(CNN) -- The Egyptian government's state of emergency should be
lifted and a process of reconciliation must begin, President Barack Obama said
Thursday of the turmoil in that country.
The president also condemned the violence against civilians and
announced the United States is canceling next month's joint U.S.-Egyptian
military exercises.
When Egypt's first democratically elected president was tossed out
earlier this year, the White House stopped short of calling it a coup.
Doing so would have forced an end to the $1.3 billion that the
U.S. sends in military aid every year -- and changed the course of its
relationship with its strongest Arab ally in the region.
But that was before Wednesday, when the
military-led interim government stormed two camps full of
former President Mohamed Morsy's supporters. More than 525 people were killed
and 3,717 wounded in the bloodiest day in Egypt's recent history, officials
there said.
Will the carnage in Egypt change the U.S. policy toward the most
populous Arab country?
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