Early this Monday, a small barrage of rockets struck the Red Sea cities of Eilat, in Israel and Aqaba, in Jordan. The missiles, which appeared to come from the Sinai, inside Egyptian territory, killed one Jordanian man and injured five. While few doubted the main target of the attack was Israel, it was less clear who exactly launched the rockets.
Jordanian authorities claimed they had proof the strikes had originated in Egypt, while
Egypt promptly blamed Hamas, which quickly denied any responsibility. Once again, Hamas and Egypt found themselves in a familiar position -- on opposite sides of a dispute.
Discussions about the situation in Gaza and about how to deal with Hamas, the Islamic organization that rules the strip, tend to center almost exclusively on the relationship between Hamas and Israel, ignoring a part of the equation that is enormously important: the relationship between Hamas and Gaza's other neighbor, Egypt. ...