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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Report: Mubarak demands Hamas be expelled from Syria
2006-06-30
At least, I now know my surprise meter is still working.Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak demanded from his Syrian counterpart Bashar Assad to deport the Syrian-based Hamas leadership unless it agrees to release kidnapped IDF soldier Cpl. Gilad Shalit, Palestinian sources said on Friday.

The demand was made in the context of a compromise that Egypt was attempting to draft between the Israel and Hamas, whose Damascus leader, Khaled Mashaal was demanding that thousands of Palestinian detainees, held in Israeli prisons, be released. Mubarak warned Mashaal that his position was leading the Palestinians to disaster, Israel Radio reported.

According to the Palestinians, the Egyptian compromise calls for the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Gaza Strip, as well as the release of prisoners who were already scheduled to be released within the next year.

Meanwhile, Mubarak stated in an interview to Egypt's leading pro-government newspaper, Al-Ahram that Shalit's kidnappers have agreed to his conditional release, but Israel has not yet accepted their terms.

Mubarak said, "Egyptian contacts with several Hamas leaders resulted in preliminary, positive results in the form of a conditional agreement to hand over the Israeli soldier as soon as possible to avoid an escalation.

The president said he had asked Prime Minister Ehud Olmert "not to hurry" the military offensive in Gaza, but to "give additional time to find a peaceful solution to the problem of the kidnapped soldier."

Egyptian Intelligence chief Omar Suleiman, was expected to go to Gaza on Friday, as Mubarak's representative, to advance the compromise. He was also scheduled to travel to Syria to meet Mashaal.

MK Ephraim Sneh (Labor) dismissed the Egyptian initiative, saying "a diplomatic option is when someone brings about the unilateral, unconditional release of the kidnapped [soldier], not when someone serves as a mediator between us and the Hamas head in Gaza," Army Radio reported.

Sources in Jerusalem stated that they had not yet received the details of the compromise. Moreover, the Prime Minister's Office insisted that it was not negotiating for Shalit's release.

Israel suspended on Thursday a planned ground invasion of northern Gaza, giving diplomacy another chance to free Shalit, whom terrorists linked to Hamas kidnapped Sunday from an Israeli camp near Gaza.

Mubarak's remark implied he was claiming a role in Israel's decision.

In Jerusalem, a senior Israeli Foreign Ministry official, Gideon Meir, said Israel did not know of such an offer.

Reached just after midnight on Friday morning, Meir told The Associated Press that Israel would have no comment until daybreak.

"In general Israel's stance is, as the prime minister said earlier, that the soldier will only be released unconditionally and there will be no negotiations with a gang of terrorists and criminals who abducted a soldier from Israeli territory," Meir said.
Posted by:phil_b

#9  Egypt doesn't want to have to replace their air force again. Had to do it once in 67' I think.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2006-06-30 20:29  

#8  on the one hand hosni knows Hamas is aligned with the muslim brotherhood, his enemies in Egypt. Now Assad doesnt like the Syrian muslim brotherhood, but he seems to have Hamas enough under his control that theres no worries there. Hosnis not in that position. To him Hamas is Syria's agent in Gaza, against the Fatahniks who are Egypts friends, and Gaza is too close to Egypt not to worry about whos in control there. And yeah, the Egyptians and Syrians were intense rivals, even back when Egypt had a more anti-western govt under Nasser.

OTOH Hosni has to worry about the Egyptian street, and so Israels incursion is ALSO a threat to him, since it angers the street, and puts him in an uncomfortable position. But Hosnis realistic enought to know that the Israelis are serious about this, and that the US, and even the Euros, dont have the desire to really hold Israel back, as long as they dont go too far.

So for Hosni best way out of this is for Hamas to cave more or less completely, then the Israelis go home, and all is good again. And Syria has the levearge over Hamas to make that happen.

But does Hosni have any leverage over Assad? Im not sure he does.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2006-06-30 13:37  

#7  Guess this was just before his staff blamed the whole thing on the Jooooooss, right? Or is Hosni getting into that whole Paleo say 1 thing in Arabic/the opposite in English thing?
Posted by: BA   2006-06-30 12:00  

#6  Maybe Suleiman will take some of the "magic dust" with him to Syria...
Posted by: Danielle   2006-06-30 11:12  

#5  I am so glad Tut is in the states, those barbarians would destroy everything given a nanosecond.
Posted by: anonymous2u   2006-06-30 11:00  

#4  Hosni's as nervous as the King of Jordan, and for the same reason.
Posted by: mojo   2006-06-30 09:53  

#3  Or he figures that if Israel and Syria start fighting then Israel may just decide hammer Egypt as well to avoid getting attacked in the rear.
Posted by: Laurence of the Rats   2006-06-30 09:33  

#2  Sounds interesting, but I wonder if he's serious or just trying to look good.
Posted by: grb   2006-06-30 07:16  

#1  mubarak despises the opthamologist in chief

this looked to be a good way to make that plain
Posted by: mhw   2006-06-30 05:40  

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