LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
July 23/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For today
The world hated
me before it hated you & hated me before you. You do not belong to the world,
but I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hates you
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint John 15/18-21:”‘If
the world hates you, be aware that it hated me before it hated you. If you
belonged to the world, the world would love you as its own. Because you do not
belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world
hates you. Remember the word that I said to you, “Servants are not greater than
their master.” If they persecuted me, they will persecute you; if they kept my
word, they will keep yours also.But they will do all these things to you on
account of my name, because they do not know him who sent me.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on July 22-23/2019
Iran Working to Arm Syria and Hezbollah by Sea
British intelligence fears Gulf crisis could lead to attacks on UK by Iranian
terror cells
Lebanon: Efforts to Remove Obstacles to Cabinet Sessions
Bolton: Iran, Hizbullah Threaten Security of Western Hemisphere Countries
Aoun Meets Senior UK Officer
Prosecutor Refers Qabrshmoun File to Military Court as Arslan Insists on
Judicial Council
Bou Saab Says Culprit Received $19 Million in Military Academy Corruption
Scandal
Abu Suleiman: Foreign Labor Law Privileges Palestinain Workers
Lebanon Renaissance Foundation Concludes Its 6th Youth Leadership Program
Death Threats and Ban Calls ahead of Mashrou' Leila's Byblos Gig
Gharib Meets Hariri, Says Open to 'Decent Solutions' for Qabrshmoun Crisis
Washington should wake up to the fact that Hezbollah runs Lebanon
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports
And News published on July 22-23/2019
Iran Arrests 17 For Spying For The CIA, Some Sentenced To Death
Iran Says Busts CIA Spy Ring, Some Sentenced to Death
Britain Says Planning European-Led Protection Force in Gulf
Top Omani Diplomat to Visit Iran amid Regional Tensions
Scores Killed, Injured in Russian Air Strike on Syria Market
Tehran sources: An Israeli Harop drone attacked pro-Iranian Iraqi militia base
NE of Baghdad
Hamas meets Iran's supreme leader during warm visit in Tehran
Kushner to Head to Mideast to Push Palestinian Economic Plan
Russian Air Strikes on Syria Market Kill 23
Airstrikes Kill 50 Civilians in Syria's Northwest
Iraq: PMF Denies Attack on its Camp Near Saladdine
Kuwait Promises to Solve Bidoun Issue this Summer
Mohammed bin Zayed: UAE Keen on Navigation Freedom in Gulf, Mideast
Japan to Make Every Effort to Reduce US-Iran Tensions
Israel Considers Granting PA Tax Breaks
French Submarine Lost in 1968 Finally Located in Mediterranean
Egypt Minister of Endowments Warns of ‘Muslim Brotherhood Terrorism’
Six Shiites Dead in Nigeria Clashes over Imprisoned Leader
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on July 22-23/2019
Iran Working to Arm Syria and Hezbollah by Sea/Yaniv Kubovich/Haartz/July
22/2019
British intelligence fears Gulf crisis could lead to attacks on UK by Iranian
terror cells/Agencies/Arab News/July 22/2019
Washington should wake up to the fact that Hezbollah runs Lebanon/Tony Badran/Al
Arabiya/July 22/2019
Iran Arrests 17 For Spying For The CIA, Some Sentenced To Death/Jerusalem
Post/July 22/2019
Tehran sources: An Israeli Harop drone attacked pro-Iranian Iraqi militia base
NE of Baghdad/DebkaFile: 22 July/2019
The Hamas-Iran Plan to Eliminate Israel/Bassam Tawil/Gatestone Institute/July
22/2019
To the EU: Iran's Mullahs Will Never Be Your Friend/Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone
Institute/July 22, 2019
The Day Hope Landed on the Moon/Stephen Carter/Bloomberg View/July 22/2019
Hormuz Hostages and ‘Caution and Foresight’/Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al Awsat/July
22/2019
Iran faces long road before it is trusted by neighbors/Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab
News/July 22, 2019
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News published on July 22-23/2019
Iran Working to Arm Syria and Hezbollah by
Sea
Yaniv Kubovich/Haartz/July 22/2019
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Tehran prefers sea route due to recent attacks aimed at preventing it from
entrenching in Syria and transferring equipment to Lebanon, Israeli officials
say
Iran is working to transfer weaponry to Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon by sea,
to avoid assaults that have targeted arms shipments, Israeli officials believe.
According to their assessments, recent attacks, some of which attributed
to Israel, that were designed to prevent Iran from entrenching itself in Syria
and transferring equipment to Lebanon have led the Iranians to prefer shipping a
portion of the weaponry by sea. According to Israeli defense officials, despite
growing tensions at sea between Iran and the United States and Britain in the
Strait of Hormuz, Israel has not been directly affected. However, officials have
warned of the risk that precision missiles launched by Iran or its proxies in
the region could hit Israeli naval and commercial vessels.
Iran would prefer to avoid a direct confrontation with Israel at sea due
to Tehran’s interest in returning to the negotiating table to put a halt to the
sanctions against the country, officials believe. These sanctions have increased
since the U.S. administration's withdrawal from the international nuclear accord
with Iran. Officials also said that the Iranians would
prefer that tensions not escalate into war, resorting instead to more isolated,
lower-intensity incidents in which it has the upper hand, such as its seizure
over the weekend in the Gulf of British-flagged oil tanker Stena Impero.
However, Israel is preparing for a potential escalation of the situation at sea
if Iran is pushed to the wall.
Iran’s envoy to Britain on Sunday urged the U.K. to contain “domestic political
forces” which he said wanted to escalate tension between the two countries amid
the capture of the Stena Impero. “U.K. government
should contain those domestic political forces who want to escalate existing
tension between Iran and the U.K. well beyond the issue of ships. This is quite
dangerous and unwise at a sensitive time in the region,” Hamid Baeidinejad
tweeted. Concerned over Iran's significant role at sea
not only in the Gulf but in the Mediterranean, too, Israeli has decided to erect
a sea barrier at the military port in the southern Israeli city of Eilat, as
part of the effort to protect the port. The move was also motivated by the need
to halt civilian tourist naval traffic in the Gulf of Eilat.
Officials said they also currently consider Iran a threat to shipping in the
Straits of Tiran, which leads to the Red Sea port of Eilat.
In recent weeks, the navy has also been considering acquiring advanced
undersea defense systems to help address the threat of naval mines.
Israel is preparing to fend off attacks on vessels through unmanned aerial
vehicle (UAV), drones, high-speed boats and even long-range anti-ship missiles
fired from land. Israeli naval vessels are threatened
regardless of Israel's superiority in the naval arena, defense officials
believe, while Iran realizes that hurting Israeli vessels would lead to an
Israeli response.No Iranian intention to enter into a direct naval conflict has
been detected by Israel, leading it to presume that should Iran decide to
escalate tensions in the Gulf, it would do so through its proxies - Houthis in
Yemen or Hezbollah in Lebanon. These organizations possess advanced means
capable of targeting Israeli naval vessels within a 300-km range.
*Reuters contributed to this report.
British intelligence fears Gulf crisis could lead to
attacks on UK by Iranian terror cells
المخابرات البريطانية تتخوف من أن يقوم حزب الله واذرع إيرانية إرهابية أخرى بهجمات
داخل بريطانيا على خلفية أزمة الخليج
Agencies/Arab News/July 22/2019
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*Terror cells linked to the Iranian-funded Hezbollah group are all over Europe,
and could launch an attack on the UK if relations between London and Tehran
deteriorate further, intelligences sources say.
*Tensions between Britain and Iran have heightened following the seizure of
UK-flagged tanker Stena Impero
-A counter-terror operation in 2015 against a Hezbollah-linked found the cell
had been stockpiling tons of explosives
LONDON: The UK could come under attack from Iranian-backed terror cells if the
ongoing Gulf crisis worsens and relations between London and Tehran continue to
deteriorate, intelligence sources have said. Senior intelligence officers in the
UK now rank the Islamic Republic only behind Russia and China as the severest
threat to the national security of the UK, a Daily Telegraph report on Monday
said.Tensions between Britain and Iran have heightened following the seizure of
UK-flagged tanker Stena Impero in the Strait of Hormuz last week, raising
concerns of top intelligence bodies in Britain.
According to MI5 and MI6, Iran is funding a network of terror cells across the
European continent — including in the UK — and, depending on how the Gulf crisis
plays out, could give the green light for attacks to be carried out. A
counter-terror operation in 2015 against a Hezbollah-linked cell found the group
had been stockpiling tons of explosives on the outskirts of London, something
first disclosed by the Telegraph in June, and described as “proper organized
terrorism.”A counter-terror operation in 2015 against a Hezbollah-linked cell
found the group had been stockpiling tons of explosives.
A source told the newspaper: “Iran has Hezbollah operatives in position to carry
out a terrorist attack in the event of a conflict. That is the nature of the
domestic threat Iran poses to the UK.”MI5 and Metropolitan Police said they were
confident that the 2015 raids had “severely disrupted” Iranian terror activity
in the UK, but that cells still existed on the European mainland. The report
also disclosed that Iran had been blamed for a series of cyberattacks on the UK,
including hacking of politician’s and peers personal information, on the Post
Office as well as local government bodies and private sector companies in 2018.
The UK government has sent a letter of protest to the UN Security Council over
the seizure of the tankers in “Omani waters when it was interrupted by Iranian
forces,” which it says is an “illegal interference by Iran.”The UK government
has consistently said it does not seek confrontation with Iran, but the letter
added: “It is unacceptable and highly escalatory to threaten shipping going
about its legitimate business through internationally recognized transit
corridors.”
Lebanon: Efforts to Remove Obstacles to Cabinet Sessions
Beirut - Mohamed Choucair/Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 22 July, 2019
President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Saad Hariri are expected to launch
consultations on Monday to hold a cabinet session to place Lebanon on the right
track to obtaining $11bn in loans pledged by international donors at the CEDRE
conference following last week’s parliamentary approval of the 2019 budget,
government sources said. “The Prime Minister will likely call for a cabinet
session this week after consulting with President Aoun,” the sources told Asharq
Al-Awsat. They added that Hariri refuses to implicate the government in
political disputes. Cabinet sessions have been placed on hold since early July,
pending a solution to a crisis that emerged over demands to refer to the
Judicial Council the killing of two aides to State Minister for Refugee Affairs
Saleh al-Gharib in the Druze area of Aley. “How would the international
community respond to the ongoing paralysis of cabinet sessions after all the
efforts exerted by foreign sides to help Lebanon revitalize the stagnant
economy?” the sources asked. They also expressed surprise at the government
remaining the victim of delays amid swift developments in the region. On Friday,
Lebanon's parliament passed the 2019 state budget that is aimed at averting a
financial crisis in the heavily indebted country and to introduce economic and
fiscal reforms, which are a prerequisite for Beirut to obtain $11bn in loans
pledged by international donors at the CEDRE conference held in Paris last year.
“The approval of the 2019 budget is a step towards achieving the needed
administrative and monetary reforms to bring down the deficit,” the sources
said. Asharq Al-Awsat learned on Sunday that Aoun supports holding a cabinet
session the soonest.
Bolton: Iran, Hizbullah Threaten Security of Western
Hemisphere Countries
Naharnet/July 22/2019
The U.S. national security adviser John Bolton on Monday said that Iran and
Hizbullah “support” the Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and “directly threaten”
the security of the countries of the Western Hemisphere. “Iran and Hizbullah
support the illegitimate Maduro dictatorship’s tools of repression, torture, &
killing of innocent Venezuelans, and directly threaten the region’s security,”
said Bolton in a tweet. “We will continue to expose Maduro’s bedfellows and
Iranian efforts to operate in the Western Hemisphere,” he added.
