Middle Eastern Moment of Truth

Posted By P. David Hornik On February 1, 2011 

Over a quarter-century Israel fought Egypt in the 1948 Independence War, the
1956 Sinai War, the 1967 Six-Day War, the 1967-1970 War of Attrition, and
the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Since then, for 37 years, Israel and Egypt have not
fought. This may have been made possible mainly by the 1979 Israeli-Egyptian
Peace Treaty; or it may be that Egypt, deterred by having lost the wars and
desiring realignment with the West, would have kept the peace in any case.

Given the stark difference between the 1948-1973 epoch and the 1973-2011
epoch, Israel has reacted to the current crisis in Egypt without
foolishness-heard elsewhere in the West-about the supposed moderation of the
Muslim Brotherhood
<http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/258419/fear-muslim-brotherhood-andre
w-c-mccarthy>  or its ally Mohammed ElBaradei
<http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/258397/what-could-be-worse-elbaradei-a
ndrew-c-mccarthy> . Israelis are alarmed across the political spectrum.

Left-of-center Haaretz columnist Aluf Benn writes
<http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/obama-will-go-down-in-history-as-
the-president-who-lost-egypt-1.340057>  that "Barack Obama will be
remembered as the president who 'lost' Egypt.. If [a superpower] abandons
its allies the moment they flounder, who would trust it tomorrow?" Another
left-of-center Haaretz columnist, Ari Shavit, writes
<http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/obama-s-betrayal-as-goes-mubarak-
so-goes-u-s-might-1.340244>  harshly that "Obama's betrayal of Hosni Mubarak
is not just the betrayal of a moderate Egyptian president who remained loyal
to the United States.. Everyone grasps the message: America's word is
worthless; an alliance with America is unreliable; America has lost it."

And President Shimon Peres, who not long ago believed in "the New Middle
East" and was a central figure in Israel's dovish turn, said
<http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Article.aspx?id=206054>  that "We still
have great respect for Mubarak. Not everything he did was right, but he
worked to keep peace in the Middle East." And regarding possible
developments in Egypt: "A fanatic religious oligarchy is not better than
lack of democracy."

Israelis know that Mubarak's "peace" (since 1981, when he took over from his
assassinated predecessor Anwar Sadat) was cold, that Egypt continued
treating Israel as an enemy in international forums, and that its society
remained intensely anti-Israeli and anti-Semitic. At the time the crisis
broke out last week, there appear to have been only a few hundred Israeli
tourists-out of an Israeli population of seven million-in neighboring,
officially "friendly" Egypt. 

But Israelis also know that, in addition to keeping the guns quiet, Egypt in
recent years has acted as a tacit ally against the radical Middle Eastern
axis of Iran, Syria, Hezbollah, and Hamas. Israeli intelligence helped Egypt
quash <http://archive.frontpagemag.com/readArticle.aspx?ARTID=34804>  a
dangerous Hezbollah espionage ring in 2009. Egypt has reportedly been doing
a lot more to stop the smuggling of weapons to Hamas in Gaza.

Israel is right, then, to urge
<http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/israel-urges-world-to-curb-critic
ism-of-egypt-s-mubarak-1.340238>  the U.S. and other countries to stop
pressuring Mubarak and appreciate the relative moderation of his
regime-compared to much worse alternatives. Still, for Israel, the crisis
can only have a deeply sobering effect.

It was with the advent of formal Israeli-Egyptian peace that the term
"Arab-Israeli conflict" came to be replaced by the term "peace process." The
tripartite signing
<http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/big/0326.html>  of the
treaty by the Israeli, Egyptian, and American heads of government was seen
by many in the West-and particularly in Israel-as having near-messianic
significance. The quest for similar consummations with the Palestinians and
Syria-supposed to lead to Israel's ultimate acceptance by the Middle
East-became a tremendous political and academic obsession and industry.

In recent years it has been much harder for Israelis to sustain such
visions. The "process" with the Palestinians has led to deadlock at best and
terror at worst. Another former regional ally, Turkey, has turned openly
hostile under Islamist rule, while Lebanon sinks further into Hezbollah's
grip. The specter of Egypt becoming, again, a frontline
country-necessitating a huge and costly reorientation of Israel's military
deployment-haunts Israelis who understand that the only strong, organized
force among the regime's opponents, whatever crowds may be roiling in the
streets of Cairo, Suez, and Alexandria, are the Islamists.

But the instability of the region, the fragility of "peace" as a goal, has
implications beyond Israel. As Aluf Benn wrote
<http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/for-obama-egypt-protests-may-garn
er-a-new-friend-israel-1.340237>  on Monday in a follow-up article:

When Obama and his advisers look at a map of the region, they see only one
state they can count on: Israel. The regime is stable, and support for
America is well-entrenched. Obama may dislike Netanyahu and his policy
toward the Palestinians, but after losing his allies in Turkey, Lebanon and
Egypt, and with the uneasiness gripping his friends in Jordan and the Gulf,
Washington can't afford to be choosy.

Egypt may not be lost yet. If it is, Israel will stand as the one strong
horse in the region aligned with the West against the radicals.

  _____  

Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article:
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/02/01/middle-eastern-moment-of-truth/

 



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