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Sinai:
New Islamic Terror Emirate?
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The Egyptians
were the first to condemn Israel each time it fired back at terrorists who
launched rockets and missiles at Israeli cities and communities. The Egyptians
are finally learning that terrorism is a double-edged sword, and that those who
approve of terror activities will one day find themselves targeted by the same
terrorists.
Until last week, the underground tunnels along the border between the Gaza
Strip and Egypt did not seem to bother the Egyptians.
The dozens of tunnels that have long been used to smuggle weapons, basic
goods, fuel and terrorists into the Gaza Strip were fine as long as they did
not pose a threat to Egyptian national security and interests.
The weapons that were being smuggled into the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip
were being used against Israel, not Egypt.
For that reason, the Egyptian authorities have long turned a blind eye to
the activities going on along their shared border with the Gaza Strip. This
policy did not start with the arrival of Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohamed
Morsi to power in June.
Under ousted President Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian authorities also
preferred to bury their heads in the sand and pretend that all was quiet on the
front with the Gaza Strip.
Why should the Egyptians be worried if the weapons were being smuggled in
one direction only - from Sinai to the Gaza Strip?
And why should any Egyptian be concerned if the smuggled rockets, missiles
and mortars were being fired just toward Israel?
Each time Hamas or other terror groups launched attacks against Israel, many
Egyptians did not conceal their jubilation. Most used to defend the
Palestinians' right to carry out "resistance attacks" against Israel.
Egyptian hypocrisy would reach its peak each time they would publicly
condemn Israeli air strikes against the underground tunnels and terror groups
in the Gaza Strip.
The Egyptians were the first to condemn Israel each time it fired back at
terrorists who launched rockets and missiles at Israeli cities and communities.
But in the last week, the Egyptian security forces have been using military
helicopters, tanks and armored vehicles to track down and kill dozens of
terrorists in Sinai. The Egyptian offensive came in response to the killing of
16 border guards at the hands of Muslim terrorists in Sinai last week.
Now the Egyptians are paying a heavy price for their hypocrisy and failure
to see the threat coming from extremist Islamic groups.
Last week's attack on the Egyptian military base has apparently served as a
wake-up call for many Egyptians.
The Egyptians are finally learning that terrorism is a double-edged sword,
and that those who approve of terror activities will one day find themselves
targeted by the same terrorists.
This lesson applies not only to Egypt, but to other Arab countries such as
Saudi Arabia, Syria, Lebanon and Libya, which also used to approve of
terrorism, whether directly or indirectly. These countries are now getting a
bitter taste of what terrorism really is.
It will take weeks, if not months, before the Egyptians regain control over
Sinai and eliminate all terror cells operating in the peninsula. The security
clampdown will succeed only if the Egyptians persist in their bid to cleanse
Sinai of all the terror groups.
If the Egyptian authorities get tired quickly and decide to go back to
sleep, they will wake up one morning to discover that Sinai and the Gaza Strip
have merged to form an Islamic terror emirate.
THE
CALL: Lords of Chaos Rule the Middle East
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This week's call began with our five
participants learning that President Morsi of Egypt had just sacked the head of
that country's armed forces, Field Marshal Tantawi. Score: Muslim Brotherhood
1, SCAF 0 (with outflows from Cairo to numbered bank accounts in Zurich,
Switzerland increasing by the hour). The news contributed to a general
atmosphere of martial headiness that pleasurably affected everyone except Amos
Harel, who writes for Ha'aretz, and is therefore more vocationally attuned to
guilt than to pleasure, and Pepe Escobar, who was enjoying dim sum in Hong
Kong.
The panelists seemed to agree that the fluid and chaotic situation in the
Eastern Mediterranean and the rapidly dwindling pre-Islamist-takeover
interregnum in Egypt both argued in favor of the likelihood of an Israeli
strike on Iran. The current lack of real equilibrium is favorable for – and
even invites -- radical game-changing actions. Whatever equilibrium is
established in the future (whenever that is) is likely to be much less
favorable for Israel and more favorable for Iran, insofar as both Israel and
the US will be in weaker positions and their Sunni rivals will be both weaker
and poorer.
Our regulars are:
Pepe Escobar -- Author of the"Roving Eye"feature for the Asia
Times and a fancier of fine Margaux
David Goldman -- aka "Spengler"
Amos Harel -- military correspondent and defense analyst for the Israeli
newspaper Ha'aretz
David Samuels -- Contributing Editor at Harper's Magazine
Rotem Sella -- foreign affairs editor of Ma'ariv, Israel's
largest-circulation daily
==
THE CALL
David Goldman: All the players in the region with the possible
exception of Israel are playing from weakness. Many of the region's players –
Iran, Turkey, and Qatar – are sticking their necks out very visibly.
