English LCCC Newsbulletin For
Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For August 07/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.august07.20.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
Who acknowledges me before others, the Son
of Man also will acknowledge him before the angels of God; but whoever denies me
before others will be denied before the angels of God
Luke 12/06-10: “Are not five sparrows sold for two
pennies? Yet not one of them is forgotten in God’s sight. But even the hairs of
your head are all counted. Do not be afraid; you are of more value than many
sparrows. ‘And I tell you, everyone who acknowledges me before others, the Son
of Man also will acknowledge before the angels of God; but whoever denies me
before others will be denied before the angels of God. And everyone who speaks a
word against the Son of Man will be forgiven; but whoever blasphemes against the
Holy Spirit will not be forgiven.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC
Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on August
06-07/2020
Lebanon's Cancer is the Terrorist Hezbollah, with all its Official &
Political Trojans/ Elias Bejjani/August 06/2020
Macron Vows to Help Mobilize Aid for Lebanon after Devastating Blast, Warns on
Reforms
Macron Meets Aoun, Berri, Diab, Urges 'Fast, Transparent' Blast Probe
Macron Urges Int'l Probe into Beirut Blast, Promises Aid Conference
Macron's Moment amid Cheering Crowds in Devastated Beirut
Macron Inspects Gemmayze, Mar Mikhail, Urges 'Political Deal', New 'System'
IMF Urges Lebanon to Break Reform 'Impasse' after Port Disaster
'Good Chance' of Finding Beirut Survivors, Says French Rescue Team
Britain's Royal Navy Will Help Beirut Prepare to Rebuild its Port
Lebanon Coronavirus Cases Peak after Deadly Blast
Jumblat Urges Int'l Probe, Says Won't Let FPM, Hizbullah Control Parliament
China Sending Medical Team to Beirut after Blast
U.S. Army to Send Supplies to Blast-Devastated Beirut
What Political Fallout from the Lebanon Blast?
Statement by the The Canadian Prime Minister on the fatal explosion in Lebanon
KSrelief Supports Lebanese Medical Teams to Help People Affected by Beirut Port
Explosion
Lebanon's Diaspora Mobilizes in Wake of Blast
Cyprus Police Question Man over Links to Beirut Chemicals Cargo
Lebanon Customs Chief Says Govt. Told of Danger
UK PM Johnson: We Will Focus on the Needs of Lebanon People
IDF officers simulate war with Hezbollah
Hezbollah Will Not Escape Blame for Beirut/Hussein Ibish/Bloomberg/August
06/2020
Hezbollah stockpiled chemical behind Beirut blast in London and Germany/Lahav
Harkov/Jerusalem Post/August 06/2020
The real tragedy for Lebanon is Hezbollah's continuing stranglehold
New Jewish fundraising campaign launched following Lebanon blast
Beirut explosion highlights danger of Hezbollah’s guided munitions
Qatari royal family member authorized arms supply to Hezbollah - dossier
Israel offers medical aid to Lebanon, response is silence/“It’s a shame that
people will die for no reason.”
Who is sending aid to Beirut? Dozens of countries send planes and medics
Lebanese Journalist Nader Fawz Flays State Officials Over Beirut Blast: Their
Hands Are Stained With The Blood Of The Victims, They Must Be Ousted And Held
Accountable
Iranian, Lebanese Experts On Iranian TV: We Cannot Rule Out The Possibility That
The Beirut Explosion Was A Deliberate Act; Israel, America Stand To Gain From
This
Lebanese Journalist Jerry Maher: Hizbullah, Lebanon's Corrupt Political System
To Blame For Beirut Port Explosion
French President Macron in Lebanon: Aid will not go to corrupt hands
Mother of Disasters in Lebanon/Salman Al-Dossary/Asharq Al Awsat/August,06/2020
Reclaiming the Lost City, Beirut/Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al Awsat/August,06/2020
From Gamal Abdel Nasser to Hassan Diab/Hazem Saghieh/Asharq Al Awsat/August,06/2020
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
August 06-07/2020
Pompeo Says U.S. to Seek UN Vote on Iran
Arms Ban Next Week
US Administration Proposes Demilitarized Zone in Libya’s Sirte, Jufra
Russia Makes Humanitarian Call to Save Syria
Kadhimi Takes Measures Against Those Responsible for Delaying Baghdad-Beirut
Beirut Tragedy Reinforces Yemeni Fears of Similar Disaster at Safer
Arab-Kurdish Conflict Feared East of Euphrates, SDF Official Warns
Jordan Government Vows to Confront Attempts to Stir Instability
Egypt and Greece Sign Agreement on Exclusive Economic Zone
Nile Dam Mediator Urges Talks to Continue
Cyprus Police Question Man over Links to Beirut Chemicals Cargo
Canada providing humanitarian assistance in response to Beirut explosion
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on August 06-07/2020
EU Issues Its First-Ever Cyber Sanctions/Annie Fixler and
Trevor Logan/FDD/August 06/2020
Destruction of Iranian Nuclear Facility Should Remind Democrats of Israel’s
Unique Value as an Ally/John Hannah/FDD/August 06/2020
Palestinians: We Support China's Muslim Concentration Camps/Khaled Abu Toameh
Gatestone Institute/August 06/2020
John Nomikos on Turkish Threats to Greece/Marilyn Stern/Middle East Forum
Webinar/August 06/2020
Europe Has a Weak Dollar Problem/Marcus Ashworth/Bloomberg/August,06/2020
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on August 06-07/2020
Lebanon's Cancer is the Terrorist Hezbollah, with all its Official & Political Trojans
Elias Bejjani/August 06/2020
All proposed solutions for solving the Lebanese devastating ongoing crisis will
fail if Hezbollah's Occupation is not totally eradicated for ever, all its
puppet Trojans the officials & Politicians are fired and the UN Resolution 1559
implemented
Macron Vows to Help Mobilize Aid for Lebanon after Devastating Blast, Warns on
Reforms
Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 6 August, 2020
French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday promised aid to blast-stricken
Lebanon but reassured angry citizens reeling from a lethal explosion that killed
145 people that no blank cheques will be given to its leaders unless they enact
reforms.
Speaking at a news conference at the end of a dramatic visit to Beirut, Macron
called for an international inquiry into the devastating explosion that
generated a seismic shock felt across the region, saying it was an urgent signal
to carry out anti-corruption reforms demanded by a furious population.
Dozens are still missing after Tuesday's explosion at the port that injured
5,000 people and left up to 250,000 without habitable homes, hammering a nation
already staggering from economic meltdown and a surge in coronavirus cases.
A security source said the death toll had reached 145, and officials said the
figure was likely to rise. Macron, paying the first visit by a foreign leader
since the explosion, promised to help organize international aid. But he said a
fully transparent international investigation into the blast was needed, and
that the Lebanese government must implement economic reforms and curb
corruption.
"If reforms are not carried out, Lebanon will continue to sink," Macron said
after being met at the airport by Lebanese President Michel Aoun. "What is also
needed here is political change. This explosion should be the start of a new
era."
He told reporters later in Beirut that an audit was needed on the Lebanese
central bank, among other urgent changes, and that the World Bank and United
Nations would play a role in any Lebanese reforms. "If there is no audit of the
central bank, in a few months there will be no more imports and then there will
be lack of fuel and of food," said Macron. Earlier, wearing a black tie in
mourning, Macron toured the blast site and Beirut's shattered streets where
angry crowds demanded an end to a "regime" of Lebanese politicians they blame
for corruption and dragging Lebanon into disaster. "I guarantee you, this
(reconstruction) aid will not go to corrupt hands," Macron told the throngs who
greeted him.
"I see the emotion on your face, the sadness, the pain. This is why I’m here,"
he told one group, pledging to deliver "home truths" to Lebanon's leaders.
He told reporters later at the French ambassador's residence, where a French
general declared the creation of the state of Lebanon exactly 100 years ago,
Macron said it was no longer up to France to tell Lebanese leaders what to do.
But he said he could apply "pressure", adding: "This morning, many people told
me, 'Bring back the mandate'. In a way you are asking me to be the guarantor of
the emergence of a democratic revolution," he said. "But a revolution cannot be
invited, the people will decide. Do not ask France to not respect your
sovereignty."
Meltdown
The government's failure to tackle a runaway budget, mounting debt and endemic
corruption has prompted Western donors to demand reform. One man on the street
told Macron: "We hope this aid will go to the Lebanese people not the corrupt
leaders." Another said that, while a French president had taken time to visit
them, Lebanon's president had not. At the port, destroyed by Tuesday's
giant mushroom cloud and fireball, families sought news about the missing, amid
mounting public anger at the authorities for allowing huge quantities of highly
explosive ammonium nitrate, used in making fertilizers and bombs, to be stored
there for years in unsafe conditions. The government has ordered some port
officials be put under house arrest and promised a full investigation.
"They will scapegoat somebody to defer responsibility," said Rabih Azar, a
33-year-old construction worker, speaking near the smashed remains of the port's
grain silo, surrounded by other mangled masonry and flattened buildings. A
central bank directive seen by Reuters later and confirmed by the bank said it
had decided to freeze the accounts of the heads of Beirut port and Lebanese
customs along with five others. The directive, dated Aug. 6, from the central
bank special investigation commission for money laundering and anti-terrorism
efforts, said the decision would be circulated to all banks and financial
institutions in Lebanon, the public prosecutor in the appeals court and the head
of the banking authority. With banks in crisis, a collapsing currency and one of
the world's biggest debt burdens, Economy Minister Raoul Nehme said Lebanon had
"very limited" resources to deal with the disaster, which by some estimates may
have cost the nation up to $15 billion. He said the country needed foreign aid.
Offers of medical and other immediate aid have poured in, as officials have said
hospitals, some heavily damaged in the blast, do not have enough beds and
equipment.
Many Lebanese, who have lost jobs and watched savings evaporate in the financial
crisis, say the blast is symptomatic of political cronyism and rampant graft
among the ruling elite.
‘Crooks and liars’
"Our leaders are crooks and liars. I don't believe any investigation they will
do. They destroyed the country and they're still lying to the people. Who are
they kidding?" said Jean Abi Hanna, 80, a retired port worker whose home was
damaged and daughter and granddaughter injured in the blast. Veteran politician
Walid Jumblatt, leader of Lebanon's Druze community, called for an international
investigation, saying he had "no trust" in the government to find out the truth.
An official source familiar with preliminary investigations blamed "inaction and
negligence" for the blast. A Lebanese security source said the initial blaze
that sparked the explosion was caused by welding work. People who felt the
explosive force said they had witnessed nothing comparable in years of conflict
and upheaval in Beirut, which was devastated by the 1975-1990 civil war and
since then has experienced big bomb attacks, unrest and a war with Israel. "All
hell broke loose," said Ibrahim Zoobi, who works near the port. "I saw people
thrown five or six meters." Seismic tremors from the blast were recorded in
Eilat on Israel's Red Sea coast, about 580 km (360 miles) away. Operations have
been paralyzed at Beirut port, Lebanon's main route for imports needed to feed a
nation of more than 6 million people, forcing ships to divert to smaller ports.
Macron Meets Aoun, Berri, Diab, Urges 'Fast, Transparent' Blast
Probe
Naharnet/August 06/2020
French President Emmanuel Macron held a meeting Thursday at the Baabda Palace
with President Michel Aoun, Speaker Nabih Berri and Prime Minister Hassan Diab.
Speaking to reporters after the talks, Macron urged “transparent and fast”
investigation into the catastrophic explosion that rocked Beirut’s port on
Tuesday, killing at least 137 people, injuring around 5,000 and leaving dozens
missing while causing massive material damage across the capital. “I spoke to
the three presidents very frankly and initiatives must be taken to reform, stop
corruption and fix electricity,” the French leader added. He also said that the
economic and financial crisis requires “strong political initiatives.”A joint
statement issued after the meeting said Aoun stressed “firm determination to
identify the causes of this tragedy-crime and those behind it and to hand them
the appropriate penalties,” underlining that “this is the priority today.”
Macron Urges Int'l Probe into Beirut Blast, Promises Aid
Conference
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 06/2020
French President Emmanuel Macron Thursday called for an international
investigation into the blast at Beirut's port that killed more than 130 people
and ravaged entire neighborhoods, costing the country billions. "An
international, open and transparent probe is needed to prevent things from
remaining hidden and doubt from creeping in," he told reporters at the end of a
snap visit to the Lebanese capital. In asking for an international inquiry, he
joined calls widely supported in and outside Lebanon for an independent probe,
and said French investigators were on their way to Beirut. Even as they counted
their dead and cleared streets of debris, many Lebanese were boiling with anger
over a blast they see as the most shocking expression yet of their leadership's
incompetence. Lebanese authorities said the massive explosion was triggered by a
fire igniting 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate stored in a warehouse at Beirut's
port. But many questions have been raised as to how such a huge cargo of highly
explosive material could have been left unsecured for years. Macron said a
French military aircraft carrier was hours away from landing in Beirut with
"rescue teams and investigators to take the search and the probe
forward."Lebanon's foreign minister had announced on French radio Thursday that
an investigating committee had been given four days to determine responsibility
for Tuesday's devastating explosion. Yet most of the members of this committee
are high-ranking officials who command little trust from the people and many
relatives of the blast's victims have been calling for foreign investigators.
The cataclysmic explosion, which left an estimated 300,000 people temporarily
homeless and injured around 5,000 people, struck when Lebanon was already
battling rampant inflation and rising poverty. The International Monetary Fund
has offered help but Lebanon's political leaders have balked at the measures the
monetary institution is requesting for a rescue package to be approved. To help
ease the crisis, an international aid conference for Lebanon would be held "in
the coming days," Macron said. He stressed that the aid raised during the
conference would be channeled "directly to the people, the relief organizations
and the teams that need it on the ground."The French president took a tough tone
on the reforms he said were the only thing holding back a massive aid package
that could put the ailing country back in the saddle. Speaking of Lebanon's
political leaders, Macron said: "Their responsibility is huge, that of a
revamped pact with the Lebanese people in the coming weeks, that of deep
change."
Macron's Moment amid Cheering Crowds in Devastated Beirut
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 06/2020
White shirt sleeves rolled up, Emmanuel Macron waded through cheering crowds in
the devastated streets of Beirut Thursday where disaster survivors pleaded with
him to help get rid of their reviled ruling elite. Doing what no senior Lebanese
leader had done since the deadly explosion at Beirut port two days earlier, the
French president allowed himself to be thronged by residents of one of the
capital's worst-hit neighborhoods. Dozens of people chanting "revolution" and
pleading with him for help pressed against his phalanx of bodyguards as he
walked through the Gemmayzeh area for around 45 minutes. Long simmering anger
against Lebanon's leaders has flared since the blast, which appears to have been
caused by negligence and is widely seen as the most tragic manifestation yet of
the corruption and incompetence of the ruling class. Some welcomed Macron like a
savior, while only a few heckled him, arguing that his mere presence in Lebanon
would only serve to legitimize a political system they want to kick out
wholesale. "Help us, you are our only hope," one well-wisher shouted as Macron
stopped to meet residents, while neighbors applauded from flats with broken
windows and crumbling balconies. A woman wearing a face mask and heavy duty
gloves cut through the crowd to catch the attention of the French head of state
before clenching his hands firmly to make an impassioned plea for help.Under the
nervous gaze of his suited bodyguards, Macron hugged her in a prolonged embrace
that triggered wild cheers from the crowd.
- 'I understand your anger' -
Throughout the dramatic walkabout, Macron appeared to savor the moment. His
moment. The scene was reminiscent of Jacques Chirac's legendary 1996 walk
through the Old City of Jerusalem, a moment that came to define his style as a
president and contributed greatly to his popularity.
"My home in Gemmayzeh has vanished and the first person to pay me a visit is a
foreign president," well-known actor Ziad Itani wrote on social media, telling
Lebanese leaders: "Shame on you.""It seems this is more than a visit. What's
happening on the streets of Gemmayzeh is historical."Clamoring around Macron,
people chanted slogans made popular during the country's October popular
uprising, launching insults at the political leaders he was to meet hours later.
Macron, when pressed by residents -- some bearing the bandaged wounds of the
cataclysmic explosion that disfigured their neighborhood -- vowed to be tough
and push for reforms. "I understand your anger. I am not here to endorse ... the
regime," Macron assured the crowd. "It is my duty to help you as a people, to
bring you medicine and food."One woman implored Macron to keep French financial
assistance out of the reach of Lebanese officials, accused by many Lebanese of
rampant graft and greed. "I guarantee you that this aid will not fall into
corrupt hands," Macron said. He promised to pitch a "new political deal" to the
country's leaders, and to press them to deliver sweeping change.
"I am going to talk to them ... I will hold them accountable," Macron said
before getting into a black limousine headed for the presidential palace.
Macron Inspects Gemmayze, Mar Mikhail, Urges 'Political
Deal', New 'System'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 06/2020
French President Emmanuel Macron visited shell-shocked Beirut Thursday, pledging
support and urging change after a massive explosion devastated the Lebanese
capital in a disaster that has sparked grief and fury. "Lebanon is not alone,"
he tweeted on arrival before pledging Paris would coordinate international
relief efforts after the colossal blast killed at least 137 people, wounded
thousands and caused billions of dollars in damage. But Macron also warned that
Lebanon -- already mired in a deep economic crisis, in desperate need of a
bailout and hit by political turmoil -- would "continue to sink" unless it
implements urgent reforms. Public anger is on the boil over the blast caused by
a massive pile of ammonium nitrate that had for years lain in a ramshackle
portside warehouse -- proof to many Lebanese of the deep rot at the core of
their state system. Macron visited Beirut's harbormaster blast zone, now a
wasteland of blackened ruins, rubble and charred debris where a 140 meter (460
feet) wide crater has filled with sea water. As Macron inspected a devastated
pharmacy in Gemmayze, angry crowds outside vented their fury at their
"terrorist" leadership, shouting "revolution" and "the people want an end to the
regime!"
"Come rule us!" one man yelled at the president. Macron told them he would urge
Lebanon's leaders to accept "a new political deal" and "to change the system, to
stop the division of Lebanon, to fight against corruption."Macron's visit to the
small Mediterranean country, France's Middle East protege and former
colonial-era protectorate, was the first by a foreign head of state since
Tuesday's unprecedented tragedy. Two days on, Lebanon was still reeling from a
blast so huge it was felt in neighboring countries, its mushroom-shaped cloud
drawing comparisons with the Hiroshima atom bomb.
