LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
April 01/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
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Bible Quotations For today
I will give boys to be their princes, and children shall
rule over them
Isaiah Chapter 03/04//05: 20.23/”I will give boys to be their princes, and
children shall rule over them. As for my people, children are their oppressors,
and women rule over them. My people, those who lead you cause you to err, and
destroy the way of your paths. Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil;
who put darkness for light, and light for darkness; who put bitter for sweet,
and sweet for bitter! Woe to those who are wise in their own eyes, and prudent
in their own sight! Woe to those who are mighty to drink wine, and champions at
mixing strong drink; who acquit the guilty for a bribe, but deny justice for the
innocent!”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on April 01/19
Praying For Others And The Healing Miracle of the Paralyzed Miracle
Aoun at Arab Summit: Trump's Golan Decision Threatens Lebanese Sovereignty
Aoun to Guterres: Pompeo Visit Heralded Positive Developments in Refugee File
Berri Begins Official Visit to Iraq
Bassil: Lebanon, Arabs in Accord on Invalidation of U.S. Decision over Ghajar
Guidanian Expects Large Numbers of Arab Tourists in Summer
Mustaqbal, Rifi Rally Voters for Tripoli By-election
Jabaq Inspects Tripoli Hospital Accompanied by Karami
Lebanon Counts On a Promising Summer Season
World Bank: Developments in Lebanon Have Not Reached Expected Level
As US pressure mounts on Iran, Lebanon finds itself in jam
Titles For The Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on April 01/19
Pope urges Catholics in Morocco to dialogue, not proselytize
Pope, Moroccan King Declare Jerusalem ‘Common Patrimony’ of Three Religions
Arab Summit Shows Unity against Trump's Israel Policy, Qatar Emir Leaves Early
Tunis Declaration Counts on Arab Solidarity Against Interventions
Qatari Emir leaves Arab League summit abruptly
Israelis to Speak at Bahrain Conference in April
Another burst of Hamas rocket fire, yet Israel reopens Gaza crossings, releases
$300m payout
Five rockets fired at Israel from Gaza Strip, Israeli tanks respond
Fourth Palestinian killed in Israel border clashes: Gaza ministry
Israel reopens Gaza crossings after week of hostilities
Hamas Awaits Results of Egyptian-Led Negotiations With Israel
Netanyahu Welcomes Brazil's Bolsonaro, Embassy Decision Pending
Sweida Fears Another Attack by ISIS
In Syria's Al-Hol Camp, Ultra-Extremists Fuel Fear
Algerian Army Chiefs Repeat Call for Proposed Presidential Vacuum
Halbousi to Asharq AL-Awsat: US Forces in Iraq Provide Political Umbrella Facing
Foreign Interventions
African Union to host Libya ‘reconciliation’ conference
US ending aid to El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras over migrants
Turks vote in critical municipal elections as Erdogan’s popularity is tested
Comic Leads as Ukraine Votes for President
Titles For The Latest
LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on April 01/19
Praying For Others And The Healing Miracle of the Paralyzed Miracle/Elias
Bejjani/March 31/19
As US pressure mounts on Iran, Lebanon finds itself in jam/Rami Rayees/The Arab
Weekly/March 31/19
Pope urges Catholics in Morocco to dialogue, not proselytize/AP/March 31/31/19
Tunis Declaration Counts on Arab Solidarity Against Interventions/Tunis- Sawsan
Abu Hussein and Thaer Abbas/Asharq Al-Awsat/March 31/19
Another burst of Hamas rocket fire, yet Israel reopens Gaza crossings, releases
$300m payout/DEBKAfile/March 31/19
The Foreign Policy Fiasco That Wasn’t/Withdrawing from the Iran nuclear deal has
paid dividends/Bret Stephens/The New York Times/March 31/19
Trump Is Right about the Golan Heights/Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone
Institute/March 31/ 2019
UK: Radical Muslims Welcome, Persecuted Christians Need Not Apply/Raymond
Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/March 31/ 2019
Proposed changes to Iraq’s citizenship law stir controversy/Nazli Tarzi/The Arab
Weekly/March 31/19
Will Trump’s Golan Heights decision affect Palestine deal/Yasar Yakis/Arab
News/March 31/19
Iranian proxies turn to crime to dodge sanctions/Baria Alamuddin/Arab News/March
31/19
Defiant Khamenei emphasizes Iranian regime’s aggressive policies/Dr. Majid
Rafizadeh/Arab News/March 31/19
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News published
on April 01/19
Praying For Others And The Healing Miracle
of the Paralyzed Miracle
Elias Bejjani/March 31/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/73457/elias-bejjani-praying-for-others-and-the-healing-miracle-of-the-paralyzed-miracle/
On the fifth Lenten Sunday the Catholic Maronites cite and recall with great
reverence the Gospel of Saint Mark ( 02/1-12): “The Healing Miracle of the
Paralytic”: “When he entered again into Capernaum after some days, it was heard
that he was in the house. Immediately many were gathered together, so that there
was no more room, not even around the door; and he spoke the word to them. Four
people came, carrying a paralytic to him. When they could not come near to him
for the crowd, they removed the roof where he was. When they had broken it up,
they let down the mat that the paralytic was lying on. Jesus, seeing their
faith, said to the paralytic, “Son, your sins are forgiven you.” But there were
some of the scribes sitting there, and reasoning in their hearts, “Why does this
man speak blasphemies like that? Who can forgive sins but God alone?”
Immediately Jesus, perceiving in his spirit that they so reasoned within
themselves, said to them, “Why do you reason these things in your hearts? Which
is easier, to tell the paralytic, ‘Your sins are forgiven;’ or to say, ‘Arise,
and take up your bed, and walk?’ But that you may know that the Son of Man has
authority on earth to forgive sins”— He said to the paralytic— “I tell you,
arise, take up your mat, and go to your house.” He arose, and immediately took
up the mat, and went out in front of them all; so that they were all amazed, and
glorified God, saying, “We never saw anything like this!”
This great miracle in its theological essence and core demonstrates beyond doubt
that intercessions, prayers and supplications for the benefit of others are
acceptable faith rituals that Almighty God attentively hears and definitely
answers.
It is interesting to learn that the paralytic man as stated in the Gospel of St.
Mark, didn’t personally call on Jesus to cure him, nor he asked Him for
forgiveness, mercy or help, although as many theologians believe Jesus used to
visit Capernaum, where the man lives, and preach in its Synagogue frequently.
Apparently this crippled man was lacking faith, hope, distancing himself from
God and total ignoring the Gospel’s teaching. He did not believe that the Lord
can cure him.
What also makes this miracle remarkable and distinguishable lies in the fact
that the paralytic’s relatives and friends, or perhaps some of Jesus’ disciples
were adamant that the Lord is able to heal this sick man who has been totally
crippled for 38 years if He just touches him. This strong faith and hope made
four of them carry the paralytic on his mat and rush to the house where Jesus
was preaching. When they could not break through the crowd to inter the house
they climbed with the paralytic to the roof, made a hole in it and let down the
mat that the paralytic was lying on in front of Jesus and begged for his cure.
Jesus was taken by their strong faith and fulfilled their request.
Jesus forgave the paralytic his sins first (“Son, your sins are forgiven you)
and after that cured his body: “Arise, and take up your bed, and walk”. Like the
scribes many nowadays still question the reason and rationale that made Jesus
give priority to the man’s sins. Jesus’ wisdom illustrates that sin is the
actual death and the cause for eternal anguish in Hell. He absolved his sins
first because sin cripples those who fall in its traps, annihilates their hopes,
faith, morals and values, kills their human feelings, inflicts numbness on their
consciences and keeps them far away from Almighty God. Jesus wanted to save the
man’s soul before He cures his earthy body. “For what does it profit a man, to
gain the whole world, and forfeit his life?” (Mark 08:/36 & 37).
Our Gracious God does not disappoint any person when he seek His help with faith
and confidence. With great interest and parental love, He listens to worshipers’
prayers and requests and definitely respond to them in His own way, wisdom, time
and manner. “Ask, and it will be given you. Seek, and you will find. Knock, and
it will be opened for you. For everyone who asks receives. He who seeks finds.
To him who knocks it will be opened”. (Matthew 07/07 &08)
Is any among you suffering? Let him pray. Is any cheerful? Let him sing praises.
Is any among you sick? Let him call for the elders of the assembly, and let them
pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord, and the prayer of
faith will heal him who is sick, and the Lord will raise him up”. (James 05:15)
In this loving and forgiving context, prayers for others, alive or dead, loved
ones or enemies, relatives or strangers, are religiously desirable. God hears
and responds because He never abandons His children no matter what they do or
say, provided that they turn to Him with faith and repentance and ask for His
mercy and forgiveness either for themselves or for others. “
There are numerous biblical parables and miracles in which Almighty God shows
clearly that He accepts and responds to prayers for the sake of others.
Jesus cured the centurion’s servant on the request of the Centurion and not the
servant himself. (Matthew 08/05-33 )
Jesus revived and brought back to life Lazarus on the request of his sisters
Mary and Martha. (John 11/01-44)
Praying for others whether they are parents, relatives, strangers,
acquaintances, enemies, or friends, and for countries, is an act that exhibits
the faith, caring, love, and hope of those who offer the prayers. Almighty God,
Who is a loving, forgiving, passionate, and merciful Father listens to these
prayers and always answers them in His own wisdom and mercy that mostly we are
unable to grasp because of our limited human understanding. “All things,
whatever you ask in prayer, believing, you will receive.” (Matthew 21/22)
In conclusion: Almighty God is always waiting for us, we, His Children to come
to Him and ask for His help and mercy either for ourselves or for others. He
never leaves us alone. Meanwhile it is a Godly faith obligation to extend our
hand and pull up those who are falling and unable to pray for themselves
especially the mentally sick, the unconscious, and the paralyzed. In this realm
of faith, love and care for others comes our prayers to Virgin Mary and to all
Saints whom we do not worship, but ask for their intercessions and blessings.
O, Lord, endow us with graces of faith, hope, wisdom, and patience. Help us to
be loving, caring, humble and meek. Show us the just paths. Help us to be on
your right with the righteous on the Judgment Day.
God sees and hears us all the time, let us all fear Him in all what we think, do
and say.
Aoun at Arab Summit: Trump's Golan Decision Threatens Lebanese Sovereignty
Naharnet/March 31/19/President Michel Aoun on Sunday described U.S. President
Donald Trump’s decision to recognize Syria’s occupied Golan Heights as part of
Israel as a “threat” to Lebanon’s sovereignty. “Trump’s decision does not only
threaten the sovereignty of a brotherly country, but also the sovereignty of the
Lebanese state, especially in the Shebaa Farms and the Kfarshouba Hills,” Aoun
warned in his speech before the 30th Arab Summit in Tunisia. Israel had argued
that the Shebaa Farms and the Kfarshouba Hills are part of the Golan whereas
Lebanon has insisted that they belong to Lebanon, amid a dispute over the
demarcation of the border in that area. Separately, Aoun wondered whether the
international community is seeking to turn the Syrian refugees into “hostages”
in order to “use them as a tool of pressure against Syria and Lebanon.” “We’re
worried over the insistence to link the refugee return to the political solution
and over the ‘voluntary return’ expression,” the president added. He also
emphasized that Lebanon “will not accept any form of naturalization” on its
soil.
Aoun to Guterres: Pompeo Visit Heralded Positive
Developments in Refugee File
Naharnet/March 31/19/President Michel Aoun has told U.N. chief Antonio Guterres
that the latest visit to Lebanon by U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has
ushered in “positive developments” regarding the Syrian refugee file. Aoun met
Guterres on the sidelines of the Arab Summit in Tunisia. The National News
Agency said Aoun told the U.N. chief that Lebanon’s priority is “the return of
Syrian refugees to their country.”This would “alleviate the heavy burden that it
is shouldering as well as the repercussions of the refugee crisis on all
sectors,” the president told Guterres. “Lebanon will continue to organize Syrian
refugee convoys to safe Syrian regions,” Aoun went on to say, noting that
171,000 refugees have so far returned home from Lebanon in this manner. The
president also noted that Pompeo’s visit “heralded positive developments in this
regard” and that “he reflected in his testimony before the U.S. House of
Representatives a change in the U.S. stance regarding the necessity for the
return of the refugees to Syria.”As for the situation on the border with Israel,
Aoun underscored “Lebanon’s respect for (U.N. Security Council) Resolution 1701
and its stipulations,” noting that “Israel is continuing its land, sea and air
violations” and “violating Lebanese airspace to carry out airstrikes on
Syria.”The president also called on the U.N. to “help it demarcate its maritime
border and to convince Israel of responding to this desire.”Guterres for his
part expressed the U.N.’s inclination to “continue to work on achieving
stability in Lebanon, in cooperation with the new government, the U.N.
organizations and the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL),” adding that the
U.N. wants to “preserve the border’s security and stability.”He also stressed
“the importance of boosting cooperation between the Lebanese Army and UNIFIL to
implement Resolution 1701 as part of preserving Lebanese sovereignty.”
