Monday, April 15, 2019

Egyptian President Al-Sisi Meets President Trump

President Donald J. Trump and President Abdel Fatah Al-Sissi of the Arab Republic of Egypt speak with reporters Tuesday, April 9, 2019, in the Oval Office of the White House.(Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead)

The White House
April 9, 2018

Readout of President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi’s Visit to the White House:

President Donald J. Trump welcomed President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi of Egypt to the White House today, the second visit of the Egyptian president since 2017.  The two leaders engaged in a frank discussion on regional developments in Libya and the threat posed by the Muslim Brotherhood.  President Trump and President El-Sisi discussed water issues, which are critically important for the United States and Egypt. These complex issues must be addressed through negotiations and with respect for international best practices. Both leaders expressed their mutual commitment to promoting religious liberty.

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Office of the Press Secretary FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 9, 2019
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT TRUMP AND PRESIDENT ABDEL FATTAH AL SISI OF THE ARAB REPUBLIC OF EGYPT BEFORE BILATERAL MEETING
Oval Office
12:17 P.M. EDT

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Thank you very much.  It’s a great honor to be with President Al Sisi of Egypt.  We have many things to discuss, as you can imagine: military, trade.

And I have to say that a lot of progress has been made in a lot of different ways, in terms of terrorism and others things, with Egypt and within Egypt.  It’s really incredible what’s happened, especially in certain respects that we’ve already talked about.  But we will be meeting with representatives of the President and of Egypt in a little while.

Again, we have very, very important things, militarily, to talk about.  And also about trade.  A big trading partner.  We do a lot of work together.  We work together.  And I think we’ve never had a better relationship — Egypt and the United States — than we do right now.

So, I want to thank everybody for being here.  And, Mr. President, thank you very much.

PRESIDENT AL SISI:  Thank you, Mr. President.

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  My friend.

PRESIDENT AL SISI:  (As interpreted.)  Thank you, Mr. President.  Allow me to express my thanks for your kind invitation and for providing me this opportunity to meet and talk about making a quantum leap in the strategic relationship between Egypt and the United States.

Let me emphasize, Mr. President, that the relations have not been better over the years of our bilateral relationship, and that is why I’m extending, Mr. President, to you our thanks, appreciation, and greetings for (inaudible).

All the credit goes to you, Mr. President.  Thank you very much for your support on all fronts.  This is what we’re seeking to promote our bilateral relations in various fields: political, economic, military, cultural, and others.

Thank you very much.

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Well, thank you.  And I just have to say, before we perhaps take a couple of questions, the First Lady was recently in Egypt.  She was treated beautifully.

But maybe even more importantly, what she saw with the Pyramids was — you could call it the seventh wonder or the eighth wonder of the world.  She thought it was incredible.  She thought it was one of the most incredible things she’s seen.  And we have lots of pictures, and that was great day and a great moment to see the Pyramids — the Great Pyramids.

So hopefully a lot of people will be going and looking at them.  But she’s not easily impressed; she was very impressed.

So thank you very much.

Q    Mr. President, you seem to be —

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Go ahead, Jeff.

Q    You seem to be cleaning house at DHS.  What would you like to achieve with the new leadership there?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Well, I never said I’m “cleaning house.”  I don’t know who came up with that expression.  We have a lot of great people over there.  We have bad laws.  We have a judge that just ruled, incredibly, that he doesn’t want people staying in Mexico.  Figure that one out.  Nobody can believe these decisions we’re getting from the Ninth Circuit.  It’s a disgrace.

And so we’re fighting the bad laws, the bad — the bad things that are coming out of Congress.  You have a Democrat Congress that’s obstructing.  You talk about obstruction — the greatest obstruction anyone has ever seen.  All they have to do is spend 20 minutes and they can fix this whole problem.

We have the worst laws of any country anywhere in the world, whether it’s catch and release or any one of them.  I mean, I could name — I could sit here and name them, but if you got rid of catch and release, chain migration, visa lottery — you have to fix the asylum situation; it’s ridiculous.  You have people coming in, claiming asylum.  They’re all reading exactly what the lawyer gives them.  They have a piece of paper.  “Read what that is.”  And all of the sudden, you’re entitled to asylum.  And some of these people are not people you want in our country.

So we are building a lot of wall.  It’s getting built.  Some of you saw that last week, when we went — we had a great presentation of a new stretch.  But we’re building a lot of wall and we’re being very strong on the border.

But we’re bucking a court system that never, ever rules for us.  And we’re bucking really bad things with Congress — with the Democrats in Congress not willing to act.  They want to have open borders, which means they want to have crime; they want to have drugs pouring into our country.  They don’t want to act.  We have to close up the borders.  We’re doing it, but we’re doing it — I could do it much faster if they would act.

So it’s a terrible thing.  The Democrats in Congress — what they’re doing and the obstruction — they don’t want to fix it.  And we have to fix it.  They want open borders.  They want to have millions of people pouring into our country.  They don’t even want to know who they are.

These are people coming into our country with criminal records.  We have murderers coming in.  We have drug lords coming in.  We have gangs coming in.  And we’re stopping them.  And if we don’t stop them, ICE is throwing them the hell out.  We’re getting them out.