Aoun Meets Senior UK Officer
Naharnet/July 22/2019
President Michel Aoun on Monday met with Lieutenant General Sir John Lorimer,
Britain's senior defence adviser to the Middle East accompanied by the UK
ambassador to Lebanon, Chris Rampling and the accompanying delegation, the
National News Agency said. Discussions focused on the general situation in
Lebanon and the region and the support given by the United Kingdom to the
Lebanese army and government, NNA said. “Lebanon backs initiatives that aim to
support stability in the region,” NNA quoted President Aoun as telling his
visitors. On the presence of displaced Syrians on Lebanese soil, Aoun said:
“Although more than 318,000 refugees have returned back to their homeland, but
more than 1.6 million refugees still live in Lebanon.” For his part Lorimer
said: “The UK will continue to support Lebanon and is interested in preserving
its economic situation.”Last week, Lebanon’s Defense Minister Elias Bou Saab
visited the United Kingdom and met with Secretary of State for Defence Penny
Mordaunt, Minister of State for the Armed Forces Mark Lancaster, and Chief of
the Defence Staff General Sir Nick Carter. Britain’s ambassador to Lebanon,
Chris Rampling, said “the visit reflects the value Britain places on the
relationship with Lebanon and in particular our defence cooperation.”He assured
that the UK remains a steadfast supporter to Lebanon through ongoing social,
economic, educational and humanitarian projects, in addition to further support
to the Lebanese Armed Forces and other security agencies.
Prosecutor Refers Qabrshmoun File to Military Court as
Arslan Insists on Judicial Council
Naharnet/July 22/2019
Acting State Prosecutor Imad Qabalan on Monday referred the file of the deadly
Qabrshmoun incident to the Military Court.
“This does not mean that things have been resolved, seeing as Lebanese
Democratic Party leader Talal Arslan is still clinging to his rejection of the
proposal” of referring the case to the Judicial Council, a top court that looks
into national security matters, MTV reported.
Prime Minister Saad Hariri is meanwhile stressing that he will not put the issue
of the Judicial Council on the agenda of the upcoming cabinet session, MTV
added. The TV network however noted that “there are several proposals to resolve
the crisis and Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim is continuing his efforts in this
regard.”Two bodyguards of State Minister for Refugee Affairs Saleh al-Gharib
were killed and a third was wounded in a clash with Progressive Socialist Party
supporters in the Aley town of Qabrshmoun on June 30. The minister, who is loyal
to Arslan’s LDP escaped unharmed as a PSP supporter was wounded. Gharib and
Arslan described the incident as an ambush and an assassination attempt while
the PSP accused the minister’s bodyguards of forcing their war and firing on
protesters. Arslan has insisted that the case should be referred to the Judicial
Council, a demand opposed by the PSP and its allies. The case has forced the
suspension of cabinet sessions since July 2.
Bou Saab Says Culprit Received $19 Million in Military
Academy Corruption Scandal
Naharnet/July 22/2019
Defense Minister Elias Bou Saab on Monday said one of those involved in the
Military Academy corruption scandal had pocketed $19 million in bribes. Speaking
at a press conference after meeting with the members of the defense
parliamentary committee, Bou Saab said the case is still stalled in the Military
Court and that he had referred the file to the ministry’s legal department. “I
sent a memo to the justice minister without naming anyone and I have not issued
a verdict against anyone in the Military Academy admission bribes file. I have
rather referred the file to the competent judicial authorities,” the minister
added. “I will let the investigation take its course and I have confidence in
the judicial inspection committee,” he added.
Abu Suleiman: Foreign Labor Law Privileges Palestinain
Workers
Naharnet/July 22/2019
Labor Minister Camille Abu Suleiman explained on Monday that the ministry’s plan
to regulate foreign labor in Lebanon gives Palestinian workers privileges
prohibited for other foreign laborers, and assured that “our goal is not to
increase their burden,” al-Hayat daily reported.
“Palestinians in Lebanon can get their work permits without having to pay any
fees,” contrary to other foreign workers said Abu Suleiman in a statement
published in the newspaper. Abu Suleiman’s statement came after a report
published in al-Hayat expressing the uproar raised by Palestinian factions in
Lebanon following the ministry’s decision to regulate foreign labor. “Abu
Suleiman assures that the ministry’s plan to regulate foreign labor in Lebanon
is not directed against anyone. Rather, it is the implementation of the Lebanese
Labor Law, which grants several privileges to Palestinian refugees, benefiting
from it, excluding foreigners,” said Abu Suleiman in a statement. "I have always
expressed my understanding of the difficult situation the Palestinians are
enduring, and defended their cause at the ILO conference in Geneva and the Arab
Labor Organization conference in Cairo in the past three months,” he added.
“I have given directives to facilitate the work permit procedures. Our major
concern is to implement the Lebanese law which serves our brethren Palestinians
especially at this delicate stage they are passing through," added the
statement. Palestinian refugees protested in the capital, as well as the south
and east of the country, against Lebanon's labor ministry cracking down on
businesses employing foreign workers without a permit. Last month, the ministry
gave companies a one-month deadline to acquire the necessary work permits. After
the grace period expired last week, it started inspections, closing down
non-compliant establishments and issuing others with warnings.
Lebanon Renaissance Foundation Concludes Its 6th Youth
Leadership Program
Naharnet/July 22/2019
As part of its efforts to promote attitude change and better governance among
the Lebanese political apparatus, the Lebanon Renaissance Foundation has
completed the sixth edition of the Youth Leadership Program under its motto
‘Politics is an expression of values, not power’’.
The program was concluded on June 29 over a training day focusing on Reflections
on Leadership facilitated by Amin Nehme, president of the Lebanese Development
Network.
The Program meant to introduce best practices of conduct and values to 22 young
practitioners (aged 24 to 30) from nine Lebanese political groups: al-Marada
Movement, Jamaa Islamiya, Lebanese Forces, al-Mustaqbal Movement, Free Patriotic
Movement, Kataeb Party, Lebanese Democratic Party, Progressive Socialist Party
and Tashnag Party. The curriculum comprised 45 hours of lectures and simulations
activities on the following themes: Personal dynamics; Government and State
Building; Role and Appraisal of the Central Inspection Bureau; Political Systems
and Electoral Laws; Radicalism and Religions; Role of Constitutions; Agriculture
in Lebanon: Status, Threats and Opportunities; Political Activism & Citizen
Values; Human Rights; Political Activism & Citizen Values; Defining and Tackling
Corruption; State Budget; Oil and Gas in Lebanon; Environment Threats &
Opportunities. Attendance certificates will be remitted to those who respected
the presence quota during a closing ceremony that will be held in October 2019.
Eighteen speakers shared their thoughts and experiences in fields and matters
not sufficiently covered by the Lebanese political discourse. They included
leading scholars, former cabinet members, activists and experts: Dr. Charbel
Nahas, Dr. Nayla Tabbara, Dr. Riad Saade, Me. Malek Takieddin, Wissam Kanj, Me.
Salah Honein, Justice Georges Atiyeh, Me. Ghassan Moukheiber, Dr. Alain Bifani,
Dr. Ali Mourad. Dr. Sami Atallah, Dr. Ali Darwich, Serge Yazigi, Fady Bustros,
Gilbert Doumit, Jean-Pierre Katrib, and training expert Rouba Fares.
Death Threats and Ban Calls ahead of Mashrou' Leila's
Byblos Gig
Naharnet/July 22/2019
The participation of popular Lebanese rock band Mashrou’ Leila in this year’s
edition of the Byblos International Festival has sparked a storm of controversy
in the country after the young artists were accused of “insulting Christianity”
in their songs. The band’s supporters and opponents are clashing on social
networking websites, amid calls for boycotting and banning the concert. Some
users, including Free Patriotic Movement official Naji Hayek, have openly
threatened to resort to violence to prevent the gig from taking place. The
Maronite Archbishopric of Byblos has meanwhile issued a statement calling for
“barring the Mashrou’ Leila performance on the land of holiness, culture and
history,” in reference to the city of Byblos. “The goals and lyrical content of
the band Mashrou’ Leila largely contravene with religious and human values and
contain attacks on Christian rituals,” the statement said. The head of the
Catholic Media Center, Father Abdo Abu Kasam, for his part stressed that “the
church will not allow any project or concert that insults our religious
sanctities.”“Lebanon is the country of freedoms, but one’s freedom stops at the
limit of the other and their respect and dignity,” Abu Kasam added. The band had
been banned from performing in Jordan in 2016 over similar accusations. The band
has toured several Western and Arab countries, including the UAE and Egypt. In
2017, at least six people were arrested in Egypt after raising the rainbow flag
of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community at Mashrou’ Leila’s
concert in Cairo. The band’s lead singer Hamed Sinno is openly homosexual. With
its unique blend of intricate indie rock and enigmatic Arabic poetry, the band
has become one of the Middle East's biggest bands. Sinno's lyrics touch on
sexuality but have also tackled the curses of Lebanese politics, materialism and
social strife, often with satirical twists. Mashrou’ Leila began in 2008 as a
university jam band at the American University of Beirut and adopted influences
from Balkan melodies, American folk music, and mainstream pop.
Gharib Meets Hariri, Says Open to 'Decent Solutions' for Qabrshmoun Crisis
Naharnet/July 22/2019
State Minister for Refugee Affairs Saleh al-Gharib on Monday met with Prime
Minister Saad Hariri at the Grand Serail after which he announced that his party
is “open to decent solutions” regarding the crisis sparked by the deadly
Qabrshmoun incident. “We are keen on the country and on activating the work of
the Council of Ministers,” Gharib added. “According to criminal classification,
the case of the Qabrshmoun incident should be referred to the Judicial Council,”
he said. “PM Hariri is carrying out a series of contacts to reconcile
viewpoints,” Gharib added. Explaining that his party’s insistence on referring
the case to the Judicial Council is not aimed at “political spite,” Gharib said
the Council is “a court for carrying out the investigation and not a
verdict.”“An innocent person should not fear anything,” he said. Gharib had
announced while entering the meeting that the Military Court is an “obligatory
pathway” and not a substitute to the Judicial Council. Acting State Prosecutor
Imad Qabalan had referred the file to the Military Court earlier on Monday. Two
of Gharib’s bodyguards were killed and a third was wounded in a clash with
Progressive Socialist Party supporters in the Aley town of Qabrshmoun on June
30. The minister escaped unharmed as a PSP supporter was wounded. Gharib and his
party described the incident as an ambush and an assassination attempt while the
PSP accused the minister’s bodyguards of forcing their way and firing on
protesters. Gharib’s party has insisted that the case should be referred to the
Judicial Council, a demand opposed by the PSP and its allies. The case has
forced the suspension of cabinet sessions since July 2.
Washington should wake up to the fact that Hezbollah runs
Lebanon
طوني بدران من موقع العربية: على واشنطن أن تعي حقيقة أن حزب الله يتحكم بلبنان
ويدير شؤونه
Tony Badran/Al Arabiya/July 22/2019
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The Lebanese foreign minister acknowledged the US classification of Hezbollah as
a terrorist organization, but said his government’s disagreement should not
preclude “good relations with the USA.”
The US State Department has invited Gebran Bassil to Washington to speak at a
conference, despite the Lebanese foreign minister’s known ties with Hezbollah –
which the US has designated as a terrorist organization since 1995. This is due
to the US’s misguided policy toward Lebanon, which fails to acknowledge that an
investment in the country’s “state institutions” is an investment in the
Hezbollah state.
Lebanon’s foreign minister, Gebran Bassil, came to Washington last week at the
invitation of the US State Department to participate in its Ministerial to
Advance Religious Freedom. The State Department inviting a staunch Hezbollah
ally like Bassil – to address a gathering devoted to religious tolerance, no
less – encapsulates the deep confusion in Washington about Lebanon.
