With brothers like these, who needs enemies?

Note: This piece was written before the latest Israeli massacres in Gaza



Commentary by  Khalid Amayreh

December 28, 2008



There is more than just a  whiff of hypocrisy in the way Arab states such as 
Egypt and  Saudi Arabia as well as the American-backed Palestinian Authority 
(PA) are dealing with the continuing nightmare in the Gaza Strip.



A fleeting examination of recent statements by  Egyptian and Saudi officials 
indicate that the rulers of the two countries are effectively adopting the 
Israeli stance on the Gaza plight.



For example, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit recently blamed Hamas 
for the collapse of the Egyptian-mediated  tacit ceasefire understanding in 
Gaza, forgetting the obvious fact that it was Israel, not Hamas, that violated 
the ceasefire when Israeli forces carried out a deadly  foray in Gaza in mid 
November, killing a number of Palestinian resistance fighters.



Abul Gheit has also been oblivious to the fact that throughout the duration of 
the ceasefire (June 19-June19-2008),  Israel kept up, even intensified, the 
cruel blockade of the Gaza Strip, pushing desperate Gazans to the edge of 
physical annihilation.



Egypt, too, we must not forget, knowingly or unknowingly assisted Israel by 
making sure that the Rafah border crossing remained almost hermetically closed, 
so that the estimated 1.5 million Gazans would suffer and die  both at the 
hands of Israeli Nazi Nazism and by  brotherly Arab love and  solidarity.



I can't really  understand why Egypt, the largest and most powerful Arab state, 
is behaving the way it is.



Egyptian officials present a number of confused and inconsistent arguments to 
justify the scandalous stand of their government.



They claim that the continued closure of the Rafah crossing was serving 
Palestinian national interests since opening the crossing would free Israel 
from its responsibility  as an occupying power.



This is a mendacious argument because all that Gazans want is to be able to buy 
food and consumer products from Egypt for survival.



Occasionally, Egyptian officials defend their cruel treatment of Gazans seeking 
to get back to Gaza or get out of it for medical treatment by invoking the 
"international agreement" governing  the operation of the border crossing.



According to that  infamous agreement, the Rafah border-crossing can only be 
opened with Israeli consent.



Well, a scandalous agreement as such is not worth maintaining in the first 
place, since it gives Israel the right to besiege and strangle and starve 
Gazans to death, very much like the Nazis did at Ghetto Warsaw.



I don't know if the Egyptian authorities are giving more  weight to honoring a 
brazenly shameful  agreement  than to the survival of 1.5 million Palestinians 
who are being subjected to a slow-motion genocide because they dared elect a 
government that Israel and the Bush administration didn't like.



Are agreements that effectively place the people of Gaza under the mercy of 
Israeli whims, cruelty and blood lust worth maintaining? This is a question 
that the leader of Egypt ought to answer faithfully and honestly.



Last year, Abul Gheit claimed that Egypt was keeping the Rafah crossing closed 
based on a request to that effect by PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas.



Well, but the Egyptian leadership should know better than just heeding 
instructions from a "leader" that is willing to go to any extent in order to 
appease the occupiers of his country and enemies of his people at the expense 
of his suffering people and their enduring just cause.



Besides, Israel has been telling the world that it end its occupation of the 
Gaza Strip more than three years ago. If so, why is Egypt so reluctant to tell 
the Zionist regime and its American guardian-ally  that Israel can't have it 
both ways, keeping Gaza under tight Israeli control and at the same time claim 
to have ended its occupation of the coastal enclave?



Otherwise, Egypt is allowing itself to be party to the Israeli designs to 
annihilate the people of Gaza under the rubric of keeping the moribund peace 
process a live.



More disturbing still is the silence with which Egyptian officials, including 
Abul Gheit, met the insolent remarks made by visiting Israeli Foreign Minister 
Tzipi Livni in Cairo on Thursday, 25 December.



Livni, the racist woman who earlier this month called for the expulsion of 
Israeli non-Jewish citizens to a prospective Palestinian entity on the West 
Bank, made a series of arrogant threats to destroy Hamas and end its rule in 
the Gaza Strip.



Well, since when  are  such Judeo-Nazi leaders allowed to speak in this tone in 
the capital of the largest Arab state, the home of al-Azhar, without any retort 
by Egyptian leaders and spokesmen.?



Is Egypt completely impotent, sterile, dead?

And now to the ruling Saudi dynasty?



It is really shameful that while the rulers of the desert Kingdom are currying 
favor with Zionist Jews, especially by organizing "inter-religious conferences" 
in Europe and North America, they are being so harsh on the Palestinians by 
demanding that they give up the bulk of their legitimate rights to freedom and 
liberation from the claws of Israeli Nazism.



Well, the Saudi rulers are well-advised to keep their mouths shut. If they want 
to continue their promiscuous relationship with Israel and her Zionist agents, 
that is their business. But they must stop telling us to give up the right of 
return. For us Palestinians, the right of return is as sacred as the Mecca and 
Madina



If the Saudis are interested in obtaining a certificate of good conduct from 
Zionist Jews, then this shouldn't be at the expense of the Palestinian people 
and their inalienable right. (end)




































































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