LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
June 02/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.june02.19.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
So you also, when you have done all that you were ordered
to do, say, “We are worthless slaves; we have done only what we ought to have
done!
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke 17/07-10: “‘Who among you
would say to your slave who has just come in from ploughing or tending sheep in
the field, “Come here at once and take your place at the table”?Would you not
rather say to him, “Prepare supper for me, put on your apron and serve me while
I eat and drink; later you may eat and drink”? Do you thank the slave for doing
what was commanded? So you also, when you have done all that you were ordered to
do, say, “We are worthless slaves; we have done only what we ought to have
done!” ’
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on June 02/2019
US Experts Study 'Hezbollah’s' Underground Tunnels
Nasrallah Warns Region to Burn if Iran Attacked, Slams Hariri's Mecca Stance
Tens of Syrian Refugees Return Home from Lebanon
Hariri Meets State Leaders on Sidelines of OIC Summit
Bustani Resumes Campaign to Remove Violations on Power Grid
Report: Budget Braces for More Changes in Parliament
Lebanon's Army Commander Slams Attempts to Weaken the Military
Kataeb MP Nadim Gemayel Says Hezbollah Was First to Violate Dissociation Policy
Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel Condemns Absolute Silence on Nasrallah's Statements
Kataeb politburo member Serge Dagher Lashes out at Nasrallah's Remarks: Who Gave
You the Right to Speak on Our Behalf?
Mecca summits highlight Lebanon’s precarious position
From Hezbollah spy to Haredi farmer
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on June 02/2019
2 rockets fired from Syria at Golan; no injuries
Iran Increases Stockpiles of Nuclear Materials: IAEA
Russia Rebuffs Iranian Request to Buy S-400 Missiles
Mecca Summit Supports Palestinians, Backs Saudis in Iran Standoff
US Denies Claims of Exemptions on Iran’s Oil Sanctions
Trump's Sanctions Hit OPEC Oil Output despite Saudi Boost
Turkey, Russia Face Conflicts over Syria's Push into Idlib
Turkey's Erdogan Absent from Mecca Islamic Summit
Algerians Rally for Change despite Dozens Detained
FBI Concerned with Release of Terrorists who Completed Jail Time
Ankara Scours for Russia-Ensured Ceasefire in Idlib, Syria
HRW Condemns France 'Outsourcing' of ISIS Trials to Iraq
Libya’s Haftar Meets Putin in Moscow for First Time
Egypt, Pakistan Agree to Bolstering Relations
Homemade Army Drones Successfully Strike Terror Targets in Algeria
New Study Says 12,000 Palestinians Volunteered to Fight Nazis during WWII
12 Dead after Gunman Fires 'Indiscriminately' in Virginia Govt Complex
Sudan recalls ambassador to Qatar for ‘consultations’
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on June 02/2019
US Experts Study 'Hezbollah’s' Underground Tunnels/Nazir Majali/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday,
01 June, 2019
Nasrallah Warns Region to Burn if Iran Attacked, Slams Hariri's Mecca Stance/Agence
France Presse/Associated Press/Naharnet 01/2019
Mecca summits highlight Lebanon’s precarious position/Makram Rabah/The Arab
Weekly/May 02/2019
From Hezbollah spy to Haredi farmer/Etty Abramov/Ynetnews/01 June/2019
2 rockets fired from Syria at Golan; no injuries/Ynetnews and Reuters/June
01/2019/
Sweden's Self-Inflicted Mess/The Scared Girls of Uppsala; Children of ISIS
Terrorists/Judith Bergman/ Gatestone Institute/June 01/2019
Pompeo’s German visit comes up short/Cornelia Meyer/Arab News/June 01/2019
Why the UK Conservatives need another Thatcher/Zaid M. Belbagi/Arab News/June
01/2019
European Parliament election results reflect the dissatisfaction of voters/Yossi
Mekelberg/Arab News/June 01/2019
Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News
published
on June 02/2019
US Experts Study 'Hezbollah’s' Underground Tunnels
Nazir Majali/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 01 June, 2019
A high-level
delegation from the US Army held on Thursday a tour inside the longest
cross-border Hezbollah attack tunnel that was discovered running into Israeli
territory from Lebanon during this past winter’s Operation Northern Shield. The
US team wants to study the Israeli technology used in uncovering those tunnels
and benefit from such technique in fighting the phenomenon of tunnels that
Washington started discovering at the borders between the US and Mexico. On
Wednesday, the Israel Forces revealed a Hezbollah attack tunnel that was
discovered during this past winter. It said the tunnel was “the longest and most
significant,” before it shut it down. Asharq Al-Awsat learned that the US
delegation already met with Israeli commander of the Baram Regional Brigade,
Col. Roi Levi, who explained to them how the tunnels were discovered. Levi said
Hezbollah planned to send thousands of fighters in an infiltration attack on
military targets in northern Israel as a surprise-opening maneuver in a future
war. He said the Lebanese party would have owned an incredible weapon, had
Israel not discovered the tunnels. According to the Israeli Army, the tunnel was
dug to a depth of 80 meters, was a kilometer long and penetrated 77 meters into
Israeli territory. It began close to the Lebanese village of Ramiya with an exit
close to the Israeli villages of Shtula and Zar’it. Lebanese Army personnel,
UNIFIL forces and men from the Hezbollah-linked environmental group “Green
Without Borders” were seen on Thursday observing what was happening at the
entrance of the sixth discovered tunnel, when the US team and reports arrived.
Last December, Israel launched Operation Northern Shield to find and destroy
Hezbollah cross-border tunnels. A month later, the military announced it had
found all of the passages and was working to demolish them. Spokesperson Avichai
Adrai said on Thursday, “From today, we can say Hezbollah has no more tunnels.”
Nasrallah Warns Region to Burn if Iran Attacked, Slams
Hariri's Mecca Stance
Agence France Presse/Associated Press/Naharnet 01/2019
Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah warned on Friday that if there was a war
against Iran the whole Middle East region would "erupt," amid escalating
U.S.-Iranian tensions. U.S. President Donald "Trump, his administration, and his
intelligence know well that any war on Iran will not remain confined to Iran's
borders," Nasrallah said."Any war on Iran will mean the whole region will
erupt," said the head of the Iran-backed movement in a televised speech marking
Quds Day, explaining that such a war was therefore unlikely. "And any American
forces and American interests will be permissible" as a target, he said.
Hizbullah is listed as a "terrorist group" by the United States, and has fought
several wars with U.S ally Israel. Nasrallah on Friday also slammed a proposed
U.S. peace deal to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that Trump has dubbed
"the deal of the century". "It's a void deal... a historic crime," he said of
the plan, that has already been rejected by the Palestinians as it is expected
to largely favor Israel. "This deal is a loss of Palestinian, Arab, and Islamic
rights," Nasrallah said. Nasrallah also rejected what he called U.S. conditions
for mediating a border and maritime dispute with Israel. He said that Washington
is "using the talks" to discuss, and even make threats over, degrading his
group's capabilities, bringing up an Israeli claim that Hizbullah has precision
missile factories. Nasrallah acknowledged his group has the weapons but denied
it produces them. "We have precision missiles in Lebanon, and enough to be able
to change the face of the region," he said. "So far in Lebanon there are no
factories for precision missiles," he added. Nasrallah threatened for the first
time, however, that Hizbullah could consider setting up such factories if
Washington continues to use the talks on border demarcation to discuss his
group's capabilities.He said it is Lebanon's right to defend itself. "The
Americans have no business with this. It is our right to have weapons to defend
our countries and it is our right to manufacture any weapons." A U.S. official
has been shuttling between Israel and Lebanon, technically still at war, to
settle the dispute. Washington considers Hizbullah a terrorist group. Nasrallah
said he is supportive of the Lebanese government's positions in the talks. "My
problem is allowing such discussion (of Hizbullah's capabilities)" he said.
"This door must be closed." Moreover, Nasrallah boasted that "today the axis of
resistance is stronger than ever, contrary to what some are claiming."He also
said that the Lebanese delegation's stance at Mecca's emergency Arab Summit is
"rejected and condemned," noting that "it does not conform to the government's
policy statement or dissociation policy." Addressing the summit, Prime Minister
Saad Hariri condemned what he called "continuous attempts to infiltrate the Arab
societies," in reference to Iran. He also strongly deplored "the attacks on the
United Arab Emirates and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia," calling for "the widest
Arab solidarity in confronting them."
Tens of Syrian Refugees Return Home from Lebanon
Naharnet/May 01/2019/Tens of Syrian families returned on Saturday to their
hometowns in Syria through several border crossings, the latest group to return
to Syria from its western neighbor, the National News Agency reported on
Saturday. The General Security pursued the process of helping tens of displaced
Syrian nationals who wish to return to their Syrian towns and villages. Dozens
of Syrian families carrying their luggage arrived at border crossing points
between Lebanon and Syria. Several buses carrying scores of people crossed the
border into Syria in the early morning. Names of the refugees were checked by
the General Security in the presence of UNHCR's representatives. Lebanon is home
to some 1 million Syrian refugees, a large number for a country of 4.5 million
people.
Hariri Meets State Leaders on Sidelines of OIC Summit
Naharnet/May 01/2019/On the sidelines of his participation in the 14th Islamic
Summit in Mecca, Prime Minister Saad Hariri met with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman and they discussed developments in Lebanon and the region and the
bilateral relations, the Premier’s media office said on Saturday. Hariri also
met with heads of delegations including Egyptian President Abdul-Fattah al-Sisi,
Iraqi President Barham Salih, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and the
Malaysian Foreign Minister Dato Saifuddin Abdallah. The Fourteenth Islamic
Summit, under the theme "hand in hand towards the future", began at 1 am in
Mecca, at the Safa Palace, under the presidency of the Custodian of the two holy
mosques, King Salman bin Abdulaziz.It addressed the challenges facing the Arab
region and the affairs of Muslim countries. The Lebanese delegation to the
summit of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) is led by Hariri, and
includes Ministers Jamal Jarrah and Wael Abu Faour, the Secretary General of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Hani Chmaitli, and Lebanon's ambassador
to Saudi Arabia, Faouzi Kabara.
Bustani Resumes Campaign to Remove Violations on Power Grid
Naharnet/May 01/2019/Energy Minister Nada al-Bustani announced on Saturday that
teams of the ministry have launched a campaign to remove the violations on the
electricity grid in the area of Ain al-Rummaneh. “Today, we have started
removing violations on the electricity grid in Ain al-Rummaneh. We remind the
citizens that a number of measures have been taken to reduce the meter
installation fees for power subscription,” said Bustani. VDL radio station
(100.5) said that Bustani has accompanied a technical team to remove violations
in five areas including the southern suburbs of Beirut, Barja, Sidon and Tyre.
Earlier in April, the Ministry kicked off a similar campaign in the capital
Beirut. The Minister emphasized that the campaign aims to help reduce theft and
losses on the grid for a better distribution of power. As part of its
commitments to the CEDRE Paris donor conference, Lebanon’s parliament had
approved a plan to reform the ailing electricity sector to unlock major
international aid and loans for infrastructure projects that need to be signed
off by the new government. The plan would improve power supplies, raise
electricity tariffs and reduce the fiscal deficit resulting from government
transfers to state-run Electricite du Liban (EDL).
