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Egypt's Gaza Plan Reveals Changing Region

Egypt Gaza

MATTI FRIEDMAN   04/29/11 04:41 PM ET   AP

JERUSALEM — Egypt's announcement that it will open a key border crossing with the Palestinian Gaza Strip within days sparked concern in Israel on Friday and revealed how the upheaval in the Arab world is shifting the Mideast conflict.

Under former President Hosni Mubarak, Egypt restricted the movement of people and goods through the Rafah crossing in keeping with a blockade it imposed on Gaza along with Israel. The restrictions were aimed at weakening the Hamas militants who rule the Gaza Strip, and whom both Egypt and Israel saw, until recently, as a common enemy.

After Mubarak's ouster in February by a popular uprising, Egypt's new transitional Cabinet and ruling military council are taking a cooler line toward Israel and the U.S. Egypt has also been warming its ties with Israel's enemies, chiefly Hamas and its main backer, Iran.

Egypt's new foreign minister, Nabil al-Araby, said Thursday that the closure was about to end, calling the decision to close the crossing "a disgusting matter" in an interview with the Arab satellite channel Al-Jazeera.

Al-Araby said the crossing would be opened "in the coming days."

Israeli officials would not comment publicly Friday, but Israel is "troubled by recent developments in Egypt," an Israeli government official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because there had been no official comment.

Israel views the Gaza blockade as essential to minimizing the flow of weaponry and militants into the territory, where Palestinian squads regularly launch rockets at Israeli towns, and to pressuring Hamas.

"In the past, despite efforts by the Egyptian government, Hamas succeeded in building a formidable military machine. If those efforts were to cease, how much easier would it be for Hamas to build a terrorist military machine," the official said.

The decision appeared linked to the surprise announcement one day earlier that the two rival Palestinian factions, Hamas and Fatah, had signed a reconciliation agreement brokered by Egypt. The deal is scheduled to be signed on Wednesday in Cairo, Palestinian Authority spokesman Nabil Abu Rdeneh said Friday. It is to lead the way to a transitional unity government and elections.

That announcement was also greeted with dismay in Israel, which said it ruled out any chance of peace talks with a Palestinian government that includes the Hamas militants. Hamas, which rejects peace talks and is committed to Israel's destruction, is considered a terrorist organization by Israel, the U.S., the European Union and others.

The announcement on the border crossing also appeared to reflect a responsiveness by Egypt's new military rulers to street sentiment hostile to Israel and to the U.S. A recent poll showed more than half of Egyptians favor an annulment of the 1979 peace treaty with Israel.

The number of travelers currently crossing through Rafah is limited to approximately 300 a day and is subject to Egyptian security clearance that is often withdrawn. The other crossings available to Gaza's 1.5 million people are with Israel and are closed with few exceptions, such as emergency medical cases. Israel allows goods into Gaza with restrictions on construction materials it says could be used by militants.

In Washington, Jake Sullivan, the State Department's director of policy planning, said the U.S. would continue to work with Egyptian authorities on ensuring that weaponry and other material cannot cross the Gaza border. He said he could not comment on the changes in Egyptian policy.

The Israeli official said Friday that Israel was concerned about calls in Egypt for the abrogation of the three-decade-old peace agreement between the countries, by "the rapprochement between Egypt and Iran, and by the upgrading of the relations between Egypt and Hamas."

Hamas hailed the move. Taher Nunu, a Hamas spokesman, said Hamas "has received positive signals from Egypt about the mechanism that Egypt is going to adopt in the terminal," and has been informed by the Egyptians that "all future progress on Egypt's part is going to serve the interests of the people of Gaza."

Before the blockade was imposed, the crossing was supervised by a detachment of European observers known as EUBAM that was meant to block the movement of weapons and other contraband through the terminal. The new details of the crossing's functioning, including the role of the European observers, remains unclear.

