It has been 9 years since the military coup in the Islamic country of Egypt. On July 3, 2013, the commanders of the Egyptian army under the guidance of the Zionists pointed the state's weapons at the nation in order to realize their treacherous ambitions.
The Egyptians, who experienced the relief of getting rid of the dictatorship, liberation and human rights during the 1-year rule of President Mohammed Morsi, were again dragged into a dark vortex with the July 3 coup.
SWAMP OF EGYPT: JULY 3 COUP
Egyptian President Mohammad Morsi was a politician with faith and trust, and while he surrendered his heart to Allah, he leaned on his people.
Morsi wanted to win the trust of the Egyptians and end the dictators' domination in Egypt permanently.
Morsi's struggle was not an easy one.
A total destruction operation was launched against the power of the Muslim Brotherhood, with various intrigues from within and without.
The effect of the Arab Spring, which started in Tunisia, an Islamic country in North Africa, at the end of 2010 and caused the overthrow of the dictator Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, had an echo in Egypt in a short time. The dictator Hosni Mubarak, who ruled Egypt with an iron fist for 30 years, was dismissed as a result of the people's revolution, as was the Tunisian dictator, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali.
In 2011, for the first time, hopes of emancipation from the dictatorship rose for the Egyptian people. Jamal Abdunnasır, Anwar Sadat and Hosni Mubarak… The dictatorship that usurped the Egyptian presidency at gunpoint for decades and denied the Egyptians the right to a humane life had come to an end. In 2012, for the first time in Egyptian political history, an election was held in which the people freely participated. Mohammad Morsi, the candidate of the Freedom and Justice Party, representing the Muslim Brotherhood, was elected president. It was the first time that a civilian head of state took over Egypt. The test of the believing President Morsi with the modern Pharaohs was going to be quite heavy.
The collapse of the dictatorship regime in Egypt as a result of the intense anger of the people had spoiled the plot of the tyrants in the Egyptian army. Billions of dollars, which are the rights of the state and the nation, were going into the pockets of a group of supporters in the rent system jointly carried out by the Egyptian army and the dictatorship regime. The overthrow of the dictatorship regime and the arrival of a believing statesman like Mohammed Morsi, who had sharp objections to corruption, endangered the interests of the tyrants. The tyrants, who wanted to tie the rent pipes cut by Morsi back into their pockets, set up unbelievable traps for the Morsi government.
UNFOLLOWED ORDERS, WRONG INTELLIGENCE, TERRORIST ATTACKS
Mohammed Morsi did not have full control over the institutions of the state during his short-term rule. The cadres of the dictatorship regime, which had a say in the country for more than half a century, were still in effective and decision-making positions in the Egyptian bureaucracy. The cadres who wanted to overthrow Morsi were active in the military, intelligence, internal affairs, judiciary and education. These collaborative cadres showed weakness in carrying out Morsi's orders and deliberately led him to make wrong decisions by providing false intelligence. Dozens of Egyptian soldiers were killed in terrorist attacks, especially as a result of security problems in the disputed Sinai Region. The purpose of creating security crises was to give the message to the Egyptian people that Morsi could not rule the country. The collaborators, who prepared the ground for the coup, unfortunately succeeded in provoking a serious mass against Morsi in Egypt with their perception operations.
EGYPT INSPIRED IN DARK BY JULY 3 COUP
Just days before the coup, the Default (rebellion) Movement, funded by Israel and its local collaborators, took to the streets. Millions of people filling the squares of Egypt wanted to remove Morsi from power. Morsi supporters also took to the streets at the same time to protect the elected president. In the streets of Egypt, coup militias called "Biltagy" began to slaughter members of the Brotherhood. The chaos environment sought by the putschists had now emerged. On July 1, the military issued a memorandum to the Morsi government to resign within 48 hours. Morsi rejected this memorandum and instructed his supporters to continue their peaceful demonstration. On July 3, the Egyptian army led by Sisi officially carried out a military coup. Thousands of Muslim Brotherhood members, especially Morsi and Ikhwan leaders, were thrown into prisons. Thousands of Brotherhood members who opposed the coup were martyred. The coup, which kept Egypt in darkness for 9 years, apparently took Egyptian Muslims captive in this way.