LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
December 30/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For today
“If I speak in the tongues of mortals and of angels, but do not
have love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal
Have you never read in the scriptures: “The stone that the
builders rejected has become the cornerstone; this was the Lord’s doing, and it
is amazing in our eyes”? Therefore I tell you, the kingdom of God will be taken
away from you and given to a people that produces the fruits of the kingdom. The
one who falls on this stone will be broken to pieces; and it will crush anyone
on whom it falls.
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 21/33-46/Listen to
another parable. There was a landowner who planted a vineyard, put a fence
around it, dug a wine press in it, and built a watch-tower. Then he leased it to
tenants and went to another country. When the harvest time had come, he sent his
slaves to the tenants to collect his produce. But the tenants seized his slaves
and beat one, killed another, and stoned another. Again he sent other slaves,
more than the first; and they treated them in the same way. Finally he sent his
son to them, saying, “They will respect my son.”But when the tenants saw the
son, they said to themselves, “This is the heir; come, let us kill him and get
his inheritance.”So they seized him, threw him out of the vineyard, and killed
him. Now when the owner of the vineyard comes, what will he do to those
tenants?’ They said to him, ‘He will put those wretches to a miserable death,
and lease the vineyard to other tenants who will give him the produce at the
harvest time.’Jesus said to them, ‘Have you never read in the scriptures: “The
stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone; this was the Lord’s
doing, and it is amazing in our eyes”? Therefore I tell you, the kingdom of God
will be taken away from you and given to a people that produces the fruits of
the kingdom. The one who falls on this stone will be broken to pieces; and it
will crush anyone on whom it falls.’ When the chief priests and the Pharisees
heard his parables, they realized that he was speaking about them. They wanted
to arrest him, but they feared the crowds, because they regarded him as a
prophet.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News
published on December 29-30/2019
Report: Aoun Wants Govt. on Monday but Shiite Duo Prefers to Wait
Raad Warns 'Strong' Parties to Control Lebanon if Chaos Prevails
Lebanese Judiciary Probing Reported Transfer Abroad of $2 Billion
Protesters Scuffle with Choucair’s Guards in Hamra
Al-Rahi Warns against Marginalizing 'Any Main Component in Lebanon'
Choucair comments on today's events
Progress Reported in Govt. Formation Talks
Protesters Rally at Diab's Home, Demand He Quits
Scandal of Lebanese Politicians’ Transfer of Billions of Dollars abroad
‘Confuses’ Banks/Youssef Diab/Asharq Al Awsat/December 29/2019
Lebanon’s vital tourism industry takes huge hit amid turmoil/Aj Naddaff /AP
/December 29/2019
Endeavor Lebanon and LIFE leverage Lebanese diaspora to support high-impact
entrepreneurs/Maysaa Ajjan/Annahar/December 29/2019
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
December 29-30/2019
US hits Iran-backed militia in Syria and Iraq in response to Kirkuk base attack
U.S. Strikes Kill 15 Pro-Iran Fighters in Iraq
US carries out ‘defensive strikes’ in Iraq, Syria against Iran-allied militia
Iraq beefs up security around air base in country’s west
Greece proposes World Court if maritime dialogue with Turkey fails
Two men shot dead in eastern Saudi city were
driving car bomb, SPA says
Syrian fighters being recruited by Turkey to fight in Libya
Turkey’s top military advisor proposes mercenary force
Turkey to evacuate wounded after deadly Mogadishu blast
Turkey speeds up Libya troop deployment deal to prevent slide into 'chaos'
Iraq’s exports, production not affected by halting Nassiriya oilfield: ministry
Turkey Says Will Not Withdraw from Army Posts in Syria's Idlib
Stabbing at New York Rabbi's Home an 'Act of Terrorism'
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on December 29-30/2019
In Iran, It Is a Crime to Be a Christian/Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone
Institute/December 29/2019
Turkey’s Libyan adventure must be stopped to prevent war in the
Mediterranean/Cyril Widdershoven/December 29/2019
Why is Iran silent on Israel’s attacks?/Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/December
29/2019
Anti-Daesh coalition’s progress threatened by unilateral moves/Hafed Al-Ghwell
/Arab News/December 29/2019
2020s global leadership: The future is young and female/Baria Alamuddin/Arab
News/December 29/2019
Turkey’s canal obsession could upset regional stability/Yasar Yakis/Arab
News/December 29/2019
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News
published on December 29-30/2019
Report: Aoun Wants Govt. on Monday but Shiite Duo Prefers
to Wait
Naharnet/December 29/2019
President Michel Aoun is insisting that the government line-up should be
announced Monday, a day before New Year’s Eve, but the “Shiite duo”, especially
Hizbullah, prefers to hold further consultations, MTV has reported. The TV
network added that Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab’s talks over the past
few days have led to some progress and that he has proposed that the new
ministers be “non-prominent political party figures or figures close to these
parties.”“An agreement has been reached on merging four ministerial portfolios
and Diab does not want figures from the previous government, but this point is
yet to be finalized,” MTV added.
Raad Warns 'Strong' Parties to Control Lebanon if Chaos Prevails
Naharnet/December 29/2019
The head of Hizbullah’s parliamentary bloc MP Mohammed Raad warned Sunday that
the “strong” parties would control the country should chaos prevail. “Some want
to implicate the Resistance is something it does not want, but it wants to
practice a positive role so that the country does not collapse over the heads of
everyone,” Raad said. “Those who want to be afraid must be afraid of the failure
to form a government, because this would lead to chaos, and when the country
descends into chaos, the strong parties will control it,” he warned.“We are
trying to repair the falling wall but there are individuals who are still
pushing this wall so that it falls, and this is our story with the government
that is being formed,” Raad went on to say.
Lebanese Judiciary Probing Reported Transfer Abroad of $2 Billion
Naharnet/December 29/2019
The Lebanese judiciary has launched an investigation into reports claiming that
nine Lebanese politicians have transferred $2 billion abroad over the past 15
days, a media report said. The judicial probe got underway simultaneously with
the investigations that are being carried out by the central bank, Asharq al-Awsat
newspaper reported Sunday. “Intensive investigations were launched Friday by the
Central Criminal Investigations Bureau, under direct supervision by State
Prosecutor Ghassan Ouweidat,” a senior judicial official told the daily.
Authorities “listened to the testimony of the person who disclosed the
information, financial expert Marwan Iskandar, who provided them with the
information he knows,” the source added. “Things are being followed up and
require further investigations in cooperation with the central bank and the
Banking Control Commission of Lebanon,” the source said.
Iskandar meanwhile told Asharq al-Awsat that the money “was normally transferred
and not smuggled as being rumored.”Faced with a grinding U.S. dollar liquidity
crisis, Lebanon's banks have since September imposed increasingly tight
restrictions on dollar withdrawals and transfers abroad in an attempt to
conserve dwindling foreign currency reserves. Activists say ordinary depositors
are footing the bill for a liquidity crisis worsened by politicians, senior
civil servants and bank owners who used their influence to get their hefty
savings out of the country. Iskandar revealed that a Swiss official has told him
that the transferred money amounts to $2 billion and that it belong to “nine
Lebanese politicians.”“What’s dangerous is that the sums were transferred over
the past 15 days, during the peak of the liquidity crisis,” Iskandar explained.
“The Swiss parliament has started a serious probe into the issue and it will
publicize the results of this investigation once it is finished, and I don’t
believe that the Lebanese side will obtain information before the end of the
Swiss probe,” Iskandar added. “There is major difficulty in recovering funds
sent abroad,” Iskandar said, reminding that the Philippines has failed to
retrieve $2.5 billion transferred by a president who died 30 years ago and that
Egypt has also failed to recover the funds sent abroad by ousted president Hosni
Mubarak.
Protesters Scuffle with Choucair’s Guards in Hamra
Naharnet/December 29/2019
Anti-corruption protesters on Sunday scuffled with the guards of the house of
caretaker Telecom Minister Mohammed Choucair in Beirut’s Hamra area. Protesters
said the guards beat up a number of young men who tried to enter the building.
Videos circulated online showed the presence of anti-riot police at the site.
Protesters meanwhile shouted slogans through megaphones outside the building.
According to the National News Agency, the protesters rallied to reject the
extension of the contracts of Lebanon’s mobile telecom operators – touch and
Alfa. “No Extension No Renewal”, they shouted.
A decision by Choucair to impose a tax on calls via internet apps such as
WhatsApp was the spark that on October 17 ignited unprecedented street protests
in Lebanon against the entire political class. The protests are still ongoing
despite the swift reversal of the decision and the eventual resignation of Saad
Hariri’s government.
Al-Rahi Warns against Marginalizing 'Any Main Component in Lebanon'
Naharnet/December 29/2019
Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi on Sunday warned against “the exclusion or
marginalization of any main component in Lebanon,” amid ongoing negotiations to
form a new government. “Lebanon cannot be ruled through hegemony, confrontation
or a one-sided government,” al-Rahi cautioned in his Sunday Mass sermon. “The
sacrifices of the young men and women of this positive national uprising should
be given their real value so that we don’t push them into despair,” the
patriarch said. Despair would lead to “a negative and destructive revolt,” he
warned. “That’s why we reiterate their demand for the formation of a government
independent from the political parties which would bring together a harmonious
team of competent and upright experts,” al-Rahi said. Such a government would
“devise and implement a salvation plan under the supervision of parliament,
which represents all the components of the Lebanese society,” he added.