Berri Begins Official Visit to Iraq
Naharnet/March 31/19/Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri arrived Sunday in Baghdad on
an official visit, at the invitation of his Iraqi counterpart Mohammed al-Halbousi,
who cut short a foreign trip in order to receive him, Lebanon’s National News
Agency reported. Berri is scheduled to meet with the country’s top officials and
with Shiite spiritual leader Ayatollah Ali Sistani. Speaking to reporters upon
his arrival, the Speaker said he was very pleased to return to Iraq on another
visit, wishing prosperity for the country “after the expulsion of Daesh and the
victory over terrorism.” Iraqi Deputy Speaker Hassan al-Kaabi later threw a
lunch banquet in honor of Berri and the accompanying delegation in the presence
of a number of Iraqi MPs and officials.
Bassil: Lebanon, Arabs in Accord on Invalidation of U.S.
Decision over Ghajar
Naharnet/March 31/19/Following the US decision recognizing the sovereignty of
Israel over the occupied Syrian Golan Heights, Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil
reiterated on Saturday that Lebanon rejects the US decision and “the Arab states
agree” with him. “Lebanon proposes and the Arabs agree: reject the US decision
over Golan Heights and consider it null and void,” said Bassil in a Tweet,
adding that the decision “violates the UN Charter by forcibly taking over the
territory of others.”Bassil also said that “Arabs support Syria’s right to
restore occupied Golan, and support the “Lebanism” of Shebaa Farms, Kfarshouba
Hills and the northern part of the town of Ghajar,” stressing Lebanon’s right to
recover it. On Friday and during a visit to Bulgaria, Bassil also stressed that
the Israeli-occupied Shebaa Farms and Kfarshouba Hills are “Lebanese land.”
Guidanian Expects Large Numbers of Arab Tourists in Summer
Naharnet/March 31/19/Lebanon is readying for a promising summer tourism season
after Saudi Arabia announced the lifting of a ban on the travel of its citizens
to the country. “There is an inclination in the UAE to lift the ban on the
travel of its citizens to Lebanon,” Tourism Minister Avedis Guidanian told the
Saudi Asharq al-Awsat newspaper in remarks published Sunday. Emirati Ambassador
to Lebanon Hamad al-Shamesi had recently announced that he would seek a lifting
of the UAE ban with the relevant authorities. And as Guidanian told the daily
that he does not know the exact date of the expected Emirati decision, he told
the newspaper that “the preparations indicate that Gulf and Arab tourists will
flock to Lebanon in large numbers this year.”“The season is expected to begin on
Eid al-Fitr and continue throughout the summer,” the minister added. Guidanian
also hoped the numbers of tourists will reach those seen in 2010, when tourism
revenues represented 20% of the national income after 2.2 million tourists
visited Lebanon that year among them over 40% from Arab countries.
Mustaqbal, Rifi Rally Voters for Tripoli By-election
Naharnet/March 31/19/Al-Mustaqbal Movement Secretary-General Ahmed Hariri,
ex-minister Ashraf Rifi and Mustaqbal’s candidate Dima Jamali have called on
voters to turn out heavily in Tripoli’s upcoming parliamentary by-election. The
joint call was voiced during a tour of the city by Hariri and Jamali during
which they met with Rifi. Hariri called on voters to confront those “who want
the turnout to be weak after their withdrawal from the by-election,” in
reference to MP Faisal Karami, al-Ahbash and their March 8 allies. “The current
consensus in Tripoli has foiled the plans of those who wanted to fish in
troubled waters and pushed them to refrain from taking part in the race,” Hariri
added, referring to the agreement with Rifi on backing Jamali. Hariri however
said that they respect the remaining candidates, noting that al-Mustaqbal will
engage in a “serious electoral battle.”And as Jamali said that “Tripoli is loyal
to martyr premier Rafik Hariri and will not allow that he be targeted,” Rifi
said “the page has been turned on the disputes because the objectives are
unified.”“We must stand shoulder-by-shoulder to achieve them,” Rifi added,
reiterating his call for a heavy turnout. And calling for voting for “the choice
of sovereignty in the face of the choice of the statelet,” Rifi vowed to exert
efforts to “develop the city and end its deprivation in cooperation with Prime
Minister Saad Hariri.”
Jabaq Inspects Tripoli Hospital Accompanied by Karami
Naharnet/March 31/19/Health Minister Jamil Jabaq has inspected the Islamic
Charitable Hospital in Tripoli, accompanied by Dignity Movement chief MP Faisal
Karami. After inspecting the hospital and its sections and visiting the
patients, Jabaq, who was named to the new cabinet by Hizbullah, said “this
hospital means a lot to Tripoli’s people.”“The personal effort to develop this
hospital by the brother Faisal Karami is a very huge effort,” Jabaq added. He
also reassured that he will continue to boost the budgets earmarked to improve
the situations at some hospitals, including the Islamic Charitable Hospital
Lebanon Counts On a Promising Summer Season
Beirut- Caroline Akoum/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 31 March, 2019/
Lebanon is preparing for a promising summer tourism season, the indicators of
which have begun to appear in recent weeks, especially after Saudi Arabia
announced the lifting of its travel ban of the Middle Eastern country. Tourism
institutions are awaiting a similar decision from the United Arab Emirates,
which would make this year’s summer the most rewarding since 2011. As the UAE
ambassador to Beirut, Hamad Al-Shamsi, announced earlier that he would work with
the concerned authorities to lift the travel ban, Lebanese Tourism Minister
Owadis Kidianian and president of the Syndicate of Hotel Owners Pierre Achkar
said that the UAE was considering allowing its citizens to travel to Lebanon.
The current preparations indicate that Gulf and Arab tourists will come to
Lebanon in large numbers, starting from Eid al-Fitr to continue throughout the
summer, said Kidianian, in remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat. He hoped that the numbers
would reach those of 2010, when tourism accounted for 20 percent of the national
income and the number of tourists reached 2.2 million, 40 percent of whom were
Arabs. At a time when programs of summer festivals have started to be announced
successively, Achkar said the country was likely to receive a large number of
tourists in Eid al-Fitr, adding that the projection of the summer season will be
clearer next month. “The Lebanese are counting on this summer season to be the
best since 2011, based on the political and security factors in the country,” he
told Asharq Al-Awsat. “The rate of bookings is expected to appear in May, and -
in addition to Saudi tourists, thousands of whom have homes in Lebanon and are
the backbone of tourism – we hope that the UAE would make a decision similar to
that of Saudi Arabia,” he added. In the same context, the director of Rafik
Hariri International Airport, Fadi Hassan, noted that in recent weeks there has
been a remarkable rise in flight traffic compared to last year, specifically
after the Saudi decision. He told Asharq Al-Awsat: “We see through the meetings
we hold with tourism companies that there are signs of a promising season.”
World Bank: Developments in Lebanon Have Not Reached Expected Level
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 30 March, 2019/World Bank Vice President for
Middle East and North Africa Ferid Belhaj described the economic situation in
Lebanon as "very crucial." Belhaj who met Friday with Lebanon's Finance
Minister, Ali Hassan Khalil, to discuss the recent economic developments, said:
"What matters today most is the way the Lebanese government proves to be up to
the expectations and aspirations of the Lebanese people, especially on the level
of reforms because they are important and essential." "Reforms should be
implemented by Lebanon to be able to communicate with the donors that support
the country, not to mention their importance on the economic and social level,"
he added. "The World Bank is one of the sides supporting Lebanon, and we are
dealing positively with the country -- with a high level of exchange of
viewpoints, transparency, clarity, and accuracy," Belhaj said. He further
confirmed that Lebanon should do more to reach the aspired level. "The Lebanese
government's reforms are very important; however, they have not reached the
expected level, and this is what we said frankly to the Lebanese
government.”Belhaj expressed confidence in Lebanon's ability to brace the
required reforms, reaffirming the World Bank's support to the country. “We have
reached a stage where time is very precious," he noted.
As US pressure mounts on Iran, Lebanon finds itself in jam
Rami Rayees/The Arab Weekly/March 31/19
Any form of political manoeuvring that seeks to draw a distinction between
Lebanon the state and Hezbollah the party is no longer an option.
Mike Pompeo was not the first US secretary of state to visit Lebanon and he will
probably not be the last. His recent visit, however, unleashed a wave of
criticism from Hezbollah and its allies, which are under increasing pressure
from the United States.
Lebanon has traditionally sought good relations with Washington and ties between
the two countries run deep. Lebanese veterans remember when 14,000 US Marines
descended on the Lebanese coast in 1958 as US President Dwight Eisenhower worked
to counter the rising wave of Nasserism. During the 1975-76 war in Lebanon,
Washington quietly gave Syria President Hafez Assad the green light to send
troops into Lebanon to end the fighting. War, however, continued until 1990 and
the Syrian tutelage remained until 2005, after the assassination of former
Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
During the Reagan era, the US Embassy in Beirut was attacked, killing 63
employees and leading to its military withdrawal. Today, US President Donald
Trump is pursuing a hard-line policy against Tehran and its allies, chief among
them Hezbollah.
“Our pressure on Iran is simple. It’s aimed at cutting off the funding for
terrorists and it is working,” Pompeo said in Beirut, adding that Iran had given
as much as $700 million to Hezbollah in a year. “We believe that our work is
already constraining Hezbollah.”
In Lebanon, Hezbollah is acknowledged as a legitimate political party with
representatives in parliament and the cabinet. However, there has always been a
demarcating line between the state’s official stance and that of the party,
which raises eyebrows over the question of political legitimacy. Former Lebanese
President Michel Suleiman (2008-16) worked to develop a unified defence strategy
that would give the Lebanese state an upper hand on war and peace issues
vis-a-vis Hezbollah. The Baabda Declaration, approved unanimously — including by
Hezbollah — in June 2012, called on the state to respect all international
resolutions, including UN Resolution 1701, which called for “the cessation of
hostilities between Lebanon and Israel.” The resolution continues to be
respected.
Now, however, Lebanese President Michel Aoun, whose success is largely due to
Hezbollah support, has publicly backed Hezbollah’s position on the issue of
armed resistance. Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, who is also Aoun’s
son-in-law, has taken the same line, telling Pompeo that Lebanon has “the
natural right to defend itself and to resist any occupation of its land. This is
a holy right.” Aoun, meanwhile, has not fulfilled his pledge to re-examine the
country’s defence strategy after the creation of a new cabinet. He has also
defended Hezbollah’s access to weapons as necessary to ensure national security.
His words put Lebanon fully in line with Hezbollah. Any form of political
manoeuvring that seeks to draw a distinction between Lebanon the state and
Hezbollah the party is no longer an option.
And, with the United States ramping up pressure on Iran and Hezbollah, Lebanon
seems to be putting itself in a jam.
*Rami Rayess is editor-in-chief of Lebanese Al Anbaa Electronic Newspaper (anbaaonline.com)
and spokesman for the Progressive Socialist Party in Lebanon.
Latest LCCC English
Miscellaneous Reports & News published
on April 01/19
Pope urges Catholics in Morocco to dialogue, not proselytize
AP/March 31/31/19
Francis has stressed a message of Christian-Muslim fraternity during his first
trip to Morocco.Proselytism is a prominent issue in religious discourse in the
north African country, even though Christians, Muslims and Jews have coexisted
peacefully here for centuries
RABAT: Pope Francis sought to encourage greater Christian-Muslim dialogue on
Sunday, telling his flock that showing the country’s Muslim majority they are
part of the same human family will help stamp out extremism.
On his second and final day in Morocco, Francis told Catholic priests and
sisters that even though they are few in number, they shouldn’t seek to convert
others but rather engage in dialogue and charity.
“In this way, you will unmask and lay bare every attempt to exploit differences
and ignorance in order to sow fear, hatred and conflict,” he said. “For we know
that fear and hatred, nurtured and manipulated, destabilize our communities and
leave them spiritually defenseless.”Francis has stressed a message of
Christian-Muslim fraternity during his first trip to Morocco, a majority Muslim
nation of 36 million. Proselytism is a prominent issue in religious discourse in
the north African country, even though Christians, Muslims and Jews have
coexisted peacefully here for centuries.
After reaching out to the Sunni majority and Morocco’s ever growing community of
migrants from countries in sub-Saharan Africa on Saturday, Francis turned his
attention Sunday to Christian minorities. His aim was to highlight their
constructive presence in Moroccan life. Francis visited a social center run by
Catholic religious sisters that serves a poor Muslim community south of the
capital, Rabat, with medical, educational and vocational services. The Temara
center operates a pre-school, treats burn victims, trains women in tailoring and
provides meals for 150 children a day. Catholic catechism isn’t taught at the
pre-school. “Their teachers are all Muslims and speak in Arabic and they prepare
them on Muslim religion,” said sister Gloria Carrillero. “We did not come here
with the purpose of doing proselytism. We came here just to help.” Catholics
represent less than 1 percent of Morocco’s population and most are foreign-born
migrants. Morocco also has between 2,000 and 6,000 homegrown converts to
Christianity who are obliged to practice their faith privately because Morocco
prohibits Muslim conversions. These Moroccan converts often celebrate Masses in
their homes and hide their religious affiliations for fear of prosecution and
arrest. Yet many flocked to Francis’ afternoon Mass in a Rabat sports stadium
with the hope the pope’s visit would compel Moroccan authorities to be more
tolerant of religious diversity. “With this visit, we want to tell the pope and
the Moroccan society that we are proud to be Christians,” said Moroccan
Christian Adam Rbati, who was attending the Mass with his Christian wife and
newborn son. “It might not change much, but it will certainly create the space
for future positive change.” Francis touched on the issue of religious freedom
in his opening speech to King Mohammed VI on Saturday, urging Morocco to move
beyond just freedom of worship to true respect for an individual’s faith. “That
is why freedom of conscience and religious freedom — which is not limited to
freedom of worship alone, but allows all to live in accordance with their
religious convictions — are inseparably linked to human dignity,” he said. In a
speech to Catholic priests in the city cathedral Sunday, Francis drew applause
when he told them they should not proselytize. The church grows, he said, when
people are attracted to its message, witness its charity and engage in dialogue
as part of a human family. He called for prayer “in the name of this fraternity,
torn apart by the policies of extremism and division, by systems of unrestrained
profit or by hateful ideological tendencies, that manipulate the actions and the
future of men and women.”
