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ibrodsky
06-16-2002, 07:50 AM
There is a conference going on in Cairo re: the topic "After the Demise of Israel."

In recent months, Egyptian leaders have publicly speculated about the prospects of militarily defeating Israel. Egypt's government-controlled press spews hatred towards Israel and its people.

Is this peace?

The Egyptian leader who made peace with Israel was assassinated. But then so was Rabin. However, there is a difference: Sadat's death was quietly welcomed by many, many Egyptians, while Rabin's murder horrified the majority of Israelis.

If the "Peace" with Egypt is representative of peace with Arab states, is it even worth pursuing?

L@mplighterM
06-16-2002, 09:06 AM
Try getting a pro Israel article/ad explaining Israel?s position regarding the WB & GS published in one of Egypt?s papers.

Lowell
10-19-2003, 02:59 PM
Originally posted by ibrodsky
There is a conference going on in Cairo re: the topic "After the Demise of Israel."

In recent months, Egyptian leaders have publicly speculated about the prospects of militarily defeating Israel. Egypt's government-controlled press spews hatred towards Israel and its people.

Is this peace?

The Egyptian leader who made peace with Israel was assassinated. But then so was Rabin. However, there is a difference: Sadat's death was quietly welcomed by many, many Egyptians, while Rabin's murder horrified the majority of Israelis.

If the "Peace" with Egypt is representative of peace with Arab states, is it even worth pursuing?

Seems this would certainly violate the 'peace' treaty Egypt has with Israel. One supposes that Egypt and other Arab nations have become emboldened by the terrorism they finance and support.

Patriot
10-19-2003, 05:00 PM
Peace? with Egypt?
There is no peace with egypt, only a cease-fire.
Egypt is the heart of anti-semitism in the arab world, it is overtly and covertly aiding terrorist organizations and, above all, is rearming with the most sophisticated weapons money can buy.

Why Egypt, who has severe demographic and economic problems, need to spend billions of dollars each year on sophisticated weapons? Is it afraid of Libya? or the mighty Sudan? or maybe they are preparing to fend off a Cypriot amphibious landing?
No. The only nation Egypt considers an enemy and a threat is the one the Egyptian army is holding excercises attacking and defending from. In all those excercises the enemy is always to the EAST of Egypt.

There is no peace with Egypt, only a cease-fire between wars.

Lowell
10-19-2003, 05:50 PM
Originally posted by Patriot
Why Egypt, who has severe demographic and economic problems, need to spend billions of dollars each year on sophisticated weapons? Is it afraid of Libya? or the mighty Sudan? or maybe they are preparing to fend off a Cypriot amphibious landing?
No. The only nation Egypt considers an enemy and a threat is the one the Egyptian army is holding excercises attacking and defending from. In all those excercises the enemy is always to the EAST of Egypt.


Good to have a realistic point of view from an Israeli. Why does Egypt and other Arab nations fear Israel, a nation that covers only some 1/10th of 1% of the ME? Is it pure bombast on the part of Egypt, etc. to be so heavily armed against a much smaller nation? Or do you think the Arabs will attack Israel again with their armies?

Mil
10-20-2003, 07:44 AM
Posted by Lowell:

Good to have a realistic point of view from an Israeli. Why does Egypt and other Arab nations fear Israel, a nation that covers only some 1/10th of 1% of the ME? Is it pure bombast on the part of Egypt, etc. to be so heavily armed against a much smaller nation? Or do you think the Arabs will attack Israel again with their armies?


May be it's because Israel has beat the Arabs in every war including all the political battles.

As far as Egypt attacking Israel - it will never happen. Egypt will be annihilated in the matter of a few minutes or defeated quite easily within a fairly short period of time. In any case with American military presence in Middle East this will never happen.

Lowell
10-20-2003, 11:07 AM
Originally posted by Mil
Posted by Lowell:

Good to have a realistic point of view from an Israeli. Why does Egypt and other Arab nations fear Israel, a nation that covers only some 1/10th of 1% of the ME? Is it pure bombast on the part of Egypt, etc. to be so heavily armed against a much smaller nation? Or do you think the Arabs will attack Israel again with their armies?


May be it's because Israel has beat the Arabs in every war including all the political battles.

As far as Egypt attacking Israel - it will never happen. Egypt will be annihilated in the matter of a few minutes or defeated quite easily within a fairly short period of time. In any case with American military presence in Middle East this will never happen.

Then why do they continue? Even burly thugs in a bar will quit picking fights with a small, skinny kung fu expert after getting beat a few times.

Patriot
10-26-2003, 06:22 PM
Originally posted by Lowell
Good to have a realistic point of view from an Israeli. Why does Egypt and other Arab nations fear Israel, a nation that covers only some 1/10th of 1% of the ME? Is it pure bombast on the part of Egypt, etc. to be so heavily armed against a much smaller nation? Or do you think the Arabs will attack Israel again with their armies?

