LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
December 26/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For today
Merry Christmas/Glory to God in the highest and on
earth peace to those on whom his favor rests
Luke/02/01-20/In those days a decree went out from Caesar Augustus 2 that the
whole world should be enrolled. This was the first enrollment, when Quirinius
was governor of Syria. So all went to be enrolled, each to his own town. And
Joseph too went up from Galilee from the town of Nazareth to Judea, to the city
of David that is called Bethlehem, because he was of the house and family of
David, to be enrolled with Mary, his betrothed, who was with child. While they
were there, the time came for her to have her child, and she gave birth to her
firstborn son. 3 She wrapped him in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger,
because there was no room for them in the inn. Now there were shepherds in that
region living in the fields and keeping the night watch over their flock. The
angel of the Lord appeared to them and the glory of the Lord shone around them,
and they were struck with great fear. The angel said to them, “Do not be afraid;
for behold, I proclaim to you good news of great joy that will be for all the
people. For today in the city of David a savior has been born for you who is
Messiah and Lord. And this will be a sign for you: you will find an infant
wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.” And suddenly there was a
multitude of the heavenly host with the angel, praising God and saying: “Glory
to God in the highest and on earth peace to those on whom his favor rests. “When
the angels went away from them to heaven, the shepherds said to one another,
“Let us go, then, to Bethlehem to see this thing that has taken place, which the
Lord has made known to us.”So they went in haste and found Mary and Joseph, and
the infant lying in the manger. When they saw this, they made known the message
that had been told them about this child. All who heard it were amazed by what
had been told them by the shepherds. And Mary kept all these things, reflecting
on them in her heart. Then the shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God
for all they had heard and seen, just as it had been told to them.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News
published on December 25-26/2019
His Beatitude Patriarch Al Raei: Lukewarm confusing stances/Elias Bejjani/December
25/2019
Christmas Spirit: Forgiveness, Sacrifice and Reconciling/Elias Bejjani/December
25/2019
The Actual Needed Christmas Spirit/Elias Bejjani/December 25/2019
Christmas And The obligations Of The Righteous/Elias Bejjani/December 25/2019
Pope Urges Return to 'Harmonious Coexistence' in Lebanon
Aoun Slams Hariri, Defends Bassil and Promises Govt. of Experts
Mustaqbal Officials Hit Out at Aoun and Bassil
Saad Hariri: I won't work with a sectarian and racist Gibran Bassil
Report: Diab Met Aides of Nasrallah and Berri Monday Night
Khalil Slams Banks for 'Trapping' Civil Servants Salaries
Lebanese Help Each Other as Economic Crisis Crushes Lives
Lebanon’s leaders in blame game over crisis/Najia Houssari/Arab News/December
25/2019
Open Letter to US Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo From Tom Harb & John Hajjar,
AMCD co-chairs Addressing Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs David
Hale's Visit Beirut/AMCD/December 25/2019
Christmas Thought of the Day/Father James Farfaglia/December 25/2019
The imminent failure of Lebanon's new prime minister/Imad K Harb/Al Jazeera/December
25/2019
Hezbollah-designated prime minister a recipe for increased unrest/Randa
Takieddine/Arab News/December 25/2019
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
December 25-26/2019
Pope Francis Ushers in Christmas with Message of 'Unconditional Love'
Pope Urges World to Ensure Security in Mideast, Syria
Syria missile strike kills 5 pro-Iran fighters: monitor
Kochavi: Direct conflict with Iran is improbable. Still, he warned of increased
fire power against civilian areas/DebkaFile/December 25/2019
Displaced Syrian Grows Mushrooms to Feed Family
Algeria Starts Funeral of Army Chief Gaid Salah
Iraqi City in Turmoil after Activist's Death
Libya War Leaves Thousands Homeless in Tripoli
Iran Warplane Crashes near Dormant Volcano
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on December 25-26/2019
IDF preparing for confrontation with Iran - Chief of Staff Aviv Kochavi
Anna Ahronhem/Jerusalem Post/December 25/2019
UN, UK Treating Persecuted Christians as “Enemies”/Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone
Institute/December 25/2019
Democrats Debate Whether Trump Has Been Impeached/Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone
Institute/December 24/ 2019
We Want A Nation: Notes On The Middle East's Revolutions/Alberto M. Fernandez/MEMRI/December
25/2019
Democrats Debate Whether Trump Has Been Impeached/Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone
Institute/December 25/2019
This decade of war in Syria has violated every norm that we believed was
sacred/Kareem Shaheen/The National//December 25/2019
To be strong voices for Palestine, Arabs must be strong voices for/Ray Hanania//ArabNews/December
25/2019
Europe’s hard choices in 2020/Zaki Laidi /News/December 25/2019
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News published on December 25-26/2019
His Beatitude Patriarch Al Raei: Lukewarm confusing stances
Elias Bejjani/December 25/2019
Our Patriarch Al Raei as always adopts sharply the stance of the last person
that he hears to. Today was not different. His beatitude is with both Hassan
Dian and the Revolution. A Lukewarm position?
Christmas Spirit: Forgiveness, Sacrifice and
Reconciling
Elias Bejjani/December 25/2019
In case you did not yet reconcile with all those whom you have had problems
with, it means you did yet welcome the birth of the Incarnate Lord, who is mere
love, sacrifice, forgiveness and humility
The Actual Needed Christmas Spirit
Elias Bejjani/December 25/2019
Inside each of an angel and a demon. With the birth of the Lord Jesus, let us
bridle and silence Satan and leave the angel free to lead us to the paths of
love and forgiveness
Christmas And The obligations Of The
Righteous
Elias Bejjani/December 25/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/81746/elias-bejjani-christmas-and-the-obligations-of-the-righteous-%d8%b0%d9%83%d8%b1%d9%89-%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%85%d9%8a%d9%84%d8%a7%d8%af-%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%85%d8%ac%d9%8a%d8%af-%d9%88%d9%88%d8%a7%d8%ac%d8%a8/
Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord.
(Luke 02/11)
Glory to God in the highest, on earth peace, good will toward men (Luke 02/14)
The holy birth of Jesus Christ bears numerous blessed vital values and
principles including love, giving, redemption, modesty and forgiveness.
Christmas is a role model of love because God, our Father Himself is love.
Accordingly and in a bid to cleanse us from our original sin He came down from
heaven, was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, and became
man.
This is my commandment, that you love one another, even as I have loved you.
(John15/12)
There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.
(John15/13)
Christmas is way of giving …God gave us Himself because He is a caring,
generous, forgiving and loving and father.
Christmas embodies all principles of genuine redemption. Jesus Christ redeemed
us and for our sake He joyfully was crucified, and tolerated all kinds of
torture, humiliation and pain
Christmas is a dignified image of modesty ..Jesus Christ accepted to be born
into a manger and to live his life on earth in an extremely simple and humble
manner.
Let us continuously remind our selves that when our day comes that could be at
any moment, we shall not be able to take any thing that is earthly with us for
the Day of judgment except our work and acts, be righteous or evil.
Christmas is a holy act of forgiveness ….God, and because He is a loving and
forgiving has Sent His Son Jesus Christ redeem to free us from the bondage of
the original sin that Adam and Eve committed.
Christmas requires that we all genuinely pray and pray for those who are hurt,
lonely, deserted by their beloved ones, feel betrayed, are enduring pain
silently pain, suffer anguish, deprived from happiness, warmth and joy .
Christmas is ought to teach us that it is the duty of every believer to practice
his/her faith not only verbally and via routine rituals, but and most
importantly through actual deeds of righteousness….
Christmas’ spirit is not only rituals of decorations, festivities, gifts and
joyful celebrations…But deeds in all ways and means by helping those who need
help in all field and domains.
Christmas’s spirit is a calls to honour and actually abide by all Bible
teachings and values.
In this realm we have a Biblical obligation to open our hearts and with love
extend our hand to all those who are in need, and we are able to help him
remembering always that Almighty God showered on us all sorts of graces and
capabilities so we can share them with others.
Christmas is a time to hold to the Ten Commandments, foremost of which is
“Honour your father and your mother”.
Christmas is a good time for us to attentively hear and positively respond to
our conscience, which is the voice of God within us.
Christmas should revive in our minds and hearts the importance of fighting all
kinds temptations so we do not become slaves to earthly wealth, or power of
authority.
Christmas for us as patriotic and faithful Lebanese is a time to pray for the
safe and dignified return of our Southern people who were forced to take refuge
in Israel since the year 2000.
Christmas for each and every loving and caring Lebanese is a holy opportunity
for calling loudly on all the Lebanese politicians and clergymen, as well as on
the UN for the release of the thousands of Lebanese citizens who are arbitrarily
and unjustly imprisoned in Syrian prisons.
Most importantly Christmas is a time for praying and working for the liberation
of our dear homeland Lebanon, from the Iranian occupation.
No one should never ever lose sight for a moment or keep a blind eye on the
sacrifices of our heroic righteous martyrs who willing sacrificed themselves for
our homeland, identity, existence, and dignity. Our prayers goes for them on
this Holy Day and for peace in each and evry country, especially in the chaotic
and troubled Middle East.
May God Bless you all and shower upon you, your families, friends, and beloved
ones all graces of joy, health, love, forgiveness, meekness and hope.
Pope Urges Return to 'Harmonious Coexistence' in Lebanon
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 25/2019
Pope Francis on Wednesday urged a resolution to the crisis in Lebanon, saying
the country must reaffirm its commitment to "harmonious coexistence."The pontiff
said in his Christmas message that he prayed for the "Lebanese people... to
rediscover their vocation to be a message of freedom and harmonious coexistence
for all."
Aoun Slams Hariri, Defends Bassil and Promises Govt. of
Experts
Naharnet/December 25/2019
President Michel Aoun on Wednesday lashed out at caretaker Prime Minister Saad
Hariri over his latest remarks and announced that the new government will be a
“government of experts.”Speaking to reporters in Bkirki after a closed-door
meeting with Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi on the sidelines of Christmas
Day mass, Aoun hoped Lebanon will “manage to overcome its current crisis” and
that the Lebanese will have a new government as a “New Year’s gift.”Asked about
accusations that Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil – his son-in-law –
is the one forming the new government, Aoun said: “Let’s suppose that Jebran
Bassil is the one forming the government, doesn’t he have the right to do so?
Isn’t he an MP and the head of the biggest bloc? But no, in fact it is not him
who is forming it. Those who are supposed to form it are forming it.”Asked
whether he did not want Hariri to form the new government, the president said:
“Is that why we waited 100 days?”“We waited for Saad Hariri for 100 days without
managing to resolve the crisis. He was hesitant. This is not how we form a
government,” Aoun added. Told that Hariri has said that the Presidency is acting
“as if nothing has happened in the country,” in reference to the economic crisis
and the Oct. 17 popular revolt, Aoun answered: “Does he want to envy me for my
calm which preserved calm in the country or for my foolishness which made me act
in a bad way?”The president’s remarks carried a veiled jab at Hariri for
resigning amid the popular protests that have swept the country. Asked about
claims in the Western media that the government will be “Hizbullah’s
government,” Aoun said: “Incorrect. A lot of parties are unhappy and they have
resorted to publishing such news. The government will be the government of all
Lebanese, including Hizbullah.”He also said he believes that there will be a
“government of experts” and not a so-called techno-political government. In a
chat with reporters on Tuesday, Hariri had said that the new government is not "Hizbullah's
government" but rather "Jebran Bassil's government," adding that he will not
accept to lead a new government containing Bassil. "I cannot work with these
people anymore. He wants to run the country on his own and he must show
moderation. How can one work with people who have a sectarian and racist
rhetoric?" Hariri added.
Mustaqbal Officials Hit Out at Aoun and Bassil
Naharnet/December 25/2019
Al-Mustaqbal Movement official ex-MP Mustafa Alloush on Wednesday lamented that
“all the attempts to protect the Presidency from the pettiness of the son-in-law
have failed,” in a jab at Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil, who is
President Michel Aoun’s son-in-law. “All what we hope for today on Christmas Day
is mercy for Lebanon in the face of the maliciousness of the devil and his greed
for swallowing everything and depriving the Lebanese of welfare and hope,”
Alloush tweeted. Al-Mustaqbal bloc MP Mohammed al-Hajjar for his part decried
that “it is sad that President Michel Aoun sees only one person in the country:
caretaker Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil.”“He considers that the rules of the
Constitution and the Lebanese political life revolve around him,” Hajjar added.
“It is strange that the Presidency has said that it waited for caretaker PM Saad
Hariri for 100 days (to take a decision on whether or not to lead the new
government), seeing as the country was awaiting the Presidency to resolve
Jebran’s obstacle and his insistence on a techno-political government,” Hajjar
went on to say.Earlier in the day, Aoun had lashed out at Hariri and defended
Bassil. “Let’s suppose that Jebran Bassil is the one forming the government,
doesn’t he have the right to do so? Isn’t he an MP and the head of the biggest
bloc? But no, in fact it is not him who is forming it. Those who are supposed to
form it are forming it,” Aoun said.“We waited for Saad Hariri for 100 days
without managing to resolve the crisis. He was hesitant. This is not how we form
a government,” Aoun added.Told that Hariri has said that the Presidency is
acting “as if nothing has happened in the country,” in reference to the economic
crisis and the Oct. 17 popular revolt, Aoun answered: “Does he want to envy me
for my calm which preserved calm in the country or for my foolishness which made
me act in a bad way?”The president’s remarks carried a veiled jab at Hariri for
resigning amid the popular protests that have swept the country.