Pope, Moroccan King Declare Jerusalem ‘Common Patrimony’ of Three Religions
Rabat-/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 31 March, 2019/Pope Francis on Saturday joined
Morocco's King Mohammed VI in saying Jerusalem should be a "symbol of peaceful
coexistence" for Christians, Jews, and Muslims, on the first day of a visit to
the North African country. The spiritual leader of the world's 1.3 billion
Catholics was invited by King Mohammed VI for the sake of "interreligious
dialogue", according to Moroccan authorities. In a joint statement, the two
leaders said Jerusalem was "common patrimony of humanity and especially the
followers of the three monotheistic religions." "The specific multi-religious
character, the spiritual dimension and the particular cultural identity of
Jerusalem... must be protected and promoted," they said in the declaration
released by the Vatican as the pontiff visited Rabat. The Moroccan king chairs a
committee created by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation to safeguard and
restore Jerusalem's religious, cultural, and architectural heritage. The joint
statement came after US President Donald Trump's landmark recognition of the
disputed city as capital of Israel, which sparked anger across the world,
especially from Palestinians who see Jerusalem as the capital of their future
state. Improving relations with other religions has been a priority for the
Argentine pontiff, whose papacy has been marred by clergy facing a wave of child
sex abuse allegations. Addressing thousands of Moroccans who had braved the rain
to attend the welcome ceremony, Francis said it was "essential to oppose
fanaticism". He stressed the need for "appropriate preparation of future
religious guides", ahead of meeting trainee imams later on Saturday. Catholics
are a tiny minority Morocco, where 99 percent of the population is Muslim. The
king is revered across West Africa as "commander of the faithful". Speaking at
the ceremony at the Tour (or tower) Hassan mosque and nearby mausoleum in Rabat,
the monarch also voiced opposition to radicalism. "That which terrorists have in
common is not religion, it's precisely the ignorance of religion. It's time that
religion is no longer an alibi... for this ignorance, for this intolerance," he
said. Francis rode to the ceremony in his Popemobile, passing rows of Moroccan
and Vatican City flags and an estimated 12,000 well-wishers who packed the
esplanade. Buildings had been repainted, lawns manicured, and security stepped
up ahead of the first papal visit to Morocco since John Paul II in 1985.
A 17-year-old was arrested after trying to throw himself onto the king's
limousine to seek the monarch's help, the police said. Some 130,000 people
across Rabat watched the first stage of the pope's visit, which was beamed onto
giant screens, officials said. After stopping by the royal palace, Francis and
Mohammed visited an institute where around 1,300 students are studying to become
imams and preachers. There they heard from a French and a Nigerian student of
the institute, which teaches "moderate Islam" and is backed by the king.
In Morocco, where Islam is the state religion, authorities are keen to stress
the country's "religious tolerance" which allows Christians and Jews to worship
freely. But Moroccans are automatically considered Muslim, apart from a minority
who are born Jewish. Apostasy is socially frowned upon, and proselytizing is a
criminal offense. The Pope finished his Saturday schedule by meeting migrants --
including children dressed in colorful hats -- at a center run by Catholic
humanitarian organization Caritas. "Everyone has the right to a future," said
Francis, who has throughout his papacy highlighted the plight of migrants and
refugees. He criticized "collective expulsions" and said ways for migrants to
regularize their status should be encouraged. Caritas centers in Rabat,
Casablanca, and Tangiers welcomed 7,551 new arrivals in 2017, according to the
charity, helping migrants access services. The number of people taking the sea
route from Morocco to Spain has recently surged as it has become harder for them
to pass through Libya. On Sunday, the pope will celebrate mass at a Rabat
stadium with an estimated 10,000 people attending.
Arab Summit Shows Unity against Trump's Israel Policy, Qatar Emir Leaves Early
Associated Press/Naharnet/March 31/19/Leaders meeting in Tunisia for the annual
Arab League summit on Sunday were united in their condemnation of Trump
administration policies seen as unfairly biased toward Israel but divided on a
host of other issues, including whether to readmit founding member Syria. This
year's summit comes against a backdrop of ongoing wars in Syria and Yemen, rival
authorities in Libya and a lingering boycott of Qatar by four fellow League
members. Algeria's President Abdelaziz Bouteflika and Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir
skipped the meeting as they contend with mass protests against their long
reigns. Representatives from the 22-member league — minus Syria — aim to jointly
condemn President Donald Trump's recognition of Israeli control over the Golan
Heights, which Israel seized from Syria in the 1967 war, and Trump's decision
last year to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital. At the opening of the
summit, King Salman said Saudi Arabia "absolutely rejects any measures
undermining Syria's sovereignty over the Golan Heights" and supports the
creation of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, with east
Jerusalem as its capital.
He added that Iran's meddling was to blame for instability in the region.
Arab League Secretary-General Ahmed Abul Gheit said that interferences regional
rivals Iran and Turkey have "worsened some crises and created new problems."One
of the few things that have united the Arab League over the last 50 years is the
rejection of Israel's occupation of the Golan Heights as well as east Jerusalem
and the West Bank, territories seized in the 1967 war that the Palestinians want
for their future state. The international community, including the United
States, largely shared that position until Trump upended decades of U.S. policy
by moving the American Embassy to Jerusalem last year and recognizing Israel's
1981 annexation of the strategic Golan plateau earlier this month. The Arab
leaders meeting in Tunisia are expected to issue a statement condemning those
moves. Mahmoud Khemiri spokesman of the summit, said there will be a "strong
resolution" on Golan. But the leaders are unlikely to take any further action.
That's in part because regional powerhouses Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates have cultivated close ties with the Trump administration, viewing it as
a key ally against their main rival, Iran. Both face Western pressure over their
devastating three-year war with Yemen's Houthi rebels, and Riyadh is still
grappling with the fallout from the killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal
Khashoggi by Saudi agents last year.
Lebanon's Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil said Saturday that Arab ministers had
voiced support in a preparatory meeting for a declaration that Trump's Golan
move violates the U.N. Charter, which prohibits acquiring territories by force.
In Syria, small protests against Trump's Golan move were held in different parts
of the country and state media criticized the Arab summit. "The Golan is not
awaiting support from the Arabs, and not a statement to condemn what Trump has
done," the Thawra newspaper said in an editorial that accused Arab leaders of
taking their orders from the U.S. and Israel.
The Arab League is expected to consider readmitting Syria, a founding member
that was expelled in the early days of the 2011 uprising against President
Bashar Assad. But officials speaking ahead of the meeting said it was unlikely
Syria would be welcomed back anytime soon.
The United Arab Emirates reopened its embassy in Damascus last year, and other
Arab states have expressed support for restoring relations. But Saudi Arabia and
Qatar have actively supported the rebels trying to overthrow Assad, and many
other states view his government as an Iranian proxy that should continue to be
shunned. Some countries were represented by their heads of state on Sunday,
while others sent lower-level delegations. The UAE sent the lesser-known
Fujairah ruler Hamad bin Mohammed al-Sharqi rather than the powerful Abu Dhabi
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed or Dubai's ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid. In
a rare sign of easing tensions, King Salman and Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin
Hamad Al Thani sat at the same sprawling table at Sunday's opening session. It
was the first time the two leaders have appeared in the same room since Saudi
Arabia led the boycott of Qatar nearly two years ago over Doha's ties to Iran
and its support for regional Islamist groups. But Qatar's emir left the summit
after the opening session and did not attend the closed-door meeting later in
the day, according to Qatar's state-run news agency. It did not give a reason
for his early departure.
Tunis Declaration Counts on Arab Solidarity Against Interventions
Tunis- Sawsan Abu Hussein and Thaer Abbas/Asharq Al-Awsat/March 31/19
The 30th Arab League Summit, slated for Sunday in the Tunisian capital, Tunis,
will be under the title "Summit of Unification of Vision and Speech", with the
need to address the US recognition of Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem and the
Syrian Golan occupied territory figuring high on the meeting’s agenda. Other
Arab world hot topics, such as Syria, the Iranian expansionist agenda, and
Turkish interventions in Iraq will also be tackled. Tunisia, which takes over
this year from Saudi Arabia in hosting the summit, will coordinate with the
leaders of 12 Arab countries in responding to some of the most pressing
challenges facing the Arab world today. Among the attending leaders are Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah Sisi, Morocco’s King Mohammed VI, Bahrain's King Hamad
bin Isa Al-Khalifa, in addition to Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and
Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika. Arab leaders will also seek to ratify
the draft "Tunis Declaration", presented to them by the Arab foreign ministers,
which reaffirms the importance of promoting joint Arab action. At their
preparatory meeting earlier on Friday, Arab foreign ministers approved draft
resolutions prepared by permanent delegates and senior officials, together with
decisions of the Economic and Social Council, which will be presented in the
Arab League meeting tomorrow at the Summit Level. The draft resolutions contain
about 21 items, which focus on the latest political developments of the
Palestinian issue and the Arab-Israeli conflict, activating the Arab peace
initiative and developments in the Syrian crisis, the occupied Syrian Arab
Golan, the situation in Libya, Yemen, Sudan, Somalia, and Lebanon. The draft
resolutions dealt with supporting the Arab ecosystem to counter terrorism and
developing the League of Arab States—it is worth noting that draft resolutions
were referred from the preparatory Economic and Social Council for the 30th Arab
Summit. The Arab League Summit will stress the importance of a comprehensive and
lasting peace in the Middle East as a strategy embodied by the Arab peace
initiative, which was adopted by all Arab countries at the Beirut summit in
2002.
Qatari Emir leaves Arab League summit abruptly
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 31 March 2019/The Emir of Qatar, Sheikh
Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, left the Arab League summit on Sunday as soon as
Tunisian President Baji Caid Essibsi concluded his speech. Arab League Secretary
General Ahmed Aboul Gheit was beginning his speech when the Qatari Emir was seen
leaving the hall abruptly, without giving a speech. Sources said that Sheikh
Tamim headed directly to the airport. The Qatari Emir left the North African
country without announcing his next destination, Qatar’s Ambassador to Tunisia
Saad bin Nasser Hamidi told Tunis Afrique Presse agency. This is the first
summit that brings together the Emir of Qatar, Saudi King Salman and Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi since Cairo, Riyadh, Abu Dhabi and Manama decided
to boycott Doha. In his speech, Aboul Gheit thanked the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
and denounced the armed militias that caused the destruction of Arab countries.
He said that the interventions of Iran and Turkey in the affairs of a number of
Arab countries exacerbated the crises and kept them away from the solution.
Israelis to Speak at Bahrain Conference in April
Naharnet/March 31/19/Several Israeli speakers are to appear at a business
conference in Bahrain next month, a move condemned by MPs in the tiny Gulf state
Sunday. At least three Israeli speakers, including the Israel Innovation
Authority's deputy chief Anya Eldan, are scheduled to speak at the Global
Entrepreneurship Congress in Manama, according to the forum's website. Members
of parliament said Sunday they were against hosting Israeli speakers in Bahrain,
which -- like most Arab states -- does not recognize Israel. "Parliament
stresses its support for the just cause of the brotherly Palestinian people, and
it will remain a priority for the Bahraini and Arab people," it said in a
statement published on its official Facebook page. "The end of the Israeli
occupation and the withdrawal from all Arab land is an absolute necessity for
the stability and security of the region and for a fair and comprehensive
peace."Officially, Israel only has diplomatic relations with two Arab states,
neighboring Egypt and Jordan. The Jewish state has long faced resistance to its
efforts to improve ties with Arab nations because of its 50-year occupation of
Arab territories. It has, however, recently seen increased behind-the-scenes
cooperation with some Arab countries, particularly in tackling their shared
enemy, Iran.in Bahrain's foreign minister, Sheikh Khalid al-Khalifa, last year
backed Israel's right to "defend itself" after its military said it struck
dozens of Iranian military targets in Syria. He said Iran had "breached the
status quo in the region and invaded countries with its forces and
missiles"."Any state in the region, including Israel, is entitled to defend
itself by destroying sources of danger," he wrote on Twitter Also in 2018,
Bahrain hosted a UNESCO conference attended by an Israeli delegation.
Another burst of Hamas rocket fire, yet Israel reopens Gaza
crossings, releases $300m payout
DEBKAfile/March 31/19
Israel reopened the Gaza border crossings early Sunday March 31, although five
Palestinian rockets were aimed at the Eshkol district. IDF tanks hit back at
Hamas positions in northern and central Gaza. There were no casualties but
damage on the Israeli side.