'Shock to anger'
"Apocalypse", "Armageddon" -- Lebanese were lost for words to describe the
impact of the blast, which dwarfed anything the country had experienced in its
violence-plagued history. The deadly explosion left dozens more missing and a
staggering 5,000 people wounded, many by flying shards of glass as windows
imploded. The death toll was expected to rise as rescue workers keep digging
through the rubble. Offering a glimmer of hope amid the carnage, a French
rescuer said there was a "good chance of finding... people alive," especially a
group believed to be trapped in a room under the rubble. "We are looking for
seven or eight missing people, who could be stuck in a control room buried by
the explosion," the colonel told Macron as he surveyed the site. Paris has
spearheaded international mobilization in support of Lebanon, where flights
carrying medical aid, field hospitals, rescue experts and tracking dogs have
arrived since Wednesday.
Beirut's governor estimated up to 300,000 people have been left temporarily
homeless by the destruction, which he said would cost the debt-ridden country in
excess of three billion dollars. According to several officials, the explosion
was caused by a fire igniting 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate fertilizer stored
for years in the warehouse. Even as they counted their dead and cleaned up the
streets, many Lebanese were consumed with anger over a blast they see as the
most shocking expression yet of their leadership's incompetence. "We can't bear
more than this. This is it. The whole system has got to go," said 30-year-old
Mohammad Suyur as he picked up broken glass in Mar Mikhail, one of the worst-hit
city districts.
Prime Minister Hassan Diab and President Michel Aoun have promised to put the
culprits behind bars, but trust in institutions is low and few on Beirut's
streets held out hope for an impartial inquiry.
- Spontaneous solidarity -
The disaster could reignite a cross-sectarian protest movement that erupted last
October and had looked briefly like it could topple what activists consider a
hereditary kleptocracy. The euphoria had faded amid grinding economic hardship
and the coronavirus pandemic. But since the disaster, social media is once more
rife with calls to kick out Lebanon's widely reviled leaders. "Lebanon's
political class should be on guard in the weeks ahead," Faysal Itani of
think-tank the Center for Global Policy wrote in The New York Times. "Shock will
inevitably turn to anger."
Human Rights Watch supported mounting calls for an international probe into the
disaster, saying it was "the best guarantee that victims of the explosion will
get the justice they deserve".In France, prosecutors have opened a probe into
the blast over injuries suffered by 21 French citizens. Amid the gloom and fury,
the aftermath of the terrible explosion has also yielded countless uplifting
examples of spontaneous solidarity. Business owners swiftly took to social
media, posting offers to repair doors, paint damaged walls or replace shattered
windows for free. Lebanon's diaspora, believed to be nearly three times the tiny
country's population of five million, has rushed to launch fundraisers and wire
money to loved ones. In Beirut, much of the cleanup has been handled by
volunteers in improvised working groups who bring their own equipment and
organize online appeals for help. "We're sending people into the damaged homes
of the elderly and handicapped to help them find a home for tonight," said Husam
Abu Nasr, a 30-year-old volunteer. "We don't have a state to take these steps,
so we took matters into our own hands."
IMF Urges Lebanon to Break Reform 'Impasse' after
Port Disaster
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 06/2020
The International Monetary Fund urged Lebanese officials Thursday to break an
"impasse" and move ahead with reforms after a massive Beirut blast devastated
the capital and cost the crisis-hit country billions in damages. "It is
essential to overcome the impasse in the discussions on critical reforms," said
the world body, which has been in talks with the Lebanese government since May
over the country's financial crisis. The talks have since hit a wall, with the
IMF urging authorities "to put in place a meaningful program to turn around the
economy" following Tuesday's explosion, which it called a "disaster."The blast
killed more than a 130 people, wounded at least 5,000 others, and left 300,000
homeless, with damage costs estimated to exceed $3 billion. It came as the
country was already knee-deep in its worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990
civil war, with runaway inflation and bank capital controls fueling poverty,
despair and angry street protests. After Lebanon defaulted on its sovereign debt
for the first time in March, the government pledged reforms, and in May started
talks with the IMF towards unlocking billions of dollars in aid. Lebanon is
seeking more than $20 billion in external funding, including an $11 billion aid
package pledged during a Paris conference in April 2018. After 17 meetings,
negotiations with the IMF have been on hold since July, as Lebanese officials
failed to agree on reform measures or the scale of the country's financial
losses. Deadlock is common in multi-confessional Lebanon, where politicians have
for decades been accused of cronyism, conflict of interest and corruption.
'Good Chance' of Finding Beirut Survivors, Says French
Rescue Team
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 06/2020
There is a "good chance" of finding survivors of the Beirut port explosion,
especially a group believed to be trapped in a room under the rubble, a French
rescuer said Thursday. "We are looking for seven or eight missing people, who
could be stuck in a control room buried by the explosion," said a colonel
leading a rescue team that arrived in Lebanon late on Wednesday. "We think there
is a good chance of finding... people alive," he told French President Emmanuel
Macron as he surveyed the scene of Tuesday's explosion that killed more than 100
people.
Britain's Royal Navy Will Help Beirut Prepare to Rebuild
its Port
Naharnet/August 06/2020
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace has authorised the deployment of HMS Enterprise in
support of the Lebanese government at this tragic time, the British embassy
announced in a statement on Thursday. The Armed Forces will continue to work
with the Lebanese government to help the people of Beirut recover. A small team
of experts will deploy to the British Embassy in Beirut to help coordinate the
UK response ahead of HMS Enterprise's deployment and a further package of
support. Defence Secretary said: "At the request of the Lebanese government I
have today authorised the sending of HMS Enterprise to help survey the Port of
Beirut, assessing the damage and supporting the Lebanese government and people
rebuild this vital piece of national infrastructure."
Lebanon Coronavirus Cases Peak after Deadly Blast
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 06/2020
Lebanon recorded 255 coronavirus cases Thursday -- its highest single-day
infection tally -- after a monstrous blast upended a planned lockdown and sent
thousands streaming into overflowing hospitals, already struggling to cope. The
health ministry figures were reported by the state-run National News Agency,
which also announced two new deaths. They bring the total number of COVID-19
infections in Lebanon to 4,604, including 70 deaths since the outbreak first
began in February. The pandemic has compounded the woes of a crisis-hit country
reeling from a massive explosion that killed more than 130 people, wounded at
least 5,000 and left an estimated 300,000 homeless. Tuesday's blast meant many
people forgot about their face masks as they crammed into vehicles, sometimes
riding with strangers, en route to hospitals which were also damaged by the
explosion. Lebanon's hospitals were -- for the first time in months --
overwhelmed with cases other than COVID-19, with some having to turn away the
wounded because they were already full. Since the explosion, people have crowded
into the hardest hit districts to inspect their damaged homes and businesses, or
as volunteers in cleanup efforts. The blast forced authorities to suspend a
lockdown that was supposed to last until August 10.
Jumblat Urges Int'l Probe, Says Won't Let FPM, Hizbullah
Control Parliament
Naharnet/August 06/2020
Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblat on Thursday called for tasking
an international panel of inquiry with probing the mega-blast that rocked
Beirut’s port, as he stressed that the Democratic Gathering bloc will not resign
from parliament.
“We do not whatsoever believe in a local investigation commission and there is
total lack of confidence that this government can unveil the truth. That’s why
we demand an international investigation commission to unveil the truth,”
Jumblat said at a press conference. “The Democratic Gathering led by MP Taymour
Jumblat has decided to stay in parliament and it calls for new elections based
on a non-sectarian law and individual electorates,” Jumblat added. The PSP
leader said the bloc has decided to maintain its presence in parliament “because
the resignation of the Democratic Gathering’s eight MPs would allow the Aounist
axis and Hizbullah to fully control the legislature.”“We will stay in parliament
to try and block any additional laws aimed at seizing the country’s assets,”
Jumblat added. He said there should “real control of ports and border
crossings,” while urging a “neutral government.”
“This is a hostile government on all levels,” Jumblat added, slamming it as a
“ruling gang.”Asked about calls by segments of citizens for the resignation of
President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Hassan Diab, Jumblat said: “When the
other forces, especially Christians, unite over the demand of Michel Aoun’s
resignation, led by (Maronite) Patriarch (Beshara) al-Rahi, we would then join
those forces.”“As for Diab, he is a voracious wolf and a nobody,” the PSP leader
added.
China Sending Medical Team to Beirut after Blast
Associated Press/Naharnet/August 06/2020
China says it is sending a medical team and supplies to Lebanon in the aftermath
of the port explosion that injured more than 5,000 people. Foreign Ministry
spokesperson Wang Wenbin said Thursday that Chinese leader Xi Jinping had
conveyed a message of condolence to Lebanese President Michel Aoun following the
blast, which killed at least 135 people. “As a friendly country to Lebanon,
China is willing to continue to provide assistance within its capacity for
Lebanon to tide over the difficulties,” Wang told reporters at a daily briefing.
China has long been a major customer for Middle Eastern oil and gas, and in
recent years has sought to boost its influence in the area as an alternative to
the U.S. and Europe. For many years, China has also contributed soldiers to the
United Nations peacekeeping operation in southern Lebanon.
U.S. Army to Send Supplies to Blast-Devastated Beirut
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 06/2020
The U.S. military is sending shipments of water, food and medicine to Lebanon,
it announced Thursday, two days after a massive explosion devastated Beirut and
left hundreds of thousands homeless. Deliveries of three C-17 military planes
loaded with food, water and medical supplies are "impending," said a spokesman
for U.S. Army Central Command chief General Frank McKenzie, without stating when
they would arrive. McKenzie said the U.S. was ready to continue providing
assistance to the Lebanese during the "terrible tragedy" in partnership with the
Lebanese Army, the U.S. embassy in Lebanon and the U.S. international aid
agency, USAID, according to the statement. Public anger in Lebanon is on the
boil over the blast caused by a massive pile of ammonium nitrate that had for
years lain in a ramshackle portside warehouse. It left at least 137 dead and
5,000 injured, and hundreds of thousands of people homeless. Rescuers and
families are still searching for dozens more people missing since the blast. The
death toll was expected to rise as rescue workers keep digging through the
rubble. The blast zone is now a wasteland of blackened ruins, while whole
neighborhoods were largely destroyed.
The fallout is expected to cost billions in a small country already plunged into
an unprecedented economic and social crisis, battling the coronavirus, and where
almost half of the inhabitants live in poverty.
What Political Fallout from the Lebanon Blast?
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 06/2020
The colossal explosion that devastated Beirut's port and gutted entire
neighbourhoods of the Lebanese capital deals a fresh blow to an already fragile
and deeply unpopular government. Lebanon's ruling elite was already under
enormous pressure from a protest movement that rejects it as inept, corrupt and
beholden to the country's myriad sectarian groups rather than the national
interest. With public anger now boiling over the epic destruction caused by a
disaster blamed on official negligence, in a country choking from its worst ever
economic crisis, what will be the political impact?
- On the government -
Prime Minister Hassan Diab's government, billed as technocratic line-up when it
was launched in January, is seen as subservient to the party of President Michel
Aoun and his Hizbullah allies. In weeks of talks, the cabinet has failed to
reached a deal with the International Monetary Fund on a rescue package for
Lebanon, which defaulted on its debt earlier this year. Battling runaway
inflation, mass unemployment and rising poverty, the government is already
fraying at the edges. This week Nassif Hitti resigned as foreign minister to
protest a lack of willingness to tackle much-needed reforms, warning that
Lebanon risked becoming a "failed state". Maha Yahya, director of the Carnegie
Middle East Center, argued that "in any other country, the government would
resign" after such deadly blasts. "Irrespective of how this explosion came to
happen there is absolute criminal neglect."Security officials told AFP that huge
quantities of highly explosive ammonium nitrate had been stored for years in a
rundown warehouse and that the hazard was known to the authorities. "The
catastrophe, while exceptionally severe, is the result of business as usual in
Lebanon," Faysal Itani, a deputy director at the Center for Global Policy, wrote
in The New York Times. "There is a pervasive culture of negligence, petty
corruption and blame-shifting endemic to the Lebanese bureaucracy, all overseen
by a political class defined by its incompetence and contempt for the public
good."Nonetheless, in the context of extreme geopolitical polarisation in the
region, especially between arch foes the United States and Iran, the
government's sponsors might seek to preserve it at all costs. "Despite popular
anger... a resignation still seems unlikely just now because there is no clear
alternative," said Karim Bitar, a professor of international relations in Paris
and Beirut.
On the protest camp
An unprecedented nationwide and cross-sectarian protest movement that erupted on
October 17 had looked at one stage like it could topple the hereditary ruling
elite. The euphoria faded however as change failed to materialise and the
combination of economic hardship and the coronavirus pandemic left the popular
revolution in tatters. Bitar predicted that Tuesday's tragedy would give the
protest camp "a second wind". "The Lebanese will be more determined than ever to
make a political class which is corrupt to the bone accountable," he said. But
Yahya argued that many among the protest camp could also see the port blast as
the last straw that convinces them to leave the country for good, joining
Lebanon's massive diaspora.The government announced a two-week state of
emergency with immediate effect on Wednesday, which could also foil any plans
for mass protests in the short term.
On Hizbullah
The Tehran-backed movement, the dominant political player in Lebanon, appealed
for unity and its leader Hassan Nasrallah has postponed a televised address
initially slated for Wednesday evening. "They will also be held accountable
because they are part and parcel of the governing system," said Yahya.
Hizbullah's influence on the running of the port is known to the public and will
reflect badly on the organisation, she said. Strangled by US sanctions, the
Shiite movement is also bracing for the upcoming verdict in the trial over the
2005 assassination of former prime minister Rafic Hariri. The main suspects are
alleged Hizbullah members and a guilty verdict could further pile pressure at
home and abroad on the Iranian proxy, which the US and many other Western
countries consider a "terrorist" group. The special tribunal in The Hague
handling the case announced on Wednesday it was postponing the verdict,
initially due on Friday, to August 18 as a consequence of the deadly port blast.
Whichever way the verdict goes, heightened tensions between Hizbullah and Hariri
supporters are a risk.
Statement by the The Canadian Prime Minister on the fatal explosion in Lebanon
August 6, 2020
Ottawa, Ontario
The Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement on the
fatal explosion in Lebanon:
“Canadians were shocked and deeply saddened by the devastating toll of Tuesday’s
explosion on the people and city of Beirut, Lebanon. We mourn the tragic deaths
of so many people, and wish a full and quick recovery to the thousands who were
injured. “We are also thinking of the many who continue to search for friends
and family, and who have lost their homes and livelihoods during this extremely
challenging time. You are in our hearts, and we are with you. We know that the
people of Lebanon will come together and rebuild, as they have before, and
overcome this tragedy. “Our two countries share a deep and longstanding
friendship, which is rooted in close people-to-people ties. Hundreds of
thousands of Lebanese Canadians live in communities across the country. For
decades, they have strengthened our country and continue to make significant
contributions to Canada today. To help the people of Lebanon, Canada is
providing up to $5 million in humanitarian assistance, with an initial $1.5
million going immediately to the Lebanese Red Cross and other trusted
humanitarian organizations.
“To the people of Lebanon, Lebanese Canadians, and all those who watched the
explosion in shock and horror, worrying about their loved ones and friends: we
will always support the people of Lebanon as you work to heal and rebuild your
beautiful city. Canada will also work with the international community to keep
identifying how we can support urgent needs, and continue to offer emergency
support, including medical aid, food, and shelter.
“Friends and relatives of Canadian citizens in Lebanon can contact Global
Affairs Canada's 24/7 Emergency Watch and Response Centre by calling
613-996-8885 or 1-800-387-3124, or by sending an email to
sos@international.gc.ca. Canadian citizens in Lebanon in need of emergency
consular assistance should contact the Embassy of Canada in Beirut at 961 (4)
726-700 or berut-cs@international.gc.ca or call Global Affairs Canada’s
Emergency Watch and Response Centre at +1 613-996-8885."
KSrelief Supports Lebanese Medical Teams to Help People Affected by Beirut Port
Explosion
Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 6 August, 2020
King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) supported on Tuesday
Lebanese medical teams and assisted people affected by Beirut port explosion.
Souboul Al Salam Relief Team, funded by KSrelief, went from north of Lebanon to
Beirut to assist in the transportation of the wounded. Also, a specialized team
from Al-Amal Medical Center, funded by KSrelief, provided emergency health care
services in Beirut. Meanwhile, Al-Amal Center said that it had launched a blood
donation campaign to meet the need of Beirut hospitals.
Lebanon's Diaspora Mobilizes in Wake of Blast
Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 6 August, 2020
Lebanon's diaspora, estimated at nearly three times the size of the tiny
country's population of five million, has stepped up to provide assistance
following the massive explosion that laid waste to the capital Beirut. Lebanese
expats rushed to wire money to loved ones who lost their homes or were injured
in the blast on Tuesday that killed at least 113 people, while others worked to
create special funds to address the tragedy. "I've been on the phone all morning
with ... our partners in order to put together an alliance for an emergency fund
in light of the explosion," said George Akiki, co-founder and CEO of LebNet, a
non-profit based in California's Silicon Valley that helps Lebanese
professionals in the United States and Canada. "Everyone, both Lebanese and
non-Lebanese, wants to help."Akiki said his group, along with other
organizations such as SEAL and Life Lebanon, have set up Beirut Emergency Fund
2020, which will raise much-needed money and channel it to safe and reputable
organizations in Lebanon. Many Lebanese expats, who almost all have loved ones
or friends impacted by the disaster, are also helping individually or have
started online fundraisers.
"As a first step, my wife Hala and I will match at least $10,000 in donations
and later on we will provide more help towards rebuilding and other projects,"
Habib Haddad, a tech entrepreneur and member of LebNet based in Boston,
Massachusetts, told AFP. He said many fellow compatriots are doing the same,
channeling their grief and anger toward helping their stricken homeland, which
before the blast was already reeling from a deep economic and political crisis
that has left more than half the population living in poverty. "They're asking
Lebanese emigrants around the world to try and help," said Maroun Daccache,
owner of a Lebanese restaurant in Sao Paulo, Brazil, a country that has an
estimated seven million people of Lebanese descent. "I'm trying to help with
something but here the business is not very good because of the pandemic. Still,
we are much better off than those over there," Daccache said.
'Terrible and heartbreaking'
Even before the tragedy, Lebanon heavily relied on its diaspora for cash
remittances but these inflows had slowed in the last year given the country's
political crisis.
Expats also usually visit home every summer, injecting much-needed cash into the
economy. But the diaspora this year has largely been absent because of the
COVID-19 pandemic and many had become increasingly skeptical and reluctant to
send aid to a country where corruption is widespread and permeates all levels of
society. "People are outraged by the mismanagement of the country and they want
to help, but no one trusts the people in charge," said Najib Khoury-Haddad, a
tech entrepreneur in the San Francisco area, echoing the feeling of many
Lebanese leery of giving money to a dysfunctional government.
