LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
April 01/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
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Bible Quotations For today
Now you Pharisees clean the outside of the cup and of the dish, but inside you
are full of greed and wickedness.
Luke 11/37-41: “While he was speaking, a Pharisee invited him to
dine with him; so he went in and took his place at the table. The Pharisee was
amazed to see that he did not first wash before dinner. Then the Lord said to
him, ‘Now you Pharisees clean the outside of the cup and of the dish, but inside
you are full of greed and wickedness. You fools! Did not the one who made the
outside make the inside also? So give for alms those things that are within; and
see, everything will be clean for you.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News & Editorials published on March 31-April 01/2020
Lebanon Registers 17 New Coronavirus Cases, One More Death
Ending Coronavirus Lockdown ‘Depends’ on People’s Behavior
UNIFIL Donates to Naqoura Municipality to Fight COVID-19
Hizbullah Unveils Its Anti-Coronavirus Plan
Despite Lockdown People Queue Near Sidon Banks, Normal Motion in Some Areas
Lawsuit Filed against Man who Transmitted Coronavirus to Others
Israeli Jets Spark Panic in Lebanon during Syria Raid
Troops Quarantined after Major Infected with Coronavirus
Franjieh Says Marada to Withdraw from Govt. if Appointments Unsatisfactory
Lebanese Govt. to Approve BDL, Financial Appointments Thursday
Lebanese Govt. OKs Plan to Bring Home Expats as of April 5
Lebanon: Upcoming Appointments Instigate Sharp Debate
Lebanon, in Virus Lockdown, to Allow Expats to Come Home, Tunisia Frees
Prisoners
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
Marc 31-April 01/2020
US, Israel Conclude Drills on Possible Iranian Attacks on Tel Aviv
US extends Iran nuclear cooperation sanctions waivers
Ex-Syrian Vice President Khaddam Dies in France
Iran Says Natural Gas Exports to Turkey Halted Following Pipeline Explosion
Iranian Official: Death Toll From Coronavirus Reaches 2,898
Europe’s trade system with Iran finally makes first deal
UN delivers aid in Gaza
Global Virus Deaths Mount as U.S. Surpasses China's Official Toll
Full Virus Vaccine at Least a Year Away Says EU Agency
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on March 31-April 01/2020
Treasury Sanctions Quds Force Fronts in Iraq/Mark Dubowitz and Behnam Ben
Taleblu/FDD/March 31/2020
Coronavirus Pandemic Impacts Turkey’s Approach to Displaced Syrians/Aykan
Erdemir/FDD/April 01/2020
Kurdish-led forces put down revolt by ISIS detainees at prison in Syria/Liz Sly
and Louisa Loveluck /Washington Post/Ma5rch 31/2020
“Defying Islamist Protests: Middle East Scholar Speaks at U.S. Army War
College”/Raymond Ibrahim/April 01/2020
Coronavirus: Strict Rules and Order Save Lives/Salman Al-Dossary/Asharq Al-Awsat/March
31/2020
Don't Let COVID-19 Become Hunger Game/Qu Dongyu/Asharq Al-Awsat/March 31/2020
What Concepts Are We to Expect in Post-COVID-19 Era?/Eyad Abu Shakra/Asharq Al-Awsat/March
31/2020
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News &
Editorials published on March 31-April
01/2020
Lebanon Registers 17 New Coronavirus Cases, One More Death
Naharnet/March 31/2020
Lebanon registered 17 new cases of coronavirus and one more death, the Health
Ministry said in its daily tally on the pandemic on Tuesday. The Ministry said
the tally includes laboratory-confirmed cases reported by the state-run Rafik
Hariri University Hospital and private hospitals and laboratories. The new tally
brings the total of cases to 463 infected and 12 dead. The Notre Dame Des
Secours hospital said in a statement earlier that one of its patients suffering
from chronic illness was infected and died of coronavirus. The patient, in his
50s, was being treated at the intensive care unit at the hospital.
Ending Coronavirus Lockdown ‘Depends’ on People’s Behavior
Naharnet/March 31/2020
Lebanon’s security forces on Tuesday vowed to take stricter measures to limit
the spread of the coronavirus outbreak, stressing that it was vital for people
to abide by instructions and stay at home otherwise the lockdown could be
extended further, al-Joumhouria daily reported on Tuesday.
A senior security source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told the daily:
“If the two-week extension of the lockdown fails to achieve the required result,
certainly the lockdown period could be extended with even tighter security
measures.”
Lebanon’s security forces have been monitoring the extent people are abiding by
the government-imposed lockdown agreed early in March and extended over the
weekend. Police have been fining people for not complying with measures to
combat the virus spread. “There is no doubt that we are in a very sensitive
phase. The danger we face has swept the whole world and has led to catastrophic
situations in many countries,” stated the source. “The military and security
services have strict instructions in obliging citizens to protect themselves.
This phase requires the utmost degree of response and it must not be
underestimated,” he emphasized. He said it was “unfortunate” how many are not
abiding by the instructions out of “recklessness” compelling the security and
military agencies to “take even more rigorous measures which is necessary to
ensure their safety.”Lebanon has reported 446 COVID-19 cases to date, with 11
deaths. To try to contain the spread of the virus, Lebanon has imposed isolation
measures on its population until April 12, with a nighttime curfew in effect.
Schools, universities, restaurants and bars are closed.Many fear the country's
healthcare system could be overwhelmed by cases.
UNIFIL Donates to Naqoura Municipality to Fight COVID-19
Naharnet/March 31/2020
UNIFIL on Tuesday handed over a number of equipment and other accessories to the
Naqoura Municipality, which hosts the U.N. Mission’s Headquarters in south
Lebanon. “This donation is part of UNIFIL’s broader effort to assist the local
population and communities in the common fight against the COVID-19 Coronavirus
pandemic,” the U.N. mission said in a statement. UNIFIL Head of Mission and
Force Commander Major General Stefano Del Col said: “During these trying times,
it’s imperative to care for one another.”“The unprecedented situation requires
exceptional measures, maximum cooperation as well as a pro-active approach in
assisting the local population that has welcomed us since 1978,” he added. The
donated items included 750 surgical masks, 10 N95 masks, 300 pairs of ordinary
gloves, 30 pairs of heavy-duty gloves, 10 protective suites and 10 shoe covers.
After receiving the items, Mayor Abbass Awada thanked UNIFIL for the support
while stressing that the Municipality is doing its best to contain the spread of
the virus. “This is the time to work all together shoulder-to-shoulder in
fighting COVID-19,” he said. “The Municipality of Naqoura is continuing its
efforts and measures aimed at fighting the spread of the virus and urges
residents to stay home.” On UNIFIL’s part, the Mission, from the very beginning
of the virus outbreak, has taken “all the necessary precautionary measures to
prevent any infection of the virus among the Mission’s more than 11,000 military
and civilian peacekeepers as well as the host populations,” the UNIFIL statement
said. “Despite the difficult situation, UNIFIL continues to carry out its
operational activities 24/7 in coordination with the LAF (Lebanese Armed Forces)
in order to ensure stability along the Blue Line,” it added.
Lebanon has so far confirmed 463 coronavirus cases among them 12 deaths and 37
recoveries.
Hizbullah Unveils Its Anti-Coronavirus Plan
Naharnet/March 31/2020
Hizbullah on Tuesday unveiled its plan to confront the novel coronavirus
pandemic in Lebanon, titled “Societal Resistance for a Country Free of the
Coronavirus Pandemic”. Under the plan, the party will deploy 1,500 doctors,
3,000 nurses and medics, 5,000 health workers and 15,000 field services cadres
and will cooperate with municipalities and municipal crews, it said in a
statement. Noting that it will seek to “work loyally in service of the people
away from any political motives,” Hizbullah said its crews will “support the
Health Ministry and the government’s measures and will abide by the regulations
and instructions of the Health Ministry and the World Health Organization.”
“Hizbullah’s assets, capabilities, expertise and health cadres will be utilized
to their maximum level in all regions and the priority in the general efforts of
Hizbullah and the Islamic resistance will be given to confronting the pandemic,”
it said in a statement.
The party added that it will also benefit from volunteers and will urge people
to volunteer, noting that it will stand by citizens socially and regarding their
livelihood to enable them to face the economic repercussions of the crisis.
“Five practical plans have been devised to deal with this situation,” Hizbullah
added, revealing that it will seek to “support government hospitals at all
levels, especially in terms of providing volunteering doctors and nurses.”
“Sections specialized in coronavirus will be equipped at some of our hospitals,”
the party said, noting that “the Saint George Hospital will soon be exclusively
dedicated to receiving coronavirus cases while its patients will be transferred
to the Great Prophet Hospital.”As for quarantine and isolation measures,
Hizbullah said “public spaces will be provided and hospitals will be rented and
equipped to be used for quarantine and isolation should the situation
deteriorate.” It said resorts, scout cities and hotels would be used for such
purposes.
Britian’s the Guardian newspaper has reported that health and other officials
focused on Lebanon, Iraq and Syria fear the numbers of people infected with
coronavirus far exceed the official figures disclosed by all three governments.
