English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese, Lebanese
Related, Global News & Editorials
For July 11/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.july11.20.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life; whoever
disobeys the Son will not see life, but must endure God’s wrath
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint John 03/31-36: “The one who
comes from above is above all; the one who is of the earth belongs to the earth
and speaks about earthly things. The one who comes from heaven is above all. He
testifies to what he has seen and heard, yet no one accepts his testimony.
Whoever has accepted his testimony has certified this, that God is true. He whom
God has sent speaks the words of God, for he gives the Spirit without measure.
The Father loves the Son and has placed all things in his hands. Whoever
believes in the Son has eternal life; whoever disobeys the Son will not see
life, but must endure God’s wrath.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on July 10-11/2020
71 New Coronavirus Cases in Lebanon
Fourteen July 8 Passengers Test Positive for COVID-19
Appetizers/Dr.Walid Phares
U.N. Rights Chief Warns Lebanon Crisis 'Spiraling Out of Control'
Lebanon ‘spiralling out of control,’ says UN rights chief
U.S. Ambassador Holds Lengthy Meeting with Diab
Water Cannon Fired at Stone-Throwing Protesters near U.S. Embassy
STL to Issue Verdict in Hariri Case on August 7
El-Sisi addresses message to Aoun: We are ready to exert every effort that can
contribute to prosperity of brotherly Lebanese people
Aoun Has Right to Repeal Laws Violating Constitution, Presidency Says
Report: Lebanon Resumes ‘Paused’ Talks with IMF
Dozens Charged including Officials over Tainted Fuel
Iranian Ambassador tells Najjar his country ready to support Lebanon in all
fields
Hitti: Talks Launched to Open Europe Airports to Lebanon Flights
Lebanon in a Compounded Economic, Monetary and Political Crisis
Without IMF Bailout, is Lebanon Heading for 'Hell'?
AUB president blasts 'worst govt in Lebanese history' for disregarding education
Soon on Al Arabiya: Exclusive interview with former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn
Lebanon must turn on Hezbollah to save its economy/Hussain Abdul-Hussain/Arab
News/July 09/2020
Lebanon: Total Loss of Trust in the Banking Sector/Hussein Shobokshi/Asharq Al
Awsat/July 10/2020
Lebanese freedoms not immune to Ankara’s encroachment
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on July 10-11/2020
Senate Report Prevents Brotherhood Supporters from Entering France
Turkish court clears way to convert Hagia Sophia back to a mosque
Fifteen Centuries, Two Faiths and a Contested Fate for Hagia Sophia
US court orders Iran to pay $879m to 1996 Khobar bombing survivors
UN security removes Iranian ambassador's photo of Qassem Soleimani
Russia, China veto last-ditch UN bid for Syria aid via Turkey for second time
Turkey’s Erdogan may be seriously pursuing his nuclear ambitions: Expert
Macron asks Israeli PM Netanyahu to drop West Bank annexation plans
Hundreds gather in West Bank for funeral of Palestinian shot by Israeli soldiers
Pakistan drug lord Uzair Jan Baloch confesses to spying for Iran: Report
Three-time Iraqi lawmaker Ghida Kambash dies of coronavirus as cases jump 600
pct
Syrian tycoon Rami Makhlouf says most of his employees are now detained
Former top Democrat praises Trump strategy on Iran, warns Biden against reviving
deal
US Bans Pakistan International Airlines over Fake Pilot Licence Scandal
Turkey May Send S-400 System to Back GNA in Libya
Egypt carries out military drill near Libya border
Titles For
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on July 10-11/2020
Erdogan to Make Hagia Sophia a Mosque Again, But Will It Help Him?/Soner
Cagaptay/The Washington Institute/July 10/2020
Iran’s nuclear defiance fueling Israeli fears/Dr. Majid Rafizadeh//Arab
News/July 09/2020
Turkey: How Erdoğan's Migrant Blackmail Failed/Burak Bekdil/ Gatestone
Institute/July 10/2020
Rage Produces Much Heat but Little Light/Amir Taheri/Asharq Al-Awsat/July,11/2020
Can an Emerging Market Become a Policy Pioneer?/Daniel
Moss/Bloomberg/July,11/2020
Natural Gas Is the Past, the Future/Nathaniel Bullard/Bloomberg/July,11/2020
The US media’s disrespectful obsession with Trump/Khalaf Ahmad Al-Habtoor/Arab
News/July 10/2020
EU is stuck in middle of Turkey’s disputes with France and Greece/Sinem Cengiz/Arab
News/July 10/2020
Iran unlikely to grab opportunity for change/Khaled Abou Zahr/Arab News/July
10/2020
On the Murder of Husham al-Hashemi/Michael Knights/The Washington Institute/July
10/2020
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News &
Editorials published
on July 10-11/2020
71 New Coronavirus Cases in Lebanon
Naharnet/July 10/2020
Lebanon on Friday confirmed 71 more COVID-19 cases, recording a relatively high
tally for the small country for the second consecutive day. In its daily
statement, the Health Ministry said 67 of the cases were recorded among
residents and only four among expats who arrived in the country in recent days.
Fifty-one of the local cases have been traced to known infected individuals, the
Ministry added. Thirty-four of the local cases were recorded in the Northern
Metn town of Roumieh while the other cases were recorded in Hamra (3), Ain el-Tineh
(1), Mazraa (1), Ras al-Nabeh (1), Ashrafieh (1), Bourj al-Barajneh (3), Arsoun
(2), Ghobeiri (1), Haret Hreik (1), Mreijeh (1), Sabtiyeh (1), Rmeileh (1), Hay
el-Sillom (3), Sofar (2), Bhamdoun (1), Sehayle (1), el-Mina (1), Mizyara (1),
al-Marj (2), Bednayel (1) and al-Rashidiyeh (2). The new cases raise the
country’s tally to 2,082 -- among them 36 deaths and 1,402 recoveries.
Fourteen July 8 Passengers Test Positive for COVID-19
Naharnet/July 10/2020
The Health Ministry said on Friday that fourteen passengers who arrived in
Beirut on July 8 tested positive for coronavirus. The Ministry announced Friday
the PCR results conducted at the airport earlier on Wednesday. It stated that
fourteen positive cases were registered in passengers coming from Sharjah with
Air Arabia Airlines (1), Copenhagen with MEA Airlines (1), Addis Ababa with
Ethiopian Airlines (1), and Abidjan with MEA Airlines (11). Lebanon on Thursday
witnessed a major one-day surge in the number of confirmed coronavirus cases
reaching 66.
44 of the cases were recorded among residents and 22 among expats who arrived in
Lebanon in recent days.
Appetizers
Dr.Walid Phares/July 08/2020
We are seeing “stories” being circulated in Lebanon about a “trade” made between
the US and Hezbollah about releasing a Hezb supporter jailed in the US versus
releasing a US citizen who was a former SLA officer who was detained in Lebanon.
The “stories” claim there is a large US Iran deal in te making. Not true, this
is Iran-Hezb propaganda to weaken civil society resistance to Iran’s domination.
This is just an appetizer. We will publish a comprehensive assessment later.
U.N. Rights Chief Warns Lebanon Crisis 'Spiraling Out of
Control'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/July 10/2020
Lebanon's economic crisis is getting out of hand, the U.N. rights chief warned
Friday, calling for urgent internal reforms coupled with international support
to prevent further mayhem. Michelle Bachelet, the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, said the social fabric of the country was at risk
as vulnerable populations are threatened with extreme poverty. "This situation
is fast spiraling out of control, with many already destitute and facing
starvation as a direct result of this crisis," she said in a statement. "The
alarm has been sounded, and we must respond immediately before it is too late."
For months, the Mediterranean country has grappled with its worst economic
crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war. Tens of thousands have lost their jobs or
part of their salaries, while a crippling dollar shortage has sparked spiraling
inflation. Bachelet said an unemployment crisis would propel poverty and
indebtedness with "grave implications" in a country with fragile social nets.
She said vulnerable Lebanese, along with 1.7 million refugees, were increasingly
unable to meet their basic needs, as were 250,000 migrant workers, many of whom
have lost their jobs or been left homeless. "Their situation will only get worse
as food and medical imports dry up," the former Chilean president said."As we
respond to this pandemic and the socio-economic crisis, we must include and
protect everyone, regardless of their migration or other status."
'Ease the pain'
Economic woes last year sparked mass protests in Lebanon against a political
class deemed irretrievably corrupt. The Lebanese pound, officially pegged at
1,507 pounds to the greenback, reached more than 9,000 to the dollar last week
on the black market in a dizzying devaluation. Prices have soared almost as fast
as the exchange rate has plummeted, meaning that a salary of one million pounds
is now worth a little more than $100, compared with almost $700 last year. After
the country for the first time defaulted on its sovereign debt in March, the
government pledged reforms and in May started talks with the International
Monetary Fund towards unlocking billions of dollars in aid. But after 16
meetings, negotiations between Lebanon and the IMF are deadlocked, while leaders
are reluctant to enact reforms. Bachelet urged Lebanon's political leaders to
implement the necessary structural changes, and prioritize the provision of
food, electricity, health and education. The rights chief also called on the
international community to ramp up its help. "Without strengthened social safety
nets and bolstered basic assistance to ease the pain caused by required
structural reform, vulnerable Lebanese, migrant workers and refugees will be
pushed further into poverty and extreme poverty," she said.
Lebanon ‘spiralling out of control,’ says UN rights chief
AFP/July 10/2020
Michelle Bachelet said the social fabric of the country was at risk as
vulnerable populations are threatened with extreme poverty
BEIRUT: Lebanon's economic crisis is getting out of hand, the UN rights chief
warned Friday, calling for urgent internal reforms coupled with international
support to prevent further mayhem. Michelle Bachelet, the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, said the social fabric of the country was at risk
as vulnerable populations are threatened with extreme poverty. “This situation
is fast spiralling out of control, with many already destitute and facing
starvation as a direct result of this crisis,” she said in a statement. “The
alarm has been sounded, and we must respond immediately before it is too
late.”For months, the Mediterranean country has grappled with its worst economic
crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war. Tens of thousands have lost their jobs or
part of their salaries, while a crippling dollar shortage has sparked spiralling
inflation. Bachelet said an unemployment crisis would propel poverty and
indebtedness with "grave implications" in a country with fragile social nets.
She said vulnerable Lebanese, along with 1.7 million refugees, were increasingly
unable to meet their basic needs, as were 250,000 migrant workers, many of whom
have lost their jobs or been left homeless.
“Their situation will only get worse as food and medical imports dry up," the
former Chilean president said. “As we respond to this pandemic and the
socio-economic crisis, we must include and protect everyone, regardless of their
migration or other status.”
Economic woes last year sparked mass protests in Lebanon against a political
class deemed irretrievably corrupt. The Lebanese pound, officially pegged at
1,507 pounds to the dollar, reached more than 9,000 to the dollar last week on
the black market in a dizzying devaluation. Prices have soared almost as fast as
the exchange rate has plummeted, meaning that a salary of one million pounds is
now worth a little more than $100, compared with almost $700 last year. After
the country for the first time defaulted on its sovereign debt in March, the
government pledged reforms and in May started talks with the International
Monetary Fund towards unlocking billions of dollars in aid. But after 16
meetings, negotiations between Beirut and the IMF are deadlocked, while leaders
are reluctant to enact reforms. Bachelet urged Lebanon's political leaders to
implement the necessary structural changes, and prioritise the provision of
food, electricity, health and education. The rights chief also called on the
international community to ramp up its help. “Without strengthened social safety
nets and bolstered basic assistance to ease the pain caused by required
structural reform, vulnerable Lebanese, migrant workers and refugees will be
pushed further into poverty and extreme poverty,” she said
U.S. Ambassador Holds Lengthy Meeting with Diab
Naharnet/July 10/2020
U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon Dorothy Shea on Friday held talks with Prime Minister
Hassan Diab at the Grand Serail. Shea left without making a statement but media
reports said the meeting was lengthy and that Diab asked the ambassador to
continue the talks over a lunch banquet. LBCI TV said the talks tackled the
latest tensions over the U.S. envoy’s statements, the issue of border
demarcation with Israel and Washington’s Caesar Act against the Syrian regime
and its financiers.
Water Cannon Fired at Stone-Throwing Protesters near U.S.
Embassy
Associated Press/Naharnet/July 10/2020
Dozens of Lebanese protesters held a raucous anti-U.S. rally outside the
fortified American Embassy in Awkar on Friday, denouncing what they said was
Washington's "interference" in Lebanon's affairs while some chanted in support
of Iran-backed Hizbullah. The crowd, made up of mostly young men who support
Hizbullah and allied political parties, hurled stones at riot police near the
embassy, from which they were separated by layers of barbed wire. Some
protesters tried to remove the wire, at which point they were sprayed with water
cannons.
The protesters burned American flags and mock-up dollar bills, calling the U.S.
the "mother of terrorism." The riot police eventually escorted the crowd away
from the embassy area. This is the second anti-U.S. protest in Beirut and its
suburbs this week amid strained U.S.-Lebanese relations. Although the U.S.,
along with Israel and some other Western countries, has designated Hizbullah a
"terrorist" group, Washington is also a major donor to the Lebanese Army.
Lebanon is facing its worst economic and financial crisis, which has triggered
anti-government protests and created domestic political tension between rival
groups. Hizbullah's leader, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, recently blasted comments
by U.S. Ambassador Dorothy Shea criticizing his group and said Washington was
seeking to turn public opinion against Hizbullah. Dozens of Lebanese also
protested Wednesday near the Beirut airport, on the day General Kenneth
McKenzie, the commander of the United States Central Command, visited Lebanon.
The protesters denounced his visit and chanted "Death to America."
STL to Issue Verdict in Hariri Case on August 7
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/July 10/2020
The U.N.-backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon on Friday announced that it will
issue its long-awaited verdict in the case of ex-PM Rafik Hariri’s assassination
on August 7. “The Trial Chamber of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) issued
a scheduling order today for the public pronouncement of the Judgment in the
Ayyash et al. case (STL-11-01) in a public session on Friday 7 August 2020 at
11.00 AM (C.E.T),” the STL said in a statement. In the filing issued Friday, the
Judges stated that the Judgment will be delivered from the courtroom with
partial virtual participation.
"Due to the COVID-19 and in line with the national guidelines in the
Netherlands, a limited number of members of the media will be allowed into the
public gallery and the STL’s media center,” the STL added. The court had
intended to issue the verdict in mid-May but it later postponed the
pronouncement due to the COVID-19 pandemic.Hariri, who was Lebanon's prime
minister until his resignation in 2004, was killed on February 14, 2005, when a
suicide bomber detonated a pickup truck next to his armored convoy on the Beirut
seafront.
Another 21 people were killed and 226 injured in the assassination, with fingers
initially pointing at Syria which had long been a power-broker in the country.
The tribunal was created by a 2007 U.N. Security Council resolution at Lebanon's
request, and four Hizbullah suspects went on trial in 2014 accused of core roles
in the attack. Salim Ayyash, 50, is accused of leading the team that carried out
the bombing, while Assad Sabra, 41, and Hussein Oneissi, 41, allegedly sent a
fake video to the Al-Jazeera news channel claiming responsibility on behalf of a
made-up group.
Hassan Habib Merhi, 52, is accused of general involvement in the plot.
The alleged mastermind, Hizbullah military commander Mustafa Badreddine, was
indicted by the court but is now believed to have died while leading the group's
forces fighting with the Syrian regime in May 2016. Hizbullah chief Sayyed
Hassan Nasrallah has refused to hand over the suspects and warned the tribunal
"don't play with fire" while Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad says the court is a
tool to "pressure Hizbullah."The assassination of Hariri transformed the face of
Lebanon, triggering a wave of mass demonstrations that ended with the departure
of Syrian forces from Lebanon after a 30-year presence. However the trial
remains a sensitive subject in Lebanon, which is politically unstable and
crippled with its worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war.
Prosecutors said during the trial that Hariri was assassinated because he was
perceived as a "severe threat" to Syrian control of the country and as a "proxy
of the West". They said their case was "circumstantial" but "compelling",
relying almost entirely on mobile phone records allegedly showing the suspects
conducting intense surveillance of Hariri from just after his resignation until
minutes before the blast.