Saad Hariri: I won't work with a sectarian and racist
Gibran Bassil
The National/December25/2019
In the most stinging criticism yet, Caretaker Lebanese prime minister Saad
Hariri has said he would not work again with caretaker foreign minister Gibran
Bassil, labelling the Free Patriotic Movement head “sectarian” and “racist.”"How
can you work with someone who is always insulting you? How can you work with
such people whose speech is sectarian and racist,” Hariri asked a group of
reporters on Tuesday. "I will not work again with Gebran Bassil, unless he
moderates [his language and policies]."The Future Movement leader and Mr Bassil
have worked closely in recent years, however splits over his policies began to
emerge shortly after the election in 2018. They deepened in recent months as Mr
Hariri reportedly tried to assemble a technocratic government but Mr Bassil
refused to back any government that did not include him as a member.The
caretaker foreign minister has been the centre of much of the public’s anger in
the ongoing two-month protests. He is often criticised for demeaning and racist
anti-refugee sentiment as well as being sectarian in his speeches. Mr Hariri
also again ruled the Future Movement out of the next administration, saying "I
will not be represented, take part in or cover the new government. If required,
I will not give it a vote of confidence."PM-designate Hassan Diab was nominated
on December 19 to begin trying to form the next administration and ease public
anger.
Report: Diab Met Aides of Nasrallah and Berri Monday Night
Naharnet/December 25/2019
Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab met Monday night with Hussein al-Khalil and
caretaker minister Ali Hassan Khalil – the political aides of Hizbullah chief
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, a media report said.
“Talks tackled the cabinet’s line-up,” LBCI television reported. “Diab intended
to carry a cabinet line-up to the President this Thursday, but he reversed his
decision after he realized that the issue needs further political
consultations,” LBCI added. “Diab had already entered the phase of choosing
candidates, picking Shadi Masaad, Demianos Qattar and the ambassador Qabalan
Franjieh to be part of his ministerial team,” the TV network said. It also noted
that the nomination of Qabalan Franjieh was the reason that “infuriated” Marada
Movement chief Suleiman Franjieh.
Khalil Slams Banks for 'Trapping' Civil Servants Salaries
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 25/2019
Lebanon's caretaker finance minister accused has the country's banks of
"trapping" civil servants' salaries with withdrawal limits that have fueled
public anger in the crisis-stricken country. "What is happening in some Lebanese
banks is unacceptable," Ali Hassan Khalil wrote on Twitter. "They are trapping
the salaries of (state) employees that are transferred by the finance ministry
every month."Rocked by two months of anti-government protests and a political
deadlock, Lebanon is also facing its worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990
civil war.A liquidity crunch has pushed Lebanese banks to impose capital
controls on dollar accounts, capping withdrawals at around $1,000 a month. Some
have imposed even tighter restrictions. Some have also capped weekly withdrawals
of the Lebanese pound at one million -- the equivalent of $660 at official rates
-- even as the currency has plunged by nearly a third against the dollar on the
black market in recent weeks. The tightening controls have prompted public
uproar, with many accusing banks of robbing them of their savings. On Tuesday,
Khalil said it was a "sacred right" of civil servants to be paid in full and on
time. "It is not permissible for this right to be violated," he said, vowing
legal action to ensure public servants can access their salaries in full. At
banks in the northern city of Tripoli, tensions soared Tuesday as clients
struggled to withdraw their salaries, said an AFP correspondent there. A fight
broke out in a branch near the city's main protest camp after the bank refused
to let a customer withdraw dollars. An anti-government street movement has
rocked the small Mediterranean country since October 17. Bowing to popular
pressure, the government resigned two weeks into demonstrations. Since then, a
potential default on Lebanon's huge public debt has heightened the economic and
political crisis. The faltering economy has pushed many companies into
bankruptcy, while others have laid off staff and slashed salaries.A recession of
more than 0.2 percent is expected for this year, the World Bank says. In its
first step towards forming an urgently-needed government, President Michel Aoun
last week designated engineering professor Hassan Diab as the country's next
prime minister, replacing Saad Hariri who quit in late October in the face of
mass protests. Diab, a self-styled technocrat, has vowed to form a cabinet of
independent experts within six weeks.
Lebanese Help Each Other as Economic Crisis Crushes Lives
Associated Press/Naharnet/December 25/2019
Panic set in on a WhatsApp group used to organize Lebanese protests when one
member said he intended to kill himself because he can't provide for his kids.
The desperate call came on the heels of the suicide of a father of two that had
stunned the public and raised alarm over how dire Lebanon's economic conditions
have become. So Mohammed Choucair, one of dozens of members in the group, sprang
into action. The 23-year-old architect student along with friends launched a
campaign appealing for donations -- for the man and for others suffering. They
posted an ad on social media and, to show transparency, created a spreadsheet to
track the money. As Lebanon's protest movement enters its third month, the
economic pinch is hurting everyone. Layoffs are increasing, salary cuts are the
norm, banks are capping withdrawals and prices are quickly rising. The euphoria
that marked the first days of the protests is being replaced with gloom. With
the entrenched political class failing to chart a way out, Lebanese are
resorting to what they've done in previous wars and crises: they rely on each
other, not the state."We got to a situation where people are not able to buy
food for their kids or pay their rent," Choucair said.
The despondent friend "said he had no money and what is the revolution doing
about it and asked why the politicians are not paying attention," Choucair said.
They were able to convince him not to kill himself, though he refused to take
any donations. Choucair and his group continued their campaign, giving money,
food, clothes and supplies to 58 families so far this month, including one
family reduced to using candles because they can't afford electricity. Over
recent years as Lebanon's economy worsened, people turned to familiar ways to
cope, like mosque and church charities or helping each other, forgiving debts or
handing out food. Those means have already been getting stretched thin.
The protests -- and the 24-hour news cycle focused on them -- have brought a
surge of help by rallying public attention to the suffering. Campaigns to
collect food, winter clothes and helplines for people in economic and emotional
distress are popping up everywhere, intensified by the Christmas spirit.
Stores have offered discounts and set up boxes for donations of clothes or
money. Ads on TV urged Lebanese to pack bags of donations instead of suitcases
for travel. Another urged Lebanese in the diaspora coming home to visit to bring
"medicines, clothes and goodies" to give, because "Lebanon needs help."
Some restaurants have offered to deliver free food, and bakeries put out bread
for anyone who needs. A yoga studio organized classes to fundraise for the
needy. WhatsApp groups and Instagram pages shared addresses of local small
businesses for shoppers to use for Christmas gifts. "We are all in this
together," said one tagline. A group of web developers created an app, Khayyak
or Your Brother, to coordinate between those who want to help and those in need.
"Don't lose hope, you are not alone," the advertisement for the app said. The
efforts are in part driven by the famed entrepreneurial spirit that helped
Lebanese get through numerous previous crises, including a 15-year civil war and
several wars with Israel that wrecked the infrastructure and economy. But the
protests have also created a unique experience -- "something for everybody,"
whether they support or oppose the revolt, said Mia Atwi, a clinical
psychologist.
"People feel more that they are all suffering the same thing, the rich and the
poor ... a common kind of loss," she said.
Atwi is co-founder of Lebanon's Embrace, a mental health organization operating
the national suicide prevention helpline. The helpline now receives 100 calls a
week, up from up to 10 before reports of suicides or attempted suicides first
erupted three weeks ago. Atwi attributed the jump to the spike of media and
public attention to the issue of suicide, something she said has saved lives.
Calls even come from rural areas, not just Beirut as they did in the past.
Still, the government hasn't given her organization a toll-free number, despite
paying $25,000 a year for the four-digit helpline.Many campaigns have sprung out
of the protest movement. Weekly clothes donations and distributions were set up
in the downtown Beirut squares at the epicenter of the demonstrations and near
the Central Bank, which protesters accuse of corruption and fueling the economic
crisis. "We only have each other" proclaims the campaign's hashtag, a snub of
the political class and the state. Rim Majid, a 21-year old student, quit
university in Beirut to participate in "everything revolution." After hearing of
news of the man's suicide in early December, she set up a griddle at a downtown
protest site to make free manousheh, a traditional Lebanese flatbread. Next to
the griddle is a donation box with the man's name. Someone donated enough wheat
for a week of baking.
"The suffering existed before, but now we are going through a crisis, one that
will only get worse," she said.
The help isn't only monetary. During a discussion one evening at a protest tent,
a concerned woman asked: "What are the revolutionaries going to do when those
who pay mortgages for their homes are unable to?" A young participant suggested
the protesters could physically block the bank and the police from evicting
people. For Choucair, the charity spirit reflects the principles of the protests
-- the rejection of an entire political elite seen as corrupt and of Lebanon's
sectarian power-sharing system. Choucair said his group's donation campaign
makes sure to transcend sectarian and political divisions and offers an
alternative to the patronage that politicians use to cement their power. The
campaign has members from Christian, Sunni and Shiite areas. At least three
donors came to them instead of established charities because, he said, they
wanted to avoid donating along sectarian or political lines.
Choucair had once planned to migrate like many others driven out by Lebanon's
economic problems. The protests convinced him he has no other place to be but
home, he said. In the last two months, he said, he met people from across
different classes and sects he never imagined talking to.
"Our relations are built on humanity and national unity," he said. "Our
friendships are built on helping people."
Lebanon’s leaders in blame game over crisis
Najia Houssari/Arab News/December 25/2019
BEIRUT: Tensions between Lebanon’s president and former prime minister have
flared after they accused each other of being to blame for the turmoil engulfing
the country.
A recession, massive street protests and a political crisis have created
financial and security chaos.
Lebanon has had a caretaker government since Oct. 29, when Saad Hariri resigned
as prime minister after nearly two weeks of protests. He has clashed with
President Michel Aoun about the leadership and composition of a new
administration. “The problem with the president is that he is acting as if
nothing has happened in the country, and he is trying to act smart by endorsing
the demands of the revolution, and my stance is clear, I will not be represented
in this government and I will not nominate anyone, nor will I give it a
confidence vote,” said Hariri.
“Now they are targeting the political legacy of the Hariri family, and they will
try to hold it responsible for all the calamities that have befallen the
country, but whoever tries to bury Hariri’s legacy will be as if he would be
burying himself. Let us see who really stole from the country. I will not cover
anyone, and they should do the same thing.”Aoun responded to Hariri by saying:
“Does he envy me for my resilience and calmness in trying to control the
situation, or does he want me to act foolishly and badly? We waited for 100 days
for him (Hariri) and nothing came out. We waited for someone who kept
hesitating. I want, and I do not want, as if someone was playing with a daisy. A
government cannot be formed in this manner.”
Dr. Hassan Diab, a university professor and former education minister, has been
nominated to replace Hariri and has started consulting with parliamentary blocs
to discuss the shape of a future government. But he faces significant hurdles,
including a boycott by influential political blocs that refused to nominate him
because of the backing he received from the Free Patriotic Movement, Hezbollah,
the Amal party and their allies. Bechara Al-Rahi, the Maronite Patriarch, on
Sunday urged all political parties to cooperate with Diab and facilitate the
formation of a rescue emergency government.
Protesters have demonstrated in Beirut and elsewhere in Lebanon against Diab,
saying he should abandon the post because he is a member of the ruling elite.
Demonstrators blame the ruling elite for widespread corruption and mismanagement
in Lebanon.
Open Letter to US Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo From Tom
Harb & John Hajjar, AMCD co-chairs Addressing Under Secretary of State for
Political Affairs David Hale's Visit Beirut
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/81759/open-letter-to-us-secretary-of-state-mike-pompeo-from-tom-harb-john-hajjar-amcd-co-chairs-addressing-under-secretary-of-state-for-political-affairs-david-hales-visit-beirut/
The Honorable Mike Pompeo Secretary of State Department of State
2201 C St., NW
Washington, DC 20520
Ref: Lebanese protests, Ambassador Hale, PM Hassan Diab
Dear Mr. Secretary,
After two months of protests, the current Lebanese government has lost all
legitimacy in the eyes of the people. The Lebanese economy continues its
downward spiral under the current leadership and economic hardship helps to fuel
the protests.
This instability has created new opportunities for the US to help shape a new
government. Unfortunately, though we fully support the message he delivered, the
optics of Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale meeting at
the residence of prominent Hezbollah-ally Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil have
caused hurt and frustration to those in the streets risking their lives for the
sake of a free Lebanon.
We have fresh information that a campaign to intimidate and in some cases to
terrorize activists is now underway. The Lebanese authorities must be sternly
reminded that they have a duty to protect the protests and warned that they will
be held accountable if activists come to harm.
We recommend that US aid only be given to fully-vetted NGOs in Lebanon and not
be given through the Lebanese government. It would be better to not give any aid
because it is ending up in the hands of our enemies.
Unsurprisingly, the Iran lobby is waging a pressure campaign in Washington
against US policy toward Lebanon, which you are so clearly and forcefullly
articulating. Iran is working not only against US interests, but against the
interests of the Lebanese and all freedom-loving people in the region.
Therefore, we urge you to issue a press release from Washington expressing
concern about the incoming Prime Minister, Hassan Diab, as his nomination came
from Hezbollah. In his past position as Minister of Education, he worked to
implement Iran’s dictates over Lebanese education, a dangerous matter both for
Lebanon and the US.
We also urge you to announce that no US aid, neither military nor humanitarian,
will be allowed to go to Hezbollah entities, allies, or entities that are
benefiting Hezbollah.
We also request that you meet with activists from the Lebanon Protests, who are
now being subjected to harsh treatment by Lebanese security agencies acting on
behalf of Hezbollah. We are ready and willing to assist you and the
administration to reach out to these activists.