Do these actions correspond to
1) Deterioration in the Syrian internal situation and positioning for a
post-Assad government?
2) Positioning for responses to a possible Israeli strike on Iran?
3) Positioning with respect to the internal standoff in Egypt?
Al-Ahram writes:
"Following the January 25 revolution and the rise of Islamists to
positions of power, questions were raised by anti-Brotherhood forces regarding
the nature of the relationship between Qatar and the Muslim Brotherhood. Some
critics claim that the group received funds from the Gulf state during the
presidential race. Morsi was the Brothehood's candidate, after its first choice
Khairat El-Shater was unable to run.
Moreover, other rumours circulated claiming the Brotherhood is planning to
rent the Suez Canal to Qatar for ninety-nine years thus undermining Egypt's
sovereignty.
The Brotherhood leadership vehemently denied these accusations."
In other news, Saeed Jalili, Iran's chief nuclear negotiator (among other
things), turns up in Syria and Lebanon in a a show of support for Assad and
Hezbollah. Jalili threatens Turkey, and Erdogan threatens Iran back. Some of
the Turkish Islamist media says its time for Turkey to stop running cover for
Iran. Syria's man in Lebanon, Michel Samaha, is busted by Internal Security
Force which claims he confessed to smuggling explosives from Syria. What's up,
people?
Amos Harel: I don't know if you're all already aware of this, but
Morsi just fired Tantawi and the generals. This might be huge.
Rotem Sella: Right -- and, the same day, we have the re-opening of
Rafah crossing into Sinai, or part-reopening
Pepe Escobar: The Emir of Qatar visits Egypt - and Mosri fires
Tantawi.
David G.: The BBC writes: "Under an interim constitutional
declaration issued before Mr Mursi was sworn in, the president cannot rule on
matters related to the military - including appointing its leaders."
Amos Harel: Regarding Iran, the leaks from Barak and Co. in Israel
are even worse than last week -- not that I should complain. I suspect there's
a pattern here: the more difficult it gets for Israel to strike before the US
election, the tougher its public stance gets. Still, there are some troubling
signs, one of them the delay in the planned change of the head of military
operations, which is one of the IDF's top positions.
Rotem Sella: Also growing stronger are the efforts within all sectors
of Israeli bureaucracy to fight against the war campaign of Barak and Bibi. I
spoke to someone in the budget office today who told me that Iranian war will
be too costly, and cause high unemployment. What does budget office have to do
with Iran? But it shows the big battle going on in Israeli government -- these
guys are trying to undermine the pro-attack approach at every turn.
Amos Harel: Israel's main goal is maintaining a credible military
threat. But Netanyahu and Barak have gotten a bit carried away with their
rhetoric, and by now they are so committed to the idea of a strike that it
would be hard for them to withdraw. The IDF keeps preparing, because the chiefs
can't tell if the Prime Minister is actually 100% serious.
Pepe: Let's introduce a little bit of sanity into this madness –
courtesy of good ol' Cold Warrior Yevgeny Primakov telling it like it is.
Attack Iran first and THEN they will go for a bomb.
http://en.rian.ru/world/20120808/175057044.html
Amos Harel: I think that until November, the three most important
factors are: Bibi's caution (not to say cowardice), Obama's hinted threats and
the IDF-Mossad objection to a strike. End result - and I hope that's not just
wishful thinking - probably no Israeli strike this year.
Rotem Sella: But Bibi-Barak are not even sure things will be better
after November. They've read the recent polls...
David G.: Returning to Egypt: Reuters says that Morsi consulted with
the generals before forcing Tantawi's retirement. But the Xinhua report
suggests a constitutional shift. Any first responses?
Pepe: Constitutional shift. And once again; right after the visit by
the Emir of Qatar. I bet a bottle of Margaux that some suggestions were made.
David G.: Regarding Pepe's Qatar angle: Bloomberg News reports,
"Egypt scrapped a sale of nine-month Treasury bills today, its first
cancellation of a debt offering in more than three months, after Qatar agreed
to deposit funds with the country's central bank to boost foreign exchange
reserves." That's pretty big: the Egyptians are saying we've got Qatar, we
can suspend public funding.
David S.: Ehud Barak's remaining standing in Israel seems to rest on
being able to play the US card. But the American interlocutors I've talked to
think he's a weirdo. So Amos, do Israelis believe that Ehud Barak is a reliable
interlocutor who is conveying an accurate sense of American intentions, and
vice versa?
Amos Harel: David S., everybody finds him baffling. And still,
compared to Avigdor Lieberman, he's considered to be close to the Americans,
whatever that means now.
David S.: Right now, the timing for an Israeli strike on Iran --
which I thought of up until a few months ago as pure hot air -- seems as
favorable as it is ever likely to be. The Iranian bloc in Syria and Lebanon is
coming apart at the seams. The Syrian Army is in tatters. Hezbollah is in a
very weak place. Obama -- who Netanyahu seems to see as a strategic enemy on a
par with Iran-- is at a weak point, the weakest he is likely to be in the next
five years, presuming he is re-elected. Morsi isn't dumb enough to order the
Egyptian Army out of their barracks no matter what happens in any back and
forth with Hamas in Gaza. Plus, the Gulfies are pushing for a strike, and they
own Gaza AND Egypt now.
David G.: After the anti-Muslim Brotherhood demonstration at the
soldiers' funeral this week, my prior was that the SCAF was the aggressor
against Morsi. It may have been entirely the reverse. Morsi might have set up
the Sinai incident and the protests at the funeral were a defensive response by
the military (ultimately futile). That raises the questions: What are the
Saudis thinking? Are they coordinating with the Qataris? Have they cut a deal
with the Muslim Brotherhood? A related question is: Is Iran involved?
So a theme that bears investigation is Iran positioning for a post-Israeli
strike response.
Pepe: The Saudis are not coordinating with Qataris at all; they are
betting on different horses. Iran is not involved in anything in Egypt so far -
apart from dragging Morsi or an underling to talks in Tehran during NAM.
David S.: Don't you people agree that this feels like a uniquely
fluid moment?
David G.: Fluid? It feels like the Aztec two-step.
David S.: First you fuck her, and then you rip her heart out? Let's
explore that.
Amos Harel: David S, to continue with your line of thought: remember
the date of "Cast Lead" -- December 27, 2008, which fell in between
Obama's victory and inauguration. But as we were told when we were young IDF
soldiers: "Every Saturday has a Saturday night". Translation: Keep in
mind there's a price to pay later, for actions committed while you felt
yourself untouchable (in the army, our commanders are not allowed to punish us
during the weekend).
Pepe: I'm getting stuff from Tehran around the fact people care
extremely worried about the concentration of power in Khamenei's hands. He
decides EVERYTHING - including the response in case of an attack.
Rotem Sella: It definitely seems that the confidence of Muslim
Brothers is increasing, the fear of a coup is even less than it was a few days
ago.
David S.: The moment things stabilize, they will stabilize in favor
of Iran and against Israel. Right now, the Iranians are in trouble. And any
major retaliation risks their remaining assets. Iran is weak, and everything
they have from their nuclear program to their allies in the region is at risk
right now is a way that may not be true a month from now, or two months from
now.
Amos Harel: Keep in mind that everybody speaks of the autumn. Why not
earlier? (I'm just theorizing here)
David G.: The threat is low everywhere except Egypt. Granting Pepe's
point that Iran's direct reach into Egypt is de minimus, Qatar's intervention
to undermine SCAF definitely helps Iran -- it removes an obstacle to attacks on
Israel.
David S.: But if you imagine that the Salafists or the MB will
control Egypt in the medium future, then this is the moment of least threat to
Egypt from that direction, unless you imagine SCAF can regain solid control of
the country under a new Mubarak.
David G.: David S., I agree with you: Tantawi's departure is one more
grain of sand on the scale on the side of an early strike.
David S.: If the MB is strong enough to cut Tantawi's head off this
morning, then SCAF isn't going to be running Egypt tomorrow.
Amos Harel: There's unofficial talk of an Obama-Bibi meeting in New
York on September 26. This might even make it harder for Israel to strike
between the meeting and the elections. Speaking of conspiracy theories, my
editor, Aluf Benn, raised the possibility that Obama has in fact already
agreed, though not enthusiastically, to an Israeli strike. I doubt this,
myself.
Pepe: I read this Aluf Benn article. I'm not convinced.
David S.: Obama is in a harder position than it looks when it comes
to dismantling the Israel-US relationship over an Israeli strike. His main
foreign policy objective coming into office was nonproliferation of nuclear
weapons. Plus, he doesn't publicly do anything about Syria, so why harsh on
Israel for doing something about Iran? Unless, of course, they fuck it up.
David G.: I agree that Obama won't be able to do much to Israel if
they strike, not, at least, before the election.
There has to be more to Egypt's situation than Qatar: $2 billion is just the
reserves they lost last month. Doesn't last very long. With $30 billion in the
bank Qatar can't carry the burden alone. I wonder if the Obama administration
has promised some money to back Morsi.
