LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
April 26/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For today
Am I now seeking human approval, or God’s
approval? Or am I trying to please people? If I were still pleasing people, I
would not be a servant of Christ.
Letter to the Galatians 01/01-10: “Paul an apostle sent neither by human
commission nor from human authorities, but through Jesus Christ and God the
Father, who raised him from the dead and all the members of God’s family who are
with me, To the churches of Galatia:Grace to you and peace from God our Father
and the Lord Jesus Christ, who gave himself for our sins to set us free from the
present evil age, according to the will of our God and Father, to whom be the
glory for ever and ever. Amen. I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting
the one who called you in the grace of Christ and are turning to a different
gospel. not that there is another gospel, but there are some who are confusing
you and want to pervert the gospel of Christ. But even if we or an angel from
heaven should proclaim to you a gospel contrary to what we proclaimed to you,
let that one be accursed! As we have said before, so now I repeat, if anyone
proclaims to you a gospel contrary to what you received, let that one be
accursed! Am I now seeking human approval, or God’s approval? Or am I trying to
please people? If I were still pleasing people, I would not be a servant of
Christ..
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on April 25-26/19
US Targets 2 Men, 3 Firms for Helping Hezbollah Avoid Sanctions
Aoun welcomes World Forum of Religions, German delegation: dialogue at United
Nations peace on paper
Hariri receives AlRoudan, Grindlay, Djerejian
Berri: Lebanon Should Begin Preparations for New Electoral Law
KSrelief Launches Humanitarian Projects in Lebanon's Beqaa
Lebanon's Cabinet Convenes in Baabda, Budget Not on Agenda
U.S. Hits Hizbullah ‘Financiers, Firms’ with New Sanctions
Lebanese Army chief at launch of 'Special Forces Training Center' in Akkar's
Sheikh Taba: Through our firm will, we face surrounding challenges
Illegal hiring: Kanaan says Court of Audit to settle on contravening contracts
Geagea during Commemoration of Armenian genocide in Meerab: Quest for a strong
and effective republic is a comprehensive national endeavor
Chidiac, Aliyyeh talk public transactions' development affairs
Report: LF, FPM at Loggerheads over Information Leaks
ISF Police Found Dead with Gunshot Wound Near AUB
UNIFIL Confirms Third Tunnel Crossing Blue Line
Lebanese Government to Start Discussing Draft Budget Next Week
Samy Gemayel, Yaacoubian Submit Draft Law on Bank Secrecy
Carlos Ghosn Wins Second Bail in Japan
IRGC Designation: A Lost Opportunity to Weaken Hezbollah in Lebanon
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 25-26/19
Israel Allows Gaza's Christians to Pray In Jerusalem
Sisi in Beijing to Attend 'Belt and Road Forum'
Palestinian Authority Looks to Soft Loans amid Financial Crisis
Damascus’ Allies, Opponents Race Over Strategic Gains
Syria Negotiators in Kazakhstan for Talks
Sudan Military Chiefs Resign as Deal Struck with Protestors
3 Members of Sudan Military Council Resign
Egypt Confirms Death Sentence for 2 Monks over 2018 Murder of Bishop
Kim, Putin Vow to Seek Closer Ties at First Talks
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on April 25-26/19
IRGC Designation: A Lost Opportunity to Weaken Hezbollah in Lebanon/David Daoud/
Atlantic Council/April 25/19
359 “People Were in Pieces!” Easter Day Islamic Terror in Sri Lanka/Raymond
Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/April 25/19
The Difficult Road to Defense/Peter Huessy/Gatestone Institute/April 25/19
Algerian Backgrounds/Hazem Saghieh/Asharq Al Awsat/April 25/19
Free Speech in Denmark/Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/April 25/19
Snuffing out Iran’s Oil Will Bring Stability to the World/Salman Al-dossary/Asharq
Al Awsat/April 25/19
Columnist In Syrian Daily Close To Assad Regime: As Russia-Iran Disagreements In
Syria Increase, Each One Pressures Regime To Accept Its Initiative For The
Region/MEMRI/April 25 kdshkL19
Iran’s investments in Syria in jeopardy thanks to US sanctions/Dr. Majid
Rafizadeh/Arab News/April 25/19
By Punishing Iran, Trump Is Weakening America/Henry Farrell and Abraham
Newman/Foreign Policy/April 25/19
ISIS’s Newest Recruiting Tool: Regional Languages/Krishnadev Calamur/The
Atlantic/April 25/19
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News published
on April 25-26/19
US Targets 2 Men, 3 Firms for Helping Hezbollah Avoid Sanctions
Asharq Al-Awsat/April,25/2019/The US Treasury, moving to boost
pressure on Hezbollah, imposed sanctions on Wednesday against two people and
three firms that Washington accuses of being involved in schemes to help the
Iran-backed party evade American sanctions, reported Reuters. The Treasury’s
Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) said it was targeting Belgium-based Wael
Bazzi because he acted on behalf of his father Mohammad Bazzi, a Hezbollah
financier. OFAC also took action against two Belgian companies and a
British-based firm controlled by Bazzi. In addition, the US Treasury designated
Lebanon-based Hassan Tabaja, who it said had acted on behalf of his brother
Adham Tabajha, also a Hezbollah financier. The two men and three businesses were
targeted for sanctions under US regulations aimed at suspected terrorists or
those who support them, the Treasury said in a statement. Hezbollah is
considered a foreign terrorist organization by the United States. “Treasury is
relentlessly pursuing Hezbollah’s financial facilitators by dismantling two of
Hezbollah’s most important financial networks,” Treasury Undersecretary Sigal
Mandelker said in a statement.
“By targeting Hassan Tabaja and Wael Bazzi and their European-based companies,
this administration is continuing to disrupt all avenues of financial support
relied upon by Hezbollah,” he said. The US action freezes their assets and
property and prevents US citizens and businesses from dealing with them. The US
State Department earlier this week offered a reward of up to $10 million for
information that could help disrupt Hezbollah’s financing. The move to boost
pressure on the group comes at a time of growing US concern about its role in
the Lebanese government. Hezbollah has also sent fighters to Middle East
conflicts, including the war in Syria, where it supported regime leader Bashar
Assad, and the conflict in Yemen.
Aoun welcomes World Forum of Religions, German delegation:
dialogue at United Nations peace on paper
Thu 25 Apr 2019/NNA - "Dialogue at the United Nations is not
useful for it is establishing peace on paper only. Without dialogue between
peoples, there can be no peace," President Michel Aoun said this Thursday. "The
implementation of the objectives of the Human Academy for Encounter and Dialogue
shall promoting democracy and establish peace among peoples," he added.
President Aoun's remarks came during his welcoming at the Baabda Palace to the
president of the World Forum for Religions and Humanity, Joel Rizkallah Jabr, at
the head of a German delegation from FREUNDE ABRAIHAMS, and members of the
forum. The delegation briefed Aoun on the activities of the organization at the
global level, in terms of dialogue between religions and openness to the other.
"The Friends of Abraham organization was founded 18 years ago at the University
of Munich and is interested in the history of the region and its religions, as
well as its political history before the spread of religions," said Kathrin
Neumann. "Studying this history would help build bridges between the past and
the present and understand what is happening now, especially in Europe."The
President welcomed the delegation, stressing "his continuous efforts to expand
the framework of dialogue in the world through the project he submitted before
the UN last year to establish the Human Academy for Encounter and Dialogue in
Lebanon under the auspices of the International Organization; a project to be
voted on this year by the General Assembly." "The Middle East has suffered from
terrorism recently, and its repercussions are still obvious, reaching Europe as
a delayed reaction to the tragedies that preceded the stages of the emergence of
heavenly religions," said the President. Aoun pointed out that "Lebanon is in
contact today with various countries, especially the European pro-Academy ones,
and that India supported the project and China will respond positively.""Respect
for the right of difference is not only between individuals but also among
civilizations, within the principle of respecting the freedom of belief for one
another. This is a universal call for peace," he said, stressing that the
uniqueness of Lebanon makes it the best platform for such an academy.
Hariri receives AlRoudan, Grindlay, Djerejian
Thu 25 Apr 2019/NNA - The President of the Council of Ministers Saad Hariri
received this afternoon at the Center House the Kuwaiti Minister of Commerce and
Industry Khaled Nasser Abdullah Al-Roudan, accompanied by the Kuwaiti Ambassador
to Lebanon Abdel-Aal al-Kinai. After the meeting, Al-Roudan said that
discussions focused on the bilateral relations between the two countries and
increasing the trade exchange since the current figures are not up to the
ambitions of the two countries. He added: "An economic team will discuss ways to
enhance the volume of exchange between our two countries, which are linked by
brotherly relations."Hariri also met with the director of the Rice University's
Baker Institute for Public Policy, former US Ambassador Edward Djerejian, who
said after the meeting: "We had a very productive meeting focused on the
situation in the region and the good Lebanese-American relations, in addition to
what Lebanon faces on the economic level and Prime Minister Hariri's plans to
face these burdens."Hariri then received the Australian Ambassador to Lebanon
Rebekah Grindlay. He met separately with the ambassadors of Lebanon in Ukraine
Ali Daher, Algeria Mohamad Hassan and Morocco Ziad Atallah.
Berri: Lebanon Should Begin Preparations for New Electoral
Law
Naharnet/April 25/19/Head of Development and Liberation parliamentary bloc,
Speaker Nabih Berri said Lebanon should start preparations for a new
parliamentary electoral law, noting that his bloc prepared a “law initiative” in
that regard, al-Joumhouria daily reported on Thursday. “The current electoral
law created great imbalance and an overwhelming complaint from everyone," said
Berri, “experience has shown it to be a “mini Orthodox” law. We must therefore
take advantage of the lessons that the elections have given.'"We are working
with a great deal of care to prepare a modern law that is based on Lebanon's
relative size and on the aspirations of the Lebanese who wish to be represented
fairly and correctly,” Berri told the daily. The Speaker said his bloc has
prepared a law initiative that sees Lebanon as one constituency on the basis of
proportionality. In 2018, Lebanon held its legislative elections based on a new
electoral law adopted in 2017 that provides a proportional representation system
for the first time in the history of the country. On the timing of his call
noting that Lebanon held its elections only a year ago, Berri said: “We don’t
want to be short of time.”The so-called Orthodox electoral law was proposed in
2012 by former Deputy Speaker Elie Ferzli. It calls for each sect to elect its
own MPs within the country as a single district. Criticisms said it would
aggravate sectarian divisions in the country.
KSrelief Launches Humanitarian Projects in Lebanon's Beqaa
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 25 April, 2019/Advisor to the
Royal Court, General Supervisor of King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief
Center (KSrelief) Dr. Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al-Rabiah toured on Wednesday
Lebanon's Beqaa Governorate, where he launched a number of relief projects in
the presence of Saudi Ambassador to Lebanon Walid bin Abdullah Bukhari. During
the tour, Dr. Al-Rabiah participated in the distribution of food baskets to the
displaced Syrians within the project of Ramadan food baskets. He also met with
Commissioner-General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees (UNRWA) Pierre Krahenbuhl, in the presence of Saudi Ambassador to
Lebanon Waleed Bukhari. During the meeting, they discussed the issues of common
interest in the fields of humanitarian and relief as well as the issues and ways
of enhancing joint cooperation between KSrelief and UNRWA in the field of
providing aid to the Palestine refugees. Dr. Al-Rabiah also met with UN Resident
and Humanitarian Coordinator Philippe Lazzarini, during which they discussed
issues of common interest in the fields of humanitarian and relief as well as
the issues and ways of enhancing joint cooperation between KSrelief and the UN
Humanitarian Office in the field of providing aid to the Lebanese, Syrian and
Palestinian needy refugees.
Lebanon's Cabinet Convenes in Baabda, Budget Not on Agenda
Naharnet/April 25/19/The Cabinet convened at the Presidential
Palace in Baabda on Thursday to discuss 38 items on its agenda that does not
include the 2019 state’s budget. President Michel Aoun chaired the meeting in
the presence of PM Saad Hariri and the government ministers. Aoun and Hariri
held a closed-door meeting before joining the ministers. The country’s budget
was not listed on the Cabinet agenda because it has not been distributed to
ministers, which raises potentials that an agreement has not yet been reached on
the austerity measures the government plans to implement.
U.S. Hits Hizbullah ‘Financiers, Firms’ with New Sanctions
Naharnet/April 25/19/The U.S. Treasury Department announced on Wednesday that it
had imposed new sanctions on two individuals and three entities on charges of
financing Hizbullah and trying to circumvent U.S. sanctions. According to the
Office of Foreign Assets Control, the two individuals are “Wael Bazzi, a Belgian
resident who worked on behalf of his father and Hizbullah financier Mohamed
Bazzi; and Lebanon-based Hassan Tabajeh, who acted on behalf of his brother
Adham Tabjba, a member of Hizbullah and one of its financiers.”The U.S.
sanctions against the two men and their three European-based firms freezes their
assets and property and prevents businesses from dealing with them. Early this
week, the Trump administration said it is offering rewards of up to $10 million
each for information that disrupts the finances of Hizbullah organization.
Lebanese Army chief at launch of 'Special Forces Training
Center' in Akkar's Sheikh Taba: Through our firm will, we face surrounding
challenges
Thu 25 Apr 2019/NNA - Army Commander, General Joseph Aoun, on Thursday
patronized the launch of the Audi Bank-funded "Special Forces Training Center"
in the region of Akkar's Sheikh Taba. The launch ceremony took place in the
presence of scores of official figures, local dignitaries and senior army
officers. "Our firm will and our faith in our message remain our weapon in the
face of all surrounding challenges," Maj. Gen. Aoun said, stressing that the
process of building a modern and sophisticated army is not solely confined to
armament, but also to training "which is equally important."