Just before he took off for Washington, Bassil met with newly sanctioned
Hezbollah security chief Wafiq Safa, with whom Bassil has a close relationship.
Abbas Ibrahim, head of Lebanon’s Directorate of General Security, also joined
the meeting, an indication of the structural synergy between Hezbollah and
Lebanese state institutions.
The Trump administration is aware of Bassil’s relationship with Hezbollah.
According to leaked cables originally sent from the Lebanese embassy in
Washington to the foreign ministry in Beirut, a senior US Treasury Department
official told a visiting Lebanese minister: “We hope the Minister of Foreign and
Expatriate Affairs understands that we are following closely his statements
about Hezbollah.” The official, the cable continued, “hoped Minister Bassil
would distance himself from Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah and his group.”
Prior to this, Bassil had made statements in support of Hezbollah following its
designation as a terrorist group by the UK. He declared the group would “remain
embraced by state institutions and all Lebanese people.” A month later, standing
next to US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Beirut, Bassil again defended
Hezbollah, insisting it “is a political party, that it is not terrorist.”
The Lebanese foreign minister acknowledged the US classification of Hezbollah as
a terrorist organization, but said his government’s disagreement should not
preclude “good relations with the USA.” The US has hardly done anything to
convince him, or Lebanon more broadly, otherwise. For this reason, Bassil likely
felt confident he and his government can continue to have it both ways without
consequences, which is why he ignored the US Treasury official’s warning.
Political alliances with Hezbollah have not jeopardized the Lebanese
politicians’ ability to receive US support, thanks to the latter’s policy of
investing in Lebanon’s so-called “state institutions” and political stability.
The Lebanese appear to have concluded – not without justification – that this
means the US will only push so far. The Hezbollah-allied foreign minister,
therefore, rightly guesses he has little to worry about. Case in point: He was
in Washington at the invitation of the State Department.
Incredibly, the US – the world’s lone superpower – has resolved that it needs to
prove itself to the Lebanese, so as to convince them to view it as their partner
of choice. The Lebanese pocket the goods, and face few demands beyond some
measure of compliance by the banks with US sanctions on Hezbollah. The US-funded
Lebanese Armed Forces are not asked to do anything to counter Hezbollah; only to
“fight ISIS.” In short, US investment in Lebanon works to the advantage of
Hezbollah, which dominates the political order.
Bassil, whose ambition is to succeed his father-in-law, Michel Aoun, as
president, knows full well that Hezbollah runs Lebanon. Without Hezbollah’s
approval, his ambition cannot be realized. The foreign minister understood early
that Lebanon was Hezbollah’s domain, and he signed a formal alliance with it in
2006. He witnessed the group’s dominance repeatedly, especially when it
paralyzed the country in order to impose his father-in-law as president. He saw
how it forced Prime Minister Saad Hariri out of the country in 2011, allowing
him back in to the country, and to head the government, only after he had
capitulated fully to their demands.
Lebanese publicists dishonestly seek to minimize the group’s power by reducing
it to the number of ministries they hold, or the number of their MPs in
parliament — even as they hold a majority in both the cabinet and parliament. In
fact, Hezbollah’s grip on Lebanon is comprehensive. It exercises decisive
influence on the security sector, but also directs the entire political order.
The political order services it in turn. Bassil is not the only official
Lebanese visitor to Washington in recent days. Last week, a delegation led by
Ali Bazzi, an MP for the Amal party, was in town to discuss the US sanctioning
of two Hezbollah lawmakers, which Bazzi called a threat to democracy.
Bazzi also compared Hezbollah to George Washington, saying: “George Washington
fought the British occupation for the sake of freedom and independence, and also
in my country there are people who resisted and are resisting occupation and
terrorism.”
In April, a US official told an Emirati paper on background, “Hezbollah and Amal
are one.” Regardless, Lebanese ministers who came to Washington at the time were
reassured that Amal’s chief, Speaker of Parliament Nabih Berri, would not be
targeted with sanctions.
This is now a pattern. Lebanese delegates – both those allied with, and
nominally opposed to, Hezbollah – all come to Washington and condemn any US
action against Hezbollah, lobby to water down sanctions, and make the case for
going soft on Lebanon, all while asking for continued aid even as they regularly
collaborate with Hezbollah. The Lebanese government, in other words, is
Hezbollah’s diplomatic and collections arm.
Washington’s long-standing policy that distinguishes between Hezbollah and the
Lebanese state is sorely misguided. As Bassil’s relationship with Hezbollah
exhibits, this distinction is a false one. An investment in Lebanon’s “state
institutions” is an investment in the Hezbollah state.
*Tony Badran is a research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
He tweets @AcrossTheBay.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
July 22-23/2019
Iran Arrests 17 For Spying For The CIA, Some Sentenced To
Death
Jerusalem Post/July 22/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/76909/%d8%a5%d9%8a%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%86-%d8%aa%d8%b9%d9%85%d9%84-%d8%b9%d9%84%d9%89-%d8%aa%d8%b3%d9%84%d9%8a%d8%ad-%d8%b3%d9%88%d8%b1%d9%8a%d8%a7-%d9%88%d8%ad%d8%b2%d8%a8-%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%84%d9%87-%d8%b9%d9%86/
"The identified spies were employed in sensitive and vital private sector
centers in the economic, nuclear, infrastructural, military and cyber areas."
Iran has captured 17 spies working for the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
and some have been sentenced to death, Iranian media reported on Monday,
according to the semi-official Fars News Agency.
State television quoted the Intelligence Ministry as saying it had broken up a
CIA spying ring and captured 17 suspects. None of the spies were in contact with
each other and all of those arrested were Iranian citizens, according to Fars.
The announcement comes after three months of spiraling confrontation with the
West that began when new, tighter US sanctions took effect at the start of May,
Reuters reported. Last week, Iran captured a British tanker in the Strait of
Hormuz after Britain's Royal Marines seized an Iranian tanker off the coast of
Gibraltar in July 4. "The identified spies were
employed in sensitive and vital private sector centers in the economic, nuclear,
infrastructural, military and cyber areas... where they collected classified
information," said a ministry statement read on state television.
The CIA recruited some of the spies by offering to aid them with the US visa
application process and promises of permanent residence permits, according to
Fars. The Iranian nationals were also assured of their safety in Iran and
abroad.
Some of the recruitment was conducted by CIA officers on the sidelines of
scientific conferences in Europe, Africa and Asia. The agency also began
correspondence with some of the Iranian nationals through social networks and
email.
As part of the espionage operation, the CIA established fake companies to
communicate with the Iranian nationals on the pretext of hiring Iranian experts
or supplying equipment from abroad.
The spies established secure communications with the CIA with the help of
intelligence tools and complex technical equipment from the agency.
Espionage equipment and money were transported into the country inside stones
with spyware embedded in them. Agents would then retrieve the stones from
various areas in cities, parks and mountain areas and remove the equipment by
breaking the stones.
The agents were also provided with fake identity documents.
The CIA had developed an emergency escape plan for the spies, in which the
agents would meet CIA officers at a predetermined place in a border town and
then exit the country with the agent. Instead, the agents were captured by
Iranian officials when they arrived at the predetermined escape point, according
to Fars. Iran's Intelligence Ministry stated that
although the spies had undergone training to withstand interrogation, all the
members of the spy network ended up confessing to communicating with the CIA.
Fars also reported that information from the spies was directed against the US.
The Iranian Intelligence Ministry will provide information uncovered regarding
this spy ring to intelligence services in other countries, in order to further
thwart CIA espionage attempts. This will most likely affect other European and
Asian countries as well, according to Fars.
Iranian state media reported that the arrests were made in the Iranian calendar
year ending in March 2019, according to Reuters.
The Iranian judiciary issued sentences for the spies a few days ago, according
to Fars. Some were sentenced to death while others received long-term prison
sentences. Those arrested were professionals and experts in Iran, but did not
serve any official roles.
According to the ministry, the spy network failed to sabotage or disrupt
activities in the Islamic republic.
It was not immediately clear if the arrests were linked to the case where Iran
said in June that it had exposed a large cyber espionage network it alleged was
run by the CIA, and that several US spies had been arrested in different
countries as a result of this action, according to Reuters.
Iran Says Busts CIA Spy Ring, Some Sentenced to Death
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 22 July, 2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/76909/%d8%a5%d9%8a%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%86-%d8%aa%d8%b9%d9%85%d9%84-%d8%b9%d9%84%d9%89-%d8%aa%d8%b3%d9%84%d9%8a%d8%ad-%d8%b3%d9%88%d8%b1%d9%8a%d8%a7-%d9%88%d8%ad%d8%b2%d8%a8-%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%84%d9%87-%d8%b9%d9%86/
Iran said on Monday that it arrested 17 suspects and sentenced some to death
after allegedly dismantling a CIA spy ring.
Security agencies "successfully dismantled a (CIA) spy network," the head of
counter-intelligence at the Iranian intelligence ministry, whose identity was
not revealed, told reporters in Tehran. "Those who deliberately betrayed the
country were handed to the judiciary... some were sentenced to death and some to
long-term imprisonment."The suspects were reportedly arrested between March 2018
and March 2019. Iran announced in June that it had broken up an alleged CIA spy
ring but it was unclear whether Monday's announcement was linked to the same
case. Iran’s new claims come amid soaring tensions between Tehran and
Washington. In May 2018, President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew the US
from a landmark 2015 deal putting curbs on Iran's nuclear program in exchange
for sanctions relief. The US administration reimposed biting sanctions on Iran,
which retaliated by increasing its enrichment of uranium beyond limits set in
the nuclear accord. Trump called off air strikes against Iran at the last minute
in June after Iran downed a US drone, one of a string of incidents including
attacks on tankers in the Gulf. The tensions have escalated since British
authorities seized an Iranian oil tanker on suspicions it was shipping oil to
Syria in breach of EU sanctions. In what was seen by Britain as a tit-for-tat
move, Iran's Revolutionary Guards seized a UK-flagged tanker in the strategic
Strait of Hormuz on Friday, angering the US ally.
Britain Says Planning European-Led Protection Force in Gulf
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/July 22/2019
British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt on Monday said the UK wanted to establish
a European-led maritime protection force for the Gulf but emphasized that London
was not seeking a confrontation with Iran. "We will now seek to put together a
European-led maritime protection mission to support the safe passage of both
crew and cargo in this vital region," Hunt told parliament after Iranian
authorities seized a British-flagged tanker in the Gulf on Friday.
Top Omani Diplomat to Visit Iran amid Regional Tensions
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/July 22/2019
Oman's top diplomat will head to Iran this weekend, the Gulf country announced
Monday, amid increased regional tensions with the Islamic republic. "Yusuf bin
Alawi bin Abdullah will visit Iran on Saturday to discuss bilateral relations
and for continuous consultations, particularly in regards to recent regional
developments," the sultanate's foreign ministry said on Twitter. Oman has
maintained good relations with Iran throughout successive regional crises,
allowing it at times to play a key mediating role, including with the United
States. Tensions in the Gulf have soared since May amid a deepening standoff
between Iran and the U.S. over Tehran's nuclear program, with a string of
incidents involving tankers and drones. The U.S. and Gulf powerhouse Saudi
Arabia blamed Iran for being behind multiple attacks on tankers in the Gulf in
June, which Iran denies. On Friday a British-flagged tanker was impounded by
Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps with its 23 crew members aboard in the
Strait of Hormuz. Oman has called for the release of the Stena Impero and for
London and Tehran to resolve their dispute with diplomacy. Saudi Arabia slammed
Iran's seizure of the ship as "completely unacceptable", urging world powers to
"take action to deter such behavior." Both Kuwait and Qatar said they were
following with "extreme concern" the developments in the region and urged all
parties to exercise restraint. "These actions increase escalation and tensions
and put navigation safety under direct threat," the Kuwaiti government said in a
statement carried by the official KUNA news agency. The Gulf has been a
theater of increased pressure on Iran from Washington. The U.S. deployed an
aircraft carrier task force as well as B-52 bombers, an amphibious assault ship
and a missile defense battery to the Gulf in May. The movements came in response
to alleged Iranian threats to US interests or those of its Middle East allies.
