Pro-Israel Advocates Push for Continued Aid to Egypt

  • by Jim Lobe (washington)
  • Inter Press Service

"The last thing we want is for Egypt to become a failed state…" he wrote in a USA Today column Friday.

Similarly, the top Republican and Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee issued a joint statement Friday suggesting that Washington give the military the benefit of the doubt before taking action.

"It is now up to the Egyptian military to demonstrate that the new transitional government can and will govern in a transparent manner and work to return the country to democratic rule," said Republican Rep. Ed Royce and Democrat Rep. Eliot Engel – both of whom are close to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC).

"We are encouraged that a broad cross-section of Egyptians will gather to rewrite the constitution," they added.

Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal's hard-line neo-conservative editorial board stressed Washington had too much at stake to disassociate itself in any way from the military, insisting that "cutting (military aid) off now would be a mistake. Unpopular as America is in Egypt, 1.3 billion dollars in annual military aid buys access with the generals. U.S. support for Cairo is written into the Camp David peace accords with Israel," according to its lead editorial Friday.

It added that Egyptians "would be lucky if their new ruling generals turn out to be in the mold of Chile's Augusto Pinochet…"

Other pro-Israel neo-conservatives insisted that Morsi's tenure proved that Washington had been mistaken in engaging the Brotherhood or political Islam.

"(T)he lesson from Egypt is that democracy may be a blessing for people capable of self-government, but it's a curse for those who are not," wrote the Journal's Pulitzer Prize-winning foreign affairs columnist, Bret Stephens, on the eve of the coup. "There is a reason Egypt has been governed by pharaohs, caliphs, pashas and strongmen for 6,000 years."

Added the New York Times columnist David Brooks even more broadly, in a column entitled "Defending the Coup": "It has become clear – in Egypt, Turkey, Iran, Gaza, and elsewhere – that radical Islamists are incapable of running a modern government. …It's not that Egypt doesn't have a recipe for a democratic transition. It seems to lack even the basic mental ingredients."

More moderately, Bush's senior democracy and Mideast adviser, Elliott Abrams, called in nationalreview.com for suspending aid pursuant to the law, but noted that, because most of that assistance is already obligated, "…an interruption of aid for several months is no tragedy, so long as during those months we give good advice, stay close to the generals, continue counter-terrorism cooperation, and avoid further actions that create the impression we were on Morsi's side."

*Jim Lobe's blog on U.S. foreign policy can be read at http://www.lobelog.com.

© Inter Press Service (2013) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service

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