Al-Jazeerah History  
	 
	
	
	Archives  
	 
	
	
	
	
	Mission & Name   
	 
	
	
	
	
	Conflict Terminology   
	 
	
	Editorials  
	 
	
	
	
	
	
	Gaza Holocaust   
	 
	
	
	Gulf War   
	 
	
	Isdood  
	 
	
	
	Islam   
	 
	
	
	News   
	 
	
	
	News Photos 
	  
	 
	
	
	Opinion  
	
	
	Editorials 
	  
	 
	
	
	
	
	US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)   
	 
	
	
	www.aljazeerah.info
	  
      
       
      
        
        
     | 
     | 
    
     
      Egyptian Historic Breakthrough With Russia, 
	  Not a Strategic Shift Yet  
	By Nicola Nasser 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 24, 2014 
	   The recent two-day first official visit in forty years by an 
	Egyptian defense minister to Russia of Egypt’s strongman Field Marshal Abdel 
	Fattah al-Sisi, accompanied by Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy, was indeed an 
	historic breakthrough in bilateral relations, but it is still premature to 
	deal with or build on it as a strategic shift away from the country’s more 
	than three-decade strategic alliance with the United States.   The US 
	administration sounds not really concerned with this controversy about an 
	Egyptian strategic shift as much as with the Russian President Vladimir 
	Putin’s welcome of al-Sisi’s expected candidacy for president.   
	“Egypt is free to pursue relationships with other countries. It doesn't 
	impact our shared interests,” said State Department deputy spokeswoman, 
	Marie Harf, on this February 13.   The United States, which has been 
	waging, by military invasion and proxy wars, a campaign of “regime changes” 
	across the Middle East, was miserably hypocritical when Marie Harf invoked 
	her country’s “democratic” ideals to declare that her administration “don't 
	think it's, quite frankly, up to the United States or to Mr. Putin to decide 
	who should govern Egypt.”   However, Pavel Felgenhauer, writing in the 
	Eurasia Daily Monitor on this February 13, described the visit as a 
	“geopolitical shift” that “could, according to Russian government sources, 
	‘dramatically reorient international relations in the Middle East’.” The 
	People’s Daily, the mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party, on the 
	following day described it as an “historic breakthrough” in Egyptian-Russian 
	relations and a “transformation in the strategic compass of Egyptian foreign 
	policy from Washington to Moscow.”   The main purpose of al-Sisi’s and 
	Fahmy’s visit was to finalize an arms deal reportedly worth two to four 
	billion US dollars, al-Ahram daily reported on February 13. The joint 
	statement released after the meeting of both countries’ ministers of defense 
	and foreign affairs in Moscow on the same day announced also that the 
	Russian capital will host a meeting of the Russian-Egyptian commission on 
	trade and economic cooperation on next March 28.   This is serious 
	business; it is vindicated also by the arrival in Cairo on this February 17 
	of the commander-in-chief of the Russian Air Force, Lieutenant General 
	Victor Bondarev, heading a six-member team of his commanders, on a four-day 
	visit, according to the Egyptian Almasry Alyoum online the following day. 
	  Egypt is the biggest strategic prize for world powers in the Middle 
	East. “Egypt – with its strategic location, stable borders, large 
	population, and ancient history – has been the principal power of the Arab 
	world for centuries, defining the movement of history there like no other,” 
	Germany’s former Foreign Minister and Vice Chancellor Joschka Fischer wrote 
	on last July 26. No wonder then the flurry of speculations worldwide about 
	whether Egypt’s Russian pivot is or is not a strategic shift.   In the 
	immediate proximity, this “new concern” has been “preoccupying Israel’s 
	strategists in recent weeks. They are beginning to worry about the high 
	momentum” with which Putin is capitalizing on America’s “hands off policy” 
	in the Middle East, according to DEBKAfile report on February 16. Al-Sisi’s 
	trip to Moscow, which “put him on the road to the independent path he seeks”  
	has “incalculable consequences”  the report said, adding that “he is 
	investing effort in building a strong regime that will promote the Nasserist 
	form of pan-Arab nationalism, with Egypt in the forefront.” “This policy may 
	well bring Egypt into collision with the state of Israel,” the report 
	concluded.   Nonetheless, two former Israeli cabinet ministers of 
	defense, namely Binyamin Ben-Eliezer and Ehud Barak voiced support for al-Sisi. 
	The first publicly supported his bid for presidency. Barak said that “the 
	whole world should support Sisi.” However, their voices seem to fall on deaf 
	ears in Washington D.C., or sounds like it.   Both men’s support is 
	consistent with Israel’s instructive official “silence” over the 
	developments in Egypt, which is still committed to its thirty five –year old 
	peace treaty with the Hebrew state. “Israel’s main interest,” according to 
	Israeli officials and experts, quoted by The New York Times on last August 
	16, “is a stable Egypt that can preserve the country’s 1979 peace treaty and 
	restore order along the border in the Sinai Peninsula,” which extends 270 
	kilometers (160 miles) from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea Israeli resort 
	of Eilat.   Within this context can be interpreted Israel’s closed 
	eyes to the incursion of Egyptian tanks and warplanes into what is 
	designated by the treaty as a “demilitarized” “Area C” of Sinai.   The 
	Litmus Test   Herein is the litmus test to judge whether al-Sisi’s 
	eastward orientation and his supposed “Nasserist” loyalties indicate or not 
	a strategic shift that trespasses the Israeli and US red line of Egypt’s 
	commitment to the peace treaty.   Senior associate of the Carnegie 
	Middle East Center, Yezid Sayigh wrote on August 1, 2012 that the United 
	States “will continue keeping a balance between its relations with 
	the (then)
	