But the absence of the defendants has raised questions about the trial's
credibility, while the gap of 13 years since the attack has caused doubts about
its relevance in a region transformed by the war in Syria. Rafik Hariri's son
Saad, who later went on to become prime minister like his father, called at the
conclusion of the hearings in 2018 for "justice" but not revenge. The court has
heard evidence from more than 300 witnesses and amassed 144,000 pages of
evidence -- at an estimated cost of at least $600 million since it opened its
doors in 2009. The tribunal opened a second case last year, charging prime
suspect Ayyash with terrorism and murder over deadly attacks on politicians in
2004 and 2005.
El-Sisi addresses message to Aoun: We are ready to exert
every effort that can contribute to prosperity of brotherly Lebanese people
NNA/July 10/2020
The President of the Arab Republic of Egypt, President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi,
affirmed Egypt's concern for Lebanon's stability and prosperity, expressing
readiness "To exert every effort that could contribute to the welfare of the
brotherly Lebanese people and restore their health."
President Sisi’s stances came in a written message addressed to the President of
the Republic, General Michel Aoun, conveyed by the Egyptian Ambassador to
Lebanon, Dr. Yasser Alawi, who was accompanied by Counselor Mohamed Musleh.
In his message, President Sisi expressed hope that negotiations which Lebanon is
conducting with financial institutions to deal with the pressing economic
situation will result in "success that will lead to reducing the damage to the
Lebanese economy, and that this will contribute to the flow of allocations
stipulated in the Cedar conference, so that Lebanon can face all the burdens on
its shoulders”. President Sisi also stressed his confidence that "Lebanese
officials will have the will to overcome the current crisis and enable Lebanon,
which is a dear and brotherly country to all Arabs, to be distanced from
regional conflicts and isolated from all negative impacts”. For his side,
President Aoun conveyed his greetings to President Al-Sisi, thanking him for his
affection towards Lebanon, his keenness to emerge the current crisis, and his
willingness to make contributive efforts.
During the meeting, the discussion tackled the Arab and regional situations and
issues of concern of the two brotherly countries.
Former Minister Karim Pakradouni:
President Aoun met former Minister Karim Pakradouni, today at Baabda, and
deliberated with him current developments. -- Presidency press office
Aoun Has Right to Repeal Laws Violating Constitution,
Presidency Says
Naharnet/July 10/2020
The Information Office of the Lebanese Presidency issued a statement on Friday
stressing that President Michel Aoun has a “constitutional right to revoke any
law that violates the constitution.”The statement said that comments and
positions were issued after Aoun requested the Constitutional Council to repeal
the law in force related to defining the appointment mechanism in the first
category in public administrations and in the higher positions in public
institutions. Some comments ignored the constitutional right of the President of
the Republic, while others went as far as to launch descriptions that are not
based on reality, said the statement. The Office of the Presidency affirmed that
by submitting a request to annul the applicable law, Aoun had exercised his
constitutional right in accordance with Article 19 of the Constitution because
he found a constitutional violation of Articles 54, 65 and 66, in the law. The
President swore an oath to respect the constitution of the nation and its laws,
and he will not hesitate every time the constitution is violated. The President
is not in a position to overlook any constitutional or legal violation,
regardless of its nature, reasons and circumstances, according to the statement.
The Constitutional Council shall give the last judgement, and everyone should
respect the constitutional institutions, their decisions and rulings.
Report: Lebanon Resumes ‘Paused’ Talks with IMF
Naharnet/July 10/2020
Negotiations between Lebanon and the International Monetary Fund for a bailout
plan are set to resume on Friday after a reported “hiatus” over the government's
failure to enforce reforms, a condition to provide economic assistance, media
reports said on Friday.“Lebanese negotiators asked the IMF to revive paused
talks since their 16th meeting last week to discuss Lebanon’s problematic
electricity file, and the international lender agreed,” al-Joumhouria daily
reported. The daily said an online meeting is set to take place Friday at 4:00
p.m. between the Lebanese side in Beirut and the IMF negotiators in Washington.
Lebanese officials taking part in the meeting include Minister of Finance Ghazi
Wazni, Minister of Energy Raymond Ghajar, Member of the Banking Control
Committee Marwan Mikhael and energy consultants. Talks will highlight the
upcoming steps after the appointment of board of directors to EDL. On Tuesday,
the Cabinet appointed a new six-member board of directors to the state-run
Electricite Du Liban. However, “informed” sources said the appointments are
“insignificant in the absence of genuine steps leading to the formation of a
regulatory body to EDL to manage the sector and enhance its independence.”
Dozens Charged including Officials over Tainted Fuel
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/July 10/2020
A Lebanese investigative judge charged dozens of people including officials
Friday over a delivery of counterfeit fuel intended for the electricity sector,
a judicial source and state media said. The "tainted fuel" case made headlines
in March when Lebanon refused to receive a fuel shipment from a subsidiary of
Algerian state company Sonatrach. A prosecutor in April ordered shut the offices
of ZR Energy, which acted as intermediary to bring the fuel into Lebanon. On
Friday, an investigative judge issued a raft of charges against around 30 people
before their expected trial, a judicial source and the official National News
Agency said. Sixteen of those individuals are already detained, the judicial
source said. They faced charges ranging from "fraud", "bribery" and "forging
official documents" to "squandering public funds", it added. Those indicted
included Sarkis Hlaiss, chief of oil installations at the ministry of energy and
water and oil director Aurore Feghaly, as well as employees and technicians at
the ministry and oil installations, NNA and the source said. Sonatrach
representative in Lebanon Tarek Fawal, as well as ZR Energy director Teddy Rahme
and general manager Ibrahim al-Zouk were also charged, the source added.
Lebanon's loss-making electricity sector is plagued by power cuts, and has long
been upheld as an example of waste in the public sector. The small country is in
the grips of its worst economic crisis in decades. It has since October been
rocked by massive then smaller protests demanding the overhaul of the entire
political class, who protesters accuse of being inept and corrupt.
Iranian Ambassador tells Najjar his country ready to
support Lebanon in all fields
NNA/July 10/2020
Minister of Public Works and Transportation, Dr. Michel Najjar, on Friday
welcomed Iranian Ambassador to Lebanon, Mohammad-Jalal Firouznia, who visited
him with an accompanying delegation. The meeting discussed the current
conditions and developments, in addition to the Lebanese-Iranian bilateral
relations and the best means to activate them, especially at various economic
levels -- most notably in the field of transportation.The Iranian ambassador
assured Minister Najjar of his country's readiness to support Lebanon in all
fields, wishing "success to the Lebanese government in its tasks. He also
extended an invitation to Minister Najjar to visit Tehran.
Hitti: Talks Launched to Open Europe Airports to Lebanon
Flights
Naharnet/July 10/2020
Foreign Minister Nasif emphasized that talks have been launched with European
countries to open their airports to flights coming from Lebanon, al-Joumhouria
daily reported on Friday. The Minister assured that Europe is still closed to
the Lebanese strictly due to “technical issues rather than political reasons. I
am 1000 percent confident about that,” said Hitti. On the rise in coronavirus
cases, the Minister said that "Lebanese authorities have no intention to change
the precautionary measures at the airport. Everything is going according to
plan. We won't change these measures."
On July 1, the Rafik Hariri International Airport in Beirut reopened partially
amid strict precautionary measures in light of coronavirus.
European and Gulf states are still closed to Lebanese. Only Cyprus, Turkey and
Greece are receiving flights from Lebanon.
Lebanon in a Compounded Economic, Monetary and Political
Crisis
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/July 10/2020
Lebanon is mired in its worst ever economic crisis, marked by an unprecedented
plunge of its currency, which has left nearly half of the population in
poverty.The economic collapse has led to mass layoffs and salary cuts, in a
country already rocked since late 2019 by mass protests against a political
system seen as corrupt and incompetent.
Dollar shortages
Anxiety at the lack of availability of dollars emerges on September 29, 2019,
when hundreds of people take to the streets of central Beirut to protest
economic hardship. Among the hardest hit are petrol station owners who need
dollars to pay their suppliers. But media report that banks and exchange offices
are limiting dollar sales for fear of running out.
Tax on WhatsApp
A proposed government tax on messaging applications like WhatsApp submitted on
October 17 is the last straw, with thousands taking to the streets in Beirut and
other cities, some chanting "the people demand the fall of the regime".
The government of prime minister Saad Hariri scraps the tax the same day, but
protests continue over the next weeks, culminating in demonstrations gathering
hundreds of thousands demanding an overhaul of the ruling class in place for
decades.
New government
On December 19 little-known academic Hassan Diab, who is backed by powerful
Hizbullah, is named prime minister, replacing Hariri who resigned in late
October under pressure from the street. Protesters immediately regroup to
condemn the appointment, which also outrages members of the Sunni community.
On January 21, 2020, a new government is unveiled, made up of a single political
camp, the pro-Iranian Hizbullah and its allies, who have a parliamentary
majority.
Demonstrators respond by torching tires and blocking several roads in mainly
Sunni towns across the country.
Default
On March 7, Lebanon, whose debt burden is equivalent to nearly 170 percent of
its gross domestic product, says it will default on a $1.2-billion Eurobond.
On the 23rd, it says it will discontinue payments on all dollar-denominated
Eurobonds.
Capital flight
On April 24, Diab says that banks have lost $5.7 billion (5.2 billion euros) in
January and February in spite of restrictions on withdrawals and transfers
abroad.
According to official estimates, $2.3 billion were transferred out of the
country last year.
Rescue plan
On April 30, after three nights of violent clashes in Tripoli, Diab says Lebanon
will seek help from the International Monetary Fund, after the government
approves a plan to rescue the economy.
On May 13, Lebanon launches talks with the IMF.
Arrests
In May the president of the money changers union Mahmoud Mrad is arrested and
the director of monetary operations at the central bank Mazen Hamdan charged
with "manipulation of the national currency".
Currency collapse
From June 11-13, after the Lebanese pound hits a new low on the black market,
protesters take to the streets after sundown, blocking roads, including in
Beirut and Tripoli.
Protesters blast central bank governor Riad Salameh's failure to halt the
depreciation.
On June 29, the director general of the finance ministry involved in the
negotiations with the IMF resigns, citing deep disagreements over the management
of the crisis. He is the second member of the negotiating team to go in the
space of two weeks.
Out of control
On July 10, the U.N. rights chief Michelle Bachelet warns that Lebanon's
economic crisis is getting out of hand, calling for urgent internal reforms
coupled with international support to prevent further mayhem.
Without IMF Bailout, is Lebanon Heading for 'Hell'?
Agence France Presse//Naharnet/July 10/2020
Talks between crisis-hit Lebanon and the International Monetary Fund are
deadlocked, and leaders reluctant to enact reforms. Without a vital
multi-billion-dollar bailout, is Lebanon headed for "hell"? For months, the
Mediterranean country has grappled with its worst economic crisis since the
1975-1990 civil war. Tens of thousands have lost their jobs or part of their
salaries, while a crippling dollar shortage has sparked rapid inflation.
After the country for the first time defaulted on its sovereign debt in March,
the government pledged reforms and in May started talks with the IMF towards
unlocking billions of dollars in aid. But 16 meetings later, the negotiations
are stalling.
"The IMF has left the negotiating table and talks have stopped," said a member
of the Lebanese negotiating team speaking on condition of anonymity. Another
Lebanese source familiar with the negotiations said IMF representatives have
"not sensed serious commitment from the Lebanese delegation" towards reform.
"Every faction is vying for its own personal interests while the country burns,"
they said. Deadlock is common in multi-confessional Lebanon, where politicians
have for decades been accused of cronyism, conflict of interest and corruption.
As Lebanon seeks help from the IMF, arguments are mounting over the scale of
total financial losses for the state, central bank and commercial banks.
The government estimated losses at around 241 trillion Lebanese pounds, which
amounts to around $69 billion at an exchange rate of 3,500 pounds to the
greenback. But a parliamentary committee quoted much lower figures using the old
currency peg of 1,507 pounds to the dollar. The IMF considers the government's
figures to be more likely. The discrepancy in the figures shows the great power
and influence of a "lobby ready to see Lebanon burn rather than expose what they
did to it", the Lebanese negotiator said.
- 'Help us help you' -
Since October, the deepening turmoil has sparked mass protests demanding the
wholesale removal of a political class seen as incompetent and corrupt. The
crisis has shot poverty up to almost 50 percent, and unemployment to 35 percent.
In recent days, the Lebanese pound fetched more than 9,000 to the greenback on
the black market. With prices soaring, many can longer afford to fill their
fridges, while others have started bartering clothes or household items online
for baby milk and diapers.
Four Lebanese killed themselves last week in suicides apparently linked to the
economic downturn. In March, the government pledged reforms long demanded by
international donors, including budget cuts, tax hikes and electricity sector
reform, but little has come through. A Western source told AFP the last meeting
"went very badly", ending with IMF negotiators urging Lebanon's representatives
"to stop taking them for a ride".
Two key members of Lebanon's negotiating team who resigned last month have
accused the government of showing no clear commitment to reform. On Wednesday,
French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said he was "very worried". "Help us
help you, dammit," he urged. Analyst Nasser Yassin said the ruling class lacked
political will. "To guarantee they won't lose everything, they would rather the
country remain on the cusp of collapsing than initiate serious reforms," he
said.Such reforms, he said, "would strip them of essential tools they use to
impose authority and control over the state, the economy, and society".
'Officials in denial' -
Among the IMF's demands are that Lebanon audit its central bank, and issue
official capital controls to replace informal withdrawal and transfer caps
imposed by the banks since the autumn.
It has also requested the country float its currency so Lebanese can follow a
single exchange rate.
To further complicate matters, the IMF talks come as tensions rise between the
United States and Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Shiite movement that is a key
political player in Lebanon.
"Hezbollah is a terrorist organisation and we are supportive of Lebanon as long
as they get the reforms right and they are not a proxy state for Iran," US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said this week.
The Western source said: "I don't see any alternative to assistance from the
IMF."
"The country is collapsing, and so is the Lebanese pound, while officials are in
denial."
Lebanon's government says it needs $20 billion in external funding, an estimate
that includes an $11 billion aid package pledged by donors at a Paris conference
in 2018.
But without an IMF rescue, donors are unlikely to pump money into Lebanon, the
Western source said.
"An IMF agreement will help correct Lebanon's reputation," he advised.
The Lebanese source agreed an IMF rescue would help Lebanon avoid the worst.
"With a skyrocketing exchange rate that could reach 25,000 to 50,000 Lebanese
pounds to the dollar and inflation increasing by the day, Lebanon, without the
IMF, will plunge into hell," he said.
AUB president blasts 'worst govt in Lebanese history' for
disregarding education
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/Friday 10 July 2020
The president of the American University of Beirut Friday called the Lebanese
government one of the worst in the country’s history due to its disregard for
the education sector. Criticizing the current and previous governments for
allowing Lebanon to become entangled in an unprecedented financial and economic
crisis, Fadlo Khuri said that no previous government took for granted Lebanon’s
higher education the way Prime Minister Hassan Diab’s government is. “Now I’m
going to be blunt here: this is the worst government in Lebanese history with
regard to their understanding of and their care of higher education,” Khuri said
in a webinar with DC-based think tank, Middle East Institute. Khuri spoke of the
need to continue supporting AUB and other Lebanese universities to produce
“educated, capable and real technocrats,” adding that he does not think the
current government is technocratic. Diab, appointed by Hezbollah and its allies,
promised to head a technocratic government made up of independent experts.
However, former Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s Future Movement, the Lebanese
Forces, Kataeb Party and Progressive Socialist Party are not represented in
Diab’s government. The AUB president said that more than 60 percent of all
citable research on Lebanon comes from AUB. “No other … university carries that
much of its country’s scientific output,” he said, lamenting the country’s
current state of higher education. “This government does not care about higher
education, and if they don’t care about higher education, they don’t care about
education [and] they don’t care about the country,” Khuri said. AUB is currently
owed more than $150 million from the government for medical bills. Khuri urged
the government to “just talk to us” and provide a schedule of how this would be
repaid.
The university, like many other institutions in Lebanon, is facing a difficult
financial situation. AUB was forced to lay off around 25 percent of its
employees, Khuri previously said. Despite this, the Lebanese prime minister is
suing the university and demanding close to $1 million in severance pay and
retirement funds. Diab is also demanding this money be paid in US dollars to a
bank outside of Lebanon. With the current crisis in Lebanon and a shortage of US
dollars in the market, banks do not allow depositors to withdraw dollars.
