Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Egypt's Mubarak: Hamas invited Israeli offensive

KUWAIT (Reuters) - Egypt's president accused Hamas on Monday of inviting Israel's three-week offensive against Gaza by not extending their ceasefire when it expired last month.. You all know that efforts Egypt had undertaken to extend the ceasefire and our warnings that a refusal by factions to extend it was an open invitation to Israeli aggression," Hosni Mubarak told a summit of Arab leaders in Kuwait.

He said Egypt would continue its efforts to achieve a reconciliation between Palestinians. "Without it (Palestinian unity) no stability will be realized for Gaza and no rebuilding and no end for its embargo," Mubarak said.

Hamas, the Islamist militant group which won 2006 parliamentary elections, has ruled Gaza since ousting Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah faction in 2007. Fatah still holds sway in the occupied West Bank.

The Arab summit in Kuwait, initially meant to focus on the economy, has been overshadowed by Israel's offensive against Gaza, which killed more than 1,300 Palestinians and was suspended on Sunday.

"We will make every possible attempt (but) if the factions do not respond to our efforts, then we tell them God helps those who help themselves," Mubarak said.

Mubarak said that resisting occupation, while legitimate, should also take into account both gains and losses.

(Reporting by Ulf Laessing and Rania El Gamal, editing by Tim Pearce)

Comment: It is important to observe the response inside Egypt and around the rest of the Arab world to his comments. There is a huge battle for power in many of these countries as the younger generation of "leaders" are about to assume power. Interesting to see the aging leaders position themselves and their countries for the future-this is a critical moment in Arab history.

3 comments:

libhom said...

Mubarak is a fool. That kind of butt kissing will further destabilize his tenuous regime.

Anonymous said...

At the very least, we know that deep inside the mind of at least one, so called moderate Arab leader, lives the notion the "violence breeds violence”, and the realization that the end does not justify the means. I would only hope that more of the Middle East citizenry can see beyond the emotional "resistance", and employ methodology that can derive real benefits for the improvement of Gaza's situation. I don't fault the Israelis for acting in their citizen’s defense. Wouldn't any government do the same for their populations? Isn't that the principal reason for a government’s existence?

Anonymous said...

I can't agree less with what "Anonymous 1" has mentioned--wouldn't any government do the same (in defense of its people)?

Remember what China warned when racial massacre erupted in Indonesia years ago? They were the 2nd, 3rd generation Chinese in Indonesia and yet China was infuriated with the incident.

Wouldn't Israel, after ages of tolerance, act on behalf of its citizens in the south constantly living under continuous pounding of rockets and bombings from across the border!