PostScript: Morsy’s Egypt and us
By HIRSH GOODMAN
08/24/2012 10:07
This is the time to use circumstance to bind the peace agreement, not excuses for undermining it.
Egypt's Mohamed Mursi at Tahrir Square rally Photo: REUTERS / Handout
The security problems that have developed in Sinai, and the way the Egyptian
government is responding to them, could be navigated toward either opportunity
or a crisis.
Since Mohamed Morsy took office as the country’s fifth
president on June 30, relations between Israel and Egypt have been even more
precarious and incendiary than ever. In tandem, the security situation in Sinai
has deteriorated significantly, with jihadi attacks on Egyptian military and
strategic targets there becoming bolder and more deadly than
ever.
Neither Israel nor Egypt can allow the security situation to
deteriorate further.
There is a formal peace treaty that binds the sides
that could be interpreted with goodwill, or used as a club against the peace
treaty itself. It all depends on what the leaders want. Morsy has to tread
carefully between the expectations of the Islamists who put him into power, the
terms of the peace treaty and continued American monetary and military
support.
And Israel has to ensure that the peace treaty is not
unilaterally violated, opening the potential for the unraveling of the accords
altogether.
Israel and Egypt both have inherent interests in maintaining
law and order in Sinai. Neither wants to see a total meltdown of authority with
jihadis filling the vacuum. Both Egypt and Israel already face problems from the
porous segment of the Egyptian-Gaza border at Rafah. There is the safety of
American and international troops deployed in Sinai to consider, who are only
there because of the peace treaty in the first place. The Egyptians want to
attract tourists back and to protect their gas terminals, and Israel wants
security cooperation in preventing terrorism and illegal immigration from Sinai
into Israel.
In September, Morsy will be on his way to Washington for his
first formal meeting with the American president and key members of his
administration.
Egypt is the recipient of over a billion dollars a year
in American aid and dependent on American weapons and supplies for its army. It
can be expected that Egypt’s first non-soldier president will try to present
himself as a responsible moderate, unabashed about his deep Islamic beliefs but,
at the same time, committed to democracy, not unlike the leadership of today’s
Turkey. Egypt, he can be expected to argue, is not part of the problem, but
essential to regional stability. Undermining the peace treaty with Israel, it
seems, is not something Morsy would logically want to do at this stage, though
anything is possible.
This would be a good time for Israel to grab the
initiative and lever the security situation in Sinai into the start of a
measured dialogue with the new regime in Egypt, starting with low-level security
talks, like those held after a terrorist attack into Israel from Sinai last
year, and judiciously being advanced into something more pertinent to
solidifying the Camp David Accords.
Both sides need the peace treaty and
the current situation in Sinai shows one reason why. And while Morsy’s Egypt and
Israel may have serious problems with each other, they share the more urgent
problem of jihadi terror in Sinai, which can claim victory over both if the
peace treaty comes apart.
Israel and Morsy’s Egypt have a lot more in
common than meets the eye. The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt is a whole different
kettle of fish compared to fragments of the organization in other parts of the
Arab world. In Egypt the Brotherhood has traditionally advocated nonviolence and
Islamic family values.
Morsy’s upcoming trip is to the US is a sure
signal that he intends to stay on a pro- Western track. He has inherited an
incredible mess in terms of social and economic anarchy in Egypt, and the need
to change an old order. He needs to continue to exert civilian control over the
military and find employment for hundreds of thousands college graduates. A
fight with Israel and America over the peace treaty right now seems about the
last thing he needs, and hence the seeds of opportunity for changing the
Israeli-Egyptian dynamic from one that is spiraling down, to slowly moving in a
constructive direction.
Those who have written Morsy off as an Islamic
fundamentalist not to be dealt with would do well to reconsider and at least
give him a chance. If asked for their opinions, neither most Israelis nor most
Americans would have voted him in, but the Egyptians did, almost entirely for
domestic reasons, and we would do well to respect the outcome of the election.
The right to vote, after all, is something we all hold dear and
true.
This is the time to use circumstance to bind the peace agreement,
not excuses for undermining it; to encourage Morsy to court the West, not fight
against it; find workable solutions to the security problems in Sinai, not
exacerbate them; and to wish Morsy well on his trip to America, not wish for his
failure.