Cairo - Months after visiting Israel in what many perceived as a sign of warming ties between Cairo and Jerusalem, Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry made headlines in the Arab world on Sunday when he told a group of students that Israel’s actions in regard to the Palestinians do not constitute terrorism.

Despite the 1979 peace treaty signed between the two countries, Israel is not often spoken of as an ally by political figures in Egypt publicly or in the media.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last week that decades of incitement against Israel in Egypt had been behind Egyptian judoka Islam el-Shehaby’s refusal to shake the hand of his Israeli opponent, Ori Sasson, at the Olympic games in Rio de Janeiro. In March, Egyptian MP Tawfik Okasha was kicked out of parliament in a vote by his peers after he met with the Israeli ambassador to Egypt and called for normalization with the Jewish state.

Shoukry’s comments on Sunday came during a Q&A session with students held at the Egyptian Foreign Ministry. In response to a question whether the Israeli killing of Palestinian children is a form of terrorism, Shoukry said that “it cannot be described as terrorism without an international agreement characterizing it as such.”

Shoukry said that Israel’s history made it...read more at VIN