"I heard that the government has set up a relief fund but who would trust them?"
he added. Ghislaine Khairalla, 55, of Washington DC, said one idea being floated
was to pair a needy family in Beirut with one outside the country that could
provide a safe and direct source of assistance. "We (the diaspora) are the
financial bloodline especially since the economy is not going to recover anytime
soon," Khairalla, whose brother's home was reduced to rubble by the blast, said.
"And we are lucky to have a kind of stable life here. We are physically outside
Lebanon but our hearts and emotions are there."
Nayla Habib, a Lebanese-Canadian who lives in Montreal, said she planned to help
in whatever way she can and expressed outrage at reports that the blast was
caused by more than 2,700 tons of ammonium nitrate stored at the Beirut port,
which is located in the heart of the densely populated city. "My God, the state
of our country is terrible and heartbreaking," Habib told AFP. "I donated before
the blast to a lady that helps feed the poor and I will donate again. "Whatever
I give is like a drop in the ocean but it's necessary," she added. "I live in
Canada but part of my heart is still there."
Cyprus Police Question Man over Links to Beirut Chemicals
Cargo
Asharq Al-Awsat/August/06, 2020
Cyprus has located and questioned a Russian man named in multiple news reports
as the owner of the ship that carried a cargo of ammonium nitrate abandoned in
Beirut and that exploded in a devastating fireball. A Cyprus police spokesman
said an individual, who he did not name, was questioned at his home in Cyprus on
Thursday afternoon. "There was a request from the Interpol Beirut to locate this
person and ask certain questions related to the cargo," the spokesman, Christos
Andreou, told Reuters. He said the responses were being passed on to Beirut. He
declined to give further information. A security source, speaking on condition
of anonymity, said the man was Russian businessman Igor Grechushkin, 43.
Attempts to contact Grechushkin were unsuccessful. Boris Prokoshev, who was
captain of the Rhosus in 2013, said the chemicals ended up in Beirut after the
ship's owner - who he identified as Grechushkin - told him to make an
unscheduled stop in Lebanon to pick up extra cargo.The chemicals, which had been
stored at Beirut port for years, exploded on Tuesday in the country's worst
peace-time disaster.
Lebanon Customs Chief Says Govt. Told of Danger
Asharq Al-Awsat/August/06, 2020
The head of Lebanon’s customs department said one of the country's main security
agencies reported to the Cabinet in the past year about the danger from
explosive chemicals being stored at the port.
Badri Daher told The Associated Press on Thursday that State Security had been
investigating the stockpile of ammonium nitrate for the past year. He said it
raised reports about the danger to the Cabinet, state prosecutor and other state
institutions. Security officials were not immediately available for comment.
He confirmed that he sent a letter in 2017 to a judge in which he warned of the
“dangers if the materials remain where they are, affecting the safety of (port)
employees” and asked the judge for guidance.Daher said he and his predecessor
sent a total of six letters but never got a response.
Media reports in the nation of Georgia said the tons of ammonium nitrate that
exploded in Beirut originated from the Georgian city of Rustavi, home to a large
chemical production plant. The company that operates the plant issued a
statement on Thursday that neither confirmed nor denied the provenance of the
2,750 tons of the chemical stored in a Beirut warehouse that is believed to have
been touched off by a fire. The ammonium nitrate — a highly explosive component
of fertilizers — had been stored there since 2013 despite repeated warnings.
Rustavi Azot said it has been operating the plant “only for the past three
years” and was unable to confirm whether the ammonium nitrate was produced in
Georgia or in the city of Rustavi.
UK PM Johnson: We Will Focus on the Needs of Lebanon People
Asharq Al-Awsat/August/06, 2020
Lebanese soldiers search for survivors after a massive explosion in Beirut,
Lebanon, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Thursday he was shocked by
the blast in Beirut and that Britain would continue to focus on the needs of the
people of Lebanon.
“I was absolutely appalled and shocked by the scenes from Lebanon, from Beirut,”
Johnson said. “I am sure that the UK will continue to focus on the needs of the
people of Lebanon.”Britain is sending a Royal Navy ship to Beirut to help the
city recover from Tuesday's devastating port explosion. Defense Secretary Ben
Wallace said the survey vessel HMS Enterprise, currently in Cyprus, will assess
damage and help Lebanese authorities prepare to rebuild the port. Britain has
pledged a 5 million-pound ($6.6 million) humanitarian support package for
Lebanon and says it will send search and rescue teams and expert medical
support.
IDF officers simulate war with Hezbollah
Jerusalem Post/August 06/2020
Hundreds of officers are using simulators, virtual reality, and escape rooms to
prepare for war with the Lebanese terror group
As the IDF transitions to a more connected and digitized military as part of the
“Momentum” multiyear plan, hundreds of officers have completed several brigade
and battalion exercises using simulators rather than drills in the field.
Officers from the 401st Armored Brigade as well as from the Givati and Nahal
infantry brigades were training when The Jerusalem Post visited IDF Training
Command Headquarters at the Julis base near Ashkelon this week to watch as they
virtually trained for a future war with Hezbollah.
“It’s like a videogame, but these are real places where troops and officers
might go,” said Col. Eliav Elbaz, commander of the brigade’s training base.
Officers experience fighting in simulated urban terrain similar to that of
Lebanon, complete with the street they might find themselves walking down and
the mosque they might pass when in a village in southern Lebanon, he said.
The latest drill, which ended Thursday, took place over the course of one week,
with five fights simulated over the course of four hours followed by a two-hour
debriefing.
Keeping with coronavirus restrictions, officers were divided into capsules in
different rooms. Platoon leaders and company commanders were in one room, and
officers of the Forward Deployed Brigade Headquarters were in another.
The officers train on Elbit System’s B2MTC (Brigade and Battlegroup Mission
Training Center), which according to the company provides a “realistic
operational picture, enables them to operate a range of assets, compels them to
respond to real-time changes and requires them to cope with tactical
communications that are realistically impacted by various effects.”The system
also mimics the flow of information among all levels of command, which enables
the officers to realistically simulate target acquisition and fire functions
during complex combat scenarios.
While it might seem like a video game, “if the officer is killed, he’s out,”
Elbaz said, adding that the entire drill is documented from beginning to end.
That includes visual and audio data of the officers’ choices, and the system can
document failures to help during the debriefing, he said.
The officers use simulators and also train in escape rooms that simulate
mass-casualty events, such as an anti-tank missile striking an armored personnel
carrier, in which they need to figure out how best to handle and clear the
scene.
These drills “are not instead of drills in the field,” Elbaz said. “These drills
work on the cognitive abilities of the officers when they are in the field. It’s
just another platform. Wars are different these days. Before, there weren’t
smart systems on guns or tanks. The enemy has also become more technological.”
With tensions high along Israel’s northern borders, “we have to keep training,”
he said. “Hezbollah and Syria aren’t stopping because of the coronavirus. It
could be that today officers are training in simulators, but tomorrow they might
be in Lebanon at war with Hezbollah. We never know. And that’s why we keep
training – to be ready.”
Hezbollah Will Not Escape Blame for Beirut
Hussein Ibish/Bloomberg/August 06/2020
When anger replaces sorrow, much of it will be directed at the Iran-backed
militia.
As if the Lebanese haven’t suffered enough. For months, they have been caught
between an economic meltdown, crumbling public services and a surging pandemic.
Now they must count the dead and survey the extensive damage to their capital
after two giant explosions on Tuesday.
The blasts, especially the second, were so huge they were reportedly heard and
felt in Cyprus. At least 100 people are reported to have been killed — that
number will almost certainly rise — and thousands injured. A large expanse of
the port and its immediate neighborhood lies in smoking ruin; miles away,
streets are full of shattered glass.
Prime Minister Hassan Diab’s government says the explosions were caused when
careless welding ignited about 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate, a highly
combustible material used as fertilizer and for bomb-making. By comparison,
Timothy McVeigh used about 2.4 tons of the same chemical in the 1995 Oklahoma
City bombing. The 2015 disaster in the Chinese city of Tianjin was caused by the
explosion of 800 tons of ammonium nitrate.
The equivalent of 1,100 Oklahoma City-size bombs could indeed account for the
devastation and the reddish mushroom cloud that plumed gaudily over the Beirut
port. But it doesn’t mean Lebanese will simply accept that the explosion was an
unavoidable, force majeure event.
Assuming the official account holds up, the disaster again exposes the rot that
is destroying the country — an especially corrosive mix of corruption,
ineptitude and malign intentions.
The ammonium nitrate was apparently seized in 2013 from a Moldovan-flagged ship
traveling from Georgia to Mozambique. But someone — who, we don’t yet know —
brought it into Beirut; instead of returning, auctioning or disposing of it, the
port management inexcusably allowed it to be stored there for years.There are no
prizes for guessing who in Lebanon might be interested in keeping such vast
quantities of explosive material close at hand. The U.S. Treasury and Israel
both believe Hezbollah controls many of Beirut’s port facilities.
Diab, whose government is entirely dependent on political support from Hezbollah
and its Maronite Christian allies, has vowed to hold those responsible to
account. More than likely, some minor officials will be fingered for permitting
improper storage of highly dangerous material.
Iran-backed Hezbollah, with its large and well-armed militia as well as its
political hold on the prime minister, has nothing to fear from the state. But it
will not escape public opprobrium: Most Lebanese will assume the ammonium
nitrate belonged to the militia, for use in Syria and against Israel.
Why the chemicals exploded is another matter, rich with possibilities of
conjecture. In the court of public opinion, the usual suspects will be rounded
up from the ongoing shadow war between Iran and Hezbollah on one side and Israel
on the other. President Donald Trump, who can be relied upon to make everything
worse, speculated it was a deliberate attack. This will be picked up and
amplified by conspiracy theorists in the Middle East.
But suspicions of Hezbollah’s culpability will intensify on Friday when a United
Nations special tribunal for Lebanon that has been looking into the 2005
assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri is expected to
issue verdicts in cases against four Hezbollah cadres being tried in absentia.
The men are in hiding, and have not been seen in years; even if they are found
guilty, no one expects them to be handed over. Hariri, remember, was killed in a
massive blast.
A guilty verdict would increase domestic pressure on Hezbollah, its allies and
the government. When Lebanese have finished mourning their dead, anger will
return — the kind that fueled the massive street demonstrations that brought
down Diab’s predecessor last October.
Even without the Beirut blasts, the timing of the verdict would have been
awkward for Diab, who is struggling to negotiate an economic bailout with the
International Monetary Fund: Among the hurdles is Hezbollah’s resistance to the
necessary reforms.
Hezbollah finds itself uncomfortably positioned as the principal backer of the
government presiding over a thoroughgoing collapse of the Lebanese state and
society. It will not easily shake off blame for the Beirut blast, or for the
Hariri assassination. Even in this country that has suffered so much and for so
long, the latest of Lebanon’s tragedies will not soon be forgotten, nor its
perpetrators forgiven.
(Corrects the number of Oklahoma City-size bombs that would equal the size of
the Beirut explosion in the fourth paragraph.)
This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or
Bloomberg LP and its owners.
Hezbollah stockpiled chemical behind Beirut blast in London and Germany
Lahav Harkov/Jerusalem Post/August 06/2020
The Beirut explosion took place at a warehouse that held 2,750 tons of ammonium
nitrate that had been confiscated from a ship.
Hezbollah kept three metric tons of ammonium nitrate, the explosive thought to
be behind the mega blast in Beirut this week, in a storehouse in London, until
MI5 and the London Metropolitan Police found it in 2015.
The Lebanese terrorist group also stored hundreds of kilograms of ammonium
nitrate in southern Germany, which were uncovered earlier this year.
The Beirut explosion took place at a warehouse that held 2,750 tons of ammonium
nitrate that had been confiscated from a ship.
The Iran-backed terrorists kept the explosive in thousands of ice packs in four
properties in northwest London, according to a report in The Telegraph last
year. The ice pack deception tactic was used in Germany, as well.
A source was quoted in The Telegraph saying the ammonium nitrate was to be used
for “proper organized terrorism” and could have caused “a lot of damage.”
MI5 arrested a man in his 40s for allegedly planning terrorist attacks, but did
not find evidence that the terrorists were planning an attack in the UK.
A foreign government reportedly tipped off MI5 to the explosives stockpile. KAN
reported that the Mossad gave the UK the information.
“MI5 worked independently and closely with international partners to disrupt the
threat of malign intent from Iran and its proxies in the UK,” an intelligence
source told The Telegraph.
The Prime Minister’s Office did not respond to a question as to whether Israel
helped the UK nab the terrorists.
However, Germany found the Hezbollah explosive stockpiles with help from the
Mossad.
The operation and raid on mosques and residents tied to Hezbollah throughout
Germany in April came in tandem with a ban on the terrorist group’s activities.
In 2019, the UK banned Hezbollah, making it a criminal offense to support or be
a member of the group, carrying a sentence of up to 10 years in prison.
Then-home secretary Savid Javid said the Lebanese terrorist group “is continuing
in its attempts to destabilize the fragile situation in the Middle East – and we
are no longer able to distinguish between their already-banned military wing and
the political party. Because of this, I have taken the decision to proscribe the
group in its entirety.”
Last week, a cross-party group of UK parliamentarians expressed concern that the
UK was not effectively enforcing the ban on Hezbollah.
The letter sent to UK Security Minister James Brokenshire came after he said, in
a Parliamentary answer, that the government did not collect data on the number
of people in the UK investigated or charged with supporting Hezbollah.
They called on intelligence agencies and the Home Office to collect and
regularly review statistics on people who have displayed the Hezbollah flag or
other symbols of support, and update the House of Commons on those numbers, in
order to assess the effectiveness of the ban.
Benjamin Weinthal contributed to this report.
The real tragedy for Lebanon is Hezbollah's continuing
stranglehold
Jerusalem Post/August 06/2020
Hezbollah would rather the Lebanese people suffer, than let them partake of
assistance offered by the Jewish state.
In a symbolic act of human solidarity, Tel Aviv on Wednesday night was to light
up its municipality in the colors of the flag of Lebanon, an enemy state.
“Humanity precedes any conflict,” Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai tweeted, explaining
the move. “Our hearts are with the Lebanese people in the wake of the terrible
disaster that befell them.”
Israel, through both official and unofficial channels, has offered Lebanon more
than symbolic gestures in dealing with the devastation caused by the massive
explosion at Beirut’s port. Jerusalem was quick to offer the Lebanese government
humanitarian aid to cope with the tragedy, including its expertise in search and
rescue. Another area in particular where Israel could assist would be in caring
for some of the injured in its hospitals.
Salman Zarka, director of the Ziv Medical Center in Safed, offered his
hospital’s services. Safed is only 100 kilometers from Beirut. Any country of
Lebanon’s size would be hard pressed to cope with a disaster that has left more
than 100 dead and 4,000 injured. Add to that the stress placed on the medical
system by the coronavirus, and the damage sustained in the explosion by four
Beirut hospitals, and there is no way that Lebanon’s hospitals can deal with
this alone.
Israel could help, and its hospitals – top in the region – are closer and easier
to access than any of the other nearby alternatives in Cyprus or Turkey (Syria
is not a realistic option).
Unfortunately, there is almost no chance Lebanon will take Israel up on its
offer. And this is a shame, because this could be a game changer. Not only would
it help the Lebanese injured, but it also could fundamentally change the
poisonous atmosphere between the two neighboring countries.
It won’t happen – even though some of the Lebanese public might wish it would –
because Hezbollah, an integral part of Lebanon’s government, would never allow
it. Hezbollah wants to destroy Israel, not allow the suffering Lebanese people
to partake of its mercies. That would undercut the ground upon which the
terrorist organization stands: that Israel is the hated enemy.
Hezbollah would rather the Lebanese people suffer, than let them partake of
assistance offered by the Jewish state. This complete disregard for the security
and well-being of the Lebanese people is nothing new.
It is this disregard that has enabled the terrorist organization to use Lebanese
civilians in south Lebanon as human shields to guard their missiles. For years,
Hezbollah has had no compunction about placing rocket launchers in the basements
of apartment buildings, knowingly and willfully placing residents of those
buildings in harm’s way.
They have also had no problems placing missile warehouses in the middle of
Beirut. No one knows for sure what sparked the horrendous blast in Lebanon’s
capital on Tuesday, though the Lebanese government has said it was because of
the storage of more than 2,700 tons of ammonium nitrate.
Even if that is true, and even if – as some initially thought – it was not a
Hezbollah missile silo in the heart of the city that exploded, those storehouses
do exist. If not at the port, then nearby. Hezbollah puts them there because it
knows Israel would be very reluctant to attack them, precisely because it would
cause the type of damage that shattered the city on Tuesday.
“In Lebanon Iran is directing Hezbollah to build secret sites to convert
inaccurate projectiles into precision guided missiles,” Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu said during a speech at the UN in 2018, unveiling intelligence showing
where the terrorist group’s missile warehouses were located. “Hezbollah is
deliberately using the innocent people of Beirut as human shields.”If,
unfortunately, Lebanon will not accept Israel’s offers of aid, at the very least
the explosion at Beirut’s port should trigger a real debate inside the country
about the risks of allowing a terrorist organization to use its capital city as
a giant missile warehouse. Tuesday’s horrendous explosion, and the death and
destruction it has wrought, is a tragedy for Lebanon. No less a tragedy is
Hezbollah’s commandeering of that country and turning its cities into weapons
storage centers that could ignite as easily as that mountain of ammonium nitrate
apparently did at Beirut’s port.
New Jewish fundraising campaign launched following Lebanon blast
The aim of the campaign is to raise NIS 1 million for Israeli Flying Aid, a
non-profit organization that provides relief for communities stricken by natural
distastes or human conflict, according to the organization's website.
By DANIEL NISINMAN/Jerusalem Post/AUGUST 6/2020
Only two days after an enormous explosion wiped out large portions of Beirut's
port, killing over a hundred people and leaving thousands with various wound
degrees, many in Israel have offered to open their hearts and pockets, seeking
to provide aid to the victims.
The latest of these efforts is a fundraising campaign, called "Human Warmth,"
which appeared on JGive platform.
The aim of the campaign is to raise NIS 1 million for Israeli Flying Aid, a
non-profit organization that provides relief for communities stricken by natural
disasters or human conflict, according to the organization's website.
Israeli Flying Aid specializes, in particularity, in providing aid to
communities in countries which do not have diplomatic relations with Israel.