Yours Sincerely,
Tom Harb & John Hajjar AMCD co-chairs
Christmas Thought of the Day
Father James Farfaglia/December 25/2019
Christmas Thought of the Day: Long ago, there ruled in Persia a wise and good
king who loved his people. He wanted to know how they lived, and he wanted
particularly to know about their hardships. Often dressed in the clothes of a
worker or a beggar, he visited the homes of the poor. No one whom he visited
even thought he might be their ruler.
Once he visited a very poor man who lived in a cellar. He ate the coarse food
the poor man ate, and he spoke cheerful, kind words to him. Then he left.
Later when he visited the poor man again, he disclosed his identity saying, "I
am your king!" Then the king thought the man would surely ask for some gift or
favor, but he did not.
Instead, he said, "You left your palace and your glory to visit me in this dark,
dreary place. You ate the course food I ate. You brought gladness to my heart!
To others you have given your rich gifts. To me you have given yourself!"
This is the true meaning of Christmas.
Had our greatest need been knowledge, God would have sent us an educator. Had
that greatest need been technology, God would have sent us a scientist. So too
had our greatest need been for money, God would have sent us an economist. Had
our greatest need been for pleasure, God would have sent us an entertainer. But,
because our greatest need was for love and the full understanding of true love,
he God sent us a Savior who is all love.
Despite the tragedies that man inflicts upon man, the goodness of man prevails
because the God-Man Jesus Christ overcame evil. The tomb is empty.
Tragedies exist; evil exists; bad things happen precisely because man rejects
God. Our modern times are marked by a general rejection of God thus causing the
terrible chaos that we see in the news each day.
The terrible problems that challenge the world this Christmas are not really a
God problem, they are our problems. How do we respond?
The imminent failure of Lebanon's new prime minister
Hassan Diab will likely oversee Lebanon's final political, social and economic
collapse.
Imad K Harb/Al Jazeera/December 25/2019
On December 19, Lebanese President Michel Aoun named Hassan Diab as the
country's next prime minister after a slew of candidates for the position failed
to receive enough political support.
Diab had been put forward by Hezbollah and its allies in the Lebanese
parliament, among them Speaker Nabih Berri's AMAL Movement and the Free
Patriotic Movement (FPM) headed by the president's son-in-law and foreign
minister, Gebran Bassil.
Immediately after Diab was named, and despite the latter's assurances that he
will form a government that addresses the many problems facing the country,
protests broke out in the streets decrying the formation of what is considered a
Hezbollah government that will aim to abort the ongoing uprising.
The protesters have demanded the end of the sectarian system and the appointment
of a politically independent premier who would form a government of unaffiliated
experts and technocrats to write a new electoral law and conduct early
parliamentary elections. So far, they have failed to realise these demands.
But even according to the power-sharing system in use today, where the prime
minister has to be a Sunni Muslim, Diab is not likely to succeed. Having scant
support among his Sunni community and former Prime Minister Saad Hariri's Future
Bloc in parliament, he lacks the political backing to be a strong prime minister
vis-a-vis President Aoun and the Hezbollah-AMAL alliance.
Protesters doubt his ability to address their demands of fighting corruption and
it is hard to see how Diab will be able to manage the panoply of political and
economic troubles the country faces. Domestic, regional and international
circumstances make his political success unlikely.
Domestic troubles
Since the 1975-1990 civil war and following the ignominious withdrawal of Syrian
troops in 2005, Lebanon has witnessed divisions, confrontations and frequent
stalemate. The last three years, however, have been especially troublesome.
The October 2016 political deal which gave Aoun the presidency in exchange for
Hariri getting the premiership became increasingly hard to maintain as the
president, supported by Hezbollah, deprived his prime minister of his
prerogatives as chief executive.
Ever the opponent of the 1989 Taif Accords, which charted the post-civil war
period and strengthened the position of the prime minister, Aoun has, since
becoming president, tried to restore the powers of the Maronite president in the
executive branch, such as choosing ministers. This came on top of Hariri's
troubles running an unwieldy government of national unity.
Today, Diab - an academic who has never run for public office or built a
political base of his own - is at the mercy of the same Hezbollah-AMAL-FPM
alliance without much discernible support from his own community. He thus starts
his tenure limping, as protesters in the street are demanding the appointment of
a strong leader who represents a popular base and who is capable of fighting
corruption and nepotism.
The immediate impact of Diab's institutional weakness will manifest itself in
his expected inability to curb Hezbollah's power and influence in state
institutions. Like Hariri and others before him, Diab will also fail to check
the party's status as an armed militia with independent decision-making and a
state within the state.
With Hezbollah claiming the current street protests were inspired by outsiders,
mostly the United States, to weaken "the resistance", it is impossible to
imagine that it will assist its choice for prime minister in reasserting the
Lebanese state's primacy over all factions in the country.
Equally problematic for Diab will be dealing with the country's teetering
economy. Ratings agency Fitch has recently downgraded the country's credit
rating and warned that Lebanon is either going to restructure its debt, which
amounts to 150 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP), or default on it.
This year Lebanon's public debt reached $86bn, while its budget deficit remained
at 11 percent. Restructuring or defaulting will be calamitous considering the
lack of trust of outside investors, the absence of funds to stimulate the
economy, and the limited impact of any action by Lebanon's Central Bank, which
has so far instituted some monetary changes to try to halt the decline.
Furthermore, a weak prime minister and government can offer no concrete solution
to the rampant corruption that has beset Lebanon for decades and led to the
current uprising.
Transparency International's Corruption Perception Index ranks Lebanon 138 out
of 180 countries. Corruption permeates state institutions, the bureaucracy, and
even the parliament, making Diab's job extremely difficult.
The same goes for necessary efforts to reform state agencies and the judiciary
where entrenched interests coincide with political power to protect influential
personalities and politicians.
Regional scepticism
While Lebanon's troubles and street demonstrations are caused primarily by
domestic dynamics, the country's regional environment exacerbates the situation.
Bereft of a strong position within his Sunni community, Diab lacks the basic
characteristic for attracting support from regional powers, such as Saudi Arabia
and Egypt. Even Hariri, who inherited his father Rafiq's connections in the Gulf
and other parts of the Arab world, had difficulties maintaining good relations
with Riyadh after his 2016 deal with Aoun and Hezbollah.
In November 2017, the Saudis even put him under house arrest in Riyadh and
forced him to resign before French President Emmanuel Macron intervened.
Regionally, Diab's premiership will be viewed as part of the tug of war between
Saudi Arabia and Iran, as the latter scored yet another victory in Lebanon with
his appointment. Granted, the kingdom and the Islamic Republic may be testing
the possibility of patching things up, but Riyadh still resents Tehran's
influence in Beirut through Hezbollah.
The reluctance of Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states to fund Lebanon at this
crucial time is another obstacle for Diab to surmount. Their financial
assistance in the form of deposits in the Central Bank, for instance, could
restore investors' trust and encourage the bank to increase liquidity in the
domestic market.
But for them to do so, Diab needs to dissipate doubt about his relationship with
Hezbollah and to show that he can be independent of the party's bidding - a
rather unlikely scenario given his institutional weakness.
International reluctance
Looking at the international scene, it is also difficult to see how Diab can
muster enough political and economic support for his mission. While many actors
value their relationship with Lebanon and understand the country's political
dilemmas, they remain convinced that its troubles can only be solved if
protesters' demands are addressed directly.
A conference convened in Paris on December 11 failed to reach agreement on
financial assistance to the country so long as it does not have a functioning
government committed to reform. Without such assistance, all bets are off that
things will be better in the foreseeable future.
After Diab forms his government, he is likely to run into some very unpleasant
circumstances. While the US may want to go easy on the prime minister-designate,
his association with Hezbollah is likely to at the very least dampen any
American enthusiasm for his government.
On December 20, US Assistant Secretary of State David Hale paid a visit to
Lebanon and met the country's leaders but remained uncommitted to providing
blanket support, instead diplomatically stating that the US has no say in the
formation of the government.
On the same day, Aoun asked Diab to form a government, Germany's parliament
passed a resolution calling for a ban on Hezbollah activities on German soil.
This could affect relations between Berlin and any Lebanese government perceived
to be cooperating with the party.
Similar bans have been adopted by the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, the US
and Canada. While France has tiptoed around a decisive break with Hezbollah and
Iran, President Macron cannot break with the US, Germany, the UK, and others to
offer help to Diab.
Diab's association with Hezbollah and loss of political and financial support
from influential international actors will stymie his ability to address the
dire economic situation. This will likely increase the party's and Iran's
influence on Lebanese politics, thus only exacerbating Diab's and the country's
problems.
Diab likely to preside over collapse
Although Diab has asserted that his government will be independent and made up
of experts, demonstrators see it as beholden to Hezbollah.
President Aoun and his allies Hezbollah and AMAL know that Diab does not have
the support of a specific political bloc and, therefore, has no chance of
success in fulfilling the demands of the Lebanese protest movement.
He may only have been chosen because he is no threat to the current president
and will not try to limit Hezbollah's influence in state institutions.
Diab will probably soon have the distinct misfortune of presiding over the final
political, economic and social collapse of Lebanon. While he will be able to
find a majority in parliament that can help him shepherd a limited reform
programme - the same majority that helped him get the post - he will not be able
to mollify the Lebanese public which sees no hope in the current political
system.
Simultaneously, his association with Hezbollah is unlikely to raise the regional
and international communities' interest in helping his government undertake the
radical economic programme the country needs to correct its path forward.
His tenure, however long it will be, will thus be yet another episode of the
type of failed governance which the Lebanese people have been protesting against
since October.
Perhaps the time has come for Lebanon's current elites to allow for the change
demonstrators are demanding: an overhaul of the political and economic systems
that can pave the road for a more modern polity and more equitable society.
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily
reflect Al Jazeera's editorial stance.
*Imad K HarbImad K Harb is Director of Research and Analysis at Arab Center
Washington DC.
Hezbollah-designated prime minister a recipe for increased
unrest
Randa Takieddine/Arab News/December 25/2019
Protests in Lebanon continued after the nomination of Hassan Diab, a Sunni
former education minister, to be the country’s new prime minister.
His designation by Lebanese President Michel Aoun was contested by protesters
and the Sunni community, many of whom continue to insist their demands for an
independent prime minister who was never part of a government be upheld.
Diab, who has worked as the American University of Beirut’s (AUB) vice president
for regional external programsand as a professor of electricalengineering, was
an education minister in the Nagib Mikati government in 2011, which was formed
by Hezbollah and the Aounist party after they organized the downfall of Saad
Hariri’s government.
Diab boasted in his 134-page bio about “international and national institutions
having recognized my achievements as outstanding contributions to the field of
education.” He also wrote in his CV: “I was the only AUB professor administrator
in the history of AUB to become (a) minister.” Presumably he was unaware of the
existence of late writer and journalist Ghassan Tueini, Bassel Fuleihan, who was
assassinated alongside late Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, or Ghassan Salame and
Jihad Azour, all of whom were both ministers and AUB professors.
His quick designation by Aoun after Hariri refused to head a technocrat
government of national unity was the outcome of a brokered deal between
Hezbollah and the president’s son in law, Gebran Bassil. Only six Sunni deputies
designated him, all close to Hezbollah and Syrian regime allies. Sunni
supporters of Hariri, though, took to the streets and protested violently at the
nomination.
With the ongoing protests in various cities across Lebanon and with Aoun, Bassil
and Hezbollah frustrated, the forming of a government by Diab is going to be
near impossible.
Despite calls from Hariri himself for protestors to stand down, the
demonstrations turned ugly, and in some cases violent, with the security
services targeted by the mob. Many protesters appeared in front of the heavily
guarded residence of the new prime minister — demanding an independent prime
minister instead. During the parliamentary consultations with various parties,
Diab said he would need six to eight weeks to form a government of 20
independent specialists. Many, though, simply do not trust him to follow through
when backed by Aoun and Hezbollah.
Hariri’s party, the Future Movement, has said it will not participate in his
government. The Lebanese Forces Party headed by Samir Geagea said the same
thing. The socialists, headed by Walid Joumblatt, designated former Lebanese
Ambassador to the UN Nawaf Salam instead.
It has created a recipe for future confrontation, with Salam a highly respected
independent personality who belongs to a prominent Sunni family of politicians
(his late uncle, Saeb, and cousinTammam Salam, both held the office of prime
minister). Hezbollah has claimed Nawaf is supported by the US — an assertion
many flat out refuse to accept as anything other than a smear.
With the ongoing protests in various cities across Lebanon and with Aoun, Bassil
and Hezbollah frustrated, the forming of a government by Diab is going to be
near impossible. He will not be able to satisfy the people’s demands, nor those
of major foreign powers who pledged in Paris under the chairmanship of France to
support Lebanon if and when a credible efficient government is formed. US
Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale visited Beirut last
week, to stress the same message. But the question is, how credible can a
government tailored by this trio be, having failed since 2011 to supply even
basic services? After nearly a decade of failure, Lebanon is on the brink of
collapse. It needs international support badly — and Diab’s appointment, failing
to unite the country, will not lead to that.
