The story has barely been reported. Columnists are not writing about it. Talking heads are not talking about it. Thus, we have good
reason to report on the interesting diplomatic proposal offered by the new
president of Egypt.
You know about the president of Egypt. He has set his
government the task of destroying the Muslim Brotherhood. For his efforts he
has received lukewarm support from the Obama administration.
Now, President Sisi is trying to solve the conflict between
the Israeli and the Palestinians.
Caroline Glick reports:
On
August 31, PLO chief and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas told an
audience of Fatah members that Egypt had offered to give the PA some 1,600
kilometers of land in Sinai adjacent to Gaza, thus quintupling the size of the
Gaza Strip. Egypt even offered to allow all the so-called “Palestinian
refugees” to settle in the expanded Gaza Strip.
Then
Abbas told his Fatah followers that he rejected the Egyptian offer.
On
Monday Army Radio substantiated Abbas’s claim.
According
to Army Radio, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi proposed that the
Palestinians establish their state in the expanded Gaza Strip and accept
limited autonomy over parts of Judea and Samaria.
In
exchange for this state, the Palestinians would give up their demand that
Israel shrink into the indefensible 1949 armistice lines, surrendering
Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria. Sisi argued that the land Egypt is offering in
Sinai would more than compensate for the territory that Abbas would concede.
In his
speech to Fatah members, Abbas said, “They [the Egyptians] are prepared to
receive all the refugees, [and are saying] ‘Let’s end the refugee story.’”
“But,” he insisted, “It’s illogical for the problem to be solved at Egypt’s
expense. We won’t have it.”
At the least, this tells us who is impeding peace and who
would prefer to see the Palestinian people continue to suffer.
Glick asks and answers the question of what Sisi is trying
to do and why he is trying to do it now. One should underscore the fact that his gambit must have been approved by the Saudis and the Emirates… because they
are financing and feeding Egypt.
In Glick’s words:
So what
is driving Sisi? How do we account for this dramatic shift? In offering the
Palestinians a large swathe of the Sinai, Sisi is not acting out of altruism.
He is acting out of necessity. From his perspective, and from the perspective
of his non-jihadist Sunni allies in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates,
the Palestinian campaign against Israel is dangerous.
Facing
the prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran, and the rise of jihadist forces from
al-Qaida to the Islamic State to the Muslim Brotherhood, the non-jihadist
Sunnis no longer believe that the prolongation of the Palestinian jihad against
Israel is in their interest.
Obviously, this is good news for Israel:
For
Israel, Sisi’s proposal is a windfall.
First
of all, it indicates that the Egyptian-Saudi- UAE decision to back Israel
against Hamas in Operation Protective Edge was not a fluke. It was part of an
epic shift in their strategic assessments.
And if
their regimes survive, their assessments are unlikely to change so long as Iran
and the Sunni jihadists continue to threaten them.
This
means that for the first time since Israel allied with Britain and France
against Egypt in 1956, Israel can make strategic plans as part of a coalition.
And it calls the bluff of the PLO, to say nothing of the
Western governments who continue to believe that it is a partner for peace:
Abbas’s
rejection of Sisi’s offer demonstrates yet again that he and his Fatah comrades
are the problem, not the solution. Continued faith in the PLO as a partner in
peace and moderation is foolish and dangerous. He would rather see Hamas and
Iran flourish than share a peaceful future with Israel.
The
only reason that Abbas is able to continuously reject all offers of statehood
and an end to Palestinian suffering, while expanding his diplomatic war against
Israel and supporting his coalition partner’s terror war, is because the US and
Europe continue to blindly support him.
And Glick adds a point that I have occasionally made. For
the Middle East Israel is the solution, not the problem.
She writes:
Sisi’s
offer demonstrates that for non-jihadist Sunnis, not only is Israel not the
problem in the Middle East, a strong Israel is a prerequisite for solving the
region’s troubles. Here is a major Arab leader willing to stand with Israel
even if it means discrediting the PLO.
7 comments:
This article directly contradicts the claimed offer. So maybe there's a reason this story has barely been reported.
http://egyptianstreets.com/2014/09/08/egypts-president-denies-offering-land-to-palestinians/
Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi denied on Monday Israeli media reports that he agreed to offer parts of Egyptian lands to Palestinians, reported state-run news agency MENA.
Being first posted in The Jerusalem Post makes it a false-flag story/untrustworthy?
Still, I take your point. Confirmation is required, and so far there appears to be none
Oh well.
http://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Egypt-PA-deny-report-that-Sisi-offered-Abbas-land-in-Sinai-for-Palestinian-state-374785
On Monday, Nabil Abu Rudaineh, spokesman for the PA presidency, again denied the report, saying Sisi had never made such an offer.
Abu Rudaineh said that the idea of expanding the Gaza Strip toward Sinai was completely unacceptable to the Palestinians, Egyptians and Arabs.
Tayeb Abdel Rahim, a senior aid to Abbas, also denied the report, dubbing it a “fabrication.”
Abdel Rahim noted that this was an old idea that had been proposed by former national security adviser Giora Eiland.
The Palestinian official accused the Israeli media of publishing “fabricated stories” in order to distort the positions of the Palestinians and Egyptians.
I can't imagine anyone being dumb enough to believe the Palestinian Authority's version of facts.
Obviously, they are doing damage control.
Sisi's attitude toward the Muslim Brotherhood and Hamas is well enough known. He wants to eradicate it. How many members of the MB have been condemned to death-- a thousand?
Really?!
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