Choucair comments on today's events
NNA/December 29/2019
The media office of the caretaker Minister of Telecommunications, Muhammad
Choucair, condemned in a statement issued on Sunday "the way in which a group of
demonstrators entered the building, where Minister Choucair resides," deeming it
an attack on the sanctity of the building and its residents. The statement
pointed out that "Choucair tried very hard to speak to this same group, when
they entered in the same way to the meeting of economic bodies, but the way they
follow and the difference in their opinion and the issues raised prevented the
continuation of the dialogue." Finally, the statement indicated that "Minister
Choucair called on the demonstrators to dialogue if they wanted, but on the
basis of compliance with the law and the principle of respect."
Progress Reported in Govt. Formation Talks
Naharnet/December 29/2019
Progress has been made in the ongoing negotiations to form a new government,
media reports said. An-Nahar newspaper said the progress was especially reported
following PM-designate Hassan Diab’s meetings with President Michel Aoun and the
political aides of Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah and Speaker Nabih
Berri. “But the conferees decided to wait until after the New Year holiday to
allow for further consultations, whether with those who have objections or with
the components who back an agreement on the shape, shares and candidates of the
government,” the daily added.
Protesters Rally at Diab's Home, Demand He Quits
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 29/2019
Dozens of protesters gathered outside the Beirut home of Prime
Minister-designate Hassan Diab overnight, calling for his resignation less than
10 days after he was appointed. Lebanon is without a cabinet and in the grips of
a deepening economic crisis after a two-month-old protest movement forced Saad
Hariri to stand down as prime minister on October 29. Anti-government protests
continued after Hariri's resignation, while political parties negotiated for
weeks before nominating Diab, a professor and former education minister, to
replace him on December 19. Echoing protester demands, Diab promised to form a
government of independent experts within six weeks -- in a country where
appointing a cabinet can take months. But protesters on Saturday were
unconvinced by his promise. "We're here to bring down Hassan Diab. He doesn't
represent us. He's one of them," said one young demonstrator, referring to the
country's ruling elite, who protesters despise collectively. Lina, another
protester agreed, saying: "It's the revolution that must name the prime
minister, not them."The 60-year-old Diab, who has a low public profile and
styles himself as a technocrat, last week called protester demands legitimate
but asked them to give him a chance to form "an exceptional government.""We are
willing to give him a chance, but let us at least give him a roadmap," Lina told
AFP. "The names don't matter to us, we want policy plans, what is his program?"
she asked. Protesters decry Diab's participation as a minister in a government
deemed corrupt. The support given to him by powerful Shiite movement Hizbullah
also angers many protesters and pro-Hariri Sunnis. Protesters also gathered in
the northern Sunni majority city of Tripoli on Saturday, an AFP photographer
said. The protests and political deadlock have brought Lebanon to its worst
economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war. The international community has
urged a new cabinet to be formed swiftly to implement economic reforms and
unlock international aid.
Scandal of Lebanese Politicians’ Transfer of Billions of
Dollars abroad ‘Confuses’ Banks
Youssef Diab/Asharq Al Awsat/December 29/2019
Statements by financial expert, Dr. Marwan Iskandar, in which he revealed that
Lebanese politicians transferred billions of dollars abroad, created confusion
among the political, banking and even judicial circles and increased the anger
of the popular uprising against Lebanon’s ruling class. This information has
caused great resentment in Lebanon, especially as it comes at a time when banks
are imposing tight restrictions on depositors’ withdrawals and prohibiting them
from transferring any amount in foreign currencies abroad. This has affected
merchants, who have to pay for imported goods, and even citizens who need to
transfer money to their children studying abroad. In this regard, an emergency
meeting of the Finance and Budget parliamentary committee was held on Thursday,
in the presence of Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh, who announced after the
talks that “investigations will be conducted in reports about officials and
bankers making transfers abroad this year.” “We will do whatever the law allows
us to, to check all the transfers that occurred in 2019 abroad, and whether
there are suspicious funds,” he vowed. Meanwhile, a judicial source told Asharq
Al-Awsat that intense investigations began on Friday by the Central Criminal
Investigation Department, under the direct supervision of Beirut First
Investigating Judge Ghassan Oueidat. The source explained that the investigation
“began by listening to Iskandar’s statements about the information he
revealed.”“The matter is being followed up and needs further investigations in
cooperation with the Central Bank and the Banking Supervision Committee,”
according to the source. In remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat, Iskandar noted that “the
amounts were transferred normally and not smuggled.”He revealed that a Swiss
official informed him that the transferred funds amounted to two billion
dollars, and they belonged to nine Lebanese politicians. “What’s dangerous is
that the sums have been transferred in the last 15 days, at the height of the
liquidity crisis,” Iskandar noted. He stressed that the Swiss parliament has
begun a serious investigation into this matter, and it would publish the results
once it is completed.
Lebanon’s vital tourism industry takes huge hit amid
turmoil
Aj Naddaff | AP /December 29/2019
BEIRUT — Lebanon’s unprecedented economic and financial crisis has taken a huge
toll on the hospitality sector, a mainstay of the Lebanese economy, with
hundreds of restaurants closing and hotel occupancy plummeting.
In recent years, there has been talk about the tiny Mediterranean country
heading toward economic bankruptcy akin to Greece’s 2009 crisis. But business
owners said they really began to feel the economic crunch after protests swept
the country in mid-October, paralyzing businesses with road closures and strikes
as the crisis intensified.
The protests were initially ignited by new proposed taxes, but are largely about
the three-decades long corruption and mismanagement stemming from the ruling
political elite.
At a news conference in Beirut on Thursday, Pierre Achkar, president of the
Lebanese Hotel Federation for Tourism, said more than 150,000 hotel owners,
partners, employees and their families face an imminent threat due to the
economic crisis.
“We dropped overnight from 100% to 4% occupancy (in October). November was the
first full month after the unrest started, and we ended up with 10%,” Rami
Sayess, regional vice president of Four Seasons Hotel, told The Associated
Press.
Since 1997, the Central Bank had maintained a fixed exchange rate of 1,500
pounds to the U.S. dollar. But since the protests erupted, dollars have grown
increasingly scarce as anxiety over political instability has caused more people
to withdraw their money from the banks, fueling the worst financial crisis since
the 1975-90 civil war. The dollars were often brought into the country by
affluent investors who made large deposits for high interest rates and have been
used interchangeably with the Lebanese pound. Local banks have also imposed
unprecedented capital controls, exacerbating the economic condition and making
it difficult for businesses to transfer salaries to employees.
As prices have risen amid the liquidity crisis, many business owners who used to
pay their employees in U.S. dollars have switched to the Lebanese pound, or have
cut back on their employees’ salaries.
“We have a lot of foreigners and expats working here and we couldn’t pay them in
U.S. dollars, so they’ve been suffering a lot. There’s been a reduction in tips,
too,” said Henri Farah, owner and CEO of Japanese sushi restaurant Kampai.
Farah’s restaurant has dropped 50% in revenue over two months.
Today’s climate is starkly different compared to the “golden period” from
2009-2011, when the hospitality sector boomed and the number of tourists and
revenues soared, according to Tony Ramy, president of Lebanon’s Syndicate of
Owners of Restaurants, Cafés, Night-Clubs and Pastries in Lebanon.
Since then, instability related to the Syria war which started in 2011 has
contributed to the country’s ailing economy. Tense ties between Lebanon and the
Gulf countries who banned their nationals from visiting Lebanon for extended
periods of time on various occasion since then, also negatively affect business.
In September, 130 businesses permanently closed, while in October, the number
increased to 135 shutdowns. November witnessed another 200, said Ramy, citing
the restaurant aggregator and food delivery startup Zomato, with whom he has a
partnership.
December is typically a busy month for the tourism industry because of Christmas
and holiday festivities. Many Lebanese expatriates who typically flock to
Lebanon at this time of year are now reluctant because of the unrest. And
because of the lack of bookings, brand hotels in Lebanon, such as Sheraton and
Four Seasons, have begun sending Lebanese staff to other hotels in the region to
lower expenses.
In the restaurant sector, business was down 70% in recent weeks, according to
Maya Noun, general secretary of the syndicate of restaurant owners. Middle-end
and high-end restaurants have been most damaged. Some outlets in the higher end
Beirut districts of Gemmayzeh and Mar Mikhael are still making it because their
clients are mainly youths who go out on a low budget for a drink or for a
wallet-friendly meal.
Low-end restaurants are sustaining the least amount of losses largely because of
delivery services, which many people consider less expensive.
Itidal al-Batal, owner of a small bakery in Beirut, said she’s “surviving” but
had to cut her employees salaries by as much as 60% since the protests started.
She said she has never seen so many hungry people. She put out bread and a sign
on her restaurant’s doorstep that reads: “If you don’t have money don’t be
embarrassed and leave your family without food. You’re welcome to take what you
need.”
Soon after, people have been coming and making donations to the bakery for those
in need.
*Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Endeavor Lebanon and LIFE leverage Lebanese diaspora to
support high-impact entrepreneurs
Maysaa Ajjan/Annahar/December 29/2019
The initiative, held in Beirut Digital District (BDD), seeks to bridge between
the high potential of Lebanese scale-up companies and the opportunities for
growth beyond the local market.