*Randa Takieddine is a Paris-based Lebanese journalist who headed Al-Hayat’s
bureau in France for 30 years. She has covered France’s relations with the
Middle East through the terms of four presidents.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on December 25-26/2019
Pope Francis Ushers in Christmas with Message of
'Unconditional Love'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 25/2019
Pope Francis ushered in Christmas on Wednesday for the world's 1.3 billion
Catholics with a message of unconditional love, saying "God continues to love us
all, even the worst of us.""You may have mistaken ideas, you may have made a
complete mess of things, but the Lord continues to love you," the pontiff told
crowds gathered at the Vatican for his Christmas Eve midnight mass. The
Argentinian also emphasized "unconditional" love, in a year that has seen the
Pope move to combat silence surrounding pedophilia in the Roman Catholic church,
which has been rocked by thousands of reports of sexual abuse by priests around
the world and accusations of cover-ups by senior clergy. Earlier this month, he
removed a Pontifical secrecy rule, which critics said prevented priests and
victims from reporting abuse, and in May passed a landmark measure to oblige
those who know about sex abuse to report it to their superiors. Francis will at
noon on Wednesday give the traditional Christmas Day mass -- his seventh --
addressed to the world in front of St Peter's Square. Meanwhile, thousands of
Palestinians and foreigners converged in the biblical town of Bethlehem, revered
by Christians as the birthplace of Jesus, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. A
few hundred worshipers gathered in the church on the site of Jesus's birth for
midnight mass, attended by Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas. Hundreds more
gathered outside, watching on screens in the crisp air.
'Special greetings' to Gaza
But fewer Christians from the Gaza Strip were in attendance than in previous
years, as Israel had granted permits to just around 300 of the some 900 people
who applied, said Wadie Abunassar, an adviser to Church leaders in the Holy
Land. At midnight bells rang out throughout the town, Archbishop Pierbattista
Pizzaballa, the most senior Roman Catholic official in the Middle East, led
hymns and said prayers. tmas all the world looks to us, to Bethlehem," he said.
"Special greetings to our brothers and sisters in Gaza, with whom I celebrated
Christmas two days ago," he added. Pizzaballa, who had to cross Israel's
separation barrier to get from Jerusalem to Bethlehem, said after his arrival
that it was a difficult time but there was reason for hope. "We see in this
period the weakness of politics, enormous economic problems, unemployment,
problems in families," he said. "On the other side, when I visit families,
parishes, communities, I see a lot of commitment... for the future. Christmas is
for us to celebrate the hope."Earlier on Christmas Eve, a few thousand people
watched in the winter sun as Palestinian scouts paraded in front of a giant
Christmas tree. "The church is beautiful and it puts what we know in the Bible
(in) place," said Laneda, an American tourist visiting the site. "Everything is
just very meaningful."French Catholics endured a sad moment as Notre-Dame
Cathedral in Paris was unable to hold Christmas Eve Mass for the first time
since 1803 -- after a fire ravaged its structure in April. In the Philippines, a
majority Catholic country, typhoon Phanfone brought a wet and miserable
Christmas Day to millions, many of them stranded at shuttered ports or
evacuation centers.
Pope Urges World to Ensure Security in Mideast, Syria
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 25/2019
Pope Francis on Wednesday urged the world community to strive for peace and
security in war-ravaged Syria and the Middle East in his Christmas message. "May
Christ bring his light to the many children suffering from war and conflicts in
the Middle East," he said in his Urbi and Orbi (To the City and to the World)
message. "May he bring comfort to the beloved Syrian people who still see no end
to the hostilities that have rent their country over the last decade," he said.
"May he inspire governments and the international community to find solutions to
allow the peoples of that region to live together in peace and security, and put
an end to their sufferings," he said.
Syria missile strike kills 5 pro-Iran fighters: monitor
News Agencies/December 25/2019
BEIRUT: Five pro-Iranian fighters were killed by unidentified missiles on
Wednesday evening in Syria’s eastern province of Deir Ezzor, a war monitor said.
“Missiles of unidentified origin targeted the headquarters of the 47th Brigade
of pro-Iranian militias in the town of Albu Kamal, in the east of Deir Ezzor
province, killing five fighters,” the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Observatory chief Rami Abdul Rahman said drones may have been responsible for
the strikes, which caused “loud blasts.”Iran and militias it supports, along
with fighters from Iraq and elsewhere, have backed the regime of President
Bashar Assad in Syria’s eight-year war. Israel has vowed to prevent its regional
arch-rival Iran from gaining a foothold in the country and has carried out
hundreds of strikes against Iranian targets. The vast desert province of Deir
Ezzor, which neighbors Iraq, hosts several actors in the Syrian conflict besides
pro-regime forces. The Syrian Democratic Forces, a Kurdish-dominated armed group
backed by the United States, was instrumental in destroying the self-declared
“caliphate” of the Daesh group. Five pro-Iranian fighters were killed in similar
raids on the outskirts of Albu Kamal on December 8, the Observatory said. In
September, 28 pro-Iranian fighters including at least 10 Iraqis were killed in
similar strikes. The Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah blamed Israel for that
attack, quoting a “security source in Syria.”In June 2018, strikes in far
eastern Syria were also attributed to Israel by an American official, on
condition of anonymity. The Observatory said they killed 55 pro-regime forces.
Syria’s complex, multi-faceted conflict has left more than 370,000 people dead
and displaced millions since it began in 2011 with anti-government
demonstrations that were brutally repressed.
Kochavi: Direct conflict with Iran is improbable. Still, he
warned of increased fire power against civilian areas
DebkaFile/December 25/2019
In a wide-ranging lecture on Wednesday, Dec. 25, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen.
Aviv Kochavi said: “Although a direct conflict with Iran is unlikely, we are
prepared without encouraging it.” Calling Iran Israel’s immediate enemy, the
general said, “We must continue our efforts to remove Iranian weaponry from
Syria, although we would have preferred not to conduct this effort on our
own.”Speaking at an event in Tel Aviv, Kochavi commented that when technology is
readily available to extremists and bitter enemies, they don’t need the support
of a large military industry or a superpower for jamming GPS systems or
cyberwarfare. Missiles are easily adapted to precision guidance and “we [Israel
and the IDF] are engaged in a huge effort to prevent our enemies from acquiring
this capability, even if at times, we reach the brink of direct conflict.”
Iran continues to manufacture precise missiles that can reach Israel in their
hundreds. The IDF chief advised the country to prepare “mentally” for a much
greater assault on civilian areas than faced in the past. In a message to the
population, Kochavi said: “Israel is a phenomenal success and the armed forces’
primary mission is to assure the country of security and defense,” in their
broadest sense, namely, “a high measure of safety, stability and the absence of
wars.” He cited “our ultimate goal” as being “to instill in our enemies the
feeling of despair and self-doubt in their ability to achieve their aggressive
aims.”
The military chief stressed: “Weapons are flowing freely from Iraq and we can’t
let this happen unopposed,” he said. “All the hostile fronts ranged against us
have become active in recent months – each escalating at least twice to war
alert levels. Al Qods and Hizballah forces operate in Syria and Iran has shot
its tentacles into the Gaza Strip. In these circumstances secret Israeli ongoing
operations aimed at preventing Shiite militia entrenchment in Syria and the
threat from precise missiles are of paramount importance and will persist.”
Referring to the years’ long Palestinian terrorist threat from Gaza, Kochavi
stressed that every effort will be made to imbue in the targeted Israeli
population a sense of security – but, he said, that sense must depend on
achieving real security. “Hamas is finally focusing on caring for the enclave’s
population and is anxious to avoid escalating tension, said the military chief.
“The last rash of rocket attacks were the work of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad,
whose leader Baha Abu al-Ata is now dead. [He was killed on Nov. 12 in an IDF
targeted assassination.] Since Hamas has regained control of the Gaza Strip,
backed by Egypt, Israel can afford to lift some of the restrictions imposed [on
a territory dedicated to terrorism], while placing the security of Israelis
along the border at the top of its scale of priorities. “This is government
policy and I support it fully. I believe it can bring calm to the area” Kochavi
said.
Displaced Syrian Grows Mushrooms to Feed Family
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 25/2019
In a camp for the displaced in northern Syria, Nasrallah scatters mushroom
spores into a bag of wet hay, hoping they will sprout and feed his family.
"Mushrooms have become the main alternative to meat, as it's so expensive," says
the 43-year-old. After the civil war erupted in Syria eight years ago, Nasrallah
started growing the fungi in his home province of Hama. "We'd eat some, give
some away to friends," explains the father of three, who used to work for the
local council in the town of Qalaat al-Madiq. But earlier this year, increased
regime bombardment on the Hama region forced his family to flee north towards
the Turkish border. They found refuge in a camp in the town of Haarem in the
northwestern province of Idlib, but jobs there are scarce. With money tight to
support his wife and children, he planted some mushrooms. "We eat some and we
sell a little to provide for ourselves," he says. Before planting the fungi,
Nasrallah sterilizes hay by stirring it in boiling water over a wood fire. He
then layers the wet straw into a bag, sprinkling five to ten grams of mushroom
spores between each coating. Sealing the bag with a tight knot, he lugs it into
a dark, warm room and leaves it for around 20 days. Once the bag has turned
white, he transfers it to a slightly brighter room, opens it up, and mists the
top regularly until mushrooms sprout out. "Not many people grow mushrooms,
though people -- especially in camps -- are increasingly turning to them," he
says.
'Can't afford them'
Mushrooms are commonly viewed as an alternative to meat in dishes, although they
are different in nutritional value. They contain far less protein, but more
minerals and vitamins. Syrians in other parts of the country have also grown
them during the war, most notably in the Damascus suburb of Eastern Ghouta when
it was under a five-year government siege. Around 6.5 million people in Syria
are food insecure, or lack access to sufficient nutritious food. Many of them
have been displaced from their homes by the conflict, the World Food Program
says. Today, Nasrallah buys a kilo of spores from Turkey for the equivalent of
$10, hoping they will generate 20 kilos of food. But he spreads out his yield,
picking no more than five kilos a week. Each kilo sells for a little under the
equivalent of $3, far less than the average $13 per kilo for meat. Inside the
brighter cultivation room, his nine-year-old son, Saeed, watches as Nasrallah
carves off a huge sprout of creamy oyster mushrooms from a sack. In the street
outside, 65-year-old Umm Khaled takes a quick look at the merchandise and picks
it up for a few bank notes. Inside her modest mudbrick home, she chops the
mushrooms up and cooks them over a camping stove with some onions and ghee. "To
be honest, chicken and meat are better, but we can't afford them," says the
elderly woman, who cooks for her son and grandchildren. Gathering around the
dishes, she and her family rip up flat bread and dip it into the vegetables
instead.
Algeria Starts Funeral of Army Chief Gaid Salah
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 25/2019
The funeral of Algeria's powerful army chief Ahmed Gaid Salah got underway
Wednesday as his remains arrived at the People's Palace, images broadcast by
state TV showed. The wooden coffin containing the body of Gaid Salah, who died
of a heart attack on Monday aged 79, arrived at 0630 GMT, covered in a national
flag and carried by officers. Surrounded by large numbers of motorbike
outriders, the funeral procession converged on the palace, which was built in
the 18th century for Ottoman governors. Gaid Salah became the country's de facto
strongman after longtime president Abdelaziz Bouteflika was forced to step down
in the face of huge street protests in April. Interim military chief of staff
Said Chengriha was in attendance, while President Abdelmadjid Tebboune arrived a
little after the procession. Tebboune won a December 12 presidential
election with 58.1 percent of the vote on a turnout of less than 40 percent,
according to official results, in a poll dismissed by protesters as a ploy by
Gaid Salah and other establishment figures to consolidate their power. After his
win, Tebboune awarded Gaid Salah the National Order of Merit, Algeria's highest
honor. After the general's death he announced three days of national mourning.
Images broadcast by several TV stations showed a crowd massed at the gates of
the palace to pay their final respects to Gaid Salah, who served as army chief
for 15 years. The religious affairs ministry asked imams to lead prayers in Gaid
Salah's memory on Wednesday. He was due to be buried shortly after 1200 GMT in
Martyrs' Square in Al-Alia cemetery, where former presidents and other major
Algerian figures are laid to rest.
Iraqi City in Turmoil after Activist's Death
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 25/2019
Hundreds of anti-government protesters marched Wednesday in southern Iraq to
mourn a dead activist after a night during which the headquarters of two
pro-Iran militias were set on fire, an AFP correspondent reported. The
demonstrators oppose the political class that has run the oil-rich yet
poverty-hit country since a 2003 US-led invasion overthrew dictator Saddam
Hussein. They accuse leaders of enriching themselves and of being beholden to
neighbor Iran. Thaer al-Tayeb, a prominent activist from the city of Diwaniya,
went to Baghdad's Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the unprecedented revolt
shaking Iraq, when the rallies started nearly three months ago. A
suspicious explosion hit Tayeb's car on December 15, badly wounding him and
fellow activist Ali al-Madani, back in Tayeb's hometown 200 kilometers (125
miles) south of Baghdad. After Tayeb's death in hospital was announced Tuesday,
crowds of demonstrators rushed to the two local headquarters of pro-Iran
militias and torched them. First they set fire to the building of the powerful
Badr organisation, run by the parliamentary head of the pro-Iran paramilitaries,
Hadi al-Ameri. Then they torched the headquarters of Assaib Ahl al-Haq, a group
whose head Qais al-Khazali is subject to sanctions by the United States, accused
of "kidnapping, murder and torture". Protesters also blocked roads with burning
car tires in the southern city of Basra. Around 460 protesters have been killed
since the start of the demonstrations in early October and 25,000 have been
wounded.
Rallies have continued despite a campaign of intimidation that has included
targeted killings and abductions of activists, which the United Nations blames
on militias. After dwindling in recent weeks following a string of killings, the
protest campaign has rediscovered its vigor at a time when political factions
are wrangling over a replacement for outgoing premier Adel Abdel Mahdi. He quit
in November in the face of the massive protests, and negotiations to fill his
post have remained deadlocked since the latest in a series of deadlines expired
at midnight on Sunday.