The money "will be directed to lifesaving aid such as medicine, medical supplies
and food for the victims," according to the campaign statement on JGive.
Rabbi Dr. Daniel Roth, Director of Moasica - The Religious Peace Initiative,
which is engaged in attempts to promote dialogues between senior Jewish leaders
and Islamic leaders from around the Middle East who are not generally inclined
to recognize the Jewish state, commented on the Jewish aspects of the new
initiative: "the campaign is in line with core halachic Jewish values."
Referring to the Babylonian Talmud, Roth added that "when you see your friend's
donkey in need, and your enemy's donkey in greater need, you should help the
donkey that is in a greater need."
Further alluding to fundamental Jewish texts, Rabbi Roth mentioned Proverbs (Mishlay),
in which it says that: "If your enemy is hungry, feed him bread, and if he is
thirsty, give him water to drink."
However, not all in the Jewish world believe that this is the right way to act,
following on the principle of "the poor of your town come first." But given the
scope of the disaster in Lebanon, it is clear why many are inclined to set aside
their differences and simply offer a helping hand.
If the campaign is successful, it could be a major step in the direction of
building confidence between the two peoples.
Israeli government offered immediate assistance to Lebanon, just several hours
after learning about the devastating consequences of the explosion and Lebanon's
apparent need for foreign assistance.
Tel Aviv Municipality showed solidarity with the Lebanese people by displaying
Lebanon's national flag on the municipality's building facade, a move
discredited by many social media users from the Arab world.
Beirut explosion highlights danger of Hezbollah’s guided
munitions
Seith J. Frantman/Jerusalem Post/August 06/2020
The terrorist group also has a special terminal at the Beirut Port where it
regularly unloads weapons that are shipped to Lebanon from Iran, the ‘Post’ has
learned.
In recent years, Hezbollah has been acquiring precision-guided munitions, which
make the terrorist group’s arsenal of 150,000 missiles more dangerous. The
massive explosion in Beirut that has affected hundreds of thousands of people,
injuring thousands and likely killing hundreds, now reveals how dangerous
precision-guided weapons could be in the wrong hands.
This threat was made more serious by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah’s
comments in 2016 and 2017, when he threatened to target sensitive facilities in
Israel where he claimed gas or ammonium nitrate are stored.
Hezbollah has not only sought to upgrade its rockets with precision guidance to
target Israel’s critical infrastructure, but it has placed rocket-launching
sites in Beirut, according to recent reports. The terrorist organization also
has a special terminal at the Beirut Port where it regularly unloads weapons
that are shipped to Lebanon from Iran, The Jerusalem Post has learned.
The containers with the weapons are unloaded by Hezbollah operatives and do not
undergo customs inspections like regular cargo. The weapons are then stored for
periods of time at the port before they are distributed to Hezbollah bases and
storage centers across the country.
The dangerous munitions, combined with Hezbollah’s threats to use
precision-guided missiles against Israel, may not be linked to the tragic
explosion in Beirut. But they reveal the danger Hezbollah poses to the Jewish
state and how dangerous its munitions can be to civilian areas.
Regarding Israeli airstrikes in Syria, its “targets are precision-guided
munitions [PGMs],” Jonathan Schanzer, senior vice president for research at the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies, wrote in January at Commentary.
Iran has sought to supply Hezbollah with kits for these munitions. Iran is
trying to find more clandestine ways to move the kits to Lebanon. Once in the
terrorist group’s hands, the kits – which include circuit boards, fins for
rockets and software – can be assembled to integrate with its arsenal.
THE IDF last year revealed how the PGM project has progressed. Iran had been
trying to move whole missiles, with the guidance installed, via Syria. “Most of
these efforts were prevented by attacks attributed to Israel,” the IDF said.
Tehran then tried to move the kits to Hezbollah and set up factories in Lebanon
to convert rockets locally to hide the kits and missiles in Syria on the way to
Hezbollah. The IDF published photos of the alleged PMG factory sites in Lebanon
last September.
The PGM threat needs to be taken seriously, Uzi Rubin, founding director of
Israel’s Missile Defense Organization, wrote in June at the Begin-Sadat Center
for Strategic Studies. They can paralyze civilian and military infrastructure
and can win wars, he said, adding: “Israel should do everything in its power not
only to prevent defeat by them, but to use them to defeat its enemies.”
Once Hezbollah has these weapons, it could launch an operation “firing salvos of
precision missiles to paralyze Israel’s air bases,” Rubin wrote. Israel’s
air-defense systems, such as Iron Dome and David’s Sling, “will probably be able
to destroy most incoming missiles, but not all of them,” he said.
Nasrallah has boasted of the precision of Hezbollah’s missiles. According to
foreign reports, Hezbollah attempted to receive GPS “suitcase kits” from Iran in
February 2019 for upgrading the precision of its missile arsenal.
We also know that as far back as 2017, Ynet warned that Iran was using the Iran
Deal to upgrade the precision of its rockets. These GPS-guided missiles were
turning “dumb” rockets into precision munitions. Iran tested them against ISIS,
used them against Kurdish dissidents in 2018 and fired ballistic missiles at a
US base in Iraq in January. It also sent ballistic missiles to Iraqi militias in
2018 and 2019.
ACCORDING TO the Alma Research Center in July, Hezbollah has 28 launch sites for
rockets in Beirut. These sites include Fateh 110 missiles, and “these particular
missiles are subject to Hezbollah’s missile-precision project,” the report said.
Launch sites are located in southern Beirut, it said.
We need to understand the PGM threat and its links to the tragedy in Beirut as
part of the same context. Hezbollah’s hijacking of Lebanon’s government helped
cause the corruption, irresponsibility and unaccountability that led to the
government’s failure to secure a warehouse full of dangerous ammonium nitrate.
Hezbollah traffics in the same dangerous chemicals, even if this wasn’t linked
to this warehouse. It has hollowed out Lebanon to create smuggling networks, and
people are fearful to demand accountability regarding things like a warehouse
full of explosive material.
The terrorist group has also stockpiled weapons in other places in Beirut. It is
building factories to transform rockets into precision munitions. It has
threatened to use those rockets against Israeli infrastructure. Nasrallah has
said in speeches that he could target Israeli gas storage facilities to harm
civilians.
That Hezbollah uses other warehouses to store weapons is known; that it uses
them in civilian areas is also well known. Any attempt to challenge Hezbollah
has been met with assassinations and threats in Lebanon.
That Lebanon can unload weapons via its own terminal at Beirut Port shows how
unregulated its transfer of dangerous weapons has become.
Israel has warned about the PGM threat and Hezbollah’s destabilizing activities.
The foreign reports and IDF report last year make clear how serious a threat
these weapons have become, as well as the network of illicit storage, corruption
and state weakness.
Qatari royal family member authorized arms supply to
Hezbollah - dossier
Benjamin Weinthal and Jonathan Spyer/Jerusalem Post/August
06/2020
A dossier provided by security contractor, Jason G., documented the role played
since 2017 by a Qatari royal family member in a sprawling terror finance scheme.
By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL, JONATHAN SPYER/Jerusalem Post/ AUGUST 6, 2020 14:03
Qatar’s monarchy has allegedly financed weapons deliveries to the global
terrorist movement Hezbollah, a private security contractor, who claims to have
worked for western intelligence agencies as well as a consultant to the Gulf
state, has told The Jerusalem Post.
The private security contractor, Jason G., said that he penetrated Qatar’s
weapons procurement business as part of an apparent sting operation. He told The
Post this week that a “member of the royal family” authorized the delivery of
military hardware to the US- and EU-designated terrorist entity Hezbollah in
Lebanon. A dossier provided by Jason G. documented the alleged role played since
2017 by a Qatari royal family member in a sprawling terror finance scheme.
The Lebanese Hezbollah organization is an Iranian proxy Shia militia,
established by Tehran’s Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) in
Lebanon in 1982. It remains dependent on Iranian finance and support.
Abdulrahman bin Mohammed Sulaiman al-Khulaifi, Qatar’s ambassador to Belgium and
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), allegedly sought to pay Jason G.
750,000 euros to hush up the role of Qatar’s regime in supplying money and
weapons to the Lebanese Shi’ite organization.
Jason G. said that at a January 2019 meeting with al-Khulaifi in Brussels, the
envoy said, “The Jews are our enemies.”
Jason G., who uses an alias to shield himself from Qatari retaliation, said his
goal was for “Qatar to stop funding extremists.” The “bad apples need to be
taken out of the barrel and for them [Qatar] to be part of the international
community,” he added.
Dr. Azmi Bishara an Arab Israeli former parliamentarian who stood accused of
aiding Hezbollah in its war against Israel in 2006, found refuge and royal
patronage (and immunity from prosecution) in Doha.
In the wake of the new revelations, prominent European politicians this week
urged a swift crackdown on Qatar’s alleged support for terror finance and
Hezbollah.
Nathalie Goulet, a French senator who led a commission investigating jihadist
networks in Europe and authored a report for NATO on terror finance, told
FoxNews.com: “We must have a European policy regarding Qatar and especially be
careful with its financing of terrorism. Belgium must ask the EU for an
investigation and freeze all Qatari bank account in the meantime.”
She continued, “We have to settle a general policy with a special warning and a
prudent policy to prevent any financing of terrorism, especially from countries
like Qatar or Turkey” that are supporting the Muslim Brotherhood and its
dangerous anti-Semitic ideology.
Ian Paisley Jr., a member of the British Parliament who tracks terror finance,
said that the Qatari regime conduct “outlined is outrageous and the government
both in the UK and Belgium should act decisively. These allegations are very
serious, particularly given that the ambassador is ambassador to NATO, and this
should be investigated and appropriate action taken.
“Hezbollah are a proscribed terrorist group in Britain and working with them
can’t be tolerated. I will tomorrow contact the UK foreign secretary and ask him
to investigate these allegations and make representations to the ambassador,”
Paisley said.
Dr. Efraim Zuroff, the chief Nazi-hunter for the US human rights organization
the Simon Wiesenthal Center, said Qatar’s alleged role in financing Hezbollah
terrorists “requires prompt action against those involved and immediate
expulsion of the Qatari ambassador.”
According to Jason G., two Qatari charities furnished cash to Hezbollah in
Beirut “under the guise of food and medicine.” He named the organizations
involved as the Sheikh Eid Bin Mohammad Al Thani Charitable Association and the
Education Above All Foundation.
Jason G., who claims to have worked for various intelligence services, said that
his dossier was viewed by top German intelligence officials. The German weekly
Die Zeit reported last month that Jason G.’s dossier could fetch as much as 10
million euros. This has not been verified by the Post.
Qatar’s financial and charity systems have been embroiled in other alleged
terror finance schemes. The Washington Free Beacon reported in June that a
lawsuit filed in New York City asserted that Qatari institutions, including
Qatar Charity (formerly known as the Qatar Charitable Society) and Qatar
National Bank, funded Palestinian terrorist organizations.
The plaintiffs in the case included the family of Taylor Force, an American
military veteran killed by the Palestinian Sunni terrorist organization Hamas in
2016.
“Qatar co-opted several institutions that it dominates and controls to funnel
coveted US dollars (the chosen currency of Middle East terrorist networks) to
Hamas and PIJ [Palestinian Islamic Jihad] under the false guise of charitable
donations,” the lawsuit reads.
In 2014, German Development Minister Gerd Müller accused Qatar of financing
Islamic State terrorists. “This kind of conflict, this kind of a crisis always
has a history.... The ISIS troops, the weapons – these are lost sons, with some
of them from Iraq,” the minister told German public broadcaster ZDF.
“You have to ask who is arming, who is financing ISIS troops. The keyword there
is Qatar – and how do we deal with these people and states politically,” said
Müller.
Then-Israeli ambassador to the UN Ron Prosor, writing in The New York Times
opinion section in 2014, termed the energy-rich Qatari monarchy a “Club Med for
terrorists.”
Israel offers medical aid to Lebanon, response is
silence/“It’s a shame that people will die for no reason.”
Jerusalem Post/August 06/2020
The heads of several Israeli hospitals have reached out to Lebanese officials
and the United Nations offering medical support to the country’s wounded.
“It hurts to see the children – little children – crying and injured,” Dr. Masad
Barhoum, director-general of Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya told The
Jerusalem Post. “People without children – their lives destroyed in an instance.
They need medical and psychological help.”
Barhoum, a Christian Arab, speaks Arabic. On Wednesday, he took to social
networks and the radio appealing directly in their language to the Lebanese
president and prime minister, and even Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, to
allow him to help.
Galilee Medical Center is just several kilometers from the Lebanese border and,
due to its proximity, the staff has learned to mobilize quickly and to work
under emergency conditions. Since 1981, with the outbreak of the First Lebanon
War, the hospital has adopted work procedures as a hospital on the confrontation
line.
Barhoum said Lebanese citizens could be transferred to Israel via the UN Interim
Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) and then returned the same way. They would cross at
the Rosh Hanikra Crossing, also known as Ras al-Naqoura Crossing.
“The idea is to help them and return them home in peace,” said Barhoum. “We have
no agenda, there are no enemies in this situation. As medical professionals, we
do not differentiate.”
Barhoum said that no hospital system could stand up to the task of treating so
many injured people at one time – estimates are that more than 4,000 are in need
of care. This is even more so the situation in Lebanon, where the country is
faced with deep economic challenges. He said he reads Lebanese social media
posts and he sees the people are angry, confused and even disillusioned. The
government, too, is afraid to make the wrong move as the people are watching
closely.
On Wednesday, rumors that wounded UNIFIL personnel were being treated at Galilee
Medical Center surfaced, but Barhoum said this is not the case, although he
expects that this could happen soon. Late Tuesday, UNIFIL reported that a ship
from its Maritime Task Force was damaged, leaving some UNIFIL naval peacekeepers
injured – some of them seriously.
“UNIFIL is transporting the injured peacekeepers to the nearest hospital for
medical treatment,” the statement read.
Ziv Medical Center in Safed has also reached out to Lebanon to help. Late
Tuesday, it posted on Twitter that it was “experienced and prepared” to take in
wounded.
Hospital head Dr. Salman Zarka said he had been in direct contact with the IDF
Northern Command and reached out to the UN to offer assistance.
He told the Post that until 2000, his hospital treated Lebanese citizens on a
regular basis.
“Two years ago, a Lebanese woman came to visit us at the medical center,” Zarka
recalled. “She told us that she and her mother had received medical care 30
years ago and that she still remembers us and wanted to say thank you.
“A meaningful story like this says that in such incidents, when there are dead
and injured, you need to let the medical workers do their jobs and leave
politics behind,” he concluded.
Sources in the know said that the UN is considering opening up a field hospital
in Cyprus where an international medical team could offer support. Zarka said it
is likely that Israeli doctors will join any international delegation.
“If there is an international delegation then Lebanon won’t put any condition
that there not be Israelis – that would be absurd,” he said.
The government and UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process
Nickolay Mladenov have been in contact about Israel’s aid offer, an Israeli
official said.
Shortly before press time, a source in UNIFIL told KAN News that Israel is in
the advanced stages of talks to transfer specific equipment to Lebanon, although
neither Israel nor UNIFIL would confirm the report.
Israel is negotiating sending equipment to detect missing people under collapsed
buildings, medical equipment and to treat people who were injured who have
foreign citizenship, Israel Hayom reported.
Israel has long provided medical assistance to countries in need.
Prof. Elhanan Bar-On, director of the Israel Center for Disaster Medicine and
Humanitarian Response at Sheba Medical Center, spoke to Israel Radio on
Wednesday and explained that the Jewish state could offer both nursing care on
the border or accept injured patients into Israeli hospitals.
“Of course, sending medical personnel to Lebanon is not practical – there are
forces there that could interfere with such an operation,” he said.
When asked how Israeli hospitals could accept more patients when they are
challenged with treating coronavirus patients, he said that, “If God forbid
there is an earthquake in our area, then everything will change… An earthquake
does not recognize coronavirus and it does not recognize borders and fences.”
He added that coronavirus patients are being treated largely in internal
medicine wards and not trauma units, so surgical wards are not unreasonably
crowded.
“Israel is ready to help,” added Zarka. “It’s a shame that people will die for
no reason.”
Lahav Harkov contributed to this report.
Who is sending aid to Beirut? Dozens of countries send
planes and medics
Seith J. Frantman/Jerusalem Post/August 06/2020
It is one of the first times since the COVID-19 outbreak that
many countries are coming together to do something as an international
community.
In the aftermath of the massive explosion that caused more than 130 deaths,
injured thousands and displaced many people in Beirut, countries are rallying to
provide aid. It is one of the first times since the COVID-19 outbreak that many
countries are coming together to do something as an international community.
The following is a list of some of the countries that have provided support so
far.
Russia has sent several planes with emergency supplies and exports. The third
plane from Russia stopped in Saratov on the way on Thursday. It is an IL-76 with
15 specialists and equipment and a lab for COVID-19 tests. 100 Russian
specialists are already on the ground with doctors and rescue workers in Beirut.
French President Emmanuel Macron arrived in Lebanon on Thursday to show his
support and France’s support. France is the former colonial power and has
hundreds of years of cultural, linguistic and religious ties to Lebanon. France
has sent several military aircraft with 55 search and rescue personnel and 25
tonnes of medical supplies. These include a third plane that is from the
shipping giant CMA-CGM, according to reports.
In Iraq Ayatollah Ali Sistani has called on all countries to help. The head of
the Iraqi Red Crescent also announced that a transport plane from Iraq with
medical aid was on the way.
A Turkish military aircraft has flown to Lebanon as well. It brought with it aid
and search and rescue teams. It left Ankara on Wednesday at the behest of
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey said.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei has expressed solidarity with Lebanon’s
suffering. Iran has offered to treat the wounded from the blast.
Latest articles from Jpost Israel was one of the early countries to offer aid
and reports indicate aid may be sent via a third party. In Qatar Al Udeid
airbase was a hive of activity as hospital beds, generators and sheet s were put
on four cargo planes to be sent to Lebanon Wednesday. Jordan has sent a field
hospital, the King said. The hospital will include specialists and staff.
Holland sent 67 aid workers, including doctors, and firefighters. The UK’s Prime
Minister Boris Johnson said England is ready to provide support.
Tunisia has sent two military planes with food aid and medical supplies. Poland
has set up a camp in Beirut with firefighters and other experts. A team of 36
from the Czech Republic are also on the way. Saudi Arabia has said that
Saudi-funded medical teams are on the ground in Lebanon. The UAE has sent 30
tons of medical supplies, according to Hend al-Otaiba and other officials. The
Crown Prince Mohamed bin Zayed al-Nahyan and armed forces commander are
coordinating the support.