BEIRUT: The recent economic crisis has had crushing repercussions on Lebanon’s
entrepreneurial ecosystem. Startups are finding it harder than ever to access
local markets and expand to regional ones.
In an effort to alleviate the effects this crisis has had on the entrepreneurial
sector, Endeavor Lebanon and Lebanese International Finance Executives (LIFE)
organized a speed mentoring session targeting 15 high-growth companies Friday,
27 December, 2019.
The session was a joint effort to enhance the business opportunities between
high-impact entrepreneurs and Lebanese investors, and strengthen the ties
between the local entrepreneurial community and the Lebanese diaspora.
“Today, Lebanon's dim economic outlook poses a range of new challenges on these
Lebanese scale-ups,” Endeavor Lebanon’s managing director, Christina Chehade,
said in her opening remarks. “Hence our constant endeavor to pave the way for
new openings that ensure continuity of this most active economic engine for the
multiplier impact it generates.”“This form of networking would engender new
avenues and draw on a wide range of perspectives for the growth to our
entrepreneurs,” she added.
The initiative, held in Beirut Digital District (BDD), seeks to bridge between
the high potential of Lebanese scale-up companies and the opportunities for
growth beyond the local market.
Through the active involvement and shared expertise of the LIFE global business
network, the focused networking discussions aim to actively support Endeavor
Lebanon network companies
with business introductions and mentoring opportunities.
“We are delighted to avail our global network towards mentoring local
enterprises and creating investment and employment opportunities, and most
importantly, access to international markets,” LIFE board member and chair of
the Promote pillar, Paul Raphael, said. “We believe in Lebanese human capital
and we are committed to promoting the Lebanese brand equity beyond the borders
of Lebanon.”The companies participating from within the Endeavor Lebanon network
included major game players in the industry such as Arabnet, Flyfoot, FOO,
HiCart, Neotic, NymCard, Royal Gourmet, SE Factory, Synkers, Topotrade, Toters,
and Zima.The sessions featured 40 mentors from LIFE network, and participants
were divided into work groups, each of which comprised one Lebanese company and
three of LIFE’s specialist mentors.
The groups focused on ways to confront the challenges faced by these companies
in light of the present economic circumstances in Lebanon. Sessions highlighted
the significant role such companies play in catalyzing the local economy,
particularly given the fact that they generate 60% more revenues and jobs on
average than small and medium-sized local firms. The format of the event allowed
the participating companies to interact directly with LIFE mentors who shared
their global experience and outlook, reflecting on the companies’ plans and
challenges, particularly with regards to attracting capital and scaling and
developing expansion prospects outside the country.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on December 29-30/2019
US hits Iran-backed militia in Syria and Iraq in response
to Kirkuk base attack
The National/December 29/2019
Strikes on five Kataib Hezbollah locations
The US has struck five Kataib Hezbollah targets in Iraq and Syria in response to
recent attacks on its personnel in bases in Iraq, the Department of Defense said
on Sunday. Kataib Hezbollah has "strong links" with Iran's Quds Force and "has
repeatedly received lethal aid and other support from Iran that it has used to
attack [Operation Inherent Resolve] coalition forces", said a statement from
Jonathan Hoffman, Assistant to the Secretary of Defense. Operation Inherent
Resolve (OIR) is the American-led coalition to fight ISIS. One US civilian
contractor was killed and four American forces were wounded on Friday in a
multiple rocket attack on a joint base in Kirkuk. The US said on Sunday that the
five targets struck included three Kataib Hezbollah locations in Iraq and two in
Syria, including weapon storage facilities "and command and control locations
that KH uses to plan and execute attacks on OIR coalition forces".
The US also warned that if Iran and its proxies do not stop their attacks then
there could be additional actions by its forces.US Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo has previously blamed Iranian proxies in the country for launching an
attack at a joint facility in Baghdad on December 9. No group claimed
responsibility for the Kirkuk base attack but US officials speaking anonymously
to Reuters stated they were looking into the “possible involvement” of Kataib
Hezbollah. The group is led by Iraqi-Iranian Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, a leader
within the Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF) who previously worked with Iran’s
Revolutionary Guard in opposition to Saddam Hussein. ISIS operates in the area
neighbouring the site of the military base, and have increasingly been using
insurgency in as it attempts to regain a foothold in the province. US Defense
Secretary Mark Esper had also expressed concern about the attacks on bases in
Iraq where US troops and material might be, to the outgoing Prime Minister Adel
Abdel Mahdi. "Secretary Esper and Prime Minister Mahdi have shared with each
other their commitment to see these KH attacks on ISF and OIR forces cease once
and for all," the defence department said on Sunday.
U.S. Strikes Kill 15 Pro-Iran Fighters in Iraq
Agence France Presse/Annahar/December 29/2019
Fifteen fighters, including commanders, were killed Sunday night in U.S. strikes
against a pro-Iran armed group in western Iraq, an official from the
Tehran-backed Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary told AFP. The official said several
fighters were also wounded in the strikes, which the Pentagon said targeted the
Iraqi Kata'ib Hezbollah in response to a barrage of 30 or more rockets that was
fired on Friday at an Iraqi military base, killing a U.S. civilian contractor.
Repeated mortar and rocket attacks have since late October targeted American
interests in the country, where the U.S. has 5,200 troops deployed as part of
the international coalition against the Islamic State jihadist group. The
Pentagon said in a statement it had carried out strikes against five Kata'ib
Hezbollah facilities -- three in Iraq and two in neighboring Syria. U.S.-Iran
tensions have soared since Washington pulled out of a landmark nuclear agreement
with Tehran last year and imposed crippling sanctions. Baghdad -- which is close
to both countries -- risks being caught in the middle. In Iraq's neighbor Syria,
Shiite powerhouse Iran backs the government of President Bashar al-Assad in an
eight-year civil war.
US carries out ‘defensive strikes’ in Iraq, Syria against Iran-allied militia
Reuters/Sunday, 29 December 2019/
The US military has carried out “defensive strikes” in Iraq and Syria against
Kataib Hezbollah militia group, American officials told Reuters. The US strikes
in Iraq and Syria targeted five Kataib Hezbollah facilities, including weapon
storage facilities and command and control locations, the US military statement
said. Several militia fighters were killed in the air strike on western Iraqi
base, according to Iraqi military and militia sources. The air strike, likely
carried out using drones, targeted Iran-allied Kataib Hezbollah militia, the
sources said.A US official had said on Friday the United States was looking into
the possible involvement of Kataib Hezbollah in a rocket attack on an Iraqi
military base that killed a US civilian contractor and wounded US service
members and Iraq personnel.
Iraq beefs up security around air base in country’s west
The Associate Press, Iraq/Sunday, 29 December 2019
An Iraqi general said Sunday that security has been beefed up around the Ain al-Asad
air base, a sprawling complex in the western Anbar desert that hosts US forces,
following a series of attacks. Maj. Gen. Raad Mahmoud told The Associated Press
that investigations were still underway to determine who was behind the
unclaimed attacks on bases across Iraq, including one earlier this month in
which five rockets landed inside Ain al-Asad. A US defense contractor was killed
Friday in a rocket attack at a different Iraqi military compound near Kirkuk
where US service members are based. Several American and Iraqi troops were also
wounded. US officials said the attack involved as many as 30 rockets. US
officials have for the most part blamed Iran-backed fighters for these attacks.
Iraq has been roiled since October 1 by anti-government protests that have left
more than 450 people dead. The vast majority of those who died were
demonstrators killed by security forces firing tear gas and live ammunition. The
mass uprisings prompted the resignation of former Prime Minister Adel Abdul
Mahdi late last month. Meanwhile, the Iraqi Joint Operations Command announced
Sunday the start of a military operation to pursue the remnants of ISIS in five
different areas in the country. The eighth phase of the operation, code named
“Will of Victory,” would cover areas in Mosul, Kirkuk, Diyala, Salahaddin, and
al-Jazeera provinces. The paramilitary Popular Mobilization Forces and local
tribal militias are also participating in the operations, with air cover from
the Iraqi air force and the Coalition air force, according to a statement issued
Sunday. Iraq declared victory over ISIS two years ago, but they still carry out
sporadic attacks in parts of the country.
Greece proposes World Court if maritime dialogue with Turkey fails
Reuters, Athens/Sunday, 29 December 2019
Greece’s Prime Minister said in remarks published on Sunday that if Athens and
Ankara cannot solve their dispute about maritime zones in the Mediterranean they
should turn to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague to settle
the disagreement. Turkey signed an accord with Libya’s internationally
recognized government last month that seeks to create an exclusive economic zone
from Turkey’s southern Mediterranean shore to Libya’s northeast coast. Greece
and Cyprus, which have long had maritime and territorial disputes with Turkey,
say the accord is void and violates the international law of the sea. They see
it as a cynical resource-grab designed to scupper the development of East
Mediterranean gas and destabilize rivals. Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos
Mitsotakis, in an interview with weekly newspaper ‘To Vima’, said his intention
is for Greece and Turkey to discuss their differences about maritime zones in
the Aegean and east Mediterranean on a political and diplomatic level. “But we
should say clearly that if we can’t find a solution then we should agree that
the one difference that Greece recognizes (over maritime zones) must be judged
in an international body like the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in
Hague.” Earlier in December, Cyprus petitioned the ICJ to safeguard its offshore
mineral rights. There has been no response so far from Turkey to that
initiative. Cyprus’s internationally recognised government discovered offshore
gas in 2011 but has been at loggerheads with Turkey over maritime zones around
the island, where it has granted licenses to multinational companies for oil and
gas research. Turkey, which does not have diplomatic relations with Cyprus’s
government, says that some areas Nicosia operates in are either on the Turkish
continental shelf, or in areas where the breakaway Turkish Cypriot state has
rights over any finds. It has sent its own drill ships to the island.
