Although the fall of Arab dictators is in general a healthy development for America, it could also pose some tricky, short-term challenges to U.S. interests in the Middle East. Egypt’s post-Mubarak diplomacy is an unsettling case in point.
Long our most reliable ally in the region, Egypt has struck a more independent course since a popular uprising forced Hosni Mubarak to relinquish power. To the consternation of Washington and Jerusalem, it brokered the April 27 power-sharing agreement between the Palestinian Authority and Hamas.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas apparently sought the reconciliation with Hamas because he thinks a unified front bolsters the chance for Palestinian statehood. A new interim government will ask the United Nations in September to recognize a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza. But since Hamas did not renounce terrorism or accept Israel’s right to exist, the accord would seem to foreclose any possibility of jump-starting stalled peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians.
Israel’s relatively dovish President, Shimon Peres, minced no words in calling the unity pact a “fatal mistake that will prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state and will sabotage chances of peace and stability in the region.”
Unfortunately, Hamas’s intransigence reflects a tragic Palestinian tendency to indulge in fantasies of redemptive violence and rally behind “strong men” who call for Israel’s destruction and defy the United States. Virtually alone in the region, Palestinians cheered Saddam Hussein during the 1991 Gulf War. A recent poll shows that a majority of Palestinians approve of Osama bin Laden, the only place in the region where that is true.
In fact, in stark contrast to the reaction of most Middle East leaders, Hamas deplored America’s killing of Osama bin Laden. “We condemn the assassination of a Muslim and Arab warrior and we pray to God that his soul rests in peace,” declared Ismail Haniya, “prime minister” of the Gaza strip. “We regard this as the continuation of the American oppression and shedding of blood of Muslims and Arabs.”
In any case, Egypt’s initiative has sharpened tensions between Palestinians and Israelis. Over the weekend, Israel froze Palestinian custom revenue to prevent it from being used to fund Hamas missile strikes, which have been escalating. Cairo has further deepened Israeli anxieties by lifting an electoral ban on the Muslim Brotherhood and reestablishing diplomatic ties with Iran. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to address Congress later this month, but is reportedly recoiling from proposing new peace initiatives.
Egypt’s foreign minister also is urging the United States to back U.N. recognition of a Palestinian state. But the Obama administration is holding firm to its position that peace can only be achieved through direct negotiations between Israel and Palestinians.