Cyprus has said it will accept injured people from Beirut and send medics if
needed. China is also sending support and peacekeepers will provide medical aid.
Chinese members of UNIFIL will organize an emergency team with nine medical
personnel initial reports indicated.
Lebanese Journalist Nader Fawz Flays State Officials Over Beirut Blast: Their
Hands Are Stained With The Blood Of The Victims, They Must Be Ousted And Held
Accountable
MEMRI/August 06/2020
On August 5, 2020, one day after the massive blast in the port of Beirut, which
caused immense devastation and thousands of dead and injured, Lebanese
journalist Nader Fawz wrote a scathing column in the Lebanese independent online
daily almodon.com in which he blamed the disaster on Lebanon's leadership. He
wrote that "Lebanon's serial killers, the ones responsible for its security, its
institutions and its decision-making, have completed their series of murders
against the people," adding that no curse is bad enough to describe these
"murderers" and "bloodsuckers."
Noting that the Lebanese have long since lost all faith in their authorities,
but that this explosion was the last straw, he added that the hands of the state
officials, chief of them Prime Minister Hassan Diab, are stained with the blood
of the victims who died in this explosion, as well as countless other Lebanese
who have died of hunger, disease and oppression. These officials, he concluded,
must resign and be made to pay for their crimes, whether through the courts or
in other ways.
Aftermath of Beirut port blast (source: dailystar.com.lb, August 4, 2020)
The following are excerpts from his article:[1]
"The Lebanese state created a time bomb and planted it in the port of Beirut, an
area that all Lebanese, from every region and every sect, and of every political
affiliation, visit and see. The state caused its citizens harm through the
explosion of chemicals that were stored at the port several months ago [sic.]
without the slightest sense of political or human responsibility. Lebanon's
serial killers, the ones responsible for its security, its institutions and its
decision-making, have completed their series of murders against the people. This
time the killing was carried out directly, rather than through economic
suffocation or torture that saps the morale. It was planned and premeditated, or
at least known in advance. This act of murder was not an isolated incident. It
is [part of] a system, part of an organized crime. It is a clear act of murder,
a massacre carried out using ammonium nitrate that was stored at the port.
"Beirut port looks as though a meteor struck it, igniting a conflagration and
causing shockwaves that were visible to the naked eye before they engulfed us,
leaving destruction, fatalities and injuries in their wake. Beirut is a
disaster-struck capital, its buildings ruined and its residents homeless. Shop
windows were torn from their place and the entire city was reduced to a
skeleton. The city had slowly expired over several months [due to the economic
crisis]… leaving only a corpse… and then came this blast and destroyed the
little flesh that was still clinging [on its bones]. The districts of Al-Gemmayzeh,
Badaro and Ras Beirut are now completely devastated. The number of victims is
still unknown, but the sight of dust-covered corpses in the port indicates that
the number is vast. Some were buried where they stood, others were felled in
their offices, in their chairs or in their cars. This blast harmed everyone, the
entire city and country.
"The explosion at the port was the last nail in the coffin of Beirut, which died
when the [entire] state died, after falling into the hands of the gang that
rules it. There are no words to describe the atrocities of this [gang]. They are
murderers who shed blood in [times of] war and [times of] peace, bloodsuckers,
mutants who have turned into beasts of prey the likes of which nature has never
seen. No curse in the book and no expression of evil or corruption is strong
enough to describe them. The first thing they did [after the blast] is to
contact [one another] to see if they were [all] ok. Some of them even visited
one another, while people's body-parts and the contents of houses were still
strewn in the streets. The Lebanese state announced a period of mourning for the
victims it itself had killed. [Later] the officials will once again attend the
funerals of people they murdered.
"The militias never perpetrated such a massacre in 15 years of war that moved
from one place to another. The Zionist enemy did not perpetrate such a massacre
in 45 years of war and hostility. The criminal Syrian regime did not carry out
such a massacre in 30 years of patronage [over Lebanon]. But these militia
leaders [of the Lebanese regime] banded together, organized themselves and
together perpetrated a crime in the name of the Lebanese state, the greatest
crime in the history of Lebanon. [The fact that this crime] was carried out by
the Lebanese state… constitutes the final admission that the only recourse left
to the Lebanese is to turn to the governments of foreign countries, which may
accept them as refugees or immigrants and thereby rescue them. [The Lebanese]
are surrounded by an enemy to the south [i.e., Israel] and an enemy to the east
and north [i.e., Syria], and [now] their [own] state has detonated the [outlet
to] the sea. So they will sit at home and wait for their imminent death.
"There was real hope that the scenario of the blast being caused by an Israeli
attack on Beirut port would prove to be correct. The regime and its leaders led
us to hope that this massacre had [indeed] been perpetrated by the Israeli
enemy. We do not love death or murder, but if it has to happen, we prefer it to
be at the hands of an enemy. A murder perpetrated by our own state means that we
sit here exposed, easy prey in a field of ceaseless killing where everyone takes
aim at our flesh. The Lebanese had already lost all hope in their political
parties and authorities, but this last crime was the final proof.
"There was a sad final scene in which Prime Minister Hassan Diab appeared and
told the Lebanese people that 'Beirut is bereft and all of Lebanon is a disaster
zone.' Diab demanded that the Lebanese join forces and cope with the [horrific]
sights as a united nation. Once again, the murderer sits with the victim to
console [the victim's] family. Instead of resigning and stepping down, he wrote
down a list of demands. The blood of the Beirut victims, whose number [already]
exceeds 50, is on his hands and on the hands of the other state officials, as is
the [blood of] hundreds of other victims who die every day from disease, hunger
and oppression, as well as those who will fall [in the future]: in a few hours,
in a week, or later. Responsibility for the August 4 disaster in Beirut lies
with the officials, who are busy cutting the people's throats… They are
murderers and have to leave now, today, not tomorrow, either the easy way or the
hard way. They must pay the price for their crimes, within the law or outside
it, in the courtroom or on the street. They are murderers and it is time to oust
them, before another massacre or [event] we will mourn takes place."
[1] Almodon.com, August 5, 2020.
Iranian, Lebanese Experts On Iranian TV: We Cannot Rule Out
The Possibility That The Beirut Explosion Was A Deliberate Act; Israel, America
Stand To Gain From This
MEMRI/August 06/2020
Source: Channel 2 (Iran)
On August 5, 2020, Channel 2 (Iran) aired a discussion about the same-day
explosion that took place in the Port of Beirut. Iranian regional affairs expert
Hossein Akbari said that America, Israel, and their allies benefit from Lebanon
being in a state of chaos. He said that the best-case scenario is that the
explosion was a result of negligence, and that in the worst-case scenario, it
was a deliberate act. Lebanese analyst Muhammad Shamas said that the possibility
of sabotage cannot be ruled out, and that statements by U.S. President Donald
Trump and Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu seem to suggest the involvement of the
U.S. or Israel. He also said that there have been reports that planes had been
seen in the area of the explosion not long before it took place, and that
American planes had been seen off the coasts of Lebanon and Syria.
Hossein Akbari: "From a certain perspective, America, the Zionist regime, and
their allies need Lebanon to be in a state of chaos but not entirely
disintegrated, so that they can place difficulties before it and its people.
They started with Iraq, then went on to Syria, and have even implemented
sanctions on us. As they themselves say, they started with a chain of sanctions,
with economic pressure, and with creating social crises with regard to the
resistance. As for this [explosion] that took place now... Those who benefit
from this the most are the Americans, who can apply pressure to the Lebanese
people. Neither the [Americans] nor the Israelis have the ability to confront
Hizbullah, and they can sense that Hizbullah is growing stronger by the day.
"In the best-case scenario, we could say that their inability to enforce
management plans, and to pay attention to this danger... I don't know to what
degree they were aware of this danger and threat, and what problems it would
cause... In the worst-case scenario, they deliberately cause it in order to
pressure the Lebanese people."
Muhammad Shamas: "We can't rule out the possibility that this was an act of
sabotage. Who would benefit from such a thing? Especially since we head that
yesterday, a few hours after the explosion, Trump said that a few officers had
told him that this was an attack, and not a regular explosion. Today, the
Pentagon and some American officials have denied this. Six hours after the
explosion in Beirut, Zionist regime leader Netanyahu said in a tweet: 'We defend
ourselves by various means.' This all seems to indicate what Israel has done...
In addition, there have been reports that there were planes in the area 24 hours
prior to the explosion. All this arouses suspicion. American planes were seen
off the coasts of Lebanon and Syria. So we mustn't rule out the theory that this
was a deliberate act, even though there is still no evidence of that."
Lebanese Journalist Jerry Maher: Hizbullah, Lebanon's Corrupt Political System
To Blame For Beirut Port Explosion
MEMRI/August 06/2020
Jerry Maher, a Lebanese journalist who is the CEO of Radio Sawt Beirut
International, said in an August 5, 2020 show on Al-Arabiya Network (Saudi
Arabia) that the same-day explosion in Beirut is a massacre in which Hizbullah
is the primary suspect because it uses ports and government facilities to
transport weapons. He said that Lebanon’s corrupt political system is also to
blame because it has given up on confronting Hizbullah and chooses to serve
personal interests at the expense of the Lebanese people.
Jerry Maher: "Unfortunately, today we witnessed a real massacre in Beirut. The
primary suspect is Hizbullah, more than anyone else in the world, because
Hizbullah uses ports and all the other Lebanese government facilities in order
to acquire weapons.
"Hizbullah has been using Beirut's international airport – the Martyr PM Rafic
Hariri Airport – for years. It has also used the Beirut port to transport these
weapons. Today, nobody but Hizbullah is responsible [for the port explosion].
The corrupt system that allowed this party to use the Lebanese ports for its own
objectives is also [responsible].
"No only Hizbullah is responsible – so are the political system, the quotas, and
the arrangements that [President] General Aoun and [former] PM Saad Al-Hariri
have made with the rest of the leaders of what used to be the March 14 Alliance.
They are the ones who have given up on confronting Hizbullah in order to protect
their financial, economic, and political gains. Because of their personal
interest, we have reached a situation in which nobody dares to criticize
Hizbullah. Since 2014, we have not heard a single voice standing up to Hizbullah.
Since 2014, it has been forbidden to even say one word to Hizbullah, as if
Hizbullah is a religion or a sect not connected to reality or to its country.
"If you criticize their policy, you are 'sectarian.' If you criticize their
terror, you are an 'agent,' a 'terrorist,' a 'criminal,' and a 'murderer.' They
banish you from the country, they accuse you of incitement, and they threaten to
kill you. The political system has given [Hizbullah] everything it wants and has
surrendered to it. Unfortunately, today we see the result. We have lost Lebanon,
and we have lost everything in this country because of the policies of these
fools who supposedly went into politics to serve Lebanon, but instead have
served their personal interests, their pockets, and their projects, which they
want to advance at the expense of the Lebanese people.
"How can we ask for aid from other countries today while there is a terrorist
organization [in Lebanon] threatening the KSA and the UAE? According to an
unambiguous statement by [Arab Coalition Spokesman] Colonel Turki Al-Maliki, the
missiles that were sent to Yemen and launched against the KSA came from the
Beirut port, the exact same place that exploded today."
French President Macron in Lebanon: Aid will not go to
corrupt hands
Reuters/Alex Winston/August 06/2020
US, French and German citizens are all reported to have died in the blast as the
death toll continues to rise on Thursday.
French President Emmanuel Macron landed in Beirut on Thursday as the first
foreign leader to visit since a huge explosion on Tuesday that killed at least
145 people and injured around 5,000.
After visiting the port at the epicenter of the blast, Macron was greeted by
crowds in nearby Gemmayze street, one of the most damaged in the city, who
shouted chants against the political establishment and endemic corruption.
"I guarantee you, this aid will not go to corrupt hands," said Macron.
He promised to send more medical and other aid to Lebanon, while those around
him chanted "Revolution" and "The people want the fall of the regime." Some also
chanted against President Michel Aoun as anger rises against Lebanese
politicians for a perceived lack of response.
"I will talk to all political forces to ask them for a new pact. I am here today
to propose a new political pact to them," he said, shaking hands on roads strewn
with rubble and flanked by shops with windows blown out.
Residents, shop owners and volunteers have led clean-up efforts in the popular
street of cafes and restaurants, where the blast ripped out balconies and
smashed store facades.
Macron was applauded by the crowds in the neighborhood, with chants of "Vive la
France! Help us! You are our only hope!"
An online petition on the website of US-based non profit organization Avaaz for
France to place Lebanon under French mandate for the next 10 years garnered over
50,000 signatures.
A French citizen, architect Jean-Marc Bonfils, died in the blast, French Culture
Minister Roselyne Bachelot stated on Twitter.
At least one US citizen was killed in the explosion, and several more were
injured, the US embassy announced Wednesday night according to the Associated
Press.
“We offer our sincerest condolences to their loved ones and are working to
provide the affected US citizens and their families all possible consular
assistance. We are working closely with local authorities to determine if any
additional US citizens were affected,” the embassy said in a statement.
An employee at the German embassy in Beirut also died in Tuesday's blast the
German foreign ministry said on Thursday.
"Our worst fear was confirmed. A member of our embassy in Beirut was killed in
her home in the aftermath of the explosion," Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said in
a statement.
Several Beirut port officials have been placed under house arrest by the
Lebanese government in the aftermath of the blast.
Prime Minister Hassan Diab declared three days of mourning starting Thursday, as
early investigations blamed negligence for the explosion at Beirut Port.
It is estimated that as many as 300,000 people have been made homeless after the
blast that rocked the Lebanese capital and was felt as far away as Cyprus - 170
km. away.
The cause of the blast is suspected to be the unsafe storage of over 2,750
tonnes of highly explosive ammonium nitrate in a warehouse next to the port.
Reports have tried to determine whether the warehouse was connected to the
terror group Hezbollah.
The white, crystalline solid had reportedly been stored in the warehouse for six
years; customs and port officials reportedly asked several times for it to be
removed due to its unsafe nature.
Badri Daher, director-general of Lebanese Customs, told broadcaster LBCI on
Wednesday that customs had sent six documents to the judiciary warning that the
material posed a danger.
"We requested that it be re-exported but that did not happen. We leave it to the
experts and those concerned to determine why," Daher said.
Damage from the blast is expected to run over $10 billion and has placed extra
burdens on a country which is already suffering from economic and political
crises.
Aid has poured into the troubled Middle Eastern country to help find survivors
and with the clean-up process, with Australia pledging an initial $1.4 million,
Russia sending several cargo planes of equipment including a mobile hospital,
and Israel reaching out to offer medical aid to those injured.
A World Health Organization plane carrying 20 tonnes of supplies landed in
Beirut on Thursday morning. The supplies will cover 1,000 trauma and 1,000
surgical interventions for people suffering from injuries and burns resulting
from the blast, according to the WHO.
“Our hearts and prayers are with all those affected by this tragic event, as we
continue our mission to serve all people in Lebanon with life-saving and
essential health care services," said WHO representative in Lebanon Dr. Iman
Shankiti. "We are working closely with national health authorities, health
partners and hospitals treating the wounded to identify additional needs and
ensure immediate support.”
Officials have not confirmed the origin of an initial blaze that sparked the
explosion, although a security source and local media said it was started by
welding work.
Lebanese officials have stressed that the investigation into the incident is
ongoing and the exact cause of the explosion is unclear.
*Tzvi Joffre contributed to this report.
Mother of Disasters in Lebanon
Salman Al-Dossary/Asharq Al Awsat/August,06/2020
So many terrorist incidents and explosions took place over the past decades,
that only a few remain unyieldingly stuck in our minds. The world remembers very
well the images of the nuclear bomb that hit Hiroshima well, as well as the
moment the World Trade Center collapsed on September 11. There is no
exaggeration in saying that the catastrophic scenes of the explosion in Port of
Beirut are no different from them. It will stay on our minds for a long time,
not only because of the suffering it left behind as thousands of innocents were
killed or injured, but also because it will be a real turning point for this
devastated country. The mother of Lebanon’s disasters, not a term used here to
repeat the famous phrase, what comes after the bombing will not be the same as
what had been before it, but, rather, to say that if the Lebanese are not
awakened by the worst disaster in the country's modern history, they will never
wake up. If the time has not yet come for ending the vicious cycle that has been
ravaging the country for years, it will never come.
How tragic for the Lebanese to wake up to an explosion caused by materials
equivalent to 1,800 tons of highly explosive "TNT" that had been stored at a
Hezbollah site in an area full of civilians. The Lebanese found out that this
extremely dangerous substance had not been stored near the Israeli border to be
used in the battle to "liberate Jerusalem", which Hezbollah’s slogans promise.
Instead, they had been procured in order to strike the stability of Lebanon and
the Lebanese and for regional and international terrorist activity. The huge
explosion did not only shake Beirut. It shook the minds of all the Lebanese,
making them realize that this is the norm and its opposite is the exception.
What is forthcoming is worse than the explosion at the port so long Hezbollah is
imposed as the ruler and leader of the state by the political game, choosing the
president, appointing the cabinet, managing it, occupying its ports and deciding
its political positions, all with the help of its majority in the representative
assembly. On top of all that, it is confronting America, Europe, and the Arab
states. What kind of grim future awaits Lebanon then?!
The explosion of almost nuclear proportions that hit the port, shaking the
entire country, is not the only disaster. Lebanon’s real catastrophe is its lack
of friends. Its Hezbollah controlled government is hostile to everyone and has
isolated itself from everyone. No one wants to cooperate with Iranian proxies
any longer, so they disengaged and left Lebanon in the dark, waiting for it to
become a normal country again. Yet it is hoped that the world saves Lebanon. How
can a country that is led by a terrorist party and helps it achieve its project
be saved? How are we to deal with a party that is pushing its citizens to their
death and playing with their lives to succeed in its endless adventures?
The solution for Lebanon will not be attained through an investigative committee
that investigates with everyone but Hezbollah, its tools, and those subservient
to it. The solution will not be achieved by waiting for salvation from abroad.
Global sympathy, no matter how strong, will be temporary. The prescription for
curing Lebanon of its cancer is short: inside before outside. If the Lebanese do
not rid themselves of this cancer, which has spread throughout their country, no
foreign power will be able to help them.
Facing up to Hezbollah is certainly not easy, and its cost would be high. No one
can blame the weaker faction for its inability to defy the more powerful one,
but it is one of only two potential scenarios. The other, even harsher and more
difficult, is that the country collapses and Hezbollah’s infrastructure
collapses with it, after which saving the country becomes less costly than it is
currently. Between these two scenarios, each harder than the other, the country
will continue to reel from one disaster after another until God puts an end to
it. In any case, this means nothing more than an endless series of catastrophes
that will only stop once the state stands on the ruins of Hezbollah.
