy in the Middle East. It was the Army War College in Carlisle Barracks, Pa., not the National War College in Washington.



On CCTV America, Some China Stories Recede From View

By JACOB FROMER

A video introduction to CCTV America.

Although they come from opposite ends of the Chinese political spectrum, for two months this spring Bo Xilai, a Communist Party official who was dismissed from his post, and Chen Guangcheng, a blind, activist lawyer who fled house arrest in his village, shared one important trait: they were the most closely watched Chinese men in the world.

When Mr. Bo fell from power in March and Mr. Chen made an unlikely escape from house arrest the following month - eventually seeking refuge in the American Embassy in Beijing - their stories were documented in minute detail in American newspapers, magazines and Twitter feeds. That is, with one notable exception: on CCTV America‘s weekend news program produced in Washington by China's state broadcaster, neither man's plight made the headlines. As my colleague Andrew Jacobs reports, CCTV Americ a failed to feature either man's story.

Here is a look at what the program did cover as those major events unfolded.

March 15: Bo Xilai Ousted From Communist Party

What happened: The brash Communist Party chief of the Chongqing municipality in China's southwest was removed from his post. It was the most high-profile dismissal of a Chinese official in years, ending his political ambitions and complicating the once-a-decade national leadership transition that will take place in the fall.

Here are the headlines from CCTV America's China-related stories that weekend:

March 18 News Broadcast: Chinese Special Envoy to Syria Returns From Trip to Damascus; China Concerned About Upcoming North Korean Missile Launch; Chinese Surveillance Ships Return From Diaoyu Islands; Important Commercial Relationship Between Brazil and China.

March 19 News Broadcast: More Concern Over Upcoming North Korean Missile Launch; Chinese A uthors Sue Apple; Beijing Subway Overhaul; First Chinese-American Congresswoman.

April 22: Chen Guangcheng Escapes From House Arrest

What happened: The blind rights lawyer scaled the wall of his compound, evaded his guards, and fled with a driver to the American Embassy in Beijing. The result was an intense diplomatic standoff between the United States and China just as Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner were preparing to arrive in Beijing for the Strategic and Economic Dialogue.

Here are the China-related headlines on CCTV America the weekend after Mr. Chen's escape became public:

April 29: New China-Russia Trade Contracts; Strategic Economic Dialogue Ready to Start; Terracotta Warriors on Exhibit in New York.

April 30: Ongoing China-Philippines Naval Dispute at the Huangyan Islands.

May 2: Chen Guangcheng Released From U.S. Embassy

What happened: After days of heated diplomatic nego tiations and numerous vacillations by an exhausted Mr. Chen about whether to leave the embassy, the blind dissident agreed to move to a nearby hospital where he reunited with his family and told reporters that he wanted to leave China.

Here is what CCTV America saw as the China-related stories the weekend after Mr. Chen left the embassy:

May 6: Chinese-U.S. Officials Hold Talks at Strategic Economic Dialogue.

May 7: China Consumer Price Index Update; Toyota's Ambitious Plans for China.

A CCTV employee told The Times that the program did record a segment about Mr. Chen that included footage of his stay at the hospital, but no such segment appears in the archived episodes available on CCTV America's Web site.



Arkansas Police Release More Footage Related to Man\'s Death

By CHRISTINE HAUSER

Witnesses in the Chavis Carter case in Arkansas said they heard a popping sound, then saw two police officers involved in his arrest approach the back seat of the patrol car where Mr. Carter had been placed in handcuffs and was later found with a fatal gunshot wound. That was according to new material released by the Jonesboro Police Department, which has said Mr. Carter apparently shot himself during the arrest last month.

New dashboard camera footage and witness interviews were released by the department late on Thursday as the police continued to try to address the questions and criticism that have swelled up over the death of Mr. Carter, a 21-year-old black man who was arrested by two white officers on a dark street in Jonesboro in late July.

