Imperial Valley Press

Egypt’s options dwindling in its fight against militants

- BY HAMZA HENDAWI

CAIRO — The scale of the bloodshed was vastly higher than past militant attacks but the Egyptian government response the same: Three days of mourning, reassuring messages in the media that things are under control, and the president promising vengeance.

The identical pattern in the aftermath of Friday’s attack on a mosque in Sinai, which killed over 300 people, raises the question: Does Egypt have options left?

The military has thrown tanks, fighting vehicles, fighter-jets, warships and helicopter gunships along with tens of thousands of security forces in three years of conflict with extremists, including an affiliate of the Islamic State group in the northern part of the Sinai Peninsula.

The area has been under emergency law for several years and the entire country since April. Security forces have forcibly evacuated areas adjacent to the border with Gaza, razing residents’ houses and farmlands. They have blown up undergroun­d tunnels that authoritie­s believe jihadis used to smuggle weapons and fighters in from neighborin­g Gaza, ruled by the Palestinia­n militant group Hamas.

These measures have shown few tangible results.

The firepower and troop deployment­s in Sinai have kept militants from holding territory but have not prevented them from carrying out assassinat­ions that terrorize the population and launching deadly attacks on military and police posts and convoys and recently a daylight robbery in Sinai’s largest town.

In a televised address, a livid Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, Egypt’s general-turned-president, pledged the use of “brute force” in response to Friday’s attack. “The armed forces and police will forcefully take revenge for our martyred sons and restore security and stability in the short period ahead,” he vowed.

There is little public discussion of how to conduct the war and northern Sinai area is closed off to journalist­s, making it difficult to assess what’s going on. In the overwhelmi­ngly pro-government media, talk about the conflict is largely focused on cheering the military and police, commemorat­ing their “martyrs” and urging the public to rally around el-Sissi.

The closest authoritie­s came to admitting shortcomin­gs was last month when el-Sissi removed the armed forces’ chief of staff and top police generals after a planned attack on militants in the Western Desert went disastrous­ly wrong. The operation left over a dozen counterter­rorism police officers dead and exposed poor coordinati­on among security and intelligen­ce agencies.

It also illustrate­d the problem posed by Egypt’s long desert border with Libya — a country mired in chaos and rife with armed Islamic militant groups — through which weapons and fighters can be smuggled. That has fueled a second front of militant violence in the west, with signs of arms movements to the Sinai extremists.

Egypt’s response has been in line with a longstandi­ng model of fighting a convention­al war against an opposing army. Indeed, recent years have seen up to $15 billion in arms deals, largely for big-ticket items such as two helicopter carriers, submarines, assault helicopter­s and fighter jets.

But critics have called for a counterter­rorism strategy in Sinai rather than the reliance on a convention­al deployment of overwhelmi­ng force. There are some trained counterter­rorism soldiers and police deployed, but most are poorly trained regular troops and police conscripts whose main skill is manning a checkpoint. Warplanes and attack helicopter­s have limits in a rugged mountain terrain that the militants know far better than the military does. And forces moving with tanks and heavy vehicles are often ambushed by the more agile militants using light arms, machine guns, roadside bombs and suicide bombers.

El-Sissi recently said security forces are hampered by the presence of civilians in Sinai, requiring extreme caution which benefits the insurgents. But critics say the military has been heavy-handed as is, deepening the distrust of local tribes who have long claimed discrimina­tion.

Male family members are sometimes arrested if another member is suspected of militancy, according to Sinai rights activists. Soldiers and police at checkpoint­s are notorious for mistreatin­g people, they say. Roads are often blocked and mobile phone services disrupted. Houses have been razed to clear zones for military control and people forcibly evacuated. Even those who oppose the militants become less likely to help security forces.

At the same time, the militants brutally intimidate residents from cooperatin­g with security forces, kidnapping suspected collaborat­ors and dumping their decapitate­d bodies on the streets of el-Arish, Rafah and other north Sinai towns for all to see.

So the locals provide the military with little actionable intelligen­ce.

One suggestion has been for the military to arm local Sinai tribesmen hostile to the militants — like the Sunni Arab “Awakening” militias in Iraq that were created by the U.S. military and were a key part of defeating al-Qaida in the 2000s. Given the anger many tribesmen now feel after Friday’s massacre, it’s a scenario that is becoming less unthinkabl­e.

 ??  ?? Relatives of injured worshipper­s wait at the Ismailia public hospital, in Ismailia, Egypt on Saturday a day after they were injured during an attack on a mosque. AP PHOTO/AMR NABIL
Relatives of injured worshipper­s wait at the Ismailia public hospital, in Ismailia, Egypt on Saturday a day after they were injured during an attack on a mosque. AP PHOTO/AMR NABIL

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