“Officials, including bureaucrats, aid workers and international observers, who
spoke with the Guardian over the past week say parts of Lebanon and Iraq in
particular are likely to be holding thousands more infected people, and that a
lack of disclosure poses a serious health risk over the next three months,” the
newspaper added. “They also claim coronavirus patients are being housed and
guarded by political groups in central and southern Iraq and southern Lebanon,”
it said.
Returnees to Lebanon had arrived from all over the world, with a priest
traveling from Italy thought to be responsible for one cluster, and travelers
from Milan and London for others. However, “the focus of concern has been on
arrivals from the Iranian city of Qom, to where the biggest regional outbreak
has been sourced,” the Guardian added. “Large numbers of Iraqi and Lebanese
people, including religious pilgrims and merchants, had been in Qom as the
crisis escalated and were gradually brought back by bus and plane to Baghdad and
Beirut, where only small numbers of patients from their communities are being
treated in public hospitals,” it said. Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah
has said party members returning from abroad – mainly Iran, Iraq and Syria --
have been placed in quarantine and has vowed to be transparent about infections.
However, so far there have been no announcements from the group about the
numbers of suspected or confirmed cases among its ranks, and concerns are
mounting that Lebanon’s relatively low official number of cases – 463 as of noon
Tuesday – is actually much higher.
“We are not saying this to make a problem for a certain political party, or area
of the country,” said one Lebanese official who, like all others spoken with by
the Guardian, refused to be named. “But we know there is a much bigger problem
in Lebanon than has been acknowledged,” the official added.
A second Lebanese official claimed that over recent weeks Hizbullah had
quarantined areas in many towns in the south of the country and provided food
and water to suspected patients. The neighborhoods were guarded by party
members, the official claimed.
Despite Lockdown People Queue Near Sidon Banks, Normal
Motion in Some Areas
Naharnet/March 31/2020
Lebanese in the southern city of Sidon stood in long queues for the second day
in a row on Tuesday in front of ATMs without any protective gear against the
novel COVID-19 that infected 463 individuals and killed eleven so far in
Lebanon. Main streets in the city, mainly in Riad el-Solh, saw traffic jam and
citizens standing in ques outside banks as monthly salaries came through after
two weeks of ongoing home confinement. No one was wearing any protective gear
like masks or gloves. People were standing close and not keeping a two-meter
distance from each other in a bid to prevent any possible transmission from an
infected person. Media reports even said that some citizens were up in arms
about the government-imposed lockdown. Separately, citizens in the northern city
of Tripoli also did not comply with the “general mobilization” period imposed by
the government. Videos and pictures of the city showed normal traffic movement.
MTV station said in a report that motion was also normal in the Metn areas of
Dbayyeh and Jal Dib, and in the Beirut neighborhood of Tarik el Jdideh. Lebanon
has reported 446 COVID-19 cases to date, with 12 deaths. To try to contain the
spread of the virus, Lebanon has imposed isolation measures on its population
until April 12, with a nighttime curfew in effect. Schools, universities,
restaurants and bars are closed. Many fear the country's healthcare system could
be overwhelmed by cases.
Lawsuit Filed against Man who Transmitted Coronavirus to
Others
Naharnet/March 31/2020
Akkar Governor Imad al-Labaki on Monday filed a lawsuit against a young
coronavirus patient who infected several people after refusing to isolate
himself. “Akkar young man Y.F. did not abide by the instructions given to him by
the health and medical sides that examined him, in terms of pledging to stay in
preventative home isolation pending additional lab tests to confirm his
infection with the COVID-19 virus,” the National News Agency said. “He
dishonored the pledge and mixed with a lot of his relatives in his town and in
other regions after which tests revealed that he had the novel coronavirus and
that he transmitted it to several people,” NNA added, noting that he was tested
after being arrested by the Intelligence Branch of the Internal Security Forces.
His behavior “sparked a state of anxiousness in his town and among all those he
mixed with and the municipality concerned did not commit to monitoring him and
obliging him to stay in home isolation as required,” the agency said. The
governor filed a lawsuit against him on charges of spreading an infectious
disease, NNA added, noting that the penalties range between a few months to
three years in jail in addition to a fine.
Labaki also decided to refer the municipal chief to the Higher Disciplinary
Commission, the Interior Ministry and the relevant judicial authorities over
“his negligence and failure to carry out the missions he’s entrusted with under
the law.” Lebanon has so far confirmed 446 coronavirus cases among them 11
deaths. The government has imposed a four-week lockdown, shuttering
non-essential businesses, public administrations and educational institutions
and the air, land and sea ports of entry.
It has also asked citizens to stay home unless it is urgent while imposing a
night curfew.
Israeli Jets Spark Panic in Lebanon during Syria Raid
Associated Press/March 31/2020
Israeli warplanes flew at low altitude Tuesday over the Lebanese regions of Metn
and Keserwan, sparking a state of panic, state-run National News Agency
reported. Syria’s state news agency SANA later reported that Syrian air defenses
were engaging “hostile targets” over the central Syrian region of Homs. It later
said that a number of missiles were shot down by the Syrian defenses after being
fired from Lebanese airspace. The outlet said the warplanes sought to attack a
Syrian army position without saying where exactly, but the Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights said the Shayrat Airbase in Homs was targeted with eight
missiles. There was no immediate comment from Israel. Israeli jets frequently
violate Lebanon's airspace to bomb targets inside Syria, usually arms shipments
and depots belonging to Hizbullah and Iran.
Troops Quarantined after Major Infected with Coronavirus
Naharnet/March 31/2020
The Army Command has ordered that all officers and soldiers be placed under
quarantine at the Land Border Regiment in Ras Baalbek after a major was infected
with the novel coronavirus. An army statement confirmed the officer's infection
and said he was undergoing treatment.
"The necessary precautionary measures have been taken and the regiment continues
to perform the missions it is tasked with," the statement added. LBCI TV
reported that "after returning to his service place from a vacation, the officer
showed coronavirus symptoms and the Army Command immediately sent him to
hospital, where he underwent the necessary tests and turned out to be
infected.”“An investigation was launched to identify the servicemen whom he
mixed with and the military personnel who came in contact with him were
immediately quarantined,” the TV network added.
Lebanon has so far confirmed 463 coronavirus cases among them 12 deaths and 37
recoveries.
Franjieh Says Marada to Withdraw from Govt. if Appointments
Unsatisfactory
Naharnet/March 31/2020
Marada Movement chief Suleiman Franjieh warned Tuesday that his movement will
withdraw from the government if it does not get two posts in Thursday’s
financial appointments. “There will be six Christian posts in the appointments,
which means that we are entitled to two,” Franjieh said in an interview with the
Mustaqbal Web news portal. “We have nominated candidates who enjoy competency
and if two of our candidates don’t get chosen, we will leave the government,” he
added. “Had the government adopted a certain mechanism for appointments, we
would have been the first to abide by it, but the picks will happen on the basis
of favoritism and in this case we want two posts,” Franjieh went on to say.
Asked about reports that he had refused to hold a meeting with Free Patriotic
Movement chief Jebran Bassil, the Marada leader said: “He has not requested one
and I don’t have the intention to see him.”According to TV networks, Cabinet
will on Thursday appoint four deputies for the central bank governor, a chairman
and four members for the central bank's Banking Control Commission and three
members for the Capital Markets Authority.
Lebanese Govt. to Approve BDL, Financial Appointments Thursday
Naharnet/March 31/2020
The Cabinet will on Thursday approve administrative appointments related to
Banque du Liban and the Capital Markets Authority, TV networks said.
The appointments include four deputies for the central bank governor, a chairman
and four members for BDL’s Banking Control Commission and three members for the
Capital Markets Authority after which the finance minister would name a state
commissioner to the central bank and a state commissioner to the Control
Commission, the reports said. “All those who will be appointed are new figures
and 16 CVs have been distributed to ministers for the four posts of deputy
central bank governor, 20 CVs for the Control Commission and 12 CVs for the
Capital Markets Authority,” LBCI TV said. “The appointments will be approved
during the Cabinet session that will be held Thursday in Baabda,” it added. The
issue of the appointments has sparked a wave of political bickering in recent
days. Al-Mustaqbal parliamentary bloc warned of a "governmental-presidential
plot" to name a new BDL administration and control commission that "meet the
desires of a certain political group". Al-Akhbar newspaper meanwhile reported
Tuesday that Mustaqbal leader ex-PM Saad Hariri has threatened that his bloc
would resign from parliament should the appointments oust Mohammed Baassiri, one
of the central bank governor’s deputies.
The daily added that the Lebanese Forces and the Progressive Socialist Party are
also opposed to the slated appointments.
