“Indeed, Putin played his card brilliantly – and cold-bloodedly. It was a magnificent display of realpolitik, with no pretensions of any high principles involved, except that Russia’s self-interests shall always be the leitmotif of its foreign policies,” M. K. Bhadrakumar noted.
The result was almost instantaneous.
Within four months of being elected as president, Sisi reached a preliminary deal to buy arms worth $3.5 billion from Russia, which was an act of strategic defiance of the US on his part, he added.
“Now that Abdel Fattah al-Sisi is firmly in the saddle and the international community has accepted the legitimacy of his election victory last year, the US too is mending fences with the Egyptian leader. But Sisi remembers Putin’s backing when he needed such support most – and he made it a point to refer to it at his joint news conference with Putin at the Kremlin Wednesday,” Bhadrakumar continued.
“Clearly, Egypt is fast emerging as Russia’s number one partner in the entire Middle East region. It makes sense for Russia to make such a strategic decision. For Egypt is the most populous Arab nation and it has always played a lead role in the geopolitics of the region,” the author wrote in conclusion.
On August 25 the Egyptian president met with Vladimir Putin as part of his two-day working visit to Moscow.
The two leaders discussed the situation in the Middle East and trade and other economic cooperation between their two countries.