'US working on plan for immediate Mubarak departure'

'New York Times' reports White House in negotiations with officials on plan to install transitional government run by Suleiman.

White House 311 (photo credit: courtesy)
White House 311
(photo credit: courtesy)
The White House was discussing a plan in which Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak would resign immediately with Egyptian officials, The New York Times reported Thursday evening.
The plan would place newly-appointed Egyptian Vice President Omar Suleiman in charge of a transitional government with the support of the country's military establishment, according to the report.
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Senior Obama administration officials told the Times that the plan was being discussed with "high-level Egyptian officials around Mr. Mubarak," but not with the president himself. Washington has made several recent statements calling on the Egyptian president to step down immediately, although tempering their language.
The reported proposal calls for a widely inclusive transitional government, with representation coming from "a broad range of opposition groups, including the banned Muslim Brotherhood."
Click here for full Jpost coverage of unrest in Egypt
Click here for full Jpost coverage of unrest in Egypt
Another White House official, however, disputed the New York Times' suggestion that the two countries were close to reaching a deal, telling CNN that "It's simply wrong to report that there's a single US plan that's being negotiated with the Egyptians."
US National Security Countil spokesman Tommy Vietor told the cable news network that in addition to the proposal outlined in the Times, Washington was discussing "a variety of different ways" for bringing an Egyptian transition to democracy. He emphasized, however, that "all of those decisions must be made by the Egyptian people."
Officials quoted in the report, in an attempt to lower expectations, pointed out that there was have not been any signs that either Suleiman or Egypt's army were willing to participate in such a plan as long as Mubarak opposed it.
Leslie H. Gelb, president emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations, told the Times that Mubarak fears that even if he steps down that he will be subject to further demands, pointing out that "he's not dealing with a legal entity, but a mob."
US officials have reportedly been putting forth several scenarios to Egyptians in the past days, but clarified that their preferred outcome was a plan that saw Omar Suleiman heading a transitional government.
Also on Thursday, US Vice President Joe Biden spoke with Suleiman, calling for restraint and that "credible, inclusive negotiations begin immediately in order for Egypt to transition to a democratic government that addresses the aspirations of the Egyptian people."
According to the report, the phone call was placed after Mubarak refused to meet with US President Barack Obama's private envoy to Egypt for the second time. The Egyptian president was apparently irked by the strong language used by the US president in his speech on Tuesday.
Earlier Thursday,
Mubarak struck a defiant tone, telling ABC News’s Christiane Amanpour that he would “never run away” and would “die on the soil of Egypt.”
The embattled president said in the interview that he was ready to leave office, but could not, for fear his country would sink deeper into chaos.