Libya War Leaves Thousands Homeless in Tripoli
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 25/2019
Layla Mohammed barely had time to gather her children's belongings before
fleeing their southern Tripoli home when shelling targeted the Libyan capital's
outskirts earlier this year. For months she moved her family between apartments
as soaring rents in the crowded city exhausted her savings, eventually leaving
them squatting in an unfinished building alongside dozens of other families.
More than 140,000 Libyans like Mohammed have fled their homes since April, when
forces loyal to eastern-based strongman Khalifa Haftar launched an assault on
Tripoli, seat of the U.N.-recognized government.
In central Tripoli, the grey skeletons of a highrise construction site --
abandoned since 2008 due to a property dispute -- now host more than 170
families. For some, the high rises in Tarik al-Sekka were "a gift from heaven",
since the alternative was living in the street. But "we live like animals --
without running water, electricity, or even sewerage," said Mohammed, a mother
of seven. Her youngest son is sick with a chronic respiratory illness. "The dust
will kill him," Mohammed despaired."All we want is to live in dignity," she
said.Neighbour Samira crowds her four children into a single room in a nearby
building, preferring the greater warmth it affords over any sense of privacy.
She feels safe in the eight square meter room, which thanks to a benefactor has
a door and a window. "Even if it's not ideal, at least it's free," she said.
Initially, Samira was determined to stay in her southern Tripoli home, even as
combat crept closer over the months. But when a rocket fell near her house the
terror became too much and she fled, she said.
'Breaks my heart'
The buildings sheltering Samira and Mohammed are just meters from the seat of
the Government of National Accord (GNA). But authorities have done little to
help. Mayssoun al-Diab is in charge of displacement issues for the GNA's crisis
committee but admits "the government has offered them nothing, not even moral
support."According to her, the government was unable to find shelter for all the
displaced, leaving many at the mercy of avaricious lenders. Her committee
requisitioned schools, public buildings and hotels to house the displaced, but
faced with an ever-growing influx as the battle dragged on, more and more
families found themselves homeless. When school resumed, the situation got
worse. After living for months in one Tripoli school, Khairi al-Doukali said his
family was "evicted alongside dozens of other families" to allow classes to
restart. Eventually, the Doukali family also ended up on the Tarik al-Sekka
building site. In the face of government inaction, civic-minded Tripoli
residents have responded to heartfelt pleas online and stepped in to help. Every
day people give food, clothing and blankets, according to Salem el-Chatti, a
member of a neighborhood support group.
"We try to distribute donated items in a fair manner," he said. A man named
Abdel-Atti arrives to donate a mattress and blankets. "I pass by these buildings
every day," he said. "It breaks my heart that my kids are fed and sleep warm
inside while our brothers are experiencing this tragedy."
Iran Warplane Crashes near Dormant Volcano
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 25/2019
An Iranian military fighter jet crashed on Wednesday near a dormant volcano in
the northwest of the country and its pilot was missing, official media reported.
State news agency IRNA said the jet went down at 9:00 am (0530 GMT) near Mount
Sabalan, in the Lesser Caucasus range, and was a MiG-29 on a test flight after
being overhauled. Amateur video footage published on the social media accounts
of various media outlets in Iran appeared to show smoke rising above snow-capped
peaks. Fars news agency said the plane had been found but there was no trace of
its pilot and that he could have ejected from the aircraft. A search and rescue
operation was underway for the pilot, who the army identified as Colonel
Mohammadreza Rahmani, one of its most experienced fliers. "Following the crash
of a military plane in Ardabil (province), helicopter and rescue groups have
been sent to the region," Iran's Red Crescent said in a statement on its
website. The official website of the army said search and rescue efforts had
been hampered by bad weather, with snow making areas impassable. Iran's third
highest peak, Mount Sabalan, features a crater that turns into a lake at certain
times of the year.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on December 25-26/2019
IDF preparing for confrontation with Iran -
Chief of Staff Aviv Kochavi
Anna Ahronhem/Jerusalem Post/December 25/2019
Lt.-Gen. Kochavi acknowledges in public for the first time that Israel has
struck Iranian targets in Iraq.
The IDF is preparing for a limited confrontation with the Islamic Republic as
Israel continues to act against Iranian entrenchment, IDF Chief of Staff
Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi warned Wednesday morning.
“There is a possibility that we will face a limited confrontation with Iran and
we are preparing for it,” Kochavi said at a conference in honor of former IDF
Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Amnon Lipkin-Shahak at the IDC Interdisciplinary Center
in Herzilya.
“We will continue to act and responsibly,” Israel’s top military officer said,
adding that it would have been better had Israel not been the only one engaged
in the effort to stop Iran.
The IDF he said, is carrying out operations both publicly and below the radar,
to prevent the enemy from obtaining precision missiles, even if those operations
bring about a confrontation.
“We will not allow Iran to entrench itself in Syria, or in Iraq,” Kochavi said,
publicly acknowledging for the first time that Israel’s Air Force has attacked
against Iranian targets in Iraq.
"Iraq is undergoing a civil war, when the Quds Force is operating there on a
daily basis, when the country itself has turned into an ungoverned area.
Advanced weapons are being smuggled by the Quds Force in Iraq on a monthly basis
and we can’t allow that,” he said.
According to Kochavi, there’s been a change in threats, will all fronts active
in trying to carry out terror or rocket attacks against Israel.
“It wasn’t always like that,” he said, pointing to years of relative quiet from
Lebanon and Syria. But over the last few months there were many instances where
there were warnings of immediate threats to Israel that the military had to
contend with.
And while over the years, Iran wasn’t regarded as an immediate threat, it’s
transformed into “an enemy that we can see and that we deal with,” Kochavi said,
adding that Israel’s “ultimate goal is to instill in our enemies the feeling of
despair and doubt in their ability to achieve their aggressive aims.”
According to the chief of staff, Iran is more active in the Middle East against
Gulf states where they are able to strike “without retaliation, without
response, without deterrence. But we do respond.”
Iran continues to produce missiles that can reach our territory, Kochavi said,
explaining that the Iranian military industry is much larger than all the
military industries of Israel combined allowing for them to produce more precise
and long range rockets to threaten the Israeli homefront.
In addition, Quds forces in Syria as well as Hezbollah have spectrum barriers
and advanced anti-aircraft missiles which can threaten Israeli jets, which
nonetheless continue to have freedom of operation across the Middle East.
According to the chief of staff, while war is a solution to be used after all
diplomatic solutions have been exhausted, “in the next war, be it with the north
or with Gaza, the intensity of enemy firepower will be great.”
"There can be no war without casualties and I cannot not guarantee a short war,”
he said. “We will need national resilience.”
“I’m looking at everyone in the eye, it will be intense. We have to prepare for
that. We have to prepare for that militarily, on the homefront, and mentally,”
Kochavi warned.
And In the next war the IDF will strike urban areas belonging to the enemy
intensely after warning civilians to leave.
“It’s the enemy that chose that,” he said. “We will strike hard, including the
infrastructure of the country that allows the terror group to act against
Israel. Know that the responsibility belongs to the government of Lebanon, Syria
and Hamas.”
Despite the increased number of threats, none of Israel’s enemies want war due
to the IDF willingness to act, Kochavi stated, adding that an opportunity has
risen in the south with the Gaza Strip to improve the humanitarian conditions of
civilians.
"I recognize a unique opportunity in Gaza. There is a strong will not to bring
about an escalation of tensions on the part of Hamas and it was Islamic Jihad
under the leadership of its now-dead commander Baha Abu al-Ata that were
responsible for the vast majority of attacks on Israel in the past year.”
Hamas, he said, wants to improve the welfare of its citizens and Israel is “in
the process of assisting the Egyptians within which we will facilitate civilian
relief. This is the policy of the Israeli government and I support it.”
But, the opportunity is fragile and it cannot be forgotten that Hamas is still
holding the bodies of fallen IDF soldiers Oron Shaul and Hadar Goldin.
"We have to return them home, not just the security concerns of the State of
Israel," he said.
UN, UK Treating Persecuted Christians as “Enemies”
ريموند إبراهيم: الأمم المتحدة وبريطانيا يعاملان المضطهدين المسيحيين كأعداء
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/December 25/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/81762/raymond-ibrahim-un-uk-treating-persecuted-christians-as-enemies-%d8%b1%d9%8a%d9%85%d9%88%d9%86%d8%af-%d8%a5%d8%a8%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%87%d9%8a%d9%85-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a3%d9%85%d9%85-%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%85/
“You have this absurd situation where the scheme is set up to help Syrian
refugees and the people most in need, Christians who have been ‘genocided,’ they
can’t even get into the U.N. camps to get the food. If you enter and say I am a
Christian or convert, the Muslim U.N. guards will block you [from] getting in…
and even threaten you…” — Paul Diamond, British Human Rights Lawyer, CBN News,
December 4, 2019.
Lord George Carey is suing the UK Home Office for allegedly being
“institutionally biased” against Christian refugees and therefore complicit in
what he calls “the steady crucifixion of Middle East Christians.”
When it comes to offering asylum, the UK “appears to discriminate in favour of
Muslims” instead of Christians. Statistics seemed to confirm this allegation:
“out of 4,850 Syrian refugees accepted for resettlement by the Home Office in
2017, only eleven were Christian….” — Barnabas Fund, November 2, 2017.
A number of other Christian orderlies were also denied visas, including another
nun with a PhD in biblical theology from Oxford; another nun denied for not
having a personal bank account; and a Catholic priest denied for not being
married.
Christian “infidels” need not apply, but radical Muslims are welcomed with open
arms.
When three Christian archbishops from Syria were invited in 2016 to attend the
consecration of the UK’s first Syriac Orthodox Cathedral (an event attended by
Prince Charles), Britain’s Home Office not only denied entry to them, but also
mockingly told them there was “no room at the inn.” Pictured: St Thomas,
Britain’s first Syriac Orthodox Cathedral. (Image source: John Salmon/Wikimedia
Commons/CC BY-SA 2.0)
The United Nations Refugee Agency appears to be committed to blocking persecuted
Christians from receiving any assistance. According to a recent CBN News report:
Christian Syrian refugees … have been blocked from getting help from the United
Nations Refugee Agency, the UNHCR, by Muslim UN officials in Jordan.
One of the refugees, Hasan, a Syrian convert to Christianity, told us in a phone
call that Muslim UN camp officials “knew that we were Muslims and became
Christians and they dealt with us with persecution and mockery. They didn’t let
us into the office. They ignored our request.”
Hasan and his family are now in hiding, afraid that they will be arrested by
Jordanian police, or even killed. Converting to Christianity is a serious crime
in Jordan.
According to Timothy, a Jordanian Muslim who converted to Christianity, “All of
the United Nations officials [apparently in Jordan], most of them, 99 percent,
they are Muslims, and they were treating us as enemies.”
Addressing this issue, Paul Diamond, a British human rights lawyer, recently
elaborated:
“You have this absurd situation where the scheme is set up to help Syrian
refugees and the people most in need, Christians who have been “genocided,” they
can’t even get into the U.N. camps to get the food. If you enter and say I am a
Christian or convert, the Muslim U.N. guards will block you [from] getting in
and laugh at you and mock you and even threaten you…. Sunni Muslim officials
have blocked the way. They’ve laughed at them, threatened them, said ‘You
shouldn’t have converted. You’re an idiot for converting. You get what you get,’
words to that effect.”
The next obstacle facing those few Christians who make it past UN refugee camps
are the immigration centers of Western nations themselves. The discrimination is
apparently so obvious in the United Kingdom that Lord George Carey is suing the
UK Home Office for allegedly being “institutionally biased” against Christian
refugees and therefore complicit in what he calls “the steady crucifixion of
Middle East Christians.”
He is hardly the only one making such charges. One independent report said that
when it comes to offering asylum, the UK “appears to discriminate in favour of
Muslims” instead of Christians. Statistics seemed to confirm this allegation:
“out of 4,850 Syrian refugees accepted for resettlement by the Home Office in
2017, only eleven were Christian, representing just 0.2% of all Syrian refugees
accepted by the UK.”
Due to such figures, Lord David Alton of Liverpool, a life peer in the House of
Lords, wrote to Home Secretary Sajid Javid, who then headed the Home Office:
It is widely accepted that Christians, who constituted around 10 per cent of
Syria’s pre-war population, were specifically targeted by jihadi rebels and
continue to be at risk…. As last year’s statistics more than amply demonstrate,
this [ratio imbalance between Muslim and Christian refugees taken in] is not a
statistical blip. It shows a pattern of discrimination that the Government has a
legal duty to take concrete steps to address.
Such imbalances appear even stranger on the realization that the Islamic State,
which precipitated the refugee crisis, is itself a Sunni organization that only
targets non-Sunnis— primarily Christians, Yazidis, and Shia — all minority
groups that the U.S. has acknowledged experienced a “genocide.”
Two of the strangest individual cases of anti-Christian bias were reported
earlier this year, when the UK denied asylum to persecuted Christians by
bizarrely citing the Bible and Islam. Both Christians, a man and a woman, were
former Muslims separately seeking asylum from the Islamic Republic of Iran, the
ninth-worst persecutor of Christians, particularly former Muslims.
In his rejection letter from the UK’s Home Office, the Iranian man was told that
several biblical passages were “inconsistent” with his claim to have converted
to Christianity after discovering it was a “peaceful” faith. The letter cited
biblical excerpts — including from Exodus, Leviticus, and Matthew — as supposed
proof that the Bible is violent; it said Revelation was “filled with imagery of
revenge, destruction, death and violence.” The rejection letter then concluded:
“These examples are inconsistent with your claim that you converted to
Christianity after discovering it is a ‘peaceful’ religion, as opposed to Islam
which contains violence, rage and revenge.”