Report: Budget Braces for More Changes in Parliament
Naharnet/May 01/2019/Lebanon’s 2019 state budget awaits the parliament approval
amid reports that new amendments could be introduced by some lawmakers in a bid
to help slash the ballooning budget deficit further, al-Joumhouria daily
reported on Saturday. Parliamentary sources told the daily: “The budget in the
form referred to parliament, lacks many sources that could provide additional
treasury income which in turn could help in reducing the deficit further.”The
daily said MPs of the Progressive Socialist Party plan to suggest several
changes, mainly ones related to illegal seaside property, and a reduction in
salaries and allocations of public authorities. Similarly, the Strong Republic
bloc has agreed to keep its meetings open to follow through the meetings of the
Finance and Budget Committee in order to help develop and modify some budget
items, the newspaper added .“The budget is going to be scrutinized in
parliament,” said the sources, “Kataeb MPs are going to raise the issue of old
accounting records, and how the budget lacks an economic vision and the
necessary reforms which appear almost non-existent in the government
project.”“Many international financial institutions have described the budget as
unconvincing. Moreover, a number of ministers have expressed their
dissatisfaction with the “populist” method that governed the budget discussions
in Cabinet and accordingly drew pessimistic sign about the possibility of
maintaining the deficit at 7.59%,” they added.
On Monday, the Cabinet approved a budget expected to trim Lebanon's deficit to
7.59 percent of gross domestic product -- a nearly 4-point drop from the
previous year. Lebanon has promised donors to slash public spending as part of
reforms to unlock $11 billion in aid pledged at a conference in Paris last
year.The draft budget still needs to be approved by parliament. House speaker
Nabih Berri has said it could take up to a month for parliament to pass it.
Growth in Lebanon has plummeted in the wake of endless political deadlocks in
recent years, compounded by the 2011 breakout of civil war in neighbouring
Syria. The country has been racking up public debt since the end of its own
1975-1990 civil war, which now stands at more than 150 percent of GDP, according
to the finance ministry.
Lebanon's Army Commander Slams Attempts to Weaken the
Military
Kataeb.org/June 01/2019/Army Commander Joseph Aoun on Saturday condemned the
reduction of the military's budget in the 2019 financial plan approved by the
government, denouncing campaigns aiming to dash the army's structure and
discourage its officers. "It's not a secret that the Army is the backbone of
Lebanon, and won't be exaggerating by saying that it is the guarantor of the
country's security and stability and that its mission is not limited to wars and
conflicts," Aoun said during a visit to the Fouad Chehab Museum in Jounieh.
"Some could have probably forgot, whether intentionally or unintenionally, that
there are still big challenges to face at our eastern, southern and maritime
borders despite the prevailing security stability. Therefore, the situation on
the security, economic and social levels still requires full readiness;
otherwise, who would take responsibility for exposing the nation's security?"
Aoun said that it was normal that the Army is part of the Lebanese economic
structure and that it would be subject, like all other state institutions, to
austerity measures. However, he objected to the random and unfair approach based
on which the Army's budget was reduced, saying that the military was not given
the option of determining its expenditures."The Army's budget figures were made
public, and open to debate and analyses as if the purpose is to convince the
public opinion that the military is responsible for the country's debt."Aoun
also criticized the recruitment freeze stipulated by the new budget, warning of
the negative consequences that such a decision will entail. "The ban on
recruiting soldiers or cadets, and the ban on dismissal, will have negative
repercussions on the Army," he cautioned.
Kataeb MP Nadim Gemayel Says Hezbollah Was First to Violate
Dissociation Policy
Kataeb.org/June 01/2019/Kataeb MP Nadim Gemayel on Saturday denounced the recent
statements made by Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah regarding the participation
of the Lebanese delegation in the Mecca Summit. In a televised speech he
delivered on Friday, Nasrallah condemned the stance expressed by the Lebanese
delegation on Iran at the Mecca summit, saying that it goes against the policy
of dissociation stipulated by the government's policy statement. "Sayyed Hassan
is giving lectures about self-dissociation and neutrality while his party was
the first to violate these two principles by shoring up the Syrian regime ans
dragging Lebanon into a conflict that it had nothing to do with," Gemayel wrote
on Twitter. Gemayel voiced surprise at the state officials' total silence on
what Nasrallah had said, with no one having condemned his statements.
Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel Condemns Absolute Silence on
Nasrallah's Statements
Kataeb.org/June 01/2019/Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel on Saturday voiced surprise
at the state officials' total silence on what Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah
had said in his latest speech, stressing that the safety of Lebanon and its
people are not to be compromised. “The complete silence of the government and
its officials on the speech of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah which violates the
State’s sovereignty and its exclusive decision-making on war and peace, and
drags Lebanon and the Lebanese into conflicts they do not want, mirrors once
again the repercussions of the presidential settlement and the ruling
authority's submissiveness to Hezbollah's will,” Gemayel said via Twitter.
Kataeb politburo member Serge Dagher Lashes out at
Nasrallah's Remarks: Who Gave You the Right to Speak on Our Behalf?
Kataeb.org/June 01/2019/Kataeb politburo member Serge Dagher on Saturday
denounced stances voiced by Hezbollah Chief Hassan Nasrallah in his latest
speech, blasting the state's officials silence over what was said. “Who said
that the Lebanese want to get into a war for the sake of Iran? Who said that we
would like to have precision rockets and facilities? Who said that we want to
annihilate the Americans and fight Saudi Arabia? Who gave you the right to speak
or to decide on our behalf? Where do the President and the Prime Minister stand
from this statement?” Dagher wrote on his Twitter page.
“Our limits stop at Lebanon's border, economy, and the safety as well as future
of its people. You are not our decision makers,” Dagher added. On Friday,
Nasrallah said a war between the United States and Iran is unlikely to erupt,
adding that Washington is aware that any confrontation would make it pay a heavy
price."War against Iran will not stop at Iran's borders. The entire region will
be set ablaze," Nasrallah warned. "All U.S. forces and interests in the region
will be annihilated", he added, saying that any war would also affect U.S.
allies, Saudi Arabia and Israel.
Mecca summits highlight Lebanon’s precarious position
Makram Rabah/The Arab Weekly/May 02/2019
The posture of Bassil and Hariri is turning Lebanon into a rogue state that has
little influence over the issues, while subjecting the country’s crumbling
economy to further regional pressures.
With the US dispatching warships to the Gulf and reinforcing troops in the
Middle East, many are envisioning an apocalyptic military showdown between
Washington and Tehran and its proxies.
While this outcome is always possible, the United States is more immediately
concerned with ensuring that its sanctions against Iran hold strong and that
Tehran’s proxies, especially Hezbollah, are contained and challenged across the
region.
The Iranian threat was the main subject of an emergency Arab summit May 30 in
Mecca. The summit, coming as a direct response to attacks believed perpetrated
by Iran-sponsored factions against commercial ships in the UAE port town of
Fujairah and oil pumping stations in Saudi Arabia, precedes the summits of the
Gulf Cooperation Council Gulf and Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, also
hosted by Saudi Arabia.
For Lebanon, the Mecca summit was a chance to enthusiastically reaffirm its
commitment to Arab unity and brotherhood, as well as an opportunity to begin
breaking its isolation vis-a-vis Gulf states.
Beirut was represented at the summit by Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri,
accompanied by two cabinet ministers. Predictably, Hariri’s speech was heavily
scrutinised by Gulf states, who have grown concerned that he is a willing
hostage to, if not outright partner with, Hezbollah.
Hariri offered a lukewarm reaction to the terrorist attacks against the United
Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, although he did declare Lebanon’s full-fledged
support to its Arab brethren. Other leading Lebanese figures, including
President Michel Aoun, House Speaker Nabih Berri, both allies of Hezbollah, were
silent on the matter.
This attitude underscores how many of Lebanon’s political leaders are out of
sync with Gulf leaders, putting the country in a precarious spot, given rising
tensions.
Aoun, especially, has been loth to support Arab Gulf states. When Lebanon
received its invitation to the Mecca summit, Aoun, usually keen to attend
international meetings, swiftly delegated the task to Hariri.
Adding insult to injury, Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil boycotted the
Arab foreign ministers’ preparatory meeting, which generally precedes any Arab
summit, sending the message that his resolve and allegiance lay elsewhere.
Even Hariri, a traditional ally of Saudi Arabia, is more distant from the
kingdom after falling out with the Saudi administration last year. As a result,
he is more reliant on his former political opponents, such as Aoun and Bassil,
the president’s ever-ambitious son-in-law.
The Hariri-Bassil alliance, based on financial rather than political
considerations, has empowered Hezbollah, which sits in Hariri’s cabinet and lets
Bassil run the show.
Bassil and Hariri believe their “good cop-bad cop” routine will protect Lebanon
from the fallout of the Sunni-Shia conflict. However, their posture is turning
Lebanon into a rogue state that has little influence over the issue, while also
subjecting the country’s crumbling economy to further regional pressures.
It is an imprudent strategy, especially because Bassil’s Faustian deal with
Hezbollah is fully exposed. Bassil’s continued defence of Hezbollah’s
interference in Gulf countries’ affairs reflects his ambitions to climb the
political ladder, eventually becoming Lebanon’s president.
Contrary to what many believe, the three Gulf summits were not aimed at
preparing for a military conflict but for war of attrition, which could be even
more harmful for Iran and its lackeys.
They also come as Arab states braced for the worst — a potential deal between
the ever-fickle US President Donald Trump and Iran. This would put Gulf states
in a very precarious position, similar to US President Barack Obama’s nuclear
deal with Iran in 2015.
Hariri’s remarks during the summits only paid lip service to his hosts. He has
little sway over his political allies, who have wildly different objectives. It
is clear, for example, that Hariri’s pledge to keep Lebanon in line with the
Arab consensus does not reflect the attitude of Aoun and Bassil, who will do
nothing to combat Hezbollah’s activities.
Hariri has effectively relinquished much of his prime ministerial
responsibilities, agreeing to be subordinate to Aoun and his political and
economic projects. This means Hariri’s words do not carry nearly the same weight
to the Saudi administration as his late father’s did.
All of this shows why Lebanon’s economic troubles are likely to continue. Hariri
and Lebanon’s political class are hoping to escape economic collapse by adopting
an imprudent budget that masks corruption behind a facade of reforms. Real
reform can only start with reeling in Hezbollah and reclaiming full sovereignty
over the Lebanese state.
It is important to note that the Mecca summits were not merely about Iran but
also about Lebanon. It is about addressing the vortex of corruption and
instability that has left Lebanon isolated, with not one of its Arab brethren
left to come to its rescue.
*Makram Rabah is a lecturer at the American University of Beirut, Department of
History. He is the author of A Campus at War: Student Politics at the American
University of Beirut, 1967-1975.
From Hezbollah spy to Haredi farmer
Etty Abramov/Ynetnews/01 June/2019
تقرير من صحيفة يدعوت احرانوت: إبراهيم ياسين الجاسوس الإسرائيلي الذي أخترق حزب
الله لسنين هو اليوم خاخام يهودي يعيش في صفد ويحمل اسماً
يهودياً هو أفراهام سايني
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/75396/75396/
Avraham Sinai’s life story is staggering – he was born Ibrahaim Yassin in
Lebanon, and fled to Israel with his family after years of spying on the
country’s most notorious terrorists; today he is a 55-year-old rabbi who lives
in Safed, where he is planning his latest venture, a goat farm
In northern Israel, in the serene spirituality of Safed, lives a man whose past
was anything but serene or spiritual. Today he is 55-year-old ultra-Orthodox
Rabbi Avraham Sinai, a father and grandfather living in a caravan on the
outskirts of the city. But in another life not too long ago, he was an Israeli
spy inside Hezbollah named Ibrahim Yassin.
Sinai’s story began 36 years ago, when he was 19-year-old cattle farmer Ibrahim
Yassin, who had a pregnant wife named Diba. Ibrahim was away from home taking
his cattle to graze when Diba went into labor without him.
*Avraham Sinai and his former IDF handler Tzahi Bareket (Photo: Aviahu Shapira)
With no midwife or hospital nearby, the Yassin family turned to the IDF forces
who were occupying Southern Lebanon for help. Tzachi Bareket, an officer in
IDF’s Intelligence Unit and a farmer himself, led his forces into the village to
help, breaking several army regulations.
Neither Tzachi nor Ibrahim imagined that this would be the beginning of a
lifelong friendship.