Lebanese Govt. OKs Plan to Bring Home Expats as of April 5
Naharnet/March 31/2020
The Cabinet on Tuesday approved a mechanism for bringing home willing Lebanese
expats amid the global coronavirus crisis. "The plan will be implemented from
April 5 to April 12," Information Minister Manal Abdul Samad announced after a
Cabinet meeting at the Grand Serail. "Prime Minister Hassan Diab stressed that
the government is keen on protecting the Lebanese and that any expat return must
be subject to the conditions laid out with the health minister," Abdul Samad
added. "We will not be lenient in enforcing the measures and I call for
cooperation calmly and scientifically, away from any other calculations," she
quoted Diab as saying during the session. According to a leaked copy of the
governmental plan, the priority will be given to citizens who have chronic
illnesses, the elderly, families, those who have critical social situations and
those who left on short-term visas. The returnees will pay for their travel
tickets and they will only be allowed to leave Beirut’s airport if the results
of PCR tests conducted at the facility come out negative. They will also undergo
PCR tests prior to boarding planes and will sign pledges that they would isolate
themselves at homes or at quarantine centers (hotels, complexes and other
places) under the supervision of the ministries of health, interior and defense
and under penalty of criminal prosecution. The first stage of the plan (April
5-12) has a cap of 10,000 returnees while the number of returnees in the second
stage of the plan (April 27-May 4) will be determined “in light of the outcome
of the first stage,” the leaked copy says. “Should the need arise for further
stages, the issue will be studied then according to the available data,” it
adds. The Cabinet also decided to grant financial aid worth LBP 400,000 to each
needy family and the money will be distributed by the army, Abdul Samad said.
"The premier called for stricter enforcement of the general mobilization
measures, noting that the reports coming from some regions over the past two
days are alarming," she added. Many expats, especially students, have urged
Lebanese authorities to evacuate them in recent days, decrying financial
difficulties and health concerns. Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri and Hizbullah
chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah have led political calls for bringing home the
expats, with Berri threatening to suspend his ministers’ participation in the
government and Nasrallah urging a “safe, calculated and quick” repatriation.
Lebanon has so far confirmed 463 coronavirus cases among them 12 deaths and at
least 35 recoveries. The government has imposed a four-week lockdown, shuttering
non-essential businesses, public administrations and educational institutions as
well as the air, land and sea ports of entry.
It has also asked citizens to stay home unless it is urgent while imposing a
night curfew.
Lebanon: Upcoming Appointments Instigate Sharp Debate
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 31 March, 2020
Former prime ministers joined the debate over the financial appointments, which
are expected to be presented at Lebanon's government session this week. The
appointments will include the deputies of the Central Bank governor and the
members of the Banking Supervision Authority.
On Monday, Former Prime Ministers Saad al-Hariri, Najib Mikati, Fouad Siniora
and Tammam Salam issued a joint statement denouncing what they described as
“attempts to monopolize the State’s positions.”“At a time when Lebanon is going
through political, economic, financial and administrative crises, the pandemic
of coronavirus comes to deepen and complicate further the situation,” they said.
“The Lebanese can see how their government tends to make appointments with an
intention to grasp control of administrative, financial and monetary positions
without respecting to the standards of competence and merit,” they added.
Sources close to the former premiers told Asharq Al-Awsat that the statement was
“more than a warning bell, and sends a direct message to Prime Minister Hassan
Diab, stating that we will not allow the country to be kidnapped by President
Michel Aoun and his political movement.”For his part, Lebanese Forces Leader
Samir Geagea issued a statement, saying: “Despite all expectations, the current
government is about to make appointments on the same basis that used to be
followed previously.” “Search for the trio,” he stressed, referring to Aoun and
the Shiite duo, Hezbollah and Amal, as explained by sources to Asharq Al-Awsat.
There cannot be any solution as long as this trio continued to grab power in
Lebanon, Geagea underlined. Sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that the Shiite duo has
informed Aoun and Diab that their bilateral agreement would not be sufficient to
pass the appointments. The duo emphasized, according to the sources, that there
would be no appointments without taking into consideration the demands of the
leader of Marada Movement, former Minister Sleiman Franjieh.
Lebanon, in Virus Lockdown, to Allow Expats to Come Home,
Tunisia Frees Prisoners
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 31 March, 2020
Lebanon’s government agreed a procedure on Tuesday to allow citizens abroad to
come back despite a coronavirus lockdown after its expat policy drew criticism
from political leaders. Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri had threatened to
withdraw support for the cabinet if it did not act to bring home Lebanese
stranded abroad during the pandemic. Beirut airport has been closed to flights
for two weeks as part of efforts to limit transmissions of the virus, which has
so far infected 463 people with 12 deaths. The government has ordered a shutdown
and an overnight curfew until April 12 in a country where dollar shortages had
drained the healthcare system of critical supplies months before the outbreak.
Prime Minister Hassan Diab, whose government was already grappling with a severe
financial crisis before the virus hit, pledged strict measures to ensure safe
returns of expatriates, his office said on Tuesday after a cabinet session. “We
cannot bear any faltering step, and none of the political forces can bear having
on its conscience the spread of the (virus) and the collapse of the health
system,” Diab said. Information Minister Manal Abdel Samad said returns would
start on Sunday and all passengers would be screened before they board flights
to Lebanon. She said cabinet may make changes to the procedure for returns in a
session on Thursday. Foreign Minister Nassif Hitti told local broadcaster
al-Jadeed earlier on Tuesday that based on an initial tally from embassies, some
20,000 Lebanese may want to return home. With the world’s big cities in
lockdown, Lebanese overseas have faced complications due to curbs by Lebanon’s
banks which have blocked transfers abroad in recent months and severely limited
cash withdrawals from ATMs. Lebanon’s banking association said on Sunday
that the lenders were “committed to transferring the appropriate sums for
Lebanese students living abroad.”Other leaders have also echoed Berri’s call for
returning expats, including Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea. Most of
Lebanon’s main politicians have close ties to the country’s large diaspora
communities from which they draw support. Tunisia releases prisonersTunisia’s
President Kais Saied on Tuesday ordered the release of 1,420 prisoners in an
amnesty to combat the spread of the coronavirus in prisons, a presidency
statement said.
Tunisia has declared a general lockdown to slow infection rates, and has
confirmed 362 cases of the coronavirus, with nine deaths. The government said in
a separate statement that it would provide food assistance to thousands of
families in their homes, starting Friday, for a period of about two months.
Saied last week ordered the army to deploy in the streets to force people to
respect the lockdown.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on March 30-31/2020
US, Israel Conclude Drills on Possible
Iranian Attacks on Tel Aviv
Tel Aviv - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 31 March, 2020
The Israeli and US air forces concluded on Monday joint drills simulating
measures when facing air threats and a possible Iranian missile attack on
Israel. An Israeli army spokesman said the goal of the exercise was to enhance
cooperation in joint air defenses and counter missile threats. The forces were
trained in Negev desert on the F-35 stealth fighter jets and simulated scenarios
in which they had to deal with both aerial threats and varying strategic threats
from the ground.
The troops were trained on a scenario of US forces’ arrival in Israel and
cooperating with the Israeli air defense system in protection missions, in case
Israel was attacked by missiles and rocket-propelled grenades from several
fronts. The three-day exercise was conducted despite the coronavirus outbreak.
All contacts between the Israeli and US crew were done remotely through shared
communication in the air and all flights were instructed using video
conferencing, in light of concerns over the outbreak. An Israeli army spokesman
said that the exercise showed Israel’s close relationship with the US military
and “increased the sharing of knowledge and study of the F-35’s capabilities and
improves the operational capabilities of the Air Force.”The spokesman said the
Air Force continues to maintain full operational capabilities, and works in an
emergency to continue to perform its mission of defending the country at all
times.
US extends Iran nuclear cooperation sanctions waivers
WASHINGTON (AP)/March 31/2020
The Trump administration on Monday renewed several waivers on U.S. sanctions
against Iran, allowing Russian, European and Chinese companies to continue to
work on Iran’s civilian nuclear facilities without drawing American penalties.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo signed off on the waiver extensions but couched
the decision as one that continues restrictions on Iran’s atomic work. “Iran’s
continued expansion of nuclear activities is unacceptable. The regime’s nuclear
extortion is among the greatest threats to international peace and security,”
State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said in a statement. Current and
former officials familiar with the matter said Pompeo had opposed extending the
waivers, which are among the few remaining components of the 2015 Iran nuclear
deal that the administration has not canceled. However, the officials said
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin had prevailed in an internal debate on the
subject last week by arguing that the coronavirus pandemic made eliminating the
waivers unpalatable at a time when the administration is being criticized for
refusing to ease sanctions to deal with the outbreak. The officials were not
authorized to publicly discuss the decision and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Last week, the administration slapped new sanctions on 20 Iranian people and
companies for supporting Shia militia in Iraq held responsible for attacks on
bases where U.S. forces are located. At the same time, however, it extended
another sanctions waiver to allow energy-starved Iraq to keep importing Iranian
power.
President Donald Trump withdrew from the nuclear deal in 2018 and has steadily
reimposed U.S. sanctions on Iran that had been eased or lifted under its terms.
The so-called “civilian-nuclear cooperation” waivers allow foreign companies to
do work at some of Iran’s declared nuclear sites without becoming subject to
U.S. sanctions.Deal supporters say the waivers give international experts a
valuable window into Iran’s atomic program that might otherwise not exist. They
also say some of the work, particularly at the Tehran reactor on nuclear
isotopes that can be used in medicine, is humanitarian in nature.But Iran hawks
in Congress have been pressing Pompeo to eliminate all the waivers, saying they
should be revoked because they give Iran access to technology that could be used
for weapons. The hawks most strenuously objected to the waiver that allowed work
at Iran’s once-secret Fordow facility, which is built into a mountain. Pompeo
canceled the Fordow waiver in mid-December but the others, which allow work at
the Bushehr nuclear power station, the Arak heavy water plant and the Tehran
Research Reactor, were last extended in late January for 60 days. On Monday, the
waivers were extended for another 60 days.