In the second case, an Iranian female asylum seeker was sarcastically informed
in her rejection letter:
“You affirmed in your AIR [Asylum Interview Record] that Jesus is your saviour,
but then claimed that He would not be able to save you from the Iranian regime.
It is therefore considered that you have no conviction in your faith and your
belief in Jesus is half-hearted.”
Discussing her experiences, the rejected woman said:
“When I was in Iran I converted to Christianity and the situation changed and
the government were [sic] looking for me and I had to flee from Iran…. in my
country if someone converts to Christianity their punishment is death or
execution.”
Concerning the asylum process, the woman said that whenever she responded to her
Home Office interviewer, “he was either chuckling or maybe just kind of mocking
when he was talking to me. For instance he asked me why Jesus didn’t help you
from the Iranian regime or Iranian authorities.”
Similarly, when Sister Ban Madleen, a Christian nun who was chased out of Iraq
by the Islamic State, wanted to visit her sick sister in the UK, she was denied
a visa — twice. A number of other Christian orderlies were also denied visas,
including another nun with a PhD in biblical theology from Oxford; another nun
denied for not having a personal bank account; and a Catholic priest denied for
not being married.
In another case, Britain’s Home Office not only denied entry to three Christian
leaders — archbishops celebrated for their heroic efforts to aid persecuted
Christians in Syria and Iraq who had been invited to attend the consecration of
the UK’s first Syriac Orthodox Cathedral, an event attended by Prince Charles —
but also mockingly told them there was “no room at the inn.”
Considering that persecuted Christian minorities — including priests and nuns —
are denied visas, one may conclude that Britain’s Home Office is extremely
stringent concerning its asylum requirements. However, this notion is quickly
dispelled on the realization that the Home Office regularly grants visas and
refugee status to extremist Muslims — not to mention that one has yet to hear
about Muslim asylum seekers being denied because the Koran is too violent, or
because they do not have enough faith in Muhammad.
For instance, despite having no papers on him — and despite telling the Home
Office that “he had been trained as an ISIS soldier” — Ahmed Hassan was still
granted asylum two years before he launched a terrorist attack on a London train
station that left 30 injured in September 2017. The Home Office also allowed a
foreign Muslim cleric to enter and lecture in London, even though he advocates
decapitating, burning, and/or throwing homosexuals from cliffs. According to
another report, “British teenagers are being forced to marry abroad and are
raped and impregnated while the Home Office ‘turns a blind eye’ by handing visas
to their [mostly Muslim] husbands.”
The case of Asia Bibi — a Christian wife and mother of five who spent the last
decade of her life on death row in Pakistan for challenging the authority of
Muhammad — best sheds light on the immigration situation in the UK. After she
was finally acquitted in November 2018, Muslims rioted throughout Pakistan; in
one demonstration, more than 11,000 Muslims demanded her immediate public
hanging.
As Pakistanis make for the majority of the UK’s significant Muslim population —
Sajid Javid, then head of the Home Office, is himself Pakistani — when they got
wind that the UK might offer Bibi asylum, they too rioted. As a result, then
Prime Minister Theresa May personally blocked Bibi’s asylum application,
“despite UK playing host to [Muslim] hijackers, extremists and rapists,” to
quote from one headline. In other words, the Britain was openly allowing “asylum
policy to be dictated to by a Pakistan mob,” reported the Guardian, “after it
was confirmed it urged the Home Office not to grant Asia Bibi political asylum
in the UK…”
At the same time, however, the Home Office allowed a Pakistani cleric who
celebrated the slaughter of a politician because he had defended Asia Bibi — a
cleric deemed so extreme as to be banned from his native Pakistan — to enter the
UK and lecture in mosques.
Discussing how “visas were granted [by the Home Office] in July [2016] to two
Pakistani Islamic leaders who have called for the killing of Christians accused
of blasphemy,” Dr. Martin Parsons, a human rights activist, expressed his
frustration: “It’s unbelievable that these persecuted Christians who come from
the cradle of Christianity are being told there is no room at the inn, when the
UK is offering a welcome to Islamists who persecute Christians.”
In short, Muslim influence against Christians is not only at work in UN refugee
camps, as recent evidence indicates, but in the UK’s immigration policy as well:
Christian “infidels” need not apply, but radical Muslims are welcomed with open
arms.
*Raymond Ibrahim, author of the new book, Sword and Scimitar, Fourteen Centuries
of War between Islam and the West, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the
Gatestone Institute, a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center, and
a Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Democrats Debate Whether Trump Has Been Impeached
Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute/December 24/ 2019
Under Laurence Tribe's scenario, the House Democrats get to "obstruct" the
Senate and "abuse" their power (to borrow terms from the articles of
impeachment).
I believe that the Senate need not wait for articles of impeachment to be
transmitted. Senators are empowered by the constitution to begin a trial now —
with or without further action by the House. Just as the House has the "sole
power of impeachment," so too the Senate has the "sole power to try all
impeachments."
Tribe and the Democratic House majority, led by Speaker Pelosi, want to have
their constitutional cake and eat it too: they want Trump impeached but not
acquitted. Sorry, but the Constitution does not permit that partisan,
result-oriented ploy. Either Trump has been impeached and is entitled to a
Senate trial; or he has not been impeached and is entitled to a clean slate.
So there are only two constitutionally viable alternatives: either Pelosi must
announce that Trump has not been impeached; or the Senate must initiate a trial.
Preserving the status quo indefinitely — Trump remaining impeached without
having a trial — is unconstitutional and should not be tolerated by the American
people.
Pictured: Speaker Nancy Pelosi presides over the House of Representatives vote
on the second article of impeachment of President Donald Trump, on December 18.
Speaker Pelosi's unconstitutional decision to delay transmission of the articles
of impeachment to the Senate in order to gain partisan advantage raises the
following question: has President Trump been impeached, or did the House vote
merely represent an authorization or intention to impeach — which becomes an
actual impeachment only when the articles are transmitted?
This highly technical constitutional issue is being debated by two of my former
Harvard Law School colleagues — Professors Laurence Tribe and Noah Feldman —
both liberal Democrats who support President Trump's impeachment.
Tribe believes that Trump has been impeached and that it would be perfectly
proper to leave it at that: by declining to transmit the articles of
impeachment, the Democrats get a win-win. President Trump remains impeached but
he gets no opportunity to be tried and acquitted by the Senate. This cynical,
partisan ploy is acceptable to Tribe because it brings about the partisan result
he prefers: Trump bears forever the stigma of impeachment without having the
opportunity to challenge that stigma by a Senate acquittal. Under the Tribe
scenario, the House Democrats get to "obstruct" the Senate and "abuse" their
power (to borrow terms from the articles of impeachment).
Feldman disagrees with Tribe, arguing — quite correctly — that impeachment and a
removal trial go together. If a president is impeached, he must be tried.
Impeachment, in his view, is not merely a vote; it is the first step in a
constitutionally mandated two-step process. He goes so far as to say that if the
articles of impeachment are not forwarded to the Senate for trial, there has
been no valid impeachment.
In my opinion, both of my colleagues are wrong, though Feldman's approach is
more consistent with the structure of the Constitution and the intent of its
Framers. I believe that the Senate need not wait for articles of impeachment to
be transmitted. Senators are empowered by the constitution to begin a trial now—
with or without further action by the House.
Just as the House has the "sole power of impeachment," so too the Senate has the
"sole power to try all impeachments." The Senate can make its own rules (as long
as they are consistent with the constitution) and establish its own timetables.
The only possible rejoinder to this constitutional verity is the argument put
forward by Feldman that the House has not yet concluded the process of
impeachment, and so the Senate has no jurisdiction to proceed to trial. What
follows from that argument is the conclusion — utterly unacceptable to Tribe —
that President Trump has not been impeached and if the articles are never
transmitted he will not go down in history as the third president to be
impeached, because the House never completed the necessary process by sending
the articles to the senate.
Tribe and the Democratic House majority, led by Speaker Pelosi, want to have
their constitutional cake and eat it too: they want Trump impeached but not
acquitted. Sorry, but the Constitution does not permit that partisan,
result-oriented ploy. Either Trump has been impeached and is entitled to a
Senate trial; or he has not been impeached and is entitled to a clean slate.
My own view is that in the public eye, President Trump has been impeached by a
partisan vote and he is now entitled to be acquitted, even if the Senate vote is
as partisan as the House vote. The partisans who voted his impeachment along
party lines in the House, have no principled argument against a party-line
acquittal. The Democrats devised the partisan rules of engagement in the House.
They can't suddenly demand a change in those rules because they are a minority
in the Senate.
So there are only two constitutionally viable alternatives: either Pelosi must
announce that Trump has not been impeached; or the Senate must initiate a trial.
Preserving the status quo indefinitely — Trump remaining impeached without
having a trial —is unconstitutional and should not be tolerated by the American
people.
*Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law Emeritus at
Harvard Law School and author of the forthcoming book, Guilt by Accusation: The
Challenge of Proving Innocence in the Age of #MeToo, Skyhorse publishing,
November 2019.
A shorter and somewhat different version of this op-ed appeared in the Wall
Street Journal.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
We Want A Nation: Notes On The Middle East's Revolutions
Alberto M. Fernandez/MEMRI/December 25/2019
2019 saw popular demonstrations and violent regime repression against these
protests from North Africa to Iraq. In contrast to what usually is covered in
the Western media, these protests were not about the United States or President
Trump or Israel or Salafi-Jihadist terrorism. It was almost as if some of the
principal issues that usually mobilize Western punditry were beside the point.
The turmoil upended two tired nostrums favored by the Western Left and Right –
that it is always about the misdeeds of the United States and Israel and that
the Middle East "street" does not matter.
Significant public turmoil broke out in five Arabic-speaking majority countries:
Sudan, Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, and Lebanon. All of these protests shared certain
surface similarities: anger at corruption, poor governance, economic
deprivation, and political exclusion. While these events were driven by broadly
similar frustrations, they each had their very specific local flavor and
tangible results have varied widely.
Demonstrations in Sudan, begun in December 2018 in response to dire economic
conditions, eventually led to the end of the almost 30-year-old rule of
President Omar al-Bashir. Sudan's revolution is the best of the 2019 bunch so
far in terms of actual change. Not much changed on the surface in Algeria and
Egypt.
The turmoil in Sudan, Algeria and Egypt differed from the other two Arab states.
They had a purely domestic, internal orientation. When Sudan's warlord Hemedti
or Algeria's generals decided to take action, they did not have to appease or
break with a foreign master. To a certain extent, change was easier in places
ruled, truly ruled, by local tyrants reacting solely to local realities and
power structures. In Iraq and Lebanon, protesters would face a different
challenge.
Shaking The Bars Of The Iranian Cage
Those two countries are part of Iran's sphere of control for years. Iran (which
implemented an especially brutal repression of its own demonstrators in 2019)
has spent decades now investing in coopting the ruling political class, the
media, and creating its own military proxies in both countries. This was not
done for the sake of good governance but to advance Iran's regional aspirations.
The priorities were clear: a Lebanon which cannot pay its debts is also awash in
tens of thousands of advanced missiles provided by Iran to Hezbollah for the
next round of war against Israel. Iraq’s domestic industry and agriculture is
subservient to Iran's need for money laundering and hard currency.
Like Sudan, Iraq is a country that has had many demonstrations in the past few
years, and the protests that began in October 2019 overlapped to a degree with
those of summer 2018 – anger at corruption, lack of government services, and
lack of jobs. Both also shared largely (and mostly peaceful) Iraqi Shia
participants and an undercurrent of violence between rival Shia militias. The
Tishreen Revolution continues and succeeded on November 29 in getting Iraqi
Prime Minister Adil Abdul Mahdi to agree to resign (he remains in power until a
successor is chosen). It only took more than 400 dead and 20,000 wounded at the
hands of security forces and pro-Iranian militias.
The demonstrations placed certain interesting realities in Iraq in sharp relief.
Iranian power in Iraq is omnipresent and pernicious but also under siege.
Iranian-controlled militias have reliably been accused of multiple kidnappings,
shootings and stabbings attacks against demonstrators and civil society. Yet
while the overwhelming bulk of demonstrators were peaceful and joyful, the
headquarters of Shia Islamist parties and pro-Iranian militias were sacked in
much of Southern Iraq (some of this had also occurred in 2018) as Sadrists
fought and slaughtered rival militiamen.
One widely circulated video clip showed notorious militia leader Qais al-Khazali
threaten the United States, Israel, and US-funded Al-Hurra television for
supposedly organizing the demonstrations. But al-Khazali’s remarks came at the
funeral of one of his militia leaders who had been literally torn apart, taken
from an ambulance and killed. There is real, unfeigned hatred by many Iraqis for
this predatory militia class that has so much innocent blood on its hands.
One Iraqi Shia commentator recently told me that the surprising thing is how
little all that Iranian influence has bought among Iraq's population (as opposed
to its ruling elite). "There is little cultural closeness, affection or
affinity. You are more likely to find an Iranian restaurant in Dubai than you
are in Southern Iraq. Farsi speakers among ordinary people are limited to those
involved in the pilgrim trade. There are Iranian agents and agreements
everywhere but also deep resentment."
Iran's reign in the Iraqi media space ostensibly looks dominant with dozens of
media outlets and an aggressive "electronic army" at their service. Not only
have demonstrators been killed by snipers, shot in the head with gas grenades,
stabbed by militiamen, and disappeared by death squads. They have been subjected
to a steady campaign of defamation by the state controlled media and by
pro-Iranian outlets and advocates, calling demonstrators "Saddam's gypsies,"
exaggerating or fabricating instances of mob violence and inferring that the
demonstrators are morally corrupt.