Even now, Bareket remains careful not to reveal details of past operations. He
delivered the baby on that day in 1983, and then arranged for mother and child
to be taken to hospital in Israel.
“I came home,” Sinai recalls, “and was told my wife had given birth. Two days
later my brother who was in the Israeli-backed South Lebanese Army, brought her
home.”
Bareket and Sinai had not met at this point, but the IDF intelligence officer
was always on the lookout for Lebanese people who could help the Israelis in
their fight.
“One day I spotted a cattle farmer,” Bareket says. “In this line of work, we
learned how to spot people we may be able to work with. I knew that he could be
a good fit. In the course of our conversation he realized that I was the Israeli
who had delivered his son.”
Sinai – who hated the Palestinian militants in south Lebanon – began working for
the Israeli military.
“The Palestinians controlled the area and they terrified us,” he says. “Once
they lit a fire in someone’s yard, burned him alive and ate him in front of my
eyes. They would bring men into villages to torment women. They killed a girl by
tying her to two cars and driving them in different directions.”
*Ibrahim Yassin, the young man who would become Avraham Sinai (Photo: Orot)
Sinai says his decision to work for Israel was in fact his way of helping
himself. “When I called Tzachi to tell him about terrorists, I knew that they
would be chased from my village, and that suited me fine,” he says.
“I considered Tzachi and I to be partners. I gave him valuable information and
he gave me fuel for my car and a document so that I wouldn’t be stopped at
checkpoints. He gave me a rifle seized from the Palestinians. Any time anything
bothered me, I had someone to turn to.”
After two and a half years as Yassin’s case officer, Bareket was reassigned to
another unit, but Sinai’s connection to Israel did not escape the attention of
the terrorist groups in Lebanon, including Hezbollah.
In 1985, Sinai was abducted from his home by agents of the terror organizations.
He was released months later, but not before his 8-month-old son was burnt to
death in front of his eyes.
To this day he cannot forget the torturous interrogations at the hands of Imad
Mughniyah, a senior member of the Iranian-backed Hezbollah assassinated –
allegedly by the IDF – in 2008.
“The day my son was burnt alive, I had lost consciousness from the beatings I
received, only to wake up and see the fire,” Sinai says.
*Notorious Hezbollah official Imad Mughniyah
He says his wife told him not to discuss the baby again. “‘That door has
closed,’ she told me.”
For months after, Sinai sank into a deep depression, and it was his father who
slowly brought him back to life.
A desire for vengeance prompted Sinai to call Tzachi, his old IDF handler.
“My wife came to me,” Bareket says, “and told me Sinai wanted to continue
working with us. He could not contact me directly at the time.”
Sinai: “Under the protection of the Israelis and with their knowledge I entered
the ranks of Hezbollah. I lived in a town that was practically owned by
Hezbollah (but) they didn’t know of my connection to Israel. My handler at the
time was Yoav ‘Poli’ Mordechai, who would later become the IDF spokesperson.”
His relationship with Mordechai also extended beyond their mission. “Poli helped
me a lot,” Sinai says. “When my daughter died soon after birth, Poli sent my
wife injections so that the next pregnancy would go well.”
Sinai recalls being imprisoned in Syria in 1989, spending a year in prison for
suspicious activity. “I was held in a state prison, so my parents could come and
visit me,” he says. “But the torture was just as bad.”
After his release, Sinai continued to spy on Hezbollah for Israel for another
seven more years. He claims to have provided information that led to the
assassination of former Hezbollah leader Abbas Musawi.
*Ibrahim Yassin, Israeli spy
With so many of its key figures being assassinated, Hezbollah began looking for
spies, and in 1997, Sinai and his family were smuggled out of Lebanon.
Sinai’s life experiences led him closer to religion. During his time in
Hezbollah, he became interested in the Quran, and when he arrived in Israel he
visited the synagogue close to his home. In 2001, he decided to convert to
Judaism.
For the past two years, Sinai has lived apart from his wife, Ziva. She was named
Diba when she followed him out of Lebanon, leaving her family behind, and
changed it when she also chose to convert to Judaism.
Today, only his eldest son, Haim, and his youngest child, Sara, are
ultra-Orthodox. Haim, born Mohammed, was 14 years old when they arrived in
Israel. The rest of his seven children all live secular lives.
Sinai now lives off a pension from the IDF and gives lectures about his life as
a Hezbollah spy working for Israeli Intelligence. He is a close friend of Safed
Chief Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu and four years ago even ran (unsuccessfully) for a
seat on the city council.
*Avraham Sinai with his close friend Safed Chief Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu (Photo:
Orot)
Sinai’s life story caught the attention of Israeli director Itamar Chen, who
convinced him to put his astonishing tale on camera. The documentary, “The Rabbi
from Hezbollah,” is being shown at Tel Aviv’s DocAviv festival this week.
“Avraham has some Forrest Gump characteristics to him,” says Chen. “He is a
sensitive man who has been through unimaginable situations.”
In the caravan he now calls home, Sinai says that there is more to his story
than he previously revealed, some of which is in Chen’s documentary.
“My children do not know everything about me,” he says. “My sons look up to me
because of my work with the army; they too served in the IDF. There are many
things in the film they knew nothing about. Even my wife never knew the details
of the things I had done.”
Bareket agrees, as he stares at an old photo from their time together in
Lebanon. “Sinai did things that fighters in elite military units do not do,” he
says.
The two men resumed their friendship not long after Sinai arrived in Israel in
1997.
“I was trying to contact him, but I only knew his name was Tzachi,” Sinai says.
“Then on an Muslim festival, he called to wish me a happy holiday.”
*Avraham Sinai today (Photo: Haim Sinai)
Bareket: “We are not friends, we are brothers. When he lectures all over the
country I come to give a short introduction. Only then he walks in with his
ultra-Orthodox garb and everyone is shocked. He lectures to the intelligence
community and only when addressing a classified unit does he speak freely.”
The former spy is an unusual character, full of contradiction. He is both very
outgoing and at the same time enjoys wandering in the wilderness for solitude
and prayer.
At the moment, he is building bee hives and a goat and chicken farm.
The above report’s link at the Ynetnews site:https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5515372,00.html
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on June 02/2019
2 rockets fired from Syria at Golan; no injuries
Ynetnews and Reuters/June 01/2019/
IDF says unclear who carried out launches; Golan Regional Council says one
rocket was intercepted in open area, which army denies.
Two rockets were fired Saturday from Syria towards the Golan Heights, causing no
casualties, the Israel Defense Forces said. A military spokeswoman said that the
details were still being looked into and that it remained unclear who had fired
the rockets and where they had landed.According to Golan Regional Council, "at
20:46, a report was received from the IDF Spokesperson's Office about two
launches from Syria towards Mount Hermon."The council said that, "one rocket
landed in Syrian territory and the other was intercepted in an open area. We are
in constant contact with the army and all the security forces. There are no
special instructions for civilians."The IDF Spokesperson's Office said that
there had been no interception. The Hermon site said that the matter was being
handled by the IDF. Israel says that arch-foe Iran and its Lebanese ally
Hezbollah, both of whom are fighting on the side of President Bashar Assad in
the Syrian war, are trying to turn Syria into a new front against Israel. In
recent years, Israel has carried out multiple strikes against Iranian and
Hezbollah targets in Syria. On Monday, the IDF said it attacked a Syrian
anti-aircraft position that had fired on one of its warplanes, and Syrian state
media said a soldier had been killed in the incident.
Iran Increases Stockpiles of Nuclear
Materials: IAEA
London- Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 1 June, 2019 /Iran has stayed within the main
restrictions of its nuclear deal, a quarterly report by the UN atomic watchdog
indicated Friday, but its stockpiles of low-enriched uranium and heavy water are
growing. As of May 26, Iran had 125.2 metric tonnes of heavy water, an increase
of 0.4 tons on February but stilم under the 130-tonne limit. As of 20 May, Iran
had 174.1 kg of enriched uranium, up from 163.8kg in February but again well
within the relevant of limit 300kg. Earlier this month, Iran announced that it
will no more comply with the nuclear deal restrictions as a protest against US
withdrawal from it and imposing economic sanctions on Tehran. Iran has increased
its production of enriched uranium to four times following the recent decision
of the Supreme National Security Council, Iran's Atomic Energy Organization (IAEA)
spokesman Behruz Kamalundi said.
Yet, this doesn’t mean withdrawal from the nuclear deal, as Iran is still
compelled to commit to other terms in it. Iran has granted European countries
until the eighth of July to save its banking and oil sectors from isolation
caused by US sanctions, otherwise it will suspend the implementation of other
commitments contained in the nuclear deal. The signed deal between Tehran and
giant states (US, China, Russia, UK, France, Germany) seeks to guarantee that
the Iranian nuclear program remains peaceful, while the US lifts its sanctions
in return. However, US President Donald Trump pulled out of the deal a year ago.
Russia Rebuffs Iranian Request to Buy S-400 Missiles
London - Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 1 June, 2019/Russia has rejected an Iranian
request to buy the S-400 missile defense systems, concerned that the sale would
stoke more tension in the Middle East, according to two people with knowledge of
the matter, revealed Bloomberg.
The request was rebuffed by President Vladimir Putin, the people said on
condition of anonymity. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif had
visited Moscow May 7, yet it is not clear whether he made the request then.
Mohsen Rezaei, Expediency Council secretary and former chief of Iranian
Revolutionary Guards Corps, refused to be drawn on the missile request when
questioned at an event in Tehran. Iran was capable of defending itself “whether
or not Russia helps us,” he said.
Bloomberg’s report coincided with US President Donald Trump’s announcement that
he would deploy more US forces to the region to deter Iranian threats. Evidence
that Iran has been behind recent attacks on oil tankers and pipelines in the
Gulf is likely to be presented to the UN Security Council as early as next week,
said US National Security Adviser John Bolton on Thursday. Russia had completed
the delivery of the S-300 air defense missile system to Iran in July 2016,
concluding a USD800 million deal signed between the two states in 2007. However,
Russian suspended the agreement, drawing protest from Iran, which filed a USD4
billion lawsuit before the International Criminal Court. The lawsuit was,
however, waived after Moscow approved selling the system to Tehran. Moreover,
Iran was disappointed with Russia’s rejection to use the veto against Security
Council resolution 1929 that bans weapons sales to Iran. But the resolution has
been lifted by virtue of resolution 2231 in July 2015. Starting from the summer
of 2020, the restrictions are expected to be lifted. This is considered one of
the main gains of the 2015 nuclear deal signed between Tehran and world powers,
according to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s government.
Mecca Summit Supports Palestinians, Backs Saudis in Iran
Standoff
Agence France Presse/The Arab Weekly/May 02/2019/A Saudi-hosted Islamic summit
on Saturday threw its support behind Palestinians ahead of a US-led peace plan
suspected to be skewed in favour of Israel, as Muslim states rallied around
Saudi Arabia over tensions with Iran. The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC)
meeting, the third and final Iran-focused summit in the holy city of Mecca this
week, denounced controversial US moves to transfer its embassy to Jerusalem and
recognise Israel's sovereignty over the Golan Heights. The summit of the
57-member bloc, marked by the notable absence of Iranian and Turkish leaders,
called for a "boycott" of countries that have opened diplomatic missions in the
city. Trump broke with decades of bipartisan policy to recognise Jerusalem as
the capital of Israel in December 2017. The OIC's statement comes as Trump's
son-in-law Jared Kushner prepares to roll out economic aspects of his
long-awaited Middle East peace plan at a conference in Bahrain later this month.
