I am going to go out on a very short limb here and suggest that this is just how Israel wants things to go with Egypt. Israel wants a reason to go for the Sinai again; they want that land back. There has been new trouble brewing there for the past while, much of it Israeli instigated.
As for the Muslim Brotherhood winning the elections, something most common Egyptians are not too crazy about, the Brotherhood is an American CIA asset with the clandestine task of creating a more disruption in the Middle East. This is one of their tasks in the bringing about this clash of the civilizations wanted by the West. As well, it makes things all the easier for Israel to cry victim should this Sinai war begin to heat up. These are not things most people would read into the departure of an ambassador from Egypt, but this is how I am interpreting things.
By Sheera Frenkel
November
25, 2011
The
surreptitious departure of Israel’s ambassador from Egypt on Tuesday symbolized
to many Israeli officials the new state of affairs between the neighboring
countries.
Yitzhak
Lebanon flew out of Cairo International Airport for the last time, ending his
time in Cairo without a departure ceremony or even a nod of farewell from
Egypt’s foreign ministry. He had hardly been active in Cairo, having fled the
Israeli Embassy there in September when rioters attacked and burned down part
of the building. Since then, he has remained stationed in Israel, flying back
occasionally for diplomatic meetings and to formally close his offices.
But
Israeli officials saw his unheralded departure as a sign of Israeli-Egyptian
relations to come.
“This
is the state of relations now. There is no real diplomacy, just shuttling back
and forth and talks at a bare minimum,” said an official from Israel’s foreign
ministry, who spoke anonymously because he was not authorized to speak on the
issue. “At least we still have relations.”
Perhaps
not for long. Officials said they are quietly preparing for what they called a
“complete break” in diplomatic ties with Egypt. That would mark a dangerous
downturn in Israel’s relations with its neighbors unequalled in the past three
decades.
“Our
peace treaty with Egypt was the backbone of our diplomatic relations with the
Arab world,” said former ambassador Eli Shaked.
Even
as events were unfolding Tuesday in Egypt, where the military government offered
to step down in July, a concession thought unlikely to satisfy the tens of
thousands of demonstrators who crowded into Tahrir Square, Israeli officials
were considering it likely that whatever eventually happens there will bode ill
for Israel.
Rumors
have spread through Cairo that the tear gas and other weapons used by Egypt’s
military against the protesters were supplied by Israel ~ despite the English
writing and U.S. serial labels found on empty tear gas canisters. Several
forums on Facebook suggested that Israel was indirectly supporting the Egyptian
military and pressing it to use harsh means against the protesters.
“Israeli
evil is behind this,” the deputy head of the Egyptian Al-Wasat Party, Osam
Sultan, said Tuesday on Egyptian television.
Israeli
news anchors showed the report alongside images of protesters in Tahrir Square
burning Israeli flags as evidence that relations with Egypt were headed for a
break.
“The
chances that at the end of the democratic process we will have a secular,
democratic, pro-Western Egypt, one that adheres to the peace agreement with
Israel and views it as being in its national interest, are eroding,” military
correspondent Alex Fishman wrote in the Israeli daily Yediot Ahronoth.
He
added that the view among Israel’s top diplomatic officials was that they “had
lost Egypt” and that the widely supported Muslim Brotherhood Islamist group had
asserted itself.
“Now
there is concern ~ not just in Israel and in the U.S. but in all the
pro-Western states around us ~ that the military junta will not be able to
withstand the pressure and that the Muslim Brotherhood will also dictate how
the elections are run and will attract many more votes than predicted in Egypt,
more than Israel hoped or Washington prayed for,” Fishman wrote.
Israeli
officials were also said to be troubled by pledges from several Egyptian
politicians that they would cut diplomatic ties with Israel after the
elections.
“Although
the relations between Egypt and Israel have been undermined after the collapse
of Mubarak’s regime, we are still unsatisfied with these conditions and serious
efforts will be made after the elections to cut relations with the Zionist
enemy completely,” Majdi Hussein, the secretary-general of the Egyptian Amal
Party, said at a press conference Tuesday in Cairo.
While
many in Israel have concluded that that outcome was inevitable, several have
argued that Israel could salvage its diplomatic relations with Egypt.
Former
cabinet minister and one-time envoy to Egypt Binyamin Ben-Eliezer told Israel’s
army radio on Monday that Israel could improve its standing with Cairo by
renewing peace talks with the Palestinians.
Ben-Eliezer,
who was considered particularly close to deposed Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak, said that Israel needed to consider that popular opinion in Egypt was
sympathetic to the Palestinians.
“Israel
is constantly expressing its desire to improve relations … but the leadership
today is hand in hand with the people, and their expectations are high. They
will simply blame Israel” for any deterioration in relations, he said.
Unless
Israel proved itself by entering into serious negotiations with the
Palestinians, their standing across the Arab world would continue to fall, said
Ben-Eliezer.
The
peace process between the Israeli and Palestinian leadership is currently at a
standstill.
Palestinian
officials have demanded that Israel freeze building in its contentious West
Bank and East Jerusalem settlements.
Israeli
officials have rejected that demand and said they would only enter negotiations
without preconditions.
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