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Egyptian Armed Forces

Does EAF even need Su-30's anymore? I think they are set for the next 15 years with the incoming Rafales and Mirages. They can get an MLU for their F-16's from Turkey. Or considering relations between Turkey and Egypt they might have to go through the more expensive route of MLU by USA.

Egypt's policy is to diversify weapons sources .
The outdated Russian warplanes are to be replaced by modern ones from the same source

French Rafales are to take the place of old Mirages , and so on ..
 
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It's been five years now re. the technical negotiation about Mig-29 M/M2 or Mig-35 and of course Su-35
Some resources even mentioned that Mig-29 smt and Su-30 are already in service .. But no official confirmation has been released.

the su-35 negotiations is not done i wasn't going to tell but the Mig-35 is coming with another surprise and it will be announced in the next days inchallah
 

Thanks for bringing that up. It's a great showcase of Egyptian aid and UN work abroad.

Egypt opened an Egyptian Field Hospital at Bagram in 2003.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

The hospital treats more than 7,000 Afghans per month. Treatment is provided free of charge. 31 percent of the hospitals patients are children.

Liam Fox, writing in the The Telegraph, described the Egyptian Hospital at Bagram as an exception to "almost non-existent" engagement in Afghanistan by the Muslim world.[8]

By Staff Sgt. Terrance D. Rhodes
RC-East PAO

BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan — Someone once said Egypt was a place flowing with milk and honey, but for the local Afghan people, the El Salam Egyptian Field Hospital gives so much more.

The El Salam Egyptian Field Hospital is a part of the coalition forces that helps and provide medical care for the people of Afghanistan.

The hospital, operating out of the wooden B-huts that dot the entire base, offers surgery and outpatient care, with specialists in many disciplines, including dentistry, ophthalmology, gynecology and pediatrics.

Since December, the hospital has seen over 5,000 patients including Afghans and American civilians.

“We treat and see civilians that work on Bagram and Afghans.” said Col. Reda AL. Shanawany, the commander of El Salam Egyptian Field Hospital. “If there is something we cannot find a solution on, we will refer all of our patients to Craig Joint Theater Hospital.”

The hospital offers many different kinds of treatment, but more often, Afghans are treated for Tuberculosis and Hepatitis B.

“The two most common cases that we see is [tuberculosis] and [hepatitis B],” said Capt. Ahmed Moheb, the chief medical doctor of the El Salam Egyptian Field Hospital. “People come from a long distance, so I think they need us here to make sure that their getting cured.”

Afghans have come from all over the country to this hospital, the Egyptians said, but most are from the area.

Some Afghans travel from far distances to receive medical treatment, and some come with no shoes and with little to eat, but once they get to the hospital, all of those needs are meet.

The staff not only treats all of its patients, it feeds them as well.

“Before the Afghan people leave, we always give them food for their trip back home,” said Shanawany.

Regardless of how far they may have to travel, Afghans know this hospital will treat them and make sure their needs are take care of.

“I spend over an hour of walking to get here, so it’s refreshing to know that all my needs will get taken care of,” said Mohamand Khanagha, a patient at the Egyptian Field Hospital.

The Egyptians enjoy taking care of their patients, and they want to win the hearts and minds of the Afghan people.

“We want to teach the Afghans how to support themselves to live successfully without us,” said Moheb. “In the future, I would like for all the Afghan people to be safe and their medical needs meet.”

Egyptian hospital provides medical care for locals | Resolute Support Mission

BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan — Rahim Khan has come from the village of Torkchi to have his hip looked at. Near the end of the Taliban reign, a fighter fired a rocket at his house, and a large mud brick fell on him.

Sixteen-year-old Kamal has come from Chaical village. Trauma from a motorcycle accident four years ago has left him with a wandering eye.

Six-month-old Meshgan almost died from malnutrition because his mother could not produce breast milk. He receives regular feedings here.