The plan, which has been heavily talked up by Trump and dubbed his "deal of the
century", has already been rejected by the Palestinians, who say the president's
policies have shown him to be overwhelmingly biased in favour of Israel. The
Palestinians see the eastern part of the disputed city as the capital of their
future state. Kushner, who was in Jerusalem on Friday on the latest leg of a
regional tour to sell the plan, had looked to an alliance with Saudi Arabia
against Iran as a way to gain Arab support. But Saudi King Salman told leaders
of the OIC countries gathered at the summit: "The Palestinian cause is the
cornerstone of the works of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, and is the
focus of our attention until the brotherly Palestinian people get all their
legitimate rights. "We reaffirm our unequivocal rejection of any measures that
would prejudice the historical and legal status of Quds (Jerusalem)."
Aggressive threats
The OIC also backed Saudi Arabia in escalating tensions with Iran, as King
Salman warned that "terrorist" attacks in the Gulf region could imperil global
energy supplies. The remark came after sabotage attacks damaged four vessels,
two of them Saudi oil tankers, off the UAE and twin Yemeni rebel drone attacks
shut down a key Saudi oil pipeline. "We confirm that terrorist actions not only
target the kingdom and the Gulf region, but also target the safety of navigation
and world oil supplies," the king told Muslim leaders. Tehran has strongly
denied involvement in any of the incidents. In a tweet just before the start of
the summit, the king vowed to confront "aggressive threats and subversive
activities". "Undermining the security of the kingdom effectively undermines the
security of the Arab and Islamic world," said OIC Secretary General Yousef bin
Ahmed al-Othaimeen, voicing solidarity that was shared by other members. In
back-to-back summits on Friday, Gulf and Arab allies similarly threw their
support behind Saudi Arabia, which drew accusations from Iran of "sowing
division". The summits came after Trump's hawkish National Security Advisor John
Bolton said Wednesday that Iranian naval mines were "almost certainly"
responsible for the damage to the four ships off the United Arab Emirates on May
12.The findings of a five-nation inquiry into what happened have yet to be
released. Tehran dismissed Bolton's accusation as "laughable" and accused him of
pursuing "evil desires for chaos in the region".
Erdogan absent
Regional tensions have risen sharply since US the Trump administration reimposed
crippling unilateral sanctions against Iran, after he abandoned a landmark 2015
nuclear deal between major powers and Iran in May last year. But Trump has
appeared to soften his tone towards Tehran, saying that his government does not
seek "regime change". Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was notably absent
from the key OIC summit, an AFP photographer said. A regional heavyweight,
Turkey -- which maintains close ties with Iran -- was instead represented by
Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu. Iran's President Hassan Rouhani was also not
present but sent a representative to the talks, an AFP reporter said. Erdogan's
visit would have been his first to the kingdom since the brutal murder last
October of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, which
tarnished the international reputation of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
US Denies Claims of Exemptions on Iran’s Oil Sanctions
Washington - Heba El Koudsy/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 1 June, 2019/US State
Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said Thursday that Washington's policy on
Iranian oil sanctions remains the same and there will be no exemptions for any
country. The US ended oil sanctions waivers for countries that were still
purchasing Iranian oil in May, giving them time to wean off Tehran's supply and
obtain other sources of oil after reinstating sanctions back in November. "We're
going to zero, and of course, there are no extensions of these waivers and that
remains our policy," Ortagus said. She stressed that Arab and Gulf unity against
Iran is essential to confront it and guarantee a prosperous future for the Gulf.
Ortagus continued that the US was not seeking war, but wants Iran to change its
behavior, stop supporting terrorism in the region and quit imposing its
influence in Beirut, Damascus, and Sanaa. Officials at the State Department
pointed out that US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was clear in determining the
way to Iran through 12 conditions, which demand a basic change in its policy.
Earlier on Wednesday, the Ortagus said that Iran is cutting the number of
Hezbollah fighters in Syria due to the US economic sanctions. She added,
Washington’s “maximum pressure campaign” against Iran “is working” and it will
continue until Tehran is willing to reach "a comprehensive new deal.”Ortagus
then went on to bring examples of how US sanctions have denied funds for Iran
resulting in financial limitations to Tehran’s proxies in the region. She also
welcomed the convening of an emergency meeting of Gulf state leaders in Saudi
Arabia aimed at discussing Iranian threats to the region. Custodian of the Two
Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz told an emergency Arab summit on Friday
that decisive action was needed to stop Iranian escalations.
Trump's Sanctions Hit OPEC Oil Output despite Saudi Boost
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 1 June, 2019/Top oil exporter Saudi Arabia has raised
production in May, a Reuters survey found, but not by enough to compensate for
lower Iranian exports which collapsed after the United States tightened the
screw on Tehran. The 14-member Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
pumped 30.17 million barrels per day (bpd) in May, the survey showed, down
60,000 bpd from April and the lowest OPEC total since 2015, the Reuters survey
showed. The survey suggests that even though Saudi Arabia is raising output
following pressure from US President Donald Trump to bring down prices, the
Kingdom is still voluntarily pumping less than an OPEC-led supply deal in place
this year allows it to. “We are seeing OPEC supply falling in May to its lowest
in numerous years,” said an industry source who monitors OPEC output. “There are
not many big increases this month, and lots of countries posting lower supply.”
Despite lower supplies, crude oil has fallen from a six-month high above $75 a
barrel in April to below $68 on Thursday, pressured by concern about the
economic impact of the US-China trade dispute. An OPEC delegate said most
countries had kept a lid on output in May, although they might have sought to
boost sales in the faster-growing Asian market. “Producers may change the
portfolio to target Asia but not increase production generally,” he said. OPEC,
Russia and other non-members, an alliance known as OPEC+, agreed in December to
reduce supply by 1.2 million bpd from January 1. OPEC’s share of the cut is
800,000 bpd, to be delivered by 11 members - all except Iran, Libya and
Venezuela.
The producers are scheduled to meet in June to decide whether to extend the deal
or adjust it. In May, the 11 OPEC members bound by the agreement achieved 96
percent of pledged cuts, the survey found, compared to 132 percent in April, due
to the rise in production in Saudi Arabia, and increases in Iraq and Angola. But
a drop in supply in two of the exempt producers more than offset these gains,
the survey found. Iran posted OPEC’s biggest supply drop this month of 400,000
bpd. The United States reimposed sanctions on Iran in November after pulling out
of a 2015 nuclear accord between Tehran and six world powers. Aiming to cut
Iran’s sales to zero, Washington this month ended sanctions waivers for
importers of Iranian oil. Iran has nonetheless sent abroad about 400,000 bpd so
far this month, less than half as much as it exported in April.In Venezuela,
supply fell by 50,000 bpd in May due to the impact of US sanctions on state oil
company PDVSA and a long-term decline in production, according to the survey.
Output also dropped in Nigeria - which last month overproduced its target by the
largest margin - because of a pipeline shutdown that disrupted exports. Among
countries pumping more, Saudi Arabia boosted supply by 200,000 bpd to 10.05
million bpd, the survey found. This is still below its OPEC quota of 10.311 bpd.
Iraq boosted exports and Libya, which is volatile due to unrest, enjoyed a
period of relative stability. Even so, May’s output is the lowest by OPEC since
February 2015, excluding membership changes that have taken place since then,
Reuters surveys show. The Reuters survey aims to track supply to the market and
is based on shipping data provided by external sources, Refinitiv Eikon flows
data and information provided by sources at oil companies, OPEC and consulting
firms.
Oil slumped over 3% on Friday and posted its biggest monthly drop in six months,
after Trump stoked global trade tensions by threatening tariffs on Mexico. Brent
crude futures fell $2.38, or 3.6%, to settle at $64.49 a barrel. US West Texas
Intermediate (WTI) crude futures fell $3.09 to $53.50 a barrel, a 5.5% loss.
Brent touched a session low of $64.37 a barrel, lowest since March 8. WTI hit
$53.41 a barrel, weakest since Feb. 14. Brent futures posted an 11% slide in May
and WTI a 16% drop, their biggest monthly losses since November. Trump vowed on
Thursday to ratchet up tariffs unless Mexico stopped people from illegally
crossing into the United States. The plan would impose a 5% tariff on Mexican
imports starting on June 10 and increase monthly, up to 25% on October 1.
Turkey, Russia Face Conflicts over Syria's Push into Idlib
Agence France Presse/The Arab Weekly/May 02/2019/Ankara and Moscow are again
facing an escalation of violence in Syria's last rebel-held territory, a
development that puts their cooperation to the test even as they support
opposing sides in the eight-year war that has devastated Syria.
An all-out offensive by Syrian government forces to capture Idlib in
northwestern Syria from insurgents could unleash an unprecedented humanitarian
crisis, for the area is home to 3 million people. Turkey, which is already
hosting more than 3.6 million Syrian refugees, is facing strong pressure from
Syria, Iran and Russia to deliver on its pledge to control the armed rebel
factions in Idlib. But Turkey also needs Russia to rein in Syrian President
Bashar Assad to prevent a massive outflow of refugees and to keep Turkish
soldiers on the ground safe. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Russian
President Vladimir Putin "have an incentive to cooperate and ensure that
nobody's interests are totally trampled," says Aaron Stein, the director of the
Middle East program in American think-tank Foreign Policy Research Institute.
In September, the two leaders brokered a cease-fire for Idlib in the Russian
resort of Sochi, preventing a bloody onslaught, despite the fact that Russia has
firmly backed Assad and Turkey supports opposition forces. Nine months later,
the truce has failed. The agreement called for a 15-to-20 kilometer (9-to-12
mile) demilitarized zone free of insurgents and heavy weaponry and for two key
highways crossing through Idlib to be reopened. The demilitarized zone has been
breached and the highways are at the center of the current government offensive.
Syrian ground forces have been advancing from the south of the rebel stronghold
under the cover of Syrian and Russian airstrikes.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said more than 291 civilians and 369
fighters have been killed since April 30 in the rebel stronghold. In the same
period, 269 government troops and 22 civilians were killed in government areas
by rebel fire. The U.N.'s children's agency said more than 130 children have
reportedly been killed.
Already, more than 200,000 people from the stronghold have been displaced,
according to the U.N., with some seeking safety near the border with Turkey
while others crammed into already crowded camps in Syria. Turkey has accused the
Syrian government of violating the cease-fire and Turkish Defense Minister
Hulusi Akar said the country has told Russia "the regime must be
controlled."Russia has launched airstrikes in Idlib and is providing air cover
in the Syrian government offensive. It has complained that the militants have
increasingly been targeting its military base in the nearby coastal province of
Latakia. But for now, Moscow is unlikely to support an all-out Syrian operation
in Idlib because the benefits of a long-term alliance with Turkey outweigh one
military battle.
"Russia doesn't want to ruin its relationship with Turkey because of Idlib,"
says Kirill Semenov, a Moscow-based Middle East analyst and expert at the
Russian International Affairs Council. In late April, Putin said he would not
rule out a large-scale assault but "together with our Syrian friends, we believe
that this would not be advisable" due to humanitarian issues. Still, Russia's
patience is wearing thin with the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, which it accuses
of targeting its military base. HTS is considered a terrorist organization by
the United States, Russia and Turkey, despite its claims it has disassociated
from al-Qaida. Top Russian officials have often called Idlib a "breeding ground
for terrorists." Despite the cease-fire deal, Turkey has been unable to
neutralize the extremists. Much of Idlib has come under the control of HTS,
which has defeated Turkey-backed armed groups.
Emre Ersan, an associate professor of international relations and political
science at Istanbul's Marmara University, believes Turkey may have overestimated
its influence over HTS. He says Turkey's plan to split the group, with some of
its members joining Turkish-backed opposition forces and the group's hard-liners
isolated, has not worked. Instead of coming under the umbrella of moderate
groups, HTS has used Turkey as leverage against Russia and Assad-supporter Iran,
according to Ersan. Adding to the risks, Turkish troops are in the line of fire.
Two Turkish soldiers were wounded in early May in a Syrian government artillery
attack on an observation post. Three other attacks have been cited by Turkey's
official Anadolu Agency, raising the question if the attacks were accidental or
designed to pressure Ankara with Russia's knowledge. "The Turkish Armed Forces
will not take a single step back from where it is," Akar, Turkey's defense
minister, said last week.
