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Egypt working with Israel

September 8, 2012

Egypt's military has been coordinating its offensive against Islamist militants in the Sinai Peninsula with Israel. Cairo said it has killed 32 militants and arrested 38 people since "Operation Sinai" began in August.

https://p.dw.com/p/165Tq
Palestinian travellers pass an Egyptian soldier standing guard on the Egyptian side of the Rafah border, to cross over to Gaza at Rafah city, some 350 km (217 miles) northeast of Cairo August 10, 2012. Egyptian military forces have captured six "terrorists" in the Sinai region after an attack on a police station earlier this week that killed 16 border guards, state television quoted a military source on Friday as saying . Egypt opened the Rafah border on Friday to allow the return of pilgrims from Saudi Arabia and those stranded on their way back to Gaza, the state news agency said, citing a high-ranking official, without outlining how long it would stay open. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany (EGYPT - Tags: POLITICS CIVIL UNREST MILITARY)
Image: Reuters

Egyptian military spokesman Colonel Ahmed Mohammed Ali told reporters on Saturday that "the deployment of the armed forces on all the territory of Sinai is not a violation of the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel."

"Egypt is coordinating with the Israeli side over the presence of Egyptian armed forces in Sinai. They know this," Ali said during a news conference in Cairo.

After the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, Egypt and Israel signed a 1979 peace treaty, in which the Jewish State agreed to return the Sinai Peninsula to Cairo under the condition that the region be demilitarized.

But since the overthrow of Egypt's US-backed former president Hosni Mubarak in February 2011, Sinai has increasingly become a staging ground for attacks by Islamist militants against Israel, which shares a border with the region.

Cautious Israeli support

On August 5, militants ambushed a security checkpoint, killing 16 Egyptian soldiers and breaching Israel's border before being killed in an Israeli airstrike. Egypt's democratically elected Islamist leader, Mohammed Morsi, subsequently ordered the armed forces to bring the region under control.

Morsi is a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, which is traditionally more hostile to Israel and publicly supportive of the Palestinians than the Mubarak regime was. His election raised concern that the Egypt-Israeli peace treaty, an anchor of regional stability, could be called into question.

"They must act against terror and if they have to bring in troops, let them do so," Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said last week in an interview with Israel's army radio. "And when it ends, they must take them out."

A file photograph dated 13 August 2008, shows a Palestinian worker digging a new tunnel between Gaza Strip and Egypt in Rafah refugee camp, southern Gaza Strip.
Smuggling tunnels are used to transfer food and fuel as well as weapons between Gaza and SinaiImage: picture alliance / dpa

Sinai-Gaza Strip smuggling tunnels

Colonel Ali said that some 31 smuggling tunnels connecting Egypt to the Gaza Strip had also been destroyed in the military offensive. The Gaza Strip is controlled by the Islamist militant group Hamas. Israel has blockaded the territory since 2006, after one of its soldiers was captured. The soldier has since been released.

The tunnels are used to smuggle food, fuel and other materials in and out of Gaza. But they are also used to transport weapons. Ali said the military had "seized arms, rockets, RPGs (and) automatic rifles."

"The operation will continue until its goals have been achieved ...," Ali said. "These are not just military goals but also developmental goals for the Sinai."

slk/mkg (AFP, AP)