Although the usual terrorist and IDF tit-for-tat show goes on – and Hamas leader
Yahya Sinwar pledged more of the same, only worse – Israel appears to be going
forward nevertheless with lavish concessions for Gaza – rewards for what Israel
officials are commending as Hamas’ “self-restraint” in keeping the March of the
Million on Saturday within bounds. DEBKAfile reports exclusively that the
Netanyahu government has consented to the UN beginning to draw on the $300m fund
for Gaza Strip’s economic development accumulated from donations by different
countries. Expenditure on projects will be overseen by Nickolay Mladenov, UN
Special Coordinator for Middle East Peace Process. Generous Israeli benefits and
Hamas promises make up a new understanding for which the Egyptian mediators are
now working on a timetable. They are listed here by DEBKAfile: Expansion of the
flow of food supplies crossing into the Gaza Strip as well as building
materials, which Israel restricted in the past as they were used for terror
tunnels.
Discussions on a maritime line linking Gaza to a port in Cyprus or Egypt.
Hamas will halt its attacks on IDF forces defending the border fence.
Palestinian rocket fire against Israel will cease.
No more explosive balloon assaults.
The IDF will exercise restraint against Palestinian “demonstrators” pushing
against the border fence. This is taken to mean and end to live fire.
Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia will twist the arm of Palestinian Authority
chairman Mahmoud Abbas to release the funds he has been holding back from the
Hamas regime for covering its payroll and Gaza’s electricity bills.
A permanent Egyptian mission will be established in Gaza City to monitor the new
accord’s implementation. Its members, high-ranking Egyptian intelligence
officers, were present on the ground during the Saturday demonstration.
No truce will be announced between Israel and Hamas. At a later date, they will
announce that they are reverting to the understandings reached after Defensive
Shield, Israel’s last major counter-terror operation in Gaza in 2006.
Five rockets fired at Israel from Gaza Strip, Israeli tanks respond
The Associated Press, Gaza City/Sunday, 31 March 2019/Five rockets were fired
from the Gaza Strip into Israel early Sunday while Israeli tanks targeted Hamas
military posts in response, the Israeli military announced, following a day of
mass protests that saw Israeli troops kill four Palestinians near the
territory's border. No casualties were reported and no Palestinian group claimed
responsibility for the rockets, though they appeared to be in retaliation for
the deaths of the protesters. Tens of thousands of Palestinians rallied in the
Gaza Strip on Saturday to mark the anniversary of their mass protests along the
Israeli border. Most demonstrators kept their distance from the border, though
small crowds of activists approached the perimeter fence. The forces responded
with tear gas and opened fire, killing four Palestinians and wounding 64. Hamas
officials say that Israel is offering a package of economic incentives in
exchange for calm along the volatile border. Khalil al-Hayya, a senior Hamas
official, said the group had received "positive signs" from the Egyptians. He
added that the Egyptian team was to return to Israel on Sunday to continue the
talks. "We will continue our marches until all our goals are achieved," he said.
Fourth Palestinian killed in Israel border clashes: Gaza ministry
AFP, Gaza/Sunday, 31 March 2019/A fourth Palestinian died from Israeli fire in
clashes sparked by mass demonstrations along the Israel-Gaza border on Saturday,
the health ministry in the enclave said. Billal al-Najjar, 17, was shot by
Israeli forces east of Khan Yunis in southern Gaza, it said in a statement. Two
others aged 17 and a 20-year-old man were killed, according to ministry
statements, as tens of thousands gathered to mark the first anniversary of
weekly protests along the frontier.
Israel reopens Gaza crossings after week of hostilities
The Associated Press, Jerusalem/Sunday, 31 March 2019/Israeli authorities have
reopened the two crossings with the Gaza Strip after days of hostilities in a
sign that cease-fire talks may be advancing. Israeli and Hamas officials
confirmed Sunday that the Erez and Kerem Shalom crossings were opened for the
first time since Monday. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity. Sunday’s
reopening comes hours after Palestinian militants launched rockets into Israel
overnight and the military responded with tank fire. Four Palestinians,
including three teens, had died a day earlier from Israeli fire as tens of
thousands took part in mass protests along the Israel-Gaza perimeter fence.
Egyptian mediators have tried to reach a cease-fire agreement to end six days of
hostilities, which began when a rocket fired by Palestinian militants struck a
home near Tel Aviv Monday.
Hamas Awaits Results of Egyptian-Led Negotiations With Israel
Ramallah- Kifah Zboun/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 31 March, 2019/As Hamas waits for
the handing over of Israeli implementation roadmaps for the latest
Egyptian-sponsored understandings reached with Tel Aviv, three Palestinians were
killed and more than 300 were wounded by Israeli fire near the Gaza Strip
border. Khalil al-Hayya, a senior Hamas official said that an Egyptian security
delegation, headed by General Ahmed Abdel Khaliq, and that is conducting shuttle
diplomacy between Gaza and Tel Aviv, will receive on Sunday an Israeli roadmap
for implementing the understandings. Hamas officials say that Israel is offering
a package of economic incentives in exchange for calm along the volatile border.
Hamas-Israeli understandings mainly focus on expanding area of sea fishing, lift
the ban on dozens of "dual-use" products, establish industrial zones and
infrastructure projects, and transfer funds without delay into the Gaza Strip.
Meanwhile, Israeli forces have killed four Palestinian protesters as
demonstrations take place on the Gaza border, the health ministry has said.
Israeli soldiers had killed the four Palestinians and injured 316 others,
including 14 who suffered life-threatening wounds, during protests across the
perimeter fence, in the eastern parts of the Gaza Strip. Most demonstrators kept
their distance from the border, though small crowds of activists approached the
fence and threw stones and explosives toward Israeli troops on the other side.
The forces fired tear gas and opened fire against protesters. The Egyptian
delegation had asked Hamas to maintain a peaceful "march of return" and
restraint its protesters as to prevent Israeli withdrawal from the ongoing
talks.
Hamas had pledged to keep the crowds at a safe distance from the fence to avoid
inflaming the political atmosphere during negotiations of a possible easing of
the blockade.
Netanyahu Welcomes Brazil's Bolsonaro, Embassy Decision Pending
Jerusalem/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 31 March, 2019/Brazilian President Jair
Bolsonaro began a visit to Israel on Sunday with a decision pending on
fulfilling a promise to move his country’s embassy to Jerusalem, a policy change
opposed by military officers in his cabinet. Bolsonaro touched down Sunday and
received red carpet treatment from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The
Brazilian leader opened his speech after landing with the words "I love Israel"
in Hebrew at Tel Aviv’s Ben-Gurion airport. The four-day visit by the far-right
leader comes a week before Israel’s closely contested election in which the
right-wing Netanyahu is battling a popular centrist candidate and corruption
allegations, which he denies. Netanyahu called Bolsonaro a "good friend" and
says Israel and Brazil have entered "a new era" of relations. He said he and
Bolsonaro would sign “many agreements”, including security deals, and that the
Brazilian leader would visit Judaism’s holy Western Wall, “in Jerusalem, our
eternal capital”. A leading Israeli financial news website, Calcalist, reported
on Sunday that Brazilian state-run oil firm Petrobras was considering bidding in
a new tender to explore for oil and gas offshore Israel and a final decision
would be announced during Bolsonaro’s visit. Earlier this month, a Brazilian
government official told Reuters no decision had been made on the embassy move,
but “something will have to be said about the embassy during the trip”. The
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, added that a formal announcement
might not come during the visit. Visiting Brazil for the Jan. 1 presidential
inauguration, Netanyahu said Bolsonaro had told him that moving the Brazilian
embassy in Israel to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv was a matter of “when, not if”.
Like Netanyahu, Bolsonaro is an outspoken admirer of US President Donald Trump,
who moved the US embassy to Jerusalem last May, five months after breaking with
international consensus and recognizing the city as Israel’s capital. Bolsonaro
also enjoys strong evangelical support at home. Netanyahu has courted US
evangelical leaders during his current decade in power. But in an interview in
February, Brazilian Vice President Hamilton Mourao, a retired army general, told
Reuters that moving the embassy was a bad idea because it would hurt Brazil’s
exports to Arab countries, including an estimated $5 billion in sales of halal
food that comply with Muslim dietary laws. Bolsonaro’s economic team and the
country’s powerful farm lobby have advised against relocating the embassy to
Jerusalem. Israel captured East Jerusalem along with the West Bank and Gaza in
the 1967 Middle East war. Palestinians seek to establish a state in the two
territories, with East Jerusalem as its capital.
Sweida Fears Another Attack by ISIS
Daraa (South Syria)- Riyad Al-Zein/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 31 March, 2019/People
living in villages and towns located in the eastern countryside of Sweida still
feel threatened by ISIS since its latest attack on July 25, 2018, on the
province. This concern comes after news on the presence of sleeper cells and a
large number of ISIS militants, who have withdrawn from areas east Syria and
headed towards Sweida. Local sources from the province confirmed the
displacement of large numbers of families from villages and towns in Sweida’s
countryside towards the province. Meanwhile, news spread on the redeployment of
the terrorist organization in Sweida’s eastern desert. Fears of people living in
the eastern countryside grew after elements from the Syrian Social Nationalist
Party (SSNP) found missiles and mines in Diyatha, east of Sweida, hidden inside
one of the organization’s hideouts. A leader in the province said ISIS militants
were able to escape from their headquarters before the arrival of SSNP fighters,
who were combing the area. He warned from the return of ISIS sleeper cells’
activity near villages in Sweida’s eastern countryside. Local factions have
boosted their readiness and deployed elements and patrols in the eastern
countryside, a source close to local factions in Sweida told Asharq Al-Awsat,
adding that they have finally conducted combing operations deep in the plains
adjacent to the villages of the eastern countryside. He explained that these
operations were meant to target any movement in the depth of the desert and deal
with any suspected mobile target. Local factions didn’t leave their
observatories in the eastern areas and were continuing their monitoring
operations along the eastern line of the province, especially after reported
ISIS movements in some desert areas, the source added. He also noted that the
Syrian army was scattered over a wide area in the desert and controlled 70
percent of the area of Tulul al-Safa, near the eastern countryside and
overlooking Sweida’s desert.
In Syria's Al-Hol Camp, Ultra-Extremists Fuel Fear
Beirut/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 31 March, 2019/Clashes with guards, violent
factional quarrels and a new strain of ultra-extremism -- the ISIS group's
territorial "caliphate" may be defeated, but a camp in eastern Syria is emerging
as a fresh militant powder keg. Dislodged in a final offensive by a Kurdish-led
ground force and coalition air strikes, thousands of wives and children of ISIS
fighters have flooded in from a string of Syrian villages south of the camp in
recent months. Among the hordes of Syrians and Iraqis, some 9,000 foreigners are
held in a fenced section of the encampment, under the watch of Kurdish forces.
When they want to go to the camp's market or receive aid rations, these
high-risk prisoners are escorted by armed guards. But tensions are rife among
the foreigners themselves. "We don't have the same mentality -- they (the
extremists) want to impose their vision of Islam," said Vanessa, who came to
Syria from her native Guyana as a convert in 2013 with her husband and children.
"They say that we are infidels," the gangly 36-year-old said, singling out the
camp's Tunisians as especially "extreme". The semi-autonomous Kurdish
administration that rules much of northeastern Syria is urging countries of
origin to take back their citizens. The women and children need to be
"re-educated and reintegrated by their home countries," said Kurdish official
Abdel Karm Omar. Otherwise, he warned, they will become "the terrorists of the
future".
Under ISIS' so-called caliphate -- declared in 2014 over large swaths of Syria
and neighboring Iraq -- minors were systematically indoctrinated and even
exposed to public executions. In a gesture of continued loyalty to ISIS, some
children at the camp -- a few grinning, others staring coldly -- pointed their
index finger to the sky in front of AFP reporters. One woman threatened to hit a
cameraman, but others -- anxious to return home and declaring they regret
joining ISIS -- were keen to talk. Some of the Tunisians and Russians interned
at Al-Hol have adopted "very extreme beliefs", confided a Belgian woman who came
to Syria in 2013. "These people scare me", she said. Even just "talking to the
guards, or requesting to go to the market, can make us infidels" in their eyes,
she added. Once someone is labeled a non-believer, these women decree it lawful
to strip the person of their belongings, the Belgian said."They can burn our
tents and do whatever they want to us." But tensions are not limited to the
foreigners' section. A few days ago, a confrontation escalated in the main area,
populated by Iraqis and Syrians. Kurdish police were forced to intervene. Some
of the residents "threw stones" at their fellow residents, a policeman told AFP,
without giving his name. Nabil al-Hassan, who heads the camp's communications,
insisted the "security situation is under control". But, he admitted, major
logistical challenges give rise to "problems", including tensions over access to
tents and aid.
Heavily pregnant Lamia, 21, told AFP she is steadfast in her loyalty to the ISIS
cause. "We remain with the (ISIS) State," said the former resident of Manbij, a
northern Syrian town that was occupied by the militants until the Kurdish-led
Syrian Democratic Forces prevailed.
Lamia wants to go back to her hometown and has been at the camp for a month; her
first husband was killed in combat, the second is in prison. Back at the
entrance to the foreigners' area, several women including Algerians and
Ukrainians gathered at the gate, insisting it was their turn to go to market.