But they have raised concerns, even among governments close to the U.S., that
brinksmanship with Tehran could lead to a dangerous miscalculation.
Scores Killed, Injured in Russian Air Strike on Syria Market
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 22 July, 2019
Sixteen civilians were among 19 people killed Monday in a Russian air strike on
a busy market in northwest Syria, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said,
in the latest violence to plague the opposition bastion. At least 45 other
people were wounded in the air raid that hit "a wholesale vegetable market in
the town of Maaret al-Numan" in Idlib province, the monitor said. The death toll
could still rise as many of those wounded are in a critical condition and some
people are still trapped under rubble, it added. Observatory head Rami
Abdelrahman said 16 of those killed were civilians while three other bodies
remain to be identified. However, Russia's defense ministry denied reports that
it was responsible for the air strike. "The statements of anonymous
representatives of the White Helmets organization financed by Britain and the US
about an alleged strike by Russian planes on a market in Maaret al-Numan are
fake," said a defense ministry statement quoted by TASS state news agency. The
latest strike comes one day after air raids by Damascus and its Russian ally on
the opposition-run Idlib region killed 18 people, including a young citizen
journalist. Anas al-Dyab, a photographer and videographer in his early 20s, was
a member of the White Helmets rescue group who also contributed to AFP. He was
killed in Russian air strikes in his hometown of Khan Sheikhoun on Sunday,
rescuers and the Observatory said. The Damascus regime and Moscow have stepped
up their deadly bombardment of Idlib since late April, despite a September
buffer zone deal to protect the region of some three million people from a
massive military assault. The spike in violence has killed more than 650
civilians, caused tens of thousands to flee there homes, and damaged or knocked
out of service two dozen health facilities.
Tehran sources: An Israeli Harop drone attacked pro-Iranian
Iraqi militia base NE of Baghdad
DebkaFile: 22 July/2019
Iranian and Iraq intelligence sources claim an Israeli Harop UAV carried out the
attack on the 52nd Brigade of the Hashd Shaabi militia on Friday, July 19. The
attack struck the militia at a Badr Brigades camp outside Amerli town in the
Salahudin Province northeast of Baghdad. The sources identify the fragments
gathered at the site as belonging to the IAF’s Harop, a loitering combat
unmanned vehicle, itself a flying bomb, developed by Israel’s Aerospace
Industries. This drone is a stealth munition that can loiter for up to six hours
before homing in on a target. It has a range of 1,000km. The Badr camp is about
900km from Israel.
Some Russian aviation websites also speculated on Sunday that Israel was
responsible for the attack.
According to Iranian Revolutionary Guards, there were no casualties – in denial
of local accounts of deaths among Iranian and Hizballah officers.
If the Iranian and Iraqi claim is confirmed, it would represent three
groundbreaking events:
1-The Israeli Air Force’s first known attack on an Iranian target using a Harop
UCAV.
2-The first Israeli attack deep inside Iraq not far from its border with Iran.
3-The Israeli minister Tzachi Hnegbi’s blunt remark on Sunday, that in the past
two years Israel has caused Iranian military deaths in both overt and covert
operations, may have betrayed some impatience with the Trump administration’s
policy of military restraint against Iran, including Tehran’s threat to Gulf
shipping. In certain circles, Washington’s restraint is seen as exposing Israel
to bolder Iranian aggression.
Israel has repeatedly put Tehran on notice that its plans to use Iraq as a
launching pad for attacks on Israel would not be tolerated.
Hamas meets Iran's supreme leader during warm visit in
Tehran
Ynetnews/Associated Press/July 22/2019
'Hamas is Iran's first line of defense' says the terror group's deputy chief
during talks with Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as the alliance between the Palestinian
faction and the Islamic Republic appears to expand
Iran's state TV says a delegation from the Palestinian militant group Hamas that
is visiting Iran has met with the country's supreme leader. The TV report on
Monday says Ayatollah Ali Khamenei held talks with Hamas' deputy chief, Saleh
al-Arouri, who is heading the delegation. The Hamas delegation also met with
Kamal Kharrazi, an adviser to Khamenei. "Hamas is Iran's first line of defense,"
said Al-Arouri following the meeting. The supreme leader issued a statement at
the end of the meeting, calling the U.S. peace proposal - dubbed "the deal of
the century" - a "dangerous plot" intended to destroy Palestinian identity with
money. "This is the main point that one should resist, and not allow them to
eliminate the Palestinian identity using money ... several years ago,
Palestinians were fighting using stones now they have precision rockets," he
said. The Iranian official news agency IRNA says al-Arouri's visit to Tehran
follows a visit by senior Iranian parliamentary official Hossein Amir-Abdollahian
to Lebanon last week. Iran backs both Hamas and the Lebanese militant Hezbollah
group. Earlier on Sunday, Hamas rulers in Gaza condemned Israel's demolition of
a Palestinian village Sur Baher on the outskirts of Jerusalem, which the Supreme
Court ruled was an illegal construction. The terror group called for
intensifying "resistance" to the "the Zionist settlement project" in an official
statement. "The increase in the occupation's crimes against the residents of the
holy city is a result of total American support," said Hazem Qassem, a spokesman
for the militant group.
Kushner to Head to Mideast to Push Palestinian Economic
Plan
Associated Press/Naharnet/July 22/2019
President Donald Trump's son-in-law and senior adviser, Jared Kushner, is
returning to the Mideast at month's end to promote the administration's $50
billion economic support plan for the Palestinians that they've rejected because
it ignores their political demands.
Kushner outlined the plan's ambitious investment and development goals at a
Bahrain conference last month. It relies heavily on private sector investment in
the West Bank, Gaza as well as Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon. The plan acknowledges
its success depends on completing a long-elusive Israeli-Palestinian peace deal.
Trump has cut aid and political support to the Palestinians. Critics say that
shows his administration's pro-Israel bias. The U.S. has also refused to endorse
a two-state solution that's long been seen as the only viable path to peace.
Russian Air Strikes on Syria Market Kill 23
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/July 22/2019
Russian air strikes on a market in northwestern Syria killed 23 people on
Monday, a monitor said, in the latest violence to plague the country's last
major opposition bastion. Moscow, however, denied it was responsible, calling
the reports "fake". The jihadist-run Idlib region, home to some three million
people, is supposed to be protected by a months-old international truce deal,
but it has come under increased bombardment by the Syrian regime and its ally
Russia since late April. The spike in violence has killed more than 650
civilians and damaged or knocked out of service two dozen health facilities.
More than 330,000 people have fled violence in the area over the past three
months, according to the United Nations. On Monday morning, 19 civilians and
four people still to be identified were killed in raids that hit a vegetable
market and surrounding areas in the town of Maaret al-Numan in Idlib province,
the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. At least a further 45 people were
wounded, according to the monitor, which said the death toll could rise as many
of those injured were in a critical condition and people were still trapped
under rubble. The Britain-based Observatory says it relies on a network of
sources inside Syria and determines whose planes carried out air strikes
according to type, location, flight patterns and munitions involved. Men
drenched in blood were carried away from the site of the attack by residents and
rescue workers, who used mattresses as makeshift stretchers, an AFP photographer
said. He saw the corpse of one man sprawled on the ground near a motorcycle,
rubble surrounding his lifeless body. With his eyes closed and his face covered
in dust, another man clutched the arms of two people helping him out of the
area, the photographer added.
Rescue worker killed
The White Helmet's rescue group said that one of its volunteers was killed in
the raids. At least six rescue workers have been killed since April. On Sunday,
air strikes on Idlib killed 18 people, including a young citizen journalist.
Anas al-Dyab, a photographer and videographer in his early 20s, was a member of
the White Helmets who also contributed to AFP. He was killed in Russian air
strikes in his hometown of Khan Sheikhun on Sunday, rescuers and the Observatory
said. Russia and rebel backer Turkey brokered an agreement in September seeking
to stave off an all-out regime assault on Idlib, but the deal was never fully
implemented as jihadists refused to withdraw from a planned buffer zone. The
Hayat Tahrir al-Sham group, led by ex-members of Al-Qaeda's former Syria
affiliate, in January extended its control over the region, which spans most of
Idlib province as well as slivers of the adjacent provinces of Latakia, Hama,
and Aleppo. The UN has expressed alarm over the escalation of violence in
Syria's northwest, warning that it may lead to the worst humanitarian
catastrophe in the eight-year civil war.
Pope expresses 'deep concern'
The Vatican too has said it is worried. President Bashar al-Assad received two
Vatican cardinals in Damascus on Monday. They handed him a letter from Pope
Francis, "who expressed (his) deep concern for the humanitarian situation in
Syria, especially the dramatic conditions of the civilian population in Idlib,"
according to a Vatican statement. Regime forces have been locked in battle with
jihadists and allied rebels on the edges of the Idlib region, as they try to
advance in the opposition stronghold. But pro-governement forces have failed to
secure significant advances in the months-long push. According to Sam Heller, an
analyst at the International Crisis Group think-tank (ICG), the violence is
likely to continue until "Russia and Turkey reach an agreement to calm" the
frontline. In the meantime, "each side will try to put pressure on the other
through their Syrian partners on the ground" or "directly, (as) with the Russian
bombing of parts of Idlib", he added. Syria's war has killed more than 370,000
people and displaced millions since it started in 2011 with a brutal crackdown
on anti-government protests.
Airstrikes Kill 50 Civilians in Syria's Northwest
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/July 22/2019
Regime and Russian air strikes killed 50 people in northwest Syria on Monday,
most of them in a crowded market, a war monitor said, in the latest violence to
plague the opposition bastion. In the town of Maaret al-Numan in Idlib province,
men covered in blood were carried away from the market by residents and rescue
workers, who used mattresses as makeshift stretchers, an AFP photographer said.
He saw the corpse of one man sprawled on the ground near a motorcycle, rubble
surrounding his lifeless body. With his eyes closed and his face covered in
dust, another man clutched the arms of two people helping him out of the bombed
area, the photographer added. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said air
strikes on the vegetable market and surrounding areas in Maaret al-Numan killed
36 civilians and two unidentified persons. The Britain-based monitor said
Russian aircraft carried out the air raids, but Moscow denied it was
responsible. "The Russian air force was not carrying out any missions in this
part of Syria," said a defense ministry statement. More than 100 other people
were wounded, according to the monitor, which said many of those injured were in
a critical condition and people remained trapped under the rubble. The head of
the local hospital, Radwan Shardub, described his horror at seeing "burnt and
carbonized bodies, and body parts". "It's boundless criminality to shameful
international silence," he said. The White Helmets rescue group said one of its
volunteers was killed during the raids, raising the number of rescue workers
killed since April to at least 6.
Fragile truce
The jihadist-run Idlib region, home to some three million people, is supposed to
be protected by a months-old international truce deal, but it has come under
increased bombardment by the Syrian regime and its ally Russia since late April.