Ex-Syrian Vice President Khaddam Dies in France
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 31 March, 2020
Abdul Halim Khaddam, a former Syrian vice president who became a prominent
opponent of President Bashar Assad’s rule after fleeing to Paris in 2005, died
on Tuesday in France, Salah Ayach, a Syrian exile who was close to him, said. He
was 88. Khaddam died at 5 am (0300 GMT) of a heart attack, Ayach said, according
to Reuters.Khaddam had served for 30 years in the Syrian state under the late
President Hafez Assad and his son, Bashar, who became president in 2000.
Iran Says Natural Gas Exports to Turkey Halted Following Pipeline Explosion
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 31 March, 2020
Iran said on Tuesday its natural gas exports to Turkey have stopped after an
attack on a pipeline inside the neighbouring country, an Iranian official told
state TV.“This morning, terrorists attacked a natural gas pipeline inside Turkey
near Iran’s Bazargan border with Turkey ...Flow of gas has been halted,” said
Mehdi Jamshidi-Dana, director of National Iranian Gas Co. “The pipeline has
exploded several times in the past. It is also likely that the PKK group has
carried out the blast,” he told Iran’s state news agency IRNA, referring to the
outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party. The pipeline, which carries around 10 billion
cubic meters of Iranian gas to Turkey annually, frequently came under attack by
Kurdish militants during the 1990s and up until 2013, when a ceasefire was
established, Reuters reported. Jamshidi said that because of the new coronavirus
outbreak, “the Turkish border guards have left, but we have informed them of the
explosion and are waiting for their response”, IRNA reported.
Iranian Official: Death Toll From Coronavirus Reaches 2,898
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 31 March, 2020
Iran's death toll from coronavirus has reached 2,898, with 141 deaths in the
past 24 hours, Health Ministry spokesman Kianush Jahanpur told state TV on
Tuesday. He said the total number of infections has jumped to 44,606, Reuters
reported. "In the past 24 hours, there have been 3,111 new cases of infected
people. Unfortunately, 3,703 of the infected people are in a critical
condition," Jahanpur said. Iran's authorities banned inter-city travel and
warned of a potential surge in coronavirus cases because many Iranians defied
calls to cancel travel plans. However, it has so far stopped short of imposing a
lockdown on Iranian cities. Earlier, President Hassan Rouhani renewed his
warnings on Tuesday as the climax of the two-week Persian New Year holiday
nears, according to AFP. He called on people to "leave this tradition for some
other time" and said violators would be fined, noting that authorities would
close parks across the country on Wednesday, in a move that effectively blocks
the family picnics that traditionally mark the 13th day of holiday. Also, a
parliament spokesman told the Tasnim news agency Tuesday that at least 23 of the
legislature's 290 Iranian members have tested positive for the novel coronavirus.
Europe’s trade system with Iran finally makes first deal
BERLIN (AP)/March 31/2020
European countries trying to keep Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers alive
said Tuesday that a system they set up to enable trade with Tehran has finally
concluded its first transaction, facilitating the export of medical
goods.Britain, France and Germany conceived the complex barter-type system
dubbed INSTEX, which aims to protect companies doing business with Iran from
American sanctions, in January 2019. The move came months after President Donald
Trump unilaterally withdrew the United States from the nuclear deal that Tehran
struck with world powers in 2015 and reimposed sanctions. Since then, officials
have struggled to get the system up and running. On Tuesday, however, Germany’s
foreign ministry said the three European countries “confirm that INSTEX has
successfully concluded its first transaction, facilitating the export of medical
goods from Europe to Iran.”“These goods are now in Iran,” it said in a statement
that gave details neither of the goods nor of who was involved in the
transaction. It didn’t specify what the intended medical purpose was. Iran has
been hard hit by the coronavirus pandemic, but supplying medical goods to Iran
already was a concern before the outbreak. “Now the first transaction is
complete, INSTEX and its Iranian counterpart STFI will work on more transactions
and enhancing the mechanism,” the German foreign ministry statement said. Tehran
has gradually been violating the nuclear deal’s restrictions to pressure the
remaining parties to the agreement — China, Russia, Germany, France and Britain
— to provide new incentives to offset the American sanctions, saying that INSTEX
has been insufficient. The nuclear deal aims to prevent Iran from developing a
bomb — something the country’s leaders insist they do not want to do.
UN delivers aid in Gaza
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 31 March, 2020
A UN aid agency Tuesday began delivering food to the homes of impoverished
Palestinians instead of making them pick up such parcels at crowded distribution
centers — part of an attempt to prevent a mass outbreak of the new coronavirus
in the densely populated Gaza Strip. The UN Relief and Works Agency for
Palestinian refugees has for decades provided staples like flour, rice, oil and
canned foods to roughly half of the territory's 2 million people. Under the old
system, those eligible lined up at crowded distribution centers four times a
year to pick up their aid parcels. Starting on Tuesday, the agency began making
home deliveries. "We assessed that tens of thousands of people will pour into
the food distribution centers and this is very dangerous,” said Adnan Abu Hasna,
the agency's spokesman in Gaza. Some 4,000 deliveries were made Tuesday, with an
estimated 70,000 others to be made over the next three weeks, he said. Drivers
on three-wheel motorcycles dropped off the food, calling people out of their
homes, confirming their identities and leaving the bags outside. The agency
instructed people to stay 2 meters from the delivery men to minimize the risk of
infection. “This makes it easy for us,” said Manal Ziara, a resident of Shati
refugee camp in west Gaza City. “The old mechanism causes crowding and touching
that help the virus spread."Only 10 people have tested positive for coronavirus
in Gaza, whose borders have been largely sealed by Israel since Hamas seized the
territory in 2007. However, there's only a small number of available tests.
International officials fear the virus could quickly spread and overwhelm an
already gutted health system.
Global Virus Deaths Mount as U.S. Surpasses China's
Official Toll
Agence France Presse/March 31/2020
More than 40,000 people have been killed in the coronavirus pandemic as the
disease barrels across the globe, with the U.S. bracing for its darkest hours
after its death toll surpassed China's on Tuesday.
In a matter of months, the virus has infected more than 800,000 people in a
crisis redrawing political powers, hammering the global economy and transforming
the daily existence of some 3.6 billion people who have been asked to stay home
under lockdowns.
Deaths shot up again across Europe Tuesday as Spain, France and Britain reported
their deadliest days.
While there are hopeful signs that the spread of infections is slowing in
hardest-hit Italy and Spain, more than 800 died overnight in both countries.
With hospitals direly overstretched, lockdowns have been extended despite their
crushing economic impact on the poorest.
In Belgium a 12-year-old girl infected with the virus passed away in another
worrying case of a youth succumbing to the disease.
Meanwhile the U.S. -- which has the highest number of confirmed infections --
reached a bleak milestone as deaths topped 3,400, ticking past China's official
tally of 3,309, according to a Johns Hopkins University tracker. France joined
it with a surge to 3,525 deaths, an official toll that includes only those who
died in hospital and not those who died at home or in old people's homes.
'We need help now'
The inundation of patients has sent health facilities around the world into
overdrive. Field hospitals are popping up in event spaces while distressed
medical staff make grim decisions about how to distribute limited protective
gear, beds and life-saving respirators. In scenes previously unimaginable in
peacetime, around a dozen white tents were erected to serve as a field hospital
in New York's Central Park. "You see movies like 'Contagion' and you think it's
so far from the truth, it will never happen. So to see it actually happening
here is very surreal," 57-year-old passerby Joanne Dunbar told AFP. While many
companies and schools around the globe have shifted to teleworking and teaching
over video platforms, huge swaths of the world's workforce cannot perform their
jobs online and are now lacking pay and face a deeply uncertain future. Food
banks in New York City, the epicenter of the U.S. outbreak, have seen a surge of
newcomers struggling to feed their families. "It is my first time," Lina Alba,
who lost her job as a cleaner in a Manhattan hotel that closed two weeks ago,
said from a food distribution center in the city. "We need the help now. This is
crazy. So we don't know what's going to happen in a few weeks," added the
40-year-old single mother of five. With more than 175,000 infections in the
United States, three-quarters of Americans are now under some form of lockdown.
Off the coast of Florida, a coronavirus-stricken cruise ship and its sister
vessel are pleading for somewhere to dock, possibly at Fort Lauderdale.
"Already four guests have passed away and I fear other lives are at risk,"
Orlando Ashford, president of Holland America Line, wrote in the South Florida
Sun Sentinel.
Virus breeds divisions
The staggering economic and political upheaval spurred by the virus is opening
new fronts for both cooperation and conflict. In virtual talks Tuesday, finance
ministers and central bankers from the world's 20 major economies pledged to
address the debt burden of low-income countries and deliver aid to emerging
markets. Last week G20 leaders said they were injecting $5 trillion into the
global economy to head off a feared deep recession. In the European Union,
however, battle lines have been drawn over the terms of a rescue plan to finance
the expected severe economic fallout. Worst-hit Italy and Spain are leading a
group pushing for a shared debt instrument -- dubbed "coronabonds". But talk of
common debt is a red line for Germany and other northern countries long opposed
to such a measure, threatening to divide the bloc in the midst of a health
catastrophe.