Illegal hiring: Kanaan says Court of Audit to settle on
contravening contracts
Thu 25 Apr 2019/NNA - The Finance and Budget House committee convened in a
session at the Parliament Thursday, under the chairmanship of MP Ibrahim Kanaan,
to follow up on the discussion of the illegal hiring inside the state
institutions and administrations. "Today's session was devoted to put the final
touches on what we have accomplished during the past month regarding the hiring
dossier since October 2018," Kanaan told reporters. "We now have facts and a
clear image about what happened; we will basically conclude the hearing sessions
and venture into the preparation of our final report," he said. Kanaan indicated
that the Court of Audit was now responsible to settle on the illegal contracts.
"We will hold the contravening political power responsible and we will name the
contravening side," he stressed. "Our report will be conclusive, comprehensive,
transparent and within the reach of everybody," he added.
Geagea during Commemoration of Armenian genocide in Meerab:
Quest for a strong and effective republic is a comprehensive national endeavor
Thu 25 Apr 2019/NNA - The Lebanese Forces Party on Thursday commemorated the
104th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide during a ceremony held in Meerab in
the presence of scores of political, social, religious and media dignitaries. In
his delivered word, Lebanese Forces leader, Samir Geagea, saluted the martyrs of
the Armenian massacres, eulogizing them as the martyrs of truth, duty and
humanity. Geagea said today's occasion comes to renew loyalty to the Armenian
cause and that of the Syriac, Assyrian and Chaldean causes that shall never die
out despite the years and decades.
Turning to the internal domestic scene, Geagea underlined that the current
delicate stage necessitates staying away from the politics of axes and
exclusivity in making decisions outside the governmental consensus.The Lebanese
Forces leader stressed continual, unremitting efforts to realize a strong
republic, saying "the pursuit of a strong and effective republic is a
comprehensive national endeavor, rather than a narrow partisan goal."
Chidiac, Aliyyeh talk public transactions' development
affairs
Thu 25 Apr 2019/NNA - A meeting was held on Thursday between Minister of State
for Administrative Development Affairs, Dr. May Chidiac, and the Director
General of Tenders Department, Jean Aliyyeh, within the framework of the support
provided by Minister Chidiac's Office to the Tenders' Department. The meeting
took place on the sidelines of the conclusion of a series of training seminars
on the objective criteria for the management of public transactions hosted by
the Office of the Ministry of State for Administrative Development
Affairs.Aliyyeh thanked Chidiac for the Ministry's efforts to develop the
capabilities of public employees, especially the staff of his Department and
members of Tenders’ committees in public administrations to carry out their
duties in accordance with the laws in effect, and to acquaint them with the
international standards and best practices in this domain.
Discussions also focused on the importance of implementing the outputs of the
EU-funded Public Transactions' Development Project, managed by the Office of the
Minister of State for Administrative Development Affairs.
Report: LF, FPM at Loggerheads over Information Leaks
Naharnet/April 25/19/The Lebanese Forces and Free Patriotic Movement are still
in an open conflict over many internal issues the most recent was over leaking
of minutes of meeting between Lebanese officials and Marshall Billingslea,
assistant secretary for terrorist financing in the United States Department of
the Treasury, al-Joumhouria daily reported on Thursday. The MOM between Deputy
Prime Minister Ghassan Hasbani and Economy Minister Mansour Btesih with
Billingslea in Washington were leaked twice in the last week. Although FPM chief
and Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil has requested opening an internal
investigation into the incident, LF sources said the move came “belated.”“There
is a double trouble here regarding this leak. There was a first leak and a
second one yesterday. Despite that the Foreign Ministry did not launch
investigations or issue an apology or a condemnation. This should have been
issued personally by Minister Bassil,” LF sources told the newspaper. “This is
damaging to the image of Lebanon, to its credibility, to its diplomacy, to the
confidence of the international community, and to its relations with foreign
countries,” they added, noting “we will question the government and foreign
ministry, we won’t ignore this file.”The sources concluded, "It is very
unfortunate that some embassies have become a place for the leak of records.
What happened is shameful, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs must bear the
responsibility and show the truth.”
ISF Police Found Dead with Gunshot Wound Near AUB
Naharnet/April 25/19/A member of the Internal Security Forces was found dead
with a gunshot wound near the American University of Beirut, VDL (93.3) radio
station said on Thursday. Unnamed “sources believed he could have shot himself,”
according to VDL. The circumstances of the incident are still unclear, it added.
Investigation were run to uncover the details.
UNIFIL Confirms Third Tunnel Crossing Blue Line
Kataeb.org/Thursday 25th April 2019/The United Nations peacekeeping force in
Lebanon, UNIFIL, on Thursday confirmed the presence of a third tunnel along the
Blue Line on the Lebanese southern border with Israel. “Recently, UNIFIL carried
out a technical inspection of the last tunnel discovered by the IDF in northern
Israel close to the Blue Line and across from the Lebanese village of Ramyah and
following an independent assessment, it confirms that this tunnel crosses the
Blue Line in violation of resolution 1701,” the statement read. Israel had
reported six tunnels but UNIFIL’s investigation has so far confirmed the
presence of five, including three crossing the Blue Line. “The Lebanese
authorities have been informed about the violation and urgent follow-up actions
have been requested in accordance with the responsibilities of the Government of
Lebanon pursuant to resolution 1701,” the statement added. “UNIFIL remains
engaged with the parties to ensure that all activities in sensitive areas are
duly coordinated, the Blue Line is fully respected by both sides, and to help
the parties uphold their respective obligations towards the cessation of
hostilities under resolution 1701,” the statement affirms.
Lebanese Government to Start Discussing Draft Budget Next
Week
Kataeb.org/Thursday 25th April 2019/The government is set to start discussing
the 2019 draft budget next week, Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil announced on
Thursday. “Starting Tuesday, the government will hold continuous sessions until
the budget is approved,” Khalil told reporters following the Cabinet session at
the Baabda Palace. Khalil pointed out that the amended budget plan will be
distributed to the ministers today so that they would be able to examine it
ahead of next week's discussions. The Finance minister refuted "rumors" about
salaries cut as unfounded. Cabinet will hold a session next week dedicated to
discussing the 2019 state budget, Finance Minister Ali Hasan Khalil said
following a Cabinet session Thursday. A copy of the latest draft budget will be
distributed to ministers ahead of the session, set for Tuesday, in accordance
with a request from Prime Minister Saad Hariri. "We will hold continuous
sessions until we have finished with the budget," Khalil added. During
Thursday's session, the government approved salary hikes for employees at the
Port of Tripoli and the Railways and Public Transport Authority in accordance
with the salary scale law. Finance minister highlighted that the government has
decided to stop covering trips except for those carried out by President Aoun
and PM Hariri for emergency political motives.
Samy Gemayel, Yaacoubian Submit Draft Law on Bank Secrecy
Kataeb.org/Thursday 25th April 2019/Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel and MP Paula
Yaacoubian on Thursday announced that they will submit a new draft law on bank
secrecy aimed at curbing corruption and control bribery in the public sector.
“The draft law that was submitted to the Parliament was made in a way to remain
unapproved because it has complicated mechanisms; it is a stillborn proposal,"
Gemayel said during a joint press conference with Yaacoubian at the Parliament.
"We have reformulated the existing draft law in a way that does not allow it to
be contested before the Constitutional Council. We have facilitated its
mechanisms and included in it political parties and their heads as well as
contractors,” he explained. “Influence peddling will not be curbed unless bank
secrecy is lifted off companies and contractors that are dealing with the
government." “We hope that the draft law gets ratified as soon as possible so
that we put an end to outbidding. We also hope that the voting would be done by
roll call so that people would know who voted in favor of it and those who did
not,” he stressed. “By proposing this draft law, we are committing to the
Kataeb's electoral platform in which we pledged to work on this issue," Gemayel
affirmed. For her part, Yaacoubian highlighted that the draft law is aimed at
boosting transparency, noting that it is more expanded than the one put forth by
the Free Patriotic Movement as it includes more people and officials whose bank
accounts should be disclosed. “According to the draft law, everyone involved in
the public service and anyone who takes part in public tenders should be subject
to the lifting of bank secrecy,” Yaacoubian stated. "The draft law also reduces
the bank guarantee from LBP10 million to just LBP1 million," she added. Turning
to the lingering waste management crisis, Gemayel warned against an
environmental disaster in the summer should this problem remains unaddressed,
pledging to keep up confronting shady deals. “The country is heading towards an
environmental disaster amid plans to expand the existing landfills,” he warned,
condemning the ruling authority's failure to keep its decentralization promises.
“It is as if they are waiting until we reach a dead end so they force us to
accept the de facto reality of landfills expansion,” he said. Yaacoubian also
slammed the Parliament for not passing the law pertaining to garbage sorting,
adding that it would have spared a large amount of waste being landfilled. “I
have been in touch with the Minister of Environment and he is willing to
advocate sorting. Had we started three years ago, the situation wouldn’t have
been as catastrophic as it is today. It is the lawmakers' duty to pass the waste
sorting law,” she added. “I hope that words would be turned into actions by
accelerating the endorsement of laws that are necessary to save the country,”
she concluded.
Carlos Ghosn Wins Second Bail in Japan
Kataeb.org/Thursday 25th April 2019/Former Nissan chief, Carlos Ghosn, won his
second bail for $4.5 million in Japan on Thursday as he faces four charges
ranging from concealing part of his salary from shareholders to syphoning off
Nissan funds for his personal use.
The court has set bail conditions specifying that Ghosn cannot leave Japan or
see his wife, subjecting him to other restrictions to prevent him from
attempting to flee or destroy evidence relating to the case. Ghosn’s lawyer
Junichiro Hironaka told reporters Ghosn's bail conditions included an "approval
system" to see his wife, Carole. "If the court approves it, she will be able to
meet him," he affirmed. "Further discoveries related to Ghosn's misconduct
continue to emerge," a Nissan spokesman said in a statement. "It was extremely
regrettable that (the court) approved his bail even as it recognized that the
accused had planned to work with people related to the case,” Deputy prosecutor
Shin Kukimoto at the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office told AFP as they
fear some evidence of the crime might be destroyed.
IRGC Designation: A Lost Opportunity to Weaken Hezbollah in Lebanon
David Daoud/ Atlantic Council/April 25/19
Designating Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a foreign
terrorist organization (FTO) stirred panic in Lebanon. Hezbollah’s allies in the
Lebanese government—such as the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) and Amal—worried
they too would soon bear the brunt of American sanctions. But US officials
reassured a hastily dispatched delegation of the group’s allies last week that
despite the more aggressive stance on Iran, they would suffer no consequences
for empowering its primary proxy. In doing so, the United States lost an
opportunity to weaken Hezbollah through deterring its allies.
Because Hezbollah has enmeshed itself in almost every level of Lebanese
government and society, countering its growing strength without harming the
integrity of the Lebanese state remains a challenge. Differing but insufficient
solutions to this dilemma exist. Israel, for example, prefers collectively
punishing Hezbollah and the Lebanese state without distinction, while France
opts for virtual inertia against the group to preserve Lebanon’s fragile
stability. In the end, either option would only strengthen Hezbollah.
By contrast, the United States has adopted the theoretically preferable approach
of robustly sanctioning Hezbollah while simultaneously strengthening Lebanon.
This too, however, has borne little practical fruit because it has focused
almost exclusively on the group’s finances, without targeting its
vulnerabilities.
Hezbollah’s governmental power should be easiest to erode. Unlike its social
influence or military power, it’s not a reflection of its own efforts, or
numbers in parliament or the cabinet. Hezbollah holds only twelve out of 128
parliamentary seats, and three of 30 cabinet ministries. Instead, its alliances
with larger parties—namely FPM and Amal—allow the group to punch above its
weight in Beirut.
Despite the longevity of Hezbollah’s alliances with these groups, their
partnership is fragile. Amal might also be Shia, but it is a secular party loyal
to Lebanon. Though Amal and Hezbollah now form the Lebanese political arena’s
“Shia duo,” they fought a mini inter-sectarian war in the late 1980s, and their
enmity periodically resurfaces in clashes between their respective supporters.
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, Amal’s leader, maintains a pragmatic alliance
with Hezbollah because challenging the group head-on risks costing him the
support of Shias and his political power.
Hezbollah’s alliance with FPM is even more tenuous, lacking the sectarian “glue”
that uncomfortably binds it with Amal. FPM is also Lebanese nationalist, but
with a Christian—predominantly Maronite—base, espousing a version of the same
“Political Maronitism” ideology condemned by Hezbollah in its 1985 Open Letter.
FPM’s founder, Michel Aoun, once ranked among the Shia group’s staunchest
political opponents. He only allied with it in 2006 because he correctly
calculated that it would serve as the vehicle of his ascendancy to the
presidency. Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil—Aoun’s son-in-law and FPM’s current
leader who also has presidential aspirations—is betting on Hezbollah for the
same reason.
In short, these parties are bound to Hezbollah not by conviction or shared
ideology, but by self-interest. Hezbollah possesses advantages—like a committed
foreign backer, a robust military arsenal, and the social support of an
ever-expanding number of Shias, by all estimates Lebanon’s fastest-growing
sect—that its opponents lack. This comparative advantage allows Hezbollah to
reward its allies with tangible political gains, like securing Aoun’s
decades-long ambition of becoming president. With no price to pay as a
counterweight, FPM and Amal have little reason to abandon this otherwise
beneficial alliance.
The IRGC designation could have changed that calculus, potentially signaling
Washington’s readiness to hold Lebanese entities and individuals criminally
liable for providing material support to the IRGC and Hezbollah, and to even
style additional Lebanese political parties themselves as FTOs in the future to
counter Tehran’s hegemonic ambitions. In short, the designation created fear
that US patience with Hezbollah’s political enablers was at an end.
