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KING ABDULLAH'S LAST HOURS .....AND SISSI

Ceylal

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King Abdullah's death was triggered by massive internal bleeding and not by pneumonia, informed Saudi sources have told me. The collapse in his health, which happened on December 31 last year, prevented the King from carrying out a plan to remove his half brother Salman from the position of crown prince and replace him with Prince Muqrin bin Abdel Aziz. Abdullah's own son Prince Meteb would have become next in line to the throne, the sources said.

On December 31, the palace issued a statement which said the king had been admitted to hospital, but which disguised the severity of his condition. According to the state SPA news agency the king " entered today, Wednesday ... the King Abdulaziz Medical City of the National Guard in Riyadh to undergo some medical tests".

The King was rushed to hospital from the Rawdat Khraim resort near Riyadh, where he had been preparing to convene a meeting between the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, and the Egyptian president Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi. The meeting, which would have sealed the reconciliation between the two sparring states, never took place.

Had it done so, the late King would then have announced a series of decisions which he had taken and which Meteb and the head of his royal court Khalid Al-Tuwaijri had been urging him to take for some time. The decisions would have secured the transfer of power to his own son, when the crown was handed over to the grandchildren of the founding King.

Abdullah's sudden collapse triggered panic in the Tuwaijri camp which foresaw the consequences to them, and their partners who staged the military coup in Egypt of Salman coming to power. Abdullah was being ventilated and under general anesthesia, so he was unconscious.

Meteb and Tuwaijri fought to keep his condition under wraps. They tried to prevent Salman from entering the king's room. They searched for ways to keep the original plan in play, so that the king's decision could be announced under his name.

To get the plan out into the open, they passed instructions to the Egyptians to float the idea in their media. The Egytian TV anchor Yousef Al-Husseini revealed in his show that a decision would be announced, relieving Prince Salman from his position as Crown prince. Al-Husseini said that would be better for Egypt and went on to attack Salman's son Mohammed for " meddling in the business of others."

Salman fought back. His camp successfully pushed for an official statement which admitted that the King had been intubated, and thus was unconscious. On Jan 2, the royal court issued a second statement which said that Abdullah was suffering from pneumonia and " temporarily needed help to breathe through a tube". This extra detail puzzled observers at the time, but it was an official admission that the king was in no state to announce any decisions.

Tuwaijri and Meteb then tried another tack. They proposed to Salman the idea of an announcement that the king had abdicated due to illness. Salman would become king in exchange for his guarantee that Meteb would become his deputy crown prince. Salman refused to enter any discussion while the King was still alive in hospital.

This attempt continued after the death of the king and that explains why it took so long for the official news of his death to come out and the conflicting media accounts of that night. It also explains the speed with which Salman acted when he inherited the crown, announcing the removal of Tuwaijri before his half-brother had even been buried.

During that period, Tuwaijri and his ally Mohammed bin Zayed, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, used the Egyptian media as their personal press office, and as a way to advance their intrigues. The day before the death of the king, the Egyptian Al-Nahar TV Channel broadcast as breaking news, a report item saying that "King Abdullah will abdicate within hours, Salman will be King, Muqrin will be Crown Prince and Metev will be deputy Crown Prince." This was the proposal Tuwaijri and Meteb were trying to get Salman to accept.

We know from leaked recordings of conversations that Abbas Kamil the manager of Sisi's office instructed journalists directly and that he was in contact with Tuwaijri's office. Saudi sources now point to a second man in the chain of command. He was the UAE Minister of State Sultan Al-Jabir. His job was to communicate with Abbas and TV channels and asked them to broadcast information about Egypt as desired by the UAE and Tuwaijri.

Since Salman came to power, the Tuwaijri camp has lost out. The new crown prince Mohammed bin Nayef has gone out of his way to show that the kingdom's friends are changing. Yesterday he met the Turkish interior minister. Last week he chose Doha for his first official visit.

There have also been a number of indicators that the Kingdom's policy on the Muslim Brotherhood , which Abdullah declared a terrorist organization, is about to change.

Four days ago a Saudi journalist quoted Foreign minister Saud al-Faisal as saying he had "no problem" with the Brotherhood. "We do not have a problem with the Muslim Brotherhood; our problem is with a small group affiliated to this organisation," he said.

He is the world's longest serving foreign minister, so his statement last week could not have been a slip of the tongue. Then, two days ago a confidant of Salman gave an interview in which he said it was "unreasonable" to designate the Brotherhood as a terrorist organization.

