Blinken Visits Cairo as US Seeks to Secure Gaza Ceasefire
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in Cairo on Wednesday, part of a Middle East tour aimed at shoring up a ceasefire that ended the worst fighting in years between Israel and Palestinian militants.
Egypt
has longstanding relations with both sides in the conflict and played a key
role in brokering the ceasefire after 11 days of violence, in coordination with
the United States.
On
Tuesday, Blinken pledged that the United States would provide new aid to help
rebuild the Gaza Strip, including $5.5 million in immediate disaster relief and
nearly $33 million for the UN Palestinian aid agency based there.
Egypt,
which shares a border with Gaza and has security contacts with Hamas, the group
that controls the enclave, is likely to have a role in channeling that aid, a
senior US State Department official said ahead of Blinken's visit.
During
the fighting, Egypt opened the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and its Sinai
Peninsula in order to provide medical aid and evacuate wounded people.
It
also deployed a security delegation that shuttled between Israel and Gaza to
reinforce the ceasefire after it came into effect early on Friday.