Arab Leaders, Viewing Hamas as Worse Than Israel, Stay Silent - “I have never seen a situation like it, where you have so many Arab states acquiescing in the death and destruction in Gaza and the pummeling of Hamas, The silence is deafening.”
From The New York Times:
CAIRO — Battling Palestinian militants in Gaza two years ago, Israel found
itself pressed from all sides by unfriendly Arab neighbors to end the fighting.
Not this time.
After the military ouster of the Islamist
government in Cairo last year, Egypt has led a new coalition of Arab states —
including Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — that has
effectively lined up with Israel in its fight against Hamas, the Islamist
movement that controls the Gaza Strip. That, in turn, may have contributed to
the failure of the antagonists to reach a negotiated cease-fire even after more
than three weeks of bloodshed.
“The Arab states’ loathing and fear of
political Islam is so strong that it outweighs their allergy to Benjamin
Netanyahu,” the prime minister of Israel, said Aaron David Miller, a scholar at
the Wilson Center in Washington and a former Middle East negotiator under
several presidents.
“I have never seen a situation like it, where you have so many Arab states
acquiescing in the death and destruction in Gaza and the pummeling of Hamas,” he
said. “The silence is deafening.”
Although Egypt is traditionally the key
go-between in any talks with Hamas — deemed a terrorist group by the United
States and Israel — the government in Cairo this time surprised Hamas by
publicly proposing a cease-fire agreement that met most of Israel’s demands and
none from the Palestinian group. Hamas was tarred as intransigent when it
immediately rejected it, and Cairo has continued to insist that its proposal
remains the starting point for any further discussions.
But as commentators sympathetic to the
Palestinians slammed the proposal as a ruse to embarrass Hamas, Egypt’s Arab
allies praised it. King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia called President Abdel Fattah
el-Sisi of Egypt the next day to commend it, Mr. Sisi’s office said, in a
statement that cast no blame on Israel but referred only to “the bloodshed of
innocent civilians who are paying the price for a military confrontation for
which they are not responsible.”
“There is clearly a convergence of interests
of these various regimes with Israel,” said Khaled Elgindy, a former adviser to
Palestinian negotiators who is now a fellow at the Brookings Institution in
Washington. In the battle with Hamas, Mr. Elgindy said, the Egyptian fight
against the forces of political Islam and the Israeli struggle against
Palestinian militants were nearly identical. “Whose proxy war is it?” he
asked.
The dynamic has inverted all expectations of
the Arab Spring uprisings. As recently as 18 months ago, most analysts in
Israel, Washington and the Palestinian territories expected the popular
uprisings to make the Arab governments more responsive to their citizens, and
therefore more sympathetic to the Palestinians and more hostile to Israel.
But instead of becoming more isolated,
Israel’s government has emerged for the moment as an unexpected beneficiary of
the ensuing tumult, now tacitly supported by the leaders of the resurgent
conservative order as an ally in their common fight against political Islam.
Egyptian officials have directly or implicitly
blamed Hamas instead of Israel for Palestinian deaths in the fighting, even
when, for example, United Nations schools have been hit by Israeli shells,
something that occurred again on Wednesday.
And the pro-government Egyptian news media has
continued to rail against Hamas as a tool of a regional Islamist plot to
destabilize Egypt and the region, just as it has since the military ouster of
President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood one year ago. (Egyptian
prosecutors have charged Hamas with instigating violence in Egypt, killing its
soldiers and police officers, and even breaking Mr. Morsi and other Brotherhood
leaders out of jail during the 2011 uprising.)
The diatribes against Hamas by at least one
popular pro-government talk show host in Egypt were so extreme that the
government of Israel broadcast some of them into Gaza.
“They use it to say, ‘See, your supposed
friends are encouraging us to kill you!’ ” Maisam Abumorr, a Palestinian student
in Gaza City, said in a telephone interview.
Some pro-government Egyptian talk shows
broadcast in Gaza “are saying the Egyptian Army should help the Israeli Army get
rid of Hamas,” she said.
At the same time, Egypt has infuriated Gazans
by continuing its policy of shutting down tunnels used for cross-border
smuggling into the Gaza Strip and keeping border crossings closed, exacerbating
a scarcity of food, water and medical supplies after three weeks of
fighting.
“Sisi is worse than Netanyahu, and the
Egyptians are conspiring against us more than the Jews,” said Salhan al-Hirish,
a storekeeper in the northern Gaza town of Beit Lahiya. “They finished the
Brotherhood in Egypt, and now they are going after Hamas.”
Egypt and other Arab states, especially the
Persian Gulf monarchies of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, are
finding themselves allied with Israel in a common opposition to Iran, a rival
regional power that has a history of funding and arming Hamas.
For Washington, the shift poses new obstacles
to its efforts to end the fighting. Although Egyptian intelligence agencies
continue to talk with Hamas, as they did under former President Hosni Mubarak
and Mr. Morsi, Cairo’s new animosity toward the group has called into question
the effectiveness of that channel, especially after the response to Egypt’s
first proposal.
As a result, Secretary of State John Kerry
turned to the more Islamist-friendly states of Qatar and Turkey as alternative
mediators — two states that grew in regional stature with the rising tide of
political Islam after the Arab Spring, and that have suffered a degree of
isolation as that tide has ebbed.
But that move has put Mr. Kerry in the incongruous position of appearing to some
analysts as less hostile to Hamas — and thus less supportive of Israel — than
Egypt or its Arab allies.
For Israeli hawks, the change in the Arab states has been relatively liberating.
“The reading here is that, aside from Hamas and Qatar, most of the Arab
governments are either indifferent or willing to follow the leadership of
Egypt,” said Martin Kramer, president of Shalem College in Jerusalem and an
American-Israeli scholar of Islamist and Arab politics. “No one in the Arab
world is going to the Americans and telling them, ‘Stop it now,’ ” as Saudi
Arabia did, for example, in response to earlier Israeli crackdowns on the
Palestinians, he said. “That gives the Israelis leeway.”
With the resurgence of the anti-Islamist,
military-backed government in Cairo, Mr. Kramer said, the new Egyptian
government and allies like Saudi Arabia appear to believe that “the Palestinian
people are to bear the suffering in order to defeat Hamas, because Hamas cannot
be allowed to triumph and cannot be allowed to emerge as the most powerful
Palestinian player.”
Egyptian officials disputed that
characterization, arguing that the new government was maintaining its support
for the Palestinian people despite its deteriorating relations with Hamas, and
that it had grown no closer to Israel than it was under Mr. Morsi or Mr.
Mubarak.
“We have a historical responsibility toward
the Palestinians, and that is not related to our stance on any specific
faction,” said a senior Egyptian diplomat, speaking on the condition of
anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks. “Hamas is not Gaza, and Gaza
is not Palestine.”
Egyptian officials noted that the Egyptian
military and the Red Crescent had delivered medical supplies and other aid to
Gaza. Cairo continues to keep open lines of communication with Hamas, including
allowing a senior Hamas official, Moussa Abu Marzouq, to reside in
Cairo.
Other analysts, though, argued that Egypt and
its Arab allies were trying to balance their own overriding dislike for Hamas
against their citizens’ emotional support for the Palestinians, a balancing act
that could grow more challenging as the Gaza carnage mounts.
“The pendulum of the Arab Spring has swung in
Israel’s favor, just like it had earlier swung in the opposite direction,” said
Mr. Elgindy, the former Palestinian adviser.
“But I am not sure the story is finished at this point.”
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