Benoit Cusin, a EUBAM spokesman, said Friday that he was aware that discussions were ongoing among "Egypt and other parties" but that there had been "no decision on redeployment of EUBAM monitors."

The decision by Egypt marks a further cooling of ties with Israel. The peace agreement between the two countries, in return for which Egypt received the captured Sinai peninsula back from Israel and significant military and economic assistance from the U.S., has anchored regional stability for more than three decades.

This week's unity deal between Hamas and Fatah drew praise from Iran. The official IRNA news agency quoted Ali Akbar Salehi, the foreign minister, expressing hope the deal could accelerate "achieving great victories in confrontation with occupiers," meaning Israel.

___

Associated Press writers Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City, Gaza Strip; Nasser Karimi in Tehran, Iran; and Bradley Klapper in Washington contributed to this report.

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JERUSALEM — Egypt's announcement that it will open a key border crossing with the Palestinian Gaza Strip within days sparked concern in Israel on Friday and revealed how the upheaval in the Arab...
JERUSALEM — Egypt's announcement that it will open a key border crossing with the Palestinian Gaza Strip within days sparked concern in Israel on Friday and revealed how the upheaval in the Arab...
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08:51 AM on 05/06/2011
All goods to Gaza can now clearly pass into Gaza from Egypt. There is no blockade.

Meanwhile: "Daniel Barenboim, one of the world’s leading pianists and conductors, made an appearance this week for the first time in the Gaza Strip, arriving via the Rafah crossing."

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/features/israeli-conductor-daniel-barenboim-the-key-to-the-future-rests-in-gaza-1.359899
02:50 AM on 05/03/2011
Since downthread there is the usual hasbara rewriting of history going on, as a public service I’d like to point out that there were absolutely NO broadcasts by Arab governments, armies, police, private radio stations…none…telling Palestinians to leave their homes in 1948. This myth was debunked 50 years ago. Those posting the myth again here have had this pointed out to them several times. The only conclusion possible is that they are consciously prevaricating. Does this really surprise anyone?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blaming_the_Victims#.22Broadcasts.22_.28Christopher_Hitchens.29
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TheLonelyGod
The oncoming storm
03:06 AM on 05/03/2011
Sorry, but as usual the Palestinians themselves are more honest than their supporters:

Journalist writing about the events of 1948 Mahmud Al-Habbash, a regular writer in the official PA paper, Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, indicates in his column "The Pulse of Life" that the Arabs left Israel in 1948 only after political Arab leaders persuaded them to do so by promising the Arabs a speedy return to their homes in Palestine:

".The leaders and the elites promised us at the beginning of the "Catastrophe" [[the establishment of Israel and the creation of refugee problem] in 1948, that the duration of the exile will not be long, and that it will not last more than a few days or months, and afterwards the refugees will return to their homes, which most of them did not leave only until they put their trust in those "Arkuvian" promises made by the leaders and the political elites. Afterwards, days passed, months, years and decades, and the promises were lost with the strain of the succession of events."

[Term "Arkuvian," is after Arkuv - a figure from Arab tradition - who was known
for breaking his promises and for his lies."] "
[Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, December 13, 2006]

Notice how he didn't say anything about radio broadcasts. They weren't needed.
12:39 AM on 05/04/2011
I love this recasting of the myth. Only problem is, since they--for reasons unknown--sent this message out without the benefit of the easiest means of communication, how the hell did they spread this info? Smoke signals?

And don't cut and paste fake quotes from your echo chamber sites. Your quote doesn't exist outside the ziosphere. If you have the courage to post real information, post a link.
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Aussieposter
And so it begins
05:59 PM on 05/05/2011
For the sake of discussion, Let us assume what you gave posted it true and correct. So ..............bloody......................... what?

All you have recounted is a situation where civillians are told to get out of Dodge because there is going to be a war. Unarmed peasants have for centuries acted like good shepards and got the flock out of there when fighting is happeneing only to return when the fighting has stopped.

