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The Price Of Peace: Israeli Army Will Cash In On Egypt’s Upheavals
24 February 2011 By Jonathan
Cook
Israel has been indulging in a
sustained bout of fear-mongering since the Egyptian
dictator Hosni Mubarak was toppled earlier this month.
The ostensible aim has been to warn the international
community that the lengthy “cold peace” between the
two countries is on the verge of collapse.
In reality, the peace treaty
signed three decades ago is in no danger for the
forseeable future. The Egyptian and Israeli armies
have too much of a vested interest in its
continuation, whatever political reforms occur in
Egypt.
And if the Egyptian political
system really does open up, which is still far from
sure, the Israeli military may actually be a
beneficiary -- if for all the wrong reasons.
The main value of the 1979 Camp
David treaty to the Israeli leadership has been three
decades of calm on Israel’s south-western flank. That,
in turn, has freed the army to concentrate on more
pressing goals, such as its intermittent forays north
to sow sectarian discord in Lebanon, its belligerent
posturing towards first Iraq and now Iran in the east,
and its campaign to contain and dispossess the
Palestinians under its rule.
But since Mubarak’s ousting on
February 11, Israeli politicians and generals have
warned that democracy for Egypt is bound to empower
the country’s Islamists, supposedly bent on Israel’s
destruction.
Last week, Benjamin Netanyahu,
the prime minister, compared a post-Mubarak Egypt with
Iran, saying Israel was “preparing for the worst”.
Likewise, Gabi Ashkenazi, the departing chief of
staff, stated that Israel was braced for the peace
treaty’s cancellation as the “moderate camp” weakened.
Officially, Tel Aviv’s concern is
that, should the treaty be revoked, Israel will have
to redirect much of its martial energy to preparing
for potential hostilties with its neighbour, the most
populous Arab state. Israel’s anxious declarations
about the peace treaty, however, are largely
self-serving.
Peace has reigned between Israel
and Egypt because it is so strongly in the interests
of both militaries. That is not about to change while
the Egyptian and Israeli general staffs maintain their
pre-eminent roles as the praetorian guards of their
countries’ respective political systems.
Today’s close ties between the
Israeli and Egyptian armies are a far cry from the
earlier era of Gamal Abdel Nasser, who galvanised Arab
nationalism in an attempt to defeat Israel, or his
successor, Anwar Sadat, who almost led the Arab world
to victory against the Israeli army in 1973.
Since the signing of the 1979
agreement, Washington has bought off the hawks on each
side with massive military subsidies underwritten by
the American taxpayer. The US has been happy to
bankroll an accord that strengthens Israel, its useful
Middle Eastern ally, and buys the acquiesence of
Egypt, the Arab state best placed to resist the
current regional order.
The Egyptian army receives $1.3
billion in annual military aid, making it the second
largest recipient after Israel, which gets more than
twice as much. In addition, military hardware has been
lavished on the Israeli army, making it possibly the
fourth strongest in the world -- an astonishing
situation for a country of only seven million.
The munificence has continued
despite the US financial crisis, and includes
Washington’s effective donation last year to Israel of
two dozen of the next-generation F-35 stealth fighter
jet as part of its pledge to maintain Israel’s
“technological edge” over its rivals in the region.
Three decades of American money
thrown at the two armies have made each a key player
in their respective economies -- as well as
encouraging a culture of corruption in the senior
ranks.
In Egypt’s case, large sections
of the economy are controlled by retired generals,
from electrical goods and construction companies to
the production of olive oil and medicines. The army is
reported to own about a third of the country’s assets.
The Israeli army’s economic stake
is less ostentatious but no less significant. Its
officers retire in their early forties on full
pensions, and then cash in on their “security
know-how”. Second careers in arms dealing, military
consultancies or sinecures in Israel’s booming
homeland security exports are all but guaranteed. Ehud
Barak, a former chief of staff and the current defence
minister, made millions of dollars from his security
consultancy in a few years out of politics, for
example.
Corruption, endemic in Israel’s
political culture, has rapidly seeped into the
military. Some of it is visible, as demonstrated this
month with the passing over of a series of candidates
for the vacant post of chief of staff because of the
skeletons in their closets. Some is not: current
investigations into dubious activities by Mr Ashkenazi
and his family are subject to heavy reporting
restrictions.
Nonetheless, both armies are
revered by their countrymen. Even should that change
in Egypt over coming months, the army is too strong --
thanks to the US -- to be effectively challenged by
the protesters.
Israeli hawks, however, are right
to be concerned -- on other grounds -- about the
“threat” of political reform in Egypt. Although
greater democracy will not undermine the peace
agreement, it may liberate Egyptians to press for a
proper regional peace deal, one that takes account of
Palestinian interests as the Camp David accord was
supposed to do.
Not least, in a freer Egypt, the
army will no longer be in a position to play Robin to
Israel’s Batman in Gaza. Its continuing role in the
strangulation of the tiny enclave would likely come to
an end.
But in such a climate, the
Israeli military still has much to gain. As Israeli
analyst Aluf Benn has observed, Israel will use the
Middle East’s upheavals to highlight to the US that it
is Washington’s only reliable ally -- the so-called
“villa in the jungle”. Its show of anxiety is also
designed to remind the US that a jittery Israel is
more likely to engage in unpredictable military
adventures.
The remedy, of course, is even
greater American largesse. And for that reason, if no
other, the fear-mongering from Tel Aviv is not about
to end.
Jonathan Cook is a writer and
journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. His latest books
are “Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran
and the Plan to Remake the Middle East” (Pluto Press)
and “Disappearing Palestine: Israel's Experiments in
Human Despair” (Zed Books). His website is
www.jkcook.net.
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