
 The Obama administration took a careful look at the political calendar before  announcing that the first four F-16 fighter planes - of the 20 approved in a $1  billion US foreign aid package to Egypt - would be delivered Jan. 22. The announcement came Tuesday, Dec. 11, as Cairo and other Egyptian towns  were set for massive rival demonstrations for and against President Mohamed  Morsi’s decision to hold a referendum on a pro-Islamist constitution Saturday.  It therefore came in for rising criticism in Washington of the wisdom of sending  the jets to an unstable Egypt in the grip of a strong political  confrontation. A broad range of opposition groups – pro-democratic, liberal, secular, women  and Christian – are demanding that President Morsi cancel the referendum. The  Muslim Brotherhood is mobilizing its supporters to counter this protest. As the  first anti-Morsi groups began gathering in Tahrir Square Tuesday, nine were hurt  by masked gunmen. The opposition has clipped President Morsi’s wings once by making him annul  the near-dictatorial powers he gave himself. Forcing him to forego the  referendum would further undermine his authority. So the president fought back by authorizing the military to secure state  buildings and arrest civilians in the incendiary days leading up to Saturday’s  referendum. debkafile’s  military sources report that Monday, six Egyptian Air Force F-16 fighters flew  symbolically over Cairo. However, the 2nd and 9th Divisions stationed around Cairo stayed in their  barracks and the only uniformed personnel visible on the street were the  Republican Guard troops on permanent duty in the capital’s center. By approving another 20 F-16 jets for Muslim-ruled Egypt on the day of the  competing demonstrations, President Obama showed the Egyptian people that he  stands foursquare behind President Morsi and that more US military aid is on the  way. The first four jets will arrive in Egypt the day after Barack Obama’s Jan. 21  swearing-in for a second term as US president at the Capitol – and not by  chance. That date also coincides with Israel’s Jan. 22 general  election. The US promise of new fighter planes was also a recommendation to the  Egyptian army to pick the right side and opt for President Morsi if they wanted  US military assistance to keep coming. Washington was also ready to consider  providing them with more high-tech items in addition to those already  supplied. Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was ready to fit into the role cast Israel  by the US president. He therefore chose to hold back from a ground incursion in  the Gaza Strip and then agreed to the radical Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal  visiting Gaza last week.
Obama is therefore using those warplanes as a signpost for the  Muslim-Arab Middle East – and the Israeli voter – to show them that he is  sticking unswervingly to his policy of support for the region’s Muslim  Brotherhood – and especially the Egyptian president - even if Morsi did slip up  by a grab for sweeping powers that alienated most of the opposition.
At all events, President Obama has made his choice, opting for  Egypt’s Islamists against the pro-democracy and liberal opposition – a choice  that he might have found embarrassing when he campaigned for his second  term.
Israel had a dark premonition of what was coming.  Obama began laying  the background for his strong alignment with Islamist Egypt last month with the  dramatic announcement of a ceasefire in Cairo on Nov. 20, that was delivered  jointly by Morsi and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
By this  announcement – and by maneuvering Israel into abstaining from a ground operation  in the Gaza Strip to complete its air operation against Palestinian terrorist  targets – Obama pulled the Egyptian president out of his hat as a fully-fledged  international figure ready to jump to the top of his newly-minted Sunni Muslim  Middle East coalition. In addition to Egypt, its chosen members were to be  Turkey, Qatar and the Palestinian Hamas. Israel was to be a secret partner and  contributor of high-grade intelligence.
His reward came at the same time as Washington’s  announcement of the 20 F-16 fighters for Egypt: The US has appropriated $650  million worth of ordnance to refill the Israeli arsenals depleted by the massive  Pillar of Defense air offensive in Gaza.
Under this deal, the US will supply  the Israeli Air Force with 6,900 satellite-guided “smart bombs;" 10,000 mixed  bombs - including 3,450 one-tonners and 1,725 bombs weighing 250 kilograms - as  well as two kinds of buster-bunkers - 1,725, GBU-39 bombs and 3,450  BLU-109s.