Speaking of the political elite in Lebanon, “including the current government
are not patriots,” Khuri said.“To bring confidence [to Lebanon], you’ve gotta be
competent. I have not seen one shred of competence so far in six months,” the
AUB president said in an apparent reference to Diab’s government that has been
in office since the beginning of the year.
Soon on Al Arabiya: Exclusive interview with former Nissan
boss Carlos Ghosn
Al Arabiya English/Friday 10 July 2020
Al Arabiya will air on Saturday an exclusive interview at 1900 GMT (10:00 p.m.
Saudi time) with the former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn who shook the car making
industry with his ongoing legal battle since late 2018. Accusations and
allegations against Ghosn by Japanese prosecutors and media include:
under-reporting his earning at Nissan, misappropriation of funds, using company
funds for personal purposes, misrepresenting the company’s investments, among
others. Ghosn, who holds both French and Lebanese citizenship, fled Japan where
he was awaiting trial and went back to Lebanon, and US prosecutors said that he
wired hundreds of thousands of dollars to two men who are now detained for
helping “smuggle” him. Ghosn denied all the allegations of financial wrongdoing
against him and said that he was ousted as Nissan’s chairman as part of a
government-backed coup to destroy any possibility of a merger between Nissan and
its French alliance partner Renault.
Lebanon must turn on Hezbollah to save its economy
Hussain Abdul-Hussain/Arab News/July 09/2020
حسن عبد الله حسين: على لبنان أن ينقلب على حزب الله ليخلص اقتصاده
Lebanon is in a state of severe economic stress. The price of almost every good
has soared beyond the affordability of many citizens. Legions are out of work.
Businesses are locked in a dire existential struggle. There is perhaps no more
accurate judgment on the state of an economy than the currency market. In this
respect, although the Lebanese pound remains officially — fantastically, one
might add — pegged at just over 1,500 to the dollar, in truth it takes close to
9,000 pounds to exchange for a dollar. That is an 83 percent devaluation in the
market’s faith in the economy.
Many Lebanese, however, are unaware that their national crisis is in fact of
Lebanon’s own making. Mostly, they blame an American embargo — one that does not
really exist. This misplacement of blame blinds the country to the real cause of
its malaise: Hezbollah. Except for sanctions imposed by the US Treasury
Department’s anti-terrorism arm, the Office of Foreign Assets Control, on a few
Lebanese entities and individuals connected to Hezbollah — the self-proclaimed
“Party of God” — there are no financial restrictions on the state of Lebanon or
any of great substance against its institutions, public or private.
But, even without being under sanctions, foreign direct investment — usually the
engine of economic growth — shies away from Lebanon. Foreign investors are
simply unwilling to bring their money into a country that lives in a state of
perpetual war, with Hezbollah currently involved in regional entanglements in
Syria, Yemen and Iraq, while also threatening to go to war with Israel.
When the Friends of Lebanon group convened an international donor conference in
Paris two years ago that came to be known as Cedre, it pledged a rescue package
worth $11 billion. The only conditions were that Beirut should get its act
together and eradicate corruption and privatize state utilities — especially the
highly inefficient Electricite du Liban. It is noteworthy that, even though
pledging donors included the US and Saudi Arabia, neither made their
contribution contingent on disarming Hezbollah — an organization that both
nations classify, for good reason, as a terrorist group. Perhaps they understood
that corruption is the lifeblood of Hezbollah, so if Lebanon actually managed to
reform away corruption, it would also see off Hassan Nasrallah and his acolytes.
The tragedy is that Lebanon cannot reform. Hezbollah, with its powerful militia,
won’t let it. And because reform is out of the question, Lebanon is increasingly
dependent on remittances from its vast diaspora. Such transfers are among the
highest in the world, but no modern economy can be built on such a broad and
deep rentier system: It saps ambition and entrepreneurship. The country
desperately needs to change.
But Lebanon cannot change. When the Lebanese economy started on its most recent
decline in October, Lebanese citizens took to the streets to demand reform.
Hezbollah accused them of being agents of foreign powers. Any hint that
Hezbollah was to blame for the economic collapse was suppressed by the party’s
thugs, who beat up protesters in the streets. Violence was not the only
Hezbollah tool, however. The party also launched a misinformation campaign that
depicted Lebanon as a victim of US sanctions, like the group’s allies Syria and
Iran.
Next, Hezbollah and its supporters connected every discussion in Lebanon to
Israel. Whatever the subject or the problem, they repeated the mantra that the
party was preparing not only to launch war on Israel, but to completely destroy
Lebanon’s southern neighbor and send Israelis back to “where they came from.” It
didn’t matter how tenuous or improbable the connection. Yet, when complaints
about the price of bread are answered with “war on Israel,” there is no room in
the narrative for macroeconomic plans or support for business.
They have turned the country into an Iranian missile base with which to threaten
Israel and blackmail America.
For Hezbollah and the Lebanese oligarchs it controls, the story of Lebanon is
one of war and only of war. They have turned the country into an Iranian missile
base with which to threaten Israel and blackmail America. And Tehran is
unwilling to let go of its investment. It is this that has been the recipe for
Lebanon’s unfolding economic disaster.
Hezbollah’s tall tales and delusional plans about destroying Israel create a
mixture that distorts reasoning. It is no surprise, then, that many ordinary
Lebanese blame America for the country’s ills. But they must stop, for it is
only by identifying Hezbollah as the scourge of Lebanon that the Lebanese might
begin to find a way out of the morass and begin to pressure the political class
to jettison the group. So far, however, that hasn’t happened. So far, Lebanon is
blaming everyone else and is unwilling to turn on its enemy within.
*Hussain Abdul-Hussain is the Washington bureau chief of Kuwaiti daily Al-Rai
and a former visiting fellow at Chatham House in London. Copyright: Syndication
Bureau
Lebanon: Total Loss of Trust in the Banking Sector
Hussein Shobokshi/Asharq Al Awsat/July 10/2020
Among the most important reasons why Lebanon was called the Switzerland of the
East was the picturesque nature that made it a distinguished and exceptional
tourist destination, the atmosphere of freedoms that made it a center for
artistic, journalistic and literary creativity, and a developed banking system
that was safeguarded by the law and guaranteed secrecy and financial oversight.
Today, this tourism sector is collapsing, with services deteriorating, capital
flight, and freedoms being restricted to an unprecedented degree that is not
typical for the nature of Lebanon. The collapse of the banking system in
Lebanon, today, is only a matter of time and the issue here is not only banks
going bankrupt but a total loss of trust in the banking system.
A few days ago, a well known Jordanian businessman, Talal Abu-Ghazaleh sued one
of the largest Lebanese banks for money wasting and fraud — a dangerous
precedent. This is neither the first nor the last case of this kind, and there
will probably be a flood of cases of the same nature filed by those harmed. This
is not the first crisis that the Lebanese banking sector has faced; there was a
months-long crisis related to Intra Bank and its founder, Palestinian banker
Yousef Beidas. This crisis continued with Roger Tamraz and it has been
extensively dealt with in two books by Canadian-Lebanese writer Kamal Dib.
Lebanese banks played a very controversial role during the bloody civil war that
went on for more than two decades, acting as a tool that enabled warlords, heads
of sects, and those in power. With that, Lebanon’s status as a center for the
production of banks in the Middle East was lost, pushing international banks to
move from Beirut to Bahrain that had provided an alternative system that was
supported by a strong banking law and a stable central bank.
After the civil war, the banking sector in Lebanon was more dangerously and
severely infiltrated, with many of them turning into containers for suspicious
and dirty money for the terrorist organization Hezbollah and the Assad regime
and its agents. This opened the way for funding drug deals and smuggling, as
well as arms deals, chemical waste deals, and other corrupt deals, leading to
the collapse of many banks, such as the Medina Bank and the Lebanese Canadian
Bank, among others. The Lebanese banking sector did not only turn a blind eye to
suspicious accounts but also to bank accounts affiliated with well known and
very large companies that were known to be fronts for Hezbollah's money
laundering from West Africa, Iran, and Latin America through a complicated
network of supporters and affiliates of the terrorist group.
This total loss of trust in the Lebanese banking sector, one of the most
important soft elements of Lebanese power, is a very grave loss that will be
difficult to compensate after years of strengthening and construction. Hence,
the propositions by Hezbollah leader, Hassan Nasrallah, on economic and
financial solutions is comical. However, Nasrallah is walking down the same path
that he had since his first day: Destroying the Lebanese model in all its
features and characteristics only to replace it with an ugly mutant that looks
nothing like Lebanon.
The banking sector is strong, and it is one of the most important pillars of the
modern state, the most important element of which is trust in the system, which
has quite obviously evaporated. The collapse of the economic and financial
excellence in Lebanon is not a coincidence, and impoverishing people was an
inevitable, natural, and expected result of this malicious project that was
promoted by the terrorist organization, Hezbollah, since its conception, only
those in denial would be surprised.
The Lebanese scene and its implications that are expected to become worse will
not change unless the roots of the problem are addressed and Lebanon returns to
what it was because Switzerland itself did not reach glory under the leadership
of the head of a terrorist organization.
Lebanese freedoms not immune to Ankara’s encroachment
The Arab Weekly/July 10/2020
On Thursday, the Beirut public prosecutor referred Der Haroutiounian to trial on
charges of “insulting” Turkey. The trial is set to begin on October 8.
BEIRUT – Recent developments have shown that even Lebanon, where Turkey has no
military presence or shared borders, is not immune to Ankara’s interference.
Lebanese political sources said that Turkish prosecutors’ claims against
Armenian-born journalist Neshan Der Haroutiounian for “insulting” the Turkish
president are part of ongoing confrontations between Lebanese Armenians and
Turkey, which is accused of carrying out a genocide against Armenians between
1914 and 1923. Some Lebanese Armenians’ harsh criticism of Turkey seems to
embarrass Lebanese authorities, who have tried to intimidate them into observing
certain “red lines.”
There are numerous external forces pressuring Lebanon, starting with Iranian
proxy Hezbollah. Turkey is now attempting to curb Lebanon’s hard-fought
freedoms, of which its citizens are rightly proud, by also exerting pressure on
Lebanese authorities.
On Thursday, Beirut referred Der Haroutiounian to trial on charges of
“insulting” Turkey. The trial is set to begin on October 8.
Lebanese news agency NNA said that “according to information provided to the
Public Prosecution Office, Der Haroutiounian will be referred to trial before
the Court of Publications Chamber in Beirut.”
A Lebanese journalist, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that there were
no grounds for the judicial charges against Der Haroutiounian.
“This is a matter of a historical dispute that has no prospect, knowing that it
is about a great crime against the Armenian people — a crime that Turkey refuses
to recognise. This in itself continues to provoke Armenians wherever they are,”
the journalist told The Arab Weekly.
Der Haroutiounian hosted former Environment Minister Wiam Wahhab during the
“Anna Heek” (This is how I am) programme that aired on the Al Jadeed satellite
channel.
Wahhab, who is the head of the Arab Tawhid Party, said in the interview that the
Turkish president was “sly” before the campaign against Der Haroutiounian began.
In response to Wahhab’s statements, a Lebanese national intervened in the
programme and attacked Der Haroutiounian, saying “Neshan, the refugee, showed
his racism,” referring to Der Haroutiounian’s Armenian origins.
Der Haroutiounian responded fiercely to the provocation, doubling down on
Wahhab’s position. “A son of a million malicious people … Erdogan, the regime,
the Ottomans, and the Turks,” Der Haroutiounian said.
“If you consider me a refugee, then I am more Lebanese than you, and I am proud
of my country, Lebanon, more than you are,” he added.
The Turkish Embassy intervened in the dispute and mobilised dozens of protesters
to demonstrate in front of the Al Jadeed TV station against “insulting the
Ottoman state and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.”
The protesters raised Turkish flags, chanted slogans in support of the Ottoman
Empire and Erdogan and called on Al Jadeed TV and those in charge of the
programme to “apologise for what happened.”
Under the hashtag “The New Ottomans,” Facebook users posted videos showing
protesters holding Turkish flags and demonstrating in front of the Al Jadeed TV
building.
In early June, a similar online campaign targeting Der Haroutiounian was
launched, with supporters of the Turkish president hurling racist insults and
using a defamatory hashtag on Twitter in response to his criticism of Erdogan.
Observers said that Turkey has succeeded in exploiting Lebanon’s political
vacuum that has been caused by mounting social and economic crises.
Ankara, according to observers, managed to infiltrate the country and create a
lobby to silence critics of Ottoman history and Erdogan’s expansionist policies
in the region, by which Lebanon, like Syria and the rest of the Mediterranean
countries, is affected.
Observers warned of the risks Der Haroutiounian’s trial could pose, not only to
Lebanon but to the entire region. They pointed out that Turkey is seeking to
create media, political and legal lobbies to prevent any criticism of its old
and new colonial policies.
Ankara is also trying to advance a self-serving agenda, a reality that functions
in the same radical and intransigent way as anti-Semitism and exposes the
critics of the Ottoman Empire to legal charges, the observers said.
The Turks benefit from Muslim Brotherhood support in the region, as they glorify
Ottoman history at the expense of Arab countries – a trend that is especially
harmful in the Libyan conflict.
This trend is also seen in Ankara’s expanding influence in Tunisia, Yemen and
Somalia. Islamists in these countries consider Turkish expansionist manoeuvres
to be a “victory” for them and their vision of the Arab and Islamic world.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on July 10-11/2020
Senate Report Prevents Brotherhood Supporters from Entering France
Paris - Michel Abu Najm/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 10 July, 2020
Few know that Gerald Darmanin, France’s new interior minister, has Arab origins.
His full name is Gerald Moussa Darmanin. His maternal grandfather, Moussa, was a
sergeant in the 13th Algerian snipers’ squad that helped liberate France from
German occupation. His father, Gerard, hails from a Jewish family from Malta and
his grandfather immigrated to France and settled in Valenciennes, where the
minister was born in 1982. Given his background, it is evident that Darmanin
would be concerned with immigration and religion. As a Minister of Interior, he
is also responsible for matters of worship. He touched on the topic of Islam,
specifically political Islam and the concept of “separatism” in his first
official statement after his appointment to his post. Darmanin previously
declared that the state should make no compromise over separatism and “fight
with all its forces political Islam targeting the republic,” including its
values and laws. French President Emmanuel Macron was the first to talk about
separatism and the state’s duty to combat it.
The Interior Minister again took up the issue when answering the questions of
Senate members on Wednesday, saying that political Islam was “the deadly enemy
of the republic and therefore all forms of sectarian introversion must be
fought.”
What he meant was the Muslim Brotherhood. Darmanin did not hesitate to recall
his “family legacy” to glorify what he calls “integration” in French society,
which is the fundamental opposite of “sectarian and social introversion” concept
and what the authorities consider the separatist project of political Islam.
A report issued on Thursday by a special Senate committee put the issue of
political Islam at the forefront of concerns. The report was prepared by a
commission of inquiry established in November 2019 and was based on seventy
interviews with officials, politicians, intellectuals, academics, and members of
active civil society associations. It considered Islamic extremism as a
“tangible reality” in many neighborhoods, “seeking today to lay hands on Islam
in France.”According to the authors of the report, “all French territories are
concerned with this phenomenon except for the west of the country”. “It is
necessary to act today before it’s too late,” they warned. The report stresses
that extremists seek to achieve “separatism in a number of cities”, which means
in practice, “denying the values of the republic, such as freedom of religion
and belief, equality between men and women, and mixing of the genders.”For
years, right parties have been accusing the Ministry of the Interior and
security services of avoiding entering suburban neighborhoods in major cities to
avoid confrontations with youth groups who consider themselves “marginalized”.
Despite the different plans launched with successive governments, the dilemma
has not been solved, but has become more explosive, increasing the dissociation
with these neighborhoods.
The report puts forward 44 measures that target the economic, educational,
social and cultural fields. It also calls for preventing the Muslim Brotherhood
advocates from entering France and fighting the extremist presence within the
framework of state institutions, public and private schools, as well as cultural
and sports clubs. The report urges the government to strengthen the monitoring
through its security services and to educate and qualify local employees as well
as members of local councils such as municipalities and others.
This report is not the first of its kind and will not be the last. In a speech
in February, Macron stated that France would gradually “abandon” the practice of
inviting imams from abroad, but would strengthen instead the training of imams
locally. However, at the same time, he warned against confusing the Islamic
religion with extremism, stressing that the measures should not be directed
against Muslims but rather against extremist Islamists, adding that Islam has
its place in the country alongside other religions.