The spike in violence has killed more than 690 civilians, and damaged or knocked
out of service two dozen health facilities in jihadist-held territory. More than
330,000 people have fled violence in the area over the past three months,
according to the United Nations. In total, jihadist and rebel fire into
regime-held areas has killed close to 60 non-combatants in that same period, the
Observatory says. Another 12 civilians were killed in regime airstrikes in other
parts of the bastion on Monday, the war monitor said. Meanwhile, retaliatory
rocket fire by jihadists and allied rebels killed 14 civilians in Hama and
Aleppo provinces, state-run SANA news agency said. Russia and rebel backer
Turkey brokered an agreement in September seeking to stave off an all-out regime
assault on Idlib, but the deal was never fully implemented as jihadists refused
to withdraw from a planned buffer zone. The Hayat Tahrir al-Sham group, led by
ex-members of al-Qaida's former Syria affiliate, in January extended its control
over the region, which spans most of Idlib province as well as slivers of the
adjacent provinces of Latakia, Hama and Aleppo.
On Sunday, air strikes on Idlib killed 18 people, including a young citizen
journalist. Anas al-Dyab, a photographer and videographer in his early 20s, was
a member of the White Helmets who also contributed to AFP. He was killed in
Russian air strikes in his hometown of Khan Sheikhun, rescuers and the
Observatory said.
'Violence must stop'
The Idlib region "has fast become one of most dangerous places in the world for
civilians and aid workers today", said David Swanson of the U.N. Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
"This violence must stop and it must stop now," he told AFP. In Damascus,
President Bashar al-Assad on Monday received two Vatican cardinals who handed
him a letter from Pope Francis expressing "deep concern for the humanitarian
situation in Syria, especially the dramatic conditions of the civilian
population in Idlib". Regime forces have been locked in battle with jihadists
and allied rebels on the edges of the Idlib region but have failed to secure
significant advances. According to Sam Heller, an analyst at the International
Crisis Group think-tank, the violence is likely to continue until "Russia and
Turkey reach an agreement to calm" the frontline. In the meantime, "each side
will try to put pressure on the other through their Syrian partners on the
ground" or "directly, (as) with the Russian bombing of parts of Idlib", he
added. Syria's war has killed more than 370,000 people and displaced millions
since it started in 2011 with a brutal crackdown on anti-government protests.
Iraq: PMF Denies Attack on its Camp Near Saladdine
Baghdad - Hamza Mustafa/Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 22 July, 2019
The recent incident at the Martyrs’ Camp of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF)
near Amerli in Saladdine governorate, was a fire resulting from solid fuel
burning due to malfunction, announced a commission of inquiry of PMF. The
commission denied there was a drone or guided missile attack on the camp,
asserting that investigations have shown that the explosion was not a military
attack. It also added in its report that none of the Forces’ members were killed
during the incident north of Baghdad. PMF sent a probing committee of security,
intelligence, missile, field engineering, explosives, and drones experts to the
Camp to investigate the incident, which reportedly resulted in the death and
injury of two Iranian military advisers. Meanwhile, member of the State of Law
Coalition MP Mansour al-Baiji accused the United States of bombing this camp.
The Iraqi government should take action and respond to the US targeting of PMF
members, said Baiji adding that the investigative committees are merely a tool
to procrastinate the case and will not yield any results. He warned that
targeting the group’s sites is a dangerous and sensitive issue and the
government should make this clear to all Iraqis.
Kuwait Promises to Solve Bidoun Issue this Summer
Kuwait - Merza al-Khuwaldi/Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 22 July, 2019
Kuwaiti Speaker Marzouq al-Ghanim revealed Sunday that Emir Sheikh Sabah
Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah has ordered to resolve the issue of illegal residents
(Bidoun) by the end of summer. “The Kuwaiti government is working closely with
parliament to find a comprehensive solution to the situation involving the
country’s illegal residents, in a way that would not inhibit their national
identity rights,” said Al-Ghanim. Their problem is the oldest and most
complicated issue in the country. This month, Kuwait’s State Security agency
arrested 15 activists from the Bidoun community, after they organized a sit-in
at al-Hurriya Square in al-Jahra town near Kuwait City on July 12. According to
Al-Ghanim, “The solution will be set in motion by legislation the parliament
seeks to approve in its forthcoming term, or in an emergency session if need
be.”He confirmed a government initiative to solve the illegal residents’ issue,
saying it was not announced in order to ensure its success and to prevent
parties with ill intentions from benefiting from the process or result. He also
explained that he cannot divulge details because talks and deliberations are
underway between the parliament, government and other concerned authorities on
several points.
The speaker promised that the solution would be just and conclusive, taking into
account all humanitarian aspects without any effect on national identity. “We
neither created nor started this problem as it was inherited by every sector in
the country,” Al-Ghanim said.
Mohammed bin Zayed: UAE Keen on Navigation Freedom in Gulf, Mideast
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 22 July, 2019
Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy
Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, said Monday that the UAE was keen on
the freedom and safety of international navigation in the Gulf and the Middle
East. The Crown Prince, who met with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great
Hall of the People in Beijing, said that the UAE “would cooperate with China and
other friendly countries to achieve this goal to ensure the safe flow of oil
supplies worldwide.”“China, with its great capability and potential, has a
pivotal role in the world and an influential presence in regional and
international issues,” Emirates News Agency quoted him as saying. “China enjoys
strong relations with Gulf states and other Arab and Middle East countries, and
the UAE is looking forward to an active Chinese role in establishing peace in
the Middle East and address the source of regional dangers and threats,” said
Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed. He also pointed to the cooperation between the two
countries in working against terrorism and extremism, which he described as the
greatest threat to world security, stability, and development.
Japan to Make Every Effort to Reduce US-Iran Tensions
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 22 July, 2019
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe stressed on Monday that Tokyo wants to make
every effort to reduce tension between the United States and Iran before
responding to an expected US request to send its navy to guard strategic waters
off Iran. Japanese media have said a US proposal to boost surveillance of Middle
East oil shipping lanes off Iran and Yemen, where the United States says Iran
and its proxies have carried out tanker attacks, could be on the agenda of Abe’s
talks with US national security adviser John Bolton. Abe said that before making
a decision on joining the United States, Japan would like to fulfill what it
sees as a unique role it has to play in reducing tension. “We have a long
tradition of friendship with Iran and I’ve met with its president any number of
times, as well as other leaders,” Abe told a news conference a day after his
coalition’s victory in an election for parliament’s upper house. “Before we make
any decisions on what to do, Japan would like to make every effort to reduce
tensions between Iran and the United States.”Japan needed to gather information
on what the United States is thinking and what it hoped to accomplish, Abe said,
adding that the two allies remained in close contact. Bolton, who heads to South
Korea after Japan, met Japanese national security adviser Shotaro Yachi and
Foreign Minister Taro Kono and later described his talks with Kono as “useful”.
“We had a very productive discussion, we talked about a very wide range of
issues,” Bolton told reporters. Last week, Iran captured a British tanker in the
Strait of Hormuz in what was the latest escalation in three months of spiraling
confrontation with the West that began when new, tighter US sanctions took
effect at the start of May. Washington imposed the sanctions after President
Donald Trump pulled out of a deal signed by his predecessor Barack Obama, which
had provided Iran access to world trade in return for curbs on its nuclear
program. European countries including Britain have been caught in the middle.
They disagreed with the US decision to quit the nuclear deal but have so far
failed to offer Iran another way to receive the deal’s promised economic
benefits. Britain was thrust more directly into the confrontation on July 4,
when its Royal Marines seized an Iranian tanker off the coast of Gibraltar.
Britain accused it of violating sanctions on Syria, prompting repeated Iranian
threats of retaliation. While Iran’s official line is that its capture of the
Stena Impero was because of safety issues, it has done little to hide that the
move was retaliatory.
Israel Considers Granting PA Tax Breaks
Ramallah - Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 22 July, 2019
Israel is considering granting the Palestinian Authority (PA) tax breaks to
prevent its economic collapse, reported Israel Hayom newspaper. The Israeli
cabinet is expected to discuss the provision of economic facilities to
circumvent the law of deduction of the salaries of the families of martyrs and
prisoners from the funds owed to the Authority. The PA is suffering from a large
financial deficit following its rejection to receive tax revenues from Tel Aviv
after authorities deducted amounts from them. Israel Hayom confirmed that over
the past few weeks, talks were held between the two sides to find a way to ease
economic pressure on the PA. The talks were approved by political officials in
Tel Aviv especially that Israeli security services fear the Authority is under
threat of economic collapse. Reports claim that Israel’s Finance Ministry could
waiver imposing fees of Palestine’s fuel purchases from Israel, which could save
about 200 million shekels a year, thus ease the economic pressure. However, PA
sources noted that any reduction of the allowances of the families of the
martyrs and prisoners is unacceptable, no matter the alternatives. PA President
Mahmoud Abbas said on Saturday the leadership will not accept the tax revenues,
collected by Israel on behalf of the Palestinians if it was not paid in full.
Tel Aviv fears a potential collapse of power that could lead to chaos. Since the
deduction law entered into effect, Israeli political and security apparatus are
seeking ways to bypass the transfer of funds to the Palestinians without
breaking the law, in a manner that does not raise criticism of public opinion.
French Submarine Lost in 1968 Finally Located in
Mediterranean
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 22 July, 2019
A private search vessel has located a French submarine that went missing in the
western Mediterranean more than 50 years ago, officials said Monday, raising
hopes the mystery over the disappearance can finally be solved. "It's a success,
a relief and a technical feat," Defense Minister Florence Parly wrote on
Twitter, after the wreck was discovered off the southern French port of Toulon.
"I am thinking of the families who have waited for this moment for so long." The
Minerve submarine was lost off France's southern coast with 52 sailors on board
on January 17, 1968, Agence France Presse reported. Despite multiple search
efforts over the years, it had never been found, AFP said. Parly announced a new
search mission at the beginning of 2019, backed by the latest technology and
naval vessels, following fresh demands from the families of deceased sailors to
find the remains of their loved ones.
Tides and currents in the western Mediterranean were modeled by the team, while
data from the time of the accident was also re-analyzed, including seismic
reports indicating the likely implosion of the vessel as it dropped to the
seabed. But the discovery was ultimately made by a boat belonging to private US
company Ocean Infinity, which found the Minerve 45 kilometers from Toulon at a
depth of 2,370 meters, a senior French naval officer told AFP. The boat, the
Seabed Constructor, arrived on the scene last Tuesday, the officer said on
condition of anonymity.
The Seabed Constructor was also successful in locating Argentina's lost San Juan
submarine in November 2018 which had disappeared in the Atlantic Ocean a year
earlier. The cause of the accident involving the Minerve has never been
announced. Experts have speculated that it could have been due to a problem with
its rudder, a collision with another boat, the explosion of a missile or
torpedo, or a fault with its oxygen supply systems. In February, Israel began
deducting about $11.5 million a month from tax revenues transferred by Israel to
the Palestinians and did so continuously during 2019. The amount totaled to
about $138 million, which is equivalent to the payments paid by the PA to the
families of martyrs and prisoners in 2018. The newspaper reported that Israel’s
Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon, is responsible for the tax authority, however,
officials at Kahlon’s office noted that the issue is purely political and the
Minister acts according to the government’s decisions. The office of the Israeli
government coordinator in the Palestinian territories declined to comment on the
report. Head of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, Avi Dichter,
rejected reports claiming that the PA would collapse, saying he doesn’t fear
this would happen. Dichter stated that the security forces opposed the tax
reduction law from the outset for fear of the collapse of the PA, but Israel
cannot accept a position in which the PA cooperates with it while paying to the
“saboteurs.”The MK told Israel Hayom that “we can overcome the obstacles and
monitor the amount of money received by terrorists' families. We expect that
this will be done.”
