When the UAE and Bahrain officially normalised relations with Israel on 15 September, US President Donald Trump hailed “the dawn of a new Middle East”.
Egypt is today waking up to what this new era spells for it. There are two types of disaster for Egypt contained in the implicit bid of the UAE to become Israel’s main Arab trading partner – both prospective and immediate disasters.
Overnight, Sisi’s canal will be undercut by a cheaper means of getting oil from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean
To start with the long-term peril first, a desert oil pipeline that was once operated as a secret joint venture between the Shah’s Iran and Israel could play a big role in connecting the Arab pipeline grid to the Mediterranean. The 254-kilometre Europe Asia Pipeline Company’s pipeline system runs from the Red Sea to the Israeli port of Ashkelon.
Along with the pipeline, Dubai’s state-owned DP World is partnering with Israel’s DoverTower to develop Israeli ports and free zones, and to open a direct shipping line between the Red Sea port of Eilat and Dubai’s Jebel Ali port.
Neither the pipeline nor the port link-up is good news for the Suez Canal, which Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi just spent $8bn widening. That includes the money he forced Egyptian businessmen and ordinary shareholders to put into the doomed project. Overnight, Sisi’s canal will be undercut by a cheaper means of getting oil from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean.
There are other, more immediate perils for his regime. With the normalisation deal, Cairo loses the role it enjoyed for decades of mediating relations between Arab states and Israel. With that came ownership of the so-called Palestinian card as Egypt was the reference point for all Palestinian factions – arranging ceasefires between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, or reconciliation meetings between Fatah and Hamas in Cairo. It is significant that the latest attempt to reconcile Fatah and Hamas took place in Ankara not Cairo.
For commentators such as Mohamed Ismat, writing in Shorouk News, the loss of Egypt’s status goes even further: “The entire Arab national security system, with all its military, political and economic dimensions, will be utterly dismantled. All Arab world rhetoric about freedom, unity and independent development will be ossified and stored in warehouses,” he writes.
“Throughout the years of confrontation with Israel, Egypt played the main role in determining the Arab reactions despite its disagreements with this or that Arab state. However, this situation will not continue. Israel aspires to replace Egypt and lead the Arab region according to new equations that will bring down all the institutions of common Arab action, foremost among them the Arab League itself.”
Game changer
Along with status, Egypt is losing hard cash. Both Saudi Arabia and the UAE have stopped funding Sisi’s military dictatorship, into which they had poured billions of dollars. Saudi Arabia has stopped funds and oil going to Egypt because of its balance-of-payments crisis, and Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed has found more inviting baubles to play with. Pouring money into the bottomless pit of Sisi’s pockets must seem so much like yesterday.
Of particular interest to Israel is the Mubadala Investment Company in Abu Dhabi, one of the UAE’s sovereign wealth funds worth $230bn. One Israeli academic who has spent time in Abu Dhabi called this fund a “game changer” for Israeli high tech.
But the prospect of Emirati investment switching from Egypt to Israel is already changing the game for some businessmen in Cairo. Salah Diab, the founder of Al-Masry Al-Youm newspaper, has been arrested before for the alleged violations of companies he owns. But his latest arrest was different: Diab is being held in jail pending further investigation, and there is every indication that prosecutors have been instructed to keep him there.
It has not been lost on Abu Dhabi that Diab is the maternal uncle of Yousef al-Otaiba, the Emirati ambassador who played a key role in pre-announcing the normalisation deal.
The last time Diab was arrested in 2015, Otaiba intervened and his uncle was soon released. Sisi is not listening this time. Showing that Diab’s legal problems are more serious this time, the text of the tape of an alleged dinner conversation between Diab and onetime presidential candidate Ahmed Shafiq was released on a social media site that bears the name of another former high-ranking general, Sami Anan. Anan was released on house arrest last December after serving two of a nine year prison sentence.
Both Shafiq and Anan fell foul of Sisi, the former being forced to withdraw as a candidate in the 2018 election and the latter serving a two-year prison sentence.
Legal problems
On the tape Shafiq, a former airforce pilot, is contemptuous of Sisi, whom he describes as “a naive army officer, one in charge of an infantry … he never learned how to deal cleanly”.
Diab replies, laughing: “You are also an army officer, Mr Lieutenant General … You certainly understand him.” Shafiq then says: “There is a difference … of course, and you know, Mr Salah, not all those in the army are the same.”