Security
breakdown in Sinai: Army battles it out with militants
Clashes
in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula are raging for the second day as the
military attempts to combat militants who have taken a foothold in
the region since Mubarak’s ouster.
RT,
9
August, 2012
The
violence has spurred the largest military deployment in the Sinai
Peninsula since 1979. Around 60 tanks, 15 armored personnel carriers,
missile batteries and hundreds of soldiers have been sent into the
main Northern Sinai town of Al-Arish on Thursday as Egyptian security
forces continue to battle with Islamic militants.
The
deployment is believed to be the largest since Egypt signed the 1979
Camp David Accords with Israel. As a result of the accords, prior
approval is needed before deploying troops on either side of the
border, a condition which served to virtually demilitarize the Sinai
Peninsula.
Militants
ramped up their attacks by attacking five joint military-police
checkpoints on Wednesday, prompting the Egyptian military to launch
airstrikes from Apache helicopters. Nile TV reported the airstrikes
killed at least 20. It was the first time Egypt had deployed its air
force in Sinai since the 1973 Yom Kippur War.
The
military also began sealing off some of the 1,200 illegal tunnels
that currently permeate the Egyptian border with the Gaza Strip.
The
security operation was launched in response to a weekend attack when
masked gunmen killed 16 Egyptian border guards before slipping across
the border into Israel.
On
Thursday Egyptian Intelligence asked Hamas Prime Minister Ismail
Haniyeh to hand over three members of the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam
Brigades- Hamas paramilitary wing for providing indirect help to
militants in Sinai, al-Quds newspaper reports.
Mossad
reportedly transferred a list of nine alleged militants connected
with Sunday’s attack to Egyptian Intelligence on the same day. The
nine suspected militants are said to be affiliated with "The
Armies of Monotheism and Jihad in Palestine," reports Haaretz,
citing Mousa Mohammed Abu Marzook, deputy chairman of the Hamas
Political Bureau.
Marzook
maintained that Mossad was responsible for the attack, backing a
claim that Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood made earlier this week. The
Muslim Brotherhood accused Mossad of “seeking to abort the
[Egyptian] revolution since its inception.” Israel maintains Hammas
are behind the attacks, an accusation they have denied.
Egypt’s
President Mohammed Morsi, who took the oath of office on June 30 to
become the country’s first freely elected president, said those
behind Sunday’s “cowardly” attack would pay dearly. Morsi, who
is a longstanding member of the Muslim Brotherhood, has not publicly
blamed Mossad for the assault.
In
a move to assert his authority, on Wednesday Morsi said he had forced
his director of General Intelligence Services to resign and had
dismissed the governor of Northern Sinai. As the military is
constitutionally out of Morsi’s reach, Field Marshal Mohammed
Tantawi, the head of Egypt’s Supreme Ruling Military Council, fired
Hamdy Badeen, the head of Egypt’s Military Police.
Egypt’s
armed forces further called on locals and Bedouin tribes in Sinai to
help security forces restore order in the region.
The
resolute response from both Morsi and the country’s military rulers
shows Egypt’s authorities are taking the deteriorating security
situation in the region seriously.
Many
analysts have attributed the growing Islamist presence in Sinai to
the security vacuum resulting from former president Hosni Mubarak’s
ouster last year.
Despite
the recent flare-up in the violence, the Egyptian military actually
launched “Operation Eagle” in August 2011 to re-establish control
in Sinai, a move which saw 2,500 Egyptian troops and 250 armored
personnel carriers deployed to Sinai.
With
Mubarak’s security apparatus virtually disintegrating in January of
last year, a tacit understanding between Israel and Egypt was reached
regarding the need to bolster the latter’s military presence in the
region, Ahram online reports.
An
Egypt-Israel gas pipeline was sabotaged almost a dozen times in under
a year, while militants believed to be connected with Islamist groups
carried out a series of attacks on Egyptian police stations and
checkpoints.
Egypt’s
decision to send in reinforcements and intensify its clampdown
follows a claim by Israel that Sunday’s brazen attack was a
“wake-up call” for Egypt to get a grip on the threat of growing
lawlessness on what is, in effect, a bridge between Asia and Africa.
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