Turkish court clears way to convert Hagia Sophia back to a
mosque
The National/July 10/2020
Ruling finds 1934 decision to change Byzantine-era World Heritage site to a
museum was illegal
Hagia Sophia or Ayasofya, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, that was a Byzantine
cathedral before being converted into a mosque which is currently a museum, is
seen in Istanbul, Turkey. Turkey’s top administrative court on Friday announced
its decision to revoke the Hagia Sophia’s status as a museum, paving the way for
1,500-year-old former cathedral to be opened as a mosque again. The widely
expected decision comes despite expressions of concern from US, French, Russian
and Greek officials, as well as Christian church leaders, over the move. The
Council of State, which was debating a case brought by a Turkish NGO, cancelled
a 1934 cabinet decision and ruled the Unesco World Heritage site would be
reopened for Muslim worship. The United Nations’ cultural body warned on
Thursday that any change in the status of sixth-century building in Istanbul may
have to be reviewed by its World Heritage committee.
The World Heritage site was built in the 6th century by the Byzantine emperor
Justinian as a cathedral of the Greek Orthodox church before being converted to
a mosque under the Ottoman empire nine centuries later. It was declared a museum
in 1934 after the secular modern Turkish republic was established in 1923 and is
one of Turkey’s most visited monuments. Unesco said the Hagia Sophia was on its
list of World Heritage Sites as a museum, and as such had certain commitments
and legal obligations.
“Thus, a state must make sure that no modification undermines the outstanding
universal value of a site listed on its territory. Any modification must be
notified beforehand by the state to Unesco and be reviewed if need be by the
World Heritage Committee,” the UN body told Reuters.
Unesco said it had expressed its concerns to Turkish authorities in several
letters and conveyed the message to Turkey’s ambassador to the institution on
Thursday. “We urge Turkish authorities to start a dialogue before any decision
is taken that could undermine the universal value of the site,” it said. The
Council of State’s 10th Chamber in Ankara had previously deferred announcing its
decision on the issue on July 2. An official from Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan’s ruling AK Party, which has Islamist roots, had said the decision “in
favour of an annulment” was expected on Friday. The move is seen by Mr Erdogan’s
critics as an attempt to divert attention from his economic and political
troubles. The president had raised the idea previously ahead of municipal
elections in March last year in which his party suffered several setbacks,
including losing control of Istanbul.
Pro-government columnist Abdulkadir Selvi wrote in the Hurriyet newspaper that
the court had already made the annulment ruling and would publish it on Friday.
“This nation has been waiting for 86 years. The court lifted the chain of bans
on Hagia Sophia,” he wrote.
The association that brought the case said Hagia Sophia was the property of
Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II, who in 1453 captured the city, then known as
Constantinople, and turned the already 900-year-old Byzantine church into a
mosque.
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, the spiritual head of some 300 million
Orthodox Christians worldwide and based in Istanbul, said a conversion would
disappoint Christians and “fracture” East and West. The head of Russia’s
Orthodox Church said it would threaten Christianity.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Greece also urged Turkey to maintain the
museum status.
Fifteen Centuries, Two Faiths and a Contested Fate for Hagia Sophia
Asharq Al-Awsat/July,11/2020
A Turkish court is set to rule on Friday on a 1934 presidential decree
converting Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia into a museum. Two Turkish officials have
said they expect the decree to be annulled, paving the way for it to become a
mosque again.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose ruling AK Party sprung from political
Islam, has said the cavernous domed building should revert to being a place of
Muslim worship. Hagia Sophia is nearly 1,500 years old and served as one of the
most exalted seats of Christian and then Muslim worship in the world, meaning
that any change to its status will have a profound impact on followers of both
faiths. It is also a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Here are the key facts of Hagia Sophia’s history, the campaign to change its
status, and statements by religious and political leaders about its fate.
Two faiths
Hagia Sophia, or “Divine Wisdom” in Greek, was completed in 537 by Byzantine
emperor Justinian.
The vast, domed structure overlooked the Golden Horn harbor and entrance to the
Bosphorus from the heart of Constantinople. It was the center of Orthodox
Christianity and remained the world’s largest church for centuries.
Hagia Sophia stayed under Byzantine control - except for a brief seizure by
Crusaders in the 13th century - until the city was captured by the Muslim forces
of the Ottoman Sultan, Mehmet the Conqueror, who converted it into a mosque.
The Ottomans built four minarets, covered Hagia Sophia’s Christian icons and
luminous gold mosaics, and installed huge black panels embellished with the
names of God, the Prophet Mohammed and Muslim caliphs in Arabic calligraphy.
In 1934 Turkey’s first president, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, forging a secular
republic out of the defeated Ottoman Empire, converted Hagia Sophia into a
museum, now visited by millions of tourists every year.
Some people now want to change that.
A forgery?
A Turkish association committed to making Hagia Sophia a mosque again has
pressed Turkish courts several times in the last 15 years to annul Ataturk’s
decree.
In the latest campaign, it told Turkey’s top court that Ataturk’s government did
not have the right to overrule the wishes of Sultan Mehmet - even suggesting
that the president’s signature on the document was forged.
That argument was based on a discrepancy in Ataturk’s signature on the edict,
passed around the same time that he assumed his surname, from his signature on
subsequent documents.
Erdogan, who has championed Islam and religious observance during his 17-year
rule, supported the Hagia Sophia campaign, saying Muslims should be able to pray
there again and raised the issue - which is popular with many pious AKP-voting
Turks - during local elections last year.
Turkish pollster Metropoll found that 44% of respondents believe Hagia Sophia
was put on the agenda to divert voters’ attention from Turkey’s economic woes.
The pro-government Hurriyet newspaper reported last month that Erdogan had
already ordered the status be changed, but that tourists should still be able to
visit Hagia Sophia as a mosque and the issue would be handled sensitively.
Reaction
Outside Turkey, the prospect of change has raised alarm.
- Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, spiritual head of 300 million Orthodox
Christians, said altering the status of Hagia Sophia would fracture Eastern and
Western worlds. Russia’s Orthodox church said turning it into a mosque was
unacceptable.
- US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said any change would diminish its ability
“to serve humanity as a much-needed bridge between those of differing faith
traditions and cultures”.
- Neighboring Greece, an overwhelmingly Orthodox country, said Turkey risked
opening up a “huge emotional chasm” with Christian countries if it converts a
building which was central to the Greek-speaking Byzantine empire and Orthodox
church.
- Turkey has criticized what it says is foreign interference. “This is a matter
of national sovereignty,” Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said. “What
is important is what the Turkish people want.”
US court orders Iran to pay $879m to 1996 Khobar bombing
survivors
Arab News/July 10/2020
JEDDAH: A US federal court has held Iran responsible for the 1996 bombing of the
Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia where US forces were housed, and ordered it to pay
$879 million to survivors. The Khobar Towers was a housing complex in the
eastern city of Alkhobar, near the Abdulaziz Air Base and Saudi Aramco’s
headquarters in Dhahran, that housed American servicemen working on Operation
Southern Watch. A truck bomb was detonated on June 25, 1996, near an eight-story
building of the housing complex. It killed 19 US Air Force personnel and a Saudi
national, wounding 498 others.
The court ruled that the Iranian government directed and provided material
support to Hezbollah who detonated the 5,000-pound truck bomb, a Chicago law
firm press release said. The attackers reportedly smuggled the explosives used
in the attack from Lebanon.
A Saudi political analyst and international relations scholar said that imposing
monetary fines was insufficient. “One can understand monetary fines in the case
of their ‘accidental’ shooting down of a civilian aircraft recently, but in
these terrorist bombings, there should be a military response,” Dr. Hamdan Al-Shehri
told Arab News. “A response that should be a deterrent. A response that should
stop Iran from committing such acts of terror. Iran should not be allowed to get
away by merely paying a couple of million dollars.”
He said that this attack was not the only one that had been carried out by Iran
and its militias. “They have been responsible for many such bombings and
assassinations. We know how they assassinated former Lebanese Prime Minister
Rafic Hariri. They are yet to be punished for that heinous crime.”
He said there was no doubt about the direct involvement of Iran in that bombing.
“It is good to know that the US court has confirmed what we knew all along and
it is good that Iran has been finally held accountable.”
Harvard scholar and Iranian affairs expert Majid Rafizadeh said: “This is
further evidence that Iran is a major state sponsor of terrorism, a
destabilizing force, and is engaged in financial, political and military support
for militias and designated terrorist groups across the Middle East and in the
West, with the aim of exporting its extremist ideals through terror, expanding
its influence and achieving its hegemonic ambitions.”
The lawsuit was brought under the terrorism exception of the US Foreign
Sovereign Immunities Act by the 14 injured US airmen and 21 of their immediate
family members. The defendants in the case were listed as the Islamic Republic
of Iran, the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and the Iranian Ministry
of Intelligence and Security. “We will continue to seek to hold the Government
of Iran accountable for this terrorist attack as long as is necessary,” said
Adora Sauer, the lead attorney of MM LAW LLC.
US District Judge Beryl A. Howell found the defendants liable and awarded the
plaintiffs $132 million for pain and suffering, as well as prejudgment interest,
for a total compensatory damage award of $747 million and $132 million for
punitive damages.
The court also said the plaintiffs were eligible for partial payments from the
US Victims of State Sponsored Terrorism Fund, which compensates American victims
of acts of international terrorism with funds obtained from fines and
forfeitures levied against companies caught illegally laundering money for
sanctioned countries and persons.
The attorneys also intend to pursue enforcement of the judgments through
litigation intended to seize Iranian assets. “The physical and psychological
toll on our families has been extremely high, but this judgment is welcome
news,” said Glenn Christie, a retired Air Force staff sergeant crew chief who
was severely injured in the bombing. “More than 20 years on, we want the world
to remember the evil that Iran did at the Khobar Towers. Through the work of our
attorneys, we intend to do just that.” According to John Urquhart of the
Urquhart Law Firm, which also represents the bombing victims, the explosion had
taken “so much from their minds and bodies” on the day of the attack and every
day and night since then. “They can now live with that balance justice
provides,” he said.
UN security removes Iranian ambassador's photo of Qassem
Soleimani
Yaghoub Fazeli, Al Arabiya/English /Friday 10 July 2020
A security officer at the UN Human Rights Council removed a photo of slain
Iranian military commander Qassem Soleimani that Iran’s ambassador to the UN
displayed as he was speaking at the council on Tuesday, according to a video
circulating online. For all the latest headlines follow our Google News channel
online or via the app
Killing Soleimani was an “illegal” act that has “endangered world peace and
security,” Esmaeil Baghaei-Hamaneh, Iran's permanent representative to the UN
office in Geneva, told the council. Baghaei-Hamaneh had a framed photo of
Soleimani next to him which a UN security officer removed a few minutes into the
ambassador’s speech. Some Iranian pro-regime social media users criticised
Baghaei-Hamaneh for not stopping the officer from taking down Soleimani’s
picture. “Why didn’t the Iranian ambassador stop the UN employee who took down
the photo of martyr Soleimani?” tweeted one user. “If I were the ambassador, I
would have hit the officer … they can’t even stand his photo,” another user
said. In a report released earlier this week, a UN expert deemed the US killing
of Soleimani in January as “unlawful.”Soleimani, who headed the Quds Force, the
overseas arms of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), was killed in
a US airstrike at Baghdad’s international airport on January 3. “Major General
Soleimani was in charge of Iran military strategy, and actions, in Syria and
Iraq. But absent an actual imminent threat to life, the course of action taken
by the US was unlawful,” Agnes Callamard, the UN’s special rapporteur on
extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, said in a report released on
Tuesday. In response, US State Department Spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said on
Wednesday Callamard’s “tendentious and tedious report undermines human rights by
giving a pass to terrorists.”US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also rejected
Callamard’s report, calling its conclusions “spurious.”“The strike that killed
General Soleimani was in response to an escalating series of armed attacks in
preceding months by the Islamic Republic of Iran and militias it supports on US
forces and interests in the Middle East region,” Pompeo said in a statement on
Thursday. The strike “was conducted to deter Iran from launching or supporting
further attacks against the US or US interests, and to degrade the capabilities
of the Quds Force,” added Pompeo.
Russia, China veto last-ditch UN bid for Syria aid via Turkey for second time
Reuters, New York/Friday 10 July 2020
Russia and China vetoed a last-ditch attempt by Western members of the UN
Security Council to extend approval -- which expires on Friday -- for
humanitarian aid to be delivered across two border crossings into Syria from
Turkey for the next six months. The United Nations says millions of Syrian
civilians in the country's northwest depend on the humanitarian aid delivered
from Turkey, describing it as a "lifeline." The remaining 13 council members
voted in favor of the resolution on Friday. The 15-member council has been
split, with most members pitted against Syrian ally Russia and China, who want
to cut the number of border crossings to one, arguing those areas can be reached
with humanitarian help from within Syria. This was the third failed vote on the
issue by the council and the second vetoes by Russia and China this week. The
Security Council first authorized the cross-border aid operation into Syria six
year ago, which also included access from Jordan and Iraq. Those crossings were
cut in January due to opposition by Russia and China. On Tuesday, Russia and
China vetoed a bid to extend for a year approval of the two Turkey crossings.
The remaining 13 members voted in favor of the resolution, drafted by Germany
and Belgium. Russia then failed to win enough support on Wednesday for its
proposal to authorize one crossing for six months. The council is now expected
to vote on a second Russian draft text to approve aid deliveries for one Turkish
crossing for one year. But because the council is operating virtually during the
coronavirus pandemic, members have 24 hours to cast a vote so a decision would
not be known until Saturday. Russia has vetoed 16 council resolutions on Syria
since Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad cracked down on protesters in 2011,
leading to civil war. For many of those votes, Moscow has been backed in the
council by China.
Turkey’s Erdogan may be seriously pursuing his nuclear ambitions: Expert
Tuqa Khalid, Al Arabiya English/Friday 10 July 2020
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan may be seriously pursuing nuclear
weapons, according to non-proliferation expert John Spacapan. Spacapan who is a
fellow at the Non-proliferation Policy Education Center in Washington DC, wrote
in an article published on the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists on Tuesday that
despite Turkey being party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons (NPT), there are three warning signs suggesting Ankara is seeking to
acquire nuclear weapons. First: Erdogan has explicitly said it was unacceptable
that Turkey couldn’t have its own nuclear weapons. In September 2019, he told
his party members: “Some countries have missiles with nuclear warheads, not one
or two. But (they tell us) we can’t have them. This, I cannot accept.” Second:
“Erdogan is often bombastic, but on nuclear energy he’s taking action. Along
Turkey’s Mediterranean coastline, the Russians are building four large civilian
nuclear power reactors at the Akkuyu Nuclear Facility,” Spacapan said. Ankara
said that the purpose of the plant was to reduce Turkey’s dependence on gas
imports to meet electricity demand, but Spacapan said that didn’t ring true for
Turkey.
“The Akkuyu facility doesn’t make Turkey less dependent on foreign powers.
Russia will own and operate the facility, and it is well-established that Moscow
uses all of its energy assets—not just fossil fuels—for coercion,” he said,
adding that the nuclear facility is a “bad investment” because Russia will only
pay for the first reactor in the facility and the Turkish government will have
to secure the financing for the other three reactors. Spacapan also added that
from market point-of-view, “natural gas and renewables beat nuclear,” and
brought the natural gas drilling deal Turkey struck with Libya’s Government of
National Accord (GNA) last year. “What’s worrisome is Turkey could exploit
nuclear power as a cover to procure bomb-related technology and hardware. The
technology transfer is already occurring. Since the Akkuyu project began,
Turkish engineering students have become the second largest national group
studying nuclear sciences in Russia, where hundreds of Iranian and North Korean
scientists came before them,” he said. Third: Turkey is collaborating militarily
with Pakistan, a nuclear-armed country that is nowhere near Turkey’s borders.
Spacapan notes that while Turkish-Pakistani ties were “warm but superficial,”
Erdogan “tightened the ties considerably” since 2018 and is supplying Pakistan’s
military with “sophisticated weapons.”“Erdogan’s current clout in Islamabad
exceeds that of North Korea, Iran, and Libya, all of which received nuclear bomb
help from Pakistan,” he said. The non-proliferation expert said: “Since nuclear
power provides much of the technology for bomb making, and in Turkey’s case
makes little economic sense, the United States should be trying to steer Turkey
away from nuclear energy.”
