Oh yes, them too.
But in terms of the regional power balance, does any one country have more to lose from this than Israel, I wonder?
(I mean countries in that area, not us or the US finding our time-honoured tributes being less forthcoming).
In power balance terms, I doubt Israel will worry. In terms of power it dominates, it's effectively a Western country that finds itself in the middle of a bunch of countries that are developed but not quite on that level of might.
What may worry it is that it'll chuck the dynamic of the region out of whack, as I said above the whole region balances on tension. Currently Egypt (and Jordan) get on rather well with Israel, a change to that may worry them.
I suppose what I'm trying to say here is that Israel stands on top of a pyramid that holds itself together against the odds. This could change the odds, but Israel will still be on top barring a complete catastrophy... it just may not like the state of that position when the odds change.
If Jordan goes pop that could raise some very interesting questions in the Holy Land. It's part of Eretz Yisrael, and a part that as they've become friendly they've given up on. I do wonder if Jordan collapses or finds itself heavily in turmoil, the Eretz Yisrael popular rhetoric changes...
I can't see Jordan collapsing, it's pretty stable. But Lebanon was already on the verge of failed state status, Yemen, too. What a mess.