Two men shot dead in eastern Saudi city were driving car
bomb, SPA says
Reuters/NNA/Sunday, 29 December 2019
Two Saudi men shot dead last week in the eastern city of Dammam were driving a
car loaded with explosives and were planning an "imminent terrorist operation,"
the SPA state news agency said Sunday, citing security forces. The two were
found with explosive paste in the car, SPA said. They started shooting at
security forces when they were approached on Wednesday and were shot dead. Five
kilograms of paste was taken from the car and found later to contain the
explosive RDX, SPA said. Police named the two men and said a third unnamed man
had been arrested. ---
Syrian fighters being recruited by Turkey to fight in Libya
Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 29 December 2019
Turkey is recruiting Syrian-based militia to fight in Libya under the command of
Turkish and Syrian officers, the Syrian Observatory reported. Recruitment
centers in the Afrin region to the north of Aleppo were set up by pro-Turkish
Syrian factions to register names of those interested in fighting in Libya, the
non-government group said on Sunday. The factions offered salaries ranging from
$1,800 - $2,000 a month, in addition to “providing services that the host
country guarantees,” it added. Opposition figures, including a leading member of
the opposition Syrian National Council Berhan Ghalyoun, said in a statement they
condemned any Syrian who agrees to fight abroad regardless of the temptations.
“Syrians revolted for their freedom and dignity and to build their national
democratic system… The Syrians did not take up arms to turn into mercenaries
fighting in the wars of others outside their land and outside the foundations of
their revolution,” the statement said. Turkey’s embattled President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan announced Thursday plans to send troops to Libya in response to a
request from the UN-recognized Government of National Accord (GNA), which is
backed by a plethora of militias including groups linked to Al Qaeda.
The Turkish move raises the stakes in Libya’s civil war, where the Libyan
National Army, led by General Khalifa Haftar, launched an offensive against the
GNA in April. Backed by several European powers and moderate Gulf Arab states,
Haftar vows to end the rule of militias.
Turkey’s top military advisor proposes mercenary force
Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 29 December 2019
Turkey’s top military advisor has suggested that the government should establish
a private military company to train mercenaries, according to the Independent’s
Turkey edition. His remarks came days after Turkey signed a military pact with
Libya. The proposal adds to concerns about Turkey’s intentions in Libya, where
Ankara has proposed sending troops to fight alongside the UN-recognized
Government of National Accord (GNA) and a plethora of militias including
extremist groups associated with Al Qaeda. The GNA is fighting against the
forces of General Khalifa Haftar, from the east of the country, who receives
support from several European powers and moderate Gulf states opposed to the
Muslim Brotherhood and other radical Islamist groups.Chief military advisor and
retired Gen. Adnan Tanriverdi, owner of the private military contractor SADAT,
supported the idea of establishing a mercenary company that operates abroad,
elaborating in an interview with the Independent’s Turkey edition on how such a
private army would be formed. “Absolutely, Turkey needs a private company like
Blackwater or Wagner,” Tanriverdi was reported as saying, indicating that it
would be a new tool in Turkey’s foreign policy. Wagner is a paramilitary group
whose contractors have reportedly taken part in conflicts including the Russian
occupation of eastern Ukraine, Syria and elsewhere. Blackwater contractors
supported the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 and subsequently was found guilty of
shooting unarmed civilians.
Libya has been divided since 2014 into rival military and political camps based
in the capital Tripoli and the east. The Libyan National Army, backed by the
government based in Benghazi, has been prosecuting an offensive on the capital
Tripoli.
Earlier this month, Erdogan announced that he would send troops to support the
GNA defend Tripoli. Tanriverdi said the deployment could bypass any kind of
international agreement. The combat power of the proposed private army would be
significant since it would consist of experienced retired soldiers, provided
that it was properly commanded, he was reported as saying. According to
Tanriverdi, materiel and weapons would be provided by the Turkish army.
Tanriverdi likened sending mercenaries abroad to exports, something also good
for the economy, rather than deploying troops and officers from the Turkish
army. Turkish lawmaker and former Ambassador to Italy Aydin Adnan Sezgin opposed
the Libya deal in a debate in parliament, saying it was designed to bypass the
legislature in sending troops abroad. Sezgin also accused the Erdogan government
of looking for ways to transfer terrorists in Syria’s Idlib region to Libya, the
Times reported. Another Turkish lawmaker and former ambassador to the
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Ahmet Ahmet Kamil
Erozan, spoke at the same parliamentary session and pointed out that there were
differences in the agreement’s wording in Turkish, English and Arabic that could
be deceptive. Turkey signed an accord with GNA Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj
last month that seeks to create an exclusive economic zone from Turkey’s
southern Mediterranean shore to Libya’s northeast coast. According to the United
Nations, Turkey has already supplied military equipment to forces loyal to the
GNA, including tanks and drones.
Turkey to evacuate wounded after deadly Mogadishu blast
Reuters, Mogadishu/Sunday, 29 December 2019
A Turkish military cargo plane landed in the Somali capital on Sunday to
evacuate people badly wounded in a devastating truck bombing in the city a day
earlier that killed at least 90 people including two Turkish nationals. The
plane also brought emergency medical staff and supplies, according to a tweet
from the Turkish embassy, adding these had been transferred to a Turkish-run
hospital in Mogadishu. Somali Information Minister Mohamed Abdi Hayir Mareye
told state media that 10 badly injured Somalis would be evacuated to Turkey. He
added that Turkey had sent 24 doctors to treat those wounded who would not be
evacuated. Saturday’s blast, at a busy checkpoint during rush hour in Mogadishu,
was the deadliest in war-torn Somalia in more than two years. No-one immediately
claimed responsibility, although the city’s mayor blamed al-Qaeda-linked
extremist group al Shabaab. The dead included many students from a university in
the city, authorities said. A Reuters witness at Mogadishu airport saw 10
injured Somalis and the bodies of two dead Turks loaded on the plane. The
bombing was the 20th vehicle-borne explosives attack of 2019 in Somalia and the
year is ending with more deaths from such attacks than 2018, according to the
Hiraal Institute, a Mogadishu-based security-think tank. Grieving families on
Sunday arranged burials and funerals for their loved ones, having endured the
anguish of identifying charred corpses and body fragments at the blast site and
at hospitals around the city.
Turkey speeds up Libya troop deployment deal to prevent slide into 'chaos'
Reuters, Ankara/Sunday, 29 December 2019
Turkey's foreign minister warned that the Libyan conflict risks sliding into
chaos and becoming the next Syria, as he sought to speed up legislation to allow
it to send troops to the North African country. Libya'sUN-recognized Government
of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli has been struggling to fend off Libyan
General Khalifa Haftar's forces. “If today Libya becomes like Syria, then the
turn will come for the other countries in the region,” Turkey's Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Saturday at a meeting of the governing AK Party. “We
need to do whatever is needed to prevent Libya from being divided and slide into
chaos, and that is what we are doing. It is the legitimate government there that
we deal with,” he said, stressing the military and security deal signed with
Libya is important. Cavusoglu will meet with three opposition party leaders on
Monday and the government is expected to discuss the motion within the coming
week.
Iraq’s exports, production not affected by halting Nassiriya oilfield: ministry
Agencies/Sunday, 29 December 2019
The halting of output from the Nassiriya oilfield in Southern Iraq will not
affect the second-largest OPEC producer’s exports and production, the country’s
oil ministry said.To compensate for the lost output, Iraq will pump more oil
from fields in the Basra province, the ministry said. Protesters broke into the
Nassiriya oilfield on Saturday and forced employees to cut off electricity from
its control station, taking the field offline until further notice, a security
source and two oil sources told Reuters.The oilfield produces 90,000 barrels a
day (bpd) of crude. The incident marked the first time protesters shut an entire
oilfield, though they have blocked entrances to refineries and ports in the
past. Iraq’s economy depends on oil exports which make up more than 90 percent
of its revenues.--With Reuters
Turkey Says Will Not Withdraw from Army Posts in Syria's Idlib
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 29/2019
Turkey will not withdraw from its observation posts in Syrian rebel bastion
province of Idlib which has seen an increase in violence carried out by regime
forces supported by Russian airstrikes, the defense minister said. The posts
were established under a September 2018 deal between Syrian regime ally Moscow
and Ankara, which backs the rebels, to avert an all-out Syrian government
onslaught in Idlib. Government forces surrounded one of 12 Turkish observation
post in Idlib province on Monday after overrunning nearby areas in a push to
take the last opposition holdout, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights. "We respect the agreement reached with Russia and we expect Russia to
abide by this agreement," Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said in comments
published on Sunday on the defense ministry's Twitter account.
"We will by no means empty those 12 observation posts, we will not leave there,"
Akar said. His comments came during a visit together with top army commanders to
the southern province of Hatay on the Syrian border to inspect Turkish troops on
Saturday.
