Mubarak Changes His Tune (JCPA-JERUSALEM CENTER FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS) By Victor Nachmias JERUSALEM ISSUE BRIEF Vol. 2, No. 18 02/16/03)
Source: http://www.jcpa.org/brief/brief2-18.htm
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Mubarak´s Surprise
On the day after the Israeli elections, in a
move both surprising and
personally dangerous, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak telephoned
Prime Minister Sharon to congratulate him on his election victory and
to invite him to a summit meeting after the establishment of the new
Israeli government. The Egyptian press later stated that the meeting
would take place in Sharm el-Sheikh.
The move was surprising
because just a few months ago the Egyptian
president declared that as long as Ariel Sharon was prime minister,
there was no hope for development of the peace process between Israel
and the Palestinians. In other words, Egypt had blacklisted the
elected prime minister of the Jewish state and would wait for better
days.
Dr. Osama al-Baz, Mubarak´s political advisor, sought to
interpret
his boss´s initiative with Sharon in the Egyptian daily al-Ahram,
noting that from an Egyptian perspective there were two kinds of
Israeli leaders: those belonging to the right, with whom there were
no connections, and left-wing personalities such as Shulamit Aloni,
Yossi Sarid, and Yossi Beilin, with whom the Arabs should strive for
closer relations, given their ability to promote peace. Indeed,
members of this group were hosted in Cairo just before the Israeli
elections.
As the Israeli elections approached, together with
published surveys
predicting a decisive victory for Sharon and for the right in
general, Mubarak understood that persistence in his negative policy
toward Sharon meant having no involvement with Israel´s government
until the completion of its new term of office (in another four
years). On election day, the daily Al-Ittihad of the United Arab
Emirates in the Persian Gulf published an interview with Mubarak in
which he divulged that Egypt was about to alter its policy toward
Sharon´s Israel. The next day he phoned Jerusalem.
Conceivably,
the Egyptian president´s about-face was motivated by his
desire to score points in Washington, which he is scheduled to visit
in the next few weeks. It also may have been in reaction to Egypt´s
failure to orchestrate a cease-fire, if only within the green line,
among all the Palestinian factions meeting in Cairo.
Intense
Arab Interest in the Israeli Elections
The Israeli Knesset
elections attracted intense and unprecedented
interest in the Arab world, both on the official level and among the
general public in the different Arab states, an interest set against
the background of the intifada and a possible American attack on
Iraq.
Arab leaders closely followed developments on the Israeli
political
scene: Egypt and Jordan via their Tel Aviv embassies, and others
through indirect channels, occasionally assisted by these two states.
The Arab media devoted much time to the subject in television news
broadcasts and talk-shows, including interviews with Arabic-speaking
Jewish and Arab MKs and journalists.
In conversations in the
hotels and cafés of Cairo, Amman, Damascus,
and Riyadh, the general public expressed unease over Sharon´s
probable reelection. His lead in the polls in the days preceding the
elections engendered an atmosphere of pessimism among the
discussants, who asked whether anything could be done to affect the
results and curtail the extent of the right´s victory.
Bashar
Al-Assad´s Syria remained as dogmatic as in the days of his
father Hafez Al-Assad, eschewing any hint of diversity in Israeli
society. The Syrian establishment press disposed of the subject with
a pithy declaration that “all of the Israeli leaders are war
criminals” and that “Zionism is a danger to all the Arabs.”
Perhaps in an attempt to influence the outcome, Cairo hosted a
representative of the Labor party´s new leader, who returned to
Israel with a letter of greeting and an invitation to visit Egypt
from President Mubarak to Amram Mitzna. Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ahmed Maher officially receiving Meretz leaders Yossi Sarid and Yossi
Beilin, both of whom continued on to Amman for a parallel visit with
Jordanian Foreign Minister Marwan Muasher. Officials in both Cairo
and Amman rejected criticism from Jerusalem that this constituted
interference in Israel´s internal affairs, asserting that they were
prepared to meet anyone willing to talk peace with them.
Arab
Overtures to Israelis
Furthermore, the Arab states did not
conceal their view that Israeli
Arabs, otherwise referred to as the “1948 Arabs,” should galvanize
their electoral strength to elect the largest possible number of Arab
MKs to the Knesset, thereby fortifying the left-wing bloc. Hence,
they called for participation in the elections, a position contrary
to that of certain elements in the Islamic movement in Israel who
advocated boycotting the elections. Egypt went as far as to invite
Arab MKs to Cairo in order to hear their informed assessments of the
Israeli domestic political scene.
Arab academics also made
undisguised overtures to Israeli Arabs.
Thus, for example, the dean of the political science faculty at Cairo
University published messages for Israeli Arabs in the Jerusalem
Palestinian newspaper Al-Quds.
Tarak Hassan, an Egyptian
researcher on the subject of Israel,
devoted at least six lengthy articles to the Israeli elections in Al-
Ahram. The sixth article dealt with Jewish Israeli citizens, former
residents of Arab states, whom he referred to as “Israeli-Arabs.”
Hassan argued that Arab states had made a mistake in neglecting this
branch of Israeli society, with whom they shared a common Arab-
Islamic cultural background. Citing Israeli sources, Hassan bewailed
the unprecedented solidarity of Israeli society engendered by the
intifada of 2000, which worked to the Arabs´ disadvantage. Hassan
claimed that Israelis of Arab origin felt that Palestinian attacks
were directed against them since they rode public buses that were the
targets of suicide bombers.
In the vigorous debates that ensued
in Arab public forums, some
publicists advocated making approaches to the “sane sector of Israel”
(meaning the left) as a way of undercutting what they perceived as
the consensus against the Palestinians, in an attempt to weaken the
right-wing camp. “Everything possible must be done to isolate and
weaken the Israeli extremists,” proclaimed Jordanian columnist
Mahmoud Rimawi. Sami Karino wrote in the Jordanian daily Al-Rai that
gambling on the Labor party was certainly worthwhile, even if it only
led to a pause that provided breathing space for the Arabs, should
Mitzna be unable to push through his peace plan.
Sharon is the
Arab´s Fate
One of the more perspicacious pundits was Ghazi Al-
Saadi, a political
analyst at the Dar al-Jalil Center for Studies in Amman, who is also
fluent in Hebrew. He maintained that neither the Palestinians nor the
Arabs, in general, should rely on the Israeli election results as a
route of escape from the dead end in which they find themselves. Even
assuming that the Labor party led by Mitzna formed the next
government, it would be unable to promote the peace process against
the wishes of a powerful and vocal opposition from the right. On the
other hand, a possible national unity government established by
Sharon would be incapable of reaching peace. The result, in his
opinion, is an ominous picture that holds no promise for the Arabs.
Hence, the Arabs should look for other ways to extricate themselves
from their current quandary. The problem is that no one has any
alternatives. During a recent lecture in Cairo on the Israeli
elections, one Egyptian academic confessed in despair, “Sharon would
appear to be the Arabs´ fate, from which, as we know, there is no
escape.” (www.jcpa.org. © Copyright 02/16/03)
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