And yet the protests remain, buoyed by the resilient and creative spirit of
Iraqi youth. These are youth who are both desperate and hopeful, naïve and
leaderless, and yet brave and idealistic. They have lasted far longer than many
expected. Repression should have been easy. The state is heavily armed and
well-funded by oil revenues. Ruthless Iranian proxies are ubiquitous in Iraq.
Media outlets seen as sympathetic with the demonstrators have been attacked or
silenced while those that defame them do so with impunity.
With the exception of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani – an essential and
honorable exception – many national Iraqi leaders, members of a corrupt and
privileged political class, mildly praised demonstrators initially and then
moved to either demonize or subvert the protests. Deadly provocations against
Iraq's protestors continue unabated and yet a new culture of popular, peaceful
civic resistance has been born on Iraq's streets that has proven to be far more
resilient than many experts expected.
This type of steadfastness has also been on display in Lebanon's demonstrations
that broke out on October 17. Like Iraq and Sudan, demonstrations are nothing
new in Lebanon and these were ostensibly triggered by the threat of additional
taxes on already heavily burdened Lebanese citizens. Lebanese demonstrators
transcended religious sect and displayed much of the same youthful enthusiasm
and creativity seen elsewhere. Demonstrators brought about the resignation of
Prime Minister Hariri's government and vague promises of reform within two weeks
and without the body count seen in Iraq.
But the responses from the Lebanese authorities to demonstrators betray
similarities with those seen in other countries. An initial patronizing approval
gave way to irritation and then anger that the protesters were not satisfied
with whatever crumbs and vague promises were offered. Hezbollah made a special
effort to squelch unrest among its own Shia demographic with some success while
playing the sectarian card against others. Pressure, violence and defamation was
brought to bear on remaining protests in an attempt to silence them. The
protests continue even as Lebanon tries to form a government keep the same crowd
in control while ostensibly trying to pacify the masses and secure enough
funding from the CEDRE process to delay economic collapse while making as little
change as possible at the top.
Can A Distracted America Be A Subversive Force For Good?
What can we learn about these demonstrations and what do they teach us about
Trump Administration foreign policy in the Middle East?
These protests are not unique to the Middle East, we see them from Latin America
to Europe to East Asia. But there is no region on the globe as buffeted by the
combination of poor governance and lack of freedom. That much maligned Middle
East "Freedom Deficit" is very real. Adding climate change and population growth
to the mix has only made things worse. It is quite likely that a regional
feedback loop of oppression, incompetence, desperation and revolt will be the
new normal.
Secondly, with the partial exception of Sudan, the old regimes are for now
"winning," holding on and buying time, learning from the turmoil of the Arab
Spring and seeking to forge new chains, new technical tools and tactics of
repression. The people resist as much as they can against what on paper seem
hopeless odds. The protests in Iraq and Lebanon were not directed squarely at
Iranian hegemony – the political systems and corrupt elites in both countries
were not created by the Iranians. But protests have over time become more about
Iran and Hezbollah as Tehran’s hold on political elites becomes publicly more
blatant.
Kleptocracy and rampant corruption in both countries was not created by Iran but
today directly subsidizes Tehran's hegemony. The system has to subsidize not
only local kleptocrats, as was done in places like Sudan and Tunisia in the
past, but pay for the upkeep of their Iranian-connected jailers. This is the
Iranian Supreme Leader's version of the Brezhnev Doctrine, what they have, they
will hold at all costs. But preferably in Lebanese Lira, Iraqi Dinars, and US
Dollars.
The stakes are very high. Iran's dominion over Lebanon and Iraq is very
valuable. While Lebanon faces economic disaster that could loosen Iran's
chokehold on that country, the situation in Iraq could be even more dangerous.
This is a largely Iraqi Shia uprising, channeling both Iraqi nationalist
sentiment and religious feeling not only independent of, but opposed to, Iran's
continued hegemony. This is a potentially a deadly new front in opposition to
Iran's leadership aspirations.
Despite the feverish ravings of pro-Iran propagandists, Washington (and Israel
and Saudi Arabia) did not create or fund the protest movements in Beirut and
Baghdad. But there is much the United States can do to both turn events to our
advantage and provide succor to demonstrators who are bravely standing up not
for America, but for their own values and causes that are not in conflict with
our interests.
Certainly, the maximum pressure campaign against Tehran waged by the Trump
Administration has raised the ticket price for maintaining Iran's empire
creating new political and economic stress fractures all along that empire's
food chain. Perhaps unintentionally, American timing has been impeccable. That
pressure should be accelerated and any remaining chokepoints on Tehran
activated.
Iran has spent years and money developing an extensive media empire in both Iraq
and Lebanon. This has included the many media organizations grouped in the
Islamic Radio and Television Union (IRTVU) but also silencing and coopting media
outlets in two countries where there was until recently some independent media
space. The West needs to accelerate providing remaining independent media in
both countries with the tools to survive and communicate their own stories more
effectively and to amplify the voices of citizen journalists reporting from the
squares of martyrs and liberty in Baghdad and Beirut.
The current American Administration inherited an odd relationship with
governments in Lebanon and Iraq. In both places, US embassies try to maintain a
productive relationship with rancid governments obviously beholden to Iran in a
forlorn effort to influence them. There is a certain logic that some cooperation
with the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) and Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) can provide
the United States with useful access and intelligence, especially against Salafi-Jihadist
groups. Iraqi Intelligence was reportedly key to the liquidation of ISIS
"caliph" Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
But as Iran and its surrogates aggressively seek to crush dissent and revolt in
Iraq and Lebanon, the time is ripe for the United States to aggressively up the
ante on elements of the state apparatus that serve Iranian repression. The
December 6 designation of four Iraqis under the Global Magnitsky Act should be
only the beginning. Rather than militia leaders and corrupt businessmen, it is
past time to sanction government officials and politicians in both countries.
Given deep American fatigue on the Middle East, can Washington learn to live
with Revolution it did not launch and does not control? It must do so and play a
subtle political game if it hopes to win.
Embracing a state of ambiguity with elites in Baghdad and Beirut can and should
be done. In Sudan for many years, the United States maintained a fruitful
relationship with Sudanese Intelligence while at the same time continuing a
hostile relationship with the regime. The difference is that behind Sudan’s NISS
was eventually al-Bashir. Behind elements of the LAF and ISF are not just local
leaders but Iran. Washington needs to clearly see most of the supposed rulers in
Baghdad and Beirut not as allies but as adversaries and act accordingly.
The political crisis on the region, seen especially in Lebanon and Iraq, has a
complex back-story. The United States cannot solve or manage a convulsive
process that must inevitably run its course and that will likely continue given
dystopian trends in the region. Iran certainly has no solutions for a desperate
people’s aspirations, and neither may many of our regional allies.
What hope there is may lie in places like Tunisia and Sudan and in the Beirut
and Baghdad revolutions. There may be popular revolts in other countries that
may directly threaten American interests but that is not the case today. Even
with our limited attention span and policy dysfunction in Washington, we can be
aggressive in trying as much as possible to level the playing field for
uprisings that not only champion inchoate aspirations towards human dignity but
also increasingly target our greatest regional adversary.
*Alberto M. Fernandez is President of Middle East Broadcasting Networks (MBN).
The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the official views of MBN or the U.S. government.
Democrats Debate Whether Trump Has Been Impeached
Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute/December 25/2019
Under Laurence Tribe's scenario, the House Democrats get to "obstruct" the
Senate and "abuse" their power (to borrow terms from the articles of
impeachment).
I believe that the Senate need not wait for articles of impeachment to be
transmitted. Senators are empowered by the constitution to begin a trial now —
with or without further action by the House. Just as the House has the "sole
power of impeachment," so too the Senate has the "sole power to try all
impeachments."
Tribe and the Democratic House majority, led by Speaker Pelosi, want to have
their constitutional cake and eat it too: they want Trump impeached but not
acquitted. Sorry, but the Constitution does not permit that partisan,
result-oriented ploy. Either Trump has been impeached and is entitled to a
Senate trial; or he has not been impeached and is entitled to a clean slate.
So there are only two constitutionally viable alternatives: either Pelosi must
announce that Trump has not been impeached; or the Senate must initiate a trial.
Preserving the status quo indefinitely — Trump remaining impeached without
having a trial — is unconstitutional and should not be tolerated by the American
people.
Pictured: Speaker Nancy Pelosi presides over the House of Representatives vote
on the second article of impeachment of President Donald Trump, on December 18.
Speaker Pelosi's unconstitutional decision to delay transmission of the articles
of impeachment to the Senate in order to gain partisan advantage raises the
following question: has President Trump been impeached, or did the House vote
merely represent an authorization or intention to impeach — which becomes an
actual impeachment only when the articles are transmitted?
This highly technical constitutional issue is being debated by two of my former
Harvard Law School colleagues — Professors Laurence Tribe and Noah Feldman —
both liberal Democrats who support President Trump's impeachment.
Tribe believes that Trump has been impeached and that it would be perfectly
proper to leave it at that: by declining to transmit the articles of
impeachment, the Democrats get a win-win. President Trump remains impeached but
he gets no opportunity to be tried and acquitted by the Senate. This cynical,
partisan ploy is acceptable to Tribe because it brings about the partisan result
he prefers: Trump bears forever the stigma of impeachment without having the
opportunity to challenge that stigma by a Senate acquittal. Under the Tribe
scenario, the House Democrats get to "obstruct" the Senate and "abuse" their
power (to borrow terms from the articles of impeachment).
Feldman disagrees with Tribe, arguing — quite correctly — that impeachment and a
removal trial go together. If a president is impeached, he must be tried.
Impeachment, in his view, is not merely a vote; it is the first step in a
constitutionally mandated two-step process. He goes so far as to say that if the
articles of impeachment are not forwarded to the Senate for trial, there has
been no valid impeachment.
In my opinion, both of my colleagues are wrong, though Feldman's approach is
more consistent with the structure of the Constitution and the intent of its
Framers. I believe that the Senate need not wait for articles of impeachment to
be transmitted. Senators are empowered by the constitution to begin a trial now—
with or without further action by the House.
Just as the House has the "sole power of impeachment," so too the Senate has the
"sole power to try all impeachments." The Senate can make its own rules (as long
as they are consistent with the constitution) and establish its own timetables.
The only possible rejoinder to this constitutional verity is the argument put
forward by Feldman that the House has not yet concluded the process of
impeachment, and so the Senate has no jurisdiction to proceed to trial. What
follows from that argument is the conclusion — utterly unacceptable to Tribe —
that President Trump has not been impeached and if the articles are never
transmitted he will not go down in history as the third president to be
impeached, because the House never completed the necessary process by sending
the articles to the senate.
Tribe and the Democratic House majority, led by Speaker Pelosi, want to have
their constitutional cake and eat it too: they want Trump impeached but not
acquitted. Sorry, but the Constitution does not permit that partisan,
result-oriented ploy. Either Trump has been impeached and is entitled to a
Senate trial; or he has not been impeached and is entitled to a clean slate.
My own view is that in the public eye, President Trump has been impeached by a
partisan vote and he is now entitled to be acquitted, even if the Senate vote is
as partisan as the House vote. The partisans who voted his impeachment along
party lines in the House, have no principled argument against a party-line
acquittal. The Democrats devised the partisan rules of engagement in the House.
They can't suddenly demand a change in those rules because they are a minority
in the Senate.
So there are only two constitutionally viable alternatives: either Pelosi must
announce that Trump has not been impeached; or the Senate must initiate a trial.
Preserving the status quo indefinitely — Trump remaining impeached without
having a trial —is unconstitutional and should not be tolerated by the American
people.
*Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law Emeritus at
Harvard Law School and author of the forthcoming book, Guilt by Accusation: The
Challenge of Proving Innocence in the Age of #MeToo, Skyhorse publishing,
November 2019.
A shorter and somewhat different version of this op-ed appeared in the Wall
Street Journal.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
This decade of war in Syria has violated every norm that we
believed was sacred
Kareem Shaheen/The National//December 25/2019
The conflict has destroyed all the myths we have cultivated about ourselves –
how empathetic we are and how seriously we take our responsibility as an
international community to protect civilians
The last few days have been apocalyptic in Syria. Tens of thousands of civilians
fleeing en masse to the border before a government advance. The prospect of mass
slaughter yet again. A ban on humanitarian aid crossing the border from Turkey
to the three million civilians trapped inside a killbox in the north-west, one
of the few remaining pockets outside government control, under bombardment from
machine guns and fighter jets. The city of Maarat Al Numan destroyed and
abandoned. Collective, global silence and inaction.
It is heartbreaking but entirely in character for a decade in which every
international norm of conduct and warfare has been systematically destroyed.
Ten years ago, Syrian President Bashar Al Assad was full of confidence,
declaring in a Wall Street Journal interview that the uprisings that had swept
other Arab countries could not happen in Syria because the government was in
tune with its citizens.
This apparent hold over citizens was of course maintained with an iron fist and
an extensive and pervasive network of informants, security and intelligence
agencies and prisons, a stranglehold on the economy that allowed epic levels of
corruption and tight control over every aspect of public life and civil society.
Nevertheless, Mr Al Assad’s Syria was enjoying the fruits of a broader opening
with the West and its Arab and Turkish neighbours.
Damascus had succeeded in creating an opportunity to mend ties with the US out
of a problem it created – cracking down on terror cells it had allowed across
the border into Iraq to fight American troops. With increasing trade ties,
diplomatic outreach and efforts to isolate Iran, Syria’s first couple, Bashar
and Asmaa Al Assad, holidayed with Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan and
attended Bastille Day celebrations with the Sarkozys in France.
Their charisma shone through as they spoke at ease to western reporters about
democratic aspirations and dined with the masses in popular Aleppan and
Damascene eateries.