	Egyptian president (Mohamed Morsi) and the Egyptian army.  The balance 
	will always shift to the side that ensures the continuity of Egypt's 
	commitment to the following:  The Camp David Peace Treaty, the retention of 
	a demilitarized Sinai, retaining multinational troops and observers led by 
	the US, maintaining gas exports to Israel, isolating Hamas, resisting Iran's 
	efforts to expand its influence, resisting al-Qaida, and keeping the Suez 
	Canal open.” (Emphasis added).   These are the bedrocks of Egypt’s 
	strategic alliance with the US and because they were and are still safe in 
	good hands under both the removed president Morsi and the prospective 
	president al-Sisi, it will be premature to conclude that the revived 
	Egyptian – Russians relations indicate any strategic departure therefrom. 
	  Preserving or discarding these Egyptian commitments is the litmus test 
	to judge whether Egypt’s revival of its Russian ties is a strategic maneuver 
	or a strategic departure.   Other indicators include the financial and 
	political sponsorship of al-Sisi’s government by none other than the very 
	close Arab allies of the US, like Jordan and in Saudi Arabia, United Arab 
	Emirates and Kuwait, who had already together pledged twenty billion dollars 
	in aid to al-Sisi and reportedly are funding his armaments deal with Russia. 
	  Saudi Al Arabia satellite TV station on this February 13 quoted 
	Abdallah Schleifer, a professor emeritus of journalism at the American 
	University in Cairo, as sarcastically questioning President Barak Obama’s 
	performance: “What an extraordinary accomplishment President Obama will take 
	with him when he retires from office – Kingdom of Saudi Arabia which 
	provided (late Egyptian president) Anwar Sadat with both moral and financial 
	backing to break with the Russians in the early 1970s and turn towards the 
	United States – may now finance an Egyptian arms deal with the Russians,” 
	Schleifer said.   Al-Sisi’s supposed “Nasserist” and “pan-Arab” 
	orientation could not be consistent, for example, with inviting the defense 
	ministers of the United Arab Emirates, Iraq, Bahrain, Morocco, and their 
	Jordanian counterpart Prime Minister Abdullah al-Nsour to attend the 40th 
	anniversary celebrations of the 1973 October War. Syria was Egypt’s partner 
	in that war and Jamal Abdul Nasser’s major “pan-Arab” ally, but it was not 
	represented. The countries which were represented were seriously against 
	Abdul Nasser’s Egypt and its pan-Arab ideology, but more importantly they 
	were and still are strategic allies of his US-led enemies and peace partners 
	of Israel.   US Aid Counterproductive   US whistleblowers 
	warning of an Egyptian strategic shift are abundant as part of blasting 
	Obama for his foreign policy blunders. For example, US foreign policy 
	scholars Tom Nichols and John R. Schindler, quoted on this February 13 by 
	The Tower.org staff, who agree that they rarely agree on anything, are 
	agreeing now that Obama’s administration is undermining “nearly seven 
	decades” of bipartisan American efforts aimed at “limiting Moscow’s 
	influence” in the Middle East.   But
	Nael Shama, writing on 
	Middle East Institute website on last December 16, said: “It can be argued 
	that Egypt's flirtation with Russia does not mean a shift in the country's 
	foreign policy away from the United States as much as an attempt to induce 
	the United States to shift its Egypt policy back to where it was before … in 
	order to pressure the United States and to arouse concern among American 
	politicians about the prospect of losing Egypt, encouraging them to amend 
	unfavorable policies.”   The Obama administration welcomed al-Sisi’s 
	assumption of power by calling off the biannual joint US-Egypt military 
	exercise "Bright Star" and halting the delivery of military hardware to 
	Egypt, including F-16 fighter jets, Apache helicopters, Harpoon missiles, 
	and tank parts and when Last January the US Congress approved a spending 
	bill that would restore $1.5bn in aid to Egypt, it was on the condition 
	(emphasis added) that the Egyptian government ensures democratic reform. 
	  Le Monde Diplomatique in November last year quoted veteran arms trade 
	expert Sergio Finardi as saying that the US aid money “never leaves US 
	banks, and is mostly transferred not to the target country but to US defense 
	manufacturers that sell the equipment to Egypt.”   More important, US 
	aid money is attached to Egypt’s commitment to the peace treaty with Israel. 
	Such a commitment is compromising Egyptian sovereignty in Sinai, which has 
	become a no-man land where organized crime, illegal trade in arms and 