Once again not accepting the truth and accuracy of your premise but pretending that it is. Being told to leave because a war is about to happen, and leaving to avoid that war, does not change the legal rights pertaining to private property. It does not give others the right to refuse to allow one to return once the fighting of the war is over and is does not permit others to assume the rights to private property that they are not entitled to.

So I say again

So …………Bloody……………..What?
hfpf
Wake up World.
11:09 AM on 05/03/2011
The first to leave were roughly 30,000 wealthy Arabs who anticipated the upcoming war and fled to neighboring Arab countries to await its end. Less affluent Arabs moved to all-Arab towns to stay with relatives or friends.

All of those who left fully anticipated being able to return to their homes after an early Arab victory, as Palestinian nationalist Aref el-Aref explained in his history of the 1948 war:

The Arabs thought they would win in less than the twinkling of an eye and that it would take no more than a day or two from the time the Arab armies crossed the border until all the colonies were conquered and the enemy would throw down his arms and cast himself on their mercy.

By the end of January 1948, the exodus was so alarming the Palestine Arab Higher Committee asked neighboring Arab countries to REFUSE VISAS to these refugees and to seal the borders against them.

Israel's Proclamation of Independence, issued May 14, 1948 states:

...we yet call upon the Arab inhabitants of the State of Israel to preserve the ways of peace and play their part in the development of the State, on the basis of full and equal citizenship and due representation in all its bodies and institutions....We extend our hand in peace and neighborliness to all the neighboring states and their peoples, and invite them to cooperate with the independent Jewish nation for the common good of all.

.
12:42 AM on 05/04/2011
One single link? Of course not. An Israel apologist SAYS it's true. The facility Israel has with lies, the Goebbelsesque quality of it, of the hypocrisy in the declaration of independence--in the midst of one of the biggest ethnic cleansing operations of the 20th century--simply boggles the mind!
Michael II
Neither the one, nor the only
05:20 PM on 05/02/2011
It's nice that one of the first people to benefit from the freer flow of people through Rafah is actually Daniel Beirenboom and his orchestra. They will be playing a concert in Gaza this Tuesday.

Nice, as he will be the first Israeli not in combat gear that younger Gazans will have ever seen.
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Sam Bark
It's a MAD world after all...
03:42 AM on 05/03/2011
michael II -- I hope that Hamas will not use the occasion to time their rockets launching to the music.... LoL
Tony Andrews
Ὁ βίος βραχύς, ἡ δὲ τέχν
09:18 AM on 05/07/2011
Let us hope that he and his orchestra keep away from any temptation to play the 1812 overture, lest the trigger happy IDF mistake the orchestral "cannon" for the real thing!
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tallen
panem et circenses
01:26 PM on 05/02/2011
Egypt's muslim brotherhood also in mourning

CAIRO (AP) — Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, a conservative organization with links around the Islamic world, has condemned the killing of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden by U.S. forces as an “assassination.”
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5i0HTpAKSuOpIn8t-45o3F4VbyNZA?docId=fe0c8e11a3564fbd80d7388d4ce31a83
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Trollstein
Once you go Schwartz, you never go back baby
01:54 PM on 05/02/2011
The shock would be if they weren't. All these radical Islamic groups basically read off the same page of music. Namely, Islam is the destiny of this world and some people merely need more convincing then others.
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Nwo2012
Sue me, I boycott products from the settlements
04:30 PM on 05/02/2011
Oh look:

"There is no doubt that Obama is a greater threat to Israel than Osama was."

-Israeli National Union MK Aryeh Eldad

Cute.

Deputy Negev and Galilee Development Minister Ayoub Kara (Likud) said "Obama in the past gave breathing space and support to the terrorists due to his naivete, but if he returns America to [former president George W] Bush's policies of fighting terror, I have no problem with him."

Nice.
06:20 PM on 05/02/2011
That was Israel's and her spies plan all along.

To conflate America's ememy with Israel's and have Americans fighting Israel's enemies as if they are her own.

