Women gather to collect water at
the Yusuf Batil refugee camp in Upper Nile, South Sudan, 4 July 2012. (Photo:
Reuters - Adriane Ohanesian)
Keep in mind Israel's long standing plans for a Greater Israel as you read the following. While you are at it, also recognize the chicanery involved using legalese and most likely a great deal of bribery and corruption. Social unrest and greed are the goals to help bring about this Zionist imperialist goal, Greater Israel.
Keep in mind Israel's long standing plans for a Greater Israel as you read the following. While you are at it, also recognize the chicanery involved using legalese and most likely a great deal of bribery and corruption. Social unrest and greed are the goals to help bring about this Zionist imperialist goal, Greater Israel.
July 30, 2012
Egyptian and
Sudanese policy failures have lead to a looming strategic threat to both
countries’ most important resources ~ the Nile.
Israel has now
signed an agreement with the South Sudanese authorities over rights to the
country’s precious water source.
There was an
outcry in Egypt and Sudan over last week’s signing of a cooperation agreement
between Israel and South Sudan on water infrastructure and technology
development.
Warnings abounded that the pact between the government in Juba and Israeli Military Industries Ltd posed a threat to the water security of the two downstream countries and should be countered.
Largely
overlooked was the fact that their own inaction was mostly to blame for it.
Israeli designs
on the waters of the Nile and on the resources of the African continent are
hardly new. For years Israel has striven hard to forge ties with a number of
African states and strengthen its presence in the continent, for both economic
and security reasons.
In South Sudan,
Israel has flaunted its ties with the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM)
~ now the new country’s absolute ruler ~ and other southern faction leaders
ever since the first southern rebellion began in Sudan in the 1950s. This was
in line with a longstanding strategic doctrine, which was revisited in a 2008
lecture on Israel’s regional strategy by former Israeli security minister Avi
Dichter.
This doctrine held, among other things, that Sudan, with its vast resources and economic potential, should not be allowed to become an asset to the power of the Arab world as a whole.
As development
in a stable Sudan would make it a threat to Israel, despite its geographical
distance, Israel and its agencies should actively encourage the destabilization
of the country by fueling successive crises until that instability becomes
chronic.
.
.
Note on this map that SYRIA is a huge component of this "Greater Israel". Syria's Golan Heights provide Israel with most of its (stolen) fresh water. This would be, of course, the same Israel in which agricultural Palestinians are systematically being eradicated through loss of water services.
The other acknowledged motive for Israeli intervention in Sudan was that the country constitutes the “strategic depth” of Egypt.
In this regard, nothing could conceivably pose a greater strategic concern to Egypt and Sudan alike than a potential threat to their supplies of water from the Nile.Israel has succeeded in mounting such a threat with its latest pact with South Sudan and earlier agreements with other Nile littoral states in recent years.
The move comes
against a backdrop of tensions over water issues between Egypt and Sudan and
the majority of the other Nile Basin countries (the other riparian states are
Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Eritrea, Tanzania, Rwanda,
Burundi and Uganda).
Most of the
upstream countries want major changes made to the arrangements that have long
governed the management of the Nile’s waters. These include a 1929 agreement
which requires Egypt to approve any large-scale water projects in upstream
countries that would affect the flow of Nile waters.
They also oppose
a 1959 pact that allocates an annual 55.5 billion cubic meters of Nile water to
Egypt and 18.5 billion cubic meters to Sudan, which they argue is unfair. Six
countries have demanded a reallocation under a proposed new Entebbe Agreement,
but Egypt and Sudan have rejected it. The pair ~ especially Egypt, which since
ancient times has relied on the Nile for more than 95 percent of its water ~
would rather keep their historic shares, and insist there can be no new water
agreement until contentious issues have been resolved.
Egyptian and
Sudanese objections will not, however, stop South Sudan ~ which with its
independence became the Nile’s 11th riparian state ~ and other countries from
proceeding with large-scale water projects to meet their pressing development
needs.
These are bound
to increase their consumption and impede the downstream flow. South Sudan
occupies a strategic location in this regard, with about 45 percent of the Nile
Basin’s water in its territory, and 28 percent of the river’s water flowing
through it to Sudan and Egypt.
Yet both
countries could have acted to avoid getting to this point.
Sudan’s
relations with South Sudan began deteriorating from the moment the latter
seceded, with political, territorial and financial disputes triggering military
confrontation within months. The opportunity was missed of holding negotiations
prior to independence on what proportion the South would get of Sudan’s water
allocation, which would have enabled Khartoum to safeguard its interests. Water
issues have since been overshadowed by other quarrels.
For Egypt, the
Nile Water question arguably represents the greatest of the country’s many
Mubarak-era foreign policy failures. The former regime neglected Africa
diplomatically, and failed to sustain Egypt’s once-strong relations with the
countries concerned. Its most tangible failure in this regard was its inability
to persuade South Sudan to agree to the resumption of work on the long-stalled
Jonglei Canal project, designed to save between 40 and 50 billion cubic meters
of Nile water annually from evaporation.
Israel was quick
to fill the vacuum. It has seized every possible opportunity to offer its
backing to water projects in the upstream countries, through which to both put
pressure on Egypt and Sudan, and gain leverage to help overcome its own water
shortage.
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