Ahmed al-Tuwaijri (no relation) a former member of the consultative assembly said: "He denied the Interior Ministry had designated the whole Brotherhood as terrorists and explained the "context" around the group's designation as an outlawed organization.

"There is something called linguistic context," Tuwaijri told Rotana, a television channel owned by Saudi billionaire al-Waleed bin Talal.

"The kingdom couldn't say in one statement that the Muslim Brotherhood is a terrorist organization. It (the designation) came as part of a list of terrorist organizations and the Muslim Brotherhood's name was added to that. It (the designation) is a group of organizations that follow the path of violence, intent on spreading terror [the designation condemns] all those to whom this applies.To take this concept and have it generalized over this huge organization that stretches from Indonesia to Morocco and to say that it is all terrorist is unacceptable to someone of reason."



The story of the court intrigues in Abdullah's last days, and the leaked recordings which have come out since then, show something that was not immediately apparent in June 2013, when Egypt's first elected president Mohammed Morsi was overthrown by his army, after mass demonstrations against his rule.

The story shows how close the connections were between one faction in the Saudi royal court, the Egyptian military and UAE. Sisi was doing their bidding and expected to be paid handsomely for it. The tone of his remarks in the leaked recordings is one of a man who is contemptuous of his paymasters. At one point in the private discussions of his kitchen cabinet, the Gulf states are referred to as "half-states".

The long arm of the Saudi royal court holds applies today to the shake-up that is currently under way. Salman's new personnel will forge new alliances, lifting the cover that Egypt's rulers have thus far enjoyed. This could be another factor behind the release of taped recordings of deeply incriminating conversations in Sisi's private office.
 
King Abdullah's death was triggered by massive internal bleeding and not by pneumonia, informed Saudi sources have told me. The collapse in his health, which happened on December 31 last year, prevented the King from carrying out a plan to remove his half brother Salman from the position of crown prince and replace him with Prince Muqrin bin Abdel Aziz. Abdullah's own son Prince Meteb would have become next in line to the throne, the sources said.

On December 31, the palace issued a statement which said the king had been admitted to hospital, but which disguised the severity of his condition. According to the state SPA news agency the king " entered today, Wednesday ... the King Abdulaziz Medical City of the National Guard in Riyadh to undergo some medical tests".

The King was rushed to hospital from the Rawdat Khraim resort near Riyadh, where he had been preparing to convene a meeting between the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, and the Egyptian president Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi. The meeting, which would have sealed the reconciliation between the two sparring states, never took place.

Had it done so, the late King would then have announced a series of decisions which he had taken and which Meteb and the head of his royal court Khalid Al-Tuwaijri had been urging him to take for some time. The decisions would have secured the transfer of power to his own son, when the crown was handed over to the grandchildren of the founding King.

Abdullah's sudden collapse triggered panic in the Tuwaijri camp which foresaw the consequences to them, and their partners who staged the military coup in Egypt of Salman coming to power. Abdullah was being ventilated and under general anesthesia, so he was unconscious.

Meteb and Tuwaijri fought to keep his condition under wraps. They tried to prevent Salman from entering the king's room. They searched for ways to keep the original plan in play, so that the king's decision could be announced under his name.

To get the plan out into the open, they passed instructions to the Egyptians to float the idea in their media. The Egytian TV anchor Yousef Al-Husseini revealed in his show that a decision would be announced, relieving Prince Salman from his position as Crown prince. Al-Husseini said that would be better for Egypt and went on to attack Salman's son Mohammed for " meddling in the business of others."

Salman fought back. His camp successfully pushed for an official statement which admitted that the King had been intubated, and thus was unconscious. On Jan 2, the royal court issued a second statement which said that Abdullah was suffering from pneumonia and " temporarily needed help to breathe through a tube". This extra detail puzzled observers at the time, but it was an official admission that the king was in no state to announce any decisions.

Tuwaijri and Meteb then tried another tack. They proposed to Salman the idea of an announcement that the king had abdicated due to illness. Salman would become king in exchange for his guarantee that Meteb would become his deputy crown prince. Salman refused to enter any discussion while the King was still alive in hospital.

This attempt continued after the death of the king and that explains why it took so long for the official news of his death to come out and the conflicting media accounts of that night. It also explains the speed with which Salman acted when he inherited the crown, announcing the removal of Tuwaijri before his half-brother had even been buried.