It was all a mirage. The decades of Baath party decrepitude, brutality and
economic mismanagement had stunted the country. Everyone had a story about a
close relative forcibly disappeared in early morning Mukhabarat raids carried
out by intelligence agencies. Inequality worsened as agricultural communities
fell into ruin and migrated to the cities.
The spark for the war was the detention in 2011 of teenagers who scrawled an
anti-Assad slogan on their school wall. Their arrest and the government’s
insults in response sparked a cycle of government violence, followed by civilian
protest that quickly spread around the country.
It did not have to be this way. Few initially demanded the outright overthrow of
the regime, hoping instead to coax Mr Al Assad into instituting reforms.
He met them with renewed brutality, a refusal to engage in serious dialogue that
endures to this day and an amnesty that included releasing convicted terrorists
in an effort to militarise the opposition and present a choice to the
international community – the president or an extremist onslaught.
The rest is bloody, atrocious history. The UN eventually stopped counting the
dead, then standing at 400,000, in 2016. The numbers have almost certainly
exceeded half a million.
Half the country's population was displaced, most inside Syria, many forced to
abandon their homes several times in the course of the nine-year war. The
millions who fled abroad profoundly altered their neighbouring countries’
character and politics, and those who braved the seas to European shores,
fleeing for the sake of their lives and their children’s, were used as a
scaremongering tactic by populist leaders across the globe to propel a
resurgence of the far right in European and American politics.
This profound shift ushered in tectonic changes and realignments, both abroad
and regionally, as Moscow took up the mantle abandoned by a retreating
Washington and intervened in the war to save Mr Al Assad from what at the time
seemed inevitable defeat. Turkey, incensed by American reliance on Kurdish
militias with aspirations for statehood, essentially abandoned its alliance with
Nato in favour of close co-operation with Russia, further undermining the
post-Second World War order.
ISIS took advantage of the power vacuum and profound injustices of the war to
establish a so-called state spanning parts of Syria and Iraq, a project laced
with atrocities of such grave barbarism as systematic enslavement and mass rape
of the Yazidi minority, the exile of Christians from their homeland and the
murder and execution of thousands of civilians in manifold horrific ways.
All the while, Syria was being systematically destroyed. The regime and its
allies undertook scorched-earth tactics of besieging opposition areas;
barrel-bombing them and advancing methodically rendered those areas
uninhabitable.
Syria needs at least $200 billion in reconstruction costs, possibly double that,
aid that is blocked by western countries due to the absence of political
reforms.
But perhaps Syria’s enduring legacy lies in how it has systematically dismantled
the international rules-based order. Over a decade of warfare and destruction,
every international norm that was once thought of as sacrosanct has been
violated with a defiance that once defied belief, until it became par for the
course. It is a stark contrast to the message the world emerged with from the
genocides in the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda – a mantra of “never again”
uttered in the halls of international tribunals.
Instead, over time, cycles of atrocity followed by outrage and impotence chipped
away at the tenets we had decided constituted civilised conduct in warfare and
affairs of state. Bit by bit, our humanity was chipped away.
These violations are numerous but they are worth elucidating because they show
how far we have fallen. Chemical weapons were repeatedly used against civilians
in a largely successful effort to terrorise them into submission, with no
meaningful retribution. Starvation sieges were used repeatedly as a weapon of
war by Mr Al Assad and his allies in the campaign to reclaim rebel-held
territory.Systematic bombing of civilians with inaccurate weapons like barrel
bombs, whose use constitutes de facto war crimes, large-scale arbitrary
detention and forced disappearance of tens of thousands of civilians, the
targeting of hospitals and the use of humanitarian aid and UN assistance as
political tools have continued to make life unbearable for civilians.
The next few years are hard to predict in Syria, precisely because the conflict
destroyed all the myths we have cultivated about ourselves – how empathetic we
are, how seriously we take our responsibility as an international community to
protect civilians, our collective belief in justice being served and in a shared
destiny.
Syria destroyed all of that in the course of crushing the dreams and rights of
an entire people to live in dignity, peace and prosperity.
Even as the wrangling over the ashes continues, the legacy of the last decade
will endure. Syria has carved the epitaph of the collective conscience of the
international community.
*Kareem Shaheen is a former Middle East correspondent, now in Canada
To be strong voices for Palestine, Arabs must be strong
voices for
Ray Hanania//ArabNews/December 25/2019
Human and civil rights do not have a religion, nationality or an ethnic
identity. They are universal rights, meaning you don’t have to be from a
national, religious or ethnic group that faces human rights violations to speak
out in defense of those rights.
The strongest voices oftentimes are women like Ilhan Omar, the Somali-American
congresswoman from Minnesota, or Rashida Tlaib, the Palestinian-American from
Michigan. Both Omar and Tlaib are Arab and Muslim, and are natural voices to
advocate for the human and civil rights of Palestinians, one of the most
oppressed and wrongfully vilified people on the planet.But Omar and Tlaib are
not the most fearless in championing Palestinian and Arab rights. That title
belongs to one of Omar’s congressional colleagues, Betty McCollum.
McCollum is a former high school teacher and saleswoman who decided to enter
politics in 1986 and won a city council election. Her fight for Palestinian
freedom and justice doesn’t stem from an ethnic, national or religious affinity
with the Palestinians. It comes from a purity of belief that human and civil
rights are the right of every individual regardless of race, religion or
nationality. That makes McCollum’s voice and advocacy righteous. She has
fearlessly pursued legislation that most other Americans might avoid. She
refused to back down when Congress brushed aside calls to place restrictions on
the $4 billion in annual financial aid that is taken from US taxpayers and given
to support Israel. She introduced a law that would prohibit Israel from using
that taxpayer money to detain Palestinian children, the Promoting Human Rights
for Palestinian Children Living Under Israeli Military Occupation Act or House
Resolution 2407.
McCollum asserts she is pro-Israel, but her voice against Israel’s repeated
human and civil rights violations against Palestinian civilians has made her a
target of AIPAC, the pro-Israel organization that serves as an umbrella for the
distribution of millions in pro-Israel campaign contributions against critics of
Israel’s human rights violations and to loyal pro-Israel challengers.
She comes from a typically average American upbringing and that’s what gives her
voice resonance.
In 1992, McCollum won election to the Minnesota State legislature and served
until running for a US congressional seat in 2000, becoming only the second
woman to represent Minnesota since Minnesota became a state in 1858 representing
the 4th House District.
A Democrat, a Christian and a single mother with two children, McCollum has
never shied away from taking on the most controversial and tough challenges.
It is one reason why she can stand up to AIPAC’s efforts to undermine her and
push her out of office to silence her voice.
A Democrat, a Christian and a single mother with two children, McCollum has
never shied away from taking on the most controversial and tough challenges.
Her biography touts her independence, and maybe that’s what makes her so popular
with her state’s citizens and protects her from her foreign critics. McCollum is
an American fighting for American issues, and she can champion justice for
Palestinians not as a Palestinian issue but as an American issue.
“Throughout her career in public service, Congresswoman McCollum has been a
champion for excellence in education, protecting the environment, expanding
health care access, fiscal responsibility, and robust international engagement
that prioritizes diplomacy, development, along with a strong national defense,”
her official biography says.
“Education, health care, and investments in transportation infrastructure are
top policy priorities for Minnesota families and the Congresswoman. With over 20
institutions of higher learning located in the Fourth District, keeping higher
education affordable, accessible, and high-quality is important. A strong
proponent of public education, she supports keeping our schools accountable to
parents and local officials. McCollum is a champion for universal health
coverage for all Americans and a strong supporter of the Affordable Care Act.
Following a decade of work and almost $1 billion of federal investment, she
welcomed the opening of the “Green Line” light rail corridor between St. Paul
and Minneapolis, along with the restoration of the historic Union Depot as a
multi-modal transit hub.”
Nowhere does her official biography mention her support for the Palestinians or
criticism of Israel’s government. it is laser-focused on fighting for mainstream
issues that mainstream Americans embrace.
McCollum is everything that American voters want in an advocate for American
rights and the principles of justice that separate the US from other countries.
That is what makes her support of the Palestinian cause so powerful. McCollum
sees the abuse of Palestinians not as a Palestinian, Arab or Muslim issue but
rather as a fundamental core issue of human and civil rights in its purest form.
It’s a lesson for Omar and Tlaib that could also make them more effective not
just as advocates for Palestinian, Arab, or Muslim issues but for Americans
issues and concerns. Omar and Tlaib need to become the voices for justice in
America for Americans before they can become effective champions of Palestinian
rights.
Any Arab-American who wants to become more effective in fighting for justice
must first become voices for American issues and then use that as a foundation
to fight for other important, but foreign, causes.
*Ray Hanania is an award-winning former Chicago City Hall political reporter and
columnist. He can be reached on his personal website at www.Hanania.com.
Twitter: @RayHanania
Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not
necessarily reflect Arab News' point-of-view
Europe’s hard choices in 2020
Zaki Laidi /News/December 25/2019
For the first time since 1957, Europe finds itself in a situation where three
major powers — the US, China and Russia — have an interest in weakening it. They
may squeeze the EU in very different ways, but they share an essential hostility
to the EU’s governance model.
The European model, after all, is based on the principle of shared sovereignty
among states in crucial areas such as market standards and trade. That liberal
idea is antithetical to the American, Chinese and Russian view of sovereignty,
which places the prerogative of states above global rules and norms of behavior.
Shared sovereignty is possible only among liberal states; unalloyed sovereignty
is the preserve of populists and authoritarians.
But today’s anti-EU hostility also owes something to Europe’s undeniable
economic weight in the world. Without the EU, the US under President Donald
Trump would likely have succeeded already in forcing Germany and France to
surrender to its trade demands. Were it on its own, France would not have been
able to reject bilateral negotiations with the US over agricultural issues. The
EU, as a “common front,” works as a power multiplier for its constituent parts
in all areas where sovereignty is shared.
China’s view of Europe is not so different from Trump’s. While the Chinese have
taken advantage of the European single market by acquiring footholds in key EU
countries, the last thing they want is for Europeans to share sovereignty in
controlling foreign investment, such as through the new screening mechanism
launched in April. China has been cultivating financial dependencies in the
Balkans, knowing full well that if these countries become EU members, they will
be subject to stronger transparency requirements.
China would much prefer the model underpinning the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI),
its massive effort to build trade and transport infrastructure linking China
with Africa and Europe. How China and participating countries finance BRI
projects is notoriously opaque. In fact, more than half of all Chinese loans to
developing countries are not even listed publicly.
Russia, too, resents European unity. Although some EU member states oppose
continued sanctions against Russia, all have respected them. Still, Europe is
hardly a monolithic bloc when it comes to Russia. Despite Europe’s
energy-independence objectives, Germany is cooperating with Russia in building
the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline. For a while, Germany also stood in the way of a
firmer EU policy regarding China, owing to the German auto industry’s reliance
on the Chinese market. But Germany’s position has changed since 2017, with its
leaders finally taking stock of the risks posed by Chinese takeovers in
sensitive industrial sectors.
The frequent claim that Europe is incapable of playing a global role is thus
simply incorrect. Compared to a more isolated developed country such as Japan,
Europe is quite strong indeed. While Japan has been at the mercy of US tariffs
on imported steel, the EU has retaliated in kind. And while Japan has had little
choice but to accept a bilateral trade deal with the US (“in principle”), Europe
has stonewalled the Trump administration’s attempts to overhaul the US-EU trade
arrangement.
To be sure, the EU is still a long way from achieving strategic and economic
autonomy. But that does not mean it is incapable of doing so.
To be sure, the EU is still a long way from achieving strategic and economic
autonomy. But that does not mean it is incapable of doing so. Europe has many
assets with which to defend multilateralism and international norms. Given its
creativity and massive market, it could play a critical role in setting the
standards for digitalization and artificial intelligence — both of which are at
the heart of today’s global economic battle. It was Europe that took the first
step in regulating the platform economy, through the General Data Protection
Regulation, which has already set a new world standard.
But Europe still needs to develop its monetary, industrial and military
capacity. The EU must expand the international role of the euro so that it can
serve as a safe asset and a standard currency for cross-border trade.
Internationalizing the euro will require a deep capital market, comparable to
that of the US, and there is already a consensus among eurozone member states in
favor of heading in this direction.
Establishing the euro as a safe asset — that is, making a Eurobond equivalent to
a US Treasury bill — is more controversial. Germany is staunchly opposed to any
proposal that implies risk-sharing across the eurozone. But if foreign investors
are not confident that the European Central Bank will defend the value of the
euro in any eurozone country, they will never see the single currency as a rival
to the dollar.
On the second point, Europe needs to create its own industrial “champions.” That
will require deepening the internal market, which remains far too fragmented
with respect to services. It also may call for a reconsideration of EU
competition rules. Following EU antitrust authorities’ decision to block a
number of large mergers this year — not least that between Alstom and Siemens —
there is a growing debate within Europe about how competition policies can be
improved.
Finally, Europe desperately needs to build up its military capacity, to lend
credibility to its exercise of commercial and soft power. For example, a new
European protection force deployed in the Strait of Hormuz would signal to both
the US and Iran that Europe can defend its own interests without having to take
sides against its allies. The capacity to project power is a fundamental source
of global clout.
Europe does not need a “grand strategy,” which is a pompous term that fails to
account for local and global constraints. Rather, it needs the determination and
political will to develop new commercial, diplomatic and military strategic
assets. In a world of saber-rattling and muscle-flexing, effective modesty is
preferable to vacuous ambition.
*Zaki Laidi is professor of international relations at Sciences Po.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019