Macron asks Israeli PM Netanyahu to drop West Bank
annexation plans
AFP, Paris/Friday 10 July 2020
Emmanuel Macron asked Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to refrain from
annexing Palestinian territory in the West Bank and elsewhere during a telephone
call between the two leaders, the French president’s office said on Friday.
Macron “emphasized that such a move would contravene international law and
jeopardise the possibility of a two-state solution as the basis of a fair and
lasting peace between Israelis and Palestinians,” his office said in a statement
after the call on Thursday. It was the latest move by European leaders pressing
Netanyahu to drop plans to annex Jewish settlements in the West Bank and the
strategic Jordan Valley. The controversial move was endorsed in a Middle East
plan unveiled by US President Donald Trump in January. Israel’s government had
set July 1 as the date when it could begin taking over the Palestinian areas,
where the population of Israeli settlers has grown since the 1967 Six-Day War.
The foreign ministries of France and Germany, along with those of Egypt and
Jordan -- the only Arab states to have peace deals with Israel -- warned this
week that any annexation could have “consequences” for relations. But Macron
told Netanyahu that France remained committed to Israel’s security and
“expressed his attachment to the friendship and confidence that links France and
Israel”, his office said.
Hundreds gather in West Bank for funeral of Palestinian
shot by Israeli soldiers
Reuters, Salfit, West Bank/Friday 10 July 2020
Hundreds of people gathered in the occupied West Bank on Friday for the funeral
of a Palestinian man shot by Israeli soldiers a day earlier. Israel’s army said
troops opened fire after the Palestinian and another man started throwing fire
bombs at a guard post near the town of Nablus.Palestinian officials dismissed
the report and said the man had been walking with friends when he was shot dead.
Mourners pray before the body of Palestinian man Ibraheem Yakoub during his
funeral in Kifl Haris in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on July 10, 2020.
(Reuters). Mourners pray before the body of Palestinian man Ibraheem Yakoub
during his funeral in Kifl Haris in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on July 10,
2020. (Reuters) People at the funeral in the village of Salfit carried
Palestinian flags and chanted “Allahu Akbar,” or God is greatest. Tensions have
been high in the West Bank in recent weeks as Israel weighs a plan to annex part
of the territory that Palestinians seek for a future state.
Pakistan drug lord Uzair Jan Baloch confesses to spying for Iran: Report
Tommy Hilton, Al Arabiya English/Friday 10 July 2020
A convicted Pakistani drug dealer has confessed to spying for Iranian
intelligence services in 2014, according to a report from Pakistan’s provincial
Sindh government this week. Uzair Jan Baloch was sentenced to 12 years in prison
after being convicted of spying in April, according to a letter written by the
senior superintendent of Karachi Central Jail and reportedly seen by Arab News.
Baloch is accused of a total of 59 criminal cases including extortion,
kidnapping, and drug trafficking.
Iranian passport
Arab News reported Baloch as saying that he had obtained an Iranian identity
card and passport in 2006, having previously acquired a fake Iranian birth
certificate in the late 1980s. According to a public report from the team that
investigated Baloch, he met a man named Haji Nasir in the Iranian city of
Chabahar in 2014, when Nasir asked him to give information about Pakistan’s
army. “On the consent of the accused a meeting with Iranian intelligence
officers was arranged by Haji Nasir in which the accused was asked to provide
certain information about (Pakistan) armed forces officials,” the report said.
“The accused is found involved in espionage activities by providing secret
information and sketches regarding army installations and officials to foreign
agents, which is a violation of the Official Secrets Act, 1923,” it added.
Baloch was based in Pakistan’s southeastern province of Sindh and reportedly
close to politicians from the Pakistan People’s Party, which governs the
province, according to Arab News
Three-time Iraqi lawmaker Ghida Kambash dies of coronavirus as cases jump 600
pct
AFP, Baghdad/Friday 10 July 2020
Iraqi lawmaker Ghida Kambash died on Friday after contracting the novel
coronavirus, parliament announced, its first member to succumb to the virus as
its spread ramps up across the country. The 46-year-old was a three-time MP from
Baquba, northeast of Baghdad, and helped pass laws on education reform and
social welfare. She leaves behind four children. Last month, parliament speaker
Mohammed al-Halbussi said up to 20 deputies were confirmed to have been infected
with COVID-19. In total, Iraq’s health ministry has declared around 70,000
coronavirus cases, of whom nearly 3,000 have died and 40,000 recovered. After
seeing a relatively slow spread in the first five months of 2020, cases spiked
600 percent in June alone, according to the International Rescue Committee. “The
rate at which COVID-19 is spreading through Iraq is extremely alarming,” said
Christine Petrie, IRC’s country director.
The country’s health system -- already worn down by years of war and poor
investments -- has been overwhelmed by the rising numbers. Protective equipment,
respirators and even hospital beds are all running low, forcing authorities to
turn expo centers, stadiums and hotels into coronavirus wards and confinement
centers. Particularly stark is the “severe shortage of oxygen,” according to the
World Health Organization, which recently airlifted 300 oxygen concentrators to
help Iraqi hospitals cope. Aid has also been donated from foreign countries,
most recently Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and the US. Still, footage shot
in hospitals in Iraq’s south shows patients struggling to breathe without access
to respirators as their family members berate health staff. Health Minister Dr.
Hassan Salman was in the southern province of Diwaniyah on Friday to inspect
hospital conditions there.
Iraq relaxed its curfew measures in recent weeks after imposing a strict
country-wide lockdown in late March. The restrictions hit its fledgling private
sector hard, with an IRC survey finding that 87 percent of Iraqis were out of
work as a result of the lockdown and 61 percent were already going into debt.
“Once things stabilize there will be a lot of work to do to help people get back
on their feet,” said Petrie. “Their loss of livelihoods will have taken a heavy
toll on people’s mental health, which was already in a fragile state after
decades of conflict and instability.”
Syrian tycoon Rami Makhlouf says most of his employees are
now detained
Leen Alfaisal & Lemma Shehadi, Al Arabiya English/Friday 10 July 2020
After more than 40 days of absence, Syrian tycoon Rami Makhlouf, a cousin of
President Bashar al-Assad, wrote again on his Facebook page saying that most of
his male employees were detained and only the females are left.
“For the past six months, the security arrests against our employees did not
stop. They arrested most of the men on our frontlines and now we only have the
women,” Makhlouf wrote. On April 30, Makhlouf had went online in an
unprecedented social media appearance that baffled the public, denouncing a
recent tax fraud bill that had been slapped on his telecoms business Syriatel.
“After not obtaining what they wanted … and after all the measures they took,
including banning all our companies, accounts, and properties, they were still
not satisfied. They closed down several companies arbitrarily, and hence laid
off hundreds of employees,” the tycoon’s latest Facebook post said.
Syria’s richest man
Makhlouf is Syria’s richest man and al-Assad’s maternal first cousin. He was
known as the “exclusive agent of Syria,” whose dominance over the economy for
over two decades served to bankroll the regime and the Assad family.
But in the past year, measures to seize his assets and dissolve his networks
indicated that he had fallen out of favor with the president. “They are
threatening the men with fabricating currency charges against them to get
fabricated confessions … while they overwhelm them in other ways to submit to
their demands,” Makhlouf said. In January of this year, al-Assad took emergency
steps to halt the fall of the local currency, forbidding the use of anything
other than Syrian pounds for transactions and punishing the act with prison and
hard labor. The spat between the cousins has sparked a flurry of speculation
about intrigue at the palace. Many have suggested that Makhlouf has a rivalry
with Asma al-Assad, the president’s wife, whose family network competes with the
Makhloufs for the spoils. Others point to pressure from Syria’s allies, Russia
and Iran.
These measures come as the country faces bankruptcy from nine years of
devastating war. The US and EU recently tightened their sanctions on regime
affiliates including Makhlouf, with the US Caesar Act coming into effect. The
Syrian pound has plummeted and locals have reported the price of basic goods has
increased 500 percent. The cash-strapped regime, which claims it has won a war
against terrorism, has said it is cracking down on corruption to save the
country’s devastated economy. In August last year, al-Assad ordered Syrian
businessmen, including Makhlouf, to pay millions of dollars into the Central
Bank.
Then, in October, al-Assad told state-television that he was asking “everyone
who wasted state funds to return the money.”
On May 21 authorities seized Makhlouf’s assets and those of his family, and
issued a temporary travel ban. On June 1, his Syriatel shares in the Damascus
stock market were suspended.
“Where is the law? Where is the regime? Where is the constitution that protects
the innocent? Have they [Makhlouf’s employees] become terrorists to be treated
this way and get detained for several weeks for nothing?” Makhlouf wrote.
Makhlouf’s role in the war The first comment on Makhlouf’s post read: “This is
the money of the people. You and your family stole it, and now the government is
returning it. Why are you surprised? I just hope they [the government] doesn’t
steal it for their own pockets.”
A Damascene businessman who manages a company affiliated to Makhlouf’s recalled
the tycoon’s willingness to intimidate and extort as he expanded his empire.
“What goes around comes around. Today, Rami is appealing to law. Where was the
law back then when he stripped people of his properties?” he told Al Arabiya
English.
Washington slapped sanctions on Makhlouf in 2008, stating that he “used
intimidation and his close ties to the Assad regime to obtain improper business
advantages at the expense of ordinary Syrians.”
When anti-regime protests began in the city of Dar’aa in 2011, Makhlouf was
evoked in slogans as a “thief.”The role he then played in the ensuing war would
only reinforce his position. Makhlouf maintained his position at Syriatel,
laundering money for the cash strapped regime, funding loyalist militias
supporting al-Assad, and paying reparations to the families of fallen soldiers.
He sided with Bashar’s view that a show of strength was the only solution to the
growing protests. His brother Hafez Makhlouf, a senior intelligence official, is
believed to have given the orders to shoot to kill on the demonstrators, which
led to thousands of deaths. Among the “humanitarian work” that Makhlouf refers
to in his videos, is his charity Al-Bustan, which funded a militia of the same
name. Experts say the militia was among the most brutal and its fighters were
paid twice the Syrian Army’s salaries.
Another revelation from Makhlouf’s videos was his patronage of the Syrian
intelligence services during the war, a dreaded institution whose members are
currently facing trial in Europe for crimes against humanity. The sprawling
security apparatus that was developed during the Cold War with the help of the
KGB and other Soviet-backed secret services has been essential to the Assads’
rule, and Bashar’s crackdown on peaceful protestors after 2011. Outraged that
his own employees had been arrested by this secret police, Makhlouf described
himself as the apparatus’ “biggest donor” and “biggest servant” during the war,
and asked: “Could anyone have pictured the security services targeting [my]
companies?”
Former top Democrat praises Trump strategy on Iran, warns
Biden against reviving deal
Emily Judd, Al Arabiya English/Thursday 09 July 2020
The maximum pressure campaign against Iran is “one of the best things the Trump
administration has done,” said former top US Democrat Joe Lieberman in an
interview with Al Arabiya English, breaking with the current Democratic
leadership’s condemnation of the campaign. The Obama administration pursued “a
mistaken course” in trying to negotiate an agreement with Iran – “an extremist,
anti-American regime” – to limit their nuclear program, according to Lieberman.
“I was thrilled when the Trump administration withdrew from the agreement and
began the maximum pressure campaign, which has weakened the regime,” said
Lieberman, who was the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 2000 and served
as a US Senator for the state of Connecticut for 24 years. Trump’s maximum
pressure campaign is moving in the right direction, which is “to change the
regime in Tehran,” he added.
After withdrawing the US from the Obama-era nuclear deal in 2018, the Trump
administration imposed its “maximum pressure” campaign on Iran, increasing
sanctions to reduce the regime’s funding of foreign interference while
pressuring Tehran to abandon its nuclear ambitions. Obama’s vice president Joe
Biden, now the Democratic presidential nominee, has condemned the Republican
administration’s Iran strategy and signaled he will revive the nuclear deal if
elected in November. Lieberman said Biden – his Senate colleague and friend for
many years - would be wrong to renegotiate the 2015 nuclear agreement.
“If the deal is recovered, this Iranian government will try to return to the
days of the Obama administration when they were paid billions of dollars by the
US, which they undoubtedly used to support their aggression in countries like
Lebanon and Syria, as well as launch attacks against Saudi Arabia,” said
Lieberman, adding that Saudi Arabia has been a “good ally” to the US for a long
time, in a “mutually beneficial relationship.”The Obama administration secretly
transferred $1.7 billion in cash to Iran, designated a state sponsor of
terrorism by the US State Department.
The payout was for $400 million of military equipment – plus interest - Iran
ordered from the US in the 1970s, which was never delivered due to the severing
of diplomatic relations in 1979. Since the cash delivery in 2016, Iran has
increased its interference in the Middle East – seizing ships in the Gulf,
attacking Saudi Arabian oil facilities, and directing attacks on US targets in
the region. Lieberman said he hopes Biden will not “enter into subservient
negotiations with Iran” if he does become president. He added that Biden should
take into account Iran’s failture to abide by rules set by the UN nuclear
watchdog, incluidng Tehran's barring of inspectors from entering significant
nuclear sites.
China-Iran agreement
Iran has been negotiating a 25-year “strategic accord” with China, Iranian
Foreign Minister Mohammed Zarif announced Sunday. Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei has backed the bilateral partnership, which was first announced in 2016
when Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said he and Chinese President Xi Jinping
signed a document on strategic relations in Tehran. The two countries represent
major threats to the US, according to Lieberman, who said China challenges the
US economically and diplomatically, while Iran is an “extremist, terrorist
regime” that is “decidedly anti-American.”
“Iran, though less powerful than China, is a greater short-term threat to
American security,” said Lieberman, who is chairman of the bipartisan
organization United Against Nuclear Iran.
“The coming together of China and Iran in an agreement is problematic to our
relations with China,” he added. The US-China relationship is already undergoing
a dark period following Beijing’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic. In
addition, Trump signed legislation last month that called for sanctions to
punish Chinese officials for human rights violations against the country’s
Uighur Muslim population. Suspected Uighurs from China's troubled far-western
region of Xinjiang, sit inside a temporary shelter after they were detained at
the immigration regional headquarters near the Thailand-Malaysia border in Hat
Yai, Songkla March 14, 2014. Suspected Uighurs from China's troubled far-western
region of Xinjiang, sit inside a temporary shelter after they were detained at
the immigration regional headquarters near the Thailand-Malaysia border in Hat
Yai, Songkla March 14, 2014.
China has also been affected by the Trump administration’s maximum pressure
campaign against Iran, which has sanctioned several Chinese private companies
for dealings with Iran.
US Bans Pakistan International Airlines over Fake Pilot Licence Scandal
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 10 July, 2020
The United States has banned Pakistan International Airlines from operating
chartered flights to the country, the airline said,.The decision came after it
announced that nearly 150 pilots would be grounded over fake or dubious
licences. This also comes after European Union aviation regulators decided to
bar the state-run carrier for six months. PIA said in a statement that the
Federal Aviation Authority in the US had revoked approval for the airline due to
"recent events identified by the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority that are of
serious concern to aviation safety," according to AFP. In June, Pakistan's
aviation minister said that a government review had found around 260 of the
country's 860 active pilots hold fake licenses or cheated on exams. PIA at the
time said it would immediately ground about a third of its 434 pilots, just
weeks after one of its planes crashed in Karachi killing 98 people -- an
accident blamed on pilot error. So far 17 pilots have been fired in the first
phase of its investigation, a PIA spokesman told AFP. The airline had suspended
its commercial operations to the US in 2017 after booking financial losses on
the route.
Turkey May Send S-400 System to Back GNA in Libya
Ankara - Saeed Abdulrazek/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 10 July, 2020
Italy’s itamilradar website revealed that Turkey was continuing its military
cargo plane flights to western Libya, amid reports that Ankara may send the
Tripoli-based Government of National Accord the Russian S-400 air defense
system. Itamilradar reported that a Turkish Lockheed C-130E (63-13188) and an
Airbuys A400M (16-0055) departed Istanbul, carrying weapons and ammunition, and
landed in Tripoli’s Mitiga airport on Wednesday. Their arrival coincided with
Libyan activists’ posting on social media of military vehicles traveling towards
western Tripoli, speculating that they were transporting air defense systems to
the al-Watiya airbase, which was attacked by unknown jets last week. Meanwhile,
Turkey’s Sabah newspaper, which is close to the Ankara government, reported that
the military may deploy the Russian S-400 system inside Libya. Turkey had
purchased the system from Moscow in July 2019. Sabah reported, however, that
Turkey would rather avoid such a provocative move and instead prefers to
maintain relations with Russia and the United States. It would not risk
jeopardizing ties with one country at the expense of the other. It said that one
of the best options, which the three parties could agree on, was deploying the
system in the North African country according to the security and military
memorandum of understanding signed between Ankara and the GNA in November 2019.