The designation’s timing increased this initial impression. It followed shortly
after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s recent tense stopover in Lebanon,
during which Hezbollah’s main allies—Aoun, Bassil, and Berri—defended the group,
its “resistance,” and place in Lebanon’s political and social pantheon. Pompeo
left them with a warning: Lebanon could choose to confront Hezbollah, or face
“unprecedented” American pressure on Tehran, its proxy, and their allies.
Heightening the designation’s impact, it also overlapped with reports that
Washington was already mulling separate sanctions against Lebanese
officials—including Berri and his inner circle—for facilitating Hezbollah’s
power. Lebanese media claimed Aoun could be next, and that the United States
warned Bassil to distance himself from the Shia group. Pompeo also declined to
dispel these reports, stressing he’d “made very clear” to Lebanese officials
that Washington would “evaluate sanctions for all those that were connected” to
Hezbollah.
Berri appeared unperturbed, even sanguinely defending Hezbollah’s “resistance”
at the 140th Inter-Parliamentary Union Assembly in Doha. But he and Aoun quickly
dispatched their three-man delegation to the United States—which included
Berri’s personal spokesman and FPM’s Ibrahim Kanaan—to lobby against sanctions.
Washington didn’t actually have to sanction FPM or Amal. It merely needed to
maintain the impression that it intended to do so, to achieve its desired effect
of distancing those two parties from Hezbollah. But by promptly reassuring them,
however, the United States negated its ability to leverage the fear aroused by
the IRGC designation to distance them from Hezbollah.
Curtailing Iran’s regional expansionism will fail without weakening Hezbollah.
Designating the IRGC as an FTO—and the fear of what comes next from the
label—would have provided Washington with a deterrent effect as it relates to
FPM and Amal. Instead, the United States assuaged their fears and ensured that
such future measures will be received with Lebanese indifference. Hezbollah’s
allies will continue reaping the benefits of the partnership, as the group and
Tehran continue to grow their power in Lebanon and the region unchecked.
Latest LCCC English Miscellaneous Reports & News published
on April 25-26/19
Israel Allows Gaza's Christians to Pray In Jerusalem
Tel Aviv - Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 25 April, 2019/After intervention from
Western countries, the Israeli government reversed its decision and allowed
Palestinian citizens in the Gaza Strip to cross the border checkpoints to
Jerusalem and Bethlehem to participate in prayers on the occasion of Easter.
Israel has denied the Christians of Gaza this right without giving a convincing
explanation, and rejected all demands in this regard by Christian citizens and
priests. After several officials from Europe and the United States raised this
matter, Israeli authorities decided to grant 500 Palestinian Christians permits
to leave, 300 of them to the West Bank and Jerusalem and 200 to Jordan. The
number of Palestinian Christians in the Gaza Strip has decreased significantly
in recent years; as most of them have left abroad. According to a report issued
by the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) in February 2018, 1,138
Christian Palestinians live in Gaza; they have relatives in Jerusalem, the West
Bank and Israel.
Sisi in Beijing to Attend 'Belt and Road Forum'
Cairo - Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 25 April, 2019/Egyptian President Abdel Fattah
el-Sisi has started an official visit to the Chinese capital to attend the Belt
and Road Forum for International Cooperation, which is held on April 25-27, with
the participation of 37 heads of state and government. Ambassador Bassam Radi,
spokesman for the Egyptian presidency, said that Sisi’s participation in the
summit “comes within the framework of Egypt’s keenness to participate in the
Belt and Road initiative, as one of the pivotal partners of China, in light of
the strategic importance of the Suez Canal, the key maritime corridor of world
trade.”Sisi’s visit to China is the sixth since he took office in 2014.
According to a statement issued by Radi, the president will hold a summit with
his Chinese counterpart to discuss ways to strengthen strategic partnership. The
Egyptian president is also scheduled to hold meetings with a number of officials
and the Chinese business community to discuss ways of boosting economic, trade
and investment cooperation between the two sides. On the sidelines of the
summit, the president will meet with a number of heads of state and government
to discuss ways of boosting bilateral cooperation on various regional and
international issues.
Palestinian Authority Looks to Soft Loans amid Financial Crisis
Ramallah – Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 25 April, 2019/The United States’
accusation that the Palestinian Authority (PA) was allegedly creating a
financial crisis drew fierce backlash from the Fatah movement. Fatah was very
vocal against fiscal measures taken by Tel Aviv and Washington, blaming them for
the deteriorating living conditions enduring by Palestinians. The Trump
administration, at a UN Security Council session on the issue at the request of
Kuwait and Indonesia, said Palestinians set off a crisis by rejecting the first
monthly sums to be taxed from Israel in 2019. Public sector employees in PA-run
territories have not received last month’s paycheck, with no news for a date for
when their salaries will be disbursed. More so, the PA is predicted to hold back
parts of civil servant salaries several months to come until a new government is
formed in Israel after the parliamentary elections earlier this month. The
Palestinian Ministry of Finance has also started implementing a plan based on
borrowing from banks, increasing domestic revenues and rationalizing spending.
Suing Israel for “piracy of its fund,” is also on the table for PA officials. US
President Donald Trump's Middle East envoy Jason Greenblatt pinned the blame for
unpaid civil servants on the PA. Israel's security cabinet had withheld tax
transfers to the PA over its payments to prisoners jailed for attacks on
Israelis. The Israeli government justified the move by saying it was
implementing a law passed last year allowing Israel to withhold funds used to
pay stipends to Palestinian attackers and their families from taxes Israel
collects on the PA’s behalf. Greenblatt stressed that the payments encourage
violence. PA officials lamented the decision, saying it will scale up the PA’s
general budget deficit from $450 to $600 million dollars. The Arab League
pledged to pay $100 million a month to the PA to plug the gap left when Israel
blocked tax transfers, Seeking a bandage solution for the financial crisis, PA
head Mahmoud Abbas met with the President of the Islamic Development Bank in
Amman, Jordan. The Palestinian Minister of Finance, in his capacity as
supervisor of seven banks operating in the Palestinian territories, also met
with Shoukri Bishara, Governor of the Central Bank of Jordan. Soft loans and
grants given to the PA reached $1.3 billion last year.
Damascus’ Allies, Opponents Race Over Strategic Gains
London - Ibrahim Hamidi/Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 25 April, 2019/Allies and
opponents of Damascus continue to benefit from the country’s political and
economic weaknesses to win strategic gains that can limit the abilities of any
Syrian government for the next decades. Western diplomatic sources said
Wednesday that the Iranian economic concessions in Syria have stirred Russian
sensitivities as Moscow and Tehran compete on securing their shares of influence
in the country as a prize for supporting the regime of Bashar Assad during the
past years. The sources said Moscow was mostly concerned when Damascus accepted
to grant Iran the right to manage the port of Latakia, which is located near the
two Russian bases in Latakia and Tartous and for allowing Iran to be the first
in reaching the Mediterranean Sea, leaving the Tehran-Mediterranean route open.
As a response, Moscow was quick to announce its long-term control over the
Syrian Tartous port through disclosures made by its Deputy Prime Minister, Yury
Borisov, who said the port will be leased to Russia for 49 years for
transportation and economic usage. While Russia and Iran benefited from Syria’s
military losses in 2015 to enhance their military presence across the country,
they both currently benefit from the economic crisis to gain strategic
concessions. In return, US President Donald Trump accepted to keep around 1,000
troops in east Syria while European-US contacts continue with an aim to shape a
common perception for their future presence east the Euphrates. Meanwhile,
Ankara and Moscow currently hold talks over a swap deal of Tal Rifaat in the
Aleppo countryside with the Shaghur Bridge, which was mysteriously attacked on
Wednesday.
Syria Negotiators in Kazakhstan for Talks
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 25/19/Delegations from Iran, Russia and
Turkey were in Kazakhstan's capital Nur-Sultan on Thursday seeking an end to the
conflict in Syria while shoring up their interests in any future political
settlement. Kazakhstan's foreign ministry confirmed that teams from the three
powers as well as negotiators from the Syrian regime and its armed opponents had
arrived in the capital Thursday. Talks will take place throughout the day in
"two-way and three-way formats" ahead of an expected plenary session on Friday,
the ministry said in a statement. United Nations Syria envoy Geir Pedersen would
arrive later in the day, the ministry added. The situation on the ground
in the northwestern region of Idlib, under the administrative control of Syria’s
former Al-Qaeda affiliate Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), is expected to feature
prominently in the talks. Idlib has been protected from a massive regime
offensive by a September deal inked by Damascus ally Russia and rebel backer
Turkey. But regime bombardment has increased since HTS took full control of the
region from rival rebels in January. Other items expected to be included in
negotiations include prisoner swaps and the distribution of humanitarian aid.
Russia, a backer of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, has taken a lead role in
diplomatic efforts in Kazakhstan that has largely sidelined UN diplomacy.
Tehran, like Moscow, is an ally of Assad's regime, while Ankara has aligned
itself with the rebels but has repeatedly threatened to attack Kurdish fighters
on the Syrian side of its southern border that it views as "terrorists". A
Western diplomat told AFP that Moscow will be aware of perceptions that recent
rounds of the so-called "Astana process" have made little progress and may push
to speed up the creation of a long-awaited constitutional committee. The capital
of Kazakhstan was called Astana until last month, when it was renamed after the
country's outgoing president. The committee is of particular interest to the UN
which favours a Syrian-led resolution to the conflict but it may be hamstrung
from the outset, the diplomat warned. "Even if a Constitutional Committee is
created, it will then take a long time to reach a very uncertain result," the
diplomat told AFP. Any proposal would therefore be "low risk" for Moscow, whose
military intervention in 2015 has helped Damascus assert control over two-thirds
of the country's territory. Syria's war has killed more than 370,000 people and
displaced millions since the conflict began with the repression of
anti-government protests in 2011.
Sudan Military Chiefs Resign as Deal Struck with Protestors
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 25/19/Three members of Sudan's ruling
military council resigned Wednesday after it said it reached "agreement on most
demands" with protest leaders who have called for a million-strong march to
demand a civilian government. The 10-member military council had invited the
protest leaders for a meeting after the leaders suspended talks with the army
rulers on Sunday. "We have an agreement on most demands presented in the
document of the Alliance for Freedom and Change," Lieutenant General Shamseddine
Kabbashi, spokesman of the ruling military council, told reporters after the
meeting between the council and leaders of the umbrella group leading the
protest movement. He did not elaborate on the key demand of handing power to a
civilian government, but said there "were no big disputes". One of the protest
leaders who attended the meeting, Ahmed al-Rabia, said the two sides had also
agreed to form a joint committee, but did not elaborate for what.Minutes later
in a separate statement the military council announced that three members of the
ruling body had resigned. They were Lieutenant General Omar Zain al-Abdin,
Lieutenant General Jalaluddin Al-Sheikh and Lieutenant General Al-Tayieb Babikir.
Wednesday's late night developments came as Siddiq Farouk, one of the leaders of
the protests, told reporters that the demonstrators were "preparing for a
general strike" if the ruling military council refuses to hand power to a
civilian administration. He also said that a "million-strong march" is planned,
confirming a call for the mammoth protest Thursday by the Sudanese Professionals
Association (SPA), the group that initially launched protests against longtime
leader Omar al-Bashir in December. For the first time, Sudanese judges said they
would join an ongoing sit-in outside army headquarters "to support change and
for an independent judiciary". The demonstrations initially began in the central
town of Atbara on December 19 against a decision by Bashir's government to
triple bread prices.
They swiftly turned into nationwide rallies against his rule and that of the
military council that took his place.
'We demand civil rule'
The council, led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan since his predecessor quit
after barely 24 hours in the post, says it has assumed power for a two-year
transitional period. Hundreds of protesters came from the central town of Madani
to join the sit-in on Wednesday, the second major batch of new arrivals from
outside the capital in as many days. A train laden with demonstrators had rolled
in from Atbara -- the crucible of the protests -- on Tuesday. "Revolutionaries
from Madani want civilian rule," the latest arrivals chanted, according to
witnesses. The protesters suspended earlier talks with the council Sunday over
its refusal to transfer power immediately. But the military council invited the
protesters to fresh talks Wednesday, acknowledging their role in "initiating the
revolution and leading the movement in a peaceful way until the toppling of the
regime" of Bashir.
'Ready to talk'
Earlier in a press conference, senior opposition figure Omar el-Digeir said
protest leaders were prepared to meet directly with Burhan. "We are ready to
talk with the chief of the military council and I think the issue can be solved
through dialogue," he told reporters. Thousands have camped outside the military
headquarters in central Khartoum since before Bashir was deposed, and have vowed
not to leave the area until their demands have been met. Late Wednesday, crowds
of protesters carrying Sudanese flags marched through the protest site outside
the army headquarters, an AFP correspondent reported. "Fall or not, we are
staying," the protesters chanted. Protester Ayman Ali Mohamed said he was
planning to join Thursday's march. "We fear that the military council might
steal our revolution, so we have to participate until the transfer to civilian
rule is accomplished," he said. "We are standing our ground no matter what."The
protesters have found support in Washington, which has backed their call for
civilian rule. "We support the legitimate demand of the people of Sudan for a
civilian-led government, and we are here to urge and to encourage parties to
work together to advance that agenda as soon as possible," State Department
official Makila James told AFP on Tuesday. On Tuesday several African leaders,
who had gathered in Cairo at the behest of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi,
insisted on "the need for more time" for a transition, according to Sisi's
office.
The leaders urged the African Union to extend by three months an end-of-April
deadline for the council to hand power to a civilian body.
3 Members of Sudan Military Council Resign
Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 25 April, 2019/Three members of the Sudanese
Transitional Military Council resigned on Wednesday. Lieutenant-General Omar
Zain al-Abideen who heads the TMC’s political committee was one of the resigning
members, the TMC said in a statement. The two others were Lieutenant-General
Jalal al-Deen al-Sheikh and Lieutenant-General Al-Tayeb Babakr Ali Fadeel. Their
resignations are yet to be accepted, the council said late on Wednesday. The
resignations came after the Sudanese Professionals’ Association, the main
protest organizer, called for a million-strong march to take place on Thursday.