Turkey, worried over a new wave of refugees from the Idlib region, is pressing
for a fresh ceasefire deal, as it sent a delegation to Moscow on Monday. Akar's
visit to soldiers on the border region comes as Turkey is also readying to send
troops to support the U.N.-recognized government in Tripoli against strongman
Khalifa Haftar's self-styled Libyan National Army. President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan on Thursday said Ankara would respond to an invitation from the Libyan
national unity government and Turkish parliament would vote on a motion to send
troops as soon as it returns from recess as early as next month. Ankara signed
in November a security and military cooperation deal with the Tripoli-based
Government of National Accord (GNA) but in order to send troops, parliament
needs to vote a motion like it does for Iraq and Syria. The official Anadolu
news agency, citing sources in Erdogan's ruling party, reported that the
timetable could be brought forward and the motion could be presented to
parliament speaker's office on Monday. The General Assembly could vote the
measure in an extraordinary session on Thursday, it said.
Stabbing at New York Rabbi's Home an 'Act of Terrorism'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 29/2019
A stabbing attack that wounded five people at a rabbi's house in a New York
suburb during celebrations for the Jewish festival of Hanukkah was "an act of
terrorism," the state governor said Sunday. Local media reported that a man with
a machete entered the rabbi's property in Monsey, Rockland County on Saturday
evening, knifing several people before fleeing. Police said a suspect was later
arrested. "This is an act of terrorism. I think these are domestic terrorists.
They are trying to inflict fear," New York Governor Andrew Cuomo told reporters
after the latest in a spate of attacks against Jewish targets.
"They're motivated by hate. They are doing mass attacks. These are terrorists in
our country perpetrating terrorism on other Americans, and that's how we should
treat it." Last year a white supremacist walked into a Pittsburgh synagogue and
killed 11 people -- the deadliest attack against the Jewish community in the
United States. Earlier this month six people, including two suspects, were
killed in a Jersey City shooting at a kosher deli, which authorities said was
fueled in part by anti-Semitism. A report in April from the Anti-Defamation
League (ADL) stated that the number of anti-Semitic attacks in 2018 was close to
the record of 2017, with 1,879 incidents. "I was praying for my life," said
witness Aron Kohn, 65, according to the New York Times, comparing the knife used
by the attacker to "the size of a broomstick". Kohn also threw chairs and tables
in an attempt to head off the attacker, he told CNN.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on December 29-30/2019
In Iran, It Is a Crime to Be a Christian
د.ماجد رافيزادا: أن تكون مسيحياً في إيران، فهذه جريمة
Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/December 29/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/81853/%d8%af-%d9%85%d8%a7%d8%ac%d8%af-%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%81%d9%8a%d8%b2%d8%a7%d8%af%d8%a7-%d8%a3%d9%86-%d8%aa%d9%83%d9%88%d9%86-%d9%85%d8%b3%d9%8a%d8%ad%d9%8a%d8%a7%d9%8b-%d9%81%d9%8a-%d8%a5%d9%8a%d8%b1%d8%a7/
Three of the Islamist judges known to preside over the trials of Christians are
Mashallah Ahmadzadeh, Mohammed Moghiseh, and Ahmad Zargar. The international
community needs to consider imposing sanctions on them.
Converts to Christianity from Islam, according the Iran's Islamic law, can face
the death penalty. The Iranian Islamist judges generally resort to verses from
the Quran and Hadith (Muhammad's sayings and acts) to justify their verdicts.
Iran systematically violates the U.S. International Religious Freedom Act and
this is why, since 1999, the U.S. has designated the Islamic Republic as a
"Country of Concern."
Under international law, the Iranian government has an obligation to respect
freedom of religion. Yet, while Christians are being increasingly persecuted and
their rights are violated in Iran at an unprecedented level, the international
community still remains silent.
The Islamic Republic of Iran is unleashing a sweeping crackdown on Christians,
particularly those who have dared to convert from Islam to Christianity.
Most recently, nine Christians in Iran, possibly converts, have been convicted
by the Islamic court, and each sentenced to five years in prison. The Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) arrested them for attending church services at
a private house. According to a report by Article 18, an Iranian NGO which
promotes religious freedom:
"The arresting officers introduced themselves as agents from the Ministry of
Intelligence (MOIS).
"They stormed the Christians' homes in a coordinated operation at around 9am,
confiscating Bibles, Christian literature, wooden crosses and pictures carrying
Christian symbols, along with laptops, phones, all forms of identity cards, bank
cards and other personal belongings.
"Arresting agents also searched the work offices of at least two Christians and
confiscated computer hard drives and security-camera recordings."
Christian families are generally dehumanized and humiliated in the community
during the agent's raids. As the Article 18 report explained, "The officers are
reported to have treated the Christians harshly, even though small children were
present during the arrests."
Across Iran, Christians are being arrested and jailed on trumped-up charges,
such as "promoting Zionism", "spreading corrupt Christians beliefs",
"propagating against the Islamic Republic in favor of Christianity",
"orientation toward the land of Christianity," or "endangering national
security". Open Doors USA stated that one particular charge -- "acting against
national security" -- is often used by the Iranian authorities "to prosecute
Christians for their house church activities."
The claim of Iranian leaders that the peaceful religious practices of a minority
group pose a grave a threat to national security is totally unacceptable. Iran's
total population is roughly 80 million, with anywhere between 117,000 and 3
million being Christian, according to various estimates. Even though Christians
make up an extremely small part of the population, however, they have always
been viewed, under the Islamic law of Iran, as a threat to "national security".
The activities of Christians in the Islamic Republic are closely monitored by
the Iranian intelligence service (MOIS) and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps (IRCG). They are not permitted to share their faith with others or to
conduct church services in Farsi, Iran's national language.
It is important to hold accountable those Iranian individuals and institutions
who are responsible for persecuting Christians.
Three of the Islamist judges known to preside over the trials of Christians are
Mashallah Ahmadzadeh, Mohammed Moghiseh, and Ahmad Zargar. The international
community needs to consider imposing sanctions on them
The NGO International Christian Concern (ICC) submitted the names of these
judges to the US Treasury for consideration of sanctions. ICC stated:
"These three Revolutionary Court judges, and Evin Prison, have a long record of
human rights abuses toward Iranian Christians. The judges are responsible for
convicting Christians on trumped up charges. They wield Iran's legal system as a
systemic tool of repression against religious minorities. Often, when Christians
stand firm in their faith, Iran's judges send them to the notorious Evin Prison,
located on the outskirts of Tehran. Stories of those who survived Evin Prison
are heartbreaking; the wide variety of abuse faced by inmates is chilling."
Converts to Christianity from Islam, according the Iran's Islamic law, can face
the death penalty. The Iranian Islamist judges generally resort to verses from
the Quran and Hadith (Muhammad's sayings and acts) to justify their verdicts.
One particular verse in Qur'an states:
"They wish you would disbelieve as they disbelieved so you would be alike. So do
not take from among them allies until they emigrate for the cause of Allah. But
if they turn away, then seize them and kill them wherever you find them and take
not from among them any ally or helper." (Qur'an 4:89)
A hadith attributed to Muhammad says: "Whoever changed his Islamic religion,
then kill him".
Even though the international community labels the government of Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani as a moderate administration, and even though Rouhani
claims that the Islamic Republic treats all religions justly and fairly, Iran is
one of the worst places in the world for Christians. According to the World
Watch List compiled by Open Doors USA, Iran is currently ranked as the
ninth-worst country for faith-based persecution. Iran systematically violates
the U.S. International Religious Freedom Act and this is why, since 1999, the
U.S. has designated the Islamic Republic as a "Country of Concern."
Under international law, the Iranian government has an obligation to respect
freedom of religion. Yet, while Christians are being increasingly persecuted and
their rights are violated in Iran at an unprecedented level, the international
community still remains silent.
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a business strategist and advisor, Harvard-educated
scholar, political scientist, board member of Harvard International Review, and
president of the International American Council on the Middle East. He has
authored several books on Islam and US foreign policy. He can be reached at
Dr.Rafizadeh@Post.Harvard.Edu
© 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.
Turkey’s Libyan adventure must be stopped to prevent war in
the Mediterranean
Cyril Widdershoven/Sunday, 29 December 2019
The simmering crisis in the East Mediterranean, threatening a military
confrontation between Turkey and the littoral states Cyprus, Greece, Egypt and
Israel, has taken a perilous new turn with Turkey’s military and political
alliance with Libya’s embattled government in Tripoli.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s move to open a new alliance with
Tripoli comes on top of his power projection in the resource-rich Eastern
Mediterranean, Syria and Iraq. The move to open a maritime bridge from Turkey to
Libya comes shortly after Ankara and the UN-recognized Libyan government signed
an illegal Economic Exclusion Zone agreement. It is an attempt to split the
Eastern Mediterranean region into two blocks, preventing not only the offshore
gas developments around Cyprus, Israel, Egypt and Greece, but also the highly
anticipated Eastern Mediterranean gas pipeline project to Europe.With one
stroke, Erdogan showed not only a willingness to reinforce his claims on already
disputed international waters, but also moves into the Libyan conundrum. By
setting up a military cooperation with the Government of National Accord,
currently fighting a losing game with the Libyan National Army (LNA) led by
Khalifa Haftar, Ankara has laid a claim to a strategic beachhead in North Africa
where regional and global powers are already major players.
Turkey’s willingness to send Turkish troops to support the GNA against Haftar
risks a direct military confrontation with Libya’s mighty neighbor Egypt, and
Haftar’s supporters include several European powers and moderate Middle Eastern
states opposed to the Muslim Brotherhood and other radical Islamist groups.