European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen warned governments not to use
emergency measures as a pretext for power grabs.
Her call followed concerns about a new law that gave Hungary's nationalist
leader Viktor Orban sweeping authority to rule by decree until his government
deems the emergency is over. Activists around the world have voiced fears that
autocrats will overreach and hold on to their new powers even after the crisis
abates. Elsewhere Poland toughened restrictions on movement while Russia
expanded lockdowns across its territory as infections ticked up, including that
of the head of Moscow's main coronavirus hospital. Though the doctor recently
met with President Vladmir Putin, the Kremlin insisted the Russian leader is
fine.
'Nothing to eat'
The economic pain of lockdowns is especially acute in the developing world. In
Tunisia several hundred protested a week-old lockdown that has
disproportionately impacted the poor. "Nevermind coronavirus, we're going to die
anyway! Let us work!" shouted one protester in the demonstration on the
outskirts of the capital Tunis. Africa's biggest city Lagos has also been
brought to a halt as it entered its first full day of a two-week shutdown.
Containment will be especially tough in the megacity's packed slums, where many
rely on daily wages to survive.
"To reduce the number of people with coronavirus, we know they need to stop
movement," said 60-year-old engineer Ogun Nubi Victor.
"But there is no money for the citizens, people are just sitting at home, with
nothing to eat." While much of the world shuts down, the ground-zero Chinese
city of Wuhan has started to reawaken in recent days, giving the bereaved the
first chance in months to bury their dead.
Full Virus Vaccine at Least a Year Away Says EU Agency
Agence France Presse/March 31/2020
It will be at least another year before a vaccine against the new coronavirus
will be ready for approval and available in sufficient quantities, the EU
medicines agency said Tuesday. As the number of declared coronavirus cases
worldwide passed 800,000 on Tuesday, according to an AFP tally, the race is on
to develop a vaccine against COVID-19 which emerged from China late last year.
The European Medicines Agency said in a statement it "estimates that it might
take at least one year before a vaccine against COVID-19 is ready for approval
and available in sufficient quantities to enable widespread use."
This was based on current available information and past experience with vaccine
development timeframes, the Amsterdam-based agency said. It added that two
vaccines have already entered a first phase of a clinical trials that was
carried out on healthy volunteers.
But in general "timelines for the development of medicinal products are
difficult to predict", the EMA said. So far, no medicine has yet shown to be a
treatment for the coronavirus, that has so far claimed some 40,000 lives.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published on March 30-31/2020
Treasury Sanctions Quds Force Fronts in Iraq
Mark Dubowitz and Behnam Ben Taleblu/FDD/March 31/2020
The U.S. Treasury Department on Thursday sanctioned 20 people and companies in
Iraq and Iran with ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force (IRGC-QF),
Tehran’s elite foreign operations and terror unit. The designation of these
terror networks, which traffic weapons and generate revenue for the Islamic
Republic’s destructive activities, underscores the depth of Iran’s influence and
networks in Iraq.
Chief among the designations is the Reconstruction Organization of the Holy
Shrines in Iraq (ROHSI), which was created in 2003 as a supposed religious
charity but in reality is a vector for sanctions busting and advancing regime
influence in Iraq. ROHSI has previously worked on projects with a sanctioned
IRGC construction firm and, according to Treasury, has been a source of “funds
to supplement IRGC-QF budgets, likely embezzling public donations intended for
the construction and maintenance of Shiite shrines in Iraq.”
Tehran’s ability to use businesses, religious foundations, and charities to
underwrite its malign activities is not new. It is how Iran’s supreme leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, accrues assets to add to his estimated $200 billion
off-the-books slush fund.
ROHSI has also funneled money to IRGC-QF–controlled entities in Iraq, such as
the Kosar Company, which was also designated. Kosar not only has received money
from the sanctioned Central Bank of Iran, but per Treasury, also functions as a
forward operating base for Tehran’s intelligence operations and weapons
smuggling.
Treasury likewise sanctioned the leader of ROHSI, Mohammad Jalal Maab, noting
that the now-deceased IRGC-QF commander Qassem Soleimani appointed him to his
position. Jalal Maab replaced Hassan Pelarak, who “worked with IRGC-QF officials
to transfer missiles, explosives, and small arms to Yemen,” according to a
Treasury statement. Pelarak was pictured alongside Soleimani as late as June
2019. Both Jalal Maab and Pelarak are reportedly from Soleimani’s hometown of
Kerman in Iran.
Among the other targets of Treasury’s action was an Iraqi maritime services
company tied to the IRGC-QF that sold Iranian petroleum products through Iraq’s
Umm Qasr port. The targets also included individuals who transferred money to
listed Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) such as Lebanese Hezbollah and
Kata’ib Hezbollah. Others violated sanctions by selling oil to the regime of
Bashar al-Assad in Damascus.
In Iraq, the IRGC-QF has supported Shiite militia efforts to kill American and
Coalition soldiers, evict the United States from the country, and bend Baghdad
towards Tehran’s will. But it has also operated in plain sight. Iran’s current
ambassador to Iraq, as just one example, is a veteran of the Quds Force, as was
his predecessor. Since the 2003 Iraq war, Iran has worked in overdrive to
penetrate Iraq’s politics, society, military, economy, and even its religious
institutions.
The IRGC-QF’s material support for terror groups earned it a position in 2007 on
the Treasury Department’s Specially Designated Nationals list. In 2019, when the
State Department designated the IRGC, the Quds Force’s parent entity, as an FTO,
the department made explicit reference to the IRGC-QF and its activities.
Hardline Iranian outlets have touted the scope of the Quds Force’s operations,
which have ranged from Bosnia to Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Gaza, and
Yemen.
Treasury imposed an asset freeze on the designated persons pursuant to Executive
Order 13224, a counter-terrorism authority expanded last year by the White
House.
The Trump administration should continue sanctioning regime-connected malign
actors, including new leaders of pro-Iran groups in Iraq as well as newly formed
groups taking credit for rocket attacks against American and Coalition bases. If
Tehran and its proxies continue to harm Americans, Washington will have to
resort to more coercive measures, including military force.
*Mark Dubowitz is the chief executive officer of the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies (FDD), where Behnam Ben Taleblu is a senior fellow. They both
contribute to FDD’s Center on Economic and Financial Power (CEFP). For more
analysis from Mark, Behnam, and CEFP, please subscribe HERE. Follow Mark on
Twitter @mdubowitz. Follow FDD on Twitter @FDD and @FDD_CEFP. FDD is a
Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national
security and foreign policy.
Coronavirus Pandemic Impacts Turkey’s Approach to Displaced Syrians
Aykan Erdemir/FDD/April 01/2020
Turkey Program Senior Director
The offensive launched by Russian- and Iranian-backed forces loyal to Bashar
al-Assad in February to capture Syria’s rebel-held Idlib region forced almost
one million people to flee their homes, causing the biggest single displacement
of the nine-year civil war. Now, the onset of the coronavirus pandemic has
forced Turkey to recalibrate its usual approach to displaced persons and how it
takes advantage of circumstances in Syria.
Over the duration of the conflict in Syria, Damascus and its allies have had a
notorious track record for weaponizing forced displacement of civilians to put
pressure on Turkey and other adversaries. Ankara has had a pattern of leveraging
displacement and refugees in its relations with the European Union and the
Syrian Democratic Council (SDC) that control sections of northeast Syria. In
response to the mass exodus from Idlib, on February 29 the Turkish government
followed through on its 2019 threat to “open the gates to send 3.6 millions of
refugees” to Europe by lifting border controls with Bulgaria and Greece.
For Syria, Russia, and Iran, forcing the residents of Idlib toward the Turkish
border during harsh winter conditions was a calculated strategy aimed at
pressuring Ankara. The Turkish government had already been overstretched by the
upkeep of 3.6 million Syrians hosted under a temporary protection regime and
troubled by a spike in anti-refugee sentiment among the electorate. Even before
the latest Idlib offensive, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan initiated a
policy of deporting Syrian asylum seekers and voiced plans to resettle a million
refugees in northern Syria.
Damascus and its allies calculated that the plight of Idlib’s residents forced
to flee their homes, with reports of children freezing to death near the Turkish
border, would also spill over to and put pressure on the EU, where officials
have been wary of a new wave of refugees and their potential impact, namely the
rise of xenophobic populists.
Unable to cope politically and economically with yet another wave of displaced
Syrians, Ankara tried to push back in Idlib with force. The Turkish government
first found itself in intense military clashes not only with pro-Assad forces
but also with Russia, and then at the negotiating table in Moscow. In between,
Ankara tried to leverage Syrian refugees to induce support from its Western
allies. A spokesperson for Erdoğan’s ruling party declared on February 28 that
Turkey is “no longer able to hold refugees,” followed by the Turkish president’s
announcement the next day that his country’s borders with Europe were open. Just
as Russia expected, it did not take long for Erdoğan to drag the EU into the
crisis, and he warned that Brussels “has to keep its promises” since Ankara was
not “obliged to look after and feed so many refugees.”