One of the SPA’s demands was that the three lieutenant-generals, Abideen, Fadeel
and Sheikh, be dismissed and tried over their alleged role in a crackdown that
killed dozens of protesters. The SPA had planned to announce a transitional
civilian government during the rally, but Ahmed Rabie, a senior member of the
group, said it will delay the announcement and instead focus on forming
different committees to hold talks with the military. Earlier on Wednesday
evening, the opposition and the TMC agreed to form a committee to resolve their
disagreements, amid tensions over how long it will take to move to civilian rule
after the overthrow of autocrat Omar al-Bashir. “We are partners working
together to bring Sudan to safety,” TMC spokesman Shams El Din Kabbashi said on
state TV following a meeting with the umbrella group Forces of the Declaration
of Freedom and Change, which includes the SPA. The TMC had invited the
opposition to the talks, saying that “the doors of dialogue and negotiation are
open.”The opposition movement voiced a willingness to participate in the talks.
“The Forces of the Declaration of Freedom and Change decided to respond to the
invitation and listen with an open mind to what the president of the military
council will propose, asserting that our desire is the peaceful transfer to a
transitional civilian authority that reflects the forces of the revolution,” the
SPA said in a statement. The military council has said it is in talks with all
Sudan's political parties to name a prime minister and civilian government to
run the country for two years. The TMC and the opposition had appeared on a
collision course in recent days over popular demands for democratization under
civilian government. The SPA had declared on Sunday it would suspend talks with
the military council. While the opposition has insisted on a swift handover of
power to civilians, the TMC has said the process could take up to two years.
Bashir ruled for 30 years after taking power in a military coup in 1989. The SPA
has called for the formation of a legislative council in which at least 40
percent of the members would be women. It would draft laws and oversee a Cabinet
of technocrats until a new constitution is written.
Egypt Confirms Death Sentence for 2 Monks over 2018 Murder
of Bishop
Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 25 April, 2019/An Egyptian court on Wednesday
confirmed the death sentence for two monks, who are accused of the 2018 murder
of a bishop. In a case that shocked the Middle East's largest Christian
community, Coptic Bishop Epiphanius was found dead with a head wound in July at
the Saint Macarius monastery in the plains of Wadi al-Natrun, northwest of
Cairo. Prosecutors said one of the monks, Isaiah, confessed to striking the
cleric with a metal bar as the second monk, Philotheos, kept watch. The
authorities blamed the killing on unspecified "differences" between the bishop
and the two monks, one of whom was later defrocked. The defendants can still
appeal. In its ruling, the court said that the defendants had carried out "one
of the greatest crimes", according to a court official. "(Their) status as monks
did not stop them from carrying out this crime, the place of the crime did not
deter them, and they did not care about the advanced age of the victim or his
religious status," it said, according to AFP. In the wake of the bishop's
killing, Egypt's Coptic Church placed a one-year moratorium on accepting new
monks. It also banned monks from social media, tightened financial controls and
refocused attention on spiritual life.
Kim, Putin Vow to Seek Closer Ties at First Talks
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 25/19/Russian President Vladimir Putin and
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed to seek closer ties as they met
face-to-face Thursday for the first time. The meeting in Russia's Far Eastern
city of Vladivostok came with Kim looking for support in his nuclear stand-off
with Washington and Putin keen to put Moscow forward as a player in another
global flashpoint. In brief statements before heading in to the talks, both
leaders expressed their hopes for strengthening historic ties. "I think it will
be a very useful meeting in developing the relationship between the two
countries, who have a long friendship and history, into a more stable and sound
one," Kim said. "As the world is focused on the Korean peninsula, I think we
will hold a very meaningful dialogue."Putin told Kim he supports ongoing efforts
to ease tensions on the Korean peninsula and wants to boost economic ties.
"I am confident that your visit... will help us to better understand how we can
resolve the situation on the Korean peninsula and what Russia can do to support
the positive processes that are currently taking place," Putin said. "In terms
of bilateral relations, we have a lot to do to develop economic relations."The
meeting was Kim's first face-to-face talks with another head of state since
returning from his Hanoi summit with US President Donald Trump, which broke down
without a deal on North Korea's nuclear arsenal in February.
North Korean labourers
Among the issues likely to be on the table is the fate of some 10,000 North
Korean labourers working in Russia and due to leave by the end of this year
under sanctions. Labour is one of North Korea's key exports and sources of cash.
Pyongyang has reportedly asked Russia to continue to employ its workers after
the deadline. Kim, whose government has told the United Nations it is facing
food shortfalls this year, will also be keen to see Moscow continue or boost its
aid. Russia has provided some $25 million in food aid to North Korea in recent
years, according to the Kremlin. One delivery in March saw more than 2,000
tonnes of wheat supplied to the port of Chongjin, news agency TASS reported. For
Putin, the summit is a chance to push Russia's agenda of opposing US
international influence. In an interview with China's official People's Daily
published on Thursday, Putin lashed out at "countries claiming sole global
leadership". "They carelessly trample on the norms and principles of
international law, resort to blackmail, sanctions and pressure, and try to force
their values and dubious ideals on entire countries and populations," said
Putin, who is heading to China after the talks for another summit. The
Vladivostok meeting follows repeated invitations from Putin since Kim embarked
on a series of diplomatic overtures last year. Since March 2018, the formerly
reclusive North Korean leader has held four meetings with Chinese President Xi
Jinping, three with South Korea's Moon Jae-in, two with Trump and one with
Vietnam's president. At the meeting with Trump in Hanoi, the cash-strapped North
demanded immediate relief from sanctions, but the talks broke up in disagreement
over what Pyongyang was prepared to give up in return. North Korea last week
launched a blistering attack on US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, insisting he
be removed from the negotiations just hours after announcing it had carried out
a new weapons test. Pompeo said on Wednesday he expected "bumpy" talks ahead
with Pyongyang but that he still hoped to reach a potentially landmark
denuclearisation deal.
Soviet-era allies
Russia has already called for the sanctions to be eased, while the US has
accused it of trying to help Pyongyang evade some of the measures -- accusations
Russia denies. The Kremlin has said the focus of Thursday's talks will be on
finding "a political and diplomatic solution to the nuclear problem on the
Korean Peninsula" but that no joint statement or signing of agreements was
planned. Moscow was a crucial backer of Pyongyang for decades and their ties go
back to the founding of North Korea, when the Soviet Union installed Kim's
grandfather Kim Il Sung as a leader. The USSR reduced funding to the North as it
began to seek reconciliation with Seoul in the 1980s, but Pyongyang was hit hard
by its demise in 1991. Soon after his first election as Russian president, Putin
sought to normalise relations and met Kim Jong Il -- the current leader's father
and predecessor -- three times, including a 2002 meeting also held in
Vladivostok. China has since cemented its role as the isolated North's most
important ally, its largest trading partner and crucial fuel supplier, and
analysts say Kim could be looking to balance Beijing's influence. While ties
between Moscow and Pyongyang have remained cordial, the last meeting between
their leaders came in 2011, when Kim Jong Il told then-president Dmitry Medvedev
that he was prepared to renounce nuclear testing. His son has since overseen by
far the country's most powerful blast to date, and launch of missiles which
Pyongyang says are capable of reaching the entire US mainland.
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on April 25-26/19
359 “People Were in Pieces!” Easter Day Islamic Terror in
Sri Lanka
ريموند إبراهيم: جايتستون: 259 انسان مزق الإرهاب الإسلامي أجسادهم في سيريلنكا يوم
عيد القصح
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/April 25/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/74209/74209/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14125/sri-lanka-easter-attacks
On Easter Sunday, April 21, Islamic terrorists launched a bombing campaign
targeting Christians in Sri Lanka; the current death toll is 359 with more than
500 wounded.
Eight separate explosions took place, at least two of which were suicide
bombings: three targeted churches celebrating Easter Sunday Mass; four targeted
hotels frequented by Western tourists on Easter holiday; and one house blast,
which killed three police officers, occurred during a later security operation.
At least 39 foreigners—including citizens from the United States, Britain,
Australia, and Portugal—were among the slain.
Most fatalities occurred in the three church bombings. The worst took place in
St. Sebastian’s, a Catholic church in Negombo; there at least 150 Christian
worshippers were killed. At St. Anthony’s Shrine, another Catholic church in
Colombo, the nation’s capital, 52 were killed; and at the evangelical Zion
Church, 38 were killed.
The Sri Lankan government said a local Islamic extremist group, the National
Thowheed Jamaath, was responsible for the carnage; 21 people affiliated with the
group were subsequently arrested. Although “[a]ll are locals,” said a government
official during a news conference, “there was an international network without
which these attacks could not have succeeded.” Two days later, the Islamic State
claimed the attack, though “the group’s wording did not make clear whether it
had direct ties to the [local] bombers, or if the attackers were heeding the
Islamic State’s calls for Muslims to attack in their home countries.”
One India, a news site, gives more context: The problem of the Islamic State has
been rampant in Sri Lanka since 2016. That year the Parliament was told that 32
Muslims from elite families had joined the ISIS. The following year, scores of
Sri Lankan ISIS terrorists had returned from Syria, following which there was a
spike in Jihadi activity. It may also be recalled that a postgraduate student
from Sri Lanka, Mohammad Nizamdeen was charged with ISIS affiliated terror
related offence in Australia. He was accused of being part of a plot to
assassinate an Australian politician. Incidentally he is the nephew of MP
Faiszer Musthapha, a cabinet minister in the Sri Lankan government
According to Sri Lanka’s 2012 census, Christians account for 7.4 percent of the
population, whereas Muslims account for 9.7 percent. The majority are
Buddhist—70 percent—with 12.6 percent Hindu.
Negombo, where the worst church attack occurred, “is fondly called the ‘little
Rome,’ with shrines and ancient churches,” explained a local. “[S]ince the
churches in these areas date back to 19th century, people flock in huge numbers
to attend the Mass on Easter and Christmas”—making it an ideal target for
terrorists looking for maximum casualties.
“I don’t have words to express my pain,” said another Christian man who survived
St. Sebastian bombing in Negombo:
We lost so many people…. The smell of flesh is all around me…. We are a
peace-loving community in this small city, we had never hurt anyone, but we
don’t know from where this amount of hate is coming. This city has become a
grave with blood and bodies lying around…. Since the past three years, we don’t
know why, but we see an extremist’s mindset developing among the Muslims. I know
many good Muslims, but there are also a lot who hate us, and they have never
been so before. It is in these three years that we see a difference.
“People were in pieces,” recalled Ms. Silviya, 26, concerning the bombing of St.
Anthony’s Shrine in Colombo. “Blood was everywhere. I closed my son’s eyes, took
him out, passed him off to a relative and ran back inside to look for my
family.”
Hotels celebrating Easter and offering special platters were especially
targeted. The Hindu describes one such attack: “The suicide bomber waited
patiently in a queue for the Easter Sunday breakfast buffet at Sri Lanka’s
Cinnamon Grand hotel before setting off explosives strapped to his back.
Carrying a plate, the man, who had registered at the hotel the night before as
Mohamed Azzam Mohamed, was just about to be served when he set off his
devastating strike in the packed restaurant,” which “was having one of its
busiest days of the year for the Easter holiday weekend.” “There was utter
chaos,” recalls the manager. “It was 8:30 am and it was busy. It was families.
He came up to the top of the queue and set off the blast.”
Minutes before a bomb ripped through another hotel, the Shangri-La, a young girl
posted a family photo (below) depicting seven smiling people sitting around a
table. “Easter breakfast with family,” she had written on Facebook.
The suicide bomber of that hotel is believed to have been popular Muslim cleric
Zahran Hashim. He is on record preaching all the usual hostility for
non-Muslims, including by extolling the doctrine of al-wala’ w’al-bara’—which
calls on Muslims to be befriend and be loyal to fellow Muslims, while hating all
non-Muslims—and asserting that “Even if a Kafir [non-Muslim] does good things, i
[sic] hate him, because he is a nonbeliever.”
Although Cardinal Archbishop of Colombo, Malcolm Ranjith, said that “we never
expected such a thing to happen and especially on Easter Sunday,” Islamic terror
attacks targeting Christians during Easter Sunday are hardly uncommon.
In 2017 in Egypt, Islamic terrorists bombed two Coptic Christian churches during
Palm Sunday mass, which inaugurates Easter week, leaving 50 dead and 120
injured. On Easter Sunday, 2016 in Pakistan, an Islamic suicide bomber detonated
near the children rides of a public park where Christians were known to be
congregated and celebrating; over 70 people—mostly women and children—were
killed and nearly 400 injured. On Easter Sunday, 2012 in Nigeria, Islamic
terrorists bombed a church, leaving some 50 worshippers dead.
The recent Sri Lankan terror attack—which in death toll eclipses all other
Muslim attacks on Christians during Easter—is a reminder that, if the Islamic
State is on the retreat in the Middle East, the hate-filled ideology it and
likeminded Muslims adhere to continues to spread, finding new recruits and new
victims around the globe.
*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.
The Difficult Road to Defense
Peter Huessy/Gatestone Institute/April 25/19
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14127/nuclear-missile-defense
Ronald Reagan expressed opposition to the policy of détente, and stated that
Soviet leaders "reserve unto themselves the right to commit any crime, to lie,
to cheat... and we operate on a different set of standards."
"Missile defense is now seen as a key, critical part of strategic deterrence,"
because it is imperative to place uncertainty in the mind of an enemy force
about its ability to achieve its objectives. — U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General
(ret.) Henry ("Trey") Obering, former director of the Missile Defense Agency
Taken as a whole, missile defense today not only defends America's homeland, but
protects U.S. allies, assets and military forces abroad.
