Amr Mousa, former Secretary General of the Arab League and Egypt's
presidential frontrunner warns things could go ugly if the Palestine question
is not dealt with fairly
By Patrick Seale
Amr
Mousa, 74, the front-runner in the contest for the presidency of
post-revolution Egypt, has called for a renegotiation of the military annexes
to the Egyptian-Israel Peace Treaty of 1979.
“The
Treaty will continue to exist,” he told me in an exclusive interview on
September 10, “but Egypt needs forces in Sinai. The security situation requires
it. Israel must understand that the restrictions imposed by the Treaty have to
be reviewed.”
Mousa
was speaking in Geneva a day after delivering the keynote address at the annual
conference of the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), a
leading London-based think tank.
Under
the Peace Treaty — signed in Washington on March 26, 1979 by President Anwar
Sadat of Egypt and Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel, and witnessed by US
President Jimmy Carter — the Sinai Peninsula, captured by Israel in the 1973
war, was returned to Egypt. In return, Egypt agreed to its demilitarisation.
Last
January, when protests first erupted against former president Hosni Mubarak,
leading to his downfall 18 days later on February 11, Israel allowed Egypt to
move a few hundred troops into Sinai — for the first time since the treaty was
signed 32 years ago. Egypt deployed two battalions, about 800 soldiers, in the
Sharm Al Shaikh area on Sinai’s southern tip, far away from Israel. But, in
calling for a revision of the military annexes, Mousa clearly has something more
radical in mind.
The
Egyptian revolution has led to acute tension between Egypt and Israel, and to
great concern in Israel and Washington about the future of the peace treaty. By
removing Egypt from the Arab line-up, the treaty gave Israel three decades of
military hegemony in the region. For the Arabs it was a disaster. It exposed
them to Israeli aggressions, such as the repeated invasions of Lebanon, the
siege and invasion of Gaza, and the relentless seizure of Palestinian land on
the West Bank.
On
the night of Mousa’s address to the IISS in Geneva, protesters in Cairo stormed
the Israeli embassy. The ambassador and his staff fled to Israel. Egyptian
opinion was outraged by the killing on August 18 of five Egyptian policemen by
Israeli forces inside Egyptian territory, north of the Egypt town of Taba and
the Israeli town of Eilat. The policemen were killed when Israeli forces
crossed the border in pursuit of fighters who had attacked Israeli vehicles on
the road to Eilat, killing eight Israelis.
“Israel
made a great mistake when the Egyptian revolution erupted,” Mousa told me. “It
claimed that the revolution had nothing to do with Palestine. I said: ‘Just
wait!’” Israel is playing havoc with the stability of the Middle East because
it doesn’t appreciate the extent of the changes sweeping the region. It thinks
it can go back to business as usual. This is impossible.
“Palestinians
are right to seek recognition of their statehood at the United Nations this
month. They have no other option. No other offer has been made to them. The
peace process is dead. The time has come for the European powers to understand
that keeping Palestine on the back burner has been a grave strategic mistake.
“All
European states should support the Palestinian move. One cannot close all doors
to the Palestinians and expect them to submit. They will not.”
Uprightness
Mousa’s
views are important because he stands a strong chance of being elected
president of Egypt next year. Other leading contenders are Mohammad Al Baradei,
70, the former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, and Abdul Muneim
Abul Futuh, 60, a medical doctor, with a long history of opposition to the
Mubarak regime, who is thought to be a member of the moderate wing of the
Muslim Brotherhood.
Al
Baradei is admired by educated young people, but he has spent much of the past
35 years out of Egypt and can have little first-hand knowledge of Egypt’s
domestic problems. As for Dr Abul Futuh, there is some doubt whether the Muslim
Brotherhood would want one of its members to assume responsibility for the
awesome task of tackling Egypt’s immense economic and social problems.
Depending
how they fare at the coming parliamentary elections, when it is estimated they
might win 30 to 40 per cent of the vote, the Muslim Brotherhood may prefer the
premiership to the presidency, or might even be content with two or three
ministries.
Mousa
could be a strong president, acceptable to a wide range of opinion. He is known
to prefer a presidential to a multi-party parliamentary system of government,
which he fears might result in weak, short-lived coalition governments. In
standing for president, he has said that he will seek only a single four-year
term.
He
was not a member of Mubarak’s ruling National Democratic Party, nor was he part
of the corrupt elite around the former president and his son. He has a
reputation for probity and for understanding Egypt’s grave domestic problems.
As he told the IISS in his keynote address, 50 per cent of Egyptians live in
poverty, while 30 per cent are illiterate. The country has to be rebuilt. He is
confident it can be done.
He
has had extensive international experience having been Egypt’s representative
at the UN from 1981 to 1983 and again from 1986 to 1990, before serving as
Egypt’s foreign minister for ten years from 1991 to 2001, and then as
secretary-general of the Arab League for another 10 years from 2001 to 2011. He
opposed the American invasion of Iraq in 2003 and has been a consistent critic
of Israel’s occupation and dispossession of the Palestinians. The Arab League
under his direction approved Nato’s operations against Muammar Gaddafi’s regime
in Libya.
Last
April, Mousa called for a no-fly zone over Gaza to protect it from Israeli
bombardment. Israel’s ‘Operation Cast Lead’ — its brutal assault on Gaza in
December-January 2008-9, which killed some 1,500 Palestinians and caused
immense material damage — did a great deal to undermine its relations with both
Egypt and Turkey, the two major powers of the region with which it used to
enjoy close relations. Many Egyptians are profoundly ashamed that Mubarak
colluded with Israel in the prolonged siege of Gaza.
Mousa
would not be a belligerent President. He wants a settlement of the
Israel-Palestine conflict on a win-win basis, as proposed in the Arab peace
initiative. He advocates setting up a regional security system, to include both
Israel and Iran on the basis of a WMD (weapons of mass destruction) free zone.
His vision is of a new, vigorous, stable and peaceful Middle East. “The people
cannot stand being robbed of their future any longer,” he says.
Mousa
is a profoundly reasonable and moderate statesman. So is Mahmoud Abbas,
president of the Palestinian National Authority, who is seeking UN recognition
for a Palestinian state. If Israel wants long-term security and full acceptance
into the region, it should heed their views.
As
Mousa told me last weekend, there is a popular consensus in the Arab world that
the Palestine question must be dealt with properly and fairly. “If this does
not happen, things will turn ugly,” he said with great emphasis.
-This article was published in The GULF NEWS on 16/09/2011
-Patrick Seale is a commentator and author of several books on Middle East affairs
-Patrick Seale is a commentator and author of several books on Middle East affairs
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