	terrorist groups enjoy a free hand with a heavy price in Egyptian souls and 
	governance.   Either the provisions of the peace treaty are amended, 
	or the American conditions for aid are dropped altogether or at least 
	reconsidered to allow Egypt to fully exercise its sovereignty in Sinai, or 
	Egypt would look elsewhere for alternative empowerment, for example to start 
	“a new era of constructive, fruitful co-operation on the military level” 
	with Russia as al-Sisi told his Russian counterpart Sergei Shoigu, according 
	to the official Egyptian news agency MENA on last November 14.   All 
	the foregoing aside, Egypt wants to modernize its military-industrial 
	complex per se. Shana Marshall, associate director of the Institute for 
	Middle East Studies and research instructor at the George Washington 
	University, quoted by http://www.jadaliyya.com/ 
	on this February 10, called this “Egypt’s Other Revolution.” The thirty 
	five-year old arrangements with the United States are not helping out, but 
	worse they have become the main obstacle to fulfill this aspiration.   
	All these and other factors indicate that al-Sisi is in fact pursuing vital 
	Egyptian national interests and not seeking a strategic shift in his 
	country’s alliance with the US. The Russian opening is his last resort. It 
	is highly possible that he might backtrack should Washington decide not to 
	repeat its historical mistake when it refused to positively respond to 
	similar Egyptian military and development aspirations in the fifties of the 
	twentieth century, which pushed Egypt into the open arms of the former 
	Soviet Union.   ‘Abject Failure’ of US Aid   For Egypt to look 
	now for Russian armament and economic help means that the Egyptian – US 
	strategic cooperation since 1979 has failed to cater for its defense needs 
	and development aspirations.   Thirty five years on, during which a 
	regional rival like Iran stands now on the brink of becoming a nuclear power 
	with an ever expanding industrial military complex while the other Israeli 
	rival is already a nuclear power and a major world exporter of arms, Egypt’s 
	military stands weaker, seems stagnant, underdeveloped and pushed out of 
	competition while its population have become much poorer.   Nothing 
	much has changed since the US Middle East Policy Council in its winter 
	edition of 1996 published Denis J. Sullivan’s piece, “American Aid to Egypt, 
	1975-96: Peace without Development,” wherein he pointed out that “the 
	reality is that Egypt is far from a "model" of effective use of (US) foreign 
	assistance.”   The country, despite the fact that “the US aid program 
	in Egypt is the largest such program in the world” and that “in 21 years, 
	Egypt has received some $21 billion in economic aid from the United States 
	plus over $25 billion in military aid,” Egypt “remains poor, overpopulated, 
	polluted and undemocratic … In short, Egypt in 1996 continues to exhibit 
	virtually all the characteristics the United States has claimed to want to 
	change since it began its massive economic aid program in 1975,” Sullivan 
	wrote.     Seventeen years later David Rieff, writing in The New 
	Republic on this February 4, described what Sullivan said was a “failure” as 
	an “abject failure” of “the US development aid to Egypt.”   
	Militarily, Carnegie’s Yezid Sayigh’s paper of August 2012 quoted an 
	assessment of US embassy officials in a 2008 cable leaked by WikiLeaks as 
	saying that “tactical and operational readiness of the Egyptian Armed Forces 
	has degraded.” He wrote that “US officers and officials familiar with the 
	military assistance programs to Egypt describe the Egyptian Armed Forces as 
	no longer capable of combat.” He also quoted “leading experts on Egypt 
	Clement Henry and Robert Springborg” as saying that the Egyptian army’s 
	“training is desultory, maintenance of its equipment is profoundly 
	inadequate, and it is dependent on the United States for funding and 
	logistical support … despite three decades of US training and joint 
	US-Egyptian exercises.”   US Back Turned to Egypt   The 
	Tower.org on February 13 reported that the “White House two weeks ago pointedly 
	declined to invite Egypt to a summit of African leaders.”   That 
	was not the first indication that the US foreign policy has been alienating 
	Egypt since Field Marshal al-Sisi assumed power early last July in response 
	to a massive popular protest on last June 30 against the former president 
	Mohamed Morsi.   Since US Secretary of State John Kerry’ visit to 
	Egypt last November, who in this capacity toured the region more than eleven 