Experts said that Russia would reject such a proposal because it opposes the
re-export of its weapons. Moscow is also a backer of the Libyan National Army,
the GNA’s main rival. The US, in turn, will also reject the move because it
would be ceding influence to Russia in the region.
Egypt carries out military drill near Libya border
Arab News/July 10/2020
The Egyptian Army carried out a military drill near the Libyan border called
“Hasm 2020”
The drill came a day after the Turkish naval forces announced that they will
carry out military exercises off the Libyan coast
The Egyptian Army carried out a military drill near the Libyan border called
“Hasm 2020”, the military said on Thursday.
The drill, which included Egypt’s Armed Forces’ land, maritime and air defence,
was carried out over several days and was attended by the Minister of Defense
and Military Production, Mohamed Zaki, and Army Chief of Staff, Mohamed Farid.
The military manoeuvre included involved multi-task aircrafts, including
helicopters that use live ammunition. “The exercises aim at eradicating elements
of mercenaries, their gathering points, command centres as well as damaging all
their logistics,” Egypt’s State Information Service said. The drill came a day
after the Turkish naval forces announced that they will carry out military
exercises off the Libyan coast. The Turkish Navy said the maneuvers – dubbed
“Naftex” – and would take place off the Libyan coast and will include 17
warplanes and eight naval vessels.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on July 09-10/2020
Erdogan to Make Hagia Sophia a Mosque Again, But Will It
Help Him?
Soner Cagaptay/The Washington Institute/July 10/2020
Turkey’s president seems focused on cementing his legacy and boosting his
popularity with voters, but the move is more likely to damage the country’s
international brand. On July 9, Turkey’s Council of State decided to void a 1934
cabinet decision designating Hagia Sophia as a museum. This high court decision
followed an intense campaign by the office of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to
convert the nearly 1,500-year-old Istanbul landmark back into a mosque. A 2010
constitutional amendment allowed Erdogan to appoint a majority of the council's
current judges, so the decision was not a surprise. Among other reasons, Erdogan
apparently wants to move forward with the conversion in order to reverse the
ongoing erosion of his popular base. Yet the decision is unlikely to give him
more than a temporary boost in popularity; what it will surely do is undermine
Turkey’s international brand as an open, Muslim-majority society at peace with
its Christian heritage.
FROM CHURCH TO MOSQUE TO MUSEUM AND BACK
Byzantine emperor Justinian I built Hagia Sophia as a Christian cathedral in
537. In 1453, Ottoman sultan Mehmet II converted it into a mosque shortly after
taking the city from the Byzantines. In 1934, following the disintegration of
the Ottoman Empire, the government of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk converted the
building into a museum. As the founder of modern Turkey, Ataturk believed that
opening the building to all people would underline his secularist revolution and
help push Islam out of government and public spaces. Yet just as Ataturk
“un-mosqued” Hagia Sophia nearly a hundred years ago, Erdogan seemingly wants to
convert it back in order to bolster his religious revolution—one that has
steadily flooded Turkey’s government and public spaces with his conservative
brand of Islam. Making such a move in Istanbul is particularly important to
Erdogan given the city’s deep symbolism in his life and career. Born there in
1954, he emerged on the national political scene after becoming the city’s mayor
in 1994, using the position as a springboard to his ongoing run as the most
powerful elected leader in Turkey’s history. For years now, Erdogan has been
patronizing major mosque construction in Istanbul as a way of leaving his
indelible political and religious imprint there. In March 2019, he oversaw the
inauguration of Camlica Mosque, informally known as “Erdogan Mosque,” a massive
structure that was erected on a tall hill in order to permanently alter the
city’s dramatic skyline. Another major Erdogan-backed mosque is also nearing
completion, this one poignantly placed on Istanbul’s central Taksim Square,
which has historically lacked a mosque. Converting Hagia Sophia back to an
Islamic edifice will complete this trilogy of massive, legacy-defining mosques
in his hometown.
BUT WILL IT BOOST HIS POPULARITY?
Erdogan’s mosque push has more nakedly political drivers as well. A nativist,
populist leader, he no doubt aims to use the controversy generated by the
conversion process to support the narrative of victimization that he often
peddles to his base. In this case his message would be, “How dare these
secularists deny us pious Muslims the ‘liberty’ to pray at Hagia Sophia?”This
strategy is unlikely to work, however. Since 2002, Erdogan has won more than a
dozen nationwide elections primarily on a platform of strong economic growth.
Yet once a recession hit in 2018, his popularity began to slip, and his
hand-picked candidates lost mayoral elections for Istanbul and other key cities
in 2019. The economy is now suffering another recession due to the coronavirus
pandemic, and polls show his popularity slipping further. Thus, even if the
Hagia Sophia conversion increases his approval rating by a few percentage
points, the boost is unlikely to last, and nothing short of strong economic
growth will bring back the wider popularity he once enjoyed.
IMPLICATIONS ABROAD
If implemented in full, the building’s conversion would cause significant,
potentially irreversible harm to Turkey’s international brand. Maintaining Hagia
Sophia as a museum has long represented Turkey’s openness—most notably, its
stated willingness to embrace its Christian past, Christian citizens, and
Christian-majority neighboring countries. As the nation’s most-visited building
by foreign tourists, Hagia Sophia in many ways is Turkey’s global brand. For
officials in Washington and other allied governments considering how best to
sway Erdogan from this damaging course, such conversations are likely best
conducted in private given the issue’s domestic sensitivities. But if the Trump
administration does decide to comment publicly, its statement should highlight
Turkey’s long, proud history of religious tolerance—and encourage Ankara to shy
away from further steps that undermine this tradition. Turkey should also be
urged to maintain Hagia Sophia’s multicultural heritage and allow public access
to its religious iconography, taking into account that such access was
unhindered during most of the Ottoman era.
*Soner Cagaptay is the Beyer Family Fellow at The Washington Institute and
author of Erdogan’s Empire: Turkey and the Politics of the Middle East.
Iran’s nuclear defiance fueling Israeli fears
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh//Arab News/July 09/2020
Through the prism of the Israeli leaders, a nuclear Iran is an existential
threat to their country. Former Defense Minister Naftali Bennett did not mince
his words when he warned in 2017: “I have no doubt that the nuclearization of
Iran is the No. 1 existential threat to the state of Israel.”
If we were to assume that there will be a war between a nuclear Iran and Israel,
the damage inflicted on Israel would likely be much more severe due to its
relatively small size. Iran’s land area is approximately 1.6 million square
kilometers, while Israel’s is only about 22,000. This means that Iran is more
than 70 times larger than Israel. Bennett acknowledged that “an attack on Iran
would not destroy the country the way that an attack by Iran on Israel (would).”
The Iranian leaders have indeed repeatedly vowed to destroy Israel. For example,
Hossein Salami, commander-in-chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, has
made the Iranian government’s plan vehemently clear, stating: “Our strategy is
to erase Israel from the global political map. And it seems that, considering
the evil that Israel is doing, it is bringing itself closer to that.” In
addition, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who reportedly published a book on how to
destroy Israel, in 2018 posted a Twitter tirade against Israel, stating that
“the Zionist regime will perish in the not so far future.”
Whether or not the Iranian leaders ultimately act on their words, Israel has
critical concerns about its rival becoming a nuclear state. From Tel Aviv’s
perspective, the international community is not doing enough to stop Tehran from
obtaining nuclear weapons, with Russia, China, Germany, France and the UK still
advocating the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), aka the Iran nuclear
deal.
The Israeli authorities have vehemently opposed the nuclear deal ever since its
establishment in 2015. Its primary objective was to permanently halt Iran’s
nuclear program, thus eliminating the possibility of a nuclear arms race in the
region and removing the strategic threat that a nuclear-armed Iran might pose
due to its hegemonic ambitions. However, the Western powers compromised on their
original demands and accepted a deal that limited Tehran’s nuclear program for a
set number of years. As Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif told the
Council on Foreign Relations think tank at the time: “Let’s establish a
mechanism for a number of years. Not 10, not 15 — but I’m willing to live with
less.” This is how the sunset clauses came about and Israel became enraged.
The sunset clauses will allow the Iranian regime to eventually resume enriching
uranium to the level it desires, spin as many advanced centrifuges as it wants,
make its nuclear reactors fully operational, build new heavy water reactors,
produce as much fuel for its reactors as it desires, and maintain higher uranium
enrichment capability with no restrictions.
Not only are the European powers, along with Russia and China, determined to
keep the nuclear deal, they appear to be disregarding Iran’s latest violations
of the JCPOA. The International Atomic Energy Agency last month reported that
Tehran is violating all the restrictions of the nuclear agreement, is not
allowing inspectors to monitor some of its sites, and is declining to answer
questions concerning undeclared nuclear sites and activities.
Meanwhile, although Israel would likely wish for the US to take military action
to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear state, there is little appetite in
Washington and among the American public for a direct military confrontation
with yet another country in the Middle East.
With the international community reluctant to act on Iran’s nuclear violations,
and with it inching closer to becoming a nuclear state, Israel is running out of
options to counter Tehran. The Iranian regime already has enough enriched
uranium to refine to produce a nuclear bomb if it so desired.
From Tel Aviv’s perspective, the international community is not doing enough to
stop Tehran from obtaining nuclear weapons.
Desperate to stop Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, the Israeli leaders seem
to be taking matters into their own hands. Kuwait’s Al-Jarida newspaper last
week reported that Israel carried out a cyberattack that caused a fire and
explosion at Iran’s Natanz nuclear site. The newspaper wrote: “This is likely to
be an electronic attack on the computer network that controls the storage
compression tanks.”
Heightened tensions between Iran and Israel over Tehran’s nuclear defiance could
spiral into a wider war. In order to prevent a major military confrontation, the
international community must take immediate action to hold the Iranian leaders
accountable for their nuclear violations and give assurances to the regional
powers that Iran will not become a nuclear state.
*Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated Iranian-American political scientist.
Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh
Turkey: How Erdoğan's Migrant Blackmail Failed
Burak Bekdil/ Gatestone Institute/July 10/2020
On February 27, Erdoğan's government was on the threshold of executing its
threat to flood Europe with millions of (mostly Syrian) migrants ... Hundreds of
thousands of migrants began flocking to the border. By the next day, Greece was
not only operating 52 Navy ships to guard its islands close to Turkey; it had
also mobilized additional troops on land. Its security forces were able to block
10,000 migrants from entering Greece by way of the Turkish land border.
The new blackmail will not work for a number of reasons. First, because many
migrants in Turkey have learned from experience that the Turkish-Greek border
can no longer easily be crossed. And second, because the Greek security forces
are now better equipped and better prepared to confront a new wave of migrants.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's threats to send hundreds of thousands
of migrants over the border and into the EU will no longer work, because
Greece's security forces are now better equipped and better prepared to confront
a new wave of migrants by land or sea. Pictured: Migrants in Turkey throw rocks
at a Greek firetruck after they set a fire at the border fence near Pazarkulke
Border crossing, on March 6, 2020. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
Greece has finally done the right thing and deprived Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan of his perpetual threats to blackmail the European Union.
On February 27, Erdoğan's government was on the threshold of executing its
threat to flood Europe with millions of (mostly Syrian) migrants and opening its
northwestern borders with Greece and Bulgaria. Hundreds of thousands of migrants
began flocking to the border. In a few days, by the beginning of March, they
would be in EU territory, to be followed by hundreds of thousands of others.
Things, however, did not go as planned by Ankara.
By the next day, Greece was not only operating 52 Navy ships to guard its
islands close to Turkey; it had also mobilized additional troops on land. Its
security forces were able to block 10,000 migrants from entering Greece by way
of the Turkish land border. Some migrants were stuck in the no-man's land
between the two countries and eventually had to return to the Turkish side.
Greek officials reported only 76 illegal entries, whom they detained and
prosecuted. In his social media account, Turkey's Deputy Foreign Minister Yavuz
Selim Kıran compared the alleged treatment of migrants seeking to cross
illegally into Greece with conditions at Nazi death camps at Auschwitz. The
Central Board of Jewish Communities in Greece immediately condemned and
denounced the statement.
All the same, on March 6, Turkish Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu claimed that
a total of 142,175 migrants had successfully crossed the border into Greece. In
reality, the border had been meticulously protected by Greek security; only a
handful of migrants had illegally managed to get though. In a private
conversation, a UNHCR official mocked the minister: "Two questions to Minister
Soylu: How did he count the number of entries into Greece? And how did those
142,175 people vanish; they are not in Greece?"
The Greek government, rallying EU support, has since deployed riot police and
military patrols to the land border as well as naval and coast guard vessels to
conduct around-the-clock patrols off the Greek coast near Turkey. The Greek
government also scrambled to seal the land border, tripling the size of an
existing 12-kilometer fence, including the addition of pylons with thermal and
surveillance cameras.
Tassos Hadjivassiliou, a conservative member of Greek parliament, said:
"Once this fence goes up, Turkey will be severely compromised in its ability to
push through migrants. And if that happens, then Ankara will have lost its most
powerful tool of leverage against Europe... and its chances, therefore, of
clinching a new deal with Brussels, plus added financial support will fade."
Eventually, at the end of March, Turkish authorities had to withdraw the
remaining migrants that were amassed at the border. In May, nevertheless,
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavusoğlu said that Turkey's "open-gate" policy
would continue, and suggested that migrants and refugees would shortly return to
the frontier as the two countries emerge from coronavirus lockdowns. In early
June, there were reports that illegal immigrants were seen arriving by buses to
the Turkish city of Edirne and the border town of Ipsala. Also in June, a video
released by Greece's coast guard, showed Turkish coast guard vessels escorting
dinghies carrying refugees and migrants arriving in Greek territorial waters.
The new blackmail will not work for a number of reasons. First, because many
migrants in Turkey have learned from experience that the Turkish-Greek border
can no longer easily be crossed. And second, because the Greek security forces
are now better equipped and better prepared to confront a new wave of migrants.
And third, because it will be a much easier task to block a few thousand than
the hundreds of thousands in March.
As Margaritis Schinas, European Commission's vice president, said: "Events on
the Greek-Turkish border in the Evros region showed that Ankara does not have
the power to exploit refugees to get its way politically."
*Burak Bekdil, one of Turkey's leading journalists, was recently fired from the
country's most noted newspaper after 29 years, for writing in Gatestone what is
taking place in Turkey. He is a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
© 2020 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.
Rage Produces Much Heat but Little Light
Amir Taheri/Asharq Al-Awsat/July,11/2020
It is too early to tell whether the recent riots in the United States were
inspired by genuine concern about chronic racism in parts of American society or
fostered by political calculations linked to the next presidential election.
However, one thing is certain: traditional America-bashing circles in Europe and
elsewhere have seized the opportunity to portray the United States as a nation
unwilling to even acknowledge the grievance felt by the “African-American”
component. Skimming through magazines gives the impression that the European
elites have been observing events in the US with a more than usual degree of
smugness. They ignore a few facts.
To start with they forget that the slave trade existed long before the United
States was constituted as a nation. They also forget that from the 15th century
onwards the trans-Atlantic slave trade was a mainly European enterprise with
African tribal chiefs as local supply managers.
More importantly, the European states maintained native slavery, serfs in
Russia, Spain and England, villains in France, and the Bauer (tied peasants) in
feudal German principalities, for centuries whereas the United States abolished
slavery just 100 years after its independence.
The newly created United States had to do with the hands that fate and history
had dealt it. And that hand included the legacy of slavery which persisted until
the end of the Civil War. Americans were always conscious of the fact that
slavery was not only an evil but also hampered their nation’s economic
development and socio-cultural development. Even a cursory survey of American
literature would show that the issue was never forgotten. American writers and
poets, both white and black, took the challenge of understanding and combating
what they regarded as an inherited defect in their nation’s social genetics.