Reclaiming the Lost City, Beirut
Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al Awsat/August,06/2020
As if the winds of painful ends stormed the city. Dead bodies are left on the
streets because of lack of space. As some leading hospitals sustained heavy
losses and as the scale of the tragedy exceeded the capacity of the
firefighters, civil defense, the Red Cross and the medical staff… the lost city,
was declared in disaster mode. Beirut woke up to the horrors of a stab unlike
anything seen before. This is the day of funerals and they are many… It’s the
day to keep searching for the missing and they’re not a few. It’s the day to
assess the damage, which is colossal. The blast did not spare ceilings, walls,
and façades, nor did it have mercy on places of worship, hospitals, and schools.
As if a massive killer decided to finish off the city and shower its people with
crushed glass and rubble. Stark death came at the worst moment.
It was no secret that the sun of Lebanon was setting. And that the Lebanese
decision-makers did not catch the meaning of the major changes in the region to
invent a new role for their country. It was clear that they were delving into
other dictionaries.
Lebanon seemed to be heading towards its centenary this year, handcuffed, and
devastated. There are those who believe that this small entity, which was built
a century ago, was a mistake. The events revealed the lack of a solid base that
would guard the map and protect it from foreign appetites and internal
adventures.
The Lebanese refuse to admit the declining role of their country, as do those
who refuse to acknowledge getting old. They lie to themselves, then the events
happen and deny their claims. A country’s roles are not gifts received for free.
They are made with effort, patience, good use of experiences, and timing.
In the past few years, Lebanon was no longer a player, whose role is to be taken
into consideration. It was no longer a source of danger to others, but rather a
source of danger to itself.
The circumstances that gave Lebanon the opportunity to present itself as an open
window for the future have changed. It lost its pioneering role. It was no
longer a laboratory for the interaction of ideas, but rather closer to a
container of explosives. It was no longer an explicit lesson of tolerance, but
rather came to confirm the thorny nature of coexistence between differences.
It is no longer the lung, the window, and the island sought by those who are
burdened with the weight of censorship in their countries or the distress of
their decision-makers. The region has changed but Lebanon remained engaged in
futile internal political wars. It is no longer a pioneer in the media, higher
education, and hospitalization, nor in the banking sector. In this dilapidated
Lebanon, the earthquake erupted, as if the city’s port chose to kill the city
and drown with it. After horrific hours, it was revealed that dangerous
materials had been left for years in the port. Neglect turned into a massive
bomb that was able to silence a nation and end a war.
The Lebanese were trying to confront hunger that persistently knocks on their
doors. But death stormed into their houses, bringing the brutal coronavirus and
poverty back to the second row. Yesterday’s most painful scenes were those of
the parents of the missing. Anxiety and fear turned into horror as time passed
without hearing reassurance or clarification. Missing people in a lost capital.
This saying is not exaggerated. Years ago, the Lebanese lost their capital. It
is no longer the natural center for their decision, coexistence, and unity.
Beirut was lost. It is no longer the Lebanese people’s opportunity and window to
progress and freedom.
Beirut became the arena for intimidation and attempts to impose dictionaries and
vocabulary in complete disregard for the nature of the country and the city.
General Michel Aoun has failed to enter the palace with a rescue project. He
wasted three years of his tenure and of the Lebanese people’s life. He missed
the opportunity that he had created at the beginning of the era for a wide rally
around him, even from his former opponents.
His advisors did not overcome the ideas of the past decade. They squandered his
credit in small wars. The circle of relatives deepened grudges and awakened
hatred. The Lebanese revolted against those who stole their money, and the
punishment was a bleak government that lacks experience, knowledge and
independence, hastening the collapse towards the abyss.
But there’s a silver lining in this disastrous darkness. The Lebanese assets in
the banks of Beirut evaporated, but Beirut’s credit in the world’s heart did not
evaporate. This is what Arab, Islamic and international reactions have shown.
The relationship with Lebanon is one thing, and that with the residents of the
Palace and the Serail is another.
Perhaps it is the last chance for General Aoun to restore the minimum necessary
for an independent decision and for putting back the country on the right track
within the international community rather than dragging it into regional axes.
When the Lebanese decide to regain their capital, they will find in the region
and the world those who encourage them to reclaim their modest role in the
region and their humble position on the world map.
Before the arrival of visitors and aid, General Aoun should review his policy
and his accounts. He must give back to the Lebanese their lost capital;
otherwise, history will blame him for its loss.
It is his last chance to save the remainder of his tenure and save the country
from disintegration. He must change his approach and reconcile with the facts
and the conditions for getting out of the economic abyss.
The lost capital can only be recovered with a serious project for statehood.
Only a serious state must govern, hold accountable, punish, reassure, and defend
the citizens and the land. The failure to take this path takes the tenure and
its master towards painful ends.
From Gamal Abdel Nasser to Hassan Diab
Hazem Saghieh/Asharq Al Awsat/August,06/2020
Something unusual happened in Lebanon a few days ago. Hassan Diab became a star
of national liberation. From now on, no Lebanese ruler will smile and nod to the
foreign "Khawaja”. The era of humiliating oppression is over. The era of dignity
begins. Gamal Abdel Nasser's animated phrase, "Raise your head, brother",
illuminates our path. Perhaps it is precisely from here, and nowhere else, that
we come to understand the deep secret of Foreign Minister Nassif Hitti’s
resignation: diplomacy is surplus to the requirements of our relationship with
the external world.
Pride and nationalism shape this relationship. This approach has many
precedents: Nikita Khrushchev waved shoes in the United Nations. Moammar
al-Gaddafi tried to set up a tent there, in the New York open air... These were
the pioneers of Easternism, whom we are now imitating as we pack our luggage to
head East.
This behavior was indeed neither familiar nor even imaginable: that a first-tier
Lebanese official would confront a Western official, even of the fifth tier.
What the prime minister has done is shift the paradigm of a country whose rulers
have long been described as subordinates who comply with Western dictates.
The blow hit like a sucker punch. Hassan Diab "violently criticized" the French
Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian during his visit to Beirut. He told him that
his "information is false", on the situation in Lebanon, describing his visit as
"not presenting anything new." Other sources added that he let him hear the
following: “I am the head of the government of Lebanon, and I do not allow you
to give me instructions on what to do. I am not Saad Hariri and will not take
your instructions.”
So, the Lebanese prime minister did not nod at his colonizer in accordance with
the former’s inferiority complex with regard to the latter, or that of the black
man to the white man. The French mandate ended three-quarters of a century ago.
Peoples are liberated and being liberated; liberation is a healing process.
The fact of the matter is that Diab's membership of the national liberation club
is very legitimate, as a resistor in his words and positions. However, this club
has changed a lot from what it had been when it was established after the Second
World War. Initially, its leaders had major projects, regardless of our opinion
on their projects. Among them were Jawaharlal Nehru, Gamal Abdel Nasser and
Kwame Nkrumah.
In the 1970s, the club's figures were people like Saddam Hussein, Hafez al-Assad
and Moammar al-Gaddafi, whose only projects were maintaining power. This
constituted the first degeneration of national liberation. But since the 1990s,
and after the demise of the Soviet camp, the figures began to lose their thunder
and their old age began to take its toll on them. After a while, they began to
pass power on to their children, erasing the last remnants of what they
symbolized. National liberation - a term that has been tweaked to carry
religious, regional or ethnic connotations - has become the task of political
parties and organizations, the most important of which, in our region, are
Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Palestine’s Hamas. With this, the second degeneration
was upon us.
During this phase, the star was born. That is why those who described him as
"the head of Hezbollah’s government" were not mistaken. Under the party’s
sponsorship, the experience of turning current President Michel Aoun into a
resistor has already been successful. Thus, on his way there, Aoun created a
massive shift in Christian politics and sensitivities. Most of them have come to
support national liberation and the alliance with Syria’s Assad and Khamenei’s
Iran. Now, with Hassan Diab, we are witnessing the second major transformation,
the transformation of the premiership from a state institution to an extension
of the revolution. Thus, national liberation has become complete, and, with
that, Lebanon’s political history and political traditions also changed
radically.
As for the leadership, both its heads have become more like a front that
surrounds Hezbollah, its job is attaining national liberation (exactly like the
National Progressive Fronts that surround the Baath Party in Syria and Saddam's
Iraq).
By the way, congratulations to those who revered national liberation and dreamed
of Beirut as an Arab Hanoi, and who chanted loudly, for many years, "we die on
our feet, not live on our knees." Today, they find in Hassan Diab a man
fulfilling their dreams. Generations after generations of young men have
believed in what is being given to them today on a silver platter. The “Hayhat
min al-thilla (oppression be-gone)” has become the republic’s philosophy,
adopting it from Hezbollah on its 100th anniversary.
In all likelihood, history will remember this era, in both its heads, Aoun and
Diab, as one in which the sand that had been blurring our vision was cleared.
Before this era, we imagined that having a relationship with the world was
better than being isolated from it. Prosperity is better than poverty. Satiety
is better than hunger. Life is better than death. This reign is teaching us the
virtues that had passed us by, we who believed in those blatant and farcical
lies told to us by colonialism and orientalists.
Hassan Diab, day by day, is becoming the most prominent activist in spreading
this new awareness. Towards pride, march. To the East, march. These are the
orders of the day.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on August 06-07/2020
Pompeo Says U.S. to Seek UN Vote on Iran Arms Ban Next Week
David Waine/Bloomberg/August 06/2020
Secretary of State Michael Pompeo said the U.S. plans to hold a United Nations
Security Council vote next week in its effort to extend the UN’s arms embargo
against Iran.“There are nations lining up to sell weapons that will destabilize
the Middle East,” Pompeo told reporters at the State Department on Wednesday.
“We’re using every diplomatic tool we have in the toolkit.”The U.S. circulated a
draft resolution Tuesday that seeks to stop all sales of weapons to and from
Iran, according to a copy of the text seen by Bloomberg News. The current ban on
arms deals with Iran is set to expire in October under terms of the 2015 nuclear
agreement. President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. out of the accord in 2018, but
the U.S. is pushing council members to extend the embargo indefinitely. Kelly
Craft, the U.S. ambassador to the UN, acknowledged Tuesday that Russia and China
are likely to veto any resolution. That could spell a crisis at the world body,
with Craft and Pompeo threatening to invoke a “snapback” provision in the 2015
Iran nuclear deal to reimpose all UN sanctions against Tehran. “We are deeply
aware that snapback is an option for the United States,” Pompeo said on
Wednesday.
The U.S. maintains it can reimpose the sanctions as one of the original
participants of the deal, a claim allies and rivals have disputed. “The strategy
in a perfect world will always be to have them abstain and obviously not veto”
the U.S. resolution, Craft said of Russia and China in an online appearance this
week at the annual Aspen Security Forum. “However, let’s be realistic here.
Right now the strategy is working with other members of the Security Council” to
put China and Russia “in a corner and shine a light on them.” Several diplomats
say that France, Germany, the U.K., Russia and China are trying to negotiate a
solution that might prevent the U.S. from taking such a step, but that no clear
compromise has emerged.
— With assistance by Nick Wadhams
US Administration Proposes Demilitarized Zone in Libya’s
Sirte, Jufra
Cairo- Khalid Mahmoud/Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 6 August, 2020
The United States has proposed a “demilitarized” solution in the Libyan cities
of Sirte and Jufra and the immediate resumption of oil production, which has
been suspended for about eight months. US President Donald Trump’s
administration has announced a solution to the Libyan crisis, including the
Libyan National Army (LNA) forces’ evacuation of their current locations in
Sirte and Jufra and the neutralization of the oil issue from the country’s
political and military conflict.
US National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien called on all parties – both those
responsible for the current escalation and those working to end it – to enable
the National Oil Corporation to resume its vital work, with full transparency,
and to implement a demilitarized solution for both cities, respect the UN arms
embargo and finalize a ceasefire under the UN-led 5+5 military talks. In a
statement published by the White House late on Tuesday, O’Brien said the US is
deeply troubled by the escalating conflict in Libya. “We strongly oppose foreign
military involvement, including the use of mercenaries and private military
contractors, by all sides,” he stressed. “The ongoing efforts of foreign powers
to exploit the conflict – for example, by establishing an enduring military
presence or exerting control over resources that belong to the Libyan people –
pose grave threats to regional stability and global commerce,” the statement
read. It added that these efforts undermine the collective security interests of
the US and its allies and partners in the Mediterranean region. “Escalation will
only deepen and prolong the conflict,” he noted.
O’Brien pointed out that Trump has spoken over the past few weeks with several
world leaders about Libya, and it is clear there is no “winning” side.
Libyans can win only if they come together to reclaim their sovereignty and
rebuild a unified country, the official stated. As an active, but neutral,
actor, O’Brien explained, the US is pursuing a 360 degree diplomatic engagement
with Libyan and external stakeholders across the conflict to find a solution
that supports Libyan sovereignty and protects the shared interests of the US,
its allies, and partners. Trump discussed the need to de-escalate the situation
in Libya in recent weeks with French President Emmanuel Macron, Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah El Sisi, and UAE Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed.
Meanwhile, Libyan sources have recently told Asharq Al-Awsat about a possible
deal on official resumption of oil production in Libya, in return for Turkey’s
exit from the military scene and avoidance of an imminent war in the
Mediterranean region.
Russia Makes Humanitarian Call to Save Syria
Moscow – Raed Jaber/Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 6 August, 2020
Russian interests in Syria are no longer focused on resolving the political
stalemate or improving the humanitarian conditions of areas deprived of
international aid, but is rather focused on the spread of the coronavirus in the
war-torn country. The pandemic, according to Russian statistics, has affected
around a million Syrians. Moscow, over the last few weeks, announced sending a
medical aid convoy to Syria that included equipment used to detect the virus.
Russian circles, however, avoided announcing available data about the spread of
the virus in Syria as to save face when it comes to the Syrian regime failing to
announce the spread of COVID-19 and failing to reveal real data on infections.
Remarkably, Russian state media in the past few days reported on the disastrous
levels of spread of the virus in Syria. Russian papers reported on
correspondents documenting large numbers of infection that weren’t mentioned in
the Syrian regime press coverage. This prompted some writers and commentators to
assert that Syria "is currently experiencing the biggest humanitarian disaster
in its history, and perhaps one of the biggest humanitarian disasters in the
world." Diplomat and political researcher Ramy al-Shaar wrote an op-ed that
warns that the virus is spreading uncontrollably across Syria and that the
number of infections reaches approximately a million with hundreds of deaths.
While the country is experiencing a terrifying humanitarian catastrophe, the
pandemic threatens the lives of millions. Al-Shaar writes that Russia is
determined to spent magnanimous efforts to dodge a COVID-19 catastrophe in
Syria. He also said that dealing with the virus has become a priority because
reaching a political settlement according to the UNSC resolution 2254 will be
meaningless if millions of Syrians were lost to the virus.
Kadhimi Takes Measures Against Those Responsible for
Delaying Baghdad-Beirut
Baghdad - Fadhel al-Nashmi/Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 6 August,
2020
Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi has taken punitive measures against all
those involved in the delay of a civilian plane departure to Beirut last week.
The individuals responsible for the flight's delay include an official in the
Transport Ministry and a relative of its Minister Nasser al-Shibli. Kadhimi’s
office issued Tuesday a strongly worded statement against “a series of errors,
behaviors and failures” in the ministry’s performance. The statement also
slammed Shibli for appointing Ali Mohsen Hashem as director of the Iraqi
Airways, contrary to the Premier’s instructions not to make any changes to
senior positions without his approval. Kadhimi also ordered canceling Hashem’s
appointment, returning him to his previous position and referring him to justice
on suspicion of delaying the trip. The statement also highlighted the illegal
and administratively unjustifiable long delay in the flight heading to Beirut by
Ahmed Assem Hussein Bandar, who is Shibli’s relative.Preliminary investigations
indicated Bandar’s abuse of his powers, it added. This was not the first time
that a close relative of a prominent official has obstructed an Iraqi Airways
flight or committed a violation of flight standards. In March 2014, son of the
former Transport Minister, Hadi al-Ameri, forced a Baghdad-bound Middle East
Airlines plane to turn around 20 minutes after leaving Beirut because he missed
the flight. However, it is the first time that the government takes deterrent
measures against violators, which has been welcomed by the public.
MP of State of Law Coalition Alia Nassif hailed the measures taken by Kadhimi
against Shibli’s violations and breaches. She expressed hope that ministers will
be held accountable for their involvement in any “administrative or financial
violations.”
“Delaying the plane departure for a minister’s relative is the worst form of
administrative corruption and is considered an insult to Iraqi citizens,” she
stressed. Shibli, for his part, affirmed that his nephew had nothing to do with
the trip delay, noting that he has been subject to media campaign.
Beirut Tragedy Reinforces Yemeni Fears of Similar Disaster
at Safer
Aden- Mohammed Nasser/Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 6 August, 2020
The tragedy witnessed by the Lebanese capital Beirut due to the explosion of
dangerous material stored in the port of the city raised the fears of Yemenis of
a similar disaster taking place in the port of Ras Isa, north of the city of
Hodeidah.
Fears are amplified in light of Houthi militias continuing to prevent United
Nations teams from accessing and maintaining the derelict oil tanker, Safer.
Government and international reports predicted that an explosion at Safer, an
oil tanker which is carrying around 1.2 million oil barrels, could lead to a
disaster and the shutting down of the Hodeidah port. Hodeidah port is the entry
gate for some 70% of imports to Yemen. More so, the environmental impact of an
explosion at Safer will take around three decades to resolve. Yemeni political
activists, who spoke to Asharq Al-Awsat, tied the major destruction caused by
the Beirut port blast to the potential disaster at Safer, where corrosion in the
platform’s hull has allowed seawater to spill into parts of the tanker. “The
similarity lies in the neglect of the Houthi militia, like the Hezbollah militia
in Lebanon, and the result would be staggering losses that affect both Yemen and
Lebanon, countries which have the problem of terror gangs controlled by Tehran,”
said the undersecretary of the Ministry of Information in the Yemeni government
Abdul Basit Al-Qaidi. “Wherever Iran's militia lands in the region, disaster
strikes, and the disaster of the explosion of the Safer oil tanker in the Red
Sea is no less dangerous than the Beirut explosion, and its effects will be more
like the effects that a nuclear bomb could leave and require decades to deal
with if it exploded,” he added. Al-Qaidi warned of the international community
neglecting the Safer dilemma and said that Houthis aren’t only being neglectful
of the problem at hand but are also dealing with it with malicious intent.