Erdogan and Putin have talked on the phone, agreeing to continue working along
the lines of the cease-fire agreement to prevent civilian deaths and a refugee
flow. They also agreed to meet on the sidelines of next month's Group of 20
conference in Japan.
"Apart from this dialogue and cooperation, there is nothing on the ground that
can prevent a catastrophe in Idlib," Ersan says. The presidents have become
close since 2016, rebuilding their relations after a dramatic crisis in 2015
when Turkey shot down a Russian jet near the Syrian border. Their rapport comes
amid Turkey's fragile relations with NATO ally United States, especially over
Washington's support of Syrian Kurdish-led forces who control large swaths in
eastern Syria. Ankara considers them an extension of a Kurdish insurgency
operating inside Turkey. Erdogan is so far sticking to his promise to buy
Russian-made S-400 missiles despite U.S. warnings the system would jeopardize
Turkey's participation in the F-35 fighter jet program and compromise its
safety. Stein calls this "a big win for Russia." Turkey is angling for a way to
have both the S-400s and the F-35s.
Turkey is also talking with the U.S. about a safe zone in northeastern Syria and
has repeatedly asked for the U.S. to end its military support for Kurdish-led
Syrian Democratic Forces, or SDF. Erdogan will meet U.S. President Donald Trump
at the G-20 as well. Ersan believes Russia may allow Turkey to grab the northern
town of Tel Rifaat from the Kurdish fighters, the last town they control in
western Syria. Russian support could help Turkey put pressure on the SDF, widen
Turkish influence and strengthen its hand in ongoing negotiations with the U.S.
In exchange, he argues, Turkey could be open to some limited Syrian operation
toward Idlib.
Turkey's Erdogan Absent from Mecca Islamic Summit
Agence France Presse/The Arab Weekly/May 02/2019/Turkey's President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan was notably absent from a key summit of the 57-member Organization of
Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in the Saudi holy city of Mecca early Saturday, an AFP
photographer said.
Turkey, a regional heavyweight, was instead represented by its Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu. Erdogan's visit would have been his first to the kingdom since
the brutal murder last October of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi
consulate in Istanbul, which tarnished the international reputation of Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The OIC meeting is the third and final summit hosted
by Saudi Arabia this week, aimed at galvanising support among Arab and Islamic
nations against arch-rival Iran, which has close ties with Turkey. Khashoggi, a
Saudi royal insider and Washington Post contributor was killed and dismembered
in what Saudi Arabia said was a "rogue" operation, but CIA analysis leaked to
the US media pointed the finger at Prince Mohammed. Saudi prosecutors have
absolved the prince and said around two dozen people implicated in the murder
are in custody, with death penalties sought against five men. But attention has
remained focused on whether the crown prince ordered the murder despite the
kingdom's denials. Erdogan has said the order to murder Khashoggi came from "the
highest levels" of the Saudi government but has stopped short of directly
blaming Prince Mohammed.
Algerians Rally for Change despite Dozens Detained
Agence France Presse/The Arab Weekly/May 02/2019/Large crowds of Algerians on
Friday took to the streets of the capital, where dozens were detained ahead of
the latest protest two months after leader Abdelaziz Bouteflika resigned.
Demonstrators filled avenues in central Algiers chanting slogans against a push
to hold presidential elections in July and rejecting calls by the armed forces
chief for dialogue. "No elections with this gang in power," the crowd shouted.
Protesters are looking to keep up the pressure on the North African state's
ruling elite with weekly rallies despite the end of Bouteflika's two-decade
rule. Police had earlier rounded up some 50 people, mainly young men, in the
heart of Algiers ahead of the planned protest. Those detained had their IDs and
mobile phones confiscated and were loaded into vans, an AFP journalist reported.
Demonstrators taking to the streets are demanding the resignation of all those
tainted by ties to the former regime. Local journalists reported that people
were out in force in the country's other biggest cities of Oran, Constantine and
Annaba. Armed forces chief Ahmed Gaid Salah has become the main powerbroker
after he turned on his boss Bouteflika and helped ease him from office in the
face of the mass protests. He is pushing for elections on July 4 but
demonstrators insist there must be a wholesale change of top officials before a
new vote can be held. Only two little-known figures have submitted their
candidacies on time for the disputed poll, raising doubts about plans to stage
it. The Constitutional Council has until June 5 to decide whether to approve the
two hopefuls, who need the backing of at least 600 elected officials or 60,000
voters to get on the ballot. The rallies that erupted across the country in
February after Bouteflika announced plans to seek a new term have largely been
tolerated by security officials overwhelmed by the vast crowds. Last Friday the
police made numerous arrests in central Algiers of protesters carrying placards
and the national flag. The crowd this week held a minute's silence for human
rights campaigner Kamel Eddine Fekhar before breaking into chants blaming the
authorities for his death in custody on Tuesday. Fekhar, an activist from the
Mozabite Berber minority, was being held in pre-trial detention for "attacks on
institutions" and had been on hunger strike since March. The justice ministry
said it was probing his death after his lawyer complained he had been kept in
"inhumane conditions."
FBI Concerned with Release of Terrorists who Completed Jail Time
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 1 June, 2019/The release of convicted terrorists after
they complete prison sentences is "absolutely a concern," a senior FBI
counter-terrorism official said, according to NPR earlier this week. The remarks
followed hours after the "American Taliban," John Walker Lindh, exited a prison
in Indiana after serving 17 years behind bars for providing support to the
Taliban. Relatives of Johnny "Mike" Spann, a CIA operative who died in
Afghanistan after questioning Lindh — and even Secretary of State Mike Pompeo —
have raised questions about whether Lindh has forsaken his ties to violent
extremists. Nearly 18 years after the attacks of September 11, 2001, a wave of
defendants convicted of supporting terrorist groups or committing acts of
violence is starting to leave prisons and jails. Lindh is perhaps the most
high-profile example. At a briefing for reporters at FBI headquarters in
Washington, the counter-terrorism official — who asked not to be identified
discussing the prospect of future threats — said special agents near the sites
of prisons designated for terrorists in Colorado and Indiana have several
options to follow up if needed. "Could be a case. Could be interviews with them,
[putting] agents in front of them," he said. The FBI official said the overall
threat from terrorism is both "high tempo" and evolving. He highlighted a
"significant increase" in racially motivated violent extremism from last fall to
earlier this year, on track to meet or exceed last year's 120 domestic terrorism
arrests. During the first two quarters of this fiscal year, the FBI made 66
domestic terror-related arrests and 63 international terrorism arrests, he said.
"Domestic terror represents a persistent and evolving threat," the FBI official
said. There have been more deaths in the US from acts of domestic terror than
from international terrorism, he added. And as with international terror,
there's been an evolution in the threat from big conspiracies — plots like the
September 11, 2001 hijackings — toward lone offenders, giving agents fewer "dots
to connect." The FBI official declined to attribute a reason for the rise in
home-grown, domestic terrorism, but he said that such cases can pose a series of
their own challenges for investigators. As compared with international
terrorism, there's no American government entity that can designate entire
groups as problematic, exposing them to financial sanctions or other measures.
The US can declare all of al-Qaeda a threat, for example — and take military,
diplomatic, financial or other action — but there's no simple analog for a
domestic group. Another challenge: beliefs of domestic radicals are protected by
the First Amendment. "We cannot and do not investigate ideology," the FBI
official said. "Membership in a group is never a sufficient basis for
investigation." As a result, federal authorities often work hand-in-hand with
state or local law enforcement agencies, charging and arresting suspects with
unrelated gun and drug offenses, to try to disrupt violent plots before they
come to fruition. One bright spot is that more good tips are coming in from the
public and state or local police, the majority of which are "spot on," the FBI
official said. Overall, the FBI has nearly 5,000 open terrorism investigations
in the United States and beyond. About 850 of those cases involve domestic
terrorism; 1,000 or so are related to ISIS; and 1,000 more are home-grown
violent extremists, often radicalized via online propaganda. "Eighteen years
after 9/11, we don't want Americans to forget that the threat is still very
real," the official said. Of al-Qaeda, he said: "They're not down and out.
They're strategic."
Ankara Scours for Russia-Ensured Ceasefire in Idlib, Syria
Ankara- Saeed Abdulrazek/Saturday, 1 June, 2019/Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan and his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, discussed late Thursday
(May 30) recent developments and violence in Syria’s northern Idlib province.
The two leaders, in a phone call, discussed agreements they signed as guarantor
states to rival Syria warring parties during previous talks held in the Kazakh
capital, Astana, and the Black Sea resort city, Sochi. Discussions come in
parallel as Russia, a major power backer of the Assad regime, continued to
bombard with Syrian regime air forces de-escalation zones in the war-torn
country’s north, where Turkey-backed armed factions are based. In a statement,
Head of the Turkish Presidential Information Office Fakhruddin Alton said
Erdogan stressed to Putin the need to reinforce a ceasefire in Idlib
immediately. Erdogan also told Putin by phone that Syria needed a political
solution. He also pointed out the need to prevent further casualties as a result
of Syrian regime attacks against civilians south of Idlib, and remove the
growing risk of a mass influx of refugees crossing into Turkey. Syrians uprooted
by the fighting protested on Friday at the Atmeh crossing into Turkey, calling
for an end to the strikes and for Ankara to open the frontier. Despite its
calls to halt pro-regime bombardment of Turkey-backed rebel areas in Syria,
Ankara has maintained a strict border policy against giving asylum to Syrian
opposition families inside Syria. Instead, it has been deploying additional
forces to its borders with Syria amid what seems to be heightened tensions
threatening Turkish-Russian fallout in the embattled Levantine country. In
September last year, Erdogan and Putin announced an agreement in Sochi to
establish a buffer zone separating regime forces and opposition armed factions
in Idlib and its environs. According to Turkish military sources, artillery
shells landed near a Turkish observation post, located in the Jabal al-Zawiyeh
area in the northern governorate of Hama, south of Idlib province. But sources
said that the shelling did not result in material or human damage.
The Kremlin, for its part, blamed Turkey on Friday for failing to curb rebels
it’s backing in Idlib from firing on civilian and Russian targets, signaling it
would continue to back a Syrian government offensive there despite Ankara’s
protests. On that note, Ankara has moved 50 military armored vehicles and
commandos to its southern Hatay province which lies on the Mediterranean coast
and is bordered by Syria to the south and the east.
HRW Condemns France 'Outsourcing' of ISIS Trials to Iraq
Paris- Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 1 June, 2019/Human Rights Watch on Friday
condemned France's "outsourcing" of trials of ISIS group suspects to "abusive
justice systems", after seven of its nationals have this week been sentenced to
death in Iraq. Two of them have "alleged that they were tortured or coerced to
confess", the New York-based watchdog said in a statement. "France and other
countries should not be outsourcing management of their terrorism suspects to
abusive justice systems," said HRW's acting Middle East director, Lama Fakih.
"These countries should not be sitting idly by while their citizens are
transferred to a country where their right to a fair trial and protection from
torture are undermined."A Baghdad court sentenced a Frenchman to death on
Wednesday for joining ISIS, bringing to seven the number of French militants on
death row in Iraq. Yassine Sakkam's sentence came despite France reiterating its
opposition to capital punishment this week. In January, a group of 11 French
citizens and one Tunisian was handed over to Iraqi authorities by a US-backed
force which expelled the militant group from its last bastion in Syria. Around
1,000 suspected foreign ISIS fighters are held in detention by this Kurdish
force and Iraq has offered to put them on trial in exchange for millions of
dollars, potentially solving a legal conundrum for Western governments but
sparking rights concerns. France has long insisted its adult citizens captured
in Iraq or Syria must face trial before local courts, while stressing its
opposition to capital punishment. Iraqi law provides for the death penalty for
anyone joining a "terrorist group" -- even those who did not take up arms. HRW
said it had documented cases of Iraqi interrogators "using a range of torture
techniques, including beating suspects on the soles of their feet,
internationally known as 'falaka', and waterboarding, which would not leave
lasting marks on the person´s body". It also condemned "the routine failure of
the Iraqi justice system to credibly investigate torture allegations". Before
that, in all but one case observed by HRW since 2016, trials had consisted of "a
judge briefly interviewing the defendant, usually relying solely on a
confession, often coerced, with no effective legal representation". A group
representing the families of French militants has asked the government in Paris
to "do everything possible to stop this fatal chain of death sentences" and to
try them "on our soil".