Blonde children and those from central Asia mingled in the dust. The women
returned from the market hauling trolleys full of eggs, potatoes, nappies, and
gas cylinders. Everything is meticulously searched by the guards, who are
instructed to confiscate, log and store unusually valuable items and mobile
phones. These "security measures" are needed to stop residents stealing from
each other -- and from smuggling goods or cultivating contacts in the outside
world -- Hassan said. Delving through a black handbag, the guards retrieved a
phone and small piece of paper with a contact number scrawled on it. "It's not
mine, it belongs to my friend," the Tunisian owner insisted. A little later, in
another bag, the guards dug out a ring and a hefty gold chain, carefully hidden
in a tiny plastic bag. The dismayed owner gripped the sentinel's hands in an
attempt to prise back the items, to no avail. "She's not coming back inside.
Take her to the cell," the guard said. The woman clung to the wire fence and
wailed.
Algerian Army Chiefs Repeat Call for Proposed Presidential
Vacuum
Algiers- Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 31 March, 2019/Algeria’s National Defense
Ministry announced that military chiefs held a meeting Saturday in which they
discussed developments vis a vis the Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General
Ahmed Gaed Salah’s proposal for the constitutional council to declare President
Abdelaziz Bouteflika unfit for office. Salah’s proposal for removing Bouteflika
from the presidency is provided for under article 102 of the national charter.
In a statement issued by the Defense Ministry on Saturday, Salah said that most
people supported the army’s plan but some were resisting, without naming those
opposed to the move. He said these opponents had met on Saturday to start a
media campaign against the army, claiming people were against the proposal. He
said trying to undermine the military, a revered institution in Algeria whose
support has long been seen as vital to keeping Bouteflika and the ruling elite
in power, was a “red line” that should not be crossed. He did not elaborate.
“All that emerges from these suspicious meetings of proposals that do not
conform to constitutional legitimacy or undermine the national army, which is a
red line, is totally unacceptable,” he said in the statement. Salah underlined
that activating article 102 proposal is the only guarantee for maintaining
political stability in the African state, adding that any alternative
“developments” will not be tolerated.
“In order to protect our country from any hazardous situation, everybody needs
to show selflessness and take into consideration the higher interests of our
home country in order to find an immediate solution to this crisis,” he said. “A
solution in accordance with the constitution, that is the only guarantee of a
stable situation,” he added in his statement earlier Tuesday. “This solution
ensures the respect of the constitution and the rule of law. It will also
guarantee consensus among all parties. Such a solution is stipulated by article
102 of the constitution." In parallel, members of Algeria's ruling National
Liberation Front (FLN) backed Salah’s proposal and called for the ailing
president to step down, following similar calls from its coalition partner the
National Rally for Democracy (RND). In a party statement released the following
day, Wednesday, the FLN announced their support for the army's call for the
invocation of Article 102 of Algeria's constitution, which will essentially
remove Bouteflika from power. "We announce our support for the initiative as a
start to a constitutional plan that will allow us to protect our country from
dangers," the statement read.
Halbousi to Asharq AL-Awsat: US Forces in Iraq Provide
Political Umbrella Facing Foreign Interventions
Washington- Elie Youssef /Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 31 March, 2019/Iraqi
Parliament Speaker Mohammed al-Halbousi said that proposals declared by some
parliamentary blocs to submit a bill calling for the withdrawal of US troops
from Iraq have become from the past. In an interview with Asharq Al-Awsat from
Washington, he stressed that the subject had been agreed upon between the
President of the Republic, the Prime Minister, and the Speaker, as well as with
all the political blocs and parties, and that it was withdrawn from the table of
discussions.
He added that calling for the withdrawal of the US-led coalition forces from
Iraq at this stage was “in the interest of terrorism”, emphasizing that the
presence of the forces was “a guarantee for Iraq and provided political cover in
the face of foreign interventions.”Halbousi, who visited the US capital heading
a parliamentary delegation, met with Speaker of the US House of Representatives
Nancy Pelosi, Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and
Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan. “The war on terror is not over. This
is what I discussed with American officials. We agreed that we have entered a
new phase of this war, which aims at drying up [terrorists’] intellectual and
financial resources and depriving this extremist ideology of its ability to
attract new followers,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat. The Iraqi speaker noted that he
discussed with US officials the sanctions imposed on Iran and that he asked for
more time for Iraq to develop its capabilities and investments, which would
enable it to abandon any other sources of energy needed by the Iraqi people at
the current time. He added that Iraq was using Iranian gas and electric power
and that he reviewed with the US officials projects between the Iraqi Ministry
of Oil with ExxonMobil to invest in these sectors in order to help Iraq to
become self-sufficient. Halbousi stressed that Iraq did not defend any side, but
the current circumstances did not allow it to meet its energy needs, adding that
it was no secret he was dissatisfied with the Iranian intervention in his
country and the region.
African Union to host Libya ‘reconciliation’ conference
AFP Sunday, 31 March 2019/The African Union will host a
“reconciliation” conference in July aimed at uniting Libya’s political rivals,
AU commission chief Moussa Faki said late Saturday. “It’s an opportunity for the
Libyans,” Faki said during a press conference in Tunis, on the sidelines of an
Arab League summit in the Tunisian capital. The announcement of the July talks
in Addis Ababa followed a meeting on Libya which included Faki, UN chief Antonio
Guterres and the EU’s top diplomat Federica Mogherini. “It’s high time that the
(political) actors discuss the fate of their country,” Faki said. Libya has been
mired in chaos since the 2011 ouster of dictator Muammar Qaddafi and a series of
international efforts have so far failed to unite the country. The United
Nations is due to hold another conference next month in the central Libyan city
of Ghadames, which is aimed at drawing up a “roadmap” to lead to elections.
Between 120 and 150 delegates are expected to attend the forum from April 14-16,
UN envoy Ghassan Salame said earlier this month. The UN backs a Government of
National Accord in the capital Tripoli, while a rival administration in the east
is supported by Khalifa Haftar and his self-styled Libyan National Army.
Reaching a lasting accord is seen as vital for creating stability in the
country, as well as getting the economy back on track.
US ending aid to El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras over migrants
Reuters, Washington/ Sunday, 31 March 2019/The US is cutting off aid to El
Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, known collectively as the “Northern Triangle,”
the State Department said on Saturday, a day after President Donald Trump
blasted the Central American countries for sending migrants to the US. “We are
carrying out the President’s direction and ending FY (fiscal year) 2017 and FY
2018 foreign assistance programs for the Northern Triangle,” a State Department
spokesperson said in a statement. The department declined to provide further
details. The State Department said it would “engage Congress in the process,” an
apparent acknowledgement that it will need lawmakers’ approval to end the
funding. A US House Appropriations Committee aide estimated that around $700
million of aid was affected. Trump claimed on Friday during a trip to Florida
that the countries had “set up” caravans of migrants in order to export them
into the United States. A surge of asylum seekers from the three countries have
sought to enter the United States across its southern border in recent days. “We
were giving them $500 million. We were paying them tremendous amounts of money,
and we’re not paying them anymore because they haven’t done a thing for us,”
Trump said. Trump also threatened on Friday to close the US border with Mexico
next week if Mexico does not stop immigrants from reaching the United States, a
move that could disrupt millions of legal border crossings and billions of
dollars in trade.
Turks vote in critical municipal elections as Erdogan’s popularity is tested
Reuters, Ankara/Sunday, 31 March 2019/Voters in Turkey began casting ballots in
Sunday’s municipal elections, which are seen as a barometer of President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan’s popularity amid a sharp economic downturn in the nation that
straddles Europe and Asia. More than 57 million eligible voters are making
choices in 200,000 polling stations across the country to elect the mayors for
30 large metropolitan cities, 51 provincial capitals and 922 districts. They are
also voting to elect local assembly representatives as well as tens of thousands
of neighborhood or village administrators. With the economy contracting
following a currency crisis last year in which the lira lost more than 30
percent of its value, some voters appeared ready to punish Erdogan, who has
ruled with an increasingly uncompromising stance. “I was actually not going to
vote today, but when I saw how much they (AKP) were flailing, I thought this
might be time to land them a blow. Everyone is unhappy. Everyone is struggling,”
said 47-year-old Hakan after voting in Ankara. Voting started at 7 a.m. (0400
GMT) in eastern Turkey and an hour later in the rest of the country. Polling
stations close at 4 p.m. in the east and 5 p.m. in the west. Erdogan’s past
electoral successes have been based on economic prosperity, but with a weakening
currency, inflation at double-digit figures and food prices soaring, his
conservative ruling party could lose control of key mayoral seats. The municipal
elections are also a first test for Erdogan since he won elections last year
that ushered in a new system that gave him wide powers. Opposition parties are
mostly coordinating strategies and running under alliances in an effort to
maximize the chances to unseat ruling party officials. The main battleground
appears to be for Ankara, the capital, where opinion polls have suggested that
Mansur Yavas, an opposition alliance candidate, could upset a quarter of a
century rule by Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party and its predecessor.
Mehmet Ozhaseki, former minister of environment and urban planning, who is
running on the ticket for Erdogan and his nationalist allies.
In Istanbul, Erdogan named former Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, who also
served previously as transport minister, to run against Ekrem Imamoglu from the
opposition. “Whoever wins Istanbul, wins Turkey,” Erdogan has said in election
rallies. His rise to power began as Istanbul mayor in 1994.
Erdogan has campaigned tirelessly for his party’s candidates, portraying the
country’s economic woes as an attack by enemies at home and abroad, and has
framed the race a matter of “national survival.” On Saturday, he spoke at six
rallies in Istanbul, which Turkish television stations broadcast live.
Erdogan has been using fiercely polarizing rhetoric against opposition
candidates. The ruling party has accused Ankara mayoral candidate Yavas of
forgery and tax evasion while also threatening to depose mayors from a
pro-Kurdish party -the second largest opposition in parliament- if they win
seats in the country’s predominantly Kurdish southeast. Since 2016, Erdogan’s
government has replaced elected mayors in about 100 municipalities held by the
pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party, replacing them with government-appointed
trustees and claiming the ousted officials had alleged links to outlawed Kurdish
militants. The pro-Kurdish party aims to win back those seats. It is also
strategically sitting out critical races in Turkey’s major cities, including
Istanbul and Ankara, with the aim of sending votes to their secular opposition
rival to help challenge Erdogan’s party. Since the previous local elections in
2014, Turkish citizens have gone to the polls in five different elections. In
last year’s presidential and parliamentary elections, Erdogan garnered 52.6
percent of the votes and his party and its nationalist ally won 53.7 percent of
the parliamentary vote.
Symbolic blow
Defeat in Ankara or Istanbul would end nearly a quarter of a century of rule by
Erdogan’s AKP or its predecessors in those cities and deal a symbolic blow to
Turkey’s leader. The pro-Kurdish opposition Peoples Democratic Party (HDP),
which Erdogan has accused of links to Kurdish militants, has not made an
official alliance and is not fielding candidates for mayor in Istanbul or
Ankara, which is likely to benefit the CHP. The HDP denies links to the outlawed
militant Kurdistan Workers’ Party. Two years ago, the state took control of some
100 municipalities from the pro-Kurdish party and some voters in the main
southeastern city of Diyarbakir said services there had improved as a result.
“Before, this city did not have the services I have now seen. I gave my vote to
the AK Party for services to continue,” said tradesman Haci Ahmet Beyaz, 43. In
the days leading up to the vote, Erdogan held around 100 rallies across the
country, speaking 14 times in different districts of Istanbul over the past two
days alone and more than four times in Ankara throughout his campaign. He has
described the elections as an existential choice for Turkey, blasting his rivals
as terrorist supporters aiming to topple the country. He has warned that if the
opposition candidate wins in Ankara, residents would “pay a price”.His opponents
have denied the accusations and challenged his characterization of the elections
as a matter of survival, saying Erdogan had led the country to its current
state. “What matter of survival? We’re electing mayors. What does this have to
do with the country’s survival?” Kemal Kilicdaroglu, head of the CHP, told a
rally in Eskisehir. With reference to Erdogan, Kilicdaroglu said: “If there is a
survival issue in Turkey, it’s because of you.”
Comic Leads as Ukraine Votes for President
A comedian whose political experience is limited to playing the president on TV
is likely to top the first round of voting as Ukrainians go to the polls Sunday.
Actor Volodymyr Zelensky's bid started as a long shot but he has leapfrogged
establishment politicians amid public frustration over corruption and stagnating
living standards. The 41-year-old star of the political comedy "Servant of the
People," which returned for its third season this week, is polling above 25
percent, well ahead of his nearest rivals. If Zelensky wins the presidency he
will lead a country of 45 million people that in recent years has known war,
loss of territory and uprisings, and remains one of the poorest nations in
Europe. The main question now is whether incumbent Petro Poroshenko or ex-prime
minister Yulia Tymoshenko will meet Zelensky in a run-off next month.
One recent survey put them neck and neck at around 17 percent, though another
showed Poroshenko pulling ahead of ally-turned-foe Tymoshenko to make the second
round. Zelensky, who has a young support base, acknowledges that he has "no
experience" but nonetheless insists he has the strength to lead Ukraine. "I
don't have all the knowledge but I'm learning this now," he told AFP in an
interview this month. "I don't want to look like an idiot." Even in the final
days of campaigning he has eschewed rallies and interviews in favour of playing
gigs with his comedy troupe. Critics point to the vagueness of his manifesto,
the key pledges of which were chosen following a public vote on social media.
But supporters say only a brand new face can clean up Ukraine's murky politics.
Some accuse Zelensky of acting as a front for the interests of oligarch Igor
Kolomoysky, who owns the channel that broadcasts the entertainer's shows, but he
denies any political links. Polls opened at 8:00 am (0500 GMT) with exit poll
results expected around 8:00 pm, and first preliminary results several hours
later.