As The Lede reported this week, coverage of the case has grown as news outlets and social media focused on the circumstances of Mr. Carter's death, even as the police tried earlier this week to show with a video re-enactment that a man in handcuffs could twist around to raise a gun to his own head.

In the latest release of footage on Thursday night, one of the videos identifies a woman, Jamie Anderson, being questioned in a police interrogation room. “It sounded like a gun going off,” she said, after describing herself as a resident of the area where the police responded to a 911 call from neighbors suspicious of the truck that Mr. Carter and two other young men had been riding in. “They were standing on the outside of the car,” she said of the officers. She said she saw the officers go toward the car, then heard some yelling.

Another witness, Casper Gibson, in a recorded phone interview with the police, said he was also watching “the whole time” as the scene unfolded, and the police searched and handcuffed the youths, later putting only Mr. Carter in the patrol car. Mr. Gibson said he he ard “a little pop” but thought a car that passed by had run over something. Then he said he saw officers “within two minutes” open the back doors of the vehicle.

Witness interview from the police

More than an hour of the new material was posted online by KAIT8.com news. It still appears to have left many with more questions than answers.

The entire footage is edited in parts, and shows no animosity during the arrest and questioning of the three youths. Excerpts of dashboard camera footage showed the officers approaching the truck after it was s topped on Haltom Street in Jonesboro.

In normal tones of voice, the officers discuss what to do with Mr. Carter's cellphone, have trouble spelling his name while trying to radio it in, and try to guess what the white powder is in a plastic bag, believing it to be sugar. Eventually, the officers release two of the youths but confer about what to do with Mr. Carter because he has an open arrest warrant in Mississippi.

Cars drive by the arrest stop, their headlights visible in the mirrors of the patrol car. Cellphones ring. At one point, a female voice can be heard asking an officer what is to become of Mr. Carter, and the response is that he will be held. Then the officer says he that is sorry he could not help her any further and says thank you. One of the responding officers, Keith Baggett, said in a separate incident report that Mr. Carter had identified the woman as his aunt. Officer Baggett's narrative then says:

“At that time I saw a vehicle driving north on Haltom and then heard a loud thump with a metallic sound.” He added that he thought it had run over “a piece of metal”. Officer Baggett said he and the other officer, Officer Ron Marsh, started going to their vehicles. Officer Baggett was about to drive away when Officer Marsh gestured to him and “said that Carter had shot himself.”

“We went to the rear passenger side door, opened it and I observed Carter in a sitting position slumped forward with his head in his lap. There was a large amount of blood on the front of his shirt, pants, seat and floor. His hands were still cuffed behind his back.”

Mr. Carter was still breathing. The officers called an ambulance. The state crime laboratory has yet to release the autopsy results and other reports related to his death, an official said.

A lawyer for the Carter family, Benjamin Irwin of the Cochran Firm, said the material released by the Police Department shed litt le light on what happened to Mr. Carter but that it was clear the officers had a duty to protect him when he was in their custody.

“I feel like we have been given a lot of information but none of it is related to the specific question of what happened to Chavis,” he said on Friday in an interview. “The family and I have spoken and their first concern is to find out what happened to their child. It is too early for us to draw conclusions as to officer involvement or not. Everybody is going to continue to go through everything and pay attention to every detail, and we hope all the truth comes out. We want to know what happened to Chavis Carter that night.”



With Defiance, Laughter and a New Single, Russian Riot Grrrls Go to Jail

By ROBERT MACKEY

Video from the Moscow courtroom where three members of the Russian protest band Pussy Riot were sentenced to two-year terms in prison on Friday.

As my colleague David Herszenhorn reports, three members of the all-female protest band Pussy Riot were sentenced to two-year prison terms on Friday by a judge who ruled that their impromptu performance of a song deriding Vladimir V. Putin in a Moscow cathedral last February was “motivated by religious hatred.”

Despite the harsh sentences, the women - Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, 23; Yekaterina Samutsevich, 30; and Maria Alyokhina, 24 - greeted the verdict with defiance, smiling and laughing at some points during the proceedings.