In 1983, when U.S. President Ronald Reagan launched the Strategic Defense
Initiative (SDI), also known as Star Wars -- a research program aimed at
developing missiles to protect Americans from a Soviet nuclear attack -- he was
accused of engaging in "red-scare tactics."
At the root of the criticism was the assumption that the nuclear balance between
the Soviet Union and the United States could only remain stable if both sides
adhered to the doctrine of Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD). That doctrine led
to the ratification in 1972 of the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty, which
prohibited the deployment of missile defenses by both the U.S.S.R. and the U.S.
beyond a minimal amount of interceptors.
The ABM Treaty had come about in large part as a result of Defense Secretary
Robert McNamara's announcement in 1967 that the U.S. was going to embark on a
missile-defense effort aimed at protecting the country from a small but
expanding Chinese missile arsenal. Although then-President Lyndon Johnson was
concerned about the growing Soviet missile threat, McNamara talked him into a
far more limited endeavor.
Even McNamara's limited proposal, however, provoked a hysterical response, with,
for instance, political cartoonists drawing caricatures of Uncle Sam "bullying"
the Kremlin.
The assumption apparently made by these and other critics of the plan, including
the Soviets, was that the Johnson administration was trying to trick everyone by
describing the defense measure as aimed at China, when it was in fact directed
against the U.S.S.R.
McNamara pushed back, arguing that although China's nuclear arsenal was small,
given the aggressive and unstable nature of the Chinese regime, it was
particularly dangerous. Therefore, according to McNamara, an emergency insurance
policy of a limited missile-defense system made sense.
Moscow did not see it that way. In 1968, Soviet Secretary-General Leonid
Brezhnev phoned the newly elected U.S. president, Richard Nixon, to request a
summit. Brezhnev not only wanted nuclear arms limited; he wanted anti-ballistic
missile defenses to be basically prohibited.
Nixon's view -- certainly his State Department's -- was that the next four years
should become an era of "negotiation" and "détente," to establish a "structure
of peace," not conflict. Soviet officials were happy to go along with this idea.
It fit into their long-term objective: to use the cover of "détente" to continue
to arm the Soviet Union to defeat the U.S.
The 1972 Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT I) nuclear agreement, signed on
May 26, 1972 by Nixon and Brezhnev, was part of this agenda. Although described
as an arms-control deal, SALT I allowed the Soviets to add 10,000 new nuclear
warheads to their missile arsenal. At the SALT I signing ceremony, the ABM
Treaty was also signed, pending Senate ratification, which it ultimately
received.
Under the ABM Treaty, the U.S. could build a nominal 100 missile interceptors to
protect its Minuteman missile field in North Dakota from incoming Soviet
warheads. After building the ABM site, however, the U.S. Army determined it was
not worth the cost, because a mere 100 missile interceptors could not protect
against a potential Soviet attack. Thus, in 1974, Congress decided to mothball
and dismantle the defenses.
For the rest of the decade, missile-defense research and development were placed
on the back burner, while nuclear arsenals continued to grow in both the U.S.
and Soviet Union. Although described as an "arms control" agreement, SALT I
allowed for the addition of thousands of nuclear warheads to Soviet and American
arsenals.
The SALT II treaty, which further codified how each country could increase its
nuclear arsenals, was signed in June 1979 by Brezhnev and U.S. President Jimmy
Carter. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December that year, however,
caused Carter to withdraw the treaty from consideration by the Senate. It
remained in limbo for the rest of the Carter administration.
At his first presidential press conference in January 1981, Ronald Reagan was
asked whether his administration would proceed with SALT II. Reagan replied that
a treaty that allowed the Soviet Union to build up its arsenal of nuclear
weapons to more than 10,000 could hardly be characterized as "arms control."
Reagan also expressed opposition to the policy of détente, and stated that
Soviet leaders "reserve unto themselves the right to commit any crime, to lie,
to cheat... and we operate on a different set of standards."
Two years later, Reagan launched SDI, understanding that it would take many
years, even decades, to achieve its goal of appropriate defense against nuclear
weapons. He also knew that nuclear deterrence would remain primarily a matter of
balancing U.S.-Soviet offensive nuclear weapons and maintaining a highly secure
retaliatory capability. Still, the U.S. under Reagan was finally challenging the
Soviets in a realm in which America excelled: high technology.
SDI not only got the Soviets' attention; it brought them to the negotiating
table. This led to two key treaties -- the Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF)
Treaty and the 1991 Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (START I) -- which, for the
first time ever, eliminated thousands of nuclear warheads.
When presented with the moral logic of defending the country from nuclear attack
by competing with the Soviets on the high-tech plane, some of Reagan's key
critics in the Democratic Party decided to support his "peace through strength"
strategy. That is how -- as was explained to this author recently by Reagan's
then-National Security Adviser, Robert ("Bud") McFarland -- in spite of the
House of Representatives being controlled by the Democrats (244-191), Reagan was
able to secure an increase in defense spending and funding for missile-defense
research, as well as to modernize America's nuclear arsenal.
With the end of the Cold War, many analysts assumed that there was no longer a
need for missile defenses. Yet, in negotiations with the new Russian government,
led by President Boris Yeltsin, the administration of U.S. President George H.W.
Bush secured a general agreement to have both countries build robust missile
defenses, capable of intercepting some 200 incoming warheads, and the deployment
of space-based interceptors.
Yeltsin then proposed that the U.S. and Russia not only reduce their nuclear
arsenals by many additional thousands of weapons, but simultaneously deploy
robust global and layered missile defenses.
Tragically, however, when President Bill Clinton took office in January 1993, he
nixed the proposal, and his defense secretary, Les Aspin, eliminated most
missile-defense funding from the defense budget, boasting that he was "taking
the stars out of Star Wars."
In spite of this setback, the 1990s did see progress in U.S. missile defense.
Both Iraq's use of missiles in the 1991 Gulf War to attack Israel and American
forces in Saudi Arabia got the attention of missile-defense proponents, such as
Curt Weldon in the House of Representatives, and Ted Stevens and Thad Cochran in
the Senate.
Moreover, sufficient evidence accumulated during that decade about missile
threats from North Korea and Iran to cause Congress, having flipped to
Republican control in 1995, to pass the Missile Defense Act of 1999.
Nevertheless, the Clinton administration refused to go ahead and test a national
missile-defense system in the summer of 2000, keeping the US completely
vulnerable to nuclear-armed missile attack. Ironically, a few months earlier,
Russian President Vladimir Putin had adopted a strategy of threatening to use
nuclear-armed missiles in a limited manner early in a crisis or conflict. In
parallel, Russia's parliament (the Duma) in 2000 rejected the START II
requirement that the U.S. and Russia deploy only a limited number of missiles
and bombers, as single-warhead land-based missiles became too expensive to hold
most of the Russian arsenal. Each warhead requires building an entire missile to
put it into the field. While submarine-launched missiles could have multiple
warheads, only one-third to one-fourth of a submarine fleet is on patrol and
alert at any one time, dramatically reducing the number of warheads available
for a first strike.
In that context, with huge numbers of warheads backing up his threats, and no
U.S. missile defense to blunt an attack, Putin seems to have assumed that his
threats, even of limited nuclear missile strikes, would be highly credible, and
that the U.S. would stand down in a crisis or conflict, and not be willing to
risk the cost of coming to the defense of America's allies.
Less than a year later, in January 2001, George W. Bush assumed the office of
the U.S. presidency. More concerned with ballistic-missile threats than his
immediate predecessor, Bush sought actually to implement the Missile Defense Act
of 1999, and announced that the U.S. would be withdrawing from the ABM Treaty:
"I cannot allow the United States to remain in a treaty that prevents us from
developing effective defenses, " he said.
Bush also secured Congressional support for the deployment of a missile defense
system in Alaska and California to safeguard the continental U.S. against
missile strikes, especially from North Korea and Iran.
Bush subsequently got Russia to agree to a deal that would drastically reduce
the number of American and Russian nuclear weapons allowed in START I. The
Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT) , also known as the Treaty of
Moscow, was signed by both countries on June 1, 2003, and would remain in force
until the end of 2012.
The Bush accomplishments above completely flummoxed arms-control enthusiasts who
had predicted that the end of the ABM Treaty would also mean the end of arms
control. In fact, however, the withdrawal from the treaty, coupled with the
deployment of a missile-defense system and the SORT Treaty, actually contributed
to arms control.
Equally important, as a result of Bush's three-pronged strategy, the previous
view that missile defenses somehow undermined Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD)
diminished significantly.
As retired U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General Henry ("Trey") Obering, former
director of the Missile Defense Agency, told Gatestone, "Missile defense is now
seen as a key, critical part of strategic deterrence," because it is imperative
to place uncertainty in the mind of an enemy force about its ability to achieve
its objectives.
In this context, with the advent of a new Russian policy to use limited nuclear
strikes in a conflict, or to threaten to do so in a crisis, it is highly likely
that a robust U.S. missile-defense system -- on land, air, sea and space --
would effectively deter or blunt a limited strike.
Moreover, the U.S.'s current land-based missile-interceptor system is roughly
85% effective in a one-on-one engagement. A simultaneous use of multiple
interceptors raises that percentage to nearly 100.
According to the proposed 2020 defense budget, the U.S. will increase its
deployed interceptors in Alaska from 44 to 64, hopefully on the way to 100. Such
a deployment, Obering explained to Gatestone, would seriously complicate the
plans of any attacker using a limited number of missiles as a form of coercion.
A sound and robust missile defense, both for the U.S. and its allies, would make
such coercion "obsolete," Obering said. In addition, the old criticism that
missile defenses had to be 100% effective against even large-scale attacks in
order to be worth funding can now be discarded.
Furthermore, U.S. defense-system tests against long-range missiles are getting
more and more effective -- so much so that five of the recent six tests of U.S.
interceptors have been successful. Even more significant is the latest
successful interception of two ICBM-class targets.
The U.S. is also successfully building missile defenses in Romania, Spain and
Poland, using Aegis ship-based systems, and in the Arabian Peninsula, using
land-based THAAD and Patriot systems. They have intercepted more than 100
missiles launched by the Iran-allied Houthi terrorists in Yemen.
There are also Israel's missile-defense systems, such as the Arrow, David's
Sling, and the short-range Iron Dome, which have successfully intercepted
hundreds of Hamas rockets.
Finally, there are the THAAD, Patriot and Aegis deployments in Japan, the
Republic of Korea and in the Pacific, which further reinforce America's new
effort to challenge China's illegitimate missile deployments, as part of
Beijing's efforts to establish itself as the hegemon in the region.
Taken as a whole, missile defense today not only defends America's homeland, but
protects U.S. allies, assets and military forces abroad.
As for the cost: Since 1983, the U.S. has spent $200 billion on missile defense.
This pales in comparison to the cost of the September 11, 2001 attacks on the
World Trade Center and Pentagon, which has been estimated at $3.3 trillion.
Imagine the cost -- in lives and money -- of a nuclear strike on New York or
Washington.
Unless the United States moves with what General John E. Hyten, commander of the
U.S. Strategic Command, recently called the "speed of relevance," the
requirement to deploy more effective and advanced defenses in the future will
not be met. Without such technologies as space-based interceptors -- a testbed
capability required in the defense bill passed by Congress last year -- the
promise of continued peace and prosperity envisioned by Reagan in 1983, when he
announced the launch of SDI, cannot be realized.
*Dr. Peter Huessy is President of GeoStrategic Analysis, a defense consulting
firm he founded in 1981, as well as Director of Strategic Deterrent Studies at
the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies. He was also for 20 years, the
senior defense consultant at the National Defense University Foundation.
© 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.
Algerian Backgrounds
Hazem Saghieh/Asharq Al Awsat/April 25/19
Some see the difference between Algeria and Sudan as wide. The first, because of
a long and costly revolution (1954-1962), formed a national group that remained
strange to the second. This statement may sound true, but in depth, it is not.
The “One Million Martyrs Revolution” was - like the Janus temple - two-faced.
Its other face is that it has turned the army into the only form of the state’s
existence. As a result of the concealment that brought about the revolutionary
forces, lack of transparency became one of the political conditions in the
independent state. Security services have thus turned into the leading bodies.
Blood and conspiracy poured heavily before and after independence. The first
prominent victim was Messali el-Hadj, the father of Algerian nationalism, and a
professor of the subsequent generation of rulers and dissidents. He wanted to
explore the potential of the political struggle by taking advantage of the
decolonization conditions that followed World War II. His followers were
uprooted from inside Algeria in 1957, and then in France in what was known as
the "Cafe Wars". The man spent the year 1974 in Paris.
The second prominent victim was Abane Ramadan, the “revolutionary thinker” and
the “architect of the Soummam Conference” in 1956, which brought about the
National Liberation Army. On the border with Morocco, his fellow, Abdelhafid
Bousouf, hanged him with his necktie.
With independence, there were multiple victims: Ferhat Abbas, head of the
interim government. He was imprisoned by Ahmed Ben Bella and remained in prison
until he was ousted in 1965. Later, Houari Boumediene imposed a house arrest on
him from 1976 until the president’s departure in 1978. Benyoucef Benkhedda, the
second president of the interim government, waged the "province war" against his
supporters, which killed hundreds of people. Benkhedda was defeated and returned
to practice his profession as a pharmacist.
Mohamed Boudiaf and Hussein Ait Ahmed, both leaders of the revolution, were
charged with conspiracy and sentenced to death. They both lived in exile.
In 1965, Boumediene turned against Ben Bella. He consolidated the authoritarian
power, while the country was emptied of prominent opponents. But this was not
the case outside the country: in 1967, Mohamed Khider was assassinated in Spain.
