CAIRO (AP) --
A fiery tirade against Jews by the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood's leader
highlights one of the foremost diplomatic challenges facing the
country's new Islamist President Mohammed Morsi as he balances popular
sentiment with the need for security relations with Israel.
The
Brotherhood's supreme leader Mohammed Badie called on Muslims worldwide
this week to defend Jerusalem, saying "Zionists only know the way of
force." He said that Jews were spreading "corruption," had slaughtered
Muslims and desecrated holy sites.
Badie's
condemnation went well beyond the harsh criticism of Israel and its
policies that is common in Egypt, opening even greater friction between
the country's most powerful political group and its Jewish neighbor. And
it will likely put more pressure on Morsi, who ran for president as a
Brotherhood candidate, to take a more assertive role than his
predecessor had in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Morsi
made no public comments about Badie's remarks, the strongest criticism
against Israel since Morsi took office in June. His spokesman, Yasser
Ali, did not immediately respond to phone calls seeking comment.
Eli
Shaked, a former Israeli ambassador to Egypt, said the Brotherhood's
statement was aimed at deflecting attention from Morsi's troubles in his
first 100 days in office, from fuel shortages to mounting piles of
garbage on the streets.
"Every time there is
domestic tension in the new Egypt, Israel and the Jews will be targeted
and every time the Egyptian street is tense or protests the Muslim
Brotherhood will bring the anti-Semitic genie out of the bottle," he
said Saturday.
Israel has increasingly become
worried about the ascendance of the formerly repressed Brotherhood to
power after last year's ouster of Hosni Mubarak, who was often pictured
warmly greeting Israeli officials in Cairo.
The
two nations share security concerns about their volatile border area,
and both control entry and exit points for the Palestinian Gaza Strip.
Islamic militants in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula have carried out attacks
this past year against security forces from both countries.
Tensions
were stoked last year when the Israeli embassy was ransacked by
Egyptian protesters after a cross-border shootout that killed six
Egyptian policemen. This summer, 16 Egyptian soldiers were gunned down
in Sinai by suspected Islamic militants during the Islamic holy month of
Ramadan. Israeli officials grumbled that Egypt had increased the number
of troops there to battle the militants without coordinating the move
first with Israeli officials, as the nations' 1979 peace accord
stipulates.
Morsi has avoided speaking of
Israel in public, only making pledges to respect Egypt's international
agreements and the peace accord. The treaty, the first between Israel
and an Arab country, has been a foundation for regional stability for
more than three decades.
This summer, new
tensions arose when Israel said Morsi wrote back to Israeli President
Shimon Peres, who had sent the Egyptian president a letter wishing him
well on the start of Ramadan. Morsi's office denied sending the message.
The
69-year-old Badie, who served 15 years in prison in his 20s for his
Islamist views and was elected to his post in 2010, is the Brotherhood's
eighth supreme leader since its founding in 1928. His statement
reflects the group's overall position toward Palestinian aspirations for
statehood and control of East Jerusalem, a holy site for both Muslims
and Jews. He does not have sole authority over group decisions, but
presides over the group's top council that vets major issues.
Badie's
statement was published on the group's website and emailed to reporters
on Thursday, coinciding with the annual Islamic Hajj pilgrimage.
Muslims used to pray toward al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem before praying toward Mecca in Saudi Arabia.
"It
is time for the Muslim ... to unite for the sake of Jerusalem and
Palestine after the Jews have increased the corruption in the world, and
shed the blood of (Muslims)," Badie said. The comments were denounced
as hate speech by organizations that track anti-Semitism.
Peace
talks between the Israelis and Palestinians have stalled over Israel's
refusal to stop Jewish settlements in the West Bank, which Palestinians
claim as their future state.
Gamal Soltan, a
political science professor at the American university in Cairo, said
the Brotherhood may be playing to a regional audience in evoking the
Palestinian crisis.
"Morsi as president,
trying to act as a statesman, is responsible for running the country.
Badie has more freedom to express views," Soltan said.
Israeli
lawmaker Danny Danon called on the United States and the European Union
to take action, adding that such "incitement and anti-Semitism in
Egypt" must stop before Washington sends more financial aid to Cairo.
"The
direction of the new Egyptian government is very worrying and we are
following with great concern what is being said and done and what is not
being done there against extremists," he said in a telephone interview
Saturday.
Brotherhood spokesman Mahmoud
Ghozlan said Israel's suspected possession of nuclear weapons coupled
with wars in the Gaza Strip and Lebanon and "the slaughter of
Palestinians and expansion of settlements" means that relations with
Egypt cannot be "normal."
Ghozlan insisted the
Egyptians would adhere to the terms of the 1979 treaty, "but we are
dealing with Israel at the limits of the treaty.
"Improved
relations were with the former regime ... against the will of the
people, the will of Arab people and the will of Palestinians. Now
relations are different."
Beyond religious
links to Jerusalem, the Brotherhood inspired the formation of Islamic
militant groups around the Middle East, including the Palestinian Hamas.
Badie, who was once part of a group of radical members charged with
seeking to overthrow Egypt's government, has since renounced violence,
but supports Hamas in its "resistance" against Israel and met with Hamas
premier Ismail Haniyeh last year in Cairo.
Soltan, the political science professor, warned that the Brotherhood and Morsi cannot continue this "duality" for long.
"They
continue to be torn apart between ideology on the one hand and politics
on the other," he said. "To survive as a president for Egypt he has to
pursue a moderate policy vis-a-vis Israel and there will definitely be
people in the Brotherhood who don't like that."
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