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Israel Wishes Liberals In The Next
Egyptian Elections 'Good Luck'
30 May 2011
By Khalid Amayreh
Officially, Israeli officials say they don’t want to
appear as interfering in the next Egyptian elections,
slated to take place in September.
However, privately, these officials make no secret of
their "burning wish" to see the anti-Islamic forces,
e.g. the liberals and remnants of the previous
regime's supporters triumph over the Muslim
Brotherhood, widely thought to be the best organized
political group on the Egyptian arena.
According to reliable sources in Washington and Cairo,
Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu last month
privately asked President Obama to press the Egyptian
government to "restrict the chances of the
fundamentalists reaching power or achieving real
influence."
Netanyahu reportedly pressed the Obama administration
to threaten economic and other sanctions against Egypt
if the next Egyptian government displayed more
anti-Israeli attitudes, including more support for the
Palestinians.
Obama tactfully rejected the Israeli request, arguing
that the Egyptians were in no mood to tolerate foreign
interference in their internal affairs, adding that
any such interference would be taken advantage of by
the Islamists to make even more gains.
However, it is unlikely that this will spell the end
of Israeli attempts and efforts to influence the post-Mubarak
political scene in the largest and most important Arab
country.
Israel is very likely to further press Congress, often
described as an Israeli-occupied territory because of
overwhelming Jewish-Zionist influence over the
bicameral American legislature, to exert every
possible pressure on the evolving Egyptian regime to
observe "Israeli sensitivities."
Meanwhile, Israeli and Zionist circles continued to
incite against anything Islamic in Egypt, with a clear
monomaniac fixation on the Muslim Brothers.
On 31 May, the right-wing Israeli newspaper, the
Jerusalem Post, published an article accusing the
Muslim Brothers of using mosques as party branches.
The article quoted former Mossad Chief Shabtai Shavit
as saying that "every mosque is a party branch
headquarters. Every cleric at the mosque is the party
branch chairman. A contribution to the mosque is a
contribution to the party."
Shabtai, who recently chaired a conference at Tel Aviv
University organized by a right-wing think-tank, the
Workshop for Science, Technology and Security, claimed
that the Muslim Brothers were seeking to create a
Sharia'-based state.
Like other Jewish supremacists, who are indoctrinated
in Jewish exceptionalism and superiority, Shabtai
ignored the fact that Jewish religious parties, who
exude a clear-cut fascist discourse, are granted full
freedom to participate and influence the political
process in Israel without any Israeli intellectual or
commentator batting an eyelash.
Indeed, the religious mentor of one major coalition
partner in the current Israeli government was quoted
recently as telling a Sabbath-eve synagogue gathering
in West Jerusalem that non-Jews were very much like
donkeys and other beasts of burden, which the Almighty
created solely to serve the chosen people.
Statements resembling in letter and spirit the most
venomous Nazi propaganda are routinely made by Israeli
religious and political leaders. However, such
statements don't raise many eyebrows in a society
where brash racism and fascism have become the norm
rather than the exception.
One Israeli cabinet minister remarked a few months ago
that "we have already become a fascist state."
Another speaker at the conference was Haim Asa who
recognized that the Arab-Muslim youths were undergoing
a real transformation and going through an empowerment
process.
"They stand in Tahrir square and in Deraa, they are
injured and killed, and they continue to stand. This
is an unstoppable process. I don't know what will come
next, but it seems the old style of dictators will be
no more.
Asa warned that what he called the "new phenomenon of
mobs" which he described as "a civil atomic bomb"
would pose a greater danger to Israel than an Iranian
nuclear bomb."
There is no doubt that the Muslim brothers and other
anti-Israeli forces in Egypt stand to gain in terms of
popularity from the manifestly-brazen anti-Ikhwan
Israeli propaganda. After all, one of the main reasons
the repressive Mubarak regime was kept in power by the
United States all these years was to placate Israel
and protect its interests.
Anti-Israeli forces, especially the Muslim Brothers,
were systematically persecuted by the former regime.
Hundreds of Muslim Brothers, including the group's
leading political activists, spent prolonged periods
of time in the regime's slimy prisons and dungeons.
Besides, there is no doubt that any words of praise
coming from Israel in favor of any political group in
Egypt would seriously harm the image of that group to
say the least given the immense dislike most Egyptians
harbor for Israel.
One Egyptian journalist told this writer that any
perceived backing or support by Israel of an Egyptian
candidate would be sufficient to kill that candidate's
chances for election or even for public respect.
"Any association with Israel would mean an
instantaneous public relations disaster. If you want
to destroy a political candidate or a political party,
try to link it to Israel.
"Israel is still widely perceived as the enemy. Israel
is likely to remain the Egyptian people's main enemy
as long the conflict with the Palestinians remains
unresolved."
I asked my interlocutor if he thought the next
elections in September could produce a government that
is significantly more anti-Israel than the current
government.
His answer was clear. "Governments anywhere have their
own calculations. But, we the peopl, have our own
convictions as well. And if the next government in
Egypt is to be faithful to democracy and answerable to
the will of masses, it will have to take the people's
convictions vis-à-vis Israel into account." (end)
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