In 1970, Krim Belkacem was assassinated in Germany. They both came from the
historical revolutions. In 1976, the internal crisis was exported in the form of
war with Morocco.
Another explosion of the 1980s was the “Amazigh Spring”. It was strange that
this happened in Algeria. It was a linguistic revolution.
The Amazighs, who constitute the quarter of the Algerian population, protested
for their language rights. The protest turned into civil disobedience. But its
crushing did not prevent it from exploding again in 2011 when 120 people were
killed before Amazigh was recognized as a national language.
After the death of Boumediene, the urgent task of finding a president became the
facade of the military-security complex. The results came as follows:
Chadli Bendjedid: he ruled during 1979 - 1992. He was a military and officer in
the Liberation Army. He defended openness. Under his tenure, political pluralism
was declared in 1990, to be later abolished in 1991 with the victory of the
Salvation Front in the first half of the elections.
He was forced to resign, but the civil war broke out, claiming the lives of
200,000 people.
Social decadence appeared in the most hideous form, with beheadings and
assassinations practiced by all the fighters (but later, with the issuance of
the law of civil accord, the perpetrators from both camps were pardoned.)
Mohamed Boudiaf, the historical leader of the revolution, was summoned from
exile because the regime was now lacking symbols. He was chosen in 1992. He
ruled for four months before being assassinated by his personal guard.
Ali Kafi: He also fought in the revolution. He ruled until 1994. Mystery led to
his ousting. Mystery at that time, in parallel with the civil war and its
atrocities, surrounded the closed circle of the regime. Other prominent figures
were assassinated, such as Kasdi Merbah in 1993 and Abou Bakr Belkaid in 1995.
Liamine Zeroual: He participated in the revolution. The army nominated him for
the presidency. A new party was created for him in a bid to hint at a serious
change. The new party and its present achieved victory in manipulated elections.
Zeroual ruled between 1995 and 1998. He resigned and kept silent on the reasons,
but he was reportedly opposed to the marginalization of the army of his role,
when dealing with Islamic militants in fighting and negotiations.
Abdelaziz Bouteflika: Boumediene’s historical foreign minister. He became
president in 1999 and stayed in power until a few weeks ago.
Meanwhile, the young men and women of Algeria read Frantz Fanon’s book, “The
Wretched of the Earth” and how violence against the French colonizer was a cure
for the Algerian colonizer. They, no doubt, laughed a lot.
Free Speech in Denmark
Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/April 25/19
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14136/free-speech-denmark
What is shocking is that a state agency has threatened to remove a foster child
from her only family, not because there is the slightest suspicion of
ill-treatment of the child, but because of the foster mother's exercising her
freedom of speech.
"If people start to change their legal, democratic statements because somebody
wants to hurt them or try to kill them, well, then we don't have a democracy
anymore. So, I am not at fault whatsoever that there is a threat to my person...
We do not believe that assailants and murderers should decide where the limits
of free speech should be...." — Rasmus Paludan, chairman of the Danish
anti-Islam party, Stram Kurs.
The value at stake here is whether freedom of speech, regardless of what or whom
it insults, can be guaranteed when it is met with violence and riots.
Jaleh Tavakoli is a Danish-Iranian blogger, an outspoken critic of Islam, and
author of the book, Public Secrets of Islam. Denmark's Social Supervisory
Authority has threatened to remove Tavakoli's foster child from her care, not
because there is the slightest suspicion of ill-treatment of the child, but
because of Tavakoli's exercising her freedom of speech. (Image source: Jaleh
Tavakoli video screenshot)
In Denmark, in recent weeks, the issue of free speech has figured prominently in
the news.
This March, an outspoken critic of Islam, Jaleh Tavakoli, Danish-Iranian blogger
and author of the book, Public Secrets of Islam, was threatened by the Social
Supervisory Authority (Socialtilsyn Øst) that her foster-daughter would be
removed from her care after Tavakoli shared an online video of the rape and
murder by Islamic State terrorists in Morocco of two Scandinavian young women.
She was informed in a letter that the government agency's approval of her
husband and her as foster parents -- they had been raising the 8-year-old since
she was a newborn baby -- had been rescinded and that the girl might be taken
away from them, as the authority did not consider them to "have the necessary
quality to have children in your care." The letter also said:
"As a generally approved foster family, one assumes a special task in relation
to taking care of children with special needs, so that the family's morality or
ethics must not be questionable to any significant extent".
In its letter, the Social Supervisory Authority mentioned that Tavakoli has been
charged -- but not convicted -- under Danish criminal law for sharing the video
of the jihadist murder of Louisa Vesterager Jespersen. Under Danish law, it is
illegal "improperly to disclose messages or images relating to someone else's
private affairs or otherwise pictures of the person... in circumstances which it
may be... required to keep out of the public [sphere]".
Tavakoli explained that she shared the video because the international media was
reporting that the Danish woman had been beheaded, while no such information was
to be found in the Danish media.
The Social Supervisory Authority wrote to Tavakoli:
"It can be problematic for your foster child that you, Jaleh, are charged with a
serious offense as a result of your video sharing as part of your public
participation [in the] debate ... the way you, Jaleh, have chosen to expose
yourself and communicate politically in the current case of sharing a violent
video... and the fact that you appear in the public debate... in leading Danish
media, both printed and electronic, can compromise your role as a foster
parent... that you, Jaleh, as one of the primary role models for your foster
child is so heavily exposed and in this connection has passed on a very violent
video, may constitute a complicated situation for your foster child... That you,
Jaleh, through your behavior on social media in the present case, [do not] act
as the 'digital role model' a foster parent must be... In this context, your
activities may confuse and cause serious doubts in a child about how to act in
the digital universe..."
"It is the worst kind of abuse of power I have ever seen" said Danish lawyer
Karoly Németh, who is representing Tavakoli and her husband. The Social
Supervisory Authority's letter caused widespread outrage in Denmark, including
among politicians across the political spectrum. The Minister for Children and
Social Affairs, Mai Mercado, wrote on Facebook:
"I am speechless. I cannot go into the specific case, which I understand is not
yet settled. I must say quite clearly that if the rules in any way cause
children in foster care to get caught [in the system], then I am ready to change
the rules immediately and I have already been informed that it can be urgently
dealt with if necessary".
The Social Supervisory Authority, since it sent its letter, seems to be
backtracking. Its officials sent a new letter to Tavakoli and her husband in
which they said they "would like to note that the social supervision has not
intended to relate to the freedom of expression of the foster family, as foster
families have the same freedom of expression as all other citizens in Denmark".
The case is ongoing and Tavakoli still has not received a final answer about
what will happen to her foster daughter. What is shocking is that a state agency
has threatened to remove a foster child from her only family, not because there
is the slightest suspicion of ill-treatment of the child, but because of the
foster mother's exercising her freedom of speech.
In a separate attempt to shut down free speech, the state-owned and
taxpayer-funded Danish media outlet, which includes radio, television and
internet, DR (formerly Danmarks Radio), also known as dr.dk., contacted Facebook
at the beginning of April, complaining about a small, independent Danish
internet media site, 24nyt.dk. The site has been critical of the EU, the
consequences of Muslim immigration into Denmark and the Danish establishment in
general. After DR lodged its complaint with Facebook, Facebook deleted
24nyt.dk's Facebook page. "A week ago, DR contacted Facebook and presented them
with a number of facts and questions regarding 24nyt's actions on their
platform," DR wrote in an article on its website.
"Facebook confirms in a text message to DR News that, based on that study [which
DR conducted of 24nyt], they have closed 24nyt, but have not yet elaborated on
exactly what the reason is."
Later, DR, without explanation, changed the wording of the article so that it
did not admit DRs crucial role and therefore now stated:
"Facebook says to DR that they have closed 24nyt's Facebook page because of
'non-authentic and misleading behavior'. Facebook has so far not elaborated on
what it actually means".
Social media expert Johan Farkas of Sweden's Malmö University called the measure
"extraordinary". "It is highly unusual that Facebook throws out a Danish media
site. As far as I know, this is the first time...", he said.
Perhaps some of the explanation for DRs wish to have the small news outlet
removed from Facebook can be found in the fact that 24nyt.dk was a competitor.
According to an article in DR:
"Over the past year, 24nyt have reached 295,000 likes, responses, sharing and
comments on Facebook. DR has found this based on data from Facebook. Thus, the
relatively young medium has received more interactions than the daily
[mainstream] newspaper Børsen, and it is approaching the level of the [larger
mainstream] newspapers Information and Kristeligt Dagblad."
The timing of the shutdown was also noteworthy. General elections in Denmark
will take place at the latest on June 17, 2019. In addition, elections to the
European Parliament are scheduled to take place May 23-26, 2019. 24nyt.dk is not
only critical of the EU and Danish immigration policies but also of political
establishment policies.
Is it acceptable for a state-owned media juggernaut, such as DR, to crush a
small private competitor that has no public funding, by having its official page
deleted from Facebook? In Denmark, virtually no one in the mainstream media or
in the political establishment appears to care.
The limits of freedom of speech in Denmark were tested most dramatically,
however, when on April 14, Rasmus Paludan, chairman of the small anti-Islam
party, Stram Kurs -- which is trying to run in the upcoming elections -- held
one of his many anti-Islam demonstrations, this time in the Copenhagen
neighborhood of Nørrebro, which has a high percentage of Muslim residents.
Paludan, who calls himself, "the soldier of freedom, the protector of the weak,
the guardian of society, the light of the Danes", has been touring Denmark with
his anti-Islam protests for the past year. His demonstrations frequently feature
a "Koran stunt". In it, Paludan either throws a Koran around, burns it or puts
bacon on it. In April, Paludan was handed a suspended sentence of 14 days in
prison for making allegedly racist statements about Africans in a video he
uploaded to the internet. Paludan has appealed the sentence.
"It is important to continue until there are no longer Muslims or others in this
country who believe they can decide what the limit of freedom of expression
should be," Paludan, who is under police protection after receiving death
threats, explained in an interview.
"If people start to change their legal, democratic statements because somebody
wants to hurt them or try to kill them, well, then we don't have a democracy
anymore. So, I am not at fault whatsoever that there is a threat to my person...
There are two things in Denmark that are completely legal, but which no one
dares to do: To defile the Koran by burning it, throwing it or putting bacon in
it, and to draw the prophet Muhammad. The reason is that the risk of being
attacked or killed is very high. We do not believe that assailants and murderers
should decide where the limits of free speech should be, and therefore we think
it is important to do just that".
The demonstration on Nørrebro on April 14 only lasted 15 or 20 minutes. Paludan,
and especially the police who were protecting him there, were assaulted by local
Muslims and far-left activists, and Paludan had to be removed for his safety.
There followed violent riots in the neighborhood for hours, including arson and
stone-throwing at the police. The riots later spread to other parts of
Copenhagen, with 20 instances of arson and 23 arrests. As a result, the police
forbade Paludan from demonstrating in Copenhagen for a week.
"Freedom of speech is seriously imperiled when violence and riots [are allowed]
to stop demonstrations" said Jonas Christoffersen, director of the Danish
Institute for Human Rights. "It is a problem that Rasmus Paludan cannot be
allowed to express himself. What we have seen is extremely serious in a
democracy that has such riots", he said, advising dissatisfied citizens to
protest Paludan with peaceful counter-demonstrations or to simply ignore him.
"If the tendency of groups of people stopping other people from expressing
themselves through violence or riots continues, this could dissuade others from
uttering their opinions. It can have the effect that people generally will not
speak or are afraid to speak because they fear the reactions."
Several senior politicians appeared to be blaming Paludan for his actions more
than blaming those who were violently assaulting the police and him. Even if one
thinks that Paludan's actions were insensitive and insulting to Muslims, his
actions are legal and protected under Danish law. The right to freedom of speech
protects the minority from the tyranny of the majority. Soothing, politically
correct speech does not need protection. Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen
tweeted following the riots:
"[I] strongly disagree with Paludan's meaningless provocations that have no
purpose other than to sow divisions. Meet him with arguments - not with
violence. Protect democracy and freedom of speech. Do not let derogatory actions
aimed at specific groups in DK [Denmark] ruin our unity."
Minister of Justice Søren Pape Poulsen tweeted:
"A sad Sunday. Paludan's circus where it is only about sowing divisions between
people and provoke[ing], and the other side with very violent anti-democrats who
are so insane as to throw stones at the police. Violence is never the answer!
Use arguments - or better yet - ignore Paludan."
Notably, neither minister explicitly mentioned who was behind the violence
against Paludan.
As some Danish commentators have pointed out, however, the value at stake here
is not Paludan, but whether freedom of speech, regardless of what or whom it
insults, can be guaranteed when it is met with violence and riots.
That question seems already to have been answered in 2006, after the Danish
cartoon drawings of Mohammad, when riots broke out in the Muslim world. They
resulted in attacks and even arson on Danish embassies in some Muslim countries,
such as Syria. The Danish cartoonists received death threats; one of the
cartoonists was the victim of an attempted murder. Instead of standing with the
Danish cartoonists, many chose to qualify the value of free speech. British
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, for instance, in 2006 criticized European
newspapers for republishing the cartoons:
"There is freedom of speech, we all respect that. But there is not any
obligation to insult or to be gratuitously inflammatory. I believe that the
republication of these cartoons has been unnecessary. It has been insensitive.
It has been disrespectful and it has been wrong."
Similarly, also in 2006, the US State Department said:
"These cartoons are indeed offensive to the belief of Muslims. We all fully
recognize and respect freedom of the press and expression but it must be coupled
with press responsibility. Inciting religious or ethnic hatreds in this manner
is not acceptable."
The question appeared to receive its final answer ten years later, when the
French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo published cartoons of Mohammad and paid
with the lives of many of its staff. The magazine's editors later said that
there would be no more Mohammed cartoons.
