logo
#

Latest news with #ChinaEgypt

Chinese fighter jets soar over Egypt in first joint exercises
Chinese fighter jets soar over Egypt in first joint exercises

CNA

time06-05-2025

  • Business
  • CNA

Chinese fighter jets soar over Egypt in first joint exercises

BEIJING: The sound of Chinese fighter jets roared over the Egyptian pyramids and could echo across the Middle East, as Beijing wrapped up military drills with Cairo aimed at chipping away at the United States' strategic influence in the volatile region. China's military on Monday (May 5) released videos of its fast jets, helicopters and transport planes flying high above the Sahara and hailing inaugural joint air force exercises with Egypt as "a signal of deepening military ties and shifting alliances". The joint exercises with one of the US' biggest security partners come as Washington increasingly turns inward under President Donald Trump, allowing China to deepen ties across North Africa and invest billions in security projects. "As Egypt looks beyond its traditional US partnership, a new era of cooperation is taking flight over Cairo's skies," said a video released by the international division of state broadcaster CCTV, as a jet plane takes off into the night. Global Times, a tabloid owned by the newspaper of the ruling Communist Party, People's Daily, said the "Eagles of Civilisation 2025" drills had established a foundation for various potential cooperation between the two countries' militaries at a time when Egypt is trying to upgrade its combat equipment, citing experts. Analysts say the 18-day drills also help Egypt assert itself as a major regional power among the Arab nations and North Africa amid growing regional turbulence. "It's great public diplomacy for (China), particularly in the Middle East," said Eric Orlander, co-founder of the China-Global South Project. "It's what brings people in the door for them to sell drones, SAMs, light arms, transports, et cetera." "A major regional power needs an Air Force, right?" he added. Orlander cautioned that switching jet fighter systems is very expensive, and Washington could choose to withhold financial military support from Cairo if it upped its purchases of Chinese technologies. But the US - the primary security partner to Egypt, neighbouring Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states since the late seventies - has made large foreign cuts under Trump that have been keenly felt across the region. And with the Gaza crisis unfolding to its north-east, ethnic violence in Sudan to the south, and political instability in Libya to its west, Egypt finds itself squeezed on three fronts. China has since pledged billions in fresh investment for projects such as satellite manufacturing facilities in Egypt capable of producing military-grade surveillance equipment.

China and Egypt wrap first joint military exercise as Beijing looks to cozy up to American allies
China and Egypt wrap first joint military exercise as Beijing looks to cozy up to American allies

Fox News

time06-05-2025

  • Business
  • Fox News

China and Egypt wrap first joint military exercise as Beijing looks to cozy up to American allies

Egypt and China wrapped up their first-ever joint military exercises on Sunday, in a show of force involving the U.S.' top rival and one of its top recipients of military aid. Running from mid-April until Sunday, the drills consisted of joint aerial exercises, simulated air combat and modern warfare lectures. China deployed its J-10C fighter jets, KJ-500 airborne early warning aircraft and Y-20 transport tankers in a display of its military prowess beyond Asia, according to footage posted by Chinese state media outlet CCTV. Egypt has, in recent years, also purchased large amounts of military machinery from Russia, prompting questions about how the U.S. should address a top Middle East ally and aid recipient growing closer to its biggest adversaries. CHINESE FIRM AIDING HOUTHI ATTACKS ON US VESSELS "We've never seen a crisis like this," said Joel Rubin, a former senior State Department official who worked on the Egypt desk under former President George W. Bush and pens "The Briefing Book" on Substack. "Egypt is essentially flouting us right now and looking to China, looking for more stable, long-term partners after nearly four and a half decades of stability in terms of the peace deal under Camp David." Egypt operates a number of U.S.-made aircraft - F-16 fighter aircraft, CH-47 Chinook and AH-64 Apache helicopters - and is slated to receive C-130 J transport aircraft. Egypt also possesses 32 American Patriot missile defense systems. The China-Egypt Eagles of Civilization 2025 is expected to bolster Beijing's ties to Africa's strongest military and a longtime strategic U.S. ally. Egypt has received roughly $1.3 billion each year in U.S. military aid since the Camp David Accords that normalized relations between Israel and Egypt. That figure puts it behind only Israel, which scores around $3.8 in U.S. military aid. Ukraine receives more aid than Egypt and Israel, but only since Russia's invasion – prior to 2022, it got between $200 and $350 million each year. ISRAEL APPROVES PLAN TO CAPTURE ALL OF GAZA, CALLS UP TENS OF THOUSANDS OF RESERVE TROOPS When the Trump administration took office and froze all foreign aid, Egypt and Israel were the only two nations who were exempted from the freeze. Egypt partners with U.S. security forces across the region to fight terrorism in places like Iraq and Syria. The Camp David Accords, per Rubin, were the "final piece to the puzzle that peeled off the most important Arab military from the Soviet Union." Prior to the accords, Egypt was aligned with Russia's priorities in the Middle East. "It was about getting them into our column, and this is a sign they may be again moving into a different column." Around $300 million of U.S. military aid to Egypt can be conditioned on human rights concerns, and that money has been frozen and unfrozen in recent years due to complaints about Egypt's human rights record under President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. "Cairo's hedging tactics are not new. This has been a slow and steady effort, and this exercise marks a clear escalation. For Cairo, they want to diversify their patrons. Washington has long conditioned its aid to Egypt on human rights and democratization efforts. While the U.S. has routinely issued waivers on these conditions and allowed the aid to flow, Cairo does not want to remain beholden to Washington," said Mariam Wahba, an Egypt-focused researcher at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. However, with a new administration with little appetite for foreign aid, Egypt may be concerned that further aid cuts are on the table. "This exercise should certainly sound the alarm in Washington," said Wahba. The exercises, according to former Deputy Assistance Secretary of Defense Simone Ledeen, "are both about capability building and sending a geopolitical signal." "Egypt is hedging, showing the U.S. it has options," added Ledeen, who worked in the first Trump administration. "China is making clear it intends to expand its influence in the Mediterranean. Everyone should be paying attention." CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP The latest development, according to Rubin, calls for "very agile diplomacy." "It's indicative of the broader global uncertainty and panic about the Trump administration's position towards international affairs," he said. "If we do threaten in a way that pushes them out, then even if we might feel justified morally, we could potentially be losing a crucial ally and partner, one that has significant impact on global shipping routes, counterterrorism work across the Arab Middle East, and we would be giving China a toe hold right into the heart of the Middle East at the worst possible time."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store