Report: Israel threatens to strike militants if Egypt fails to secure Sinai (HA´ARETZ NEWS) By Zvi Bar´el 04/08/12)
Source: http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/report-israel-threatens-to-strike-militants-if-egypt-fails-to-secure-sinai-1.423154
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Israel delivered a threatening message to Egypt, according to which
it would take action against militants in the Sinai if Cairo did not
take responsibility and secure the countries´ shared border, Egyptian
officials indicated on Saturday.
Hints of possible Israeli
intervention in Sinai could intensify
tension between the Bedouin and the Egyptian government, as well as
put the fate of the Camp David agreements at risk.
The reported
message was transferred days after Sinai militants fired
a volley of Grad-type Katyusha rockets into a residential area of the
southern Israeli city of Eilat, and a little over a month since
militants attacked a gas pipeline in the desert Peninsula that
transports fuel to neighboring Israel and Jordan for the 12th
time.
According to Egyptian officials, the fall of a grad rocket
in Eilat
and Egypt’s denial that it was fired from the Sinai Peninsula has
created new tensions between Israel and Egypt, with Israel sending a
resolute “and even threatening” message to the Egyptian Military
Council regarding the council’s responsibility for events occurring
in the Sinai.
The warning message, sources said, included hints
that Israel might
be forced into taking action in the Sinai, if attacks against Israeli
targets continue to originate from within the peninsula.
Coupled
with Egyptian media reports of Israeli forces massing close
to the Egyptian border, the reported warning led to negative
reactions from within the Egyptian public.
In an editorial,
Halad Salah, editor of the newspaper Youm al Sabbah,
warned Israel against using the “false” excuse of attacks from Sinai
in order to try and create a rift among the Egyptian
Public.
According to Salah, Israel is claiming that it now faces
security
threats originating from within Egypt, and that the situation in
Egypt, specifically the rise of the Islamists “is the main threat, as
reported by Israeli newspapers, under the influence of the Shin Bet
and the Mossad.” If Israel continues to blame the Egyptians, it will
soon discover that all Egyptians are united against it.
However,
despite public backlash, the Egyptian Supreme Military
Council is aware of its ineptitude in the Sinai, especially after
Bedouin militias “conquered” two police stations in El-Arish and
Sheikh Zuweid, and are not allowing Egyptian forces to monitor the
trade taking place through tunnels between Sinai and the Gaza
Strip.
In response, Egypt began sending reinforcements to
natural gas
facilities and El-Arish last week. General Salach Al Masri,
responsible for the safety of northern Sinai, reported Egyptian
intent to clear the Sinai of terrorist activity.
Al Masri
reported last week that an initial cadre of 50 police
officers and dozens of armored vehicles entered the Sinai, with a
mission to retake the police stations, and patrol the natural gas
pipeline.
On Saturday, Al Masri told the website “el- masrawy,”
that a decision
was made to increase the security presence in northern Sinai, and
that an additional force of 150 police officers and additional
armored vehicles will be dispatched to the area surrounding El-Arish
and Rafiah.
These additional forces will patrol the length of
the natural gas
pipeline, and attempt to thwart smuggling of weapons through the
tunnels.
This is not the first time that Egypt has sent
reinforcements to
Sinai. Last November, Al Masri declared that his forces succeeded in
arresting those responsible for bombing the natural gas pipeline. A
short time later, however, the pipeline was bombed again, and Bedouin
militias took control of roads, and Egyptian police guard
towers.
The desert peninsula has become a gigantic weapons
storage facility,
the contents of which are available to anyone willing to pay the
Bedouin a reasonable price.
Egyptian Prime Minister Kamal
Ganzouri reported this month that at
least 10 million illegal weapons, including heavy machine guns,
submachine guns, rocket launchers and mortars have been smuggled into
Egypt from Libya and Sudan since the beginning of the revolution.
Some weapons are said to have been smuggled in from Israel as
well.
Security officials have reported to the Egyptian media
that weapons
caches are confiscated on a daily basis, and that it seems today
that “every Egyptian family is in possession of a weapon.” Large
quantities of weapons have made it into the Sinai as well, and are
being sold into Gaza or to organizations active within the
Sinai.
In the past, Haaretz has reported that the Yemeni branch
of al-Qaida
built a munitions base in the Sinai, meant to serve its forces in
Gaza while radical organizations also found cover at sites in central
Sinai that the Egyptian military was unable to breach.
The
Egyptian government is aware of the fact that any military
endeavor in Sinai will fail without cooperation from the Bedouin
tribes. However, that cooperation would require a very substantial
financial investment, including the creation of water and electric
systems, the building of schools, and the creation of jobs in an area
where unemployment rates reach 90%.
Since Mubarak was removed
from office and the creation of the civil
government, the Bedouin, numbering around 360,000, have heard
numerous promises of government intent to improve their
situation.
Despite the fact that meetings have been held with
the heads of the
tribes, no significant changes have come. Without these changes, the
Bedouin will continue to be forced to rely on smuggling and trade
with terrorist organizations in order to survive.
The tensions
between the Egyptian government and the Bedouin have
deteriorated far beyond the relations between the regime and its
citizens. It is threatening the delicate relations between Israel and
Egypt, just as the Supreme Military Council and the Muslim
Brotherhood, set to control the country’s future, are declaring their
devotion to the Camp David Accords.
A scenario in which Israel
would act on its own in the Sinai could
turn the cooperation between the Bedouin and the terrorist
organizations and the tension between the Bedouin and the Egyptian
government into a strategic threat, capable of destroying the peace
agreement for which all are worried. (© Copyright 2012 Ha´aretz
04/08/12)
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