Paludan's attempts to turn back the clock on the issue by resorting to
Koran-burnings and the like are unlikely to change the situation, as the large
number of policemen needed to protect his safety amply demonstrates. Precisely
because of that, both in Denmark and throughout Europe, it is urgent to keep
freedom of speech from eroding any further.
*Judith Bergman, a columnist, lawyer and political analyst, is a Distinguished
Senior Fellow at 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.
Snuffing out Iran’s Oil Will Bring Stability to the World
Salman Al-dossary/Asharq Al Awsat/April 25/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/74220/%D8%B3%D9%84%D9%85%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AF%D9%88%D8%B3%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%AA%D8%B5%D9%81%D9%8A%D8%B1-%D9%86%D9%81%D8%B7-%D8%A5%D9%8A%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%A7%D8%B3%D8%AA%D9%82%D8%B1/
When the US administration - in its strategy to deal with Iran - relied on a
strong whip of sanctions, promising to bring Iran’s oil exports to zero and
threatening anyone who deals with Tehran, the latter bet on US President Donald
Trump’s failure to convince the world of his position.
The rest of the world rebelled against the American actions. Even in July,
Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani mocked Trump’s threat to halt Iranian oil
exports, saying his country had a dominant position in the Gulf and the Strait
of Hormuz.
Today, as Washington pursued its strategy by announcing that it would end all
sanctions exemptions starting May 2 – the waivers that had so far allowed eight
countries to buy Iranian oil without falling under US penalties – it dealt the
strongest blow with the aim to reduce Iran’s crude oil exports to less than one
million barrels per day, compared to 3.6 million barrels per day in 2016.
The allies rallied against Iran have come to realize that the sanctions would
have no effect on the structure of the regime unless the waivers are canceled,
which has already happened.
We can say that decreasing the export of Iranian oil is the effective way for
the US strategy to exert pressure on Tehran. It is true that the declared goal
of bringing Iran’s future oil exports to zero may be difficult and will take a
long time, but it is certain that exports will decrease significantly, which
will be painful for the Iranian economy.
Trump’s administration, when it abandoned the nuclear deal, knew that the mere
withdrawal would be futile if it was not accompanied by pressure on the regime.
Hence, the US sanctions are now targeted at driving Iran’s oil sales to zero.
Consequently, mounting economic pressure, further financial crises and rising
unemployment levels will lead to what is required to “change the behavior” of
the Tehran regime, which will be deprived of 40 percent of its revenues from oil
sales.
Greece, Italy and Taiwan, for example, one of the top 10 buyers of Iranian oil,
said they had permanently stopped their imports from Tehran, even though that
they were under the US exemptions.
Since the start of US sanctions on Iranian oil exports, there has been a
remarkable decline in Iran’s role abroad, as it faces the risk of not being able
to finance its agents in the Middle East, such as the militias that fight proxy
wars in Syria, in addition, the Hezbollah party has started to openly show its
financial crisis.
Preventing Iran from obtaining the funds it needs to finance its foreign policy,
its agents and its missile program, is the best solution to change its behavior
without firing a single bullet. A stable Middle East cannot be envisioned if
Iran continues to fund its militias throughout the Arab world.
Apart from Iran’s repeated heroic rhetoric and its latest threat - perhaps the
100th - to close the Strait of Hormuz, the most telling description of its
current reality was expressed by its Oil Minister, Bijan Zangeneh, who in
February said US sanctions were tougher than the eight-year war his country had
waged with Iraq.If the sanctions that allowed some exceptions to Tehran’s oil
export had a huge impact on the country, what will be the case when Iran loses
20 percent of its income only a few days from now?!
Columnist In Syrian Daily Close To Assad Regime: As
Russia-Iran Disagreements In Syria Increase, Each One Pressures Regime To Accept
Its Initiative For The Region
MEMRI/April 25 kdshkL19
In a scathing column published April 22, 2019 in the Syrian daily Al-Watan,
which is affiliated with the regime of Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad, Rif'at
Ibrahim Al-Badawi accused Syria allies Russia and Iran of individually
pressuring Syria politically and economically to accept political proposals
leading to the actualization of each of their interests – even if it means
suffering for the Syrian people. Al-Badawi argued that the once-hidden
Russia-Iran disagreements are now out in the open, and that the two countries
are now in a frantic race to convey messages promoting divergent initiatives to
the Syrian leadership. While Iran is attempting to improve, and even revive,
Syria-Turkey relations, with the aim of forming a regional alliance, Russia is
working to nudge the Assad regime closer to Saudi Arabia and the other Arab
countries, with the aim of weakening Iran's influence on Syria and in the entire
region.
Al-Badawi writes that both Russia's and Iran's actions are tainted by economic
and political strategic interests. Further, he accuses Syria's allies,
particularly Russia, of deliberately planning and creating the fuel crisis –
which has been paralyzing the country for weeks – as they collaborate with
Syria's rivals with the aim of pressuring Syria into accepting their proposals.
Al-Badawi stresses, however, that Syria is carefully and judiciously examining
the proposals and will choose one that is compatible with its interests and will
preserve its Arab character.
Rif'at Ibrahim Al-Badawi (Source: watanipress.com, December 14, 2018).
In this context, it is noteworthy that in recent months, there has been an
increasing number of reports, particularly on Syrian opposition websites but
also in the Arab and foreign press, on Russia-Iran struggles for influence in
Syria. Each is striving to strengthen its influence in the Syrian security
apparatuses and in the militias fighting on the ground, while weakening the
other side's influence and presence. These struggles are manifested in fierce
clashes on the ground between pro-Iran and pro-Russia militias, that have
reportedly claimed many deaths on both sides.[1] Likewise, there have been
reports of arrests of pro-Iran Syrian activists, both by Syrian security
apparatuses acting on instructions from Russia, and by the Russian military
police force itself in Syria.[2] It has also been reported that the changes
earlier this month in the upper echelons of Syria's state security apparatus –
including the replacement of the chief of staff – were a result of Russian
pressure, and were aimed at weakening President Assad's brother, Maher Al-Assad,
who is considered close to Iran, and his associates, and to replace them with
officials loyal to Russia.[3]
The following are excerpts from Al-Badawi's column:[4]
"The frequency of the visits to Damascus by Iranian and Russian officials, one
after the other, is not incidental. These visits were a hectic race to convey
messages to the Syrian leadership, including proposals aimed at reaching an
arrangement with Syria... [The proposals of] each [i.e. Russia and Iran] are in
accordance with the language and perspective [of each vis-à-vis Syria]... It is
clear that Syria is in no hurry... and that it is judiciously examining the new
proposals to see which are compatible with Syrian interests – for fear that it
will become embroiled in disputes and conflicts of interest and [will then be
subject to] additional pressures – especially in light of the severe fuel crisis
in the country because it is besieged.
"It is also clear that this time, the messages of Syria's allies [Russia and
Iran] are coming from opposite directions, reflecting the unique and separate
view of each. What is certain is that generous proposals from [two] rival
[countries], Turkey and Saudi Arabia, have been streaming into Damascus, and are
aimed at establishing routes for political and security cooperation; they have
been described as positive.
"Damascus, [as noted,] is diligently considering all options and initiatives.
Tehran is pushing Damascus to adopt what it calls a high-quality initiative,
which is aimed at reshuffling the cards of the conflict between Syria and its
neighbors, chief of them the [Turkish] Ottoman neighbor. The purpose of Iranian
Foreign Minister Mohammad Zarif's [April 16, 2019] Syria visit was to relay
[reciprocal] messages between Ankara and Damascus, as part of an Iranian effort
to promote political and security arrangements to the point where relations
between the two countries are revived – even if initially limited to
intelligence cooperation...
"Russia, [on the other hand,] seeks to bring Damascus's positions closer to
those of Riyadh, by pushing Syria to implement UN Resolution 2254 and to
accelerate the formation of the constitutional committee [so that this will
happen] prior to the Sochi summit slated for the end of the month [April].
Russia is depicting this effort as serving the interest of rapprochement among
the Arab states, preparing ground for Syria's return to the Arab League, and
contributing to breaking the political siege [on Syria] and defusing the
existing conflict [between Syria and the Arab states], in preparation for a
future resolution of the crisis.
"However, it is impossible to separate the fast pace of events and the influx of
initiatives to Damascus from [the fact] that these countries... [are seeking] to
strengthen their roles and their alliances and secure their strategic interests
– even if it causes suffering for the Syrian people.
"From Iran's efforts with its Ottoman neighbor, it can be learned... that Iran
is acting [now] with absolute determination to create common interests among
countries that border [it], so as to ensure the broadest possible coordination
[among them], and also to secure the interests of the peoples, primarily those
linked to Iran via Islam and ideology. This would assure Iran a larger role, and
grant it considerable political influence in laying out the characteristics of
the region, especially with regard to the struggle with the Israeli enemy.
"Thus, the [once-]concealed disagreements among Syria's allies are now out in
the open. It is no longer a secret that Russia, in response to a clear demand
from the Gulf, aspires to weaken Iran's influence, which is growing and
expanding at the expense of the influence of Arab Gulf states in the region – a
situation that explains the Russian-Saudi rapprochement in the face of the
Iran-Turkey rapprochement. It is now clear that the glut of initiatives is not
for political purposes alone, because the outcomes will be translated into
economic profits…
"In light of the tangle [of interests and relations of the various forces
operating within it], Syria is experiencing a true crisis and a suffocating
siege, amid the slump in the import of crucial fuels... This crisis cannot be
isolated from the pressure Syria is experiencing to actualize the aims of the
initiatives and proposals presented to it. This is because the fuel crisis
currently facing Syria did not happen even at the peak of the war there; thus,
one wonders at its timing.
"There are strident voices from [Syria's] Russian ally giving excuses for
[Russia's] refraining from supplying fuel to Syria, claiming that transporting
it is costly – even though it is half the distance from Russia's ports to
Syria's ports than from Iran's ports to Syria's ports. [Even though]
transporting fuel from Iran to Syria costs much more than transporting it from
Russia, Syria consistently [manages to] pay this cost.
"As for Iraq's failure to help Syria in this crisis regardless of its geographic
proximity to it, our Iraqi brothers replied that they are committed to the
U.S.-Saudi resolution [prohibiting providing fuel] to Syria that is aimed at
ratcheting up the pressure on it.
"What is happening in the Syrian arena in the wake of the suffocating crisis is
deliberately planned by Syria's allies and rivals, together and separately, with
the aim of pressuring [Syria] into accepting either the Russian or the Iranian
proposal. That is, the boycott on Syria is a disguised boycott aimed at
achieving particular aims that will secure the interests of one of the allies...
"As we await the opening of the envelopes [containing] the proposals and
arrangements, we say to those so expert at fishing in murky waters and at
seizing opportunities to play upon people's pain and whose shrill voices are
heard on social media and elsewhere: Play no part in pressuring Syria. [Rather,]
come to its aid, because what [Syria's] rivals and allies have not accomplished
with bloodshed they will not accomplish today with a disguised boycott, whose
goals are now clear.
"We say with full confidence that the Syrian leadership will consider only a
proposal that guarantees that the heart of the Syrian Arab Republic will
continue to be fully Arab."
[1] For example, it was reported in January 2019 that power struggles were
taking place in Damascus between pro-Iran and pro-Russia militias; in January
and February 2019, clashes erupted in the Sahl Al-Ghab region in northern Hama
between the Syrian Army's Fourth Division, headed by Maher Al-Assad, the
president's brother who is considered close to Iran, and the Fifth Corps, set up
by Russia and headed by Suhail Al-Hassan, reputed to be a Russian protégé.
Reports surfaced in January and March 2019 on clashes in the southern Syrian
city of Dar'aa between pro-Russia and pro-Iran militias, while similar clashes
were reported in April in the town of Al-Mayadin, in the Deir a-Zour region, and
in eastern Aleppo. Baladi-news.com, January 20, 2019; Al-Quds Al-Arabi (London),
January 21, 2019; Orient-news.net, January 22, 2019, January 23, 2019, February
27, 2019; Horanfree.com, March 26, 2019; Aljazeera.net, April 19, 2019; Al-Modon
(Lebanon), April 20, 2019.
[2] Orient-news.net, February 17, 2019, March 6, 2019, April 11, 2019;
Syriahr.com., February 2, 2019.
[3] Al-Modon (Lebanon), April 5, 2019; Orient-news.net, April 8, 2019.
[4] Al-Watan (Syria), April 22, 2019.
Iran’s investments in Syria in jeopardy thanks to US
sanctions
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/April 25/19
Sanctions leveled by the US on the Iranian government’s military institution —
the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and its affiliates — as well as the
banking system and the oil sector are placing significant pressure on the
Islamic Republic.
Iran’s economy shrank last year and is expected to decrease by 3.6 percent or
more this year, according to a recent report published by the International
Monetary Fund. Iran’s oil exports have also declinedby more than half, and its
national currency, the rial, continues to lose its value, while the flood
disaster is adding further weight to the economic crisis.
But it is not only inside the country that the Iranian leaders are feeling the
economic losses; Tehran’s economic influence, investments and assistance to
other countries, particularly Syria, are being negatively impacted too.
In addition to military and geopolitical assistance, economic interference was
one of the most important tools that the Iranian regime utilized to intervene in
Syria, make profits, control the Arab state, and help keep President Bashar
Assad in power.
While the two countries played almost equal roles in bilateral economic trade,
business dealings and investments before the conflict in Syria erupted, Tehran
has since provided considerable amounts of financial assistance and made
significant investments across the country. This granted Iran economic leverage
over Damascus and caused its debt and dependence on Iran to increase
dramatically.
For example, a few months after the conflict began, the Iranian authorities
signeda $10 billion agreement with Syria and Iraq for the construction of a
natural gas pipeline that would start in Iran, run through Syria, Lebanon and
the Mediterranean, and reach several Western countries.
