NOVANEWS
by Stephen Lendman
On August 18, Israel aggressively entered Sinai, killing five Egyptian security force members and injuring seven others.
At issue was allegedly looking for unnamed attackers held responsible for eight same day Israeli deaths.
Filing an official protest, Egypt demanded an “urgent investigation,” explaining reasons and circumstances surrounding the incident. Withdrawing its ambassador from Tel Aviv also was threatened.
Refusing to apologize, Israel claimed militants responsible for killing Israelis came from Gaza through Sinai. No corroborating evidence was cited because there is none.
Israel lied about what has all the earmarks of another false flag to divert public attention from more pressing issues, including unmet social justice demands!
Egypt began its own inquiry.
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak blamed the victim, saying the incident “reflects the weakening of Egypt’s hold in the Sinai and the broadening of activities by terror elements.”
Egyptian officials responded angrily. Sinai governor Khaled Fouda rejected Barak’s comments, saying:
“We refute such statements and have increased security patrolling and checkpoints in Sinai.”
The incident also sparked public anger, noticeably in Cairo where protests rallied outside Israel’s embassy and continue. They denounced the attack, demanding authorities expel Israel’s ambassador, and end its 1979 peace treaty, following the 1978 Camp David Accords.
To diffuse tensions, Egypt walled off Israel’s embassy in recent days. It didn’t help. Protesters sprayed the two and a half meter high barrier with comments like:
“The people want the fall of the wall.”
Protests grew louder and angrier. On September 4, an unidentified man told Egyptian radio:
“Why would we protect a state that is killing our people? This is wrong, unfair and irritating.”
Visceral street anger expressed the same sentiment. On September 9, it erupted. New York Times writers David Kirkpatrick and Heba Afify headlined, “Protest of Thousands in Cairo Turns Violent,” saying:
Demonstrators Friday in Tahrir Square turned violent when “thousands….tore down a protective wall around the Israeli Embassy, while others defaced the headquarters of the Egyptian Interior Ministry,” expressing anger over lack of social justice progress and military junta repression.
Egypt’s state news agency said hundreds were injured and numerous arrests made. In fact, since Mubarak’s February ouster, thousands have been terrorized, tried in military tribunals, and imprisoned.
On Friday, protesters “scaled the walls of the Israeli Embassy,” removing Israel’s flag for the second time in less than a month. The earlier incident replaced it with an Egyptian one.
Using wooden poles and hammers, they tore down the restraining wall while chanting, singing and carrying Egyptian flags. They also broke into offices, tossed documents out windows, and allegedly attacked an employee inside.
Egyptian soldiers and security police finally stopped them, but by 3:00AM Saturday, thousands still battled security forces in streets. “Demonstrators threw rocks and gasoline bombs at the officers, sometimes forcing them to retreat, and the police fired back with tear gas.”
In response, Israeli ambassador Yitzhak Levanon, his family, and most embassy staff were flown out of the country for their safety.
Haaretz said an Israeli Air Force plane evacuated over 80 diplomats and their families.
Later reports said three protesters were killed.
Press TV reported that Egypt’s Information Minister Osama Heikal said Cairo will enforce “all articles of the emergency law to ensure safety.”
Egyptian political analyst Nabil Abdel Fattah said:
“This action shows the state of anger and frustration the young Egyptian revolutionaries feel against Israel, especially after the recent Israeli attacks on the Egyptian borders that led to the killing of Egyptian soldiers.”
Haaretz said an unnamed senior Israeli official denounced the overnight attack, calling it a “grave violation” of diplomatic norms and a “blow to peaceful relations” between both countries.
Netanyahu said Israel won’t compromise its peace treaty with Egypt, adding that regional turmoil shows he’s right to insist on security assurances in any future peace deal.
He also bogusly linked events in Cairo to stalled Middle East peace negotiations, pointing fingers away from who deserves blame. Instead, he insisted Israel must “defend its interests in the region.”
Left unsaid always is its belligerent way of doing it, making enemies, not allies, especially on Arab streets.
On September 10, New York Times writer Ethan Bronner headlined, “Beyond Cairo, Israel Sensing a Wider Siege,” saying:
“With its Cairo embassy ransacked, its ambassador to Turkey expelled and the Palestinians seeking statehood recognition at the United Nation, Israel found itself on Saturday increasingly isolated and grappling with a radically transformed Middle East where it believes its options are limited and poor.”
Context was entirely missing from his article, including:
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– longstanding below-the-surface Arab street anger over years of Israeli crimes of war and against humanity, as well as 44 years of illegal military occupation;
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– Israel’s premeditated May 31, 2010 murder of nine unarmed Turkish nationals aboard the Mavi Marmara humanitarian ship, bringing vital aid to besieged Gaza;
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– Israel’s refusal ever to apologize for its most grievous crimes; and
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– its collusion with Washington to block long overdue Palestinian statehood within 1967 borders (22% of historic Palestine), East Jerusalem as its capital, and full de jure UN membership.