Arab-Kurdish Conflict Feared East of Euphrates, SDF
Official Warns
Hasaka - Kamal Sheikho/Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 6 August, 2020
The region might be heading towards an Arab-Kurdish conflict that would affect
coexistence, a prominent figure in Syria’s Democratic Forces (SDF) has warned.
SDF spokesperson Mustafa Bali accused ISIS elements of assassinating three
tribal Sheikhs last week. “After failing to carry out its criminal acts, ISIS
resorts to causing Kurdish-Arab strife among regional components.”The Autonomous
Administration of North and East Syria (NES) also denounced the assassination of
Sheikh Mutasher Jadaan al-Hafel and the injury of Leader of al-Agaidat tribe
Sheikh Ibrahim Jadaan al- Hafel, describing the incident as “cowardly terrorist
act.” NES Chairman Abdul Hamid al-Mehbash has offered sincere condolences to the
Agaidat tribe on Sheikh Hafel’s “martyrdom,” wishing the tribe’s leader speedy
recovery. “We denounce and condemn this cowardly terrorist act, which aims at
sowing discord among components,” he stressed, noting that some parties have
rushed to point fingers to the NES and its military forces. Unidentified gunmen
have assassinated the Sheikh and his diver Daar al-Khalaf on Monday, and injured
Sheikh Ibrahim after opening fire on their convoy in the Hawayij village in Deir
Ez-Zour’s eastern countryside. Hafel was the third Arab tribal leader to be
assassinated after Sheikh Suleiman al-Kassar on July 30 and Sheikh Ali Alwis of
al-Baggara tribe on August 1. The Internal Security Forces in Deir Ezzor
launched probes and “will not rest until the perpetrators are arrested, handed
over to justice and held accountable as soon as possible,” Mehbash stressed. “We
will work to bridge the security gaps and confront whoever tries to undermine
regional stability.” This terrorist act targets all components of northern and
eastern Syria, he added, pointing out that it is a desperate and cowardly
attempt to affect the coexistence and brotherhood among peoples to destabilize
security. Demonstrations took place against Hafel’s assassination as protesters
blocked roads and targeted SDF security checkpoints. The SDF, for its part,
announced a partial ban on Shuhail town and launched a massive security
crackdown.
In a statement on Wednesday, the SDF said it has arrested a number of terrorists
and suspects, noting that some were injured during the operation. It also
revealed that two of its elements were killed during the operation
Jordan Government Vows to Confront Attempts to Stir
Instability
Amman- Mohammed Kheir Rawashdeh/Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 6 August, 2020
Jordanian Minister of State for Media Affairs Amjad Adaileh has asserted that
the government will fight against anyone who triggers instability and tension in
the country. In a press conference on Wednesday, Adaileh commented on the chaos
that followed a protest for teachers in Karak (in the south of the country). The
chaos led to the injury of seven and the arrest of around 48 people. The
minister stressed that the government won’t go easy with anyone who offends the
security guards and relevant bodies as they perform their tasks. Any financial,
partisan, or syndicate demand won’t be fulfilled using this attitude but through
dialogue and acceptance of others, he stressed. Adaileh further noted that there
are some practices that contradict with the precautionary measures such as
gatherings, as well as holding weddings and funerals. For this, the government
and the administrative governors will join efforts to handle the violations
strictly. Moreover, Jordan Minister of Interior Salameh Hammad affirmed Tuesday
that the government will never tolerate violence against security personnel on
their duty. Hammad condemned the incident in Karak, during which police officers
were attacked while on their official duty, as "unacceptable".
He explained that the protest that took place this evening in Karak was not
limited to teachers, but witnessed the participation of two political parties,
activists, and some young people who were "deceived" by them. The country has
been witnessing stands by teachers in several provinces demanding abolishing the
decision to shut down the syndicate and releasing those arrested – amid a
campaign of mass arrests of activists and heads of syndicate branches.
Egypt and Greece Sign Agreement on Exclusive Economic Zone
Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 6 August, 2020
Egypt and Greece signed an agreement on Thursday designating an exclusive
economic zone in the eastern Mediterranean between the two countries, an area
containing promising oil and gas reserves, Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh
Shoukry said.Shoukry made the announcement at a joint press conference with his
Greek counterpart Nikos Dendias in Cairo. "This agreement allows both countries
to move forward in maximizing the utilization of the resources available in the
exclusive economic zone, especially promising oil and gas reserves," Shoukry
said. In Greece, diplomats said the deal effectively nullified an accord between
Turkey and the Government of National Accord in Libya. Last year, those two
parties agreed to maritime boundaries in a deal Egypt and Greece decried as
illegal and a violation of international law. Greece maintains it infringed on
its continental shelf and specifically that off the island of Crete.
"The agreement with Egypt is within the framework of international law," Dendias
said. "It is the absolute opposite of the illegal, void and legally unfounded
memorandum of understanding that was signed between Turkey and Tripoli.
Following the signing of this agreement, the non-existent Turkish-Libyan
memorandum has ended up where it belonged from the beginning: in the trash can."
His statement came hours after Greece said it is ready to start exploratory
talks on the demarcation of maritime zones with Turkey as soon as this month.
Tensions were already high between Greece and Turkey over the exploration of
energy resources in the eastern Mediterranean. The NATO members are also at odds
over a range of issues from overflights in the Aegean Sea to maritime zones in
the eastern Mediterranean and ethnically divided Cyprus.
Turkey's Foreign Ministry said the exclusive zone designated in the agreement
falls in the area of Turkey's continental shelf. It said Ankara considers the
agreement null and void, adding that the deal also violates Libya's maritime
rights.
In June, Greece and Italy signed an agreement on maritime boundaries,
establishing an exclusive economic zone between the two countries. Earlier this
month, Egypt said that part of a seismic survey planned by Turkey in the eastern
Mediterranean potentially encroached on waters where Cairo claims exclusive
rights. Egypt hopes to become a regional energy hub with the rapid growth in
Egypt's natural gas supplies. It formed with other countries the so-called
Eastern Mediterranean Gas Forum, which aims to develop the region's gas market.
Turkey is not a member of the forum, which also includes Greece, Cyprus, Israel,
Italy and Jordan.
Nile Dam Mediator Urges Talks to Continue
Asharq Al-Awsat/August/06, 2020
South Africa, current mediator in a long-running feud over Ethiopia's dam on the
Blue Nile, on Thursday urged talks to continue despite threats of suspension and
walkout. Egypt on Tuesday called for a halt in the talks while Sudan threatened
to withdraw, rattling efforts to calm the dispute. In a statement, South Africa,
which as current chair of the African Union (AU) has been acting as mediator,
said negotiations were at a "critical phase" and it "encourages the parties to
remain engaged". "We would like to urge them to continue to be guided by the
spirit of Pan-African solidarity and fraternity, which has characterized the
AU-led negotiations process on the GERD," International Relations Minister
Naledi Pandor said. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) has been a source
of tension in the Nile River basin ever since Ethiopia broke ground on it in
2011, AFP reported. Egypt and Sudan view the dam as a threat to vital water
supplies, while Ethiopia considers it crucial for its electrification and
development. "It is important that the parties should display magnanimity and
understanding of each other´s interests so as to move the process forward,"
Pandor said. Tuesday's warnings were issued after a meeting of tripartite
technical and legal committees which are seeking an agreement on how the dam
should be filled and operated. Sudan's water and irrigation minister, Yasser
Abbas accused Ethiopia of shifting its position. Ethiopia, he said, now insisted
that the deal on the dam be linked to the wider question of sharing the waters
of the Blue Nile. "This new Ethiopian position threatens the negotiations under
the aegis of the African Union, and Sudan will not participate in negotiations
which include the subject of sharing Blue Nile waters," he warned. According to
AFP, Egypt and Sudan invoke a "historic right" over the river guaranteed by
treaties concluded in 1929 and 1959. But Ethiopia uses a treaty signed in 2010
by six riverside countries and boycotted by Egypt and Sudan authorizing
irrigation projects and dams on the river. Egypt's water ministry, for its part,
said Ethiopia's draft proposal lacked substance and contravened guidelines set
at an AU summit on July 21. "Egypt and Sudan demanded meetings be suspended for
internal consultations," it said.
Cyprus Police Question Man over Links to Beirut Chemicals Cargo
Asharq Al-Awsat/August/06, 2020
Cyprus has located and questioned a Russian man named in multiple news reports
as the owner of the ship that carried a cargo of ammonium nitrate abandoned in
Beirut and that exploded in a devastating fireball. A Cyprus police spokesman
said an individual, who he did not name, was questioned at his home in Cyprus on
Thursday afternoon. "There was a request from the Interpol Beirut to locate this
person and ask certain questions related to the cargo," the spokesman, Christos
Andreou, told Reuters. He said the responses were being passed on to Beirut.
He declined to give further information. A security source, speaking on
condition of anonymity, said the man was Russian businessman Igor Grechushkin,
43. Attempts to contact Grechushkin were unsuccessful. Boris Prokoshev, who was
captain of the Rhosus in 2013, said the chemicals ended up in Beirut after the
ship's owner - who he identified as Grechushkin - told him to make an
unscheduled stop in Lebanon to pick up extra cargo. The chemicals, which had
been stored at Beirut port for years, exploded on Tuesday in the country's worst
peace-time disaster.
Canada providing humanitarian assistance in response to
Beirut explosion
August 5, 2020 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
Today, the Honourable François-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Foreign Affairs,
and the Honourable Karina Gould, Minister of International Development,
announced that Canada is providing up to $5 million in humanitarian assistance
in response to the tragic explosion that occurred in Beirut, Lebanon, on August
4, 2020.
This includes an initial $1.5 million going immediately to trusted humanitarian
partners on the ground, including the Lebanese Red Cross via the Canadian Red
Cross Society, to help meet the urgent needs of people affected by this crisis.
Canada’s contribution will help support emergency medical services and provide
shelter, food and other essential items.
Quotes
“Canada stands with the people of Lebanon in this tragedy and we are ready to
assist however we can, as I have articulated in my two recent conversations with
my Lebanese counterpart. This initial contribution will help meet the immediate,
most urgent needs of those devastated by this explosion.”
- François-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Foreign Affairs
“The first days of a humanitarian disaster are crucial and Canada is here to
help. This funding will provide safe shelter, clean water, medicines and basic
necessities for those in need. As a government, we are mobilized to ensure that
Canada is there to bring much-needed assistance to the Lebanese population.”
- Karina Gould, Minister of International Development
Quick facts
Through its Middle East engagement strategy, Canada is providing more than $47
million in humanitarian assistance funding for crisis-affected populations in
Lebanon in 2020. This assistance includes, among other things, support for
access to basic health services and the supply of medical assistance.
Associated links
Canada’s Middle East engagement strategy
The Latest LCCC English analysis &
editorials from miscellaneous sources published on August 06-07/2020
EU Issues Its First-Ever Cyber Sanctions
Annie Fixler and Trevor Logan/FDD/August 06/2020
The European Union announced its first-ever cyber-related sanctions on Thursday,
designating malicious actors from Russia, China, and North Korea. The
designations provide an opportunity to bolster transatlantic cooperation to hold
accountable hostile actors that use cyber means to threaten global security.
Using a new cyber sanctions framework created in May 2019, Brussels imposed
asset freezes and visa bans against six individuals and three entities,
including a cyber unit of Russia’s military intelligence directorate, or GRU,
and four of its operators. Brussels designated them for attacks on Ukraine’s
power grid in 2015 and 2016, the destructive NotPetya attack in 2017, and an
attempted attack in 2018 on the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons, which at the time was investigating chemical weapons use in Syria and
Russia’s attempted assassination of defector Sergei Skripal in the United
Kingdom using a lethal nerve agent.
The European Union also designated two Chinese hackers and their employer,
Tianjin Huaying Haitai Science and Technology Development Co. Ltd, for their
roles in China’s state-backed corporate espionage campaign called Operation
Cloud Hopper. Finally, the European Union designated North Korean company Chosun
Expo for supporting Pyongyang’s cyber operations, including the 2017 ransomware
attack known as WannaCry.
Last week’s sanctions add teeth to European condemnations of significant
cyberattacks. Sanctions, the European Union explained, are part of the bloc’s
“comprehensive cyber diplomacy toolbox to prevent, deter and respond to
malicious behavior.” Washington’s Cyberspace Solarium Commission similarly
concluded that cyber sanctions on hostile governments and their operatives
“generat[e] credible costs and benefits for norms enforcement,” which “reduce
the likelihood and effectiveness” of attacks by changing cost/benefit
calculations. For example, the Commission contends, when malicious actors know
that they face a unified coalition, “they anticipate that bad behavior is likely
to be more severely punished.”
The EU sanctions mirror U.S. efforts to isolate malicious cyber actors from the
global financial system. Washington also sanctioned Chosun Expo as well as the
same GRU operatives and the GRU itself. Collectively, these U.S. and EU
sanctions make it nearly impossible for the designated actors to move money
through the formal financial system, and signal that Washington and Brussels
have sufficient forensic evidence to defend their attributions in a court of
law.
Unlike the European Union, Washington has yet to sanction the Chinese hackers
responsible for Operation Cloud Hopper despite having indicted them in December
2018. In fact, despite numerous indictments, Washington has not sanctioned any
Chinese cyber operatives working for the Chinese Communist Party. These EU
sanctions begin to close that gap. Now Washington should bring its sanctions in
line with Brussels’ by designating these Chinese actors.
For its part, Brussels should expand sanctions to include other Russian,
Chinese, and North Korean operatives sanctioned or indicted by the United
States. In addition, Brussels should ensure that Iranian cyber operatives also
come under scrutiny. While Iran has not successfully launched a global operation
on the scale of NotPetya, Cloud Hopper, or WannaCry, Brussels will want to send
a clear message that Tehran’s attempted cyberattacks on Israeli water
infrastructure – and attempted attacks on any critical infrastructure – will
result in swift censure.
Moving forward, Washington and Brussels should increase coordination on
sanctions and attribution, including through joint sanctions announcements.
While unilateral sanctions, particularly U.S. financial sanctions, have a
significant impact on their targets, multilateral sanctions have a
norm-enforcing benefit and make it difficult for malign actors to exploit
differences in sanctions regimes. Likewise, coordinated attribution efforts, as
the United States and its allies demonstrated in response to the WannaCry and
NotPetya attacks, not only boosts technical cooperation but also signals unity
and resolve.
*Annie Fixler is deputy director of the Center on Cyber and Technology
Innovation (CCTI) at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD).
*Trevor Logan is a cyber research analyst. For more analysis from Annie, Trevor,
and CCTI, please subscribe HERE. Follow Annie and Trevor on Twitter @afixler and
@TrevorLoganFDD. Follow FDD on Twitter @FDD and @FDD_CCTI. FDD is a Washington,
DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and
foreign policy.
Destruction of Iranian Nuclear Facility Should Remind
Democrats of Israel’s Unique Value as an Ally
John Hannah/FDD/August 06/2020
An explosion at the Natanz nuclear complex on July 2 laid waste to the Iran
Centrifuge Assembly Center (ICAC), a workshop designed to mass produce thousands
of advanced centrifuges for enriching uranium. Satellite pictures strongly
suggest that the blast's cause was a powerful bomb placed at a critical juncture
inside the facility. Not implausibly, many experts pointed to Israel—not least
because “a Middle Eastern intelligence official,” widely suspected to be Mossad
chief Yossi Cohen, told the New York Times that Israel was, in fact,
responsible. If true, it’s a potent reminder of Israel’s enormous value as a
strategic partner of the United States, one that combines the will,
capabilities, and tactical skill to confront the region’s most dangerous threats
in ways that are largely unrivaled by any other American ally. The point may be
particularly worth underscoring in the run up to the 2020 elections, especially
for a Democratic Party where support for Israel has seemed increasingly under
stress.
The destruction of the ICAC was a significant blow to Iran’s nuclear program.
Once deployed, the advanced centrifuges being assembled there would have
dramatically reduced the time required to produce enough highly-enriched uranium
(HEU) not just for one nuclear bomb, but for a small arsenal. Their mass
production would also have made it much easier for Iran to divert a critical
number of advanced centrifuges to a covert site, where any rapid breakout to
develop nuclear weapons could proceed in secret. With a single exquisitely
executed act of sabotage, cloaked in mystery, and avoiding the attendant risks
of war associated with an overt military strike, those powerful Iranian cards
have now been swept from the table—at least for the time being. Estimates are
that the explosion could have set back Iran’s centrifuge program by up to two
years.
That’s not to say that the danger has been eliminated, far from it. Deep
underground, at a different facility in Natanz and at another in Fordow, several
thousand older centrifuges, known as IR-1s, continue to churn outgrowing
quantities of enriched uranium under the gaze of inspectors from the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Over the last year, in response to
the re-imposition of crippling U.S. sanctions following the Trump
administration’s withdrawal from the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA),
or the Iran nuclear deal, Iran has slowly but surely begun violating several of
the deal’s restrictions—including on enrichment levels, stockpiles of
low-enriched uranium, and research and development on advanced centrifuges.
Roughly 1000 next-generation IR-2m centrifuges that were dismantled under the
JCPOA could also be available for re-installation, leaving Iran’s breakout time
for producing sufficient HEU for one nuclear bomb as low as 3 to 4
months—significantly less than the JCPOA’s 12-month target.
Nevertheless, there’s no question that the risks from Iran’s nuclear program are
significantly more manageable without the looming danger posed by the thousands
of far more powerful centrifuges that the ICAC was set to produce. The
facility’s destruction has almost certainly bought those determined to contain
the Iranian nuclear threat important time and space that, before the explosion,
were rapidly dwindling in the face of Iran’s JCPOA violations.
A prospective Joe Biden administration, in particular, should take note.
Democrats, not without reason, have been signaling their growing alarm about
Iran’s renewed nuclear expansion and their eagerness to bring it back into
compliance with the JCPOA. In exchange, they have made clear that the United
States would also return to the deal—in essence, reversing Trump’s maximum
pressure strategy by lifting the crippling sanctions that it has re-imposed
since 2018. Doing so, however, would surrender an enormous amount of leverage
now in U.S. hands in exchange for little more than going back to a deal that
even many of Biden’s aides privately acknowledge is flawed. While Democrats are
right that maximum pressure has failed to produce any positive changes in Iran’s
malign behavior, it’s also true that sanctions have subjected the Iranian regime
to unprecedented economic and political pressures--all exacerbated by the
Covid-19 crisis--from which it badly needs relief sooner rather than later.