Tehran also opened a credit line for Syria and investeda considerable amount of
resources, skilled forces and labor in Damascus. Iranian Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei supportedthe allocation of billions of dollars in aid to Syria,
including $5.8 billion that was provided by Iran’s Center for Strategic
Research, which concentrates on Tehran’s strategies in six areas, including
foreign policy research, Middle East and Gulf research, and international
political economy research.
Tehran also began establishing military bases across Syria, while Iranian
authorities and Assad made plans for more comprehensive agreements that sought
to establish a regional economic bloc. This included a 17-article agreementthat
was signed by both parties and focused on “trade, investment, planning and
statistics, industries, air, naval and rail transportation, communication and
information technology, health, agriculture, (and) tourism.”
While the two countries played almost equal roles in bilateral economic trade,
business dealings and investments before the conflict in Syria erupted, Tehran
has since provided considerable amounts of financial assistance and made
significant investments across the country.
Iran’s investments in Syrian infrastructure, power generation capabilities and
its gas market also increased as part of the reconstruction process.
But Iran cannot afford to maintain its business dealings in Syria. One day after
Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif visited Syria on April 16, Syrian
newspaper Al-Watan revealed, in an unprecedented move, that Tehran had halted
its credit line to Damascus.
Tehran has also been incapable of shippingoil to Syria in the last six months.
Accordingto Al-Watan, this has caused significant fuel shortages because Syria
only produces roughly 25 percent of the fuel that the nation needs.
The fact that a Syrian newspaper made such disclosures just after Zarif’s visit
indicates that Damascus most likely failed to convince Tehran to extend its
credit line and oil exports.
The US sanctions on currency transactions have also impacted Iran’s dealings
with Syria because the Iranian-Syrian economic alliance has operated using
multi-level contracts involving state and semi-private organizations through the
adoption of the dollar for transactions.
One of the major reasons that the Iranian government was previously capable of
offering billions of dollars of credit, free oil exports and investments in
Syria was due to the nuclear deal, which lifted four rounds of UN sanctions
against Tehran and increased the regime’s revenues remarkably.
Another area that has been impacted is the military cooperation between the two
nations thanks to the recent designation of the IRGC as a terrorist group by the
US. Arms trade with Damascus is critical for Khamenei and the senior cadre of
the IRGC to strengthen Syria’s defense systems because the survival of the Assad
regime is considered a matter of national security for Iran.
In a nutshell, US sanctions are putting significant pressure on Iran
domestically and regionally. Tehran has invested billions of dollars in Syria,
but its investments are currently at risk as the regime cannot afford to spend
such amounts assisting Assad. To the Syrian president’s dismay, Iran cannot act
as Syria’s economic lifeline any longer.
*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
Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not
necessarily reflect Arab News' point-of-view
By Punishing Iran, Trump Is Weakening America
Henry Farrell and Abraham Newman/Foreign Policy/April 25/19
Last week, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo complained about Republicans in
Congress who were grandstanding for harsher sanctions on Iran. Now, he has
joined the grandstanders, announcing that the Trump administration is stepping
up its maximum pressure campaign against Iran by ending waivers that had allowed
some states to import Iranian crude oil.
This may have significant consequences for global oil markets. It will have
bigger consequences for U.S. power. Trump administration unilateralists,
together with their Capitol Hill supporters and anti-Iran lobby groups, such as
the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, think they can use sanctions as a
tool of regime change. They are wrong. The increasingly desperate efforts of the
United States to ratchet up sanctions are likely to backfire, hardening the
resolve of the Iranian regime and driving both allies and competitors away from
the U.S.-dominated global financial system.
The administration’s sanctions unilateralists are making a fundamental mistake
about the nature of U.S. financial power. U.S. clout is not a direct product of
its military might or even its large domestic economy. Instead, it is a
byproduct of the unique topography of globalization—the system of networks that
allows global financial transfers and trade to take place. These networks did
not come into being through any grand master plan but instead were the result of
an uncontrolled and decentralized process of adaptation to the new opportunities
of globalization.
The United States is well placed to control key elements of these networks, such
as the dollar clearing system and the SWIFT financial messaging system. This, in
turn, has allowed it to press foreign financial institutions and firms into
service as instruments of U.S. power: No international bank wants to be denied
access to dollar clearing, and it is nearly impossible to carry out global
financial transfers without SWIFT.
These circumstances have permitted the United States, with the support of
European allies, to penalize countries such as North Korea and to cut Iran out
of the world financial system. International financial networks became a massive
force multiplier for U.S. power. The United States was able to carry out global
coercion on the cheap. When the United States designated foreign businesses,
organizations, or individuals as the targets of sanctions, other businesses
avoided them as if they were bearers of the plague. No bank wanted to face the
unlovely choice between paying massive fines with little hope of legal appeal
and being excluded from the dollar clearing system. For a decade or more, it
seemed as if the United States had discovered one weird trick for achieving
global financial hegemony while imposing most of the costs on foreign banks and
businesses.
Now, the United States is trying to do this on an even larger scale. Pompeo
announced that he wants zero Iranian oil exports. It is probably impossible for
any single state to control global oil markets because oil is a commodity.
However, the United States can target the financial institutions that provide
payments for Iranian oil, the shipping companies that transport it, insurance
companies that underwrite shipping, and the myriad other corporations that
support trade in Iranian oil. Even where the United States has no direct levers
against these companies, it may have levers against other companies that do
business with them, perhaps allowing it to isolate them from the global economy.
If shipping insurance on freighters moving between Kharg Island and Shanghai is
not provided by a U.S. financial institution, it is probably provided by a
company with exposure to U.S. markets. As Pompeo acknowledged in his
announcement, “To conduct these transactions, one almost always needs to
participate in financial markets. We intend to enforce the sanctions.”
The problem is that weird tricks work until they stop working. There is plenty
of reason to believe that the United States is overplaying its hand. There is no
immutable law declaring that foreign states and businesses have to use
U.S.-dominated global financial networks to carry out their business. As the
political risk of using these networks increases, their attractions are
dwindling remarkably quickly. The graveyards of economic history are filled with
the corpses of once indispensable international financial arrangements.
It is unclear whether the United States has the clout to actually deliver on its
threats. The countries with waivers include China and India, as well as Greece,
Italy, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Turkey. China in particular is less
integrated into the global financial system than most other large economies. It
is hence less susceptible to pressure and more likely to react angrily to any
efforts to target its businesses. The Trump administration has already partly
backed down from a sanctions fight over the Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE
and is embroiled in a politically complex sanctions dispute over Huawei.
Large-scale actions against Chinese energy importers or the domestic banks that
work with them would represent a dramatic escalation and invite substantial
retaliation.
Efforts to punish European banks, which conduct many of the transactions for
Chinese firms, would be nearly as risky. Even before the most recent escalation,
European states had started to explore ways to escape the reach of U.S. economic
power. Most notably, Germany, France, and the United Kingdom announced in
January that they would develop a special purpose vehicle known as the
Instrument in Support of Trade Exchanges (INSTEX), which allows for the clearing
of Iranian transactions without using U.S. dollars or financial networks. Just
days ago, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu announced that Turkey is
looking into establishing a similar INSTEX system to circumvent U.S. pressure.
It is unlikely that either the renminbi or euro (let alone the lira) will
replace the dollar as a global reserve currency anytime soon. However, these
efforts slowly chip away at the zones of U.S. control. U.S. officials have
hinted that they may use sanctions to bring European allies to heel,
specifically targeting businesses or even perhaps government officials who are
associated with the new arrangements. If the United States delivers on these
threats, it is more likely to alienate its allies than to cow them. Why should
they trust a country that harshly punishes them for trying to maintain an
agreement with Iran that the United States itself negotiated before its
unilateral withdrawal?
The United States is not only alienating allies but reshaping the incentives of
private actors. The head of Barclays’s Americas sanctions office has noted that
even if the dollar is unlikely to be displaced, there is growing “comfort with
processing certain types of transactions” in other currencies to circumvent U.S.
sanctions. Last week’s unrelated decision by the administration to waive Title
III of the Helms-Burton Act, allowing U.S.-based individuals and businesses to
sue foreigners over the expropriation of Cuban property, may dramatically
accelerate the flight of foreign businesses from contact with the United States.
As private financial institutions experiment with ways to go around the U.S.-led
financial system, they are gnawing away at the supports of U.S. financial power.
Over the years, the United States benefited from spreading a fear of contagion.
When states or businesses or individuals incurred the displeasure of U.S.
financial authorities, they were treated by others as though they had the
plague. They worried that pariah status might be catching (even accidental or
innocent contact with a sanctioned party might be interpreted in unfortunate
ways), and hence they avoided all association. This sometimes turned out to be a
nuisance for U.S. policymakers. For example, businesses rarely took advantage of
sanctions exemptions that were supposed to allow the export of freedom-enhancing
technologies to Iran for fear that they might accidentally do something that the
United States would punish. However, in general, this fear increased the
efficacy of sanctions, by discouraging businesses from trying to game the rules.
If the United States continues along its current path, the fear of contagion may
start to have quite different consequences. Instead of leading states and
businesses to minimize contact with the targets of U.S. sanctions, it may lead
states and businesses to minimize their contact with the U.S.-led global
financial system and to start to construct their own workarounds. Over time,
those workarounds might even begin to accumulate into an effective alternative
system. Financial arrangements such as SWIFT and dollar clearing were responses
to the incentives and profit opportunities of globalized financial markets. Now,
U.S. unilateralism is changing those incentives and profit opportunities in
unpredictable ways.
ISIS’s Newest Recruiting Tool: Regional Languages
Krishnadev Calamur/The Atlantic/April 25/19
When ISIS claimed responsibility for the coordinated bombings in Sri Lanka that
killed more than 350 people, it did so, as one would expect, in Arabic and
English. But it also issued statements in other languages—including Tamil.
There is yet no independent verification of the terrorist group’s claim, but the
pronouncement in a language spoken by about 70 million people, overwhelmingly in
the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu and in northern and eastern Sri Lanka,
as well as in Malayalam, spoken by about 35 million people mostly in the
southern Indian state of Kerala, suggests the organization has recruits fluent
in what are essentially regional languages with relatively few speakers.
It is this sort of targeted outreach at which ISIS is particularly good: Like
other militant groups, ISIS exploits weak governments, but it also capitalizes
on disenfranchisement among Muslim minorities, speaks to their particular
grievances, and looks to recruit educated professionals for its sophisticated
propaganda efforts. On the face of it, ISIS’s influence in South Asia is
limited. About 180 Indians are said to have joined the group out of a population
of 170 million Indian Muslims, according to the Observer Research Foundation (ORF),
a think tank in New Delhi. (Muslims are the largest religious minority in the
nation of 1.2 billion.) But the majority of those who did are from the south.
Sri Lanka’s case is similar: About 32 Sri Lankan Muslims have fought with ISIS
in Syria, ORF says. (Muslims make up about 10 percent of Sri Lanka’s population
of 21 million.)
“Overall, they haven’t been successful,” Kabir Taneja, who studies terrorism in
South Asia at ORF, told me. “The number of cases compared to the population,
especially compared to the Muslim population, is really, really low.”
ISIS’s real success in recruitment has come in the places one would expect: the
Arab world, Central Asia, and western Europe. But while it struggled to attract
recruits in places such as India, it has drawn fighters from as far afield as
Trinidad and Tobago (which Simon Cottee wrote about for The Atlantic), Cambodia,
Australia, parts of Southeast Asia, and even Chile. It has been able to do this
mainly through its tremendous success on the battlefield in Iraq and Syria, as
well as its declaration of a caliphate, which it trumpeted aggressively in its
propaganda and media operations.
“There’s a lot of hyperbole that surrounds the Islamic State, but two areas in
particular that weren’t hyperbole: how much money the group made, and the
sophisticated nature of its media apparatus,” Colin Clarke, an expert on ISIS
who is a senior research fellow at the Soufan Center, a security-focused think
tank, told me.
He said ISIS specifically targeted, as a headhunting firm would, people with a
background in graphic design and production and with media degrees. That would
make southern Indian states and Sri Lanka, with their high literacy rates,
fertile ground for recruitment. (The notorious ISIS Twitter troll Shami Witness
was unmasked in 2014 as a corporate executive in one of India’s largest
conglomerates.)
Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said some of the attackers may
have traveled overseas before the bombings. He did not elaborate, but Taneja
said that fits in with the pattern of “diaspora coming back and trying to
radicalize and sell the argument of the Islamic State among the local
population.”
For those who intend to cause harm, Sri Lanka—like other places with prolonged
conflicts, such as Northern Ireland—offers another advantage: The island nation
has only just recovered from a nearly three-decade-long civil war that ended in
2009. There are leftover weapons, ammunition, and explosives available to those
who know where to find them. But weapons are insufficient if there’s no local
grievance.
Indeed, ISIS’s efforts to appeal to small numbers of people dovetail with the
public and hostile anti-Muslim rhetoric seen more and more in South Asia, which,
fueled by social media, has resulted in violence against Muslims in India, Sri
Lanka, and elsewhere. Militant groups have seized on this by focusing on local
complaints rather than on the group’s plans for a global caliphate. That’s how
“they were able to appeal to a local audience as well as a transnational
audience,” Clarke said.
That strategy appears to have worked. The attacks in Sri Lanka came immediately
after an assault failed in Saudi Arabia, one succeeded in Afghanistan, and the
group gained a toehold in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Just weeks ago,
President Donald Trump was declaring victory over ISIS. Even if it emerges that
ISIS did not play a direct role in Sri Lanka, its propaganda efforts show that
it remains a serious threat. “This puts them back in the news cycle in a
positive way and allows them to claim what they’ve been saying along,” Clarke
said. In effect, he continued, they were telling potential recruits, “We’re
going to continue to survive and expand.”