Since Ankara has thrown its weight behind Iran, Qatar, the Muslim Brotherhood
and other radical networks, this latest international move poses a serious
threat to the interests of moderate Middle Eastern states, Europe and the United
States.
The potential for a total regional conflict is there. The stakes have been
raised by Ankara again. After confronting international oil companies, such as
Italian operator ENI, French partner Total or US-based ExxonMobil in their
drilling operations offshore Cyprus, Ankara now has stepped up its power
projections even outside the Eastern Mediterranean. Erdogan recently stated that
Turkish military drones will be based on the territory of the “Turkish Republic
of Northern Cyprus (TRC)”, which is the Turkish occupied part of Cyprus, while
indicating that a larger military base will be built very soon, together with a
full-scale naval base.
Ankara’s statements are officially a reaction to lifting of military sales
sanctions on Cyprus by the US Congress. A feverish diplomatic and military
consultation process is currently underway between the Eastern Mediterranean
party countries to block any military Turkish operations in the area. Egypt,
Greece and Israel already have committed themselves to take action against
Turkey in case of any incursion. American, French and Italian naval forces are
also heading to the region to put pressure on Ankara.
Erdogan seems impervious to the threats. On Thursday last week, he threatened to
send Turkish troops to fight Haftar and take control of the North African
country. Some years ago, such a statement might have been dismissed as a bluff,
but looking at Erdogan’s Ottoman dreams, as shown in Iraq and Syria, there is a
good chance Erdogan is deadly serious.
The risk Erdogan is taking in Libya is exponentially larger than with his
operations in Syria. The US, EU and NATO will be watching with a wary eye, while
moderate Arab powers of the Gulf will definitely confront such a movement on the
ground. For Ankara, a Libyan operation will be costly, dangerous and not easy to
put in place. Arab powers, and even Israel, will be willing to block or confront
Turkish movements on the ground, offshore or in the air. NATO will not support
Ankara, as it is a unilateral move. A Turkish military presence in the southern
core of the Mediterranean would be an unwelcome development for many NATO
members including Greece, France and Italy.
The first weeks of January could be crucial. If Ankara goes through with its
military plans, the Libyan civil war will take on stronger regional dimensions.
It could escalate quickly and also trigger outbreaks of violence in the Eastern
Mediterranean. It is time to bring Erdogan back into line. Economic sanctions
should be imposed immediately. Erdogan must be forced to acknowledge that his
military adventure in Libya is a reckless and irresponsible move.
Why is Iran silent on Israel’s attacks?
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/December 29/2019
Israel inflicted several blows on the Iranian regime in 2019, including in the
last week, with cruise missiles reportedly launched towards Iranian and Syrian
military positions near the latter’s capital, Damascus.
In August and November, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) struck dozens of Iranian
targets in Syria, and carried out a series of airstrikes in northern Baghdad a
few months ago. According to reports, several Iranians have been killed and
wounded in these airstrikes.
The Islamic Republic is known for immediate retaliation, usually resorting to
military responses power in such situations. But on these strikes, the regime
has remained silent. The only response coming out of Tehran is heightened
rhetoric.
Abbas Nilforoushan, the deputy commander of operations of the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), threatened in an interview with the Iranian
news agency Tasnim: “Israel is not in a position to threaten Iran. Iran has
encircled Israel from all four sides. Nothing will be left of Israel.” Another
deputy commander, Hossein Salami, called Tel Aviv “vulnerable and bringing
itself closer to death.”
This begs the question why Iran has not yet responded militarily to Israel’s
airstrikes against its bases and proxies in Syria and Iraq. The main reason lies
in the fact that the Iranian authorities are currently fighting for their own
survival, as the regime is mired with various problems and has been cornered
from every possible direction.
Tehran has not faced so many challenges at once since its establishment in 1979.
Domestically speaking, the regime appears to be in a constant state of
emergency. For every round of protests that it crushes with brute force, the
next one spreads. In the latest demonstration, around 1,500 people were killed
by security forces, including, according to Reuters: “At least 17 teenagers and
about 400 women, as well as some members of the security forces and police.”
Regionally speaking, the regime is also having a difficult time maintaining its
strategic advantage, popularity and influence in the Shiite communities in Arab
states, particularly in Iraq and Lebanon, where people have also been protesting
against Iranian proxies and interference.
Even some officials and commanders have asserted that the government’s hold on
power is in danger. That is why the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called
on security forces to crush the protesters: “You have my order. Do whatever it
takes to end it.”
Unemployment is high, inflation continues to skyrocket, and the currency is
crashing. The Statistical Center for Iran (SCI) reported that the country’s
overall inflation rate is 47.2 percent, with the inflation rate for food and
fuel as high as 63.5 percent. This means that the cost of living has increased
by almost 50 percent in 2019 while wages remained the same, and many out of
work.
The Iranian regime has also been closely monitoring social media outlets to
detect calls for demonstrations across the country. Last week, the authorities
restricted access to the internet and shut down mobile connectivity ahead of
potential protests — which, with many wishing to commemorate those who lost
their lives in November, are only intensifying.
Regionally speaking, the regime is also having a difficult time maintaining its
strategic advantage, popularity and influence in the Shiite communities in Arab
states, particularly in Iraq and Lebanon, where people have also been protesting
against Iranian proxies and interference. Six Gulf countries have also joined
hands to impose sanctions on banks, individuals and dozens of corporations,
which are linked to Tehran’s support for militant groups, including Hezbollah.
On the global stage, the US withdrawal from the nuclear deal and the subsequent
re-imposition of sanctions on energy, banking and financial sectors have imposed
significant pressure on the Islamic Republic. Due to the US policy of “maximum
pressure” as well as the Trump administration’s decision not to extend its
waiver for Iran’s eight biggest oil buyers — China, India, Greece, Italy,
Taiwan, Japan, Turkey and South Korea — Tehran’s economy has taken a major
beating. The regime is finding it extremely difficult to pursue its military
adventurism and fund its proxies across the region.
European powers have also been mirroring Washington’s campaign. France, Germany
and the UK have stepped up pressure on Iran over uranium enrichment and
centrifuge development. The EU has also pressured Tehran for its ballistic
missile activity, declaring “Iran’s developments of nuclear-capable ballistic
missiles and related technologies is inconsistent” with its obligations under UN
resolution 2231.
In sum, Iran has been silent amid the IDF’s attacks on it because there is
little, really, it can do. The regime has to prioritize its resources as it
fights for its survival on all fronts, domestically and abroad.
• Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is an Iranian-American political scientist and president
of the International American Council. Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh.
Anti-Daesh coalition’s progress threatened by unilateral
moves
Hafed Al-Ghwell /Arab News/December 29/2019
For the 81-member Global Coalition Against Daesh, the events of March and
October delivered on critical objectives, having wrested Daesh’s last territory
and killed its notorious leader, Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, respectively. At its
height, Daesh controlled more than 50,000 square kilometers of territory in
Syria and Iraq, covering a population of roughly 4 million people, and boasted
pledges of allegiances from sympathetic groups in Africa, Asia and the Caucasus.
Financially, the group operated on an annual budget of some $1 billion, buoyed
by illegal oil sales, as well as trafficking people, arms, drugs, and blood
antiquities, bringing in revenues of nearly $2 billion a year, which went on
supporting a fighting force of some 200,000 men, 15 percent being foreign-born.
The scale and complexities of the group’s foundations and ambitions made Daesh a
formidable, atypical insurgency group; one that had no qualms broadcasting its
aims, justifying them in religious writ, laying the groundwork for them and
proceeding to capture those objectives.
In an increasingly non-interventionist, casualty-averse, war-weary world,
exhausted by failures in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya, tackling the Daesh threat
required a different approach beyond bullets, bombs and boots on the ground.
Daesh’s emergence revealed a critical flaw in overseas interventions that
focused on immediate deliverables at the expense of post-war stabilization
efforts that could prevent the creation of power vacuums or cracks that are
prized by extremist groups. The resulting strategy left the sophisticated
aspects of war to the advanced militaries, while the gritty ground-level
fighting was carried out by a loose coalition of armed non-state actors and
paramilitary forces operating in Syria and Iraq. It capitalized on a mutual
interest — the defeat of a common enemy — by a means that spared Western
governments from negative public opinion baths, while inadvertently legitimizing
the agendas of local partners, some of whom have controversial notions of
political oppression or greater autonomy and even outright secession as their
foundational principles.
For now, the global anti-Daesh coalition of countries and organizations from
five of the world’s six continents still holds and shows no sign of slowing
efforts to counter the terrorist group’s re-emergence. These include stabilizing
the regions that made Daesh’s growth inevitable in Syria, Iraq, Libya, Nigeria
and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, while also denying access to funding
for its remnants, countering its poisonous ideology and propaganda, and
curtailing recruitment efforts by preventing the movement of foreign terrorist
fighters. These goals recognize that extremism does not exist in a vacuum.
Failure to mitigate its indirect causes and propagating factors would inevitably
lead to a return of a prescient, insidious Daesh (or even other extremist
groups), bathed in the knowledge and experiences of predecessors.