Standing up to Russia
Poroshenko was elected president in 2014 after a revolution forced
Kremlin-backed predecessor Viktor Yanukovych from office. The pro-Western
uprising was followed by Russia's annexation of Crimea and a conflict in eastern
Ukraine between Kiev's forces and Moscow-backed separatists. Poroshenko came in
on promises to tackle graft, align Ukraine with the West and shut down the
fighting in the east. But five years on, corruption is widespread and the
simmering separatist conflict has cost 13,000 lives. "I am absolutely confident
that despite all of Russia's attempts... the Kremlin will not block the European
or Euro-Atlantic integration of my country," Poroshenko said after his final
campaign rally. The 53-year-old president has positioned himself as the only
person able to stand up to the Kremlin and has promised to return Crimea to
Ukraine if he is re-elected.The pledge has been widely dismissed as unrealistic.
Record number of candidates
Tymoshenko -- who was once known for her traditional plaited hairstyle but now
opts for a more conventional pony tail -- has focused on the cost of living. She
has promised to cut consumer gas prices in half and boost pensions as she
appeals to an older base during her third bid for the presidency. With a record
39 candidates on the first-round ballot, analysts say the race remains open
despite Zelensky's dominance in the polls. Barring a shock result in which one
candidate crosses the 50 percent threshold in the first round, a two-person
run-off is to be held on April 21.
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on April 01/19
The Foreign Policy Fiasco That Wasn’t/Withdrawing from the
Iran nuclear deal has paid dividends.
Bret Stephens/The New York Times/March 31/19
It’s been nearly a year since Donald Trump made the decision to withdraw from
the Iran nuclear deal, to loud cries that it would bring nothing but woe to the
United States and our interests in the Middle East.
So far, the result has been closer to the opposite.
That much was further made clear thanks to excellent reporting this week by The
Times’s Ben Hubbard. “Iran’s financial crisis, exacerbated by American
sanctions,” he writes from Lebanon, “appears to be undermining its support for
militant groups and political allies who bolster Iranian influence in Iraq,
Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere.”Well, heavens to Betsy. When the Obama
administration negotiated the nuclear deal, the president acknowledged that
sanctions relief for Tehran would inevitably mean more money for groups like
Hezbollah. But he also insisted it wouldn’t make much of a difference in terms
of Iran’s capacity to make mischief in the Middle East. Hubbard’s reporting
suggests otherwise. Iran can no longer finance civilian projects or credit lines
in Syria. Hezbollah fighters and Palestinian militants aren’t being paid, and
their families are losing subsidized housing. Even Hezbollah leader Hassan
Nasrallah has complained publicly about the effects of U.S. sanctions.
Nor are those the only benefits of withdrawal. The U.S. is no longer looking the
other way at Hezbollah’s criminal enterprises, including drug smuggling and
money laundering, the way it did during the Obama administration in order to
engage Iran diplomatically. Iran’s protest movement, quashed in 2009, has shown
signs of renewed life, not least because of public fury that the regime spends
money on foreign adventures while economic conditions worsen at home.
Most importantly, Iran has not used the U.S. withdrawal from the deal to restart
its nuclear programs, despite its threats to do so. Part of this has to do with
Tehran’s belief that it can wait Trump out, especially since Democrats like
Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris have promised to re-enter the deal if
elected.
But it also suggests an edge of fear in Tehran’s calculations. The U.S. can
still impose a great deal more pain on the Islamic Republic if it chooses to do
so.
How so? Mark Dubowitz of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies told me
earlier this week that the sanctions needle now stands at around a 6. With a nod
to Spin̈al Tap’s Nigel Tufnel, he says, “We need to get to 11.”
Iran still exports about a million barrels of oil a day; the administration
could bring it to zero by refusing to hand out sanctions waivers. The State
Department could also designate the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps as a
foreign terrorist organization, on a par with Al Qaeda or the Islamic State.
Such a designation, Dubowitz says, would “make the entire Iranian economy
radioactive” to foreign investment, since the I.R.G.C. is heavily involved in
scores of Iranian businesses.
Even here Dubowitz is merely warming to his theme. Freeze Iran’s foreign
exchange reserves? Doable. Expose the immense wealth of Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei and sanction the companies he and other leading regime figures control?
Ditto. Unleash lawsuits against companies still doing business with Iran to
recover billions of dollars in outstanding terrorism judgments against the
country? That, too.
The point isn’t to punish Iran for punishment’s sake. It’s to create leverage
for a better nuclear deal. Last May, Mike Pompeo set a dozen parameters for an
agreement, including “unqualified access” to U.N. nuclear inspectors, permanent
cessation of uranium enrichment and plutonium reprocessing, the end of Iran’s
ballistic-missile program, withdrawal of its forces from Syria, and the release
of U.S. nationals held in its prisons.
Pompeo’s demands have been alternatively dismissed as silly or reckless by most
of Washington’s foreign policy establishment. But it says something about the
debasement of diplomatic expectations — both of what we have a right to demand
and what we think we can achieve — that any of it should be controversial.
Non-nuclear states that sponsor terrorism and subscribe to millenarian
ideologies should never have access to any part of the nuclear fuel cycle, ever.
Any U.S. administration that abdicates the responsibility to do everything it
can to prevent such access effectively renounces America’s status as a
superpower as well. Iran’s G.D.P. is roughly equivalent to that of the greater
Boston area, with 17 times the population. The regime may be a force to be
reckoned with in the Middle East. But it is hardly a giant on the world stage,
immune to any form of economic pressure.
The Trump administration has succeeded in dramatically raising the costs to Iran
for its sinister behavior, at no cost to the United States or our allies. That’s
the definition of a foreign-policy achievement. It’s time to move the needle up
again. The longer Hezbollah fighters go unpaid, or the Assad regime unaided, the
better off the people of the Middle East will be.
The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d
like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some
tips. And here’s our email: letters@nytimes.com.
*Bret L. Stephens has been an Opinion columnist with The Times since April 2017.
He won a Pulitzer Prize for commentary at The Wall Street Journal in 2013 and
was previously editor in chief of The Jerusalem Post. @BretStephensNYT •
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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/29/opinion/iran-us-foreign-policy.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage
Trump Is Right about the Golan Heights
Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute/March 31/ 2019
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13976/trump-is-right-about-the-golan-heights
No country in history has ever given back to a sworn enemy militarily essential
territory that has been captured in a defensive war.
Predictably, the European Union opposed the U.S. recognition of the annexation.
But it provided no compelling argument, beyond its usual demand that the status
quo not be changed.
Has any European country ever handed over high ground, captured in a defensive
war, to a sworn enemy? Recall that at the end of the first and second world
wars, European countries made territorial adjustments to help preserve the
peace. Why should the European Union subject Israel to a double standard it has
never demanded of itself? The answer is clear: The European Union has always
acted hypocritically when it comes to Israel, and this is no exception.
No reasonable person would ask the Israelis to give the Golan Heights to the
Syrian mass murderer Assad. It would be suicidal to hand the high ground
overlooking Israeli towns and villages to a madman who would use it to target
Israelis civilians with chemical barrel bombs, as Assad has done to his own
citizens. No country has ever returned a battleship captured in a defensive war
to an enemy sworn to its destruction. In addition, the Golan Heights is a big
battleship that would be used to attack Israel.
The Golan Heights. Israel's control over the area has been the status quo for
more than half a century, and its legitimate need for this control has only
increased over time. Photo: Wikipedia.
The Golan Heights is not like the West Bank, which has a large population of
civilians who regard themselves as occupied or displaced. The civilians who
lived in the Golan Heights before Israel entered it on the last day of the
Six-Day War were largely Druze. Whoever remained there are far better off living
in Israel than in Syria. Since Assad began his campaign of murder, many Golan
Druze have already become Israeli citizens. As one of the 25,000 Arab Druze
stated in a recent LA Times article, "No doubt that Druze and Israelis in the
Golan enjoy a level of safety and security that can't be compared to life on the
other side... Each night at dinner, he says he reminds his children that while
they are well fed, there are children in Syria with nothing to eat."
So, Israel's control of the Golan Heights is not about people; it is largely
about military advantage. No country in history has ever given back to a sworn
enemy, militarily essential territory that has been captured in a defensive war.
The issue is not whether Israel should give back the Golan Heights now.
Virtually everyone agrees it should not. Moreover, it will not. No Prime
Minister of Israel, no matter how far to the left, would ever think of ceding
the Golan Heights to Assad. The area is high ground that the Syrians used to
shoot down onto the Israeli farmers laboring in the valley: it was a shooting
gallery.
Israel will remain in control of the Golan Heights for the foreseeable future.
The only issue is whether Israel's annexation of the Golan Heights should be
recognized by the United States and other countries. It should, for several
important reasons.
The reality on the ground is that Israel will never give up the Golan Heights to
Syria, unless it is part of a negotiated resolution with a peaceful, democratic
Syria that has agreed to end all belligerency and recognize Israel as the nation
state of the Jewish people. This is unlikely to happen anytime in the
foreseeable future. If it were to happen, there would be nothing to stop Israel
from ceding the annexed Golan Heights to Syria as part of an enduring peace
deal. There is therefore no real harm in Israel's decision to annex it and the
United States' decision to recognize that annexation. Furthermore, the decision
to annex and recognize the annexation removes the Golan Heights from the status
of occupied territory and recognizes the status quo as both de facto and de jure
realities.
I had the opportunity to discuss this issue with U.S. President Donald J. Trump
two weeks before he announced his decision. I provided him with the battleship
analogy, which he seemed to appreciate. I told him that I thought the Sunni Arab
world might complain, but that they really do not care about the Golan, which
has no religious significance to Islam. There were in fact, some minor protests,
but nothing of significance.
Predictably, the European Union opposed the U.S. recognition of the annexation.
But it provided no compelling argument, beyond its usual demand that the status
quo not be changed. Israel's control over the Golan Heights has been the status
quo for more than half a century; and Israel's legitimate need to control the
heights has only increased over time, with war in Syria, and the presence of
Iranian and Hezbollah military in close proximity. Would the European Union
demand that Israel now hand over the Golan Heights to Assad? Has any European
country ever handed over high ground, captured in a defensive war, to a sworn
enemy?
Recall that at the end of the first and second world wars, European countries
made territorial adjustments to help preserve the peace. Why should the European
Union subject Israel to a double standard it has never demanded of itself? The
answer is clear: The European Union has always acted hypocritically when it
comes to Israel, and this is no exception.
So three cheers for President Trump for doing the right thing. I will continue
to criticize him if and when he does the wrong thing -- such as separating
families at the U.S.'s southern border.
That is what bipartisan means: praising the President I voted against when he
does the right thing, and criticizing presidents I voted for (such as Barack
Obama) when they do the wrong thing (such as abstaining on the Security Council
Resolution declaring Jewish holy places to be occupied territory).
Israel's continuing control over the Golan Heights increases the chance for
peace and decreases the chances that Syria, Iran and/or Hezbollah will be able
to use this high ground as a launching pad against Israelis. That is good news
for the world, for the United States and for Israel.
Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law Emeritus at Harvard
Law School and author of The Case against the Democratic House Impeaching Trump
(Hot Books, January 2, 2019), and a Distinguished Senior Fellow of Gatestone
Institute.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
UK: Radical Muslims Welcome, Persecuted Christians Need Not
Apply
ريموند إبراهيم: بريطانيا ترحب بالمسلمين المتطرفين الذين يضطهدون المسيحيين وترفض
طلبات لجؤ المسيحيين
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/March 31/ 2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/73464/raymond-ibrahim-gatestone-institute%d8%b1%d9%8a%d9%85%d9%88%d9%86%d8%af-%d8%a5%d8%a8%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%87%d9%8a%d9%85-%d8%a8%d8%b1%d9%8a%d8%b7%d8%a7%d9%86%d9%8a%d8%a7-%d8%aa%d8%b1%d8%ad%d8%a8-%d8%a8/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13975/uk-unwelcome-christians
In rejecting the claim for asylum of a man who converted from Islam to
Christianity, and presumably compelling his return to Iran, the British
government is effectively sentencing him to death.
"[O]ut of 4,850 Syrian refugees accepted for resettlement by the Home Office in
2017, only eleven were Christian, representing just 0.2% of all Syrian refugees
accepted by the UK." — Barnabas Fund.
At the same time, the Home Office allowed a Pakistani cleric, Syed Muzaffar Shah
Qadri, considered so extreme that he is banned even from his native Pakistan, to
come and lecture in UK mosques.
"It's unbelievable that these persecuted Christians who come from the cradle of
Christianity are being told there is no room at the inn, when the UK is offering
a welcome to Islamists who persecute Christians.... There is a serious systemic
problem when Islamist leaders who advocate persecution of Christians are given
the green light telling them that their applications for UK visas will be looked
on favourably, while visas for short pastoral visits to the UK are denied to
Christian leaders whose churches are facing genocide. That is an urgent issue
that Home Office ministers need to grasp and correct." — Dr. Martin Parsons,
Barnabas Fund.
In rejecting the claim for asylum of a man who converted from Islam to
Christianity, and presumably compelling his return to Iran, the British
government is effectively sentencing him to death. (Image source: iStock)
In two unrelated cases, the United Kingdom denied asylum to persecuted
Christians by bizarrely citing the Bible and Jesus. Both Christians, a man and a
woman, are former Muslims who were separately seeking asylum from the Islamic
Republic of Iran, the ninth-worst persecutor of Christians -- particularly of
those who were Muslims and converted to Christianity.
