http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0117/p01s03-wome.html

Why is Egypt airing insurgent TV from Iraq?
Al Zawraa's broadcasting of Sunni attacks on American soldiers 
highlights sectarian politics.
By Sarah Gauch | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

CAIRO - Al Zawraa television station, the face of Iraq's Sunni 
insurgency, shows roadside bombs blowing up American tanks, dead and 
bloody Iraqi children, and insurgent snipers taking aim and firing.

And all this blatant anti-Americanism is broadcasting 24/7 on an 
Egyptian government-controlled satellite provider from one of 
Washington's closest allies. Even though Iraq and the US have asked 
Egypt to pull the plug, the station remains on the air.

The question is, why? While Nilesat, which broadcasts Al Zawraa, argues 
that it's airing the channel for purely commercial reasons, analysts 
point to the political benefits for Egypt.

Some say the country's reluctance to shut down the channel shows that 
Egypt, predominantly Sunni, may be taking a stand against what it sees 
as the unjust aggressiveness of Iraq's Shiite-led government and the 
dangers of Iran's influence there.

"With Iran flexing its muscles in Iraq and Lebanon and talking about 
becoming a nuclear power, all of this puts the Sunni Arab regimes -- 
Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan -- on the defensive," says Lawrence Pintak, 
director of American University in Cairo's television journalism program 
and author of "Reflections in a Bloodshot Lens: America, Islam, & the 
War of Ideas."

Mr. Pintak says Egypt's decision to keep Al Zawraa on the air plays into 
the Sunni-Shiite cold war that has descended on the region, caused 
largely by sectarian bloodshed in Iraq and Iran's nuclear ambitions. In 
essence, he says, it's a show of support for fellow Sunnis.

American officials have reportedly called the station "utterly 
offensive," saying that closing it down is a priority.

But one Egyptian government official, who asked to remain anonymous, 
reiterated Nilesat's stand that the station remains on air purely for 
commercial reasons. "We're merely a carrier of this station. We're not 
producing it. This is a straightforward business deal," he says, adding 
that, "none of us would reject the principle of freedom of speech and 
broadcasting for everyone."

Egypt has a history, though, of arresting bloggers and journalists and 
violently dispersing protests critical of Egyptian President Hosni 
Mubarak's government. On Saturday, Egyptian authorities detained an Al 
Jazeera journalist for allegedly fabricating scenes of torture in 
Egyptian police stations. The journalist was later released.

If Nilesat should buckle under US pressure, however, Al Zawraa will soon 
have other venues.

Station owner Mishan al-Jabouri says he's just signed contracts with 
Paris-based satellite provider Hot Bird and Emirates-based Arabsat. He 
also hopes to sign a contract soon with an American satellite company, 
which he didn't want to name, and to open new studios in Paris. American 
subtitles, too, are in the offing, he says.

"I want to show people everywhere what the Americans are doing to my 
country," says Mr. Jabouri, a former member of Iraq's parliament, now 
based in Damascus, "what American democracy has done to Iraq, how it has 
killed children, what has happened in the prisons, how the Americans 
gave Iraq to Iran."

While many see Nilesat as Al Zawraa's staunch supporter, Jabouri 
complains that the satellite provider is already reacting to US pressure 
by raising technical obstacles that prevent him from sending new footage 
from the field, forcing him to loop already-broadcast material.

Al Zawraa began two years ago as an above-ground, hard-line Sunni TV 
station, based in Iraq, until the Iraqi government closed it down last 
November, around the time Saddam Hussein was sentenced to death. Today, 
it's an underground station with brutal, no-holds-barred content, often 
amateur, shaky footage showing American soldiers crumpling to the ground 
after being shoot, and alleged American atrocities against Iraqi 
civilians. The station's anchors wear military fatigues and rail against 
the Shiite-led Iraqi government.

The Iranian flag is superimposed over Iraq's Shiite leaders shown on air 
and news crawls call on viewers "to liberate Iraq from occupying US and 
Iranian forces" and say that "the mafia" of Moqtada al-Sadr are all 
"criminals and thieves."

The station closely resembles Islamic extremist websites, with even 
religious chanting backing up some footage, although Jabouri emphasizes 
that his station has no ties to Al Qaeda.

The business deal between Al Zawraa and Nilesat is all the more curious, 
commentators say, since Islamic extremism remains a threat in Egypt and 
Al Zawraa appears the perfect militant recruiting tool. But, it seems 
Egypt is more concerned about reasserting its leadership in the Sunni 
Arab world than it is in gagging a possible militant mouthpiece, 
analysts say.

This is also a sign that Egypt may be further distancing itself from 
Washington. Recently, it defiantly announced a nuclear energy program of 
its own and criticized Mr. Hussein's execution last month.

However, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met with Egyptian 
officials Monday to shore up this country's support for American efforts 
in Iraq. Ms. Rice is traveling through the Middle East on a trip 
intended largely to bolster support for President Bush's new plan to 
stabilize Iraq and to reassure the US's Arab allies of its commitment to 
Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking. Arab states are anxious for Washington 
to renew efforts to find a solution to the historical conflict, which 
they say is the underlying cause of the region's political problems.

In Egypt, Ms. Rice said, "We share risk and we share responsibility, 
because this is an area of the world which will very much be affected by 
how Iraq turns out."

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit, a frequent critic, was 
ready to give Mr. Bush's plan the benefit of the doubt. "We are 
supportive of that plan because we are hopeful that the plan would lead 
ensure the stability, the unity, and the cohesion of the Iraqi government."

. Material from Reuters was used in this report.

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