Egypt and Turkey seek to strengthen ties
September 06, 2024
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Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan hosted his Egyptian counterpart, President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, in Ankara this week for the first such state visit to Turkey by an Egyptian leader in 12 years. Erdogan was a strong supporter of Mohamed Mursi, the Moslem Brotherhood supported President of Egypt who al-Sisi overthrew in 2013. This event led to relations between the two regional powers, both of which are important allies of the United States, into a deep freeze.
That freeze began to thaw in 2020, when Erdogan began a campaign to improve ties with other regional powers who were also allies of the US. Egypt was receptive to the olive branch and ties began to improve, culminating in a visit to Cairo by Erdogan in February and now al-Sisi's reciprocal visit to Ankara.
"With a win-win mindset, we will carry our multi-dimensional ties forward," Erdogan said while greeting al-Sisi at the airport on Wednesday.
During the subsequent talks at the presidential palace in Ankara, 18 memorandum's of understanding and cooperation were signed by ministers from the two countries. They included a wide variety of topics in field such as energy, defense, tourism, health, agriculture, finance, culture, education, and transport.
The two presidents reportedly also discussed their mutual understanding regarding the war in Gaza and their mutual desire to see a resolution of the deepening crisis in Libya, as well as other regional matters.