Unfortunately, recent moves by the US and Turkey, as well outside interference
in Libya’s civil war, threaten to undo all the progress that has been achieved
so far. The decision, for example, to recall US military personnel from parts of
the region handicaps international efforts aimed at ensuring extremist groups
like Daesh, the White Flags, Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham and Al-Qaeda are denied
opportunities to expand their influence in vulnerable regions. It may even lead
to an abrupt end to Combined Joint Task Force — Operation Inherent Resolve
training programs for the Iraqi army to enhance security and stabilization.
Beyond that, it contravenes the US Department of Defense's Stabilization,
Security, Transition, and Reconstruction Operations, which are designed to
minimize military interventions by maximizing coalitions, multi-nation
cooperation and boosting partners in the host nation. In essence, if Washington
is the key to keeping a diverse mix of nations, partners and interests focused
on counterinsurgency operations and regional stabilization, this sudden
withdrawal will result in a return to the sort of turmoil and instability that
birthed Daesh in the first place.
It cannot be stressed enough that America’s involvement is needed now more than
ever. Although Daesh has been “defeated” territorially, it remains a potent
ideological force that former fighters and detainees are not readily abandoning
despite revoked citizenships and horrific conditions in detention camps. Even
the death of Al-Baghdadi has not led to a mass appeal for clemency. In fact,
recent reports suggest that the camps have become radicalization zones, preying
on the young and vulnerable, who are especially susceptible given that such an
environment is all they have ever known.
It cannot be stressed enough that America’s involvement is needed now more than
ever
Turkey’s recent incursion into Kurdish-controlled Syria and attacks on
Kurdish-held positions have already led to escapes at detention facilities in
Qamishli and Ain Issa following Turkish airstrikes and bombardments. It has also
become challenging to gauge the factual from the exaggerated in the stream of
reports emerging from the area. This cripples the counterinsurgency coalition’s
information-gathering and dissemination functions, which are critical to keeping
all members fully informed with relevant, verifiable information. Failure to do
so merely guarantees the coalition’s inability to act when Daesh detainees
escape and rejoin with remnants or attempt to re-establish Daesh in the chasm
between Kurdish forces now allied with Damascus on one side, and the Turkish
forces on the other.
Elsewhere, Daesh sleeper cells, supporters and sympathizers have also gone
underground, retaining their capability to cause havoc in areas they are less
likely to get tracked or monitored by already over-stretched intelligence and
law enforcement agencies. These splinter groups are also critical to the
extremist group’s online capabilities, which help spread propaganda and
radicalizing content and recruit the disaffected. The aim of recruitment this
time is not to join a rebuilt Daesh per se, but to enlist lone wolves to carry
out attacks on their homeland in the group’s name. For instance, Daesh
radicalization operations have become sophisticated enough to target white
supremacists in the US, urging them to exploit loopholes in gun laws in order to
inspire more mass shootings.
These developments become even more alarming when accounting for activities on
the unmonitored dark web, where unregulated cryptocurrency remains a medium for
exchange for trafficking in contraband, stolen goods and information, or as
payment for services rendered.
The task before any anti-extremism coalition should go beyond using force to
exorcise dangerous ideology. It should also deal with a tendency to dismiss
extremist propaganda as merely the work of internet trolls who craft morbid
jokes, make crude memes and delight in making a mockery of suffering. The
repeated instances of such media and commentaries resonate with many disaffected
people who subscribe to a Daesh worldview. To them, the persistence of content
glorifying extremism and the spurious justifications that anoint groups like
Daesh as the sole fixers of a broken world (or systems) is proof of Daesh's
resilience and imminent re-emergence. Worse yet, these online activities lend a
sort of “staying power” — a credibility and legitimacy that is assured by the
world's inability to eradicate it or its remnants.
Going forward, the world is now faced with a Herculean task. Tens of thousands
of Daesh detainees languish in camps, which have become a bargaining chip for
larger forces vying for control in the region or merely prioritizing their
self-interests. Turkey has begun forcefully repatriating former Daesh fighters
back to Europe, while Syrian-Kurdish forces have rejected US offers to take
custody of Daesh’s more dangerous members. In the eyes of its allies, America
has once again regressed to the familiar pursuit of self-interest over
participating in global efforts to pursue the greater good. Any attempt to
address future threats from extremist groups or even a re-emerged Daesh will
come with a steep price, demanding a deeper commitment by Washington that may
not be palatable to a glaringly partisan Congress.
For the Middle East, it will remain challenging to trace out what the future
will look like before the dust of Turkey’s Syria incursion settles or Libya’s
proxy war ends. If Turkey's aim was to have a buffer between the Syrian
Democratic Forces (SDF) and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), merely occupying
a narrow stretch of land between the Turkish border and SDF-held territory in
Syria is hardly going to suffice. The ensuing aggression has also generated more
antipathy against Ankara than it solved the issue of an emboldened PKK allegedly
supported by the SDF. Now, the latter has sought to align itself with Russia and
the Assad regime, leaving the US supporting a loose coalition of rebel groups
that will not survive a joint SDF-Damascus-Moscow offensive on Idlib — the
opposition's last major bastion.
Iraq’s own domestic issues are already straining newly established security
forces that are still undergoing training, further delaying outcomes from
stabilization programs and the rooting out of remaining Daesh cells. In
addition, should Baghdad move toward prioritizing US aims, it may face stiff
opposition from the Iraqi parties, groups and interests that are aligned with
Tehran, threatening further instability.
In Libya, the war on Tripoli launched by Khalifa Haftar has also created a
suitable environment for Daesh to re-emerge after it was defeated by the
internationally recognized government in Tripoli, with support from the US Air
Force. Sleeper Daesh cells now carry out attacks and infiltrate new parts of the
country, taking advantage of the chaos created by the civil war and the foreign
presence in its midst.
On the world stage, the anti-Daesh coalition may have scored some major
victories, but it revealed a major flaw in the preparations to counter the Daesh
threat in the Middle East. There was very little post-Daesh planning, especially
in regards to dealing with the detainees, and vulnerable children in particular.
Revoking citizenships depended heavily on sustained stability in former Daesh
territories, as it merely involved waiting for the return of the rule of law and
capable judiciaries to adjudicate over the detained and mete out appropriate
sentences for terrorism-related charges.
However, it all fell apart with the US’ disinterest, which has thrown the region
back into chaos and thus necessitated new arrangements. These have already been
overshadowed by Ankara’s intent to forcefully repatriate former Daesh fighters.
It does not excuse the poor decision to merely wait out the Syrian civil war and
Iraq’s slow transition to stability, or supporting a peaceful solution in Libya
— countries should have been better prepared to furnish plans (and their
alternatives) to deal with former Daesh fighters who were once citizens.
Canceling citizenships and rejecting their repatriation only kicked the can down
a dangerous, unpredictable road, with ramifications we are only just beginning
to see.
The attraction of Daesh and other radical groups will remain as long as chaos,
war, oppression and civil wars continue in the region. The only way to ensure a
total defeat of this radical agenda and its ability to appeal to large numbers
of the young in the region and globally is to offer an alternative to religious
sentiments among populations, especially the young, and satisfy their deep
desire to be part of public life by supporting moderate groups that accept the
principles of civil states, law and order, elections, and the democratic
mechanism. All parties of moderation that reject violence should be given a way
to absorb the political aspiration of the young to participate in public life
through peaceful means, rather than being excluded and their members being
pushed further into the arms of radical groups.
• Hafed Al-Ghwell is a non-resident senior fellow with the Foreign Policy
Institute at the John Hopkins University School of Advanced International
Studies. He is also senior adviser at the international economic consultancy
Maxwell Stamp and at the geopolitical risk advisory firm Oxford Analytica, a
member of the Strategic Advisory Solutions International Group in Washington and
a former adviser to the board of the World Bank Group. Twitter: @HafedAlGhwell.
2020s global leadership: The future is young and female
Baria Alamuddin/Arab News/December 29/2019
Our transition into a new decade is an apt moment for soul searching — looking
at my grandchildren and wondering where the world is going. In every direction
there is turmoil and crises of leadership. Is this a symptom of oncoming
catastrophe, or the birth pains of a very different kind of world order?
Everywhere there are strong and assertive women challenging the status quo,
notably in protests in Latin America, Hong Kong, Algeria, Sudan, Iran and Iraq.
Closest to my heart, I am immensely proud to see Lebanese women frequently
outshining men; sophisticatedly articulating their demands, and posing a
fundamental challenge to a corrupt, sectarian, and yes, patriarchal system.
We Lebanese who lived through the civil war accepted the revised sectarian quota
system of governance because it seemed to be the least-worst solution to stop us
from killing each other. It puts us to shame that our young people see this
corrupt, backward, broken system for what it is. They desire a mature system of
governance that doesn’t straitjacket us according to what sect we were born
into.
In Saudi Arabia, the rate of change is mind-spinning. Women drive everywhere. I
recently found myself with three female leadership figures from the Saudi
financial sector — including Lubna Al-Olayan, who chairs the newly merged SABB
and Awwal banks, now the third-largest bank in the Kingdom. Over 60 percent of
science graduates are women, and the numbers of female lawyers, academics,
journalists and health professionals are rapidly increasing. These changes can
never be rolled back, but rather will be consolidated as girls grow up
confidently expecting to play leading roles.
As refugee-hating, climate-denying, populist regimes pop up everywhere, young
women are inevitably on the frontlines, challenging this ugly reality. Recent US
polls suggest about 60 percent of women support Donald Trump being impeached and
removed from office; most men disagree. Among young, college-educated, suburban
women, support for Trump disappears almost completely.