In the first week of March, Turkey started bussing asylum seekers for free to
the Greek border and allowed others to cross the Aegean Sea to Greek islands,
suspending its commitments under a 2016 deal with the EU. Marc Pierini, the
former EU ambassador to Turkey, called Turkey’s policy, “the first-ever refugee
exodus, albeit a limited one, fully organized by one government against
another.”
Turkey’s weaponization of refugees seemed to force EU members into action. On
March 1, under pressure of the humanitarian catastrophe on the Turkish-Greek
border, Athens suspended asylum applications for a month and the EU called for
an emergency meeting on the deepening Turkey-Syria crisis. Although Erdoğan’s
leveraging of refugees ultimately failed to win political and military support
for his Idlib campaign from Turkey’s European allies, he nevertheless secured a
March 9 summit with top EU officials and a March 17 videoconference with
British, French, and German leaders. Erdoğan hoped that the leveraging of the
refugee crisis would not only allow him to reboot the refugee deal with
Brussels, providing him additional funds, but also a visa liberalization deal
that he has sought for a long time.
While negotiations were continuing on the EU-Turkey front, coronavirus was
making headways on both sides of the border. Turkey confirmed its first
coronavirus case on March 11, becoming the last major economy to report an
outbreak. The Turkish public, however, was suspicious of a government cover-up,
as until that point Turkey was the only unaffected country in the world with a
population larger than 50 million. The precarious conditions of refugees on
Turkey’s borders with Syria and the EU, and the risk of a coronavirus outbreak
among them, further heightened anxieties.
As the potential costs of a coronavirus epidemic began to outweigh the potential
benefits of weaponizing refugees, attitudes began to change in Ankara. On March
7, only eight days after announcing that Turkey will no longer stop refugees who
want to go to Europe, Erdoğan ordered the Turkish coast guard to prevent
migrants and refugees from crossing the Aegean Sea to Greece. As of March 13,
Ankara started to wind down its policy of moving migrants to the Greek land
border and began bussing them back to Istanbul. The same day, a Turkish court
sentenced three human traffickers to 125 years in prison, one of the harshest
penalties on record. In an ironic turn of events, nineteen days after trying to
force Greece and Bulgaria to open their borders to asylum seekers, Ankara
announced on March 18 its decision to close its land borders with both countries
to exit and entry, shortly after it confirmed its first coronavirus death. On
March 27, Turkey’s interior ministry announced that it has removed all the
remaining migrants away from the Turkish-Greek border, “as a precaution amid the
coronavirus pandemic.”
Besides anxieties about a coronavirus outbreak, a key factor that led to such a
dramatic reversal of Turkey’s strategy is the hardening of the attitudes in
Europe. Seeing that European voters were ready to endorse the strictest measure
to keep asylum seekers out during a coronavirus pandemic, EU governments adopted
a tough stance, even if it meant letting refugees drown in the Aegean. Hence,
when Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis raised the possibility of “a
win-win solution going forward,” calling for a revision of the multi-billion
migration deal between Turkey and the EU, he also warned that such an
arrangement would not “happen under conditions of blackmail.” Greece’s foreign
minister, Nikos Dendias, struck a similar tone in an op-ed published on March
29: “neither Greece nor the EU will engage with Turkey under duress, threat or
blackmail. Maybe the time has come, especially given the difficult situation we
all face with the pandemic, for the Turkish leadership to realize that its
extortion diplomacy has ceased to be effective.”
Paradoxically, the onset of coronavirus did not have a similar restraining
effect on Ankara’s policy toward the displaced populations of northeast Syria.
On March 21, Turkey-backed armed groups interrupted the flow of water from the
Allouk water station to SDC-controlled regions of northeast Syria, where close
to 500,000 reside, including tens of thousands of internally displaced persons
sheltered at camps. UNICEF warned that the “interruption of water supply during
the current efforts to curb the spread of the Coronavirus disease puts children
and families at unacceptable risk.” The Turkish government reportedly
interrupted waterflow to receive more electricity to the regions under its
control, as part of a Russian-brokered a deal that guaranteed drinking water to
SDC-led areas in exchange for power supply.
Ankara calculates that a coronavirus outbreak caused by internally displaced
persons who have no access to water in northeast Syria would not spill over to
Turkey, and hence poses a negligible risk to the Turkish public compared to the
risk posed by destitute asylum seekers stuck in the no man’s land between Turkey
and Greece. This might end up as a dire miscalculation. As a spokesperson for
the World Health Organization warned on March 8, Syria’s “fragile health systems
may not have the capacity to detect and respond” to an epidemic. An
International Rescue Committee official added that the situation was “especially
ripe for a spread” of the virus. Similarly, Turkey’s ambassador to Washington
cautioned on March 9 that the challenge of tracking or preventing the spread of
the coronavirus among displaced Syrians is “a mission impossible.” It would,
therefore, be prudent for Ankara to unwind its leveraging of displaced Syrians
in the war-torn country’s northeast as it has already done so in Turkey’s
northwest border region.
Over the course of the nine-year civil war in Syria, a long list of state and
non-state actors have taken advantage of the flow of displaced persons to
advance policies, extract concessions from counterparts, and impose costs on
adversaries. This process has exacted an untold level of physical and mental
suffering on the Syrian people. The growing risk of a coronavirus pandemic,
however, is slowly forcing decision-makers to factor in the potential costs they
are likely to incur as a result of an outbreak in the territories they control.
The realization that what afflicts Syria’s vulnerable populations is not
something that can be contained or ignored has been made clear, as the COVID-19
disease is now poised to afflict others in the region and beyond. These
circumstances should be a wake-up call for regional and global actors to take
urgent and concerted action to bring an end to the suffering in Syria that has
gone on for too long.
*Aykan Erdemir is a former member of the Turkish parliament and the senior
director of the Turkey Program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
Kurdish-led forces put down revolt by ISIS detainees at
prison in Syria
Liz Sly and Louisa Loveluck /Washington Post/Ma5rch 31/2020
BEIRUT — Kurdish-led forces on Monday put down a revolt at a prison in northeast
Syria for former Islamic State fighters after militants complaining about their
conditions seized control of parts of the facility.
The U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces said the riot was quelled by Monday
night, more than 24 hours after prisoners inside smashed doors, broke down walls
and took over at least one wing of the prison.
“Due to great efforts made by our forces & swift intervention against the
insubordination of ISIS detainees inside one prison, we were able to avoid
catastrophe & take control. No prisoners escaped,” the SDF commander, Gen.
Mazloum Kobane Abdi, said on his Twitter account.
The prison revolt was the most serious yet by the thousands of former Islamic
State fighters detained in prisons in the area, typically in cramped,
overcrowded conditions that have drawn criticism from human rights groups.
The jihadis that no one wants
The uprising coincided with mounting fears across northeast Syria that the
coronavirus will arrive in the war-ravaged area, with potentially devastating
consequences in the crowded prisons. U.S. officials say about 10,000 foreign
fighters from dozens of nations and family members are being held in detention
centers and camps there, along with tens of thousands of Syrians and Iraqis.
Kurdish officials have long warned that they lack the resources to indefinitely
detain such a large number of people and have urged governments around the world
to repatriate their nationals who volunteered to join the Islamic State. Most
countries have refused to do so, fearing that the former fighters would pose a
security threat after they returned.
The SDF’s Mazloum — who goes by a nom de guerre — said the unrest demonstrated
the need for the international community to help resolve the burden on the
Kurdish authorities left to manage the captured fighters. “Our allies must find
a quick radical solution to this international problem,” he tweeted.
The revolt began Sunday night at a prison in the city of Hasakah that houses
about 5,000 Islamic State fighters of multiple nationalities who were captured
after the group’s final stand in the village of Baghouz, Kurdish officials and
local journalists said.
“ISIS terrorists managed to take over the first floor in Hasakah prison,” SDF
spokesman Mustafa Bali wrote on his Twitter account. “Some of them managed to
escape and our forces are searching to capture them.” SDF officials later said
that all the prisoners were accounted for.
Col. Myles B. Caggins III, a spokesman for the international coalition, said the
U.S.-led force provided the SDF with aerial surveillance to look for escapees
and to monitor for any signs that might indicate a “larger conspiracy.”
Video footage posted by a journalist at the scene Monday morning showed members
of the SDF creeping around the outside of the prison wall, suggesting that they
still had not brought the facility under control. The prisoners seized control
of a section of the prison after they disabled surveillance cameras, broke down
metal doors and then used them to smash down walls between the prison cells.
“The mutiny is still ongoing,” the journalist said.
Surveillance video footage from inside the prison on Sunday night showed
prisoners in orange uniforms tightly crammed together in one of the cells and
holding up a sign appealing for intervention by international humanitarian and
coalition forces to alleviate their conditions.
Previous footage from the prison cells, seen by Washington Post reporters during
a visit last year, showed men packed together so tightly that they tripped over
one another as they tried to move across the rooms. Some sat in small, tight
circles, deep in conversation. Others lay staring into space, and several could
be seen clawing at their own faces.
*Loveluck reported from London. Asser Khattab in Paris contributed to this
report.
