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President Barack Obama will offer a "personal commitment" to bridge differences between the United States and Muslims in a eagerly anticipated speech in Egypt this week.
The address at the University of Cairo on Thursday is the centrepiece of Mr Obama's second overseas tour as president. The trip begins in Saudi Arabia and includes stops at a former concentration camp in Germany and ceremonies in Normandy to mark the D-Day anniversary.
Robert Gibbs, the White House spokesman, said the president would "review particular issues of concern, such as violent extremism and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict" and "discuss new areas for partnership".
"The speech will outline his personal commitment to engagement, based upon mutual interests and mutual respect," he said.
It is intended to be the president's most striking attempt – delivered in the heart of an Arab capital – to reassure Muslims of American goodwill and to repair the damage done to his country's reputation by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the controversial tactics of George W Bush's "war on terror".
The effort started at Mr Obama's inauguration and continued in Istanbul, when he said Islam had nothing to fear from the West.
The president, whose middle name is Hussein, is likely to play up his Muslim associations, having downplayed them for domestic consumption.
Denis McDonough, the deputy national security adviser, said that Mr Obama had "experienced Islam on three continents before he has been able to visit the heart of the Islamic world".
He cited the president's "upbringing" in Indonesia, where he spent four years as a child, and how Muslim Americans were "a key part of Illinois and Chicago", Mr Obama's base.
The president will also hold a meeting with Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president, and visit a mosque, advisers said.
Mr McDonough said the president would probably stress how "many of the advances that come out of the Muslim world" had benefited Americans.
However, Mr Obama has faced criticism that his efforts to mend fences have so far yielded few results.
His conciliation towards Iran has yet to be reciprocated, while the new Right-wing Israeli government has ignored demands to stop Jewish settlement-building in the Palestinian West Bank. A discreet approach to the North Koreans was rebuffed with a second nuclear weapons test.
Ed Royce, the top Republican congressman on the house foreign affairs committee, said: "It's more important what countries do than what they say, and the Obama administration has overestimated the importance of being liked."
Source
The address at the University of Cairo on Thursday is the centrepiece of Mr Obama's second overseas tour as president. The trip begins in Saudi Arabia and includes stops at a former concentration camp in Germany and ceremonies in Normandy to mark the D-Day anniversary.
Robert Gibbs, the White House spokesman, said the president would "review particular issues of concern, such as violent extremism and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict" and "discuss new areas for partnership".
"The speech will outline his personal commitment to engagement, based upon mutual interests and mutual respect," he said.
It is intended to be the president's most striking attempt – delivered in the heart of an Arab capital – to reassure Muslims of American goodwill and to repair the damage done to his country's reputation by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the controversial tactics of George W Bush's "war on terror".
The effort started at Mr Obama's inauguration and continued in Istanbul, when he said Islam had nothing to fear from the West.
The president, whose middle name is Hussein, is likely to play up his Muslim associations, having downplayed them for domestic consumption.
Denis McDonough, the deputy national security adviser, said that Mr Obama had "experienced Islam on three continents before he has been able to visit the heart of the Islamic world".
He cited the president's "upbringing" in Indonesia, where he spent four years as a child, and how Muslim Americans were "a key part of Illinois and Chicago", Mr Obama's base.
The president will also hold a meeting with Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president, and visit a mosque, advisers said.
Mr McDonough said the president would probably stress how "many of the advances that come out of the Muslim world" had benefited Americans.
However, Mr Obama has faced criticism that his efforts to mend fences have so far yielded few results.
His conciliation towards Iran has yet to be reciprocated, while the new Right-wing Israeli government has ignored demands to stop Jewish settlement-building in the Palestinian West Bank. A discreet approach to the North Koreans was rebuffed with a second nuclear weapons test.
Ed Royce, the top Republican congressman on the house foreign affairs committee, said: "It's more important what countries do than what they say, and the Obama administration has overestimated the importance of being liked."
Source