On Tuesday, Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said France was stepping up
efforts to stop Iraq executing those convicted.
Libya’s Haftar Meets Putin in Moscow for First Time
Cairo - Khaled Mahmoud/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 1 June, 2019/Commander of the
Libyan National Army (LNA) Khalifa Haftar held talks with Russian President
Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Friday in what was the first official and declared
meeting between them. Libyan sources close to Haftar said he sought to convince
Putin to help lift the embargo that as been imposed on the LNA by the United
Nations Security Council. They also discussed Russian assistance in developing
the LNA’s weapons, they added. Haftar had arrived in the Russian capital on
Thursday. The pro-LNA Libyan news agency quoted a source from Haftar’s office as
saying that the trip was a routine visit that falls within the ongoing
coordination between Libya and Russia on counter-terrorism. Haftar had paid
several visits to Russia in the past where he met with senior officials at the
defense and foreign ministries. Separately, the LNA denied reports of the death
of one of Haftar’s sons, Khaled, during the battle to liberate Tripoli from
terrorist and criminal gangs that are affiliated with the Government of National
Accord (GNA). It said that the claim was a rumor circulated by the Muslim
Brotherhood press. Activists also alleged Khaled’s death, saying he was killed
in Turkish drone attacks on Gharyan city, some 80 kms south of the capital.
Khaled leads the 106 brigade. He has appeared in footage several times since the
launch of the operation against Tripoli on April 4. Meanwhile, Fayez al-Sarraj’s
GNA was still banking on a shift in stance by US President Donald Trump on the
Libyan crisis. GNA media hailed a letter sent by four US congressmen that calls
on Trump to demand a ceasefire in Libya. The congressmen expressed their concern
over Haftar’s operation, warning it may ignite a more violent civil war.
Near the eastern city of Benghazi, meanwhile, the head of Libya’s oil workers’
labor union, Saad Dinar, was released on Thursday after being held by eastern
security authorities for almost a month, a relative said. Earlier in the day,
Dinar said on his Facebook page that he was let go after what he described as
“routine interrogation.”The Tripoli-based Libyan state oil firm NOC called a
week ago for Dinar’s release.
Egypt, Pakistan Agree to Bolstering Relations
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 1 June, 2019/Egyptian President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi
and Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan agreed on Friday to bolster ties between
their countries, reported the Saudi Press Agency. The officials met in the holy
Saudi city of Makkah on the sidelines of their participation in the Organization
of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) summit. Cairo and Islamabad will boost ties through
visits by parliamentary delegations and contacts between senior officials. Sisi
and Khan also discussed regional and international developments of interest, as
well as Islamic affairs, said a statement from the PM’s office.
Homemade Army Drones Successfully Strike Terror Targets in
Algeria
Algiers- Boualam Ghimrasah/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 01 June, 2019/Algeria’s
Defense Ministry published a statement revealing that Algerian-made army drones
struck terror targets near the country’s southern borders. This is the first
time the ministry publicizes operating locally-made drones since it first
declared war on terror in the mid-90s. In a statement, the Ministry of Defense
said the flights were ordered by Algerian Army Chief Lieutenant General Ahmed
Gaid Salah, who paid a visit to the “sixth military zone” (near borders with
Niger) in the last four days. It also highlighted the role of Algerian-made
drones in counterterror operations, adding that the aircrafts were capable of
operating both nighttime and daytime missions effectively. Despite saying
targets were successfully struck, the statement did not mention the toll
inflicted on terrorist formations. In a related context, the Ministry of Defense
announced that the army had discovered a weapons and munitions depot north-east
the In Amenas town which lies on southeastern borders with Syria. The weapons
cache included rocket launchers and RPG-7 missiles, as well as machine guns,
pistols, and ammunition.
New Study Says 12,000 Palestinians Volunteered to Fight Nazis during WWII
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 1 June, 2019/In 2015, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu sparked an uproar when he claimed that Mufti Haj Amin al-Husseini was
the one who had urged Hitler to annihilate the Jews, drawing a wave of
criticism. But it turns out that there was another side to the story that also
escaped mention by Netanyahu, the historian’s son: the forgotten role played by
thousands of Palestinians who did not heed the Mufti of Jerusalem’s call to
support the Axis countries, and went so far as to take up arms to fight the
Nazis, often shoulder to shoulder with young Jews from Mandatory Palestine,
reported the Israeli Haaretz on Friday. Professor Mustafa Abbasi, a historian at
Tel Hai Academic College, has spent years tracing their story. Having recently
published an academic article on the subject, this week he suggested an opposite
narrative to the one that Netanyahu put forward. The prime minister had sought
to paint the Palestinians as supporters of the Third Reich, but Abbasi says,
“The Mufti did not find a receptive audience among the Palestinians for his call
to aid the Nazis. Not at all.”Many studies have been published about Jewish
volunteerism in the war against the Nazis, which reached a peak with the
formation of the Jewish Brigade. But “the thousands of Arab volunteers are
hardly mentioned and sometimes the record is often distorted,” Abbasi says. In
an article in the latest issue of the periodical Cathedra (“Palestinians
Fighting the Nazis: The Story of Palestinian Volunteers in World War II”), he
explains why these Palestinian fighters have been left out of the history books.
On the one hand, Zionist historians naturally placed an emphasis on the role
played by Jewish volunteers in the fight against the Nazis. On the other hand,
their Palestinian counterparts were focusing on the struggle against British
rule and were not eager to glorify the names of those who cooperated with
Britain not so many years after the British put down the Arab Revolt of
1936-1939, and thereby indirectly helped the Jews establish a state. “Neither
side wished to highlight this subject,” says Professor Abbasi. “But I think it’s
the historian’s job to be faithful to the sources and to try to describe history
as it was, without being hostage to any national narrative that would limit him
and prevent him from writing history freely.”No organization was ever
established to commemorate the actions of these Palestinian volunteers.
“Many of them were killed and many others are still listed as missing. But no
memorial has ever been established for them,” says Abbasi according to Haaretz.
In fact, the records of the Palestinian volunteers, along with much of their
personal archives and papers, have disappeared.
Over the last few years, Abbasi was able to learn of their story in Palestinian
newspapers from the Mandate era, in memoirs and personal journals, and through
interviews he conducted with a few of the last remaining volunteers who are
still alive. He also collected material from various British archives, from the
Zionist Archive, and the archives of the Haganah and the Israeli army. Abbasi
estimates that about 12,000 young Palestinians enlisted in the British Army in
World War II. Hundreds became POWs, many others (the exact figure is unknown)
were killed.
“Compared to other peoples, this is not an insignificant number,” he says.
Initially, the Palestinian and Jewish volunteers served in mixed units. “They
received training and drilled at the same bases and in many instances fought
shoulder to shoulder, and were also taken prisoner together,” says Abbasi.
The proximity of the Jewish and Palestinian fighters sometimes led to unusual
outcomes, as in the case of Shehab Hadjaj, a Palestinian who enlisted in the
British Army, was taken prisoner in Germany and died in 1943. To this day, he is
listed at Mount Herzl as “a casualty of Israel’s wars” because someone
mistakenly thought his surname indicated that he was Jewish. “Relations among
the fighters were generally good, and if there was any friction it was mainly
over service conditions, like mail and food,” Abbasi says. However, there were
certain key differences between the two groups, too. For example, while the Jews
were united in their goal of fighting the Nazis to promote the establishment of
the Jewish state, the Palestinians “had no clear national agenda,” Abbasi
writes. For this reason, unlike the Jews, they did not seek to form separate
Palestinian units and there was no “Palestinian Brigade” parallel to the Jewish
Brigade, in which thousands of Jews from Mandatory Palestine served. The Mufti
of Jerusalem was never truly a leader of the Palestinian people. “He left
Palestine for a decade in 1937. What kind of leader abandons his people at such
a time?” Abbasi wonders. “He had no influence on the public. He was detached and
the public was already tired of him and his methods. They didn’t see him as a
leader,” he says. “Anyone who says differently is distorting history.”
12 Dead after Gunman Fires 'Indiscriminately' in Virginia
Govt Complex
Agence France Presse/The Arab Weekly/May 02/2019/A municipal employee sprayed
gunfire "indiscriminately" in a government building complex on Friday in the US
state of Virginia, police said, killing 12 people and wounding four in the
latest mass shooting to rock the country. The shooter was also killed after an
extended gun battle with responding officers, in a scene that "best could be
described as a war zone," Virginia Beach police chief James Cervera told a news
conference. The shooting happened just after 4:00 pm (2000 GMT), when the gunman
entered one of the buildings at the Virginia Beach municipal complex and
"immediately began to indiscriminately fire on all of the victims," Cervera
said. One victim was killed outside in his vehicle, while the others were found
on all three floors of the building. Police upgraded the casualty toll to 12
dead and four wounded Friday night, after earlier reporting 11 dead and six
wounded. The shooter was armed with a .45-caliber handgun fitted with a sound
suppressor, and he reloaded multiple times with extended magazines, Cervera
said. "Due to the sound of gunfire, (the four responding officers) were able to
locate the floor in which the suspect was committing his crimes. They
immediately engaged with the suspect, and I can tell you that it was a long gun
battle," Cervera said. "During this gun battle, basically the officers stopped
this individual from committing more carnage in that building."Authorities did
not release the shooter's name or speculate on his motives, aside from saying
that he was a longtime employee of the public utilities department. The wounded
included a police officer, who was saved by his bulletproof vest. All were
undergoing surgery Friday night.
'Surreal'
The building where the shooting took place in Virginia Beach -- a city of
450,000 people about 200 miles (320 kilometers) southeast of Washington --
housed the city's public works and utilities offices and can have 400 people
inside at any time. "This is the most devastating day in the history of Virginia
Beach," Mayor Bobby Dyer told reporters. "The people involved are our friends,
co-workers, neighbors and colleagues." Megan Banton, a public utilities
employee, told local television station WVEC that during the chaos she and about
20 coworkers hid in an office, where they used a desk to wedge the door shut.
"We just wanted to try to keep everybody safe as much as we could and just
trying to stay on the phone with 911, just because we wanted to make sure
(police) were coming. They couldn't come fast enough," she said, adding that it
felt like "hours." "We heard gunshots. We kept hearing gunshots and we kept
hearing the cops saying, 'Get down.'"Banton said it felt "surreal" to have a
mass shooting in her office building, and having survived it she just wanted to
go home and hug her family. "I have an 11-month-old baby at home and all I could
think about was him and trying to make it home to him," she said.
150th mass shooting
President Donald Trump had been briefed on the shooting and was monitoring the
situation, the White House said. According to the Washington-based Gun Violence
Archive monitoring group, Friday's shooting was the 150th mass shooting in the
United States this year, defined as a single event in which four or more people
are shot or killed. Despite the scale of gun violence across the nation, gun
ownership laws are lax and efforts to address the issue legislatively have long
been deadlocked at the federal level. Among Democrats, the response to the
shooting was especially pointed, with many of the party's White House hopefuls
weighing in on the gun violence crisis. "Another horrific shooting shocks the
nation, this time in Virginia Beach," Pete Buttigieg tweeted. "Already, this
much is clear: it is unacceptable for America to remain the only developed
country where this is routine. We must act."