They were among the 20 or so Afghans who came to Bagram Air Field on Wednesday for free examinations, courtesy of the Egyptian Field Hospital. It would be a very slow day; the hospital usually sees 250 to 350 people per day, but the Egyptians are rotating teams, and had minimal staffing as they prepared to leave.

The hospital, operating out of the wooden B-huts that dot the entire base, offers surgery and outpatient care, with specialists in many disciplines, including dentistry, ophthalmology, gynecology and pediatrics.

One of four medical facilities on the massive air base in Parwan province north of Kabul, the Egyptian hospital is staffed by 14 doctors and 20 nurses who provide health care to Afghans as an instrument of “soft power,” a way to give locals tangible aid and, hopefully, win some of those hearts and minds sought in counterinsurgency strategy.

Dr. (Col.) Eham Karam Henein Morcos is the chief. According to Karam and the hospital’s commander, Col. Khaled Farghaly abd Elsamee, Egyptian medics have helped more than 600,000 Afghans on an outpatient basis since the hospital opened in July 2003. They have performed more than 2,600 operations on locals, with Khaled’s team doing 284.

Most come in suffering complications from malnutrition and anemia. Tuberculosis, hypertension and diabetes are common. And because much of it goes untreated, patients often arrive in distress, including some “in severe coma,” Karam said.

The same can happen when there is external injury.

“Sometimes, one month after [breaking a bone], they come,” he said, because the locals have no money, or no way to travel.

What the hospital provides is a largely Muslim face — some Egyptians, including Karam, are Christian — to a population that might resist treatment by a Westerner.

There are also Afghan interpreters, to handle the Dari-to-Arabic translations. Many are doctors who come every day from Kabul to translate and to learn from their Egyptian colleagues. The Afghan doctors sometimes assist with surgeries, but many are happy to have a coalition-provided salary, which some of the Egyptians speculated was more than they would make practicing medicine in Kabul.

Egypt is one of just three Arab countries — the others are the United Arab Emirates and Jordan — providing troops in Afghanistan, a fact not lost on some.

“United States has bases in Kuwait, in Qatar, in Bahrain,” complained a United Arab Emirates soldier at the compound. “Where are their soldiers?”

Afghans have come from all over the country to this hospital, the Egyptians said, but most are from the area.


They run a gantlet of Afghan, Egyptian and U.S. security to get on the base.

A small contingent of U.S. forces does eye scans and fingerprinting on each visitor coming in the small gate on the side of the Bagram village, home to about 1,000 Afghans.

They check the retina scan against the growing national database, and add those not in it. On this day, one man’s name was in the system as having had insurgent connections. He sat waiting for U.S. intelligence officials to come “have a chat,” a U.S. Air Force security policeman said.

There also are cultural hurdles for locals. Many have been reluctant to accept care, even from medical staff who are mostly Muslim.

Women in particular were slow in trusting, at first only wanting to deal with the female Egyptian nurses. But Karam says about 70 percent of the women who come in the gate now are willing to be treated by a male doctor.

Still, some are not.

Karam spoke of the heartbreak of dealing with a population plagued by fear and anchored in another culture.

“Sometimes,” he said, “the woman is told she needs C-section, or she die. She say, ‘I ask my husband,’ and we never see her again. What happens, we don’t know.”

Egyptian hospital puts Muslim face on medical care in Afghanistan - News - Stripes

News of today’s ouster of democratically-elected President Mohamed Morsi by the Egyptian army is positively stunning–a military takeover is hardly good news for democracy–but I cannot help but feel a measure of optimism. Perhaps progressive change in Egypt toward democracy looks different than what we outsiders might think it should.

July 23rd is Egypt’s Revolution Day, and this year marks the 61st year of Egyptian independence from foreign rule. As the military takes over this week, I find it especially important to reflect on Egypt’s revolution in 1952, how it came about, and the meaning those events hold for Egyptians. And as I reflect on this history, I also think back fondly to my time working with the Egyptian army in Afghanistan–and all that I learned from them about Egyptian history, politics, and culture. It is, more than anything, my friendship with Egyptian troops that gives me hope.