UK asylum worker Nathan Stevens recently shared their stories. In his rejection
letter from the UK's Home Office, which is in charge of immigration, the Iranian
man was told that biblical passages were "inconsistent" with his claim to have
converted to Christianity after discovering it was a "peaceful" faith. The
letter cited several biblical excerpts, including from Exodus, Leviticus, and
Matthew, presumably to show that the Bible is violent; it said Revelation was
"filled with imagery of revenge, destruction, death and violence." The
governmental letter then concluded:
"These examples are inconsistent with your claim that you converted to
Christianity after discovering it is a 'peaceful' religion, as opposed to Islam
which contains violence, rage and revenge."
In response, Nathan Stevens, the asylum seeker's caseworker, tweeted:
"... I've seen a lot over the years, but even I was genuinely shocked to read
this unbelievably offensive diatribe being used to justify a refusal of asylum.
Stevens added: "Whatever your views on faith, how can a government official
arbitrarily pick bits out of a holy book and then use them to trash someone's
heartfelt reason for coming to a personal decision to follow another faith?
There seemed no awareness that, despite occasional verses of violence in the
Bible, its main message, in both the Old and New Testaments, is to be found in
Leviticus 19:18: "Love thy neighbor as thyself."
In rejecting the claim for asylum of this man who converted from Islam to
Christianity, and presumably compelling his return to Iran, the British
government is effectively sentencing him to death.
In the second case, an Iranian female asylum seeker was informed in her
rejection letter:
"You affirmed in your AIR [Asylum Interview Record] that Jesus is your saviour,
but then claimed that He would not be able to save you from the Iranian regime.
It is therefore considered that you have no conviction in your faith and your
belief in Jesus is half-hearted."
Recently interviewed on BBC Radio 4, the woman, who wishes to remain anonymous,
said:
"When I was in Iran I converted to Christianity and the situation changed and
the government were [sic] looking for me and I had to flee from Iran.... In my
country if someone converts to Christianity their punishment is death or
execution."
Concerning the asylum process, she said that whenever she responded to her Home
Office interviewer, "he was either chuckling or maybe just kind of mocking when
he was talking to me.... [H]e asked me why Jesus didn't help you from the
Iranian regime or Iranian authorities."
These two recently exposed cases appear to be symptomatic not only of a
breathtaking lack of logic that flies in the face of history -- God obviously
did not always save those who believed in Him -- but also what increasing
appears to be a venomous Home Office bias against Christians. For instance, when
Sister Ban Madleen, a Christian nun in Iraq who had fled the Islamic State,
applied to the Home Office to visit her sick sister in Britain, she was denied a
visa -- twice. Another report cites a number of other Christian orderlies who
were denied visas, including another nun with a PhD in Biblical Theology from
Oxford; a nun denied for not having a personal bank account, and a Catholic
priest denied for not being married.
In another case, the Home Office not only denied entry to three heroic Christian
leaders -- archbishops celebrated for their efforts to aid persecuted Christians
in Syria and Iraq who had been invited to attend the consecration of the UK's
first Syriac Cathedral, an event attended by Prince Charles -- but also
mockingly told them there was "no room at the inn."
Even longtime Christian residents are being deported. Earlier this year, Asher
Samson, 41, a Christian man who had been residing in the UK for 15 years and
undergoing theological studies, was deported back to Pakistan -- where he had
earlier been "beaten and threatened by Islamic extremists." (Such treatment is
normative for Christians in Pakistan, the world's fifth-worst persecutor of
Christians.) Samson's former UK pastor said:
"I've received some messages from him. He's very scared, he's fearful for his
life.... He's in hiding in Pakistan and his family are terribly worried for
him.... At the moment he has no funds to live on — he can't work .... [T]he UK
is sending people back to these countries where their lives are in danger."
By contrast, a report from the Barnabas Fund found that in offering asylum, the
UK "appears to discriminate in favour of Muslims" instead of Christians.
Statistics confirm this allegation:
"Figures obtained by Barnabas Fund under a Freedom of Information request show
that out of 4,850 Syrian refugees accepted for resettlement by the Home Office
in 2017, only eleven were Christian, representing just 0.2% of all Syrian
refugees accepted by the UK."
Statistics from earlier years have shown the same disparity. Although Christians
accounted for approximately 10% of Syria's prewar population, the overwhelming
majority of Syrians granted asylum by the Home Office were Sunni Muslims. Such
an imbalance appears even more bizarre when one realizes that the Islamic State
(ISIS) is itself a Sunni organization that targets non-Sunnis, primarily Yazidis,
Christians and Shiite Muslims, all minority groups that the U.S. government
acknowledges have been targets of genocide.
As Lord David Alton of Liverpool, a life peer in the House of Lords, wrote to
Home Secretary Sajid Javid, who heads the Home Office:
"It is widely accepted that Christians, who constituted around 10 per cent of
Syria's pre-war population, were specifically targeted by jihadi rebels and
continue to be at risk.... As last year's statistics more than amply
demonstrate, this [ratio imbalance between Muslim and Christian refugees taken
in] is not a statistical blip. It shows a pattern of discrimination that the
Government has a legal duty to take concrete steps to address."
Considering that persecuted Christian minorities -- including priests and nuns
-- are denied visas, one might conclude that perhaps the Home Office just has
extremely stringent asylum requirements. This notion is quickly dispelled,
however, when one sees that the Home Office regularly grants visas and refugee
status to extremist Muslims. One has yet to hear about Muslim asylum seekers
being denied visas because the Koran is too violent, or because they do "not
have enough faith" in Muhammad.
Ahmed Hassan, despite having no papers -- and despite telling the Home Office
that "he had been trained as an ISIS soldier" -- was still granted asylum two
years before he launched a terrorist attack in a London train station that left
30 injured in September 2017.
The Home Office also allowed a foreign Muslim cleric, Hamza Sodagar, to enter
and lecture in London, even though he advocates beheading, burning, or throwing
homosexuals from cliffs.
In addition, according to another report, "British teenagers are being forced to
marry abroad and are raped and impregnated while the Home Office 'turns a blind
eye' by handing visas to their [mostly Muslim] husbands."
The case of Asia Bibi -- a Christian mother of five who has spent the last
decade of her life on death row in Pakistan for challenging the authority of
Muhammad -- is perhaps emblematic of the immigration situation in the UK. After
she was finally acquitted last November, Muslims rioted throughout Pakistan; in
one march, more than 11,000 Muslims demanded her instant and public hanging.
As Pakistanis make up the majority of all Muslims in the UK -- Sajid Javid the
head of the Home Office is himself Pakistani -- when they got wind that the UK
might offer Asia Bibi asylum, they too rioted. As a result, Prime Minister
Theresa May personally blocked Bibi's asylum application -- "despite UK playing
host to [Muslim] hijackers, extremists and rapists," one headline read. The UK,
in other words, was openly allowing "asylum policy to be dictated to by a
Pakistan mob," reported the Guardian, "after it was confirmed it urged the Home
Office not to grant Asia Bibi political asylum in the UK..."
At the same time, the Home Office allowed a Pakistani cleric, Syed Muzaffar Shah
Qadri, considered so extreme that he is banned even from his native Pakistan, to
come and lecture in UK mosques. Qadri celebrated the slaughter of a politician
because he had defended Asia Bibi.
In short, local Muslim opinion apparently plays a major role in the UK's
immigration policy: radical Muslims are welcomed with open arms; Christian
"infidels" need not apply.
Commenting on the difficulties Christian minority asylum seekers have with the
Home Office, Dr. Martin Parsons, the head of research at the Barnabas Fund,
remarking that "visas were granted in July to two Pakistani Islamic leaders who
have called for the killing of Christians accused of blasphemy," summarized the
situation:
"It's unbelievable that these persecuted Christians who come from the cradle of
Christianity are being told there is no room at the inn, when the UK is offering
a welcome to Islamists who persecute Christians.... There is a serious systemic
problem when Islamist leaders who advocate persecution of Christians are given
the green light telling them that their applications for UK visas will be looked
on favourably, while visas for short pastoral visits to the UK are denied to
Christian leaders whose churches are facing genocide. That is an urgent issue
that Home Office ministers need to grasp and correct."
Raymond Ibrahim, author of the new book, Sword and Scimitar, Fourteen Centuries
of War between Islam and the West, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the
Gatestone Institute and a Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Proposed changes to Iraq’s citizenship law stir controversy
Nazli Tarzi/The Arab Weekly/March 31/19
Iraqi lawmakers chose to unsettle the historical foundations of the country’s
citizenship law in absence of public consultation, consent and a referendum of
citizenship and nationality rights.
Iraq’s capital is divided once more over a draft law that would drastically
transform the country’s citizenship law.
The litany of amendments in the document blurs legal distinctions between those
who have the right to lawfully enter and reside in Iraq freely and those
entitled to citizenship. The proposed law extends to those born in Iraq to
foreign parents regardless of legal status. Foreigners who reside in Iraq for up
to 12 months would be entitled to rights equal to those enjoyed by Iraqis,
including a monthly social welfare allowance of 500,000 Iraqi dinars (about
$420).
The draft law has proven wildly unpopular but the concern that weighs most
heavily in the minds of citizens is the reduction of the period foreigners must
wait before they are eligible for naturalisation.
Iraq’s Citizenship Law of 2006 stipulates a 10-year waiting period but the draft
measure proposes to shrink it to 1 year, which analysts cited as the main reason
the draft failed to pass on an early vote.
The extent to which the changes represent a strategic risk has been hotly
debated in local media, reactivating discussions about citizenship, statehood
and what it means to be Iraqi in the post-2003 political order.
Failure to change Iraq’s citizenship law, however, has not stopped those
steering the proposals. They are likely to try again but the government will
struggle to convince the populace of the need to amend the law.
“Whether in Iraqi embassies abroad or in civil affairs centres at home,
bureaucratic hurdles are endless for Iraqis looking to renew their papers or
have a passport issued for the children born abroad,” said former Baghdad
resident Nabil, who resides in London. “The priority for the government
should be relaxing complicated procedures for Iraqi before relaxing
naturalisation rules for foreigners.”
Publicly voiced criticism bloomed on social media, indicting the level of
distrust Iraqis, suspicious of those guiding the changes, feel.
The move has led to renewed attacks on the administration of Prime Minister Adel
Abdul-Mahdi, who is accused of weaponising the law to further political agendas.
The official justification, provided by the Directorate of Residence, is to
right the wrongs of the Saddam Hussein government and rectify unspecified
episodes of forced expulsions and the banishment of certain segments of Iraqi
society.
Iraqis have been loud in condemning the demographic implications. Some have
accused those behind the draft — whose identities remain anonymous — of
overriding the notion of sovereignty and disfiguring rules that traditionally
and fairly determined how citizenship was granted.
Existing mechanisms are in doubt considering the repeated failures by the Iraqi
government to introduce strict controls during religious tourism season to
ensure that foreign pilgrims return to their home countries after they visit
shrines.
While religious tourism attracts millions of people annually, largely from
neighbouring Iran, it provides cover for the illegal entry of migrants during
holy months on the Islamic calendar.
The anger Iraqis displayed is expected in a context that the public is sidelined
from decisions the government takes. Iraqi lawmakers chose to unsettle the
historical foundations of the country’s citizenship law in absence of public
consultation, consent and a referendum of citizenship and nationality rights.
*Nazli Tarzi, is an independent journalist, whose writings and films focus on
Iraq’s ancient history and contemporary political scene.
Will Trump’s Golan Heights decision affect Palestine deal?
Yasar Yakis/Arab News/March 31/19
Donald Trump’s recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the occupied Golan
Heights raises the question of whether this move is part of the US president’s
“deal of the century,” which is being promoted by his chief adviser and
son-in-law Jared Kushner. The deal basically aims to solve the Palestinian
conflict on the basis of the two-state solution.
Could Washington’s recognition of the Golan’s annexation be another goodwill
gesture extended to Israel by the US before asking it to be forthcoming in favor
of the Palestinians when the time comes for the implementation of the “deal of
the century?”
In December 2017, talking to Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas, Trump
described himself as committed to getting the best possible deal for the
Palestinians and said “Israel would make real concessions” (in exchange for what
the US has done for it). He repeated this when he decided to move the US Embassy
from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
At the signing session of the Golan proclamation, he did not make any reference
to the concessions to be made by Israel. So it is unclear whether Trump will
also ask Israel to make concessions this time but, looking at the relieved
attitude of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, one may speculate that he
was not expecting any pressure from the US.
The “deal of the century” is still vague and its main components are yet to be
disclosed. We only know the speculation on the possible results of Kushner’s
visits to various Middle East capitals, including seeing Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan. In this visit, Kushner probably asked Erdogan to use his
leverage on Hamas to agree to his undisclosed plan. It is unlikely for Erdogan
to have promised anything that Hamas would refuse.
If the rumors on this subject prove to be right, Trump’s decisions to move the
US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and recognize Israel’s sovereignty over
the Golan Heights are part of this deal.
Many skillful diplomats have tried hard in the past to strike a deal, but to no
avail. It remains to be seen whether the Trump team will be any more successful.
