JERUSALEM,
July 7 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Egyptian intelligence chief
General Omar Soleiman met Sunday with top Israeli officials and
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, in what Israeli sources cited as
an attempt to closely monitor reforms to the Palestinian Authority and
prevent chaos in the Palestinian occupied territories.
Soleiman
met with Israeli Defense Minister Binyamin Ben Eliezer in a Jerusalem
hotel at 10:00 am (0700 GMT), Defense Ministry officials said.
He
later met with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Foreign
Minister Shimon Peres, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Soleiman
expressed Egypt's concern at the ongoing bloodshed after almost 22
months of Palestinian Intifada against the Israeli occupation. In
recent days, Israeli forces have virtually occupied and locked down
the whole of the West Bank.
The
Egyptian spymaster then traveled north to Ramallah in the West Bank to
see Arafat.
Egypt
played an important role in plans to overhaul the much-criticized
Palestinian security services, which failed to prevent resistance
groups attacking Israel, a matter seen as their only task by Israel
and the United States.
Soleiman
was expected to be accompanied by Osama al Baz, political advisor to
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, but officials in Egypt said they had
no news of his arrival.
The
visit "comes in the light of attempts to emerge from the crisis
in the region caused by Israeli policies," Egypt's Foreign
Minister Ahmed Maher told reporters in Cairo Saturday.
Israeli
Defense sources, meanwhile, said Egypt is particularly concerned over
the potential eruption of chaos in the territories, therefore the
dispatching of Soleiman to Israel.
"The
Egyptians are coming to follow the reforms closely because they are
very much concerned that there not be chaos here," said one
senior defense official, reported Israeli daily newspaper The
Jerusalem Post.
Peres,
for his part, was quoted by Israeli daily Ha’aretz, as telling
Soleiman that the Palestinian Authority had to combat terrorism, and
had to crack down on militant groups such as the Islamic Hamas
movement and Islamic Jihad.
Mubarak
announced the mission a few days ago saying that he is concerned that
the situation may deteriorate, leading the "entire region into
anarchy." Officials in Cairo described the intelligence chief's
visit as "overly important."
Israel
Radio quoted sources in Jerusalem as saying that the Egypt wants to
increase its involvement in implementing PA reforms and also wants a
role in selecting a new Palestinian leadership, should Arafat step
aside.
It
is worth mentioning that Mubarak has repeatedly announced that the
Palestinians are the only people entitled to choose their own
leadership.
In
a separate related development, a veteran Egyptian well-informed
political writer, on a TV program broadcast over the weekend, and
widely covered on Egyptian papers, warned against Egypt’s
involvement in any security arrangement for the Palestinian
territories.
“A
security vacuum [in the Palestinian territories] is sure to take
place, in light of the deterioration of the abilities of the
Palestinian Authority,” said Mohammad Hassanien Hiekal, on the
Egyptian Dream TV Private Channel.
The
former Minister of Information, during the rule of President Nasser,
cited a written promise from Egypt’s assassinated former President
Sadat, to former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, in which the first
committed Egypt to intervene in the Palestinian territories, to
preserve security, should a security vacuum take place.
Hiekal
then warned against “getting Egyptian security forces involved in
the West Bank and Gaza,” asserting it would be a very hurting move
“not only to Egypt’s role in the Arab World, but also to its
strategic national interests”.
However,
an Egyptian political analyst, speaking to IslamOnline Sunday, on
condition of anonymity, said Israel was trying to make use of
Egypt’s interest in restoring order to the Palestinian land, so as
to implicate the biggest Arab state as conspiring against the
Palestinians.
“We
have to be very careful, in this critical stage of our history, not to
fall into Israeli traps. Soleiman’s visit could simply be no more
than a political step to monitor the situation. It is not logic to
send Egyptian security forces to protect Israel against the
Palestinians. No sane man can even think about such a move,” he
added.
Additional
reporting by Khaled Mamdouh, IOL Staff.