Washington – Violence in Israel Challenges US-Egypt Ties

    10

    People wave Israeli flags during a demonstration supporting soldiers in Israel's military operation in Gaza, as they stand opposite a counter-protest at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem November 15, 2012. Flash90Washington – The Obama administration struggled Thursday to deal with the biggest flare-up in Israeli-Palestinian violence in years, unable to call on its old ally, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, to negotiate an end to rocket attacks on the Jewish state.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    Instead, the administration relied on Egypt’s untested Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, who — like the Gaza Strip’s rulers, Hamas — is a member of the Muslim Brotherhood.

    The challenge illustrates America’s weakened influence since last year’s Arab Spring as popular Islamist political movements have replaced pro-U.S., secular strongmen throughout the region over the last two years. The shift has shaken the foundations of American security strategy in the Middle East and is having its greatest effect in Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous and influential country. There, the United States long partnered with Mubarak and his circle of top generals in mediation efforts between Israel and the Palestinians but now faces far trickier diplomacy with Morsi.

    President Barack Obama spoke with Morsi on Wednesday, but they came out of the discussion with diverging messages. A White House statement credited Egypt’s “central role in preserving regional security” while stressing that Obama condemned Hamas’ rocket fire from Gaza into Israel and backed the Jewish state’s right to self-defense. Obama also spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, urging him to avoid civilian casualties while placing responsibility clearly on Hamas to stop its attacks.

    But Morsi, speaking Thursday in Cairo, provided a far different account of his conversation with Obama. He said he told Obama that Israel’s offensive must stop and should not be repeated and that the leaders “agreed that Egypt and the United States will work together to prevent any escalation or the continuation of the aggression,” according to a presidential statement. By “aggression,” Morsi meant Israel’s military action. Later he even more explicitly denounced Israel’s “unacceptable aggression” and sent his prime minister to Gaza in a show of support for Hamas’ rulers.

    Morsi, who entered office in June, belongs to the Muslim Brotherhood party. Hamas is the Brotherhood’s Palestinian chapter and has long been branded a terrorist organization by the United States, meaning American officials have no contacts with the group’s members and must work through intermediaries like Egypt, Turkey and European countries to send it messages.

    “There is a very clear path here to ending the violence and that’s for the rocket attacks to stop, so we would hope that that’s a message that would be delivered,” State Department spokesman Mark Toner said, referring to the planned visit to Gaza on Friday by Egyptian Prime Minister Hesham Kandil.

    Responding to a barrage of missiles from the Gaza Strip, Israel’s offensive began Wednesday with sorties that killed Hamas’ military commander and destroyed dozens of rocket launchers. But Palestinian militants launched nearly 150 more rockets at Israel on Thursday, killing three people and firing into the Tel Aviv area for the first time since Saddam Hussein’s Scud missiles struck Israel’s largest city in the 1991 Gulf War.

    Late in the day, Israel signaled a ground operation may be imminent as forces moved toward the border area with Gaza, raising the likelihood of a wider conflict following two days in which 15 Palestinians were killed.

    Obama was to speak with both Morsi and Netanyahu again Thursday, a U.S. official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak publicly on the matter. The president was likely to stress similar points, with White House press secretary Jay Carney repeating the administration’s assertion Thursday that there is no justification for missile strikes against Israel.

    “The onus here is clearly on Hamas,” Toner said. “This is a situation that they’ve created by firing rockets at innocent Israeli civilians.”

    The violence in Gaza and Israel adds to the instability plaguing the Middle East and North Africa. Syria is stuck in a civil war that has killed more than 36,000 people since March 2011, according to activists. Libya is awash with militants a year after Moammar Gadhafi’s demise, a danger illustrated by the Sept. 11 terrorist attack in Benghazi that killed a U.S. ambassador and three other Americans. Northern Mali has been seized by al-Qaida-linked rebels. Lebanese politics are in disarray. Popular discontent persists in places from Jordan to Bahrain. And Iran’s continued international meddling and nuclear program has the U.S., Israel and Arab countries alike on alert.

    In previous times of upheaval, Washington could count on a strong ally in Cairo. Despite his abysmal democracy and human rights record, Mubarak played a key role over his three-decade autocracy in promoting Arab-Israeli peace and helping the U.S. fight al-Qaida and contain the influence of Iran. U.S.-Egyptian cooperation has waned on all fronts since Mubarak’s February ouster, but Toner said Thursday that Egypt will uphold the 1979 Camp David Accords with the Jewish state.

    “We believe the government of Egypt remains committed to its peace treaty with Israel,” he said.

    Still, Morsi’s public comments thus far have inspired little confidence. U.S. officials say they’ve been confused by Morsi’s messaging but remain hopeful that his government will impress upon Gaza’s militant leaders the need for a cease-fire. His comments were less inflammatory, however, than the head of the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammed Badie, who referred to Israel as “the project of the devil” in a speech Thursday in Sudan.