As a successful businessman, Kushner may have thought that, if financial
incentives are offered to Palestinians, they could be persuaded to make
concessions on the subject of land. This assumption disregards the importance
that many Palestinians attribute to land. The easiest way to guess the answer to
this question is to reverse it and ask whether the Israelis could be persuaded
to give up part of their land in exchange for financial incentives. Oil-rich
Gulf countries would be ready to produce considerable amounts of money to
persuade Israel to back such a solution should it ever come on to the agenda.
Various unrealistic ideas were proposed with a view to circumventing
Palestinians’ attachment to land. These were going to be in the form of a series
of land exchanges: Palestinians would give the West Bank to Israel in exchange
for land of equal value that they would receive from Jordan; Jordan would take
comparable land from Saudi Arabia, which would be compensated by receiving from
Egypt two islands in the Red Sea; and Egypt would receive Gaza from Palestine.
But who can guarantee that such a chain would go unbroken?
Michael Wolff gave some inside information about the early months of the Trump
administration in his book “Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House,”
published in May last year. He wrote that many in the president’s close
entourage did not expect Jordan or Egypt to be interested in taking the West
Bank and Gaza, respectively. Jordan’s late King Hussein is on the record as
saying in 1988 that he was not interested in taking the West Bank and that —
unlike what late Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin used to say — Jordan was
not Palestine. As for Egypt, it is more interested in sealing its border with
Gaza than adding it to its territory.
Many Arab countries regard any concession to be made on the Palestinian
territories as a betrayal of the Palestinian cause and that they will not be
able to explain this attitude to their domestic audience. Furthermore, this
scenario does not explain what will be the quid pro quo for detaching the Golan
Heights from Syria. It also ignores other major actors in the region, such as
Russia and Iran.
What is known so far is that Trump’s initiative is far from being a done deal.
Many skillful diplomats have tried hard in the past to strike a deal, but to no
avail. It remains to be seen whether the Trump team will be any more successful.
The deal is due to be disclosed after the Israeli elections of April 9. One can
only hope that it will not look like an attempt to reinvent the wheel.
*Yasar Yakis is a former foreign minister of Turkey and founding member of the
ruling AK Party. Twitter: @yakis_yasar
Iranian proxies turn to crime to dodge sanctions
بارعة علم الدين: الأذرع الإيرانية تلجأ إلى الممارسات الإجرامي لتفادي العقوبات
على النظام الإيراني
Baria Alamuddin/Arab News/March 31/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/73467/baria-alamuddin-iranian-proxies-turn-to-crime-to-dodge-sanctions-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%B1%D8%B9%D8%A9-%D8%B9%D9%84%D9%85-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AF%D9%8A%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A3%D8%B0%D8%B1%D8%B9-%D8%A7%D9%84/
US forces still have not departed from eastern Syria, yet Tehran is already
rushing to fill the void. Iranian agents have been offering cash, food, ID
cards, public services and free education to war-weary Syrians, particularly in
localities near the Iraq-Syria border like Al-Bukamal. In areas freshly
liberated from Daesh’s pernicious ideology, these Iranian schemes include offers
to join proxy militia forces and convert to Khomeinist theological principals.
“From every family you find one or two people who have become Shiite,” a local
observer told the Wall Street Journal. “Just like (Daesh) gave religious lessons
to children after prayers, they are doing the same thing,” commented another
local, who said that his village was now controlled by Iranian militias.
This has nothing to do with religion and everything to do with consolidating
Tehran’s hegemony. Iran previously abused its relationship with states like
Morocco, Algeria, Bahrain, Sudan and Senegal by sponsoring Shiite evangelical
activity, with a view to establishing a fifth column of loyalists. Meanwhile, in
western Syria, Tehran and the Assad regime have been engineering demographically
loyal communities in strategically vital areas. This included handing out visas
to the families of foreign militants, while populations perceived as sympathetic
to the rebels were either terrorized into exile or evacuated as part of
cease-fire deals.
Such sectarian strategies are gradually converting Iraq, Syria and Lebanon into
vassal states, affording Tehran strategic depth in its efforts to neutralize
American economic pressures and attain regional supremacy. Iran’s transnational
militia assets dominate foreign territories, while engaging in money laundering,
commercial activities, smuggling and exporting Iran’s theocratic model. Although
Iran’s Iraqi assets are paid directly from Baghdad’s state purse, Hezbollah and
Syrian militants have been experiencing wage cuts as sanctions bite. They are
thus resorting to creative methods of revenue generation.
Certain Iraqi and Lebanese financial institutions have reportedly been embarking
on money laundering schemes for syphoning hard currency toward Tehran. Iran’s
Central Bank governor was recently in Baghdad seeking to consolidate Iranian
influence over Iraq’s banking system and create a “financial apparatus” for
circumventing sanctions. Iraqi militant Shibl Al-Zaidi has been using a
diplomatic passport for laundering dollars via Beirut airport. Mosul residents
complain about illegal paramilitary checkpoints for taxing passers-by, just as
Daesh extorted money from the local populace.
President Hassan Rouhani’s recent Iraq visit produced deals in the fields of
oil, trade, health and bilateral rail infrastructure. Both China and Iran are
keen for this rail network to run through to Latakia, and there are discussions
about an Iranian-Iraqi-Syrian “free trade area.” Iran and Iraq pledged to boost
bilateral trade from $12 billion to around $20 billion, despite the Trump
administration giving Iraq nine additional months to wean itself off trade with
Iran. Although Iran is Iraq’s third-biggest trading partner, the $9 billion
trade imbalance in Tehran’s favor means that Iraqi markets are flooded with
Iranian goods.
Prime Minister Adil Abdul-Mahdi was mocked for blaming Argentina for epidemic
quantities of drugs flooding into Iraq, despite his officials acknowledging that
around 80 percent of narcotics arrive via Iran. Some observers estimate that
Hezbollah’s worldwide narcotics and crime revenues dwarf the estimated $700
million it had been receiving annually from Tehran. Iran’s leaders have been
pressuring the heavily indebted Assad regime to repay massive loans, while
securing lucrative reconstruction and commercial opportunities.
Like a game of whack-a-mole, if Iran’s proxies are forced out of one economic
sector, they pop up and thrive in a dozen others
Hezbollah’s control of the Lebanese Health Ministry grants it the fourth-largest
ministerial budget of $338 million annually. Hezbollah could exploit this to
offload onerous expenditure on wounded war veterans, while facilitating its
position in the medical goods trade. Hezbollah’s monopolization of swathes of
the economy is enmeshing Lebanon in a plethora of criminal activities. One
wonders how the “Party of God” rationalizes its exploitation of Syrian refugees
via people smuggling and prostitution.
The recent designation of Hezbollah in its entirety as a terrorist organization
will complicate the UK’s relations with Lebanon. However, such measures must
compel Lebanon to acknowledge the dangers of Hezbollah’s increasing
stranglehold. With the US, Britain and others finally getting serious about
isolating Iran-linked entities, Lebanon, Iraq and Syria risk being cut off from
global financial and political institutions.
With US forces poised to withdraw from Syria, Iran’s allies are now resolved to
pushing the Americans out of Iraq. President Donald Trump’s comments about using
troops in Iraq to “do something” in Syria and “watch” Tehran have acted as a
lightning rod for anti-US sentiments. Evicting Americans from Iraq is one of the
few things that the Sadrists and Hashd politicians, who dominate the government,
agree on.
Iran routinely evades sanctions by using Iraqi documentation for ships carrying
its oil. The plethora of options for oil smuggling and sanctions circumvention —
including bartering oil in exchange for goods with Far Eastern recipients
reluctant to implement US measures — means that not only is Iran still able to
derive oil income, but the rewards from this trade go disproportionately to
state and paramilitary entities overseeing these black-market activities. Poorly
implemented containment efforts may paradoxically encourage the regime to become
even more reliant on its transnational assets.
Like a game of whack-a-mole, if Iran’s proxies are forced out of one economic
sector, they pop up and thrive in a dozen others. The US and its European
counterparts must stop working to undermine each other over Iran policy and
begin cooperating to develop a more sophisticated and holistic approach if they
are to eradicate these parasitic entities from the Middle East. Such a
multi-faceted strategy should address money laundering, narcotics smuggling,
propaganda, militancy, and sectarian incitement, while ensuring that Iran
doesn’t rapidly become the dominant force in eastern Syria too.
After years of international efforts in support of stability and national unity
in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, Iran’s activities are fanning the flames of conflict
and sectarianism, with catastrophic global implications. It is long past time
that the international community began treating the Iranian menace with the
seriousness it deserves.
• Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaster in the Middle
East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has
interviewed numerous heads of state.
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1475401
Defiant Khamenei emphasizes Iranian
regime’s aggressive policies
د. ماجد رافي زاده: الخامنئي المتمرد يؤكد على سياسات إيران العدوانية
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/March 31/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/73469/dr-majid-rafizadeh-defiant-khamenei-emphasizes-iranian-regimes-aggressive-policies-%D8%AF-%D9%85%D8%A7%D8%AC%D8%AF-%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%81%D9%8A-%D8%B2%D8%A7%D8%AF%D9%87-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AE/
Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei addresses crowds of Iranians in the
northeastern holy city of Mashhad for a celebration of Nowraz. (AFP)
Every year, Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei delivers a few speeches, with
the annual address in Mashhad, a city in northeast Iran, considered to be the
most important.
It is imperative to meticulously examine the points made by Khamenei in this
speech, which is delivered after the Persian New Year. The comments by the most
powerful man in Iran outline the path the Islamic Republic will take in the next
year.
Iran’s lawmakers in the Majlis (parliament) and military generals view
Khamenei’s annual speech as direct instructions to be followed. Policymakers
should also search for the important issues that Khamenei deliberately and
shrewdly evades.
In his most recent annual speech, which he gave on March 21, Iran’s supreme
leader highlighted several important issues. First of all, he went on at length
to explain that the Islamic Republic ought to maintain its core revolutionary
principle of opposing Western countries.
Intriguingly, Khamenei did not make any distinction between the US and European
countries in this year’s speech. After the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA),
commonly known as the Iran nuclear deal, was reached between six world powers
and the Islamic Republic, Iran’s supreme leader employed a softer tone toward
the European nations in his annual speeches.
The main reason behind Khamenei’s shift this year is the fact that European
countries have been incapable of assisting Tehran in bypassing the renewed US
sanctions. After the Trump administration reimposed the primary and secondary
sanctions that had been lifted or waived under the nuclear deal, both American
individuals and companies and non-American entities could be punished for
continuing to trade and have business dealings with the Iranian government. Many
European firms and corporations, including French energy giant Total,
subsequently abandoned their plans to invest in Iran.
As a result of this move, Khamenei’s main military institutions, including the
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, its elite Quds Force branch, and Iran’s
militia and terror groups, which were the main beneficiaries of the increased
cash flow following the nuclear deal, witnessed a significant drop in their
income.
The supreme leader was initially hoping that the EU would come to his aid.
However, as Hassan Rouhani’s government searched for assistance from European
governments in helping Tehran increase its revenues and trades, the Islamic
Republic soon realized that the EU’s projects and mechanisms, such as INSTEX —
the Instrument in Support of Trade Exchanges — were totally ineffective.
This is why Khamenei ridiculed the EU, stating: “This financial channel they
recently set up resembles a joke, a bitter joke... Europeans should have stood
up to the US after it left the JCPOA and should have lifted all sanctions
against Iran.” But European companies will not risk their business with the US
or access to the US financial systems by dealing with Iran.
Khamenei demonstrated escalating antagonism toward those state or non-state
actors that his regime views as enemies.
The second critical comment that Khamenei made was linked to deploying more hard
power, rather than diplomacy and soft power, for carrying out domestic and
foreign policies. He emphasized that the country’s military infrastructure ought
to be advanced.
His move is in clear defiance of the international community’s pressure on
Tehran’s military adventurism and advancement of its ballistic missile program.
Khamenei pointed out that: “We shall continue to strengthen our military power
in spite of the enemies and will not relent under pressure.”
In addition, Khamenei demonstrated escalating antagonism toward those state or
non-state actors that his regime views as enemies and rivals. For example, he
lashed out at Saudi Arabia and further incited anti-Western sentiments. He
referred to Western politicians as savages. “Deep inside, Western politicians
are savage individuals in the true sense of the word. You should not be
surprised at this. They wear a suit, they wear a tie, they put on perfume and
they carry a Samsonite briefcase, but they are savages and they act in a bestial
manner in practice,” he said.
Iran’s supreme leader did not take responsibility for the most important issue
in Iran: The economic difficulties and challenges that many Iranians are facing
on a daily basis. He blamed the West for the nation’s economic crisis and
labeled the coming year as one “of opportunities, possibilities and openness”
and a year for “boosting production.”
How can the Iranian people regard the new year as a “year of opportunities” and
“boost production” when the country’s leaders have not taken any concrete steps
to address the regime’s financial corruption, misuse of public funds and the
widespread banking crisis, which are among the major reasons behind the present
currency and economic crises? In fact, these problems are systemic and exist
deep in Tehran’s economic infrastructure.
Khamenei made it clear in his important speech that he is determined to defy
international norms and standards, continue to expand the stranglehold of his
military institutions, further destabilize the region, and evade responsibility
and accountability for Iran’s economic crisis.
• Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated Iranian-American political
scientist. He is a leading expert on Iran and US foreign policy, a businessman
and president of the International American Council. Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh