The Jerusalem Post

Congratula­tions, Egypt!

- ENCOUNTERI­NG PEACE • By GERSHON BASKIN

Ihave to begin by congratula­ting the people of Egypt and their new president, Mohammed Morsi, for the first fully democratic elections in the largest Arab country in the world. As an Israeli, I extend my hand in peace to the people of Egypt and to its elected leaders. I wish you the best. Your tasks at hand are overwhelmi­ng. Your job approval ratings come with taking responsibi­lity and acting responsibl­y.

There is no doubt that in Israel, around the world and in Egypt there is great concern about the future of Egypt. The task of ruling a country like Egypt is not about ideology, it is about being able to feed, employ, educate, provide health care and human dignity to its 82 million citizens.

The Egyptian economy has been largely built, in the past years, on tourism and foreign investment. Both have taken a huge blow since the revolution ousted the dictator Mubarak. Egypt must create hundreds of thousands of new jobs every year that provide income and respect for its people. Stability is a magnet for money and revolution­s are the ultimate in capital flight. Whoever rules Egypt needs stability. That means no war on bikinis and beer. It also means that relations with the United States and the West are strategic. It also means that peace with Israel will remain.

President Morsi is sincere when he says he wants to be president for all Egyptians, those who voted for him and those who fear him, mostly the Coptic minority. This is not an empty slogan that every new elected official states. Morsi will seek to have a wide coalition of support behind him, and the educated and largely secular young people who created the revolution ended up mostly supporting him because the thought of supporting General Ahmed Shafiq, a remnant of the Mubarak regime, was abhorrent to them. Now they have democracy and they also have a regime led by the Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

‘I am echoing what many said at the end of the run-off vote last week: I’m happy Shafiq lost and sad Morsi won. The fight for freedom continues’ – Mona Eltahawy

Morsi will have to contend with the abusive powers that still remain in the hands of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF). A power struggle will ensue almost immediatel­y. I believe that in the end the democratic forces in Egypt will overpower the dictatoria­l tendency of military rulers. It will be a long struggle, but like in Turkey, the democratic­ally elected civilian government will at some time in the future be the sovereign rulers of the country and not the military.

I project that the Muslim Brotherhoo­d-led government in Egypt will be keen on re-establishi­ng full Egyptian sovereignt­y in Sinai. The absence of governance and law and order in Sinai and the rise of radical jihadi groups there is something the Muslim Brotherhoo­d president will not tolerate. Strangely, he will find Hamas in Gaza to be an ally in the desire to put Sinai back under the direct control of Cairo.

Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhoo­d are not friends of the alQaida-type internatio­nal jihadi organizati­ons. They endanger the rule and authority of both political movements. Hamas and Egypt will have a shared interest in developing a normal border between them, including a commercial terminal in Rafah that will put an end to the smuggling and the tunnel trade in Sinai. This is not a bad thing for Israel.

The Israeli-Egyptian relationsh­ip will remain frigid, but I think that the intelligen­ce communicat­ion and mediating role of Egyptian intelligen­ce will continue to function in mitigating violence when it erupts between Israel and Gaza.

I think that it is most interestin­g to monitor the tweets of Egyptians and other Arabs over the hours since the announceme­nt of the Morsi victory. They are filled with celebratio­n, apprehensi­on, struggle, amazement and humor. I will let these young Arab people speak for themselves:

Ahmed Shihab-Eldin@ASE: “Fireworks and smoke engulf cheering crowds of tens of thousands in Tahrir as fists pump in the air.”

Shadi Hamid@shadihamid: “This is the first time in history an Islamist party has risen to the presidency in the Arab world.”

Rachel Shabi@rachshabi RT@jmalsin: “This place is going gorillas. Fireworks, cheering, men embracing each other and weeping.”

Ahmed Shihab-Eldin@ASE: “Congratula­tions Egypt – the real work begins now. Womens revolution is next.”

Ismael@ChangeInLi­bya: “Tahrir square waving Libyan, Tunisian and Palestinia­n flags :D”

Youssef Chouhoud@TheAlexand­rian Egypt: “1/3 is celebratin­g; 1/3 is neutral/cautiously optimistic; 1/3 is downloadin­g porn or buying vodka ‘while there’s still time’”

Gigi Ibrahim@Gsquare86: “Aside from my difference­s with Ikhwan and my deep opposition to their politics, I am very happy Shafiq lost!”

Mohamed El Dahshan@eldahshan: “No congratula­tions to Morsi. Now, we’ll be watching you closely. If you mess up, you’ll be out sooner than you can say ‘Qatar’”

Mona Eltahawy@monaeltaha­wy: “Egypt is not Iran, Algeria, Pakistan, Turkey, Indonesia or any place else. Egypt is Egypt. I am echoing what many said at end of run-off vote last week: I’m happy Shafiq lost and sad Morsi won. The fight for freedom continues. I vowed I’d come back 2 Egypt if Morsi wins & I’m sticking 2 my word. I long fought Mubarak regime thru my writing, prepared 2 do same w/Morsi”

Dalia Mogahed@DMogahed: “Let’s hand it to Egypt. It took them WAY less time to figure out who won in a contested close election than Bush/Gore in 2000.”

Mina Al-Oraibi@AlOraibi: “White House issues statemnt congratula­ting Morsi-says he has ‘both legitimacy&responsibi­lity of representi­ng a diverse&courageous citizenry’”

Sara Hussein@sarahussei­n: “Right Morsi, I gave you a chance to give your speech, but now it’s Euro2012 time. Peace out.”

The writer is the co-chairman of IPCRI, the Israel Palestine Center for Research and Informatio­n, a columnist for The Jerusalem Post, a radio host on All for Peace Radio and the initiator and negotiator of the secret back channel for the release of Gilad Schalit.

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