    Morsi, Egypt’s first freely elected president, is in a tight spot of his own. Opponents at home want him to take a stronger stand against Israel, but many in the establishment fear greater friction with the U.S., which provides Egypt with $1.5 billion in aid each year. That money is dependent on Egypt upholding its peace deal with Israel, one of the Obama administration’s key remaining elements of leverage in a changing Middle East.

    The Senate late Thursday approved a resolution expressing “vigorous support and unwavering commitment to the welfare, security and survival of the state of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state with secure borders.” The non-binding measure, approved by voice vote, also recognizes Israel’s “right to act in self-defense to protect its citizens against acts of terrorism.”


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    10 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    Liepa
    Liepa
    11 years ago

    If it weren’t for the billions the US pours in to this schnorrer of a country Egypt, there’d be riots and killings in Tharir Square even worse than the one’s witnessed not too long ago.
    So shut up Egypt, your oil rich brethren aren’t lifting a finger to help you, America is the only one that does.

    The one who foots your bill is the boss.

    When the USA sneezes you’d better sing the words ‘BLESS YOU’ or else you and your people can die from hunger, once Congress decides ‘enough is enough’.

    Weren’t you guys taught, never bite the hand that feeds you!
    Oh, I forgot, there are many things you guys weren’t taught, silly me.

    11 years ago

    Maybe he is our President, but Obama is a fool. This is NOT the time to warn Israel about civilians. Where is the common sense and morality when someone is defending their innocent civilians? Do they not value civilians? Don’t they have an extensive history of protecting Palestinian civilians – especially when most of the children they protect are being fed daily diets of hate and terror? Now is not the time to lecture Israel. It is the time to abolish each and every form of aid, even the stuff you liberals in Washington call “humanitarian” from the Palestinians, all of them. That includes the money sent to Egypt, now ending up financing the anti-Israel activity. The Muslim world can easily fill the gaps. The population in Gaza lives in third world filth because their leaders insist on that and esign their lifestyle that way. It is not because of Israel, who supplies them with all their needs, electricity, water, medical care, etc. Don’t lecture Israel. Stop the savage terror from the Muslim world. Otherwise, just help supply Israel to accomplish that, and keep your mouth shut!

    Normal
    Normal
    11 years ago

    “Morsi said he told Obama that Israel’s offensive must stop and should not be repeated”

    Israel’s offensive?? 10 years of unanswered missiles. Really?

    Obama’s administration is in for a big eye-opener about the Arab Spring and who they have to deal with in the future.

    honestbroker
    honestbroker
    11 years ago

    Why the mecia still insist on calling it the”Arab spring ” is beyond me, it’s more like a Muslim nuclear winter.
    I guess there is no cure yet for tunnel vision.

    11 years ago

    let’s hear a tape recording of Obama’s conversations – then we can know what he told morsi . Obama should stop the aid unless morsi listens to the us govt.

    Sarak
    Sarak
    11 years ago

    the funny thing is, that the brotherhood system seems to be more oppressive to the people than mubarak

    SherryTheNoahide
    SherryTheNoahide
    11 years ago

    For the people who come on here & gripe about the Prez for NO reason: did you bother to actually READ what was said in the article? I don’t understand what the issue is here! He blamed Hamas- TO Hamas & Netanyahu. Told Bibi he had every right to defend his people. Period. Just to be careful to watch for civilians on the other side.

    Ooooh…frightingly anti-Israel, I know! Come on already. While all this craziness is going on right now, can you just for once have some tact & worry about the people, pray for them, think on the Times and what *could* be the beginnings of something potentially bigger (G-d forbid), at some point? Let’s pray this is not so, that Israel can take care of who they must, but why NOT pray that not to many civilian lives are lost? You folks act like EVERY Musilm is culpable! And gee, isn’t that how they feel about You too? When does the irrationality of this all end?!

    So honestly…let bygones be bygones for this situation, back off the President for once in your lives & try to imagine having his job for just ONE DAY & the think on the stress YOU’D feel at the end of that *one* day at his job, with the daily nightmares he has to deal with these days? And yet…not a SHRED of mercy or fairness do you give to the man!

    Were people nice to Bush? No. But yet…Democrats supported him in the days after 9\11. We came together in the crisis! Nobody was picking apart the guy at the top for every little thing for a few days, no…weeks really, if not months(!) After the fact. Bush also got major legilastion pushed through, thanks to at least *some* bi-partisan help…come on!

    Please, priorities people. Can for one day, you just leave it alone, and do something ELSE for me? Can you PRAY for the President this weekend, instead of picking him apart? Pray that he’s able to help, that he’s able to be successful, because when our Head of State is capable, level-headed, calm & intelligent…everyone benefits from these qualities?! Your friends, your family! And not just here, but in Israel too. Just pray from the heart for this for a change. I promise you, you will NOT be struck by lightning by Ha-Shem. In fact…quite the opposite would happen.