Los Angeles Times

EGYPT’S FOREIGN POLICY LIKELY TO HOLD

The incoming Islamist president may talk a sharp game, analysts say, but he probably won’t sever key ties.

- By Jeffrey Fleishman

CAIRO — Egypt’s foreign policy under its first Islamist president is likely to change in tenor but not substance as the new government can ill afford to damage relations with the U.S. or risk internatio­nal furor by abandoning Egypt’s 1979 peace treaty with Israel.

President Mohamed Morsi faces domestic social and financial crises that are expected to eclipse foreign affairs in coming months. Rhetoric against Jerusalem and Washington may sharpen, but Morsi, who ran as the Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s candidate, is desperate for Western and regional investment to ease the economic turmoil that has overwhelme­d the Arab world’s most populous state.

The new president, who will be sworn in to office Saturday, will be further constraine­d by the nation’s secular military, which receives $1.3 billion annually in U.S. aid. Days before Morsi was elected, the generals, who have controlled the country since Hosni Mubarak’s overthrow early last year, suppressed the powers of the president to counter the rising influence of conservati­ve Islamists.

On Friday, Morsi spoke before an enormous crowd in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, many of them chanting, “Down, down with military rule.” His defiant appearance was a reminder to the military that the Muslim Brotherhoo­d can rally thousands to the streets, but it also showed the limitation­s in opposing an army firmly in control of the country’s immediate political future.

“There will be no change in the peace treaty with Israel, and strategic relations with the U.S. will continue,” said Emad Gad, a foreign affairs expert with Cairo’s Al Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies. “Morsi will actually enhance relations with the U.S. The Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s program is based on free markets and is liberal when it comes to the economy.”

Still, the new president has made it clear that his approach to the Israelis will be less compliant than that

taken during Mubarak’s 30year rule.

“The peace treaty between us and the Israelis has constantly been violated by the Israelis,” Morsi recently told an Egyptian TV channel. “They must understand that peace is not just words. It is actions on the ground. The aggression on the Egyptian borders, their violence against Egyptian soldiers, and the threats they sometimes made to Egypt are all unacceptab­le. They should no longer think that the Egyptian president will back down.”

Some regard Morsi’s rise as the foreshadow­ing of a strident political Islam that will have consequenc­es from Abu Dhabi to Washington. For now, however, it is unclear whether Morsi and the Brotherhoo­d will mirror the diplomatic­ally bold yet religiousl­y moderate policies of Turkey or a more rigid, antiWester­n Islam.

“For the United States, Morsi’s election, coupled with Osama bin Laden’s killing a year ago, underscore­s a shift from the threat of violent Islamist extremism to a new, more complex challenge posed by the empowermen­t of a currently nonviolent but no less ambitious form of Islamist radicalism,” said Robert Satloff, executive director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

That specter was raised by Morsi in his Tahrir speech on Friday when he called for the release of Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, who was convicted in 1995 of plotting terrorist attacks in the U.S. and is serving a life sentence in North Carolina. The mention of Rahman appeared to be a move to strengthen Morsi’s popularity among

‘We are 90 million. It is not possible for a country of 5 million to intimidate 90 million.’

— Mohamed Morsi Egyptian president-elect, referring to Israel

ultraconse­rvative Islamists and to demonstrat­e to all Egyptians that his administra­tion would challenge the U.S. on sensitive matters.

Morsi will also quickly confront the sensitivit­ies of his Arab neighbors. He has promised to restore Egypt to its regional prominence after years of decline under Mubarak. That is viewed apprehensi­vely by Saudi Arabia, a close Mubarak ally, and other Persian Gulf Arab states whose internatio­nal stature has ascended in pivotal dealings with Lebanon, Syria and Iran while Cairo’s has diminished.

“The rebalancin­g of the political order and the emergence of Egypt would have a huge impact on regional political dynamics, but we are a long way off from that,” said Michael Wahid Hanna, a Middle East expert and a fellow at the Century Foundation, a nonpartisa­n think tank. “A stronger, more independen­t Egypt would be on a course that would both balance and clash with the Saudis’ power.”

Egyptian activists don’t see Morsi as embodying the ideals of the revolution that overthrew Mubarak. But for gulf monarchies, he represents a dangerous Islamist populism that may inspire revolts and threaten their reigns in an era of uprisings.

The election of Morsi, a U.S.-educated engineer, reflects a region in tumult, where autocrats who once buttressed U.S. and Israeli policies have been swept aside. Some analysts say such an unpredicta­ble atmosphere makes it time for Israel to push in earnest for Middle East peace.

“Windows are closing all around and this is the time for fast action. Not hysterical, but certainly swift,” said Yisrael Hasson, an Israeli lawmaker and former deputy chief of Israel’s internal security agency. “Israel is already three years late in putting forth a peace initiative and this is the time to move.”

A crucial issue for Cairo and Israel is the increase in lawlessnes­s and Islamic militants in Egypt’s Sinai peninsula. The desert that borders the Gaza Strip has become more dangerous since Mubarak’s fall; Israel has been pressing Egypt to crack down on militant networks that have launched rocket attacks and deadly cross-border raids.

“I believe the peace treaty will be kept, although it will undoubtedl­y be a colder peace,” said Benjamin Ben- Eliezer, an Israeli lawmaker and former defense minister. “I hope he [Morsi] enables the army to continue dialogue with Israel because we have at least one common concern that can set the region on fire, namely Sinai, which has become a home to terror around the world, from Al Qaeda to Hamas.”

The militant group Hamas, which controls Gaza, celebrated when Morsi was elected. The Muslim Brotherhoo­d has strong ties to Hamas, and Morsi has criticized Israel for what he claimed was violence against Palestinia­ns and intransige­nce on reaching an accord on a Palestinia­n state. This sentiment may eventually lead to a reevaluati­on or collapse of the peace

“We are 90 million [people]. It is not possible for a country of 5 million to intimidate 90 million,” Morsi said, referring to Israel.

Egypt has not become an “enemy state threatenin­g Israel’s borders, but the intelligen­ce and military establishm­ent in Israel should nonetheles­s regard the old friend as a country that has to be relearned, and should prepare accordingl­y,” Alex Fishman, a military analyst, wrote in Israeli daily newspaper Yediot Aharonot.

 ?? Khaled Elfiqi European Pressphoto Agency ?? PRESIDENT-ELECT Mohamed Morsi, center, joins a Cairo rally in defiance of military rulers. Morsi can’t afford to harm relations with the U.S., analysts say.
Khaled Elfiqi European Pressphoto Agency PRESIDENT-ELECT Mohamed Morsi, center, joins a Cairo rally in defiance of military rulers. Morsi can’t afford to harm relations with the U.S., analysts say.

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