Coinciding with the approval of the Egyptian parliament for the military to carry out combat missions abroad, it was posted on social networking sites in Egypt, a video clip depicting a train loaded with military equipment, suggesting imminent military intervention in Libya.

However, the video was originally published in 2015 and has nothing to do with Egypt, but rather transmits scenes of an American military convoy at Burbank Station in the United States.

The two-minute and 22-second video depicts a train loaded with military equipment including tanks, armored vehicles and vehicles.

The video was sometimes attached to the Egyptian flag, with a heart mark beside it, and wrote in the commentary in the Egyptian dialect: "Eh all (what is all this), O Sissi, may God protect it in its form, so you will not be against good" (you will not be good for Tripoli).

The video has spread widely on social media from YouTube, Twitter and Facebook, as it has won millions of views and tens of thousands of posts.

Combat missions abroad The
video began to circulate in this format on July 22, two days after the Egyptian parliament, whose supporters are Sisi's overwhelming majority, agreed that the army would carry out "combat missions" outside Egypt's borders in defense of Egyptian national security, which would mean potential military intervention. In Libya, the western neighbor.

Libya was not mentioned by name, but discussions during the session centered on "threats facing the state" from the West.

Egypt shares a porous desert border with Libya, where war is taking place, according to what deputies saw.

On June 20, Sisi warned that forces loyal to the internationally recognized government of Tripoli, backed by Turkey, to the east would push his country into direct military intervention in Libya, and the government of al-Wefaq considered the warnings a "declaration of war."

Since the fall of the Muammar Qaddafi regime in 2011, Libya has witnessed a conflict between two authorities, the government of national unity recognized by the United Nations, and a parallel government emanating from the Tobruk parliament supported by retired Major General Khalifa Hifter, who is supported by Egypt, the UAE and Russia.