Pepe: The only "promise" is via the IMF.
David S.: I get the feeling that the Emperor has no clothes when it
comes to Obama's Mid-East policy. I think he simply decided it was a loser, and
his job was to "get the US out of the Middle East." If I were him I'd
rather think about Asia.
Amos Harel: Let's all move to China, then.
Pepe: We could say the same about Obama's Central Asia policy.
Amos Harel: If David is right and this is the case, it will be a
major blow to 40-odd years of Ha'aretz editorials
David S.: Guess what, Israel? The US doesn't give a crap about what
happens to you one way or another. If you stop the Iranian nuclear program,
great. If Iran gets the bomb, that's more your problem than ours, dig?
Pepe: You are all welcome here in Hong Kong.
Rotem Sella: Is there kosher Margaux?
Pepe: You can mix!
David G.: Even better, you can drink treyf.
David S.: The entire Jewish religion is based on not mixing stuff.
Shatnez -- it's the prohibition of mixing cotton and linen.
Pepe: Not here, guys. This is the future of hybrid capitalism. Hong
Kong fashion is all about cotton and linen.
David G.: Before we conclude: Any thoughts about Turkey that aren't
obvious from the press coverage?
David S.: I think the Turks have royally fucked themselves.
Pepe: Erdogan is toast - or an eggs benedict with toast, actually.
David G.: David S., that's a local specialty: It's called
"Turkish Delight." I agree. They wanted no enemies and now they have
no friends.
David S.: Are the Kurds the quiet big winners of the last 12 months?
Pepe: Oh, man, now you got me going. The most important story right
now is Great Kurdistan beckoning in the future.
David S.: I've been thinking about that a lot, to the annoyance of my
girlfriend.
Pepe: Will write a long story first for Asia Times - then we could
discuss it here. But hold on, your girlfriend is Turkish?
David S.: The Glorious Future of the Kurdish Autonomous Model Beckons
the Entire Middle East! My girlfriend is a Turkish-Greek-ish Jew from Long
Island.
Pepe: She's a born diplomat.
David S.: As opposed to me.
David G.: Here's a hint: "Kurds have the right to demand federal
areas: Kurdish Iranian MP"
Pepe: Greater Kurdistan - way to go!
David: Assad's courting of the Kurds could blow back against Iran as
well.
Pepe: Nobody in Iran is talking about Iranian Kurds.
Amos: I wonder if the Kurds can achieve any Olympic medals. Israel's
London experience had been terrible, by the way. For the first time since 1992,
no medals. Haven't the Jewish people suffered enough?
David G.: But the diaspora came through, reviving that classic of
Jewish art, "Hava Nagila." You'll have to hear it ten times a day for
the next forty years.
Amos Harel: We'll always have "Hava Nagila"
David G.: For that you have my condolences.
Pepe: And the Qataris will always have Paris (they are buying the
whole thing).
David S.: Let's take a final poll? Israeli strike on Iran by end of
the year, yes or no?
David G.: I vote yes.
David S.: Me too!
Rotem Sella: End of Jewish year or 2012?
David S.: Stop stalling!
David: Goyish year, of course – 2012.
Amos Harel: No (you stand where you sit - and my family is right in
the middle)
David S.: I'm not talking about the wisdom of a strike, but the
likelihood of one. I'm personally opposed. Nasrallah's still alive in Lebanon,
right?
Rotem: I say now more likely than not.
Amos Harel: D&D - at least, try not to sound as if you're
enjoying it.
David S.: Does your evasion mean you think it is likely?
Pepe: DJ Spengler spins Hava Nagilah Bomb Shelter - the Bibi remix.
David S.: Everyone is now on record as thinking an Israeli strike on
Iran is more likely than not by the end of 2012 except Amos who is worried for
his children. Amos?
Amos: Again, 50:50, but in the end I assume it won't happen, not this
year.
David G.: Wait a minute -- Pepe hasn't voted.
David : I thought Pepe's "Bomb Shelter remix" line was a
yes.
Pepe: Damn - can I go for a "hypothetical"? It's all based
on hypothesis confronted against other hypothesis. Still; not likely after the
Obama-Bibi meet. This means more likely over the next 4 to 5 weeks. Likely with
Mitt 2013. Totally unknown territory with Obama 2.0.
David G.: Gentlemen, I have to excuse myself. Prior engagement.
Amos: On this happy note, friends, good night from Israel, hopefully
not for the last time.
David: You mean, the eastern province of Greater Kurdistan, the
future autonomous national home of the Jewish people?
Pepe: And disgruntled Chinese!
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