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Michael Daventry

ByMichael Daventry, Michael DaventryForeign Editor

Analysis

Israel-Egypt ties have been put to the test over the past 40 years

Two neighbours that have spent more years at peace than at war are partners — but not particularly close ones, our foreign editor writes

September 17, 2018 09:35
A protester burns a flag outside the Israeli embassy in Cairo during the 2011 riots
1 min read

Egypt and Israel have spent more years as neighbouring countries at peace than at war.

For most of the past four decades, there has been an Egyptian embassy in Tel Aviv and a corresponding Israeli mission in Cairo.

This is normality to those born or who have come of age in the years since 1978.

But it is easy to forget how momentous a decision it was for President Anwar Sadat to fly to Israel and — in a 60-minute speech at the Knesset —invite Israelis to live alongside their Arab neighbours in “full security and safety”.