Egypt's Sissi Orders Army Ready for Missions Abroad Amid Tensions Over Libya
Earlier this month, Egypt called for a ceasefire in Libya as part of an initiative which also proposed an elected leadership council for the country

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sissi on Saturday ordered his army to be ready to carry out any mission inside or outside the country to protect its national security amid tensions over Turkey's intervention in neighbouring Libya.
Turkey supports the internationally recognized Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli, which, with Turkish support, has reversed a 14-month assault on the capital by Khalifa Haftar's eastern-based Libyan National Army (LNA)
The LNA is backed by Russia, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt.
Sissi on Saturday toured an air base near Egypt's 1,200 kilometre-long western border with Libya, where state TV showed him watching fighter jets and helicopters taking off.
"Be prepared to carry out any mission, here inside our borders – or if necessary, outside our borders," he told several air force pilots and special forces personnel at the base.
He said the Egyptian army was "one of the strongest in the region". "It is a rational army; an army that protects and does not threaten... this is our strategy, our beliefs and our principles that we will never change."
Earlier this month, Egypt called for a ceasefire in Libya as part of an initiative which also proposed an elected leadership council for the country.
- How Turkey's Libya foray can backfire, and the Israeli dilemma
- Egypt to launch peace initiative to bring calm to war-torn Libya
- Russia and Turkey risk an ever-bloodier stalemate in Libya
The United States, Russia and the UAE welcomed the plan. Germany said UN-backed talks were key to the peace process.
However, Turkey dismissed the proposal as an attempt to save Haftar following the losses he suffered on the battlefield.