“Defying Islamist Protests: Middle East Scholar Speaks at
U.S. Army War College”
Raymond Ibrahim/April 01/2020
Note: The following account of my Feb. 26 lecture at the US Army War College was
written by Leonard Getz, CPA, the Philadelphia Counter-Islamist Grid Associate
at the Middle East Forum. It first appeared in American Thinker:
On a 500-acre campus in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, Middle East scholar Raymond
Ibrahim was finally allowed to give his speech before a packed, mostly civilian
audience at the U.S. Army War College’s Heritage and Education Center. Based on
his book, Sword and Scimitar — Fourteen Centuries of War Between Islam and the
West, Ibrahim covered the 7th century origins of Islam, its conflict with
Christianity during the hundreds of years that followed, and revisionist
attempts to deny Islam’s history of violent warfare and supremacism.
Ibrahim, a Judith Friedman Rosen Writing Fellow with the Middle East Forum, was
on the receiving end of such an attempt in June 2019, when the Council on
American-Islamic Relations and other Islamists convinced the U.S. Army War
College to disinvite Ibrahim from his original appearance, fallaciously accusing
the son of Egyptian immigrants of being a “bigot” and “white nationalist.”
However, Ibrahim wasn’t alone. In its press release, CAIR ridiculed the War
College as “an academic institution run on taxpayer funds” which was “poised to
exacerbate longstanding problems such as racism and human rights violations that
exist within the US military.”
Ibrahim explained that CAIR is “well aware how important it is to dominate the
historic narrative.” He pointed to his reliance on primary source material and
actual quotes from jihadist and Islamists to support his view that there is “a
continuity between past and present; Muslim religious leaders and jihadists see
Christianity as both antithetical to the Islamic world and inherently ripe for
conquest or conversion.”
It took a letter signed by ten congressmen to Army War College commandant Major
General John S. Kem, as well as a National Association of Scholars letter to
President Trump which included 5,000 signatories, to convince Army leaders to
reinstate Ibrahim’s invitation.
When CAIR learned that Ibrahim was set to return to the Carlisle campus, it
responded by once again suggesting that it suffers from an “internal problem
with white supremacists and white nationalists within its ranks,” while claiming
that Ibrahim’s talk would “instigate hatred against Muslims.”
Undeterred by his Islamist critics, Ibrahim began his presentation by saying
that “since 9/11,” it has “become popular” for media and academia to whitewash
the Koran’s objectionable passages. “They say Mohammad may have done bad things,
but so did King David and Abraham,” he said. The difference, Ibrahim noted, is
that the Torah acknowledges the wayward path of these leaders and advises
against following them, unlike the Koran.
For argument’s sake, Ibrahim offered to “put aside what the Koran says,” and
“see what Islamists have done.” Beginning with the Islamic conquests of the
Middle East and North Africa, Ibrahim argued that Islamists’ consistent goal has
been western submission to Islamic supremacy. This region, which is identified
today as Muslim-majority, was home to more Christians than Europe in the 7th
century. What remained after the Arab Muslim invasion became “the West.” Ibrahim
quoted historian Franco Cardini, who wrote that, “Repeated Muslim aggression
against Europe in the 7th and 8th centuries and again in the 14th and 18th
centuries was a violent midwife to Europe.”
Ibrahim referred to the late historian of Islam Bernard Lewis, who said, “We
forget that for a thousand years since the advent of Islam from the 7th century
to the siege of Vienna in 1683 Christian Europe was under constant threat from
Islam, the double threat of conquest and conversion violently wrested from
Christendom.” Ibrahim noted that modern historians often fail to acknowledge
this simple truth.
He argued that Mohammad’s guidance to spread Islam was the motivation behind the
Islamic conquests. The only way peace could be achieved was through acceptance
of Islam by conversion, enslavement, or paying the jizya — an enormous annual
tribute which the caliphate levied on non-Muslims.
Short of these options, a non-believer’s only recourse was to fight to the
death. He quoted what Islamist conqueror Khalid bin Walid said to a Byzantine
general before the Battle of Yarmuk in 636 CE: “We Arabs are in the habit of
drinking blood and we are told the Romans are the sweetest of its kind. Where
you love life, we love death.”
Unlike contemporary historians who identify the various inter-civilizational
wars of this age as ethnic and nationalistic, Ibrahim emphasized that the
primary sources clearly show that these ongoing battles were manifestations of
jihad, inspired by Koranic scripture. He called this tendency “a historic fact
that modern day historians censor.”
Ibrahim showed that modern jihadists “belonging to groups such as ISIS are
well-versed in Islamic historic military jurisprudence” and the Koran and point
to historical precedents to justify their violence and brutality.
At the fall of Constantinople, Sultan Mehmed II motivated his jihadists with the
same instructions invoked by modern-day ISIS: “Recall the promise of our Prophet
regarding fallen warriors in the Koran; the man who falls in combat will be
transported bodily to Paradise [and] will dine with Mohammed in the presence of
women.”
Next, Ibrahim recounted the American experience with the Islamic Barbary pirates
in 1785 and 1786 that attacked U.S. merchant ships and enslaved American
sailors. In an effort to ransom the slaves, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams
entered negotiations with Abdul Rahman, Tripoli’s ambassador to Britain. The
American diplomats futilely explained that they “had done them no injury” and
“consider all mankind our friends.”
Abdul answered that “it was founded on the laws of their Prophet, written in the
Koran that all nations not acknowledging their authority were sinners, that it
is their religious right and duty to make slaves of non-believers, and all
Muslims slain in battle were sure to go to paradise.” America’s conflict with
Islam did not begin on 9/11. Rather, it dates back to the time of America’s
Founders.
To underscore this message, Ibrahim cited Theodore Roosevelt’s 1916 book, Fear
God and Take Your Part, where the former president pointed out, “If the peoples
of Europe in the 7th and 8th centuries, and on up to and including the 17th
century, had not possessed a military equality with, and gradually a growing
superiority over the Mohammedans who invaded Europe, Europe would at this moment
be Mohammedan and the Christian religion would be exterminated.”
The great English statesman Winston Churchill also criticized Islam for
institutionalizing slavery. “The fact that in Mohammedan law every woman is the
absolute property — either as a child, a wife, or a concubine — must delay the
final extinction of slavery until the faith of Islam has ceased to be a great
power among men.”
Ibrahim rhetorically asked, if the violent history of Islam is so
well-documented, “so ironclad” then “why don’t we know about it?” Older
historians who studied Islam unprejudiced by political correctness reached
conclusions which no longer comport to what the public is told. Conversely,
modern historians get away with academic malpractice by reducing previous
Islamic studies scholarship to outdated myths.
This is all part and parcel to what Ibrahim referred to as “propaganda as a form
of jihad,” misinformation of which academics and groups such as CAIR are the
most vociferous defenders.
Meanwhile, CAIR, an unindicted co-conspirator in the nation’s largest terrorism
finance trial and an accused Hamas supporter, engaged in “propaganda jihad ”by
working to suppress Ibrahim’s historical review, a practice consistent with
Islamist suppression of different religious beliefs.
In the end, Ibrahim gave Army service members and the community a coherent and
fact-driven presentation of Islamic history that everyone in America should
hear, one that dispels the many false, politically correct notions about the
nature of Islam. It lays bare the inconvenient truth that Islamic ideology is
what motivates Muslim jihadists to perpetrate acts of terrorism against
non-believers, both domestically and abroad.
Coronavirus: Strict Rules and Order Save Lives
Salman Al-Dossary/Asharq Al-Awsat/March 31/2020
From now, people will know that nothing is unimaginable and that they need to
rethink everything that they have read about in books and seen in fantasy
movies. Not since the Second World War have societies seen such a dramatic
change as they are now seeing during the coronavirus outbreak. Airports and
trains have practically come to a halt, highways are deserted, borders are
closes, health systems have collapsed… even taking a walk in the park is deemed
a luxury. Walking on the streets tomorrow? A dream.
Isolation has become the rule and carrying on with life as it was has become the
exception.
According to figures published by the Frances’ Les Echos on Saturday, the rate
of isolation tripled in the past ten days. Sixty countries, or 3.26 billion
people, meaning 43 percent of mankind, are under curfew or strictly advised to
stay at home and to venture out for essential goods, medical treatment or work.
As we continue to live in this unprecedented horror movie, the number of
infections around the world continues to rise dramatically. For example, Italy,
whose population makes up 4 percent of China, has registered more infections
than China itself.
There is however, some hope to take from the Asian experience, especially in
China, Japan and South Korea. China has gradually eased restrictions and some
restaurants have reopened. Japan and South Korea have also eased restrictions,
while the United States and Europe have turned into epicenters of the virus.I
won’t be exaggerating in saying that the second shock, after the first shock of
the virus itself, is just how fast the pandemic is spreading and how dangerous
it is, in Europe specifically. It was believed that Europe boasted the world’s
best health systems. Now, it appears that Italy and Spain are “competing” with
Iran, with all of its backward systems, in registering the greatest number of
cases and deaths.
To get a better picture, let us assume that a war were to break out between
Britain or France with Hong Kong, for example. We would be shocked if the war
machine of the two European countries would be defeated so easily by such a
small state. But this is what’s happening now. The greatest government systems
in the world are helpless in stopping the spread of the coronavirus.