On my first deployment to Afghanistan, I found myself working with soldiers from the Egyptian army’s humanitarian hospital at Bagram Airfield. Egyptian troops provided vital medical care for Afghan civilians, and they interfaced regularly with Americans, NATO, and Afghan forces to coordinate security and other support for their camp. My job involved helping with logistical support, and I paid regular visits to their compound to participate in events organized by the Egyptians to distribute clothing and shoes to Afghan women and children, or sometimes just to say hello or have a cup of coffee. I became fast friends with a captain who served as the hospital’s liaison, who (for the sake of his anonymity) I will call Aziz.

I remember in July of that year Aziz sending me an email to wish me a happy “Independent Day.” I told him the story of American independence, and how important the Declaration of Independence was to our national identity. Americans may not be able to name the dates that our Revolutionary war began or ended, but we can all name July 4, 1776, as the day we declared our independence from Britain. We often seem to forget how vital the role of the U.S. military–and military leaders–was in forming and stabilizing our own early democracy.

Aziz asked for my help in putting together a history presentation for a Revolution Day celebration he wanted to organize at Bagram to bring Egyptians, Americans, and Coalition troops together. He brought me a file of digital images of photos from the 1950s, of Anwar Sadat, Gamal Abdel Nasser, and Mohammed Naguib–and he told me the story of the Free Officers Movement that formed within the Egyptian army following Egypt’s loss of the Arab-Israeli War in 1948. Egypt had been ruled by foreign kings and emperors for centuries, and at that time King Farouk, who was of foreign descent and influence, was blamed by an increasing number of Egyptians for the loss of 1948. Farouk was also broadly considered incompetent, and an embarrassment both because of his un-Islamic playboy lifestyle and his tolerance of ongoing British occupation of the Suez Canal Zone.

By 1952, an attack on Egyptian police by British troops–resulting in 50 police killed and more than 100 wounded–brought Egyptians out into the streets in protest, and the protests grew into angry mobs that rioted for weeks against a king and a government that seemed wholly disinterested in the will of the Egyptian people. This was the moment for this group of young army officers to plan the ouster of a corrupt, foreign government on behalf of the Egyptian people. Gamal Abdel Nasser was the passionate young colonel who masterminded the Free Officers Movement, Anwar Sadat was the group’s spokesman, and Mohammed Naguib, a respected commander from the Arab-Israeli War, was named the figurehead.

At 7:30 on the morning of July 23, 1952, the voice of Anwar Sadat came over the radio to announce that, for the first time in two thousand years, Egypt would be ruled by Egyptians. The Egyptian army and police were positioned throughout Cairo and Alexandria, and King Farouk’s palaces were surrounded. Having no other option, Farouk abdicated, and departed the country with full military honors, never to return. Naguib served as Egypt’s first president, Nasser the second–and Nasser oversaw the establishment of a new Constitution for Egypt. He also brought an end to foreign occupation of the Suez Canal Zone.

Maybe Americans who were alive in the 1950s remember this, but I found that this history isn’t a familiar one for most Americans. Certainly not the majority of young U.S. soldiers who joined us at Aziz’s Revolution Day barbecue, where our history slideshow ran on a projector in a giant tent while Egyptian pop music blared and soldiers danced, grilled hamburgers, and enjoyed a respite from their daily routines.

Over the time I knew Aziz, he told me with pride that he chose to attend Egypt’s military academy as a young man, where he endured rigorous training that included long foot marches in the Sinai desert. His father had been a successful businessman, yet he chose a life of military service, and he was immensely proud of his country’s rich, enduring history. We talked politics, we exchanged stories about our military training and family lives, and he shared with me so much of his sincerely and deeply held Islamic faith. He was troubled that the Islamic Brotherhood had been outlawed at that time by President Mubarak, yet he insisted that Egyptian society must respect all faiths, to include his many Coptic Christian friends. Respect for other faiths is a tenet of Islam, he insisted.