'Horrific day'
Senator Bernie Sanders decried the influence of the National Rifle Association,
a powerful lobby group that routinely calls for more guns in US society so that
ordinary citizens are armed and ready to confront a "bad guy." "The days of the
NRA controlling Congress and writing our gun laws must end. Congress must listen
to the American people and pass gun safety legislation. This sickening gun
violence must stop," he said in a tweet. Virginia Governor Ralph Northam said it
was a "horrific day" for the state. "Our hearts ache over the senseless violence
that has been inflicted upon the Virginia Beach community today. My deepest
condolences and prayers go to the families of those who left home this morning
and will not return tonight," he said at a news conference. Singer and music
producer Pharrell Williams, a native of Virginia Beach, paid homage to the
strength of his hometown. "We are praying for our city, the lives that were
lost, their families and everyone affected. We are resilient," he said in a
tweet. "We will not only get through this but we'll come out of this stronger
than before we always do."
Sudan recalls ambassador to Qatar for ‘consultations’
AFP/June 01/2019/KHARTOUM: Sudan’s ambassador to Qatar has returned to Khartoum
for consultations, the foreign ministry said Saturday, with the envoy set to fly
back to Doha soon. The diplomat was summoned “to Khartoum for consultations
and...will leave to Doha in the coming hours” to resume his work, Sudan’s
ministry said. Earlier in the day, a spokesperson for Qatar’s foreign ministry
denied claims on social media the ambassador had been recalled and said it
received official notification only that he was on “short leave.”Sudan’s
decision to summon its ambassador came after the country abruptly shut down the
office of Qatari broadcaster Al Jazeera on Thursday without giving a reason. The
news channel, which regularly broadcasts footage of demonstrations that have
taken place in Sudan since December, is funded by Doha, a close ally of former
president Omar Al-Bashir. Sudan’s military in April ousted Bashir after
months-long protests against his authoritarian, three-decade rule. The ruling
military council’s head Abdelfattah Al-Burhan is currently in Saudi Arabia after
traveling for a string of summits. He has already visited Egypt and the United
Arab Emirates. The deputy head of the council, Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, also
visited Riyadh in May and met Crown Prince Mohamed Bin Salman. Saudi Arabia and
allies including the UAE and Egypt, broke off diplomatic ties with Doha in 2017,
accusing it of supporting terrorism, which it denies.
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from
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on June 02/2019
Sweden's Self-Inflicted Mess/The Scared Girls of Uppsala; Children of ISIS
Terrorists
Judith Bergman/ Gatestone Institute/June 01/2019
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14209/sweden-self-inflicted-mess
According to an Amnesty International report, in Sweden, rape
investigations are under-prioritized, there are "excessively long waiting times
for the results of DNA analyses", there is not enough support for rape victims
and not enough work is done for preventative purposes.
In 2017, a Swedish police report, "Utsatta områden 2017", ("Vulnerable Areas
2017", commonly known as "no-go zones" or lawless areas) showed that there are
61 such areas in Sweden. They encompass 200 criminal networks, consisting of an
estimated 5,000 criminals. Twenty-three of those areas were especially
critical....
"I cannot bear to see children faring so badly.... There should be no doubt that
the Government does what it can for these children [of ISIS terrorists] and if
possible they should be brought to Sweden." — Swedish Foreign Minister Margot
Wallström.
Unfortunately, the horrific fate of enslaved Yazidi children does not appear to
be something that Wallström "cannot bear".
According to the latest National Safety Report, published by the Swedish
National Council for Crime Prevention, four out of 10 women are afraid to walk
outside freely. According to an Amnesty International report, "In a 2017 study,
1.4% of the population stated they had been subjected to rape or sexual abuse,
corresponding to approximately 112,000 people."
In the picturesque Swedish university city of Uppsala, 80% of girls do not feel
safe in the city center. One 14-year old teenager, who is afraid to reveal her
identity, told the Swedish media that she always wears trainers so that she can
'run faster' if she is attacked: "I sat down on a bench and immediately guys
came and sat next to me on both sides. Then more guys came and stood in front of
me. They began to grab my hair and my legs and said things to me that I did not
understand. I became so terrified and told them many times to stop, but they did
not listen... Everything is so horrible. This is so wrong. I want to be able to
feel safe", she said about taking the bus home.
A recent survey from Region Uppsala shows that only 19% of girls in high school
feel safe in the inner city of Uppsala. In 2013, the number was 45%. The men and
boys in the gangs that engage in the sexual harassment of Swedish girls in
Uppsala are frequently newly-arrived migrants.
In response, officials from Uppsala apparently told the Swedish press, "We
usually encourage girls who feel insecure to think about what they need to do to
feel safe, such as not walking alone, making sure they get picked up and
anything else that can reduce their sense of insecurity." In other words, the
authorities are leaving the responsibility for dealing with this critical
security issue to the girls themselves.
The scared girls in Uppsala are only a small part of the entire picture.
According to the latest National Safety Report, published by the Swedish
National Council for Crime Prevention (Brottsförebyggande Rådet or Brå), four
out of 10 women are afraid to walk outside freely. "Almost a quarter of the
population chooses a different route or another mode of transportation as a
result of anxiety about crime... Among women aged 20-24, 42 percent state that
they often opted for another route or another mode of transportation, because
they felt insecure and worried about being subjected to crime. The corresponding
proportion among men in the same age group is 16 percent..." according to Brå.
Nevertheless, the government is cutting down on the police's resources. In the
government's new spring change budget, the police are facing a reduction of 232
million Swedish kroner (US $24.5 million). "The proposals in the spring change
budget will have consequences for the police's activities, but what effects it
will have it is too early to respond to at present. We will now analyze how we
will handle the new economic conditions," the police said in response to the
proposed budget costs, with police chief Anders Thornberg criticizing the cuts.
As it is, the police are already drowning in tasks they cannot perform properly,
such as solving rape cases. A recent Amnesty International report, "Time for
Change: Justice for rape survivors in the Nordic countries", released in April,
harshly criticized Sweden for not dealing properly with rape cases. According to
the Amnesty report, among other problems, rape investigations are
under-prioritized, there are "excessively long waiting times for the results of
DNA analyses", there is not enough support for rape victims and not enough work
is done for preventative purposes.
The Amnesty report states:
"In 2017, the Swedish police received 5,236 reports of rape involving people
aged 15 or over: 95% of victims were women or girls. The preliminary statistics
for 2018 show 5,593 reports of rape of which 96% of victims were women or girls.
However, under-reporting of rape and other sexual crimes means that these
figures do not give a realistic picture of the scale of the problem. In a 2017
study, 1.4% of the population stated they had been subjected to rape or sexual
abuse, corresponding to approximately 112,000 people. The vast majority of rape
victims will never report the crime to the police. Of those who do, few will see
their case heard in court. In 2017, prosecutions were initiated in 11% of cases
involving children aged between 15 and 17 and in 6% of cases involving adults".
Sexual crimes are not the only crimes that Swedish authorities find themselves
unable properly to confront. In 2018, Sweden experienced a record high number of
lethal shootings; 45 people were killed in them nationwide. Most of the
shootings took place in the Stockholm area, and most deaths occurred in Region
South, where Malmö is located. "It is at a terribly high level," Stockholm's
police commissioner , Gunnar Appelgren, said about the shootings. Previously,
2017 held the record with 43 shot to death. The number of reported shootings
overall did, however, decrease slightly: from 324 in 2017, to 306 in 2018. The
number of people who were injured was also slightly lower: 135 people in 2018,
compared to 139 in 2017.
According to the police, many of the shootings are linked to criminal conflicts
and so-called "vulnerable areas" (utsatta områden, commonly known as "no-go
zones" or lawless areas). In the first six months of 2018, according to police,
almost every other shooting took place in a "vulnerable area". In 2017, a
Swedish police report, "Utsatta områden 2017" ("Vulnerable Areas 2017") showed
that there are 61 such areas in Sweden. They encompass 200 criminal networks,
consisting of an estimated 5,000 criminals. Twenty-three of those areas were
especially critical: children as young as 10 had been involved in serious crimes
there, including ones involving weapons and drugs. Most of the inhabitants were
non-Western, sadly mainly Muslim, immigrants.
To add to these problems, Foreign Minister Margot Wallström appears to be
planning to bring back children of Swedish Islamic State (ISIS) terrorists who
are living in refugee camps in Syria. "It is complex and that is why it has
taken time to develop a policy and a clear message, but we are working on this
every day. I cannot bear to see children faring so badly", she recently said. In
an April 12 Facebook post, Wallström wrote:
"The government is now working intensively to ensure that children with links to
Sweden who are in Syria receive the help they need. There should be no doubt
that the government does what it can for these children and if possible they
should be brought to Sweden. Each case must be handled individually. The
children are in different situations, some perhaps orphans, others with parents
arrested for acts they committed for ISIS. Identifying Swedes who can have been
born in [Syria or Iraq] is difficult. In the largest camp there are about 76,000
people. We are in contact with International Red Cross in the camps. It is of
the utmost importance that the children's situation is handled with legal
certainty and with the best interests of the children. International actors,
Swedish authorities and Swedish municipalities, who can be recipients of
children, must cooperate..."
Unfortunately, the horrific fate of enslaved Yazidi children does not appear to
be something that Wallström "cannot bear".
Additionally, 41 out of 290 Swedish municipalities could be forced, or are
already being forced, to accommodate returning ISIS terrorists in the near
future, according to a recent report by SVT Nyheter. The ISIS terrorists are
either still in Syria or already on their way back to Sweden. To "prepare" the
municipalities, the Swedish Center Against Violent Extremism invited them to a
"knowledge day" about ISIS returnees on April 24. The purpose was to "provide
support to the municipalities that have received or will be receiving returning
children and adults from areas previously controlled by the Islamic State". The
municipalities involved are those where the ISIS terrorists had lived before
being recruited to ISIS.
In total, 150 male and female ISIS members are expected to return to Sweden, as
well as 80 children who are travelling with their parents.
According to Prime Minister Stefan Löfven, returning ISIS terrorists have a
"right", as Swedish citizens, to return to Sweden. Löfven claimed that it would
be against the Swedish constitution to strip them of their citizenship, but that
those who had committed crimes would be prosecuted. Swedish terrorism expert,
Magnus Ranstorp, though, has warned Sweden against taking back not only ISIS
terrorists, but also their wives and children, who, he said, also pose a
security risk:
"The women are not innocent victims, and there is also a large group of ISIS
children... From the age of eight or nine, they have been sent to indoctrination
camps where they have learned close combat techniques and how to handle weapons.
Some of them have learned how to kill... their identities will forever be linked
to their time with ISIS, and the fact that they have an ISIS father or an ISIS
mother."
Sweden seems intent on importing even more problems.
*Judith Bergman, a columnist, lawyer and political analyst, is a Distinguished
Senior Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 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.
Pompeo’s German visit comes up short
Cornelia Meyer/Arab News/June 01/2019
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is on a whistle-stop tour of Europe. He
arrived in Berlin on Friday, is in Switzerland now and will join US President
Donald Trump in the UK, routing himself via the Netherlands.
Germany was tense. Pompeo’s visit was preceded by Chancellor Angela Markel’s
commencement speech at Harvard University, where she was praised for her
commitment to free trade and for having admitted one million refugees to Germany
in 2015/2016. While she never mentioned Trump by name, she still attacked many
of his policies.
The second issue was a perceived slight by Pompeo in early May. He had canceled
a scheduled visit with German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas at short notice in
order to go to Iraq. It is unusual for a US secretary of state to wait more than
a year to pay an inaugural visit to Berlin – arguably America’s most important
ally in continental Europe. Ever since Trump came to power, US-German relations
have been on the skids.
Pompeo, Merkel and Maas tried hard to demonstrate commonalities. They could,
however, not gloss over substantially different viewpoints on many issues.
