Cairo murder mystery

U.S. State Department The U.S. embassy in Cairo is a fortress-like compound, sequestered in the leafy, decaying neighborhood of Garden City along the east bank of the Nile. Merely to stand before the outer blast wall, you have to pass through a security checkpoint and explain your business. But maybe the U.S. mission to Egypt ...

By , a former managing editor of Foreign Policy.
594471_080625_Cairo_Front_View15.jpg
594471_080625_Cairo_Front_View15.jpg

U.S. State Department

U.S. State Department

The U.S. embassy in Cairo is a fortress-like compound, sequestered in the leafy, decaying neighborhood of Garden City along the east bank of the Nile. Merely to stand before the outer blast wall, you have to pass through a security checkpoint and explain your business.

But maybe the U.S. mission to Egypt isn’t as impregnable as it seems. A body was recently discovered on the embassy’s lush grounds, and Margaret Scobey, the new U.S. ambassador, has demanded a full-scale investigation. The body was sent out for autopsy to experts in Cairo and swiftly returned to the United States for burial.

Thing is, it’s the ambassador’s dog that we’re talking about, not a person. The animal might have died accidentally after eating poison intended for feral cats. But Scobey wants to make sure, pan-Arab daily al-Hayat reports:

Americans in Egypt say that the ambassador’s state of extreme anger has forced the embassy’s security to cooperate [with] Egyptian authorities in spending considerable time on proving that the incident was not a premeditated attack and that the embassy’s security measures, employees and the ambassador’s home and household are safe. After all, a successful attempt to murder the ambassador’s dog sends a message that it is possible to commit the same crime against Americans working at the ambassador’s home or against the ambassador herself.

(Hat tip: Brian Whitaker)

Blake Hounshell is a former managing editor of Foreign Policy.

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