Thank God it's falling apart.

The cost so far has been astronomical given the size of the country of Israel and its population.
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Sam Bark
It's a MAD world after all...
01:19 AM on 05/03/2011
now2012 -- they are entitled to their opinion as well, same as you are.....LoL
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tallen
panem et circenses
09:41 AM on 05/02/2011
Palestinians in mourning over Bin Laden.

Hamas condemns killing of "holy warrior" bin Laden
05.02.11

The Palestinian Islamist group Hamas on Monday condemned the killing by US forces of Osama bin Laden and mourned him as an "Arab holy warrior".

"We regard this as a continuation of the American policy based on oppression and the shedding of Muslim and Arab blood," Ismail Haniyeh, head of the Hamas administration in the Gaza Strip, told reporters.
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4063399,00.html
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Iconcoclast
complicated laws are opportunities for scoundrels
11:24 AM on 05/02/2011
Yeah, mourning the death of Bin Laden is quite the prelude to peace in the region.
12:37 PM on 05/02/2011
Such nice people, let's give them a state!
09:09 AM on 05/03/2011
See what happens when we treat them like 3rd class citizens, steal their lands, their country and their future, and give it to a bunch of European immigrants?
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theuniversalcollective
from the ether that is net
08:46 AM on 05/02/2011
"Fox News reports from the Gaza strip: Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh says the operation is "the continuation of the American oppression and shedding of blood of Muslims and Arabs."

These guys truly never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity.
09:11 AM on 05/03/2011
I think, they are smart enough to realize that after 44 years, there are no opportunities when it comes to dealing with Israel. Let's not forget that haplessness breeds radicalism and violence breeds more violence.
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TheLonelyGod
The oncoming storm
08:18 AM on 05/02/2011
Egypt and Gaza are now open, but Hamas is preventing hundreds of people from leaving:

http://www.palpress.co.uk/arabic/?action=detail&id=5560

If it's the world's biggest prison, who are the wardens again?
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Json
Cynical dreamer, sarcastic idealist...
09:39 AM on 05/02/2011
Got that in english?
(Google translate sucks.)
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TheLonelyGod
The oncoming storm
10:05 AM on 05/02/2011
Afraid not.
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11:38 AM on 05/02/2011
Can you read Arabic?
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TheLonelyGod
The oncoming storm
11:42 AM on 05/02/2011
Obviously.
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Sam Bark
It's a MAD world after all...
01:44 AM on 05/02/2011
Rubalk and the rest of Israel haters -- No we do NOT know your Pallywood fairytales.... so please inform us, hpost has plenty of space for anti-Israel trash.......
When was the first time the Gazans did not have food and supplies.....? For sure they are short on pipes and explosives to build their Qassam rockets.... but do NOT worry soon enough the Egyptian will give them plenty….. of weapon and some hotheaded bozos will join them and attack Israel..... Losing EIGHT wars is not enough for the Arabs... they are inching for some more bloodshed.... Obviously, most of them are too young to remember the 1967 and 1973 wars, or have a very short memory….Just pity them and their moronic leaders…. Too bad Sadat lesson was forgotten.
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Amr Abouelleil
Egyptian-American and proud of both!
05:03 AM on 05/02/2011
Egyptians don't view the 1973 war as a loss, since the end result was the return of the Sinai to Egypt.
To many Egyptians, Sadat's lesson was to be alienated by other Arab countries for making peace with an Israel that continues to occupy Palestinian territory. I don't believe Arabs are either inching or itching for a war with Israel. You believe so because you receive a very constrained narrative of the Arab world.
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Sam Bark
It's a MAD world after all...
01:29 AM on 05/03/2011
amr A - If egypt cared so much for the Palis why they did not give them citizenship when Cairo ruled the Gaza strip, and alloed them free move to Egypt? And what is Egypt claim regarding the Palis, if you never took care of them and help them.... As they say in Arabic 'Calam Fahdi'....
Regarding 1973 HAVE IT YOUR WAY, of course Egypt won..... LMAO, today isd old history, I just hope Egypt will keep its side of the peace treaty .....
12:35 AM on 05/02/2011
I'm telling you, I feel it coming! Palestine is getting its stuff together to declare independence! Gaza has been reunited politically with West Bank..the Israeli embargo against them will soon be no more. Declaration is coming soon! Who would "recognize" their sovereignty immediately? Who would not?
freddyflotilla
Gone fishin'
11:40 PM on 05/01/2011
Skia..are you Phute,too?
07:35 AM on 05/02/2011
You have been pulled up before for your childish obsession,No option but to flag you. You need to grow up.
Flagged. Give yourself a break.
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theuniversalcollective
from the ether that is net
08:46 AM on 05/02/2011
But are you Skia too?
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Relpo Miraculous
Psychobiological Anthropology
11:07 AM on 05/03/2011
False flag attack. Comment flagged was not abusive. You should be warned, then banned from the system if you continue to abuse your privileges here.
freddyflotilla
Gone fishin'
11:36 PM on 05/01/2011
bin Laden down..Hamas leaders are next!
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Relpo Miraculous
Psychobiological Anthropology
11:08 AM on 05/03/2011
They are, indeed, in all likelihood next, as they have condemned the killing and but their support squarely behind terrorism.
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Nym22
10:28 PM on 05/01/2011
Good. Let Gaza have a reach to freedom. But if the weaponry they're lobbing at school buses becomes more lethal and accurate, the IDF should level Hamas
freddyflotilla
Gone fishin'
11:37 PM on 05/01/2011
why wait?
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Amryxx
politeness rules, but with sharpened edges
11:49 PM on 05/01/2011
I don't care what IDF do to Hamas, as long as they don't level the entire neighbourhood in the process.
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TheLonelyGod
The oncoming storm
02:10 AM on 05/02/2011
Well get Hamas to leave the neighborhood and/or evacuate the civilians first and that won't be an issue.
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BcemXAHA
Yerushalaim shel zahav
07:21 AM on 05/02/2011
No one would like that more. But that can ONLY happen if Hamas stops hiding in those neighborhoods and stops using their children as human shields.
09:57 PM on 05/01/2011
I am so happy to watch soon the Egyptians flow through the boarder like an ocean of justice and peace. I will be there in spirit, rejoicing from the sidelines. Most likely Iran and Syria will join you, and the rest will follow suit. It cannot be stopped. I could not stop it even if I wanted to, which I don't. It will be nothing short of the Liberation of the Palestinian People.
freddyflotilla
Gone fishin'
10:23 PM on 05/01/2011
Why would any Egyptians "flow through the border" into the human cesspool they created?
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BcemXAHA
Yerushalaim shel zahav
07:21 AM on 05/02/2011
Very good. People like you will stop bemoaning that there is a blockade.
freddyflotilla
Gone fishin'
09:39 PM on 05/01/2011
Egypt's Gaza plan> Other than to open the Rafah crossing and allow Hamas terrorists into Egypt..what is "The Gaza Plan"?? The blog never says. bad headline,HP!
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Jenna Bean
Sock Monkeys!
08:21 PM on 05/01/2011
Man them Zionists are sweating this big time!

Good luck trying to drive a wedge between these two groups, hopefully no Israeli's are hurt and exploited by their own government in the process.
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Sal Glen
01:22 AM on 05/02/2011
You mean them Jew's
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Nwo2012
Sue me, I boycott products from the settlements
06:22 AM on 05/02/2011
flagged
06:25 AM on 05/02/2011
Nop... Them Z|0nists.... U haven't been around here too long have u....
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Json
Cynical dreamer, sarcastic idealist...
10:49 AM on 05/02/2011
Anyone with any concern for israeli civilians is sweating this.
Should we not count you among the concerned?