For 2 reasons:
1. Israel is still stronger (militarily) than it's neighburs, even Egypt (although Egypt is fast closing the gap), more so now, that Iraq is out of the picture.
2. The need this to justify their own military buildup for aggression against Israel. If they cry "oh, no, we are afraid of mighty Israel" than thay can rearm and maintain great and expansive armies at a cost of economic hardships within.

As for the arabs attacking Israel - if we appear weak, and give too much to the pals, than it's a possibility.
If we are stupid enough to retreat to the 1967 lines (which Aba Even called "the Auschwitz Lines"), than the arabs might see a chance to win.
Just imagine the 1973 Yom Kippur War starting at the June 4th 1967 lines...

Patriot
10-26-2003, 06:26 PM
Originally posted by Mil
Posted by Lowell:


May be it's because Israel has beat the Arabs in every war including all the political battles.

As far as Egypt attacking Israel - it will never happen. Egypt will be annihilated in the matter of a few minutes or defeated quite easily within a fairly short period of time. In any case with American military presence in Middle East this will never happen.

The only good thing about the "peace" with Egypt is that it created a large buffer zone between Israel and Egypt - the Sinai desert. The Egyptian army is west of the Suez Canal, and if they decide to advance on the border, the IDF can destroy it while it crosses, long before it reaches the border.
But this is military logic. I'm afraid that Israeli politicians are not equipped with an abundance of logic of any kind... (see Golda Meir's actions before the 1973 Yom Kippur War)

NewsGuy
10-26-2003, 08:25 PM
Originally posted by ibrodsky
If the "Peace" with Egypt is representative of peace with Arab states, is it even worth pursuing?

Yes, I think that the "peace" with Egypt is very much representative of what can be expected from dealing with the Arabs in a best case scenario.

Of course, instead of peace, it is a cold war.

Egypt is in complete breach of the peace treaty negotiated by Carter, Begin and Sadat, as follows:

1. No "normalization" has taken place.

2. No economic cooperation to speak of.

3. Egypt withdrew its ambassador from Israel.

4. Egypt maintains its hostility towards Israel, including incitement to national hatred and anti-Semitism, not to mention offering to attack Israel if other Arab countries paid Egypt a specific sum of money (I think it was $100 million).

In general, peace with Arabs has been worthless. While Israel gives up parts of the Jewish homeland, it never got any real peace in return -- not from Egypt and not from Jordan.

In fact, in the case of Jordan, Israel lost out on an historic opportunity to send back million of Palestinians to their homeland in the Jordanian kingdom, something that could have solved the Palestinian problem.

In basic terms, Arabs have nothing of value to offer Israel. The one asset the Arabs have, which is a large base of low-income consumers, is no longer of real value. The Arabs have been brainwashed to reject Israeli goods, and so, even that asset is now useless.

Contrary to what many might think, Israel is probably better off with just an enforceable cease-fire agreement, and not phony peace agreements.

And in any event, many Arabs view all agreements with Israel as being similar to the fake peace agreement that the historical Muslim prophet Mohammad made with the Jews of Medina. After unsuccessfully trying to conquer the Jewish stronghold, he signed a peace treaty with them, prompting the trusting Jews to lay down their arms in peace. The Muslim "holy" man then proceeded to brutally murder all the Jews in Medina, including women, children and elderly. Unfortunately, this example of Muslim peace agreements is a guiding light for many modern-day Arabs in dealing with the modern-day Jews of Israel.

How do I know this? Because the Arabs actually proclaim this strategy proudly and publicly.

Frans_1
10-26-2003, 08:43 PM
Not to mention Egypt's terrorist tunnels from Sinai to Gaza and arms smuggling.

This the "Egyptian peace", that Israel and the US brought at what price ?

The Arabs have good reason to be smug, contemptuous of all peace efforts and totally confident about their "continuing struggle" until the "Zionist enemy" is "exhausted".

L@mplighterM
10-26-2003, 08:53 PM
Originally posted by Frans_1
Not to mention Egypt's terrorist tunnels from Sinai to Gaza and arms smuggling.



I talked to my friend a couple of weeks ago and she told me that the Palestinians get a thousand dollars and a new house (from the PA) if it’s discovered that they have a tunnel. She suggested that they most likely discretely contact the IDF and tell them that they have a tunnel so they end up with the grand and new house.

L@mplighterM
10-26-2003, 08:55 PM
Originally posted by NewsGuy
4. Egypt maintains its hostility towards Israel, including incitement to national hatred and anti-Semitism, not to mention offering to attack Israel if other Arab countries paid Egypt a specific sum of money (I think it was $100 million).



