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Egypt Rejects Syrian Al Qaeda HTS-Nominated Ambassador

Egypt refused to accept the credentials of the Syria Al Qaeda HTS ambassador

Egypt has refused to approve the credentials of the new ambassador nominated by the Al Qaeda HTS regime in Syria, despite the nominee’s close ties to Abu Mohammad al-Julani.

According to leaked, unofficial but trustworthy sources, Egyptian authorities have turned down a request by the “foreign ministry” of Al Qaeda HTS—which controls Syria—to appoint Mohammad Taha Al-Ahmad to the top diplomatic position. This decision was conveyed to the group’s leadership through clear messages, bypassing an official public statement to avoid a diplomatic spat.

Egyptian sources cited Al-Ahmad’s militant past as the primary reason for the rejection. Al-Ahmad was once dubbed the “spoiled boy of the Al-Nusra Front” within the group, which critics label as a Western-, Turkish-, and Israeli-sponsored organization.

Unimpressed by Al-Ahmad’s updated image and unfazed by Donald Trump’s praises of Al Qaeda HTS leader Al-Julani at the White House, Egypt chose to honor the sacrifices of its own armed forces, who have fought these extremist groups across Egypt for decades.

Egypt ousted its Muslim Brotherhood regime in July 2013, after only one year in power, through a military intervention led by incumbent Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who was the commander of the Egyptian Army at the time. This move followed revelations regarding the organization’s links to Israel and Al-Qaeda’s then-leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, in Afghanistan. It came immediately after former Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi declared jihad against the Syrian state.

Egypt later shifted its regional stance, utilizing its leverage in the Arab world to support the isolation of the government of Bashar al-Assad, while also denying Iranian oil tankers passage through the Suez Canal.

The Muslim Brotherhood, from which groups like Al-Qaeda and ISIS eventually branched out, has a long history of militancy and political upheaval across the region. Historically, critics have argued that the group was nurtured by British intelligence and various Western, NATO, and regional actors to counter mainstream political movements.

The rejected nominee had reportedly put himself forward for the position to the Al Qaeda HTS foreign ministry, pointing to his prior experience in Egypt, where he studied at Cairo University before joining the ranks of terrorist organizations in Syria.



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1 Comment

  1. Heuer Stefan

    Egypt did the right thing when it ousted the Muslim Brotherhood jihadist Morsi from office, and has now made the right decision again by refusing to host a Mossad sex jihadist in Cairo. Let’s see what Tel Aviv and Washington think of that.

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