Israel and Egypt’s enduring ‘cold peace’
CAIRO: Forty years after signing the Camp David Accords, Egypt and Israel live in uneasy peace, as cool diplomatic ties have failed to unfreeze other relations.
“There is still a psychological barrier between us and the Israeli people,” said Egyptian ex-lawmaker Mohammed Anwar Sadat, nephew of former president Anwar Sadat.
Mohammed proudly keeps a photo of his late uncle in his office here.
Egypt’s then head of state risked everything in making peace with Israel at the United States presidential retreat Camp David on Sept 17, 1978.
The Accords, cemented by a peace treaty in 1979, saw regional powerhouse Egypt temporarily shunned by the rest of the Arab World.
Sadat was assassinated on Oct 6, 1981.
The late president “had great courage and a vision for the future”, his nephew said.
But the peace, he said, “has always been cold”.
While many Egyptians welcome the absence of war, they remain hostile to Israel.
“Egypt’s acceptance of full diplomatic and political normalisation” has not translated into “a cultural or popular normalisation”, said Cairo University political sciences professor Mustafa Kamal Sayed.
This uneasy but stable status quo is reflected on the streets here, where many put their antipathy towards Israel down to their neighbour’s policies towards the Palestinians.
“The normalisation failed to gain popular support because of events linked to Palestinians,” said bank worker Mohammed Oussam.
He said he could not forget Israel’s bombing of “schools and refugee camps” during Lebanon’s 1975 to 1990 civil war.
“The Israelis have not adhered to the principles of peace with the Palestinians or the Arabs,” said another Mohammed.
It’s a sentiment also shared by Islam Emam.
“We speak of peace, of normalisation — then they kill our brothers and take their land,” he said, referring to the Palestinians.
He blames Israel’s government, rather than its citizens.
“Nobody truly chooses his government,” he said.
Enmity towards Israel often crystallises over sporting events.
Egyptian and Liverpool football maestro Mohamed Salah has been criticised for appearing in a Champions League match in Israel in 2013, when he played for Switzerland’s FC Basel.
Salah said he did not make political decisions.
Three years later, Egyptian judo Olympian Islam El Shehaby refused to shake hands with Israeli rival Or Sasson at the Rio games — a gesture that embarrased Egyptian authorities.
Writer and Hebrew translator Nael el-Toukhy said any Egyptian who reached out to Israelis faced intense pressure.
Israel is a hot topic for Egyptian talk shows, guaranteed to stoke the kind of high feelings seen in debates on gay rights.