Disproportionate numbers of votes for authoritarian leaders and retrogressive
policies come from the oldest generations. In the UK’s 2016 Brexit referendum,
75 percent of those under 24 voted to remain in the EU. Europe and America have
not lurched toward ultra-nationalist, populist autocrats because young people
are embracing fascism, but conversely because an overwhelmingly progressive
younger generation is consistently outnumbered at the polling booths by their
reactionary and embittered elders.
Nevertheless, in states such as France, Germany and the Netherlands,
extreme-right (and also far-left) parties have made ominous inroads with younger
demographics, particularly among working-class and poorly educated communities.
Academic research shows close correlations between high unemployment and
anti-immigrant sentiments.
When leaders such as Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, Viktor Orban in Hungary, Trump in
the US and Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines make crass and uninformed comments
about climate change, it is a salutary reminder that we cannot passively expect
our rulers to do the right thing. Climate deniers who patronizingly carp that
Greta Thunberg is a child, not a scientist, deliberately miss the point. Greta
is no more knowledgeable than any of us; she simply followed her conscience and
inspired millions of others to demand that we stop choking and burning our
planet. It is humbling, but also hope-inspiring, to see our grandchildren, wise
beyond their years and far more clear-sighted than our own cynical,
self-absorbed generation.
Lebanon, Iraq, Hong Kong and South America are in turmoil because increasingly
well educated and broadminded young people fundamentally reject the corrupt,
discredited status quo, and are determined to contribute to building something
better.
The civilized and democratic city-states of ancient Greece devolved into an
irrelevant backwater, while the energetic and militaristic Roman Empire expanded
throughout the Mediterranean world. Western global influence has likewise long
been ebbing away, and the rise of Trump simply accelerates this tendency. We
apparently can no longer expect Western leaders to honor their moral and legal
commitments, stand by their allies, or even make truthful, coherent public
statements.
China looks set to eclipse the West as the dominant 21st-century power, if its
own increasingly authoritarian governing model doesn’t implode. Discreet Chinese
influence is visible everywhere throughout Central Asia and Africa. Sometimes
Chinese assistance has proved an invaluable motor for infrastructural and
economic development; on other occasions, unsustainably indebted governments
have been compelled to give away trade and mineral concessions, or surrender
control of their ports.
Vladimir Putin is far noisier in his efforts to subvert the old Eurocentric
order, with Russia muscling its way to becoming a major Middle Eastern
powerbroker in just a few years. But with a dysfunctional economy smaller than
that of Italy, Moscow may prove to be merely the opening act for an era of Asian
global leadership.
For those of us who report global events, it often feels that everything is
going to hell; everywhere civil unrest, regionalized conflict, populist
demagogues, intolerance and extremism. Yet a deeper look into this turmoil can
elucidate the opposite conclusion: These reactionary, patriarchal and nativist
tendencies are the final gasp of a drowning old order. In the heavily
gerrymandered US electoral system, Trump lost the popular vote in 2016 by nearly
three million votes. Irrespective of whether he retains the presidency next
year, he is likely to lose the popular vote by an even greater margin.
Demagogues such as Putin, Ali Khamenei in Iran and Recep Tayyip Erdogan in
Turkey thrive when terrorized, impoverished and disaffected citizens lose all
hope, suffering their most humiliating electoral defeats in cosmopolitan,
youth-dominated cities such as Moscow, Tehran and Istanbul. Just like Muammar
Qaddafi in Libya, Saddam Hussein in Iraq and Ali Abdullah Saleh in Yemen, these
autocrats subsist on the wrong side of history, waiting for the gravitational
pull of popular rejection to eventually bring them crashing down to earth.
Along with cracking down on the media and judiciary, autocrats invariably target
their education systems, because enlightened and informed young people will
never voluntarily lend their support to retrogressive, dishonest and corrupt
leaders. Iran and Venezuela have among the highest rates of brain drain in the
world, but when educated young people choose to stay and invest their energies
at home, change is never far behind.
The coming decade will be one of tumultuous convulsions; as displaced elites
struggle to grapple with their diminished status, while emerging powers develop
the sense of responsibility that can make their expanded influence sustainable
and beneficial. This is not a zero-sum game; all nations benefit from stability,
open borders, multilateral cooperation, fair and enforceable rules, and a shared
ethos for good governance — even if some nations must learn to live with smaller
slices of the cake. Nevertheless, global inequality is rapidly increasing.
During 2019 the world’s richest 500 people increased their collective wealth by
an astonishing 25 percent, up to $5.9 trillion dollars, in an economic climate
where overall growth is stalling.
I remain optimistic, however, because I believe that a world in which more women
occupy leadership roles will be more humane and considerate, more mindful of our
duty to bequeath the world to future generations in better shape than we found
it. Finland’s new prime minister, 34-year-old Sanna Marin; European Central Bank
President Christine Lagarde; US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi;
and the European Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen, are a few of the
many powerful examples I could cite.
Lebanon, Iraq, Hong Kong and South America are in turmoil because increasingly
well educated and broadminded young people fundamentally reject the corrupt,
discredited status quo, and are determined to contribute to building something
better. They will not always immediately succeed, but that doesn’t mean they
were wrong to try, and it doesn’t mean they won’t learn from mistakes and
ultimately live to see their dreams become reality.
*Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaster in the Middle
East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has
interviewed numerous heads of state.
Turkey’s canal obsession could upset regional stability
Yasar Yakis/Arab News/December 29/2019
The Turkish government seems set to dig a canal in Istanbul to link the Black
Sea to the Marmara Sea. It will constitute a second link between the two seas in
addition to an existing natural waterway, the Istanbul Strait (Bosporus), 30-40
km to the east. The government claims that the main purpose of the project is to
alleviate heavy traffic in the Bosporus.
The opponents of the project claim that it is more a pretext to create rent for
real estate developers and to further enrich pro-government contractors. They
also want to know who purchased real estate in areas along the canal’s route.
The initial estimates say that the construction may cost US$15–20 billion. It
also has geological, environmental and social implications, but this article
will focus on the international law aspect of the question.
The Black Sea is the only sea whose status is regulated by an international
agreement, the Montreux Convention. This convention regulates the passage
through the Turkish Straits, that is to say the Dardanelles, Marmara Sea and
Bosporus.
As a general rule, merchant vessels are free to use the Turkish Straits, but
there are certain restrictions in case of war. These rules vary according to
whether Turkey is belligerent or not. If Turkey is a belligerent party, the
restrictions apply to merchant vessels according to whether or not they are
vessels of countries with which Turkey is at war. If they are registered in
countries that are not at war with Turkey, they are allowed to go through the
Turkish Straits on condition that they do not in any way assist Turkey’s
enemies.
This rule also applies in the event that Turkey considers itself to be
threatened with imminent danger of war.
The tightest restrictions concern the tonnage of warships. The maximum aggregate
tonnage of all foreign naval forces passing through the Straits shall not exceed
15,000 tons. These forces shall not comprise more than nine ships at the same
time.
The aggregate tonnage that non-Black Sea countries may have in those waters
cannot exceed 30,000.
If the Montreux Convention comes to an end one way or another, Turkey may not
obtain a similar leverage for the protection of the region’s stability,
especially in the area covered by the Turkish Straits.
There are other restrictions as well: The warships of non-Black Sea countries
are not allowed to stay in that Sea more than 21 days, whatever the reason for
their presence there. Submarines must pass through the Turkish Straits in
daytime and on the surface of water.
These details give an idea of the central role entrusted to Turkey in the
implementation of the convention. This was thanks to the conditions that
prevailed in the mid-1930s when the convention was signed. Italy had invaded
Abyssinia (Ethiopia) and the predecessor of the United Nations — the League of
Nations — could not do anything to prevent it. Nazi Germany had already started
to threaten Czechoslovakia. In this precarious environment, Turkey was able to
persuade the international community that the best way to maintain stability in
the Black Sea region was to regulate the entry of non-coastal countries’
warships.
This was approved and the Montreux Convention largely contributed to the
stability of the region for more than 80 years.
If the Montreux Convention comes to an end one way or another, Turkey may not
obtain a similar leverage for the protection of the region’s stability,
especially in the area covered by the Turkish Straits. In the aftermath of World
War I, between 1923 and 1936 this competence was assumed by an agency called the
International Straits Commission under the auspices of the League of Nations.
Turkey was able to take over this responsibility from the commission thanks to
the circumstances that prevailed in mid-1930s. Such a constellation in the
international arena is not likely to happen again.
What does the Montreux Convention have to do with digging a canal in Istanbul?
If a canal is dug, non-coastal countries wishing to maintain a military presence
in the Black Sea may approach Turkey and ask to use the canal — rather than the
Bosporus — to send their warships to the Black Sea. They may claim that Montreux
Convention does not cover the new canal, therefore the restrictions imposed by
the convention do not apply.
Russia will probably oppose any relaxation of the measures that restrict the
entry to the Black Sea of a large number of warships of non-coastal countries,
such as the US navy. Of course, Turkey is not obliged to allow the warships of
the non-coastal countries into the Black Sea, but it may find itself squeezed
between the applicant countries and Russia. Therefore, if the Montreux regime
collapses, it is difficult to predict what type of environment may arise,
especially now that Turkey is largely isolated in the international arena.
*Yasar Yakis is a former foreign minister of Turkey and a founding member of the
ruling AK Party. Twitter: @yakis_yasar