	times and seems to spend more time in the Middle East than in US, Kerry has 
	been dropping Egypt out of his itinerary. His president Obama, who is 
	scheduled to visit Saudi Arabia next March, receive Israel’s Prime Minister 
	Benjamin Netanyahu early in the month and had received King Abdullah II of 
	Jordan on this February 14, had no reported plans either to receive al-Sisi 
	or to visit his country, which was previously a regular stop for US top 
	visiting officials.   Is it a surprise then that al-Sisi’s first visit 
	abroad was to Moscow and not to Washington D.C., to meet with the Russian 
	president and not with his US counterpart?   Al-Sisi in an interview 
	with the Washington Post early last August accused the US of “turning its 
	back” to Egyptians. “You left the Egyptians, you turned your back on the 
	Egyptians and they won’t forget that,” he said.   However, al-Sisi 
	does by no means dream of disturbing the existing political order in the 
	Middle East, or coming to loggerheads with Israel or the US, but it seems 
	obvious that he’ is fed up with the preconditions attached to US aid that 
	have rendered his country’s military and economy backward in comparison to 
	regional highly upgraded rivals. The US did not help Egypt become a “success 
	story in economic development” as the USAID claims on its website.   
	Pavel Felgenhauer wrote on February 13 that, “It is clear Egypt is ready to 
	accept Russian aid and weaponry as it did during the Cold War in the 
	1950s–1970s to show the US it has an alternative source of support.”   
	Indeed, al-Sisi thanked his Russian counterpart for “giving the Egyptian 
	people economic and defense aid.” Putin said that he was “sure we can 
	increase trade to $5 billion in the future.” Russian Foreign Minister Sergey 
	Lavrov said: “We agreed to speed up the preparations of documents that will 
	give an additional impulse to the development of military and 
	military-technical cooperation.” It is noteworthy that all is without 
	preconditions, political or otherwise.   The Associated Press on 
	February 13 quoted Abdullah el-Sinawi, whom the AP identified as “a 
	prominent Cairo-based analyst known to be close to the military,” as saying 
	that al-Sisi “wanted to send a signal to Washington.” "Egypt needs an 
	international entrusted ally that would balance relations with America. 
	Egypt will be open to other centers of power without breaking the relations 
	with the US," he said.   Abdel-Moneim Said, another Egyptian analyst, 
	wrote in Al-Ahram Weekly on last November 21 that Egypt is “merely seeking 
	to expand its maneuverability abroad” and that “the Russian ‘bear’ that had 
	come to Egypt has had its claws clipped”: “Soviet Union has collapsed, the 
	Warsaw Pact is dead, and the Cold War is over … (and) the US GDP … is eight 
	times more than Russia’s;” moreover the US-led world alliance accounts “for 
	80 per cent of global gross production and a larger percentage of the 
	world’s modern technology.”   True, Egyptian Foreign Minister Fahmi 
	said on last October 18 that the “Egyptian-American relations have changed 
	after 30 June for the first time in 30 years to a peer relationship” and 
	that “Egyptian decision making is now independent from any state.” A day 
	earlier he told the state-run Al-Ahram newspaper that the bilateral 
	relations were in “a delicate state reflecting the turmoil in the 
	relationship.” “The problem,” he said, “goes back much earlier, and is 
	caused by the dependence of Egypt on the US aid for 30 years.”   
	Therefore, “Egypt is heading toward Eastern powers,” Saeed al-Lawindi, a 
	political expert at Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, 
	told Xinhua on February 14, but Talaat Musallam, a strategic and security 
	expert and a former army general, described al-Sisi's Russian pivot as “a 
	kind of strategic maneuver.” Musallam was vindicated by Fahmi’s repeated 
	assertions that “Egypt’s closeness with Russia is not a move against the 
	US,” i.e. not a strategic departure from the United States.   However, 
	international relations are not static; they have their own dynamics. Should 
	the US passive sensitivity to Egyptian aspirations continue to be hostage to 
	the 1979 Camp David accords and the Russian opening continue to cater for 
	Egypt’s military as well as economic vital needs, the “strategic maneuver” 
	could in no time turn into a strategic shift.   Nicola Nasser 
	is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the 
	Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
	nassernicola@ymail.com 
	 
       
       
       | 
     | 
     
      
      
      
      
     |