EL-ARISH, Egypt —
Egypt's military vowed on Monday to hunt down those
behind the killing of its 16 soldiers at a checkpoint along the Sinai
border with Israel. It called the attackers "enemies of the nation" and
suggested they were Egyptian Sinai-based militants who received
Palestinian support from the Gaza Strip.
The violence - which saw the attackers try to break through the
border after killing the soldiers - could increase tensions with Israel,
which has stepped up pressure on Egypt to clamp down on the lawless
border region.
"The armed forces have been careful in the past months and during the
events of the (2011 Egyptian) revolution (that ousted Hosni Mubarak)
not to shed Egyptian blood ... but the group that staged yesterday's
attack is considered by the armed forces as enemies of the nation who
must be dealt with by force," said the military's statement.
The attack and the army's promised crackdown add to the host of
political, economic and security crises that festered under Mubarak and
that now face his successor, newly elected President Mohammed Morsi,
whose powers are limited by the military.
It could mark an escalation in the Sinai's decade-long low-level
Islamist insurgency. Sunday's attack is among the worst-ever against
Egyptian soldiers.
Israel says its aircraft killed between six and eight militants.
Egyptian officials have said six attackers were killed. A statement by
the Egyptian armed forces said 35 militants took part in the attack,
suggesting that close to 30 attackers may be on the run.
Security and military officials said at least two helicopter gunships
arrived in the border town of El-Arish on Monday to join the hunt for
the militants believed responsible. Israel meanwhile stepped up pressure
on Egypt to clamp down on the lawless border region.
Morsi, who has vowed to avenge the attack, was due to travel to the border region later on Monday.
In the first direct indication that the attackers may have had the
help of Palestinian militants, the statement said "elements from the
Gaza Strip" aided the attackers by shelling the Egyptian-Israeli border
crossing of Karam Abu Salem with mortars as the attack was taking place.
The security and military officials said counter-terrorism units
arrived in the border town of El-Arish on Monday and joint police-army
patrols were combing the ground. Aircraft patrolled the sky overhead,
they said.
The officials said more helicopter gunships were expected to join the two already in the border zone.
The Sinai has seen a surge of violence since Mubarak's ouster last
year, but Sunday's attack was the worst in several years. Suspected
Islamists attacked the checkpoint in the border town of Rafah at sunset,
killing the soldiers as they were sitting down for the traditional meal
breaking the fast in the holy month of Ramadan.
The attackers then commandeered two of their vehicles and burst
through a security fence into Israel, according to Israeli officials.
They said the incursion was quickly spotted and hit with an airstrike.
Egypt's military said only one armored vehicle was commandeered.
The unrest in Sinai poses a daunting challenge to President Morsi,
who since coming to office a little more than a month ago has warmed up
to Gaza's Hamas rulers. Hamas officials have condemned the killings, but
Morsi may still come under pressure to back down from plans to end
Egypt's cooperation with the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip.
He vowed on Sunday night to make the killers pay for their crime and
to restore security to Sinai, home to several of the most popular Red
Sea resorts in Egypt. On Monday, he declared three days of mourning for
the victims, according to state television.
"This is a huge calamity for Egypt," declared his spokesman Yasser Ali.
The Sinai border has been largely quiet for most of the three decades
since Israel and Egypt signed a peace agreement, although security
forces have for years combated a low-level insurgency in El-Arish and
nearby areas. The 1979 treaty restricts the number of troops and the
type of weapons Egypt can deploy in the peninsula.
Israel has agreed in the past to Egypt sending reinforcements to
bolster its forces there, but the Egyptian officials did not say whether
Israel had signed off on the helicopter deployment.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
Sinai's security problems have their roots in the resentment by its
native Bedouins of what they see as the police's heavy-handedness and
the lack of adequate government services. Security officials there say
Islamists have forged alliances among some of the disgruntled Bedouins.
In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday paid an
unannounced visit to the site where the militants broke through,
praising Israeli security forces for their swift response and expressing
regret for the loss of the Egyptian lives.
"Israel and Egypt clearly have a shared interest in maintaining a
quiet border," Netanyahu said. "But when talking about the security of
Israeli citizens, Israel must and will rely only on itself," he added.
Other Israeli officials gave more details of the attack and their response.
Chief military spokesman Brig. Gen. Yoav Mordechai told Army Radio
that after killing the soldiers, the militants seized a truck and an
armored car, then blew up one of the vehicles to punch a hole through a
security fence to enter Israel.
He said that Israeli intelligence services had reports of impending
infiltration and sent aircraft to strike as the militants broke through.
"We were prepared for it, so there was a hit," he said. The military
"averted a major attack on southern Israel," he added.
The attack was the third cross-border infiltration since Mubarak's
overthrow. In one, in August 2011, eight Israelis and six Egyptian
soldiers were killed. The six Egyptians were mistakenly killed by
Israeli forces. Israel is building a fence along the border to block
militants as well as illegal African migrants, but also wants Egypt to
crack down harder on the border region.
"We hope this will be a fitting wakeup call for the Egyptians to take
things in hand on their side more forcefully," Defense Minister Ehud
Barak told parliament's foreign affairs and defense committee on Monday.
He said there were between six and eight militants killed.
Egypt-Israel relations have always been cool but since Mubarak was
overthrown and Islamists rose to power, Israeli officials have expressed
concern that ties would further deteriorate. Israel is particularly
concerned that Egypt will ease restrictions on entering and leaving the
Gaza Strip.
Immediately after the attack, Egypt shut the Rafah crossing with
Gaza, an ominous sign for the Palestinian territory's 1.6 million
people. Israel bars Gazans from entering Israel, so the Rafah crossing -
the only exit from the tiny coastal territory not under direct Israeli
control - is their sole gateway to the outside world.
Gaza officials disowned the attack but gave mixed signals over whether residents of the territory may have carried it out.
Gaza's deputy prime minister, Mohammed Awad of the ruling Hamas
movement, said militants from the territory were "not involved in this
awful crime." But a leading Hamas member, Mohammed Zahar, undercut that
denial, telling Al-Jazeera TV that he asked Egypt to provide the names
of possible suspects from Gaza so that "we will immediately bring them
to justice."
The attack could harm Hamas' efforts to persuade Morsi to ease
restrictions at the crossing. Hamas is an offshoot of the Muslim
Brotherhood and had hoped that Morsi, a fellow member of the region-wide
movement, would be sympathetic to its requests. But he has moved
cautiously, in part because of concerns about an influx of militants
from Gaza.
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