But our job could be so much easier.  I think Kevin is going to do a fantastic job.  He’s Acting, but I think he’s going to do a fantastic job.  And we’re not doing anything very big, as far as — what we need: homeland security.  That’s exactly what we want.  There’s no better term; there’s no better name.  We want homeland security and that’s what we’re going to get.  Thank you all very much.  Thank you.

Thank you.  Thank you very much.  Thank you very much.

Q    Egypt is ordering more fighter jets from Russia.  How do you feel about that?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Thank you very much, everybody.

Q    Are you considering child separations, sir?  Can you rule that out, Mr. President?  You wouldn’t start separating the children again, would you, Mr. President?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Obama separated the children, by the way.

Q    Would you consider doing it again?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Just so you understand, President Obama separated the children.  Those cages that were shown — I think they were very inappropriate — they were built by President Obama’s administration, not by Trump.  President Obama had child separation.  Take a look.  The press knows it.  You know it.  We all know it.  I didn’t have — I’m the one that stopped it.  President Obama had child separation.

Now, I’ll tell you something: Once you don’t have it, that’s why you see many more people coming.  They’re coming like it’s a picnic because “let’s go to Disneyland.”  President Obama separated children.  They had child separation.  I was the one that changed it.

Okay.  Thank you very much.

Q    But what’s President Trump going to do?  Are you going to bring it back is the question.  Would you bring it back?

Q    Will you bring it back, though?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  We’re not looking to do that.  No.

Q    You’re not going to bring it back?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  We’re not looking to do that.  No.

Thank you very much.

Q    You’re not looking to bring it back?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  But it — it brings a lot more people to the border.  When you don’t do it, it brings a lot more people to the border.  We are not looking to do it.

But President Obama had the law.  We changed the law.  And I think the press should accurately report it.  But, of course, they won’t.

Thank you all very much.  Thank you.

Q    Should the Muslim Brotherhood be a terrorist organization?  Muslim Brotherhood?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Thank you very much.

Q    (Inaudible.)

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  It’s a great honor to be with the President.  It’s a great honor to be with your President.

Q    Do you support his efforts to stay in power longer?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  What?

Q    (Inaudible) through 2034?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  I don’t hear you.

Q    Do you support his efforts to stay in power through 2034?

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  I think he’s doing a great job.  I don’t know about the effort; I can just tell you he’s doing a great job.  Great President.

Thank you very much, everybody.  Thank you.

END                 2:26 P.M. EDT


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Office of the Press Secretary FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 9, 2019
PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP REMAINS COMMITTED TO EGYPT AND MIDDLE EAST STABILITY
“It’s a great honor to be with President El-Sisi, a friend—a great friend—of Egypt. And we have very special things happening. Our relationship has never been stronger. And we’re working with Egypt on many different fronts, including military and trade.” – President Donald J. Trump

A STRATEGIC AND POWERFUL PARTNERSHIP: The United States and Egypt have a strong relationship with many security and economic implications.
  • Today marks the second visit of President El-Sisi to the White House since 2017.
  • Egypt has long been an important strategic partner in the Middle East.
  • United States assistance to Egypt has played a central role in the country’s economic and military development.
    • Since the 1979 Egypt–Israel Treaty of Peace, the United States has provided Egypt with more than $40 billion in military assistance and $30 billion in economic assistance.
  • Egypt has become an anchor of stability in the Middle East, as exemplified by its enduring forty-year peace with Israel.
  • The United States encourages the Egyptian government to preserve space for civil society and to protect human rights.
PROMOTING REGIONAL STABILITY: President Trump is strengthening our partnership with Egypt and promoting regional stability across the Middle East.
  • President Trump is working with Egypt on issues impacting regional stability including conflicts in Libya, Syria, and Yemen and progress on the Middle East Strategic Alliance.
  • The Trump Administration is working with Egypt to combat terrorism and to stop the spread of radical Islamic terrorism.
    • The United States is providing Egypt with military training and equipment to support counterterrorism efforts.
  • We continue to strengthen our strategic relationship through security cooperation and broader security efforts.
  • President Trump applauds Egypt’s efforts to advance female economic empowerment and promote religious freedom.
  • The Trump Administration supports the Egyptian government’s bold program of economic reform, which will set Egypt on the course of long-term economic stability.
  • Egypt hosted the inaugural meeting of the Eastern Mediterranean Gas Forum, which will enhance economic cooperation and shared prosperity among countries across the region.
EXPANDING FAIR AND RECIPROCAL TRADE: President Trump is building on the strong and robust trade relationship between the United States and Egypt.
  • The United States and Egypt have a robust bilateral trade relationship.
  • President Trump hopes to build on this relationship through cooperation and mutual benefit.
  • America is one of Egypt’s leading trade partners.
    • In 2018, the United States goods trade surplus with Egypt was $2.6 billion, a 9.3 percent increase from 2017.
    • In 2018, United States goods exports to Egypt totaled $5.1 billion, up 26.7 percent from 2017.
  • America and Egypt continue to work together to promote fair trade and increased investment by addressing market access, standards, labor, and intellectual property protection issues.

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