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          | Editorial Note: The 
		  following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may 
		  also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. 
		  Comments are in parentheses. |  
       
        Of Course, Israel Is Egypt's Enemy  By Khalid Amayreh PIC, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 10, 2011 
 Some Israeli officials have voiced surprise at revelations 
		published by Wikileaks showing that the Egyptian military continues to 
		view the apartheid Israeli regime as the primary strategic threat facing 
		Egypt.
 
 This is despite the passage of more than 30 years since 
		the signing of the Camp David peace treaty between the two states in 
		1979.
 
 According to the revelations, American diplomats have been 
		frustrated as the Egyptian army continued to retain the erstwhile 
		military doctrine which viewed Israel as the enemy.
 
 The US, 
		which is often at Israel and beck and call, has been trying to convince 
		leading Arab states that their enemy is Iran and Sunni Islamist 
		movements, such as Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, not Israel which 
		committed a virtual genocide in Gaza two years ago and is constantly 
		trying to kill the prospects of Palestinian statehood by keeping up the 
		construction of Jewish colonies on stolen Arab land.
 
 One leaked 
		file quoted an unnamed American diplomat as saying that "the US has 
		sought to interest the Egyptian military into expanding their mission in 
		ways that reflect new regional and transnational security threats, such 
		as piracy, border security and counterterrorism."
 
 However, Egypt 
		reportedly resisted the flagrant American intervention in shaping the 
		Egyptian strategic military doctrine, with one high-ranking Egyptian 
		army commander stressing that Israel was still targeting Egypt in a 
		variety of ways, including having plans for the possible re-occupation 
		of the Sinai Peninsula.
 
 Well, it is an expression of daring 
		audacity on the part of these arrogant American diplomats to expect the 
		sons of Egypt to morph themselves into Israel lovers and forget the tens 
		of thousands of Egyptians, civilians and servicemen, who were murdered 
		by Israel.
 
 The Egyptian people are not about to forget 
		the massacres of Bahr el Bagar school, the Abu Za'abal factory, and the 
		massacre of Egyptian POWs at the instruction of Ariel Sharon in addition 
		to the indiscriminate bombings of Egyptian civilian areas during the 
		so-called war of attrition prior to the 1973 war.
 
 It is true 
		that Egypt , mainly due to  economic and other reasons, had to sign 
		the infamous peace treaty at Camp David, which only formally ended the 
		state of belligerency between Israel and largest and most powerful Arab 
		country. But it is also true that the vast majority of Egyptians 
		continued to hate Israel as a hostile and criminal entity despite all 
		American inducements and bribes to create good chemistry between 
		Egyptians and Israelis.
 
 In the final analysis, it would be a 
		form of morbid imagination to expect Egyptians, who nearly on a daily 
		basis watch Zionist thugs and terrorists murder, terrorize and savage 
		their coreligionists and brethren in Palestine and destroy their homes, 
		bulldoze their farms, and expel them form their places of residence.
 
 It is morbid imagination to expect members of the Egyptian armed 
		forces to fall in love with the killers of their fathers and forefathers 
		who fell in battle with Zionism on Palestinian and Egyptian soils.
 
 It is even more morbid to expect the Egyptian  armed forces to 
		abandon their old doctrine and adopt a new one based on the unnatural 
		and mendacious assumption which views  other Arabs and  
		Muslims, not Israel,  which usurped Palestine  and expelled 
		its people  to the four corners of the world,  as the enemy.
 
 Egypt and its kind-hearted people may not be going through the best 
		of times. But what is in the heart is in the heart, and no amount of 
		Kafkaesque metamorphosis would succeed in deviating the needle of the 
		Egyptian people's compass away from its natural direction.
 
 I 
		know that Israelis can easily visit Egypt, dine in its restaurants and 
		bask on its beaches. But it is also true that these Israelis who do so 
		are often met with inimical eyes and sullen hostility wherever they go. 
		I also know that these Israelis, especially those who would reveal their 
		identity, never feel secure or at peace. This is why they stop speaking 
		Hebrew in public and often claim to be Italians or other Europeans.
 
 To be sure, Israel itself never came to view Egypt as a non-hostile 
		state. In fact, one exaggerates little by saying that Israel continues 
		to view Egypt as constituting the main strategic threat facing Israel. 
		Yes Israel feels  the threat is dormant, but it is real.
 
 Moreover, it would be foolhardy on the part of Egyptian strategic 
		planners to ignore or dismiss intelligence reports suggesting that 
		Israel is constantly acting to destabilize and weaken Egypt in a variety 
		of ways.
 
 These include, inter alia, encouraging some expatriate 
		Copts to rise up against the central government, encouraging Nile-basin 
		countries such as Ethiopia to undermine Egyptian interests, keep 
		Egyptian-Iranian relations in the worst possible state, and constantly 
		threatening to instigate Congress, which is tightly controlled by the 
		Jewish lobby, to press for reducing or cutting off US economic and 
		military aid to Egypt if the Egyptian regime doesn't behave according to 
		script.
 
 A few years ago, Avigdor Lieberman, the thuggish 
		Israeli foreign minister, went as far as threatening to bomb the Aswan 
		Dam. This is what he said in public.   One would wonder what 
		he might have said in private.
 
 Another point, which really 
		illustrates both the temerity and naivety of many American diplomats, is 
		the belief that cordial relations between Israel and an Arab-Muslim 
		country are possible as long as the Palestinian plight remains 
		unresolved. This is probably the reason the Americans couldn't bring 
		themselves to understand the recent turnabout in the Israeli-Turkish 
		relations.
 
 Finally, I have one advice to the self-absorbed 
		American diplomatic community.  Don’t take Arab and Muslim peoples 
		for granted, don't overlook the feelings of millions of  Arabs and 
		Muslims  as this myopic approach  would eventually boomerang 
		onto you.
 
 
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