I believe that the majority of countries adopted one of two strategies: The
first relied on strict preventive measures before the outbreak spread across
their territories. The second relied on the awareness of people to confront the
virus. In this second strategy, governments, specifically western ones, did not
adopt preventive measures or strict rules, given the nature of their political
systems, which did not allow for such measures to begin with because they were
viewed as restrictions on personal freedoms, in the western definition of the
term, of course.
The coronavirus crisis was soon upon them and they failed in preempting it and
carrying out what was necessary to save the lives of hundreds of thousands, or
perhaps millions, of its people in the coming weeks. In contrast, countries that
took preemptive preventive measures, succeeded in predicting the impending
danger before it was too late.
It is odd that the two strategies have the same goal, which is saving people
from a human disaster. However, one succeeded, for now at least, and the other,
failed, for now at least, as well. It has been proven on the ground, especially
at times of catastrophes, that strict rules and order save lives, says Michelle
Gelfand, a psychology professor at the University of Maryland.
During the coronavirus crisis, the hardest question confronting scientists,
politicians and doctors is: When will this disaster end?
The truth is, no one knows. The difference is that there are some political
systems that have realized the danger early on and have limited the possibility
of the spread of the virus and protected themselves from imminent catastrophe.
They have not left room for criticism against them from their people. Other
political systems, however, waited for catastrophe to strike and acted late,
incurring the wrath of the people.
The irony here is that the systems that realized the danger ahead of time are
accused of violating human rights, while the others pride themselves in
defending them, for the world to discover that the principles that protect
public liberties are the ones that are failing in saving lives.
Don't Let COVID-19 Become Hunger Game
Qu Dongyu/Asharq Al-Awsat/March 31/2020
The COVID-19 pandemic is putting enormous strains on the public health systems
around the world, and millions of people in the world's most advanced economies
are in some form of quarantine.
We know the human toll will be high, and that massive efforts to turn the tide
carry a heavy economic cost. To reduce the risk of an even greater toll -
shortage of food for millions, even in affluent countries - the world must take
immediate actions to minimize disruptions to food supply chains.
A globally coordinated and coherent response is needed to prevent this public
health crisis from triggering a food crisis in which people cannot find or
afford food. For now, COVID-19 has not entailed any strain on food security,
despite anecdotal reports of crowded supermarket sieges.
While there's no need for panic - there is enough supply of food in the world to
feed everyone – we must face the challenge: an enormous risk that food may not
be made available where it is needed. The COVID-19 outbreak, with all the
accompanying closures and lockdowns, has created logistical bottlenecks that
ricochet across the long value chains of the modern global economy.Restrictions
of movement, as well as basic aversion behavior by workers, may impede farmers
from farming and food processors (who handle most agricultural products) from
processing.
Shortage of fertilizers, veterinary medicines and other input could also affect
agricultural production.
Closures of restaurants and less frequent grocery shopping diminish demand for
fresh produce and fisheries products, affecting producers and suppliers,
especially smallholder farmers, with long-term consequences for the world's
increasingly urbanized population, be they in Manhattan or Manila. Uncertainty
about food availability can induce policymakers to implement trade restrictive
measures in order to safeguard national food security. Given the experience of
the 2007-2008 global food price crisis, we know that such measures can only
exacerbate the situation.
Export restrictions put in place by exporting countries to increase food
availability domestically could lead to serious disruptions in the world food
market, resulting in price spikes and increased price volatility.
In 2007-2008, these immediate measures proved extremely damaging, especially for
low income food deficit countries and to the efforts of humanitarian
organisations to procure supplies for the needy and vulnerable. We should all
learn from our recent past and not make the same mistakes twice. Policy makers
must take care to avoid accidentally tightening food-supply conditions.
While every country faces its own challenges, collaboration – between
governments and the full gamut of sectors and stakeholders - is paramount. We
are experiencing a global problem that requires a global response.
We must ensure that food markets are functioning properly and that information
on prices, production, consumption and stocks of food is available to all in
real time. This approach will reduce uncertainty and allow producers, consumers,
traders and processors to make informed decisions and to contain unwarranted
panic behavior in global food markets.
The health impacts of the unfolding COVID-19 pandemic on some of the poorest
countries are still unknown. Yet, we can say with certainty that any ensuing
food crisis as a result of poor policy making will be a humanitarian disaster
that we can avert.
We already have 113 million people experiencing acute hunger; in sub-Saharan
Africa, a quarter of the population is undernourished. Any disruptions to food
supply chains will intensify both human suffering and the challenge of reducing
hunger around the world.
We must do everything possible to not let that happen. Prevention costs less.
Global markets are critical for smoothening supply and demand shocks across
countries and regions, and we need to work together to ensure that disruptions
of food supply chains are minimised as much as possible.COVID-19 forcefully
reminds us that solidarity is not charity, but common sense. Food and
Agriculture Organization Director-General QU Dongyu
What Concepts Are We to Expect in Post-COVID-19 Era?
Eyad Abu Shakra/Asharq Al-Awsat/March 31/2020
House-bound, a group of friends including me, have turned to Skype as an
alternative means of communication, socializing and thinking about COVID-19,
which has suddenly invaded lives.
Each of us has his own experiences and views about the situation; and, of
course, each has his expectation of how this pandemic is going to change our
concepts, beliefs, as well as our lifestyle, behavior, and social and economic
priorities. However, one thing our ‘Skype gang’ is unanimous about is that the
post-COVID-19 world will be something totally different from what we have known
and experienced.
One example of the concepts and issues we expect to change, one way or another,
is the relationship between politics and religion. Another one is what role
humans are going to play in a world dominated by hi-technology and AI, and the
majority of whose politicians are obsessed with our globalized economy.
Then, of course there is the future of anything related to knowledge and
communication, from the field of education to media, and the radical
transformation is already in motion there.
The dimensions of the ‘pandemic’ - as it is officially recognized now by the
World Health Organisation (WHO) - are frightening. Indeed, after hesitating to
use the term ‘epidemic’, WHO has acknowledged the reality after witnessing the
astonishing increase in cases and fatalities, and the shift of its epicenter
from China, to Iran and western Europe, and from there to every corner of the
world.
I believe that Europe’s experience with the pandemic deserves a lot of attention
for several reasons, foremost among which is that Europe has solid and
transparent democracies. These democracies never hesitate to admit mistakes, and
are never late in correcting them. This is not the case with China which is
controlled by a policy of secrecy, a command structure mentality, and one-party
rule. Neither is it case with Iran, which is a militaristic theocracy, nor the
USA that currently engulfed by excessive populism in an election year whereby
public health strategy has become part and parcel of electioneering and
marketing.
This is why I believe that we in the Arab world need to monitor and learn from
the way a badly-suffering Europe is behaving. Among the costliest mistakes the
Europeans have learned from are:
1- Their hesitance in enforcing lockdowns two months after the Chinese locked
down the city of Wuhan, a city of 11 million inhabitants.
2- Being too late in carrying out tests, which are vital in knowing about the
spread of infections, which would help plan quarantines and carry out treatment.
Germany, perhaps, has been the exception here, with the proof being the
relatively very low fatality rate compared with that of Italy.
3- Failure to adequately invest in the public health sectors, and the ongoing
tendency of under-funding it.
Today, Italy’s fatalities have overtaken China’s, with Germany, Spain, France
and the UK moving in the same direction lagging behind only by one or two weeks.
Relatively high infection figures are being recorded too in much smaller
countries like Belgium, Switzerland, and Ireland. All this means that we are
going to witness an unprecedented and rapid rise in both cases and
peacetime-fatalities throughout western Europe within one or two weeks.
These facts, no doubt, are very worrying; what is even more worrying are the
reports coming from Italy, and those expected elsewhere, about a virtual
collapse of medical service under the enormity of the pandemic.
Indeed, this collapse has led to open talk about ‘selectivity’ in saving lives,
and some hospitals’ refusal to treat the elderly and those with underlying and
chronic health conditions.
Furthermore, despite the late-coming curfews, lockdowns and house isolations, as
well as retooling factories to start producing ventilators and other ICU
equipments, the effect of the last few weeks’ delay will appear in the cases and
fatalities figures of the next three months. This is why the British Prime
Minister Boris Johnson was talking about around 12 weeks before any improvement
becomes evident.
This data definitely points to inevitable changes.
Regarding the relationship between politics and religion, some believe that the
aura enjoyed by religious establishments – of all major religions – above any
other consideration, is almost gone. They argue that putting peoples’ lives
above classical everyday worship is a sign of rationalism and realism that would
save religions from excessive ritualism. The counter-argument by others would
claim that science failed in the past, and has also failed now to prevent this
pandemic.
As for the relationship between the private and public sectors, there was an
interesting article last week by the London-based staunchly conservative Daily
Telegraph in which it said that to avoid socialism, the government must be a
socialist for a while to save the liberal free market!
This came in the wake of the generous relief and compensation package announced
by the British government for those who are threatened with losing their income
as a result of the repercussions of the pandemic. This package recalls the
quasi-nationalization measures taken by US President GW Bush administration
during the financial crisis of 2007-2008.
The Western countries have since moved on, and seem to have forgotten what
happened in 2007-2008; which is why they have re-elected right-wing leaderships
promising better times and low taxes. Well these countries are now facing
COVID-19 which is costing them times and times over what they would be spending
their tax money on health infrastructures and investment in scientific research.