Egypt Minister of Endowments Warns of ‘Muslim Brotherhood Terrorism’
Cairo - Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 22 July, 2019
Egyptian Minister of Endowments Mohammed Mokhtar Jomaa warned of the threat of
the Muslim Brotherhood, officially classified as a terrorist group since
November 2014. Egypt accuses the group of stoking chaos and violence in the
country following the ouster of former president Mohamed Morsi in July 2013, but
the group usually denies the accusation. The minister reiterated his rejection
of the Brotherhood and its rhetoric, pointing out in a statement that the
group’s slogan is “either to rule or kill and destroy.”Morsi ruled the country
for a year before his ouster, after which he was imprisoned. He died while
standing trial in June this year. Jomaa said members of the Brotherhood claim
they are “God's chosen group”, noting that since its establishment, the
terrorist organization has been threatening Egypt. It is driven by its
treasonous collaboration with enemies of the Arab world and its belief that its
authority can only be built on the ruins of its nations. He called for “complete
vigilance and hard work to uproot extremism”. Hundreds of Brotherhood leaders
and supporters are being tried in Egypt in cases mostly linked to violence. On
Sunday, an Egyptian military court adjourned to July 29 the trial of 304
defendants in the Hasm movement case, involving the attempted assassination of
the assistant attorney general. Defendants include former minister and member of
the Brotherhood’s Guidance Bureau Mohammed Ali Bishr. Investigations revealed
that the suspects received intelligence support from Qatar and Turkey, in
agreement with Brotherhood fugitive leaders, to attack the police and armed
forces and obstruct state institutions. In another case, the criminal court of
Cairo adjourned to August 4 the trial of 11 defendants, including Brotherhood
fugitive leaders in Turkey, suspected in the assassination attempt of the
Alexandria security director.
The prosecution accuses the defendants, including two prisoners, of joining the
Hasm movement, which is the armed wing of the Brotherhood, and providing its
members with funds, equipment, weapons and other means of logistical support and
attempting to assassinate the former Alexandria security chief and his guards.
Six Shiites Dead in Nigeria Clashes over Imprisoned Leader
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/July 22/2019
At least six Shiite Muslim protesters were killed in clashes with Nigerian
police in the capital Abuja on Monday, witnesses told AFP, the latest deadly
violence over the lengthy detention of a religious leader. Hundreds of
protesters from the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), a Shia sect, marched
demanding the release of pro-Iranian cleric Ibrahim Zakzaky, who has been held
since December 2015 on various charges, including terrorism. Hundreds of his
supporters, including women and children, were killed by the security forces, in
December 2015, according to a toll established by rights watchdogs.
After witnessing the violence on Monday, a Shiite protester, Abdullahi Musa,
said: "I am right now in front of six dead bodies, one of them is an underage
boy." "Many, many people were shot."An AFP journalist said he saw police open
fire with live ammunition as well as tear gas, while protesters threw petrol
bombs at the officers."I saw six people dead in different places, one of them
was a teenager," the journalist said. A senior police officer was also killed in
the violence, according to local reports, which the journalist verified.
A local fire station was set ablaze.
The IMN have held almost daily marches in the capital in recent months amid
concerns Zakzaky's health is deteriorating. Zakzaky remains in government
custody despite the federal high court ordering his release. The government has
refused and filed fresh criminal charges, including culpable homicide that is
"punishable with death". The move has enraged his supporters who say Zakzaky is
in urgent need of medical treatment being denied by the authorities. Police on
Monday described the clashes as "a violent protest" but gave no casualty
figures. "The police are taking adequate measures to bring the situation under
control," Nigerian police spokesperson Frank Mba said. Amnesty International
condemned the police action as a "reckless use of force". "This new crackdown is
part of a shocking pattern in which security forces have used live ammunition to
disperse IMN supporters who are simply exercising their freedom of expression,"
the rights group said. Nigerian broadcast company Channels TV said one of its
journalists was hit by a stray bullet.
- 'Assassinate my parents' -
Zakzaky has been at loggerheads with Nigeria's secular authorities for years
because of his call for an Iranian-style Islamic revolution. Northern Nigeria is
majority Sunni Muslim. He was detained after violence during a religious
procession in Kaduna State, northern Nigeria in December 2015. Rights groups say
some 350 mostly unarmed Shiite marchers were killed by the Nigerian army and
buried in mass graves. The military denies the claim. Since then, several
protest marches by IMN supporters have led to violence with the police. In
October 2018, the IMN and human rights groups said, more than 40 people were
killed when the security forces opened fire on crowds on the outskirts of the
capital. The official toll is six. After a rare visit by medical staff, the IMN
said Zakzaky was suffering from a number of conditions including lead poisoning,
high blood pressure, and glaucoma which can lead to partial blindness.
Zakzaky's wife, Zeenah Ibrahim, has also been detained since 2015. She had an
un-treated bullet wound, medical staff said. Their son Mohammed Zakzaky
earlier this month said it was a miracle they were still alive. "It appears that
there is a deliberate attempt to assassinate my parents through deliberate
negligence towards their health," he said. A spokesperson for President
Muhammadu Buhari last week called for an end to the IMN's protests which "openly
insult the President." The IMN said they would continue demonstrating as past
court orders for Zakzaky's release had been ignored.
"This government deliberately intends to provoke the movement into violence,"
said IMN spokesperson Ibrahim Musa in a statement. The IMN, which emerged
as a student movement in the late 1970s, was inspired by the Islamic revolution
in Iran. The sect is met with hostility in Nigeria, where the Sunni elite are
allied with Saudi Arabia.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials
from miscellaneous sources published
on July 22-23/2019
The Hamas-Iran Plan to Eliminate Israel
بسام طويل/معهد كايتستون:
مخطط حماس وإيران لإنالة إسرائيل وتدميرها
Bassam Tawil/Gatestone Institute/July 22/2019
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14575/hamas-iran-eliminate-israel
"There are Jews everywhere. We must attack every Jew on planet Earth! We must
slaughter and kill them, with Allah's help. We will lacerate and tear them to
pieces." — Fathi Hammad, Hamas senior leader, at a rally near the Gaza-Israel
border, July 14, 2019.
Haniyeh's statements coincided with a visit to Iran by a senior Hamas
delegation. Headed by the Palestinian arch-terrorist Saleh Arouri, the
delegation will spend a few days in Tehran for talks with Iranian leaders on
ways of strengthening relations between the two sides.
If the Hamas arch-terrorist succeeds in his mission to secure more funding from
Iran, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other terror groups in the Gaza Strip will most
likely ratchet up their terror activities against Israel. The most effective way
to stop Hamas from carrying out its plan to "slaughter" every Jew is by
increasing international sanctions and other means of pressure on Iran -- before
it is too late.
In the Hamas lexicon, launching arson kites at Israeli farms and villages near
the border with the Gaza Strip is defined as "peaceful resistance." Pictured:
Firefighters attempt to extinguish a burning wheat field in Nahal Oz, Israel,
next to the border with Gaza after it was torched by an incendiary kite launched
by Palestinians from the Gaza Strip, on May 15, 2018.
Has Hamas, the Palestinian terror group that rules the Gaza Strip, finally
accepted the two-state solution and abandoned its objective to destroy Israel?
The headlines in some Arab media outlets on July 20 created the impression that
Hamas has changed its policy and is no longer seeking the annihilation of
Israel. More remarkably, the headlines made it seem as if Hamas were presenting
a new plan for peace with Israel.
Quoting statements by Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, several Arab media
organizations ran headlines implying that the terror group now favors the
two-state solution. "Hamas does not oppose the establishment of a [Palestinian]
state on the 1967 borders," the headlines shouted.
Haniyeh reportedly made his statements during a video conference interview with
Turkish journalists in Istanbul. The interview was organized by a group called
the Palestinian Forum for Communication and Media, which describes itself as an
"independent media organization aiming to enhance coordination between Arab and
international media organizations to support the Palestinian cause."
Although the initial impression created by Haniyeh's statements suggest a
dramatic shift in Hamas's policy – from seeking the destruction of Israel to
accepting the two-state solution – it quickly becomes clear from reading the
rest of his remarks that there is no change in the terror group's strategy or
ideology.
Haniyeh carefully clarified that accepting a Palestinian state on the pre-1967
"borders" does not mean that Hamas would recognize Israel's right to exist.
"Hamas is not opposed to the establishment of a state on the 1967 borders, but
insists on not recognizing the Israeli occupation of the rest of the Palestinian
territories," the Hamas leader is quoted as telling the Turkish journalists.
Haniyeh, to his credit, was more honest that the editors who chose the
misleading headlines suggesting that Hamas has accepted the two-state solution.
Listen closely to what Haniyeh was really saying: "If we are offered a
Palestinian state next to Israel, we will not say no. While we will take
whatever Israel gives us, we will never recognize its right to exist. We will
use the state as a launching pad to liberate all Palestine, from the
Mediterranean Sea to the Jordan River."
Haniyeh's remarks are nothing but a smokescreen, intended, it seems, to deceive
the world into thinking that his terror group has softened its position towards
Israel and Jews.
Yet, the Hamas leader was quite clear about the terror group's stance. He even
went as far as assuring the Turkish journalists that his movement will never
abandon the "armed struggle" against Israel. "We often resort to peaceful and
popular resistance [against Israel]," Haniyeh said. "This does not mean,
however, that we have given up our armed resistance against Israel."
For Haniyeh, the weekly demonstrations along the Gaza-Israel border, which are
being held in the context of the Hamas-sponsored "Great March of Return," as
"peaceful" and "popular" acts of "resistance." The protests, which began in
March 2018, are anything but "peaceful" and "popular."
In the Hamas lexicon, launching rocks and arson kites at Israeli farms and
villages near the border with the Gaza Strip is defined as "peaceful
resistance."
Although the organizers of the protests have been publicly calling on
participants to preserve the "peacefulness" of their weekly demonstrations,
Palestinians have repeatedly attempted to infiltrate into Israel by knocking
down the security fence along the border or hurling firebombs and explosive
devices at Israeli soldiers. They are probably doing that because they do not
listen to what their leaders tell them, or because they have lost faith in their
leaders and believe that violence is the only way to extract concessions from
Israel.
Last Friday, the protests were held under the banner of "The Friday of burning
the Zionist flag." The demonstrators not only burned Israeli flags; they also
clashed with Israeli soldiers. Reports from the Gaza Strip said that more than
70 Palestinians were injured during the clashes.
In addition, since the beginning of the protests in March 2018, more than 260
Palestinians have been killed, and thousands injured. The number of Palestinians
taking part in the Friday protests finally appears to be declining: many Gazans
have apparently reached the conclusion that their leaders are using them to
advance their own interests. Since the marches started, Palestinians have seen
no improvement in their living conditions.
If you follow Hamas's logic, it is only a matter of time before the organization
declares that firing rockets again and kidnapping Israeli villagers are also
"peaceful" and "popular" means of "resistance." The mainstream media in the West
will doubtless continue dutifully to rewrite its definitions.
Hamas's true intentions were expressed by one of its senior leaders, Fathi
Hammad. During a rally near the Gaza-Israel border, he recently said: "There are
Jews everywhere. We must attack every Jew on planet Earth! We must slaughter and
kill them, with Allah's help. We will lacerate and tear them to pieces." He also
urged Palestinians to purchase "five-shekel knives" and "cut the necks of Jews."
Haniyeh's statements coincided with a visit to Iran by a senior Hamas
delegation. Headed by the Palestinian arch-terrorist Saleh Arouri, the
delegation will spend a few days in Tehran for talks with Iranian leaders on
ways of strengthening relations between the two sides.
In November 2018, the US Department of State offered a five million dollar
reward for information about Arouri, who serves as deputy head of Hamas's
"political bureau."
Saleh Arouri's covert operational activities, including the handling of Hamas
terrorist squads, are mainly carried out in Lebanon and Turkey," according to
the Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center. "In Lebanon, where
he lives today, he operates under the sponsorship of Hezbollah with no
interference from the Lebanese government, while in Turkey the authorities
ignore his activities and those of Hamas."
