- Associated Press - Wednesday, February 2, 2011

WASHINGTON — The White House said Wednesday that Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has a chance to show the world “exactly who he is” by bringing desperately needed change to his country now.

Press Secretary Robert Gibbs also decried bloody violence happening in Cairo, where pro-government forces clashed with protesters a day after Mr. Mubarak announced he would not seek re-election in September. That wasn’t good enough for the protesters, who want him out now.

“If any of the violence is instigated by the government it should stop immediately,” Mr. Gibbs said, while declining to speculate whether the government was in fact behind the violence. Protesters contend plainclothes police are among the pro-government attackers.

“The president found the images outrageous and deplorable,” the press secretary said.

Mr. Gibbs said no decision had been made on cutting off the $1.5 billion in annual aid the U.S. provides Egypt but that it was still under review. Mr. Gibbs reiterated President Obama’s call from Tuesday night that transition in Egypt must begin now — but he didn’t explain exactly what that meant or say whether Mr. Mubarak should resign now.

“Now means now,” Mr. Gibbs said at the White House briefing.

“The people of Egypt need to see change, the people of Egypt need to see progress,” he said.

Mr. Gibbs didn’t directly answer when asked whether Mr. Obama viewed Mr. Mubarak as a dictator, saying the Egyptian president had a chance to show who he was. Mr. Mubarak has been an important ally to the U.S. during his 30-year reign, ensuring passage through the Suez Canal and maintaining peace with Israel, but for many Egyptian people they have been years of corrosive poverty, repression and corruption.

Mr. Gibbs avoided describing what a future government of Egypt might look like, or whether it was acceptable to the U.S. for Mr. Mubarak to preside over the transition to the next elections. Great uncertainty clouds the format of the transition and its ultimate outcome, but Mr. Gibbs would not say if one feared outcome — elevation of an Islamist fundamentalist regime — would be acceptable to the U.S.

Mr. Gibbs did say that the U.S. expects that whatever government comes into power will respect the treaties entered into by previous Egyptian governments — a clear reference to Egypt’s peace treaty with Israel, which has provided an important measure of stability for the region.

U.S. officials, including Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, are in conversations with the Egyptian military, Mr. Gibbs said. He said he believed that contact had helped maintain a level of restraint by the military, a well-respected institution in Egypt which at least through Tuesday had been seen as offering at least implicit support to protesters.

The unrest in Egypt was sparked by an uprising in Tunisia and is reverberating throughout the region. King Abdullah of Jordan on Tuesday sacked his government and named a new prime minister, bowing to public pressure. Mr. Gibbs said that Mr. Obama and Abdullah spoke on the phone late Tuesday, but he gave no details on the conversation.

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