Military service is compulsory for men in Egypt, as is the case in many countries across the world. The Egyptian army unit I worked with was professional, and made up of a cast of characters not unlike a U.S. unit–spanning the spectrum of a doctor who carefully researched and documented the pathogens he was seeing in his patients, to young nurses who were dedicated, cheerful, and wanted to learn English, to the joking NCOs who always welcomed me warmly with a smile. The Egyptian camp was dilapidated because it ran on a shoestring budget, but it always seemed to work like clockwork, managing a patient load of about 200 per day with a small staff working at least six days a week. I grew to respect these Egyptian soldiers tremendously.

I cheered on the 2011 uprising in Tahrir Square along with much of the world, and I was unsurprised when the Egyptian army rolled in and ended up taking on a mediator role for the masses rather than acting as a tool of repression and violence against a popular uprising. A military acting either as tool of a dictator or as a force independent of a government no doubt can produce horrifying results. But there is also something genuinely inspiring about a military that chooses to side with a nation’s populace rather than its government.

I am seeing calls for an end to funding for Egypt–a vital military partner for the U.S., and a nation that, despite profound civil unrest and changes in government, yet upholds its treaty with Israel–as well as condemnations of today’s ouster of President Morsi as dooming Egypt to endless political unrest. I simply cannot agree with these ideas. I can’t predict the future, but I see the yearning of crowds in Tahrir Square for democratic leadership that truly represents the best ideals of Egyptian society, and the move of the Egyptian army to intervene on the people’s behalf, as potentially positive forces.

As the U.S. celebrates our own proud independence and democratic ideals, my hope is that Egypt will be able to look back on this week as a pivotal shift toward true representative government for all Egyptians. Although my Egyptian brother Aziz and I frequently disagreed, we always agreed on one thing–we want to see peace and stability in the world, and in our own countries. I am wishing Aziz and my friends in Egypt all the best. May peace and stability soon be the result.

A New Revolution Day in Egypt? | True Boots


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Those Egyptian female soldiers are part of the hospital staff. That is a great endeavor, god speed!
 
the su-35 negotiations is not done i wasn't going to tell but the Mig-35 is coming with another surprise and it will be announced in the next days inchallah
They are nurses. There is a shool of nursery for the military a video of the opening for a new branch in upper egypt
 
I think the coming purchases till now are 24 Rafales (the first three jets to be delivered in 2015) + 12 more F16 block 52+ with CFT + Antey 2500 air defense system from Russia + 4 German type 209 diesel submarines, the first one to be delivered in 2016 insha'allah + Fremm Frigate + Gowind-class corvettes + More Ambassador MK III missile boats + A huge Russian deal to be announced soon isa that may include (Mig 35, SU30/35, attacking helicopters..etc)

We need to replace some jets that were/ planned to be out of service such as our F-4 Phantoms.
 
I think the coming purchases till now are 24 Rafales (the first three jets to be delivered in 2015) + 12 more F16 block 52+ with CFT + Antey 2500 air defense system from Russia + 4 German type 209 diesel submarines, the first one to be delivered in 2016 insha'allah + Fremm Frigate + Gowind-class corvettes + More Ambassador MK III missile boats + A huge Russian deal to be announced soon isa that may include (Mig 35, SU30/35, attacking helicopters..etc)

We need to replace some jets that were/ planned to be out of service such as our F-4 Phantoms.

wake up all the F-4 fleet are out of service since late 2010
 
looks like a crow being saluted:coffee:
Word on the street is the whole Yemen war was launched to give him legitimacy since it's the first time they are transitioning from brothers to a son in modern history.
 
wake up all the F-4 fleet are out of service since late 2010

I know that's why I said some jets that (were) / (or) planned to be out of service, but I don't remember that we replaced them with other alternatives, just like the Egyptian Tu-16 strategic bombers which were out of service years ago without replacement or at least conversion to be used as tankers.
 
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