by Efraim Inbar
Hopes for peaceful relations with Arab countries – such as between the US and Canada – are fanciful dreams.
Originally published under the title "For How Long Will the Peace Treaty with Egypt Be Robust?"
Israel's 40-year-old peace treaty with Egypt has proven more durable than contemporary cartoonists imagined.
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Israel
is celebrating the fortieth anniversary of the historic visit of
Egyptian president Anwar Sadat to Jerusalem, that led to the
Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty. The move by Egypt, the largest and
strongest Arab state, changed the dynamics of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Sadat
violated the Arab taboo against good neighborly relations with the
Jewish state and opened the way for additional peace agreements. The
defection of Egypt from the Arab military coalition eliminated the
option of a two-front conventional war against Israel and saved the
Israeli taxpayer billions of dollars. The heavy price paid by Israel to
Egypt was total withdrawal from the Sinai and removal of settlements.
But, in retrospect, it worked out well, turning Israel into "the land
had peace for forty years."
The
peace treaty withstood many difficult tests: Israel's strike on the
Iraqi nuclear reactor in 1982, the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, the
1987 Palestinian uprising, Israeli measures against the Palestinian
terrorism campaign since 2000 and the Israel-Gaza wars. Even the Muslim
Brotherhood government in Egypt (2012-13) did not cancel the peace
treaty.
Israeli expectations for normal inter-state and people-to-people interactions with Egypt were not realized.
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Unfortunately,
Israeli expectations for normal inter-state and people-to-people
interactions were not realized. The rooted cultural and religious
barriers to having good relations with the Jewish state have been too
difficult to overcome. In the Arab world, Israel is mostly seen as an
alien body. For Egypt, this has not changed after 40 years of formal
peace. In the absence of drastic change in the Arab educational systems,
these perceptions of Jews and their state will continue. Hopes for
peaceful relations with Arab countries – such as between the US and
Canada – are fanciful dreams. This insight should be taken into
consideration when calculating the Israeli price for Arab peace offers.
Moreover,
the robustness of the peace treaty is not self-evident. History teaches
us that most wars break out in violation of a peace treaty.
The
survival of the peace treaty seems threatened by several developments.
We have to remember that the change in Egypt's position toward Israel
was a result of Cairo gradually preferring the US to the Soviet Union.
Egypt's position toward Israel changed because it preferred the US to the Soviet Union.
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Egypt
realized that the US had greater leverage on Israel in its attempt to
gain back the Sinai. However, its pro-American orientation is not a
constant. Nowadays, the US seems to have become a less desirable ally.
Its international standing has deteriorated and its Middle East policy,
under presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump, favors disengagement
rather than involvement.
At
the same time, Russia has become more influential in the region. Egypt
seems to sense the change and now buys Russian weapons. It also
purchased two Russian nuclear reactors, which has created a long-term
dependency upon Moscow. A change in Egypt's foreign policy orientation
also affects its relations with Israel.
The region, whose character is changing due to the ascendance of Iran, also provides reasons to worry.
Egypt's pro-American orientation is not a constant. With U.S. influence waning, Cairo has begun buying Russian weapons again.
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States
in the region are aware of a projected American weakness and are left
with only two choices when facing an Iran that cooperates with Russia.
They can form an alliance to curb Iranian influence (the choice of Saudi
Arabia and most of the Gulf States) or get closer to Iran (the choice
of Turkey and Qatar). Egypt is usually seen as part of the Sunni
moderate camp that fears greater Iranian clout. Egypt is much more
dependent upon financial support from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states.
Nevertheless, Egypt supported Bashar Assad in Syria – an Iranian ally.
If the Gulf region falls under Iranian influence, Cairo might have to
adopt a different posture and also look for support in Tehran. This
might put an end to the peace treaty with Israel.
Finally,
the large growth of the Egyptian military and its modernization is a
source of concern. The growth of the Egyptian air force, navy and land
forces remains a mystery, particularly with no enemy on Egyptian borders
in sight. The investments in logistics infrastructure from Cairo
eastwards and the building of tunnels under the Suez Canal seem to have
no reasonable civilian rationale. Moreover, the demilitarization of
Sinai, the most important stabilizing element in the peace treaty, has
been eroded, as Israel agreed to the infusion of Egyptian units into the
Sinai to fight the radical Islamic insurgency.
While
an Egyptian-Israeli military confrontation is unlikely, we see the
emergence of conditions that make an Egyptian attack easier.
Everything
must be done by Jerusalem to preserve the peace treaty with Egypt, but
Israel should still prepare itself for worst-case scenarios.
Efraim Inbar is president of the Jerusalem Institute for Strategic Studies, professor emeritus of political studies at Bar-Ilan University, and a Shillman-Ginsburg fellow at the Middle East Forum.
Source: http://www.meforum.org/7051/future-of-israel-egypt-peace-treaty
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Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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