Arouri is one of the founders of Hamas's armed wing, Izaddin al-Qassam Brigades,
and is responsible for several bloody terrorist attacks against Israeli
civilians and soldiers, including the 2014 kidnapping and murder of three
Israeli teenagers in the West Bank.
Notably, Arouri is not travelling to Tehran to discuss with Iranian leaders ways
to improve the living conditions of Palestinians in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.
He is wholly preoccupied with how to acquire more weapons and money for killing
Jews. It is no coincidence that Hamas chose a commander of its armed wing to
head the delegation to Iran. He is going to Tehran to request weapons and
funding for terror activities, his special expertise.
The Iranian leaders, for their part, are not about to offer Arouri and his
friends cash to construct hospitals and schools in the Gaza Strip. Iran will
ensure that its money is earmarked for building more terror tunnels along the
Gaza-Israel border and manufacturing rockets that will be used to attack Israel.
Iran's leaders never tire of reminding everyone of their desire to annihilate
Israel. The most recent threat came from a senior Iranian lawmaker, Mojtaba
Zolnour, chairman of the Iranian parliament's National Security and Foreign
Policy Commission. "If the US attacks us, only half an hour will remain of
Israel's lifespan," he said.
In another threat earlier this year, the second-in-command of the elite Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps said that Iran will obliterate Israel if it starts a
war, and the Israelis will not even be able to bury their dead. "Our strategy is
[to wipe] Israel [off] the world's political geography and Israel seems to be
approaching this reality by its mischiefs," Brigadier General Hossein Salami
told reporters in Tehran. If Israel "does anything that leads to a new war,
certainly it will be [the kind of war] that will result in their elimination,
and the occupied territories will be retaken. Israelis won't even have a
cemetery in Palestine to bury their corpses."
In welcoming the Hamas delegation, the leaders of Iran seem to know something
that is hidden by misleading headlines: that Hamas remains committed to its goal
of destroying Israel.
The Iranian leaders know that Arouri, with his proven record of terrorism and
his hands dripping with Jewish blood, is someone Tehran can do business with.
Hamas is desperate for cash and weapons. It needs these resources not because it
is ready to accept the two-state solution, but in order to prepare for the next
war with Israel.
It seems that Arouri is seeking to affirm to his Tehran cash-cow that Hamas is
still very much on the same page as they are: eliminating Israel and replacing
it with an Iranian-backed terror state.
If the Hamas arch-terrorist succeeds in his mission to secure more funding from
Iran, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other terror groups in the Gaza Strip will most
likely ratchet up their terror activities against Israel. The most effective way
to stop Hamas from carrying out its plan to "slaughter" every Jew is by
increasing international sanctions and other means of pressure on Iran -- before
it is too late.
*Bassam Tawil is an Arab Muslim based in the Middle East.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
To the EU: Iran's Mullahs Will Never Be Your Friend
مجيد رافيزادا/معهد
كايتستون/أقول للإتحاد الأوروبي بأن ملالي إيران لن يكونوا اصدقاء لكم
Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/July 22, 2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/76905/%d9%85%d8%ac%d9%8a%d8%af-%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%81%d9%8a%d8%b2%d8%a7%d8%af%d8%a7-%d9%85%d8%b9%d9%87%d8%af-%d9%83%d8%a7%d9%8a%d8%aa%d8%b3%d8%aa%d9%88%d9%86-%d8%a3%d9%82%d9%88%d9%84-%d9%84%d9%84%d8%a5%d8%aa/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14571/iran-eu-mullahs-friends
Despite these attacks, and attempted attacks, the EU, despite its ceaseless
moral sanctimony, continues to soften its tone toward Iran, presumably out of a
zeal for doing business even with a country designated the world's leading state
sponsor of terrorism.
The more the EU appeases the Iranian government, the more it empowers it to
pursue aggressive and terrorist activities.
The EU needs to stop appeasing the ruling mullahs of Iran who are consistently
engaged in terror activities in Europe, and join its old transatlantic partner,
the US, in putting even more pressure on Iran's fundamentalist government.
Iran has recently become more aggressive and breached the 300kg limit on
enriched uranium, among several other malign actions. Pictured: The Isfahan
uranium enrichment facility in Isfahan, Iran.
The extent to which the European Union is willing to go in order to appease the
ruling mullahs of Iran, is unfathomable. To witness the EU siding with the
fundamentalist government of Iran rather than backing its old transatlantic
partner, the United States, is a shock.
Since President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the flawed
agreement, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) , Iran's leaders have
been consistently pushing for Europe to do more to appease them; more than it is
capable of delivering.
First, the EU came up with a mechanism called the Instrument in Support of Trade
Exchanges (INSTEX). Its purpose was to shield the Iranian government from
economic sanctions, in order to assist its ruling clerics -- and Europe -- in
gaining more revenues.
Then, Iran became more aggressive and breached the 300kg limit on enriched
uranium, among several other malign actions (here, here and here). The increased
level of enrichment was a blatant violation of Iran's agreement and contrary to
the shared international desire -- except for Iran's ayatollahs -- to
de-escalate regional tensions.
The Trump administration rightfully classified the development as "nuclear
blackmail", an example of what seems tantamount to a scarcely concealed,
increasingly desperate effort to force the Europeans into persuading the United
States to lift the sanctions against it.
Although Iran has clearly breached the JCPOA and although the International
Atomic Energy Agency stated that Iran violated the JCPOA, the response from
Europe has been muted. After a meeting with foreign ministers, the EU High
Representative for Foreign Affairs, Federica Mogherini, said that the EU's focus
remains to "keep the agreement in place", telling reporters that Europe will
consider Iran to be "fully compliant" with the nuclear agreement.
Instead of reacting to the fact that Iran poses an enormous threat to the EU
national security interests, the EU will more likely attempt to chart other
paths to help the ruling mullahs of Iran. In recent years, since the JCPOA was
reached between the P5+1 (China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the
United States, plus Germany) and the Islamic Republic, a series of assassination
and terrorist plots across Europe, some successful and others not, have been
traced back to Tehran.
On an evening in November 2017, as Ahmed Mola Nissire walked up to his home in
The Hague, Netherlands, an assassin gunned him down right in front of his door.
Nissire, a Dutch citizen of Iranian origin, was 52 years old, and a prominent
figure in the Arab Struggle for the Liberation of Ahvaz, an activist group that
fights for the formation of a separate state in Western Iran.
For the first time, Dutch authorities publicly announced that it was the Iranian
government which commissioned the murder. Based on Nissire's resistance to
Iran's tyrannical government, a target had been placed on his back, and his life
was ended to further the goals of Iran's autocratic rulers -- whom the EU
supports and shields.
Nissire's death is not an isolated case. Another of Tehran's political
opponents, Ali Motamed, was killed under similar circumstances in Amsterdam in
2015.
European officials also foiled a terrorist attack that targeted a large Free
Iran convention in Paris, attended in June 2018 by many high-level speakers --
including former US House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich, former New
York City mayor Rudy Giuliani, and former Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird.
An Iranian diplomat and several other individuals of Iranian origin were soon
arrested in France, Belgium and Germany. After a thorough investigation, French
officials concluded that the Iranian regime had been behind the bomb plot. If
the terrorist attack had been successful, the loss of life would have been
staggering, but the devastating toll it would have taken on the community that
fights for human rights, would have been immeasurable. Now it is clear there is
a target on the backs of those who stand up for freedom and human rights.
This certainly was not an isolated plot in Europe. Iran's attacks were also
detected in 2018 in Denmark, where officials accused Tehran of attempting to
assassinate one of its citizens. Foreign Minister Anders Samuelsen emphasized
the seriousness of the plot by saying:
"An Iranian intelligence agency has planned an assassination on Danish soil.
This is completely unacceptable. In fact, the gravity of the matter is difficult
to describe. That has been made crystal clear to the Iranian ambassador in
Copenhagen today."
Despite these attacks, and attempted attacks, the EU, despite its ceaseless
moral sanctimony, continues to soften its tone toward Iran, presumably out of a
zeal for doing business even with a country designated the world's leading state
sponsor of terrorism.
The more the EU appeases the Iranian government, the more it empowers it to
pursue aggressive and terrorist activities.
The EU needs to stop appeasing the ruling mullahs of Iran who are consistently
engaged in terror activities in Europe, and join its old transatlantic partner,
the US, in putting even more pressure on Iran's fundamentalist government.
*Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a business strategist and advisor, Harvard-educated
scholar, political scientist, board member of Harvard International Review, and
president of the International American Council on the Middle East. He has
authored several books on Islam and US Foreign Policy. He can be reached at
Dr.Rafizadeh@Post.Harvard.Edu
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
The Day Hope Landed on the Moon
Stephen Carter/Bloomberg View/July 22/2019
When I remember the moon landing, I think about my father. Fifty years ago, on
the evening of Sunday, July 20, 1969, we sat together in Dad’s capacious study
in our house in Ithaca, New York, holding our breaths, hardly uttering a word as
the Eagle touched down.
My father, raised in Barbados, was a stern and distant man of donnish bent. He
was rarely impressed and almost never smiled. But when Neil Armstrong, the
Apollo 11 mission commander, stepped onto the lunar surface, Dad grinned from
ear to ear. The nation joined in. The world joined in. The jubilation of the
moment cannot be explained. There is no analogy.
A glowing profile a few days before launch insisted that Armstrong’s “acts”
would “survive in all probability as long as mankind exists.” That was how
people felt, as if history had suddenly taken a sharp turn. Actually it hadn’t —
but we were in the grip of a fevered optimism.
If you’re not old enough to remember, the chances are you don’t appreciate how
desperately the nation and the world needed Apollo 11. The Vietnam War seemed
eternal. Richard Nixon was in the White House. Meanwhile, heroes were falling
everywhere. Just 13 months earlier, Robert Kennedy had been assassinated in Los
Angeles. Two months before that, Martin Luther King Jr. had been murdered.
During the spring and summer of 1968, the nation’s cities had burned.
That weekend, the nation’s left was in a particularly bad way. On Saturday
morning — literally the day before the Eagle touched down — I had witnessed my
father’s agony after learning that the previous night, Senator Edward Kennedy
had driven his car off a bridge on Chappaquiddick Island, resulting in the death
of Mary Jo Kopechne. The senator would (quite justifiably) be dogged by
questions about Chappaquiddick for the rest of his political career.
My father was bereft. He had worked in John Kennedy’s administration and been
part of Robert Kennedy’s presidential campaign. He was among those who had seen
Teddy as the best hope to defeat President Richard Nixon in 1972. Now that hope
was gone.
Yet now one of his hero John Kennedy’s greatest dreams was about to be realized,
and Dad was smiling. JFK’s promise to put a man on the moon within the decade
has given us the phrase “moon shot,” used routinely nowadays to describe the
commitment of vast resources to solving a specified problem.
It’s easy to forget how in the 1950s and early 1960s, the US lagged behind the
Soviet Union in the space race. The Soviets launched the first true satellite,
put the first man in space, put the first woman in space, and accomplished the
first spacewalk. The US was terrified of falling further behind. Winning the
race to the moon became among the highest of national priorities.
Yet there were those who harbored doubts. Civil rights groups protested the
cost, asking why the money wasn’t being spent on building affordable housing and
solving other urban problems. In 1966, Martin Luther King Jr. had observed
wryly, “In a few years we can be assured that we will set a man on the moon and
with an adequate telescope he will be able to see the slums on Earth with their
intensified congestion, decay and turbulence.” In the spring of 1969, scant
weeks before the launch of Apollo 11, the National Welfare Rights Organization
even staged a sit-in outside Mission Control in Houston.