With the Natanz explosion largely removing the immediate threat of a large-scale
deployment of advanced centrifuges, a prospective Biden administration might
well have more time than it thought before July 2 to address the Iranian nuclear
challenge. The ICAC’s destruction may have reduced the urgency for any
precipitous rush back into the JCPOA. Instead. Biden could have more room for
maneuver to play the sanctions card that Trump would be handing off to him and
exploit the Iranian regime’s profound distress to drive a much harder bargain
that would ideally not just restore the JCPOA, but begin to address some of its
most problematic shortcomings as well—from its soon-to-expire sunset clauses to
the failure to constrain Iran’s ballistic missile arsenal.
If, as so many suspect, Israel was behind the explosion, it has both inflicted
serious damage on Iran’s nuclear program and strengthened America’s diplomatic
position in confronting Iran’s efforts at nuclear blackmail. But more than that,
the bombing would also emphatically underscore some of the truly extraordinary
capabilities that Israel brings to the table of the U.S.-Israel strategic
partnership. The ability to place an agent inside one of the crown jewels of the
Iranian nuclear program, much less smuggle in a powerful bomb and detonate it at
the point of maximum damage, is an absolutely stunning intelligence
accomplishment. It’s not at all clear that there’s another intelligence service
in the world, including the United States, that would have been capable of
pulling off an operation of such difficulty, danger and daring so flawlessly.
Given the downside risks, most probably wouldn’t even have tried.
Of course, it would hardly be the first time. Just two years ago, in an
operation no less audacious than the ICAC bombing, Israel spirited out of a
Tehran warehouse a huge chunk of what became known as the Nuclear Archive—tens
of thousands of pages and more than 150 compact discs detailing the history of
Iran’s crash program in the 1990s and early 2000s to develop a small arsenal of
nuclear weapons and conceal it from the world. Over the course of two years, a
team of Israeli agents—mostly made up of Iranians—operated under the noses of
one of the world’s most ruthless and effective security establishments,
collecting intelligence, conducting reconnaissance, and planning and expertly
executing a James Bond-like break-in, burning through safes with high-powered
blow torches, securing the most important parts of the archive, and then getting
the treasure trove of the Iranian regime’s most important secrets out of the
country without a trace.
These are remarkable success stories that go largely unappreciated by most
Americans in part because it’s the sort of brilliant professionalism that people
have been conditioned to expect from Israel’s security services. It’s almost
taken for granted that a tiny country of 8 million people will on a regular
basis undertake operations of enormous risk and danger to confront and contain,
if not necessarily eliminate, the Middle East’s most dangerous threat: nuclear
weapons in the hands of dictators with a predisposition toward large-scale
bloodletting. From the destruction of nuclear reactors in Iraq in 1981 and Syria
in 2007 to the Stuxnet cyberattack (in collaboration with the United States) on
Iranian centrifuges and the targeted killing of top Iranian nuclear scientists a
decade ago, Israel has arguably been the world’s greatest force for keeping at
bay the nightmare scenario of a fully nuclearized Middle East.
With Israel’s value as an American ally increasingly up for debate, particularly
within the Democratic Party, that is a lesson worth highlighting in an election
year. The United States has grown tired of the Middle East. It wants to do less
there, not more, and divert resources to containing higher priority threats from
great-power competitors like China in the Indo-Pacific and Russia in Europe.
But at the same time, America still has important interests in the Middle East
that need to be secured—not least preventing a hostile Iran, born in the
crucible of “Death to America,” from dominating the region and wielding nuclear
weapons. In that context, what’s the value of a local partner like Israel that
has the capabilities, will and competence to take on the burden of serving as
the tip of the spear in the shared effort to mitigate such threats? Especially
after a two-decade period when the United States spent trillions of dollars and
lost thousands of lives directly engaging in military conflicts in the region, a
$3.8 billion per year investment in Israel, one of the world’s leading military
and intelligence powers that is unabashedly pro-American and prepared to act in
defense of U.S. interests, looks like an absolute bargain. The mysterious, but
highly fortuitous, destruction of the ICAC, and the significant setback it
inflicted on the nuclear program of America’s most dangerous Middle East
adversary, should serve as a useful reminder of that essential reality.
*John Hannah, senior counselor at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies,
served as national security advisor to former Vice President Dick Cheney.
Palestinians: We Support China's Muslim Concentration Camps
Khaled Abu Toameh Gatestone Institute/August 06/2020
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas... is saying that he fully
supports China's right to hold more than one million Muslims in re-education
camps and crack down on human rights activists and journalists in Hong Kong. Yet
Abbas, a Muslim, sees no reason why he or anyone else should ask the ICC to
launch an investigation into China's "war crimes" against Muslims.
Why have Palestinian leaders chosen to side with China? Money and political
support. The Palestinians are hoping that China will replace the US as an
"honest broker" in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Iran, Egypt, Syria and dozens of other countries that could not tolerate a
magical realist novel can live with the mass sterilisation of Muslim women. They
will give concentration camps a conniving wink of approval, but draw the line at
cartoons in a Danish newspaper." — Nick Cohen, The Guardian, July 4, 2020.
The Palestinians' hate for Israel and the US has blinded them to the point where
they are prepared to support the penning up of more than a million Muslims in
re-education camps in China. Such a show of support ought to serve as a
re-education for the international community about the warped Palestinian
perspective of justice.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is indicating that he supports
China's right to hold more than one million Muslims in re-education camps and
crack down on human rights activists and journalists in Hong Kong. Abbas, a
Muslim, sees no reason why he or anyone else should ask the International
Criminal Court to launch an investigation into China's "war crimes" against
Muslims. Pictured: Abbas meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on
July 18, 2017.
The Palestinian Authority (PA) says it is determined to proceed with its request
that the International Criminal Court (ICC) launch an investigation against
Israel for "committing war crimes" against the Palestinians. The PA is hoping
that such a move by the ICC would pave the way for filing "war crimes" charges
against several Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
While it is seeking to indict Israeli officials for their ostensible "war
crimes" against Palestinians, the PA leadership is working to strengthen its
relations with China, where more than one million Muslims are being held in
detention in re-education camps.
Palestinian leaders have a long record of supporting dictators and autocratic
states, including Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini, Iraq's Saddam Hussein and the North
Korean leader Kim Jon Un. The Palestinian leadership's current support for
China's repressive regime is part of a larger pattern. They have proven that
they are always ready to support any dictator who openly challenges Israel or
the US.
In keeping with that pattern, the PA leaders have also chosen to support China
in its repressive measures against the residents of Hong Kong, who have been
protesting plans to allow extradition to mainland China. If China has its way,
residents of Hong Kong will be exposed to unfair trials and violent treatment in
China. There is also fear that China's move will give the mainland greater
influence over Hong Kong and allow it to target political and human rights
activists and journalists.
At the same time, hardly a day passes without Palestinian officials accusing
Israel of committing human rights violations against Palestinians in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip.
These officials, however, are deliberately ignoring the plight of Muslims in
China, most of whom are Uighur, a predominately Turkic-speaking ethnic group
primarily from China's northwestern region of Xinjiang.
The detained Muslims have never been charged with crimes and have no legal
avenues to challenge their detentions. Often, their only crime is being Muslim.
Last month, PA President Mahmoud Abbas and Chinese President Xi Jinping spoke
over the telephone about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and efforts to prevent
the spread of the coronavirus pandemic. Abbas reportedly "appreciated China's
efforts to uphold justice on the Palestinian issue and safeguard the legitimate
rights and interests of the Palestinian people, saying that facts have proved
time and again that China is the most reliable friend of the Palestinian
people."
Instead of raising the issue of his fellow Muslims persecuted in China, Abbas
has backed China's supposedly "legitimate position" on persecuting his
co-religionists.
Abbas, in other words, is saying that he fully supports China's right to hold
more than one million Muslims in re-education camps and crack down on human
rights activists and journalists in Hong Kong. Yet Abbas, a Muslim, sees no
reason why he or anyone else should ask the ICC to launch an investigation into
China's "war crimes" against Muslims.
Instead of following other world leaders in demanding justice for the residents
of Hong Kong, Abbas emphasized during the telephone conversation that the
"Palestinian side will continue to stand firmly with China and resolutely
support China's just position on Hong Kong, Xinjiang and other issues concerning
China's core interests."
It was the second time in recent months that Abbas publicly supported China in
the Hong Kong crisis. In May, Abbas issued a statement in which he said:
"We reiterate our support to the friendly People's Republic of China's right to
maintain its sovereignty against any foreign intervention into its internal
affairs and the attempts to destabilize it."
This is the same Abbas who in recent months has been expressing strong
opposition to Israel's intention to apply its sovereignty to portions of the
West Bank.
On one side, Abbas is voicing support for China's right to impose full
sovereignty over all its territories, including Hong Kong, and maintain its
territorial integrity. On the other side, Abbas is demanding that the
international community impose sanctions on Israel if and when it applies
sovereignty over some parts of the West Bank. He is also demanding that, because
of Israel's plan to extend Israeli law over parts of the West Bank, the ICC
should launch a "war crimes" investigation against Israel.
This double-standard stinks of hypocrisy, as well as a sickening disregard for
the people of Hong Kong and the oppressed Muslims in China. Abbas has long been
accusing Israel of "oppressing" the Palestinians, but now he is supporting the
Chinese regime in its atrocities oppressing his Muslim brothers and repressing
the residents of Hong Kong.
Why have Palestinian leaders chosen to side with China? Money and political
support. The Palestinians are hoping that China will replace the US as an
"honest broker" in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Abbas's support for the Chinese atrocities against Muslims, and the oppression
of Hong Kong residents is already paying off. The Chinese are now rewarding
Abbas by rejecting US President Donald Trump's "Peace to Prosperity" plan for
Middle East peace. China has announced that it stands behind the "just cause of
the Palestinians," Chinese UN envoy Zhang Jun told the UN Security Council last
month. He also pledged that China would back Abbas's call for an international
peace conference rather than a peace process headed by the US. "China is a
sincere friend of the Palestinian people," Zhang said. "The Palestinian people
can always count on China's support for their just cause and legitimate rights."
Ironically, the Chinese envoy, whose country is seeking support for imposing
full sovereignty over Hong Kong -- and attempting hostile actions against its
neighbors in the South China Sea, India and Taiwan -- spoke out against any
pending Israeli plans to apply sovereignty to portions of the West Bank. "It's
unsettling that the planned annexation may provoke a new round of tensions,"
Zhang argued, warning that such a move would constitute a "most serious
violation of international law." China is lecturing the rest of the world about
conforming to international law?
In addition to the political support, the Palestinians are also expecting China
to reward them with millions of dollars in economic aid, as it has already been
doing for the past few years.
Last year, PA Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh praised China's "unwavering
support" of the rights of the Palestinians, as well as its support to the
Palestinian people in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, including providing generous
aid to poor students, infrastructure and the solar energy sector.
By siding with China, the Palestinians have thrown their Muslim brothers and the
residents of Hong Kong under the bus in return for money and political backing.
The Palestinians are ready to do anything to stick a finger in the eye of the
US.
The Palestinians, however, are not the only Muslims to turn a blind eye to the
suffering of Muslims in China and Hong King residents.
"[T]he main reasons why Muslims suffer in silence is that the Muslim-majority
countries that raged against Rushdie, Jyllands-Posten and Charlie Hebdo have
decided to stay silent," noted Observer columnist Nick Cohen.
"They use the idea of Muslim solidarity only when it suits them.
"In July 2019, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Algeria
and other Muslim-majority states that pose as defenders of the faith helped to
block a western motion at the United Nations calling for China to allow
"independent international observers" into the Xinjiang region. Iran issues
occasional criticisms but wants Chinese support in its struggle against the
Trump administration and so keeps its complaints coded. Their hypocrisy is
almost funny, if you take your humour black. Iran, Egypt, Syria and dozens of
other countries that could not tolerate a magical realist novel can live with
the mass sterilisation of Muslim women. They will give concentration camps a
conniving wink of approval, but draw the line at cartoons in a Danish
newspaper....
"To bring down numbers of the largely Muslim Uighurs of Xinjiang, the China
scholar Adrian Zenz reports, the Communists are forcing women to be sterilised
or fitted with contraceptive devices."
The Palestinians have chosen not only to remain silent, but to come out in full
support of China's concentration camps and its totalitarian regime. Their hate
for Israel and the US has blinded them to the point where they are prepared to
support the penning up of more than a million Muslims in re-education camps in
China. Such a show of support ought to serve as a re-education for the
international community about the warped Palestinian perspective of justice.
*Khaled Abu Toameh, an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem, is a
Shillman Journalism Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
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or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
John Nomikos on Turkish Threats to Greece
Marilyn Stern/Middle East Forum Webinar/August 06/2020
John M. Nomikos, director of the Research Institute for European and American
Studies, spoke to participants in a June 5 Middle East Forum webinar (video) to
discuss Turkish threats to Greece.
Nomikos described a recent escalation of Turkish provocations against Greece
that risk erupting into an armed confrontation. The Turkish Coast Guard has been
sending illegal immigrants to flood the Greek islands and the Greek-Turkish
border. Turkish intelligence officers have been infiltrating the municipality of
Thrace near the Turkish-Greek border to "undermine covertly" the Greek Muslim
community's relationship with the Greek government and create unrest.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoǧan has used the Turkish-Libyan Exclusive
Economic Zone as cover to illegally encroach on the Greek island of Crete. The
zone is the "biggest national security threat to the stability in the
Mediterranean region, including Greece, said Nomikos. Erdoǧan announced his
intention to begin drilling for oil in the eastern Mediterranean by the
beginning of September.
Greece's options in combatting Erdoǧan's "cat and mouse" game of "no peace, no
war" are limited. With a population of just 10 million – one eighth that of
Turkey – and an economy heavily dependent on tourism revenue, a war would be
economically devastating for Athens.
Exacerbating the situation is the neutral stance taken by the General Secretary
of NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization), rather than demanding that Turkey
cease its aggressive actions against a fellow member of NATO and respect the
stability of the Eastern Mediterranean and the Aegean.
Despite the fact that Greece has been a member of the European Union since 1981,
the EU has also taken a position of neutrality, doing little to address Turkey's
aggression. The EU's only priority is to avoid dealing with the illegal
immigrants Erdoǧan is foisting on Greece, aside from sending "blackmail" money
to Turkey to keep the migrants, including possible jihadists among them, from
flooding into Europe. The humanitarian crisis is left for Greece to manage, but
Europe would be wise to remember that "Greek borders are European borders," said
Nomikos.
Nomikos believes the only power with the clout to dissuade Erdoǧan from
challenging Greece's national security is the United States. Some important
steps toward this end have been taken. The Trump administration's support for
the Eastern Mediterranean Energy Security and Energy Partnership Act of 2019
authorizes new security assistance for Cyprus and Greece and lifts the U.S. arms
embargo on Cyprus. It also authorizes the establishment of a United
States-Eastern Mediterranean Energy Center to facilitate energy cooperation
among the United States, Israel, Greece, and Cyprus as a tool for providing
stability in the Eastern Mediterranean. With the potentially explosive situation
between Turkey and Greece reaching a critical stage, the United States must go
further in protecting its interests in the Mediterranean.
Israel is "the only country we can rely on and ask for support."
Given the world's lukewarm response to Turkish aggression, Nomikos said it's
likely Erdoǧan will eventually start a war. "He's looking for the right time,
and he will attack Greece." Accordingly, Nomikos strongly advocates a military
alliance between Greece and Israel, which share "the same national security
threat." Israel, he said, is "the only country we can rely on."
*Marilyn Stern is communications coordinator at the Middle East Forum.
Europe Has a Weak Dollar Problem
Marcus Ashworth/Bloomberg/August,06/2020
How much is too much of a good thing? The euro has strengthened 5% versus the
dollar this year — a fair reflection of the European Union’s better handling of
the coronavirus, not least its historic decision to create a pandemic rescue
fund that will involve fiscal transfers from the wealthy north of Europe to the
worst-affected countries in the south. US Treasury yields have also fallen
closer to zero, bringing them nearer to the euro zone’s negative rates, and
America’s growth forecasts are starting to look similar to Europe’s. As such,
there’s less reason for investors to keep so many eggs in the dollar basket. The
problem for the European Central Bank is that an overly robust currency might
seriously hinder the continent’s fragile post-Covid recovery.
The Federal Reserve was struggling with a too-strong dollar at the height of the
crisis, but it has successfully managed to contain that and it now looks
supremely relaxed with greenback weakness. Fed officials are pushing for more
fiscal stimulus and are committed to more monetary action as required. That’s a
worry for the ECB, which wants to prevent the euro from appreciating too far or
too fast.
The EU has long enjoyed a current account surplus, fueled by its dynamic export
sector and helped by a relatively weak euro. But such benign conditions don’t
last forever. There’s a global scramble to reboot economies and engineering a
weaker currency is one of the obvious tools in the box.
Despite ECB protestations to the contrary, large-scale unconventional monetary
action is really all about reining in your currency — hence the regular
accusations from President Donald Trump of foreign-exchange manipulation against
all countries engaged in quantitative easing. (He’s gone quiet on the subject
now that the US is doing the same.) By artificially lowering yields through huge
bond-buying programs, the ECB has prompted investors to look elsewhere for
returns, thereby keeping the euro’s price contained. But this only works if no
one else is doing the same.
The Fed and the Bank of England have noisily gatecrashed the ECB's QE party by
cutting rates deeper during the coronavirus crisis and front-loading ever larger
amounts of stimulus. This leaves the ECB without any obvious levers to pull on
to prevent the euro rising. Even before the crisis, it had negative interest
rates and a vast QE program in operation. The Fed and BOE, which still have
marginally positive interest rates, have more ammunition left.
Ironically, one of the main reasons for steering clear of the euro — fear about
the bloc’s unity — has been removed by the groundbreaking agreement for the 750
billion-euro ($888 billion) pandemic recovery fund. With the European Commission
set to issue as much as 200 billion euros of debt next year, at a decent premium
over German bunds, there will be liquid bonds available for foreign investors
that won’t be punitively negative in yield. Currency valuations ultimately are
driven by relative growth expectations and Europe is attracting interest for
this reason too. The usual tendency for US growth to exceed Europe’s has
moderated during the crisis. It might even reverse. One can hardly complain
about Europe’s relatively good performance in handling the pandemic, but this
success will be worth less if the continent’s export-led model suffers. The ECB
may be near powerless to prevent the euro achieving even greater heights if the
dollar weakens much further.