On August 14th, the vice president of Egypt resigned that post after just one month in office.
With everything else that is going on in Egypt, this didn't get a lot of attention in the U.S. The crowds in the streets get attention, the killing to clear protest camps, even the imminent release of former president Mubarak. These things get attention.. But ElBaradei? Meh.
This is important, though, because this particular Vice President was an internationally respected name, and critical to the post-Morsi government's hopes of receiving broad recognition of its legitimacy.
Regular readers will recall that I made the same point at the time ElBaradei became VP (something of a lateral move from that of prime minister.)
As I noted then, ElBaradei is the former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency. In that position he was appropriately skeptical of American claims about weapons of mass destruction in either Iraq or Iran, but he took a hard line on the subject of North Korea, saying "I see a very serious crisis -- a country that's completely defying the world."
Who else in Egypt now, in the military's camp or in Morsi's for that matter, has this fellow' international stature?
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