Features
Israel braces for 'new Middle East'
Israelis are watching events in Egypt with uncertainty as they debate how they 
will impact regional politics.
Mya Guarnieri Last Modified: 31 Jan 2011 08:38 GMT

Israelis are questioning whether a change of guard in Egypt will lead to a 
shift in regional politics [GALLO/GETTY]

As massive protests rocked neighbouring Egypt, the Sunday edition of a popular 
Hebrew-language daily announced the arrival of "the New Middle East". While 
most Israelis are not ready to make such bold claims, they are keeping a close 
eye on Egypt, watching with a mixture of excitement, admiration, uncertainty 
and fear.

It is widely understood here that a change of guard in Egypt could bring about 
a seismic shift in regional politics - and some worry that this might upend the 
uneasy peace between Israel and Egypt, never mind the treaty that the two 
signed in 1979 - so it is unsurprising that few Israelis are indifferent.

But interviews revealed something shocking: Some Jewish Israelis, fed up with 
the stalled peace process and frustrated with the status quo, said that they 
hope to see an uprising similar to Egypt's sweep through their own country.

Amongst them is a 33-year-old Jewish Israeli woman who lives in Tel Aviv and 
works in education. When asked if anti-government protests - which began in 
Tunisia and have spread to Egypt, Jordan and Yemen - might erupt here, she 
answered: "We're far from it. And I say this in happiness and sadness."

She explained that watching events unfold in Tunisia made her value Israel's 
stability. But, she added, "I think the appropriate thing here would be a 
revolution."

Why?

What the interviewee calls Israel's "hidden dictatorships" - political wheeling 
and dealing that gives the religious right a disproportionate amount of power 
and allows the Jewish settlers to keep on building illegally.

Rita, a 38-year-old housewife who asked to be identified by a pseudonym, 
remarked of Egypt's protests: "I wish that we had people that would go out to 
the streets like that."

'God will protect us'

But these women are, admittedly, part of the minority.

Speaking of the unrest in Egypt, Ron Chayek, a 35-year-old website manager, 
said: "What do I care if they're dying or killed?"

"The only problem it's going to give us is [in regards to] peace. But, 
otherwise, let them kill themselves."

Unlike interviewees who fear that a new government in Egypt might mean a new 
war for Israel, Chayek is not concerned. "You look in the sky," he said, 
pointing up, "and I'm speaking 100 per cent serious. He's going to take care of 
us."

Chayek, who seems proud that he served in the Givati Brigade, an infantry unit 
that was active in the Gaza Strip during Cast Lead, added: "They've attacked us 
many times before, the Arabs, and we've managed to defend ourselves. God 
protects all the time - God and the army.

"I'm not worried at all. If the people in Egypt want to kill themselves," he 
shrugged. "You write in Al Jazeera that Ron Chayek said 'a good Arab is a dead 
Arab'."

End of an era
Many Israelis believe the protests in Egypt signal the end of an era in 
Israeli-Egyptian relations [GALLO/GETTY]

Meir Nabat, the 53-year-old owner of a restaurant equipment store and an 
enthusiastic Al Jazeera fan, felt a deep sympathy for the Egyptians.

"It's a pity that the people are dying," he said, adding: "I hope that there 
will be a change to their benefit ... I hope that there will be democracy."

While some Israelis have expressed concern that extremist groups could use the 
unrest in Egypt as an opportunity to seize control of the country, Nabat 
remarked: "I think the young guys with Twitter and Facebook won't let it 
happen. They aren't suckers."

Nabat doubted that Israel would see protests like those in Egypt. Both Jewish 
Israelis and Palestinian citizens of the state are too comfortable financially, 
he said. "But in Jordan, yes, because it's a domino effect."

What about the West Bank? Might the Palestinians rise up against the 
Palestinian Authority? And, by extension, the Israeli occupation?

Eyal Zisser, the head of Tel Aviv University's Department of Middle Eastern and 
African History, answered: "I don't know. It's a good question and I have no 
answer for that."

What Zisser and a slew of Israeli op-ed writers seemed certain of, however, is 
that the protests signal "the end of an era in Israeli-Egyptian relations".

"It will not be the same, no doubt about it. The optimistic way of thinking of 
it is that it will be much colder," Zisser said, adding that a new regime might 
sever all ties with Israel.

"We'll have to wait and see."

Mubarak: 'Friend of the West'

A 28-year-old student, who preferred to remain anonymous, is concerned about 
the unrest in Egypt because the Israeli media tells him that it pleases Iran.

"I read that Iran is supporting the protests in Egypt because in 1979 there 
were protests like this in Iran and that's how the Islamic government came in," 
he said. "And I don't think that's what the [Egyptian] protesters want."

"It wouldn't be good for us," he added. "Mubarak is a friend of the Western 
world."

He emphasised that he trusts the Israeli media only "to a limited extent".

When asked if he is worried that the anti-government protests and unrest could 
make their way to Israel, the student answered: "It's possible that it will 
happen but I'm not scared."

Why?

"Because they won't arrive to Tel Aviv," he said, with a laugh.

If there is one feeling that seemed to unite all of Israel's citizens - Jewish 
and Palestinian - it is uncertainty.

Anat, a 44-year-old woman who works at a toy store in Jaffa (or Yafo), 
commented that the protests in Egypt are "really scary because what will become 
of the peace with Egypt? That's what I'm thinking about all the time".

A middle-aged Muslim housewife joined the conversation, adding: "I hope there 
won't be a mess here. That's all I hope."

'All the people'

A Muslim man who owns a small shop in Jaffa and preferred to remain anonymous, 
explained that he was speaking not for himself but for "a lot of people who 
think like me" and are excited about the protests.

"It's not one political party that did it," he remarked. "It's all the people. 
All the people."

And what about here? Will the people rise?

He laughed. "I don't think so. Even with all the mess here, we have democracy. 
Yesterday there was a protest in Yafo [Jaffa]," he said, referring to a 
demonstration against racism in Israel and the growing presence of Jewish 
settlers in the area.

"Here, it's possible to express what you feel," his wife added. "But there [in 
Egypt] it was forbidden."

But there is legislation currently making its way through the Knesset that many 
observers call anti-democratic. And the uncertainty that comes with regional 
unrest could allow an even more hawkish government to take hold of Israel - 
threatening what remains of democracy in the state and, perhaps, giving rise 
eventually to a Mubarak-like regime. Both the security establishment and the 
local media seem to be doing their best to whip up fear, paving the way for 
this.

So what do the changes in Egypt mean for Israel?

The husband answered: "Right now, the most important thing is democracy for 
[the Egyptians]."



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