It was a $100 million.

I think you summed up and expressed the Egyptian position really well.

NewsGuy
10-28-2003, 09:30 AM
Originally posted by Frans_1
Not to mention Egypt's terrorist tunnels from Sinai to Gaza and arms smuggling.

This the "Egyptian peace", that Israel and the US brought at what price ?

The Arabs have good reason to be smug, contemptuous of all peace efforts and totally confident about their "continuing struggle" until the "Zionist enemy" is "exhausted".

That's right. Egypt is directly responsible for providing weapons and transportation of those weapons into the Palestinian-controlled areas, to be used to massacre Israeli civilians.

Allowing Egypt to breach the peace agreement so blatantly is a signal to the Arab world that Israel is weak and cannot enforce its rights under peace agreements.

Oh Jerusalem
08-20-2004, 02:53 AM
Column One: Willful blindness in Gaza
By CAROLINE GLICK

The drumbeat of anti-Semitic and anti-American incitement marches on in the Egyptian government-controlled press. In recent weeks, the media in Egypt has come out with a series of articles that, like the long and continuous stream of their poisonous predecessors, dehumanize Jews, and criminalize both Israel and the United States.

In one recent piece in the ruling National Democratic Party's newspaper Al-Liwaa Al-Islami, Dr. Rif'at Sayyed Ahmad wrote a dirge of Holocaust denial entitled "The lie about the burning of the Jews." Like most Holocaust denials, this one argues that the Jews made up the Holocaust in order to blackmail the world into giving the Jews a state where they proceeded to carry out a "holocaust" against the Arabs.

In another article, in the government's religious magazine Aqidati, columnist Hussam Wahba penned a long blood libel against the Jews in which he argued repeatedly that the Talmud demands that Jews murder non-Jews wherever they are to be found. And, of course, that Jews murder non-Jews in ritual killings to make Passover matzot.

Less graphically, two Egyptian government magazines, Al-Ahram Al-Arabi Weekly and Al-Ahram Weekly published articles claiming that US concern about the genocide being carried out in the Darfur region of Sudan is really just a ruse for Washington to gain control over the Sudanese oil fields.

Unfortunately, if it weren't for the Middle East Media Research Institute's painstaking translations of these articles, there would be almost no way for us to know about the Egyptian government's continuous campaign to hammer deep and enduring hatred of the Jews, Israel, and the US into the hearts and minds of the Egyptian people.

The Israeli government rarely bats an eyelash in response to these expressions by Hosni Mubarak's media. It certainly doesn't link Israel's willingness to treat Egypt with deference to the cessation of this Nazi-like dehumanization of the Jewish people. And it doesn't seem to consider that the deep and abiding hatred for all things Jewish that is so studiously inculcated into the Egyptian consciousness may have policy implications for the stability of the cold war that exists between our two countries.

To the contrary, as Egyptians ingest their daily diet of venom, Israeli generals are vigorously engaging their Egyptian counterparts in discussions on the role that the Egyptian military will play in a post-Israeli withdrawal Gaza.

Earlier this month a high-ranking delegation of Egyptian generals, led by Intelligence Chief Omar Suleiman, was treated to televised embraces by Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz and his underlings at the Defense Ministry. Next month, our generals are scheduled to fly to Cairo for a reciprocal visit. The aim of these friendly parleys is to work out the Egyptian role in Gaza after an IDF withdrawal.

Egypt's engagement of Israel is part of its two-pronged strategy for Gaza. At the same time that it discusses altering the 1979 treaty with Israel in a manner that will allow the Egyptian military to deploy up to 15,000 troops along the border with Israel, and perhaps in Gaza itself, it is holding discussions with the PA, Fatah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad to put together a plan for what Gaza will look like after these terrorists take full control of the area.

Both Egyptian and Israeli sources involved in the bilateral security talks have informed the press that Egypt has laid down four conditions for its support for Sharon's unilateral Israeli retreat from Gaza. These conditions involve (1) the transfer of control over the 10-kilometer-long Gaza-Egypt border to Egypt; (2) full Palestinian control over the Rafah border terminal with Egypt, the PA airport in Dahaniya, and the Gaza seaport; (3) the reopening of the "safe passage" route connecting Gaza and Judea to enable uninhibited Palestinian travel through Israel; and (4) an Israeli commitment not to reoccupy or attack the Gaza Strip after an IDF withdrawal.

These demands, breathtaking in their effrontery, would endanger the national security of Israel. Yet Mofaz did not cancel the talks, indeed the government continues to behave as if the Egyptians are being helpful.

