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Egypt
And Israel Heading For Crisis: Mood In Cairo Turns Against
Close Ties
05 May 2011 By Jonathan Cook
Israeli officials have expressed
alarm at a succession of moves by the interim Egyptian
government that they fear signal an impending crisis
in relations with Cairo.
The widening rift was underscored
yesterday when leaders of the rival Palestinian
factions Hamas and Fatah signed a reconciliation pact
in the Egyptian capital. Egypt's secret role in
brokering the agreement last week caught both Israel
and the United States by surprise.
The Israeli prime minister,
Benjamin Netanyahu, called the deal “a tremendous blow
to peace and a great victory for terrorism”.
Several other developments have
added to Israeli concerns about its relations with
Egypt, including signs that Cairo hopes to renew ties
with Iran and renegotiate a long-standing contract to
supply Israel with natural gas.
More worrying still to Israeli
officials are reported plans by Egyptian authorities
to open the Rafah crossing into Gaza, closed for the
past four years as part of a Western-backed blockade
of the enclave designed to weaken Hamas, the ruling
Islamist group there.
Egypt is working out details to
permanently open the border, an Egyptian foreign
ministry official told the Reuters news agency on
Sunday. The blockade would effectively come to an end
as a result.
The same day Egypt's foreign
minister, Nabil Elaraby, called on the United States
to recognise a Palestinian state -- in reference to a
move expected in September by Mahmoud Abbas, the
Palestinian president, to seek recognition of
Palestinian statehood at the United Nations.
Israel and the US have insisted
that the Palestinians can achieve statehood only
through negotiations with Israel. Talks have been
moribund since Israel refused last September to renew
a partial freeze on settlement building in the West
Bank and East Jerusalem.
According to analysts, the
interim Egyptian government, under popular pressure,
is consciously distancing itself from some of the main
policies towards Israel and the Palestinians pursued
by Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president overthrown by
a popular uprising in February.
Mubarak was largely supportive of
Israel and Washington's blockade policy to contain
Hamas' influence. Egypt receives more than $1.3
billion annually in US aid, second only to Israel.
But the popular mood in Egypt
appears to be turning against close diplomatic ties
with Israel.
A poll published last week by the
Pew Research Centre showed that 54 per cent of
Egyptians backed the annulment of the 1979 peace
treaty with Israel, with only 36 per cent wanting it
maintained.
Israel's Yedioth Aharonoth daily
reported this week that Egyptian social media sites
had called for a mass demonstration outside the
Israeli embassy tomorrow, demanding the expulsion of
the ambassador, Yitzhak Levanon.
In comments to several media
outlets last weekend, unnamed senior Israeli officials
criticised Egypt's new foreign policy line. One told
the Wall Street Journal that Cairo's latest moves
could "affect Israel's national security on a
strategic level".
Another unnamed official told the
Jerusalem Post that "the upgrading of the relationship
between Egypt and Hamas" might allow the Islamic
movement to develop into a "formidable terrorist
military machine".
Silvan Shalom, Israel's
vice-premier, told Israel Radio on Sunday that Israel
should brace for significant changes in Egyptian
policies that would allow Iran to increase its
influence in Gaza.
Egypt's chief of staff, Sami
Hafez Anan, responded dismissively on his Facebook
page to such statements, saying, "Israel has no right
to interfere. This is an Egyptian-Palestinian
matter."
In a sign of Israeli panic,
Netanyahu is reported to be considering sending his
special adviser, Isaac Molho, to Cairo for talks with
the interim government.
In recent weeks, Netanyahu has
repeatedly complained to visiting European ambassadors
and US politicians about what he regards as a new,
more hostile climate in Egypt.
Late last month Elaraby said
Egypt was ready to “turn over a new leaf” in relations
with Tehran, which were severed after the signing of
the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty more than three
decades ago.
Egyptian offiials have also
warned that the supply of natural gas to Israel may be
halted. The pipeline has been attacked twice on the
Egyptian side, including last week, in acts presumed
to be sabotage.
Even if Egypt continues the flow
of gas, it is almost certain to insist on a sharp rise
in the cost, following reports that Mubarak and other
officials are being investigated on corruption charges
relating to contracts that underpriced gas to Israel.
Yoram Meital, an expert on
Israeli-Egyptian relations at Ben Gurion University in
Beersheva, said Egypt's policy change towards Gaza
threatened to "provoke a severe crisis in
Egyptian-Israeli relations" by undermining Israel's
policy of isolating Hamas.
With the toppling of Mubarak’s
authoritarian regime, Meital noted, the Egyptian
government is under pressure to be more responsive to
local opinion.
“We are at the beginning of this
crisis but we are not there yet. However, there is
room for a great deal more deterioration in relations
over the coming months,” he said.
Analysts said Cairo wanted to
restore its traditional leadership role in the Arab
world and believed it was hampered by its ties with
Israel.
Menha Bahoum, a spokeswoman for
the Egyptian foreign ministry, told the New York Times
last week: “We are opening a new page. Egypt is
resuming its role that was once abdicated.”
That assessment is shared by
Hamas and Fatah, both of which were looking to Egypt
for help, said Menachem Klein, a politics professor at
Bar Ilan University.
He noted that Abbas had lost his
chief Arab sponsor in the form of Mubarak, and that
the Hamas leadership's base in Syria was precarious
given the current upheavals there.
With growing demands from the
Palestinian public for reconciliation, neither faction
could afford to ignore the tide of change sweeping the
Arab world, he said.
Meital said: “We are entering a
new chapter in the region's history and Israeli
politicians and the public are not yet even close to
understanding what is taking place”.
Jonathan Cook is a writer and
journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. His latest books
are “Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran
and the Plan to Remake the Middle East” (Pluto Press)
and “Disappearing Palestine: Israel's Experiments in
Human Despair” (Zed Books). His website is
www.jkcook.net.
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