As I watched with excitement Armstrong climbing down to the lunar surface, I was
aware of none of this ferment. My father was heavily involved in the movement,
but he had not chosen to share such concerns with his children. Our middle-class
parents had raised us as far as possible from “the slums on Earth” of which King
spoke.
The young teenager I was had grown up reading science fiction and dreaming of
outer space. I was too caught up in the delight of the moment to consider other
possible ways to spend the money. Stanley Kubrick’s film “2001: A Space Odyssey”
had been released the year before, and I lost count of how many times I saw it.
In my teenaged mind’s eye, I foresaw a near future in which hopping onto a
spacecraft was little different than hopping onto a plane. I wanted lunar
colonies, space stations, missions to our sister planets and beyond.
Finally the moment came. “Armstrong on the moon!” flashed the television. We all
remember his carefully scripted first words — “That’s one small step for man,
one giant leap for mankind” — even if he flubbed them by omitting “a” before
“man.” But I’ve always liked his next words, because they were spontaneous:
“Yes, the surface is fine and powdery. I can pick it up loosely with my toe.”
In the half century since, it’s become common to describe the mission as a waste
in that sense, because so little was learned.
The criticism misses the mark. The moon landing, like the space program itself,
served a different set of needs. All through history, the stars have been
shining down on what we are pleased to call civilization. Reaching those distant
glimmers has been a human dream for as long as there have been human beings to
look upward in wonder. The desire has quickened in billions of hearts. And for a
jubilant moment on the evening of July 20, 1969, we really thought the world had
taken one giant leap along the way.
Hormuz Hostages and ‘Caution and Foresight’
Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al Awsat/July 22/2019
Fifty years after man set foot on the moon for the first time and the hopes that
emerged from that scene, the Middle East seems to be stuck in old and new
conflicts that deprive it of the opportunity to embark on the train of natural
states engaged in development and progress.
In these five decades, the Palestinians have not found their state… Nor the
Kurds their rights. Fear has retained the title of first citizen in the region.
Countries are worried about their borders, or fearing surprises inside their
home. Governments are unable to meet development goals. Modern institutions are
incapable of coping with existing problems and predicting imminent ones… It is a
painful region full of conflicts, waves of refugees and suicidal tendencies that
are destroying it and threatening the whole world.
If this region had previously been worried about its wealth and land from
lurking foreign powers, it is now afraid of the adventurous approach of
countries dreaming of grabbing the title of the great local state. A quick look
at the region shows how it is crowded with small mobile armies, rockets, drones
and reckless policies.
Last week, one had to follow two events at the same time. The celebration of the
anniversary of the first man on the moon and the crisis that erupted near the
Strait of Hormuz, with all its local and international implications.
As oil tankers became the victims of a new hostage crisis, people in the region
and the world remembered an old similar crisis that unfolded 40 years ago, when
the Iranian revolution took Americans hostage at their country's embassy in
Tehran. Some are quick to conclude that the region has not changed, nor has
Iran.
As I watched the video released by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard about the British
oil tanker’s capture, I remembered what I had heard on the sidelines of the G20
summit in Osaka. The Japanese speaker was trying to explain his country’s
current concerns.
“Japan lives in a difficult region and you do not choose your neighbors,” he
said, referring on the one hand to North Korea's behavior and its repeated
celebrations of its latest military production, and on the other hand, to the
Chinese rise and its economic, political and possibly security implications on
his country.
He said countries should be both rational and firm. Rational, to avoid engaging
in any escalation resorted to by a mischievous or reckless neighbor; and firm,
by possessing elements of strength that can deter players who like to play on
the edge of the abyss.
The elements of power, in his opinion, are to develop your own strengths to
defend yourself, and at the same time, forge alliances that form a protective
umbrella against adventures. He considered that the most difficult challenge a
country can face is dealing with a worried and aggressive neighbor, who follows
a path that does not comply with international values and the principles and
resolutions of the United Nations.
The video released by the Revolutionary Guard poses many questions. Why did Iran
choose a British tanker? Is it about the release of the Iranian tanker detained
in Gibraltar? Is it precisely because Britain is overwhelmed these days by the
search for a successor to Theresa May, fearing a Brexit without agreement? Or is
it because Britain today is no longer the Britain of the past, which sent its
fleet in the early 1980s to reclaim the Falkland Islands and defeat the
Argentine generals who tried to humiliate the former empire? Is it because
Britain can no longer wage war alone, and because Donald Trump will not wage a
war for Britain?
Many questions arise: Why did Iran choose the path of escalation? Did it make
sure that Trump meant what he said when he announced that he did not want to go
to war? Did it consider this step as a show of force that awakens national
feelings and distracts its citizens from their suffering due to the
unprecedented sanctions imposed by the Trump administration on Iranian oil
exports?
Did Tehran want to provide an example of the possibility of resorting to a
partial closure of the Strait of Hormuz with a series of incidents that prompt
countries to advise their tankers to avoid the trap of the strait? Does Tehran
want to change the rules of the game so that the world’s only demand is for it
to stop meddling with the Strait of Hormuz, instead of demanding that it put its
ballistic arsenal and regional policy on the table in any future negotiations?
The countries of the region find it difficult to understand Iranian behavior,
which is far from relying on the conventional international norms. Tehran claims
that it wants the withdrawal of the forces of major powers from the region, but
acts in a way that justifies these countries to strengthen their presence.
The bombing or seizure of tankers unequivocally confirm that the problem with
Iran lies in its behavior before it its nuclear ambitions. This is why the
countries of the region cannot but take all the necessary measures to strike a
balance that prevents a slide into war.
In this context, it is possible to understand Saudi Arabia’s decision to accept
to host US forces “to raise the level of joint action in defending the security
and stability of the region and ensuring peace.” Saudi Arabia, which has openly
declared that it does not want war, sees US troops as “a continuation of
military cooperation between the two countries, which aims to keep pressure on
Iran and prevent it from further escalating” the tension.
The region has no interest in a new war. But the conditions for stability do not
seem to be available. Iran has not changed and continues to reject international
norms. Forty years after Americans were held hostage at their country’s embassy
in Tehran, oil tankers are being held hostage near the Strait of Hormuz.
Iran is betting that the decision of war is not appropriate for Trump, who is
aspiring for a second presidential term. Some believe that the sanctions are
painful enough to tempt it into taking risks. Others believe that straining the
line of contention with the West and its allies is a policy it uses to renew the
cohesion of its regime. But this type of game is not suitable for all times and
places. The brink of war is fraught with dangers. Tehran should take advantage
of its foreign minister’s advice to others to deal with “caution and foresight.”
Iran faces long road before it is trusted by neighbors
Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab News/July 22, 2019
A closed-door conference held recently in Europe concerning developments on the
political scene in the Middle East and ways to address them was attended by
high-profile characters from several countries, including Iran. The discussions
during the event and informal talks in the breaks between sessions focused on
the tensions between the US and Iran, their consequences, the options at hand
and the repercussions of these tensions on the region.
The leading figures appearing at the event from the Iranian side were all close
to President Hassan Rouhani and his Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif. Most
of these figures occupy or once occupied senior positions within the government.
Some of the meetings were heated whereas others were calm, with some of those
present trying to ease the tensions whenever they reached an advanced stage of
controversy or mutual recrimination or got bogged down in efforts to prove a
particular viewpoint or to refute a certain argument.
I won’t go into details about the content of the conference and the various
sessions, which lasted for a day-and-a-half. I did, however, come away from the
event having reached several conclusions and made a number of observations
concerning Iranian affairs that I believe are important, which I will summarize
in the following points.
First: The political bloc known as the moderates or reformists is deeply
concerned about its future in Iran. Some of those attending the conference said
openly that this political bloc would face massive challenges in the foreseeable
future due to the increasing domination of the fundamentalists over state
apparatuses, Parliament, and the entire government.
These moderates fear that the fate of Rouhani and Zarif will be similar to that
of former President Mohammed Khatami and perhaps that of the late Ayatollah
Hashemi Rafsanjani, who died in ambiguous circumstances, with the finger of
blame being pointed at the fundamentalists.
Second: The Iranian government believes that escaping the current crisis Iran is
experiencing depends on improving relations with the Gulf nations, especially
Saudi Arabia, and that dialogue between Riyadh and Tehran is the shorter, more
reasonable and more effective course for the Iranian side. Saudi Arabia is seen
as being capable of salvaging the reformist bloc on the one hand and easing US
pressure on Iran on the other.
Third: The Iranian reformist-moderate bloc is not opposed to the Islamic
revolutionary principles on which the regime is founded, despite their efforts
to present themselves to the West as being liberal. When they are confronted
with facts, they find themselves in limbo without convincing answers or
acceptable justifications, shifting quickly to the more well-known discourse and
language adopted by the hard-line revolutionary regime and its fundamentalist
supporters.
The recent conference saw numerous verbal lapses by the Iranian delegates,
putting their colleagues in awkward situations. Many of those present noted the
disgruntled expressions on the faces of the more junior or more genuinely
moderate delegates as their colleagues launched extremist tirades. These
outbursts confirmed the prevalent belief among the people in the region that the
internal, superficial disputes between the wings of the regime do not
substantially affect the Iranian regime’s foreign policy.
The Iranian government headed by Rouhani is still not involved in making the
country’s key strategic and critical decisions, even in the difficult
circumstances like those which Iran is currently experiencing. Indeed, officials
of the Iranian Foreign Ministry are not updated on many of the details related
to the developments of Iran’s relations with the world, especially those
intermediaries tasked with attempting to bring Iran’s views closer to those of
the international community.
The regime’s profoundly racist and supremacist anti-Arab worldview is, in
general, still an insurmountable obstacle
The “unofficial” shadow foreign ministry, represented by former Foreign Minister
Ali Akbar Velayati and which is linked to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, is kept
more regularly updated about these developments and is closer to the
leadership’s decision-making circle than the official Foreign Ministry
represented by Zarif. Fifth: The problem of the Iranian regime’s profoundly
racist and supremacist anti-Arab worldview is, in general, still an
insurmountable obstacle for Iran before anybody else. The political leadership
in Iran is still unwilling or unable to let go of the nation’s imperial
historical legacy. Indeed, it has ardently embraced this legacy and allowed it
to dominate the Iranian conscious and subconscious mindset, despite the
impossibility of reviving this legacy given the concepts of the modern world and
the nation state, let alone the lack of ability among Iran’s leadership to
ensure that the country plays a role as a leading nation or presents an
attractive model of governance at home and abroad.
Sixth: The team of the former US President Barack Obama and those affiliated
with him are still liaising with the Iranian government. Some former officials
in the administration play a strong voluntary role in convincing European
governments and companies to deal with Iran economically, commercially and
politically. The Iranian participants at the conference couldn’t hide their
nostalgic yearning for the Obama administration and its soft approach to Tehran,
which enabled the regime to expand its influence across the region, with its
militias and sleeper cells becoming active in every sphere.
In the end, there is still a long and bumpy road ahead for the Iranian regime if
it wishes to gain the confidence of the region’s countries, to prove its
goodwill and to work to change its behavior toward the region and the world.
This requires the Iranian regime to change its mindset through working to gain
confidence and to convince the other parties, by doing so steadily, that its
change in behavior is not tactical but a real strategic change, albeit
gradually.
While the Gulf nations are always ready and prepared to strengthen relations
with their neighbors, their historic experiences with Iran following the 1979
revolution prove that we should always question the regime’s objectives and
remain deeply skeptical about its intentions, with its words being deceptive by
default until proven otherwise. Although this approach is frustrating in the
context of conducting international relations in general, it is, unfortunately,
not only acceptable but essential in the case of Iran.
*Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami is Head of the International Institute for Iranian
Studies (Rasanah). Twitter: @mohalsulami