The United States condemned comments by Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan accusing Israel of having a hand in the Egyptian military's overthrow of president Mohamed Morsi, a White House spokesman said on Tuesday.
"We strongly condemn the statements that were made by Prime Minister Erdogan today. Suggesting that Israel is somehow responsible for recent events in Egypt is offensive, unsubstantiated, and wrong," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters in a briefing.
In Israel, an official in Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu's office told AFP: "These comments by the Turkish prime minister
are nonsense."
Earlier on Tuesday, Erdogan told provincial leaders of his
AK Party: "What do they say in Egypt? Democracy is not the ballot box.
What is behind it? Israel. We have in our hands documentation."
Also Tuesday, the White House said media reports that
suggest the US cut off aid to Egypt are not accurate, adding that the Obama
administration is still reviewing its options.
"That review has not concluded and ... published
reports to the contrary that assistance to Egypt has been cut off are not
accurate," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters in a
briefing.
Earnest also said that Egypt's detention of Muslim
Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie was not in line with the standard that the
United States would hope to uphold in protecting basic human rights.
The White House will hold a Cabinet-level meeting to discuss
cutting some of $1.5 billion in US aid to Egypt.
Earnest confirmed that a National Security Council meeting
of top officials will take place Tuesday. Cabinet members such as Secretary of
State John Kerry will participate.
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