by Caroline Glick
Will the Egyptian military be permitted to remilitarize the Sinai?  Since Palestinian and Egyptian terrorists crossed into Israel from Sinai  on August 18 and murdered eight Israelis this has been a central issue  under discussion at senior echelons of the government and the IDF.
Under  the terms of the Egypt-Israel peace treaty, Egypt is prohibited from  deploying military forces in the Sinai. Israel must approve any Egyptian  military mobilization in the area. Today, Egypt is asking to  permanently deploy its forces in the Sinai. Such a move requires an  amendment to the treaty.
Supported by the Obama  administration, the Egyptians say they need to deploy forces in the  Sinai in order to rein in and defeat the jihadist forces now running  rampant throughout the peninsula. Aside from attacking Israel, these  jihadists have openly challenged Egyptian governmental control over the  territory.
So far the Israeli government has  given conflicting responses to the Egyptian request. Defense Minister  Ehud Barak told The Economist last week that he supports the deployment  of Egyptian forces. Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said Sunday that  he would consider such deployment but that Israel should not rush into  amending the peace treaty with Egypt.
Saturday Barak tempered his earlier statement, claiming that no decision had been made about Egyptian deployment in the Sinai.
The  government's confused statements about Egyptian troop deployments  indicate that at a minimum, the government is unsure of the best course  of action. This uncertainty owes in large part to confusion about  Egypt's intentions.
Egypt's military leaders do  have an interest in preventing jihadist attacks on Egyptian  installations and other interests in the Sinai. But does that interest  translate into an interest in defending Israeli installations and  interests? If the interests overlap, then deploying Egyptian forces may  be a reasonable option. If Egypt's military leaders view these interests  as mutually exclusive, then Israel has no interest in such a  deployment.
ISRAEL'S CONFUSION over Egypt's  strategic direction and interests echoes its only recently abated  confusion over Turkey's strategic direction in the aftermath of the  Islamist AKP Party's rise to power in 2002. Following the US's lead,  despite Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's hostile rhetoric  regarding Israel, Israel continued to believe that he and his government  were interested in maintaining Turkey's strategic alliance with Israel.  That belief began unraveling with Erdogan's embrace of Hamas in January  2006 and his willingness to turn a blind eye to Iranian use of Turkish  territory to transfer arms to Hezbollah during the war in July and  August 2006.
Still, due to US support for  Erdogan, Israel continued to sell Turkey arms until last year. Israel  only recognized that Turkey had transformed itself from a strategic ally  into a strategic enemy after Erdogan sponsored the terror flotilla to  Gaza in May 2010.
As was the case with Turkey  under Erdogan, Israel's confusion over Egypt's intentions has nothing to  do with the military rulers' behavior. Like Erdogan, the Egyptian junta  isn't sending Israel mixed signals.
Former  Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak was never a strategic ally to Israel  the way that Turkey was before Erdogan. However, Mubarak believed that  maintaining a quiet border with Israel, combating the Muslim Brotherhood  and keeping Hamas at arm's length advanced his interests. Mubarak's  successors in the junta do not perceive their interests in the same way.
To  the contrary, since they overthrew Mubarak in February, the generals  ruling Egypt have made clear that their interest in cultivating ties  with Israel's enemies - from Iran to the Muslim Brotherhood - far  outweighs their interest in maintaining a cooperative relationship with  Israel.
From permitting Iranian naval ships to  traverse the Suez Canal for the first time in 30 years to opening the  border with Hamas-ruled Gaza to its openly hostile and conspiratorial  reaction to the August 18 terrorist attack on Israel from the Sinai,  there can be little doubt about the trajectory of Egypt's relations with  Israel.
BUT JUST as was the case with Turkey -  and again, largely because of American pressure - Israel's leaders are  wary of accepting that the strategic landscape of our relationship with  Egypt has changed radically and that the rules that applied under  Mubarak no longer apply.
After Israel withdrew  from the Gaza Strip in August 2005, terrorists in Gaza and Sinai took  down the border. Gaza was immediately flooded with sophisticated  armaments. Then-prime minister Ariel Sharon made a deal with Mubarak to  deploy Egyptian forces to the Sinai to rebuild the border and man the  crossing point at Rafah. While there were problems with the agreement,  given the fact that Mubarak shared Israel's interests, the move was not  unjustified.
Today this is not the case. The  junta wants to permanently deploy forces to the Sinai and consequently  is pushing to amend the treaty. The generals' request comes against the  backdrop of populist calls from across Egypt's political spectrum  demanding the cancellation of the peace treaty.
If  Israel agrees to renegotiate the treaty, it will lower the political  cost of a subsequent Egyptian abrogation of the agreement. This is the  case because Israel itself will be on record acknowledging that the  treaty does not meet its current needs.
Beyond  that, there is the nature of the Egyptian military itself, which was  exposed during and in the aftermath of the August 18 attack. At a  minimum, the Egyptian and Palestinian terrorists who attacked Israel  that day did so with no interference from Egyptian forces deployed along  the border.
The fact that they shot into  Israel from Egyptian military positions indicates that the Egyptian  forces on the ground did not simply turn a blind eye to what was  happening. Rather, it is reasonable to assume that they lent a helping  hand to the terror operatives.
Furthermore, the  hostile response of the Egyptian military to Israel's defensive  operations to end the terror attack indicates that at a minimum, the  higher echelons of the military are not sympathetically disposed towards  Israel's right to defend its citizens.
Both  the behavior of the forces on the ground and of their commanders in  Cairo indicates that if the Egyptian military is permitted to deploy its  forces to the Sinai, those forces will not serve any helpful purpose  for Israel.
THE MILITARY'S demonstrated  antagonism toward Israel, the uncertainty of Egypt's political future,  the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood, and the hatred of Israel shared by  all Egyptian political factions all indicate that Israel will live to  regret it if it permits the Egyptian military to mobilize in the Sinai.  Not only will Egyptian soldiers not prevent terrorist attacks against  Israel, their presence along the border will increase the prospect of  war with Egypt.
Egypt's current inaction  against anti-Israel terror operatives in the Sinai has already caused  the IDF to increase its force levels along the border. If Egypt is  permitted to mass its forces in the Sinai, then the IDF will be forced  to respond by steeply increasing the size of its force mobilized along  the border. And the proximity of the two armies could easily be  exploited by Egyptian populist forces to foment war.
In  his interview with The Economist, Barak claimed bizarrely, "Sometimes  you have to subordinate strategic considerations to tactical needs." It  is hard to think of any case in human history when a nation's interests  were served by winning a battle and losing a war. And the stakes with  Egypt are too high for Israel's leaders to be engaging in such confused  and imbecilic thinking.
The dangers emanating  from post-Mubarak Egypt are enormous and are only likely to grow. Israel  cannot allow its desire for things to be different to cloud its  judgment. It must accept the situation for what it is and act  accordingly.
Caroline Glick
Source: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2011/08/the-perils-of-a-remilitarized.php
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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