North
Korea on the Nile
Reports
that Egypt's oil suppliers are cutting shipments to the
nearly-bankrupt nation coincide with a dramatic diplomatic shift
towards Iran by President Mohammed Morsi. Morsi's attendance at the
Non-Aligned Summit in Teheran today denotes the end of Iran's
diplomatic isolation in the Sunni Arab world
28
August, 2012
Reports
that Egypt's oil suppliers are cutting shipments to the
nearly-bankrupt nation coincide with a dramatic diplomatic shift
towards Iran by President Mohammed Morsi. Morsi's attendance at the
Non-Aligned Summit in Teheran today denotes the end of Iran's
diplomatic isolation in the Sunni Arab world.
In
addition, as my Asia Times Online colleague M K Bhadrakumar noted in
his Indian Punchline blog, Morsi proposed to include Iran in a
four-nation contact group to resolve the Syrian crisis, along with
Turkey, and Saudi Arabia. Morsi's outreach to Iran at the August 15
Organization of Islamic Coordination summit in Mecca was welcomed by
Iran's Foreign Ministry
At
the same time, Egypt has become a prospective threat to Israel for
the first time in more than three decades. The deployment of Egyptian
tanks in the Sinai, supposedly in pursuit of terrorists, violates the
33-year-old peace treaty with Israel, and persuades some Israeli
analysts that Egypt might threaten Israel's southern border in the
event of an Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear facilities.
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