What is remarkable is that black American writers never used the theme as an
excuse for pressing for Apartheid in the name of racial equality. Almost all saw
themselves as Americans who happened to be black and not as blacks who happened
to be Americans. In her “Black, White and in Color” book Hortense J Spillers,
shows that American black writers did not behave as if they were outsiders in
their American homeland.
Even before slavery was abolished, Frederick Douglas, arguably one of the
greatest orators in all history, envisaged positive change in the United States.
He said: «I do not despair of this country. There are forces in operation which
must inevitably work the downfall of slavery. The arm of the Lord is not
shortened, and the doom of slavery is certain. I, therefore, leave with hope.
While drawing encouragement from "the Declaration of Independence," the great
principles it contains, and the genius of American Institutions, my spirit is
also cheered by the obvious tendencies of the age.” The same spirit is found in
such writers as Ralph Ellison in “The Invisible Man”, Richard Wright in “Fishbelly”,
Chester Himes in “Cotton Comes to Haarlem”, and even James Baldwin’s “The Fire
next Time”. Alex Haley’s “Roots” is an illustration of the “ Only in America”
dream as reality, depicting one family’s story from boyhood in Africa to slavery
in America to producing farmers, lawyers, architects, teachers and best-selling
authors. Tony Morrison’s “Beloved” is not a fake cry of rage as the ones howled
by self-styled champions of Black Lives Matter (BLM). It is about a heroic quest
for redemption not by re-reeling resentment by but forgiveness.
The same spirit inspired Martin Luther King Jr who had an inclusive dream, not a
project for rejection and apartheid based on skin color. He saw racism and
segregation as an evil that affected all Americans.
When he attended theology classes in Medina, Malcom X was known as “the American
brother” because he did not wish to discard his American-ness. His message was
one of hard work and self-betterment rather than moaning and commerce with
victimhood.
The “inherited evil” of racism has not been ignored by non-black American
writers. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”, Margaret Mitchell’s “Gone
With the Wind”, William Faulkner’s “Light in August”, Harper Lee’s “To Kill a
Mockingbird”, Erskine Caldwell’s “God’s Little Acre”, and John Dos Passos in
“USA Trilogy”, take up the challenge in different ways. Even when we see
negative portrayals, such as in John Steinbeck’s “Of Mice and Men” and Lorraine
Hansberry’s play “Raisins in the Sun”, the issue of racism and segregation is
not ignored. “Look Who Is Coming for Dinner” by William Rose, F.L Green’s “Lost
Man” and John Ball’s “In The Heat of the Night” signal the treatment of black
characters in a more mainstream American context without forgetting the uphill
struggle they face.
European intellectuals, who sneer at the United States for treating its
“Africans” in a decent way, would not dream of labelling their own black
communities as “African-French” or “African English.”
The African label is itself a legacy of Imperialism, Roman Imperialism of more
than 2,000 years. The Roman general Publius Cornelius Scipio was sent to what is
now Tunisia for a second war against a coalition led by Hannibal and spearheaded
by the local Afri tribe. When Scipio returned victorious the Senate gave him the
agnomen “Africanus” and, later, started calling the entire continent south of
the Mediterranean Africa although it contained hundreds of different ethnicities
often with little in common except various shades of darker skin.
In the same way, another Roman general Caius Julius Caesar was to get the
agnomen “Germanicus” after he defeated a rebellious tribe known as Germans in a
land that the Romans then called Germany, ignoring its ethnic, cultural and
religious diversity.
In recent weeks, anti-American cabals have unleashed much sound and fury but
little of substance; much heat, but little light. Their aim is to terrorize the
majority by pretending that hatred of America is more widespread than it really
is.
This reminds me of a passage in President Ulysses Grant’s memoirs.
In Texas, during the Mexican war, Grant, then a lieutenant, accompanied by
another officer, goes to investigate the howling of what sounds like a huge pack
of wolves. When they arrive they see: “There were just two of them; they had
made all the noise we had heard. I have often thought of this incident since
when I have heard the noises of a few disappointed politicians… There are always
more of them before they are counted.”
Can an Emerging Market Become a Policy Pioneer?
Daniel Moss/Bloomberg/July,11/2020
Jakarta is unabashedly monetizing state debt — an idea once considered heretical
in polite circles because of concerns it would stoke inflation, weaken the
currency and erode central-bank independence. But this concept has been slowly
making its way toward the light. The central bank said Tuesday it will purchase
574.4 trillion rupiah ($40 billion) in bonds from the government, most of it
directly through private placements. The experiment is laudable, and a measure
of how far things have come globally that it isn’t condemned. It could even show
the way for other emerging markets.
Bank Indonesia now finds itself underwriting muscular budgets that aim to steer
the world's fourth-most populous nation from its deepest recession in decades,
and help prevent tens of millions of citizens from plunging further into
poverty. It certainly isn’t alone. Around the globe, officials have cut rates to
zero, engaged in quantitative easing and propped up markets. Finance ministries
have unleashed massive supplementary budgets to alleviate Covid-19's
catastrophic impact.
But few, if any, have gone this far. It may only be a question of time: India’s
economy has been crippled and faces a gaping budget deficit, while Malaysia has
fired four fiscal cannons and interest rates are at a record low. If Indonesia
doesn’t pay too steep a price — much less no penalty — they will be tempted to
follow. The Philippines central bank has bought much smaller parcels of debt in
the secondary market and has expressed interest in going a bit further.
Jakarta is trying to bust out of its longstanding constraints. The rupiah isn't
a reserve currency, unlike the dollar or euro, and the nation has a nagging
deficit in its current account, the broadest measure of trade. That means an
avalanche of bond sales to more traditional investors, including international
buyers, would tend to weaken the rupiah. This isn't theoretical; Indonesia
descended into political chaos and communal violence in the late 1990s when the
currency collapsed during the Asian financial crisis.
Investors are giving policy makers the benefit of the doubt, for now at least.
Though markets faltered last week when word of monetization began to leak, bonds
rallied after Tuesday’s announcement. Perhaps that's because Finance Minister
Sri Mulyani Indrawati assured us that the deal is a one-off — and many took
heart that the amount wasn’t even bigger. Credit-rating companies don’t sound
perturbed, either, being largely agnostic about who owns this debt. The rupiah
rose 14% last quarter, reflecting a broad rally in emerging-market currencies
after a drubbing in the preceding three months.
Central banks have long balked at direct monetization because it challenges the
idea that monetary policy should be independent from politics. Another reason
why it has been taboo is the risk that rampant spending will spur inflation.
It’s worth noting that BI isn't giving the finance ministry a free pass; the
government will have to pay the benchmark rate — now 4.25% — rather than zero,
as some had feared. Central bank Governor Perry Warjiyo said inflation is under
control and that if prices do spike, he can stop them.
Warjiyo is a lucky soldier in this revolution. Deflation is a bigger threat than
inflation, which was in retreat around the world for years before Covid-19 came
along. Indonesia is no exception; the pace of annual increases in the consumer
price index have fallen to the bottom of BI’s 2% to 4% target range.
If anything, Indonesia's steps have exposed the limitations of inflation
targeting as the key pillar of central banking architecture. Emerging markets
borrowed this framework from the West to buy credibility with investors. In
time, forward guidance, public forecasting and press conferences followed.
These models were never quite set in stone. Indonesia and the world now have
broader priorities. As a result, fiscal and monetary teams have begun working
closely to combat a once-in-a-lifetime crisis, and boundaries have been blurred.
In Jakarta, the politically correct term for the monetization is “burden
sharing.”
This boldness may not last. An investor panic at the prospect of stimulus
withdrawal in big economies — like the “taper tantrum” of 2013 — or a medical
breakthrough could see Indonesia return to the traditional model.
Officials have been clear about their intentions and Sri Mulyani, a former top
executive at the World Bank in Washington, is a tremendous asset as de facto
head of investor relations for President Joko Widodo. She will need to be alert
for the slightest whiff of a shift in sentiment that could put emerging markets
back under strain. BI is a more lenient lender than the International Monetary
Fund was two decades ago. If this gambit doesn’t work, the IMF may again be on
the horizon. If successful, however, Indonesia’s policy experiment will be the
subject of textbooks and finance seminars for years to come.
Natural Gas Is the Past, the Future
Nathaniel Bullard/Bloomberg/July,11/2020
On Sunday, Virginia-based utility Dominion Energy Inc announced plans to sell
almost all of its natural gas pipeline and storage assets to Warren Buffett’s
Berkshire Hathaway Inc for $4 billion. At the same time, the Virginia-based
utility said that it’s killing the Atlantic Coast gas pipeline despite a Supreme
Court ruling that would grant it passage underneath the Appalachian Trail.
There’s a lot going on here, and not just for the second-biggest US power
company by market value and the Oracle of Omaha. Natural gas, the “bridge fuel”
to decarbonize the US electricity system, is under pressure. But it’s not yet a
bridge to nowhere.
There are a number of factors motivating Dominion’s strategy. The first is that
permitting for gas infrastructure is “increasingly litigious, uncertain, and
costly,” Chief Executive Officer Thomas Farrell said during a call with analysts
to discuss its plans. The second factor is that the economics of operating a
midstream pipeline—even one that has had no trouble attracting customers—aren’t
great, Farrell admitted.
That doesn’t mean the company is getting out of gas entirely. It still burns gas
in power plants and will for some time. It also still owns distribution
networks, which deliver gas to customers. That’s the infrastructure Dominion
sees carrying it into the future.
The whole thing is part of a strategy to generate more of its earnings from
assets with a return on equity that’s determined by state regulators. That may
sound unexciting, but that’s part of the point. It’s predictable, and it gives
Dominion a clear story to tell capital markets: for every dollar we invest in
regulated assets, we’ll receive X amount back, guaranteed.
There’s a slide in Dominion’s analyst presentation that illustrates this idea.
It shows the company’s past acquisitions of mostly-regulated companies such as
gas distributor Questar and electric and gas utility Scana leading directly to
Dominion’s decision to sell its midstream gas interests and other assets. The
result, it hopes, is that 90% of its operating earnings will come from
state-regulated operations.
There’s a financial strategy at work here too, one that I’ve written about
before. It has three parts, the first of which is that returns on equity—both
what utilities ask regulators for and what they’re awarded—have been falling for
decades. Not only that, the spread between asked and awarded is also fairly
tight, and definitely tighter than it was in the mid-2000s and in the mid-1990s.
That’s good for messaging: it means you can say that what you want is pretty
close to what regulators think you deserve.
The second part of this strategy comes from the long-term decline in the
risk-free rate of return on investments, as represented by the US 10-year
Treasury yield. We can think of 10-year Treasuries as a utility’s opportunity
cost for not investing in regulated businesses; the spread between a utility’s
awarded ROE and the 10-year note is effectively the risk-adjusted return on
equity for regulated utilities. That spread is at a near-record high, north of
800 basis points, and it’s more than double the risk-adjusted return of 25 years
ago.
The third part of this strategy is that Dominion can match a clear growth path
to this return on equity. Virginia’s power sector aims to be 100% clean energy
by 2045, which requires building at least 16 gigawatts of wind and solar
generation assets. Dominion is allowed, by Virginia law, to own up to 65% of
those assets. Those it owns will become part of the utility rate base, the
assets on which it earns its ROE. It’s not quite risk-free, but it’s not far
off.
The same is happening all over the country, meaning that gas networks on the
other coast face pressure, too. In California a number of municipalities have
mandated all-electric new construction—that is, gas won’t be connected even for
cooking purposes.
In the past three weeks, two of the state’s big utilities, Pacific Gas &
Electric and Southern California Edison, have written to the California Energy
Commission in support of a statewide all-electric buildings mandate. SCE’s
letter says it wants the Commission to move “as quickly as possible” so that
utilities might “avoid costly spending on natural gas infrastructure that may
become stranded before 2045.” Implicit in that statement: not every gas
infrastructure operator can count on Warren Buffett or his successors to buy
their assets when the time comes.
The US media’s disrespectful obsession with Trump
Khalaf Ahmad Al-Habtoor/Arab News/July 10/2020
Many once-reputed US television news networks, whose newsgathering, unbiased
reporting and war coverage was formerly beyond reproach, have evolved into a
platform for people who despise the current president. Besides being wholly
unprofessional, some of these channels are undermining their credibility among
those of us who once looked to them for global news.
We are today met with a repetitive roll-out of one-sided opinion and unabashed
political propaganda. Switch on at any time of the day or night and what you get
are talking heads dissecting President Donald Trump’s every action and word on
the pandemic or the mass social awakening on racial inequality.
Invariably egged on by program hosts, so-called experts in their field spew
their anti-Trump vitriol unchallenged. In fact, I am beginning to think that
their invitations to appear on air are based on their ability to indoctrinate
viewers with hatred for America’s democratically elected commander-in-chief.
Admittedly, Trump and hard facts are like oil and water. He often exaggerates
statistics and has a tendency to put a positive spin on bad news. He is an
optimist. He is a fighter. He has been attacked with a stifling cloud of daily
criticism and unfounded speculation. Never in America’s history has a president
been subjected to such an onslaught of media attacks, vulgar press mockery or
treacherous former aides out to pen lucrative tell-all exposes of their time at
the White House. He has been stabbed in the back again and again by people he
trusted.
His own niece, Mary Trump, who fought with him over the family fortune decades
ago, has now leapt on the “literary” gravy train with a book characterizing the
president as a product of a toxic family and as a “narcissist” who is a danger
to every American. So much for family loyalty. Her opinionated book is long on
accusations and unflattering anecdotes that reviewers say are not backed up by
evidence. It would not have seen the light of day if publishers respected their
readership and did not endorse baseless libel.
Setting aside the occasions when Trump has misspoken — often out of wishful
thinking rather than a cynical wish to deceive — he should be praised for his
love of his country. He attained office on a conservative ticket vowing to beef
up the military and appoint Republican-leaning judges to the Supreme Court. He
promised huge tax breaks and said he would not only grow the economy but also
work toward job creation.
Almost all of his promises were fulfilled. On his watch, unemployment plummeted
and wages rose, while the stock market reached record highs. Despite his bluster
and threats, during his four-year tenure the US has not been engaged in a costly
new war. Indeed, he has pulled almost all US troops from Syria and is in the
process of drawing down the troop contingent from Afghanistan.
From the president’s perspective, the timing of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak could not have been worse. Through no fault of his own,
markets tumbled, companies were liquidated and millions of jobs lost. Lockdowns
gave rise to poverty, hunger and homelessness. With economic Armageddon looming,
most states opened up prematurely, leading to disastrous results in terms of
skyrocketing case numbers and deaths.
Several prominent channels are blaming Trump for failing to get a handle on the
virus, while alluding to the president’s refusal to wear a mask in public as
having contributed to the rate of infections. In keeping with conservative
thinking, he allowed people to choose and relied on governors to tailor the
reopening of businesses in their states. He gave governors a free hand in
deciding if masks were mandatory in public spaces. In a country made up of 50
states with an overall population of 328 million, a one-size-fits-all policy
would not be sensible.
The White House COVID-19 task force, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention and the World Health Organization, along with thousands of doctors
and scientists, strongly advise social distancing, frequent hand-washing, and
nose and mouth coverings to contain the spread until there is an effective
vaccine.
Sadly, many Americans, especially young people, have flocked to the beaches,
bars and clubs believing they are invincible, with no care for the parents or
grandparents they could infect. Others have joined mass protests around the
country in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, no doubt contributing greatly to
the spread.
Because the president is not exactly gushing in his approval of the Black Lives
Matter movement, sections of the US media are attempting to paint him as a
racist. Notably, some people are using the guise of this movement to loot
stores, torch buildings and vehicles, attack police officers and vandalize
monuments and statues. As head of state and a self-proclaimed believer in law
and order, he cannot encourage anarchy or back the dissolution of police forces,
of course. Such misbehavior cannot and must not be tolerated.
Against the backdrop of Mount Rushmore and the carvings of four famous US
presidents, he this week decried the way, in his view, schoolchildren are being
indoctrinated into hating their own country. “Every virtue is obscured… every
flaw is magnified until the history is purged and the record is disfigured
beyond recognition,” Trump said.
We all have deep sympathy for African-Americans, who have been subjected to
systemic discrimination for centuries, but alienating the majority or seeking to
erase history and the imperfect heroes who began America’s upward trajectory
will only embolden white supremacists and accentuate existing racial divisions.
Setting aside the occasions when Trump has misspoken, he should be praised for
his love of his country.
Fox News’ Tucker Carlson has his own theory as to why Trump is so hated and
despised by the left: He cannot be controlled.