During that period, Tuwaijri and his ally Mohammed bin Zayed, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, used the Egyptian media as their personal press office, and as a way to advance their intrigues. The day before the death of the king, the Egyptian Al-Nahar TV Channel broadcast as breaking news, a report item saying that "King Abdullah will abdicate within hours, Salman will be King, Muqrin will be Crown Prince and Metev will be deputy Crown Prince." This was the proposal Tuwaijri and Meteb were trying to get Salman to accept.

We know from leaked recordings of conversations that Abbas Kamil the manager of Sisi's office instructed journalists directly and that he was in contact with Tuwaijri's office. Saudi sources now point to a second man in the chain of command. He was the UAE Minister of State Sultan Al-Jabir. His job was to communicate with Abbas and TV channels and asked them to broadcast information about Egypt as desired by the UAE and Tuwaijri.

Since Salman came to power, the Tuwaijri camp has lost out. The new crown prince Mohammed bin Nayef has gone out of his way to show that the kingdom's friends are changing. Yesterday he met the Turkish interior minister. Last week he chose Doha for his first official visit.

There have also been a number of indicators that the Kingdom's policy on the Muslim Brotherhood , which Abdullah declared a terrorist organization, is about to change.

Four days ago a Saudi journalist quoted Foreign minister Saud al-Faisal as saying he had "no problem" with the Brotherhood. "We do not have a problem with the Muslim Brotherhood; our problem is with a small group affiliated to this organisation," he said.

He is the world's longest serving foreign minister, so his statement last week could not have been a slip of the tongue. Then, two days ago a confidant of Salman gave an interview in which he said it was "unreasonable" to designate the Brotherhood as a terrorist organization.

Ahmed al-Tuwaijri (no relation) a former member of the consultative assembly said: "He denied the Interior Ministry had designated the whole Brotherhood as terrorists and explained the "context" around the group's designation as an outlawed organization.

"There is something called linguistic context," Tuwaijri told Rotana, a television channel owned by Saudi billionaire al-Waleed bin Talal.

"The kingdom couldn't say in one statement that the Muslim Brotherhood is a terrorist organization. It (the designation) came as part of a list of terrorist organizations and the Muslim Brotherhood's name was added to that. It (the designation) is a group of organizations that follow the path of violence, intent on spreading terror [the designation condemns] all those to whom this applies.To take this concept and have it generalized over this huge organization that stretches from Indonesia to Morocco and to say that it is all terrorist is unacceptable to someone of reason."



The story of the court intrigues in Abdullah's last days, and the leaked recordings which have come out since then, show something that was not immediately apparent in June 2013, when Egypt's first elected president Mohammed Morsi was overthrown by his army, after mass demonstrations against his rule.

The story shows how close the connections were between one faction in the Saudi royal court, the Egyptian military and UAE. Sisi was doing their bidding and expected to be paid handsomely for it. The tone of his remarks in the leaked recordings is one of a man who is contemptuous of his paymasters. At one point in the private discussions of his kitchen cabinet, the Gulf states are referred to as "half-states".

The long arm of the Saudi royal court holds applies today to the shake-up that is currently under way. Salman's new personnel will forge new alliances, lifting the cover that Egypt's rulers have thus far enjoyed. This could be another factor behind the release of taped recordings of deeply incriminating conversations in Sisi's private office.


If this is true then Sisi should be in trouble by now but have we seen anything like that?
 
Please explain the kind of trouble this thug is facing. He's making deals with Russia, that's all I know.



UN: Egyptians and Westerners divided on the strategy to follow against terrorism in Libya



Egyptian fighter landing 16 February 2015 return strikes in Libya.© AFP
While Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sissi publicly calls for international military intervention in Libya, Western countries defend the option of a political solution and the establishment of a national unity government.

President Sissi on the offensive

The day after a raid of his aviation against the positions of the Islamic State Group (EI), Egypt is placed in the front line Tuesday to ask the UN mandate for international intervention in Libya. This is at the heart of a meeting of the Security Council scheduled for Wednesday at the request of the Egyptian Foreign Minister, Sameh Shoukry, who is in New York to make a presentation of the situation.

Monday, it took only a few hours to President Abdel Fattah al-Sissi to launch the Egyptian air force against the Libyan branch of the IU, who came to claim in a terrible video beheading of 21 Coptic Christians, including 20 Egyptians ."There is no choice," the president has dealt Sissi, questioned Tuesday by French radio Europe 1 on its willingness to ask the Security Council to adopt a resolution for an international military intervention.