Maj. General (res.) Doron Almog, who commanded the Southern Command from 2000-03 authored an article in the current issue of The Middle East Quarterly entitled "Tunnel Vision in Gaza." Almog argues that transferring control over the Gaza-Egypt border, or the so-called Philidelphi corridor to the Egyptian military, would be disastrous not merely to the stability of Gaza, which he claims is liable to quickly deteriorate into a "mini-Afghanistan" as a result. The move, he writes, could well destabilize the entire region by encouraging Egypt to abrogate the peace treaty.

Almog writes that Egyptian "[t]olerance for smuggling and infiltration, like anti-Israel demonstrations in Cairo and incitement in the media, appears to be designed to relieve some of the pressure exerted by anti-Israel public opinion in Egypt." Taking his analysis a step further, the Egyptian government encourages anti-Semitism and enables terrorism against Israel in order to promote domestic stability in Egypt itself.

As Almog notes, Egypt "is an authoritarian and inefficient state that has failed to meet even minimal goals of political and economic reform." If they didn't have Israel to hate, the frustration of Egyptians with the failure of their government to enable their national advancement and promote civil liberties would turn on the regime itself. So regime stability is dependent on anti-Semitism and support for Palestinian terrorism.

Given this state of affairs, Almog argues that Israel must not provide Egypt with a role in Gaza after the withdrawal. Rather, he concludes that Israel must retain total control of the international crossing points and border zones in Gaza even though doing so will provide the Palestinians with a rhetorical basis for claiming that Israel has not withdrawn. Like Hizbullah with the Sha'ba Farms, the Palestinians will use Israeli control of the borders to justify further terrorism emanating from Gaza itself.

Almog's view of Egypt is strengthened by the Egyptian-brokered deal between the PA, Fatah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad for the post-IDF withdrawal period in Gaza. Reports of the deal vary but they all boil down to a few common elements. Hamas, Fatah, and Islamic Jihad will not be dismantled. Rather, they will either continue to operate autonomously but in a coordinated manner with the PA militias, or they will join the Palestinian army in Gaza that Cairo is set to train. Terrorism against Israel will not cease, but its focal point will likely move to Judea and Samaria to provoke further Israeli retreats.

Several reports this week have claimed that Marwan Barghouti, the head of Fatah in Judea and Samaria who is now serving six consecutive life sentences in Israeli prison for six separate murder convictions of Israeli citizens, has played a large role in organizing the Egyptian-sponsored agreement. Yediot Aharonot reported this week that Barghouti, who is in solitary confinement, was able to conduct these negotiations with Hamas and Islamic Jihad leaders in Damascus and Beirut through meetings he has held in recent weeks with 48 different attorneys.

According to Ofer Lefler, the spokesman for Israel Prisons Service, prison authorities have no legal ability to prevent Barghouti from holding such meetings. But this is a willful misreading of the law. According to the Prisons Service Regulation 29(B), "if suspicion arises that a meeting between a prisoner and his lawyer will enable the commission of a crime that endangers the well-being or security of another person or the security of or well-being of the public or national security, the head of the Prisons Service or the prison warden may order the prevention or interruption of such a meeting." Barghoutis's actions are motivated by clear goals. He wishes to strengthen his own position and he wishes to continue to coordinate cooperation between Fatah, Islamic Jihad, and Hamas in the conduct of the war against Israel as he has been doing since the planning stages for the war in the summer of 2000.

Egypt's two-pronged strategy of engaging Israel and the terrorists in separate negotiations is also clear. Egypt wishes through its coordination of the various terror factions to promote relative stability in Gaza among Palestinian terrorist groups to prevent Palestinian refugees from moving into the Sinai.

At the same time, it wishes to provide a framework for cooperation to ensure that all terrorist factions remain directed against Israel and only Israel to prevent destabilization of Egypt and promote destabilization of Israel.

Finally, Egypt seeks to enhance its position in the Arab world by extending its support for global jihad from the diplomatic sphere to direct sponsorship of terror against Israel even as it wins plaudits for its "constructive role" from both Israel and the US.

While the impetus driving Egypt and Barghouti in their moves to turn Gaza into a "mini-Afghanistan" are clear, Israel's policies on the issue are incoherent yet familiar. In planning for the retreat from Gaza today, as with the Oslo accords 11 years ago and Israel's view of Egyptian intentions at the Suez Canal in 1973, Israel's strategic planners are seized by wishful thinking about the intentions of our enemies as we voluntarily abandon the means to defend ourselves. Those earlier strategic misconceptions based on fantasies caused us thousands of otherwise preventable deaths. We can only hope that our leaders and strategists will get wise to reality this time, before we are forced to pay yet another unthinkable price for their willful blindness to reality.

Oh Jerusalem
08-20-2004, 02:54 AM
URL for the above article is http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1092884508481&apage=1