Like him or hate him, what happened to public respect for the office? Now that
the genie of no-limit disrespect is out of the bottle, Trump’s successors can
expect to be placed under a similar microscope. Anyone with a skeleton in his or
her closet or grudging enemies waiting to pounce will be in for a rough ride. If
Trump is voted out come November, will Fox News adopt CNN or MSNBC’s
presidential battering ram? And, in that event, will the new US president be
strong enough to withstand the pain?
*Khalaf Ahmad Al-Habtoor is a prominent UAE businessman and public figure. He is
renowned for his views on international political affairs, his philanthropic
activity and his efforts to promote peace. He has long acted as an unofficial
ambassador for his country abroad. Twitter: @KhalafAlHabtoor
EU is stuck in middle of Turkey’s disputes with France and
Greece
Sinem Cengiz/Arab News/July 10/2020
Against a backdrop of rising tensions between Turkey and some EU member states,
the bloc’s policy chief, Josep Borrell, paid a two-day visit to Ankara this
week. A number of issues were on his agenda for discussion, including the war in
Libya, the refugee crisis, friction in the Eastern Mediterranean, and the
coronavirus pandemic. Turkey’s relationships with France and Greece have
deteriorated, and Borrell was tasked not only with addressing grievances, but
also easing tensions.
His visit came a week before special sessions of the European Parliament and the
EU Foreign Affairs Council are due to take place after calls from French
officials for new sanctions on Ankara in response to the latter’s actions in the
Eastern Mediterranean. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu used Borrell’s
visit as an opportunity to warn the EU that Ankara will retaliate if sanctions
are imposed.
“We observe that Turkey will be on the agenda of the EU in the coming days,” he
said during a joint press conference with Borrell on July 6 in Ankara. “Taking
decisions against Turkey will not resolve the existing problems; on the
contrary, it will deepen them.
“If the EU takes additional measures against Turkey, we will have to respond. If
you further sanction Turkey, we also have steps to take in the field, in the
Eastern Mediterranean.”
Borrell’s visit also included a meeting with Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi
Akar.
The EU was dragged into the escalating dispute between Paris and Ankara, over
the Eastern Mediterranean and Libya, after the former called on the 27-member
bloc to take a stand against Turkey. France and Greek Cyprus have also played
significant roles in blocking Turkey’s bid to join the EU by putting political
roadblocks in the way. Borrell acknowledged that ties between the EU and Turkey
are far from ideal, and immediate and serious problems must be resolved.
“We have to change the dynamic of our relationship. We have to follow a more
positive track so that we can avoid additional problems,” he said.
The first decade of the 2000s was a momentous time in the relationship between
Turkey and Europe, as Ankara began implementing EU-related reforms. The Turkish
authorities advocated that accession would not be a burden on the bloc but
benefit it, as they would help share the burden of the difficulties faced by the
union. Unfortunately, this honeymoon period did not last. Frustrated by the
barriers to admission imposed by some members and a lack of progress in
negotiations, Ankara appeared to grow increasingly eurosceptical despite its
generally pro-EU stance. This was evident not only at the political level but
also on a societal level, as support among the Turkish people for membership of
the EU began to decline.
Relations between Turkey and EU member states are affected by bilateral,
regional and global issues. Since the collapse of EU membership talks, Turkey
has redefined its bilateral relations mainly by leveraging border security and
migration management.
However, Ankara adopts a diverse approach to its bilateral ties with EU members.
For instance, it treads a fine line in its relationship with Italy: The Italian
defense minister recently visited Turkey, officials in Rome have expressed
support for Turkish intervention in Libya, and the top Italian diplomat recently
visited Ankara for talks. Regionally, the Eastern Mediterranean, Libya and Syria
are key issues affecting the security and stability of the EU, and there is a
need for dialogue with Ankara to resolve them, a point that was raised by
Borrell. While some EU members view Turkey as a threat, others believe it offers
significant economic and security benefits. There is a long history of relations
between Turkey and the EU, and it is hard to predict how they might evolve in
the future.
On a global level, the mutual frustration with each other felt by Turkey and the
West, including the EU and the US, had significantly influenced Ankara’s pivot
toward Russia.
The cooling of relations between Turkey and the EU is also related to
developments within the bloc itself. The refugee crisis, caused by regional
developments, led the EU to abandon values it had promoted for decades. This
created fertile ground for the growth of populist, right-wing parties that
contradict liberal, democratic institutions and processes — the very foundation
upon which the main pillars of European values, such as human rights, democracy,
tolerance, inclusiveness and multiculturalism, are premised. Therefore,
expansion is no longer seen as the standard solution to the problems affecting
the continent, and European values are being openly flouted in several member
countries. There is a long history of relations between Turkey and the EU, and
it is hard to predict how they might evolve in the future. Turkey is located in
an area where a single incident can start a domino effect that changes the
landscape of the entire region; the Arab uprisings, for example, continue to
affect regional balances. How will the war in Syria unfold? Will the instability
in Libya be rectified any time soon? How long will tensions persist in the
Eastern Mediterranean? How will the role of global powers Russia, China and the
US evolve in the coming years. These are all questions to which there are no
clear answers at this time.
*Sinem Cengiz is a Turkish political analyst who specializes in Turkey’s
relations with the Middle East. Twitter: @SinemCngz
Iran unlikely to grab opportunity for change
Khaled Abou Zahr/Arab News/July 10/2020
Like many of the Middle East’s issues, Iraq is looked at through the Iranian
lens. Iraq has been a great opportunity since the mid-2000s for Iran and the
Arab world to find a good and strong balance and to bring about change for the
region. Unfortunately, this week’s assassination of the Iraqi analyst and
political adviser Hisham Al-Hashimi has proven once again that this is wishful
thinking. Iraq has become a territory for Iran to expand its revolution and
hegemony. Hence, as in Lebanon, it is a land where the rule of the Iranian
militias and proxies replaces the rule of law. These are lands where not even
suggestions are acceptable and the consequence for the messenger is either death
or exile.Therefore, it is always surprising to hear, mostly from Iranian
pundits, that Iran is surrounded by enemies and needs to defend itself in order
to justify its proxy wars and the presence of armed militias all over the
region. They also keep reiterating that the Iranian regime is defending and
supporting oppressed Shiite minorities all over the Arab world.
One might argue that, in the 1980s, Iran was indeed surrounded by hostile
countries, from Iraq to Afghanistan. Yet, since 2003, this has completely
changed; the regimes and governments in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq, after
the fall of Saddam Hussein, are all, in principle, friendly to Iran. As for the
region’s Shiite communities, they are not in need of Iranian protection — a
quick look at how Iranian citizens are treated in their home country compared to
how they live nowadays in Arab countries suffices to prove this.
The problem with Iran is not about it being a religious regime; this is the
composition and the will of the country and its citizens are free to support or
oppose it. The problem lies in its relentless attempts to export and impose the
regime’s ideology throughout the Arab region since 1979. It is like an Islamic
version of Leon Trotsky’s vision of communism.
If Iran did not engage in terrorist activities outside its own territory, it
could have constructive bilateral relations with countries around the world.
Today, Iran is isolated from its region not because it is Persian or Shiite, but
because the regime acts in a rogue manner. If it did not, it would not be facing
the hardships it does today and its economy, as well as its people, would not be
so badly off. Sanctions exist because this regime carries out terrorist
activities, has a potential military nuclear program, and interferes negatively
in Arab affairs. Arab countries are not seeking confrontation, but are forced to
react to Iran’s actions. Therefore, Western analysts’ continuous comparisons
between the two are absurd and look more like a blackmail scheme than anything
else.
Iraq is the very symbol of the Iranian vision. The regime’s strategy is not to
support a fellow country, with the majority of its citizens belonging to the
same religious belief it claims to protect. It is a strategy to secure its own
agents in the government and state institutions in order to build its loyal and
obedient militias — militias that compete with and threaten the sovereign state.
Iran’s regime always looks at weakening the state institutions so that they can
fulfill their main role of acting as cover for its militias, which can
ultimately become the de facto ruler of the country through their death threats
and violence.
If Iran’s objectives were indeed to protect Shiite minorities, then it would
help support and build the state, not weaken it, like it has done in Iraq and
Lebanon. But its objectives are hegemonic. It needs to keep its target countries
weakened, regardless of anything else, to make sure its own proxies and agents
are the kingmakers and real decision-makers. Iraq is a perfect example of this,
and Lebanon is the case study for all its interference programs from Syria to
Yemen.
The Iranian regime’s focus is thus not on its bilateral relations with the
state, but its control of armed militias. So, when we hear Foreign Minister
Mohammed Javad Zarif say during a parliament session last week that he
coordinated all his actions with Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Qassem Soleimani
and also Hassan Nasrallah, this tells you that, despite what Iranian pundits
claim, Iran has no doves and hawks, only the orders of the supreme leader and
the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). It is not supporting Iraq and the
Shiite community — it is conducting an expansion of its dictatorship to other
territories.
The same applies to every country Iran is trying to control. It is strange that
it does not apply this strategy to its eastern border; although the return of
Afghans and Central Asian fighters from Syria, where they fought with the IRGC,
might pose a problem in the future. However, for now, Tehran has concentrated
its focus and armed militias exclusively in the Arab world. One might ask why.
But what have been the results for Iran and its people, for the Shiites it
claims to protect, and for the citizens of countries it tries to assert its
control over? The answer is simple, nothing but destruction and poverty. Lebanon
has been plunged into total chaos and destitution, with no hope of an immediate
solution. Even economic reforms would not start to fix the extent of the
problem.
Iraq might have a better chance thanks to its new Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi.
It seems that, with support from most Iraqis, he is trying to change the current
situation and hone in on the militias’ lawlessness. Ending the corruption and
Iranian interference needs to start with their total dismantling. This has the
potential to change the entire Middle East for the better. A stable Iraq would
permit the shift toward more balanced relations between Baghdad and Tehran, and
could serve as an opening for Iran to do the same with more Arab countries.
Iran is isolated from its region not because it is Persian or Shiite, but
because the regime acts in a rogue manner.
A government-to-government relationship, rather than government to Iranian
militias, is the key to prompting the start of this change. Just imagine for a
second the true revolution if Iran announced its support for Iraq’s leadership
plan of dismantling all armed militias. This would be a positive signal that
Iraqis from all confessions and the entire region would welcome — a first solid
trust-building step.
So there is now a unique opportunity for the Iranian regime, especially as it
seems to be suffering both in its regional files like Syria and economically. An
overstretched and cash-strapped Iran is also facing domestic issues, with
mysterious explosions in strategic sites such as the Natanz nuclear facility.
However, as to what to expect from this regime and its proxies, the
assassination of Al-Hashimi reminds us that Iran will oppose and combat Al-Kadhimi’s
current plan with little hope of compromise.
*Khaled Abou Zahr is the CEO of Eurabia, a media and tech company. He is also
the editor of Al-Watan Al-Arabi.
On the Murder of Husham al-Hashemi
Michael Knights/The Washington Institute/July 10/2020
On July 6, 2020, Iraq’s most prolific security commentator Husham al-Hashemi was
assassinated in Zayouna, a social melting pot neighborhood of east Baghdad. At
8:19 pm, he arrived outside his home, driving his own unarmored white SUV.
Seconds before, two motorbikes pulled up, each carrying two young men. They knew
that he was coming and they knew where he would park his car.
Before he had even driven into his space, the shooter was on him, peppering the
driver-side window with bullets, coming close to finish the job with multiple
pistol shots through the shattered glass. The shooter stowed his pistol in the
seat storage of the bike and got on behind the waiting driver, and seconds later
the second bike, maybe filming the scene or maybe a back-up security team, also
drove away. His three boys watched him dragged, bloodied and nearly dead, from
the car. He died in a hospital shortly after.
Husham left behind a wife and four young children, along with many friends
across the political spectrum and across the world. I had known him for about
six years. Husham was a bit of an enigma at first: an Iraqi security analyst
with contacts, a strong work ethic and good analytical instincts—a potent
combination and a very rare one.
A former inmate of Camp Bucca, a U.S. detention center in Iraq, Husham had seen
a little of the Iraqi Salafist insurgency from the inside, though it was never
clear how deep his involvement was. He studied the Islamic State in Iraq and his
analysis was sought after by think-tanks and grant-funded research projects
because he brought an Iraqi voice to a subject that was, and still is, dominated
by non-Iraqi researchers.
One of the most intriguing aspects of his work was his interactions with the
Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF, or Hashd al-Sha’abi in Arabic). After the fall
of Mosul, he was proud of the PMF and viewed them as part of the loosely
coordinated Iraqi and international effort aimed at defeating the Islamic State.
He was granted interviews with senior PMF leaders, including the U.S.-designated
terrorist Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis.
As an American, I had no desire (and questionable legal leeway) to interview
Muhandis, so I was fascinated to read his writings on the top-level thinking
within the PMF. It was hard not to be jealous of Husham’s access, but also
impossible to resist his abundant charm and generous nature.
After the Islamic State’s territorial caliphate was defeated in Iraq in 2017, I
sensed a gradual change in Husham’s view of Muhandis and the Iran-backed groups
within the PMF. He had always known of their ties to Iran, their gangster-ism,
and their attacks on Sunni civilians (not that it mattered, but Husham was from
a mixed Shia-Sunni background). After the recapture of all Iraq’s cities, Husham
began to sense—as many Iraqis did—that the reputation of the PMF was being
damaged by Muhandis’ Iran-backed militias. He was an advocate of “normalizing”
the PMF under state control, and his thinking helped Iraq and its aid partners
to conceptualize how security sector reforms might help put arms under the
control of the state.
This Iraqi nationalist position became something more intense after the
Iran-backed elements within the PMF started killing tens of young Iraqi
protesters in October 2019. I was struck by the change Husham's tone, privately
and on his prolific twitter feed. A journalist himself, with children just a
decade younger than the protesters being killed, Husham went “all-in” with the
protests. He threw caution to the wind at a time when the militias ran Prime
Minister Adel Abdulmahdi’s government.
At the time, I wondered how long he could last. His explicit calls for militias
to be brought to justice seemed too bold and too prominent not to be answered
violently. By the end, Husham was recklessly brave, both with his own personal
security and with his words. If there was a living martyr in Iraq—conveying the
sense of a dead man walking since the protests—it was Husham.
Husham was not in the inner circle of the new prime minister—Mustapha al-Kadhimi—but
they were both writers, both keen observers to the Iraqi security scene, and
both Iraqi nationalists who wanted arms under the control of the state. They
were also both intensively harassed and threatened by militias like Kata’ib
Hezbollah. On June 26, Kata’ib Hezbollah responded to the arrest of some of its
members by driving a thirty-vehicle armed column through the International Zone,
the government and diplomatic district of Baghdad, in a show of strength aimed
at intimidating Kadhimi.
On July 3, Husham was reportedly likewise threatened by Kata’ib Hezbollah
spokesman Hussein Mounis (Abu Ali al-Askari), according to phone messages seen
by a colleague of Husham’s. On July 5, Husham called out the militias for firing
a rocket at the International Zone that wounded a little Iraqi girl. In my view,
having monitored seventeen years of Shia militia targeted killings of Iraqi
academics, doctors, journalists and soldiers, Kata’ib Hezbollah clearly killed
Husham to send a message to the Kadhimi government and to other Iraqi
commentators: back off, stop trying to place arms under the control of the
state.
The Islamic State affiliated media outlet, Quraysh, applauded Husham’s killing
but did not claim it. This is the point that events have reached in today’s
Iraq: both the Islamic State and their putative enemies in Kata’ib Hezbollah
have the same Iraqi nationalist on their hit lists. I cannot think of a better
eulogy for him than the curses of Kata’ib Hezbollah and the Islamic State. If a
man is judged by the reputation of his enemies, Husham was doing a great service
to Iraq at the time of his death and in his passing.
Iraq’s protesters, journalists, and security agencies knew Husham well, as did
nearly all the governments of the international Coalition.If Husham can be
killed, then anyone can be killed in today’s Iraq. A weak response may convince
militias that they are safe to go even further. Everyone, from every angle, must
lend their voice and their efforts to finding and prosecuting Husham’s killers,
and those who killed protesters and journalists, before they kill more Iraqis.
*Michael Knights is a Boston-based senior fellow of The Washington Institute,
specializing in the military and security affairs of Iraq, Iran, and the Persian
Gulf states.