"What is happening in Libya will transform the country into a breeding ground that will threaten the entire region, not just Egypt but also the Mediterranean and Europe," warned the Egyptian president. We need to do it again, but together. "Nothing has filtered Tuesday on the balance of strikes in Libya, or their prosecution." We must address this issue because the mission has not been completed by our European friends added Sissi in reference to the intervention that led to the fall of Muammar Gaddafi's regime in 2011. We have abandoned the people of Libya, extremist militias prisoner. "



The favorable Westerners "a political solution"

On Tuesday, the major European countries and the United States stressed their side in a joint statement the need to find a "political solution" in Libya and called for the formation of a national unity government they are willing to hold up. "The brutal killing of 21 Egyptian citizens in Libya by terrorists affiliated to EI stresses once again the urgent need for a political solution of the conflict," said the statement issued in Rome.

The formation of a national unity government that these Western powers (US, Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Spain) say they are ready to support, "is the best hope for Libyans," continues text. It also announced that the Special Representative of the Secretary General of the UN on Libya Bernardino Leon convene in the coming days a series of meetings in order to result in the formation of this government of national unity. Those who do not participate in the reconciliation process will exclude from the "political solution".

"Four years after the revolution," which led to the fall of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, "he will not be allowed to attempt to obstruct the political process and democratic transition in Libya to condemn the country to chaos and the extremism, "yet says the text, which, however, makes no reference to a possible threat of military intervention if this process does not lead.

Italy in the front line on the Libyan issue

Italy has recently sought to mobilize the UN and its European allies to try to bring stability to its former colony, fearing the establishment of a "caliphate" on the other side of the Mediterranean. The Italian Foreign Minister, Paolo Gentiloni, claimed this weekend that Italy was "ready to fight" and his counterpart of Defense, Roberta Pinotti, had said that the country would lead a military coalition send at least 5,000 troops on the ground.

But the Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi calmed the game Monday, ruling that it was "not the time for a military intervention," while calling to exercise "wisdom and prudence".

Italy's Federica Mogherini, chief diplomat of the European Union, will meet Thursday in Washington also with the US Secretary of State John Kerry and Arab leaders about Libya, following a summit on "violent extremism" in the US capital.

(With AFP)
Egypt is moving away from a political solution , that with Algeria, has signed at the Hamammet meeting Tunisia. Tunisia and Algeria have lived the after effect of the fall of Kaddafy have reiterated their position for the political solution among all the Libyan warring parties. This will certainly raises question about the credibility of Egypt and which deal she signed onto with France after the deal of the century...Egyptian troops in Libya proper will undoubtedly poison the relation with Algeria to the brink of casus belli..They almost came to it over a soccer match if Egypt didn't stand down...
 
Please explain the kind of trouble this thug is facing. He's making deals with Russia, that's all I know.
They depend on the money arabian nations will donate to Egypt.

Tourists to Egypt has been reduced by 95%, Which is a hard hit for egyptian central bank and local stores.
 
Egyptian troops in Libya proper will undoubtedly poison the relation with Algeria to the brink of casus belli..They almost came to it over a soccer match if Egypt didn't stand down...

What cassus belli?,Algeria would shut up and won't put up as the Egyptian military would walk over you.:lol:

Don't kid yourself ...
 
They depend on the money arabian nations will donate to Egypt.

Tourists to Egypt has been reduced by 95%, Which is a hard hit for egyptian central bank and local stores.

Tourist number has drooped due to the political violence but what I wanted to know is the kind of trouble sisi is facing because of the new King in SA. Nothing is visible so far.


And that's all you need to know.:lol:

Go back to your Ukrainian dungeon and appease your Russian masters, that will be more productive for peace in your country.
 
I hear your kind is being hunted in Bangladesh,don't worry ,i live in a free country bozo.

Some free country, doesn't even know where the border is! Does Ukraine exist anymore? last time I heard that its self-proclaimed President was busy hiding himself in his bunker.
 
Some free country, doesn't even know where the border is! Does Ukraine exist anymore? last time I heard that its self-proclaimed President was busy hiding himself in his bunker.
Don't worry about the food stamp queen, the Brits have just cut his umbilical cord...he is searching for the next country's trash bin.
 

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