http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=174349

   
Photo by: AP 
Iran rivalry behind Cairo's Hizbullah tension 
By JONATHAN SPYER 
30/04/2010 02:12 


Arab leaders in way of Iran's hegemonic ME goal. 
  
Hizbullah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah reacted angrily yesterday to an 
Egyptian court verdict which sentenced members of a terror cell organized by 
the movement in Egypt to prison terms.

The verdict, delivered on Wednesday, resulted in the sentencing of the 26 
members of the cell to jail terms varying between six months and 15 years. 

The conviction of the Hizbullah-organized cell in Egypt is the latest episode 
in the ongoing rivalry between Egypt and Iran, in which Hizbullah plays the 
role of a proxy force on behalf of its patrons in Teheran.

Egyptian-Iranian tension, in turn, is a reflection of the larger Iranian 
project for regional domination.

In a statement to the Kuwaiti al-Rai newspaper which was also carried on 
Hizbullah's official Web site, Nasrallah said that the verdicts "against the 
mujahidiin who were offering aid to the mujahidiin in the Gaza Strip are 
political adjudications and are arbitrary decisions in the right of those 
mujahidiin, those noble men." 

The Hizbullah leader vowed to "pursue political and diplomatic means to settle 
this matter and establish the rights of those brothers and remove them from 
prison." 

Hizbullah's differences with Egypt came to a head during Israel's Operation 
Cast Lead operation in Gaza. The Egyptian decision to keep the Rafah exits from 
Gaza sealed was a major contributing factor to the relative military success of 
the operation. Hizbullah was infuriated by the Egyptian stance, and Nasrallah 
called for a military mutiny in Egypt, and the overthrow of the regime.

The Egyptian media responded in kind, referring to Nasrallah as the "monkey 
sheikh" and a "son of garbage." Such enervating rhetoric reflects the differing 
views of Egypt and Hizbullah/Iran regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

But the recently convicted cell, led by Hizbullah operative Muhammad 
al-Mansour, was not convicted only for seeking to organize operations in aid of 
the Palestinians. Rather, according to presiding judge Judge Adel Abdul Salam 
Gomaa, it planned to carry out attacks on Egyptian soil, including the 
targeting of ships on the Suez Canal.

Mansour's lawyers denied this, saying that their client had proposed operations 
against Israeli targets in Egypt, but that Nasrallah had rejected it. 

Judge Gomaa, however, dismissed their protests, asking whether "targeting ships 
in the canal" and "targeting tourist resorts" could be considered action on 
behalf of the Palestinians. In other words, the cell led by Mohammed al-Mansour 
appears to offer proof of planned direct military activity by an Iranian proxy, 
targeted at a leading Arab country.

The Egyptian regime is evidently trying to avoid playing up this aspect of the 
trial. Cairo acts in its own interests and its own interests place it firmly on 
the American and Israeli side of the current regional divide. However, given 
widespread popular enmity for Israel and the west in Egypt, the government 
prefers to avoid excessively demonstrating this reality in public. 

Some reports of the trial suggested that the relative leniency of the sentences 
handed down reflected this Egyptian preference.

But whatever the public relations needs of the Egyptian regime, the revelation 
of the large, Hizbullah-led terror cell led by Mansour offers the latest 
glimpse into the modus operandi of Iran and its allies.

The targeting of shipping in the Suez Canal has no application in terms of the 
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But the canal provides billions of dollars in 
annual revenue for the Egyptian regime. A strike on a ship passing through the 
canal would constitute a major blow to Cairo.

Despite Mansour's identity as a member of Hizbullah, such a goal is of little 
relevance to the movement. It would, however, be an obvious interest for Iran, 
which seeks to subvert and undermine regional rivals, and to acquire threats 
and leverage against them.

A capacity to strike at the Suez Canal would also represent an asset for the 
Iranians in the event that they wished to respond to any future attack on their 
nuclear facilities.

According to a report published last year by the respected Intelligence Online 
Web site, Mohammed Mansour reported to the special operations branch of 
Hizbullah formerly controlled by Imad Mughniyeh. This element of Hizbullah, in 
turn, coordinates its activities with Gen. Faisal Bagherzadeh, the senior 
Iranian Revolutionary Guard officer in Lebanon.

So the activities of of the cell are further proof of the stark divide in the 
region, and of the extent to which the Iran-led 'resistance bloc's ambitions go 
beyond opposition to the US and Israel only.

The goal of the Iranian regime is to emerge as the hegemonic power in the 
Middle East. The traditional leading countries of the Arab world are an 
obstacle in the way of this ambition. Iran and its allies therefore organize to 
subvert them - albeit, as the trial in Cairo reflects, not always successfully. 

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