There is Germany’s financial contribution to NATO. German defense expenditure is
below 2 percent, which is mandated for NATO members. Germany did not fulfill
promises to substantially augment the defense budget.
There is the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which will bring Russian gas to Germany
circumventing the Ukraine. The US considers it a security risk. The Germans
consider the pipeline important in terms of energy security, and gas is
considered a reliable, low-carbon-emitting fuel. Pompeo did not enlighten the
Germans as to whether the US administration is considering sanctions against
companies participating in Nord Stream 2.
There was no meeting of minds on Huawei either. Many European governments do not
share the Trump administration’s concerns over the company’s ties to the Chinese
government. Huawei technology is an integral part of rolling out 5-G networks in
Germany, the UK and Switzerland.
The two countries are ideologically miles apart on many issues, none more so
than trade wars.
Lastly and very importantly, Pompeo discussed Iran. Germany is one of the three
European signatories to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) to ensure
Iran will not build nuclear weapons. Germany, the UK and France bemoaned the
fact that the US unilaterally withdrew from the agreement last year.
Pompeo and Mass declared that they both agreed Iran should not have nuclear
weapons and that Iran’s influence in Yemen, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon is
disconcerting. Yet Germany has so far not declared Hezbollah a terrorist
organization, despite repeated prodding by the US. Maas did also not give Pompeo
any guarantees that the German typhoon aircraft, which are part of Germany’s
commitment in Syria, would remain in Jordan when their term expires this autumn.
The two countries are ideologically miles apart on many issues, none more so
than trade wars. German prosperity is built on the country’s industrial prowess
and ability to trade its products freely on the world markets. China is a very
important trading partner of Germany. When it comes to the automotive sector,
German car manufacturers’ supply chains and assembly lines in North America were
configured when NAFTA was in force. Therefore, the latest spat between Mexico
and the US is less than helpful.
Switzerland will be a lot easier for Pompeo. He is attending the secretive
Bildeberg meeting, which assembles 100 policy-makers to discuss issues of global
concerns. We will likely never hear what was discussed. Topics are said to
include trade, security and the weaponization of social media. Pompeo is
scheduled to attend, alongside presidential adviser Jared Kushner.
Pompeo’s meeting with Switzerland’s Foreign Affairs Minister Ignazio Cassis
meeting will likely focus on Iran, because Switzerland represents US interests
in the Islamic Republic. Switzerland is neutral and not a signatory to the JCPOA.
Its foreign policy has always been geared to mediate in conflict situations.
But when it comes to Huawei, the Swiss, who are economically minded, independent
and neutral, will not yield to Pompeo. Swiscom’s landline system is built on
Huawei technology and the Chinese company is a client of most of the independent
operators, particularly when it comes to rolling out 5-G networks.
Pompeo’s trip has shown one thing: While the US has been Europe’s traditional
ally, fault lines are starting to show. Europeans thrive on multilateral
approaches, be it on trade, security or foreign policy. The current US
administration believes in bilateral relationships and the full deployment of
America’s might. Europe may need America more at this point, but in the long run
the US will fare better with more rather than fewer friends, especially when
they are long-standing allies. The world will certainly be a safer place if the
US and its traditional allies share their viewpoints and act in unison.
*Cornelia Meyer is a business consultant, macro-economist and energy expert.
Twitter: @MeyerResources
Why the UK Conservatives need another Thatcher
Zaid M. Belbagi/Arab News/June 01/2019
The UK is facing its “worst peacetime crisis,” and the union is “more divided
than at any time since the Civil War.” Such statements have been used to
describe the current impasse the country finds itself in. With embattled Prime
Minister Theresa May to step down next week, Conservative Party candidates are
falling over themselves to try and get the top job. Following a spectacular
drubbing during the European elections last week, with the ruling party coming a
spectacular fifth, the Conservatives must choose a leader who will bridge
divides and avoid a potentially fatal electoral defeat.
A staggering 38 British prime ministers have come from the Conservative Party or
its Tory predecessor. The party of Wellington, Disraeli, Churchill and Thatcher
is first and foremost a party of government. However, May last week made it four
successive Conservative prime ministers who, in one way or another, had to
resign because of Europe. Three years since the British people voted to leave
the EU, the UK is torn between a government so weak that it has pursued a Brexit
deal that would leave the country at the mercy of fate, a ruling party fraught
with division, and an electorate so utterly fed up that they have begun to vote
for outlying parties in protest. Last week’s European polls were won by the
Brexit Party, established only months ago, as the Conservatives astonishingly
trailed behind the Greens.
There is no doubt that May’s tenure has grossly divided the party. Her
cataclysmic decision to prematurely hold a general election resulted in the
Conservatives losing their majority. As her voice continued to crackle, her
party did too. However, May cannot be held solely responsible for its state.
Europe, as ever, has driven a wedge between those who wish to remain in the EU,
those who wish to leave whatever the cost, and those who wish to leave with an
agreement that protects British interests into the future. This entire episode
has shown that what the Conservatives require is strong, almost radical,
leadership – bold enough to set a course for the party and the wider country.
What the party needs is Margaret Thatcher.
What the Conservatives require is strong, almost radical, leadership — bold
enough to set a course for the party and the wider country
As a staggering 11 Conservative leadership candidates begin jostling for the top
job, they would do well to remind themselves of the plucky grocer’s girl who
stunned the party at 50-1 odds to unseat Edward Heath as leader in 1975. In the
1970s, Britain’s industrial decline was spectacularly mismanaged, with the
government at the mercy of unions and social strife an all-too-common feature of
daily life. The UK had seen sustained high inflation rates, which were above 20
percent at the time of the 1979 election, unemployment had risen and, over the
winter of 1978-79, there was a series of strikes that became known as the
“Winter of Discontent.” Petrol stations closed, ports were picketed, bodies were
left unburied and waste uncollected. In the midst of this civil disturbance,
Thatcher amazed her opponents by coming to power, as the Labour Party failed in
its efforts to satisfy its working-class voter base.
Though not as drastic, Britain’s present situation is not dissimilar to that of
the 1970s. The Brexit process has absorbed political will and effort, leaving
little else for the other big challenges of the day. Not until a deal is agreed
on Brexit will Parliament be able to wholeheartedly proceed to tackle other
pressing challenges.
When Thatcher came to power, a “national consensus” had dominated British
politics – tolerating or encouraging nationalization, strong trade unions, heavy
regulation, high taxes, and a generous welfare state – since 1945. By boldly
bringing this to an end, Thatcher steered the country on a new course, whilst
also taking her party to three historic election wins. By making drastic changes
to trade union laws (most notably the regulation that unions had to hold a
ballot of their membership before calling strikes), walkouts had fallen to their
lowest level for 30 years by the time of the 1983 general election, which the
Conservatives won by a landslide.
The crop of candidates that have put themselves forward to replace May is by no
means a list of the party’s most impressive and extraordinary. Hollowed out by
the collapse of David Cameron and May’s governments, the party is a deeply
tribal beast, with any future leader having to make any policy palatable to the
different factions within the party.
It is clear from the recent European and local council elections that politics
in the UK is changing. Where established parties previously had the advantage of
existing infrastructure and recognition to change the outlook of elections,
social media and technology has allowed newer, more nimble political movements
to exploit popular dissatisfaction to devastating electoral effect.
Tory leadership hopeful and former foreign secretary Boris Johnson showed
understanding of this, warning that the Tories would be “dismissed from the job
of running the country” if they continued to fail in delivering on their
promises. If, like the unions in the 1970s, Europe is to be the critical factor
in uniting the country, the new Conservative leader must act swiftly on
delivering Brexit or the party risks exiting mainstream politics altogether.
*Zaid M. Belbagi is a political commentator, and an adviser to private clients
between London and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Twitter: @Moulay_Zaid
European Parliament election results reflect the
dissatisfaction of voters
Yossi Mekelberg/Arab News/June 01/2019
If anyone hoped that last week’s European Parliament elections would clear the
murky waters of European politics, they set themselves for a disappointment.
Voters didn’t exactly produce a decisive result, which could guide their
representatives about their expectations, but in not doing so they reflected the
confusion of the leaders of this massive experiment in forming a supranational
polity. By the time the votes were counted, it surfaced that in the bigger
picture the electorate prefers continuity to radical change, though this didn’t
stop the specter of ultra-right populism from continuing to creep into
mainstream politics. However, there was better news for parties with more
coherent messages such the Liberals and Greens, who have done better at the
expense of the center right and center left. From local to national and European
elections, the main trait is of fragmentation and malaise directed at the
inability of the more traditional parties to come up with answers to
21st-century challenges.
There were some sighs of relief that the center, right or left, hasn’t melted
down completely. Yet for the first time in the history of European elections,
the two major groups, the center-right European People’s Party (EPP) and the
center-left Socialists and Democrats (S&D), cannot together form a majority,
losing between them 11 percent of the vote share.
These were also the first European elections to take place in the shadow of
Brexit and the refugee crisis that has unsettled large parts of Europe. For
decades this political-economic union was seen as a panacea for most countries
transiting towards what they hoped would be unabated economic development, the
advancement of democratic institutions and human rights, and a guarantee of
peaceful relations with their neighbors – outcomes that were diametrically
opposed to the course of European history before the European Union. From its
beginnings as a loose economic association between a tiny group of countries,
the EU has evolved into a union of 28 countries that increasingly resembles a
federal system, including the free movement of people between all member states
and a single currency for 19 of them.
The fragmentary outcome of these elections should not be confused in
politicians’ minds with the lack of a clear message.
Relief at the election results shouldn’t turn into complacency. For better or
worse, the centrist parties are not out of the woods; they have just got a
temporary reprieve. Right-wing populism is here to stay, at least for the time
being, and unless other parties with more complex and considered views adjust
their policies to the current climate and the concerns of European citizens,
they will gradually become marginalized. Look no further than the results in
France, Italy and the UK, where right-wing populism did well. In Italy, Matteo
Salvini’s Northern League is the outright winner, and together with the Five
Star they commanded more than half of the vote. Their sister party in France,
Rassemblement National (RN), led by Marine Le Pen, just edged out French
President Emmanuel Macron’s La Republique En Marche, and in the UK Nigel
Farage’s Brexit Party won more seats than any other. To be sure, parties
committed to strengthening the European Union still hold two-thirds of seats in
the EU Parliament, but the trickle not only to the right, but also towards
smaller parties and single-issue ones, reflects the shifting attitudes of
voters, who would like concrete answers to their daily concerns, whether on
immigration, the erosion of sovereignty or climate change.
But however one deciphers the European election results, it is clear that there
is a significant disconnect between the momentous project of putting together
almost an entire continent under one political, economic and legal system, and
the citizens of this project, who don’t necessarily have an emotional attachment
to it, nor feel genuinely represented. Most hardly know the names of the people
they elect, and though there was an increase in turnout for these elections, it
was still barely more than 50 percent. Considering the power the European
Parliament has, especially since the Lisbon Treaty was ratified, it is
staggering that many more voters are not flocking to the polling stations.
Brexit also took part in the European election. From a European perspective, the
very possibility of leaving, though less tempting if one looks at the havoc it
has wreaked on the UK, is undermining the foundations of the EU. Until 2016
Europe was moving in one direction only, towards expansion. For a country to
vote to leave, and even for Turkey, for instance, to cool its interest in
joining the EU, represents a genuine challenge for the future of the union,
though it is also an opportunity to assess its direction. The newly formed
Brexit Party might have won more seats than any other, but the overall vote
leaned towards the Remainers. What clearly emerged is that the British public is
becoming increasingly polarized when it comes to Brexit. Though turnout was only
37 percent, those who bothered to vote rewarded parties that either clearly
supported leaving the EU, even without a deal, or were outspoken Remainers. Both
so-called big parties, the Conservatives and Labour, saw heavy losses,
particularly the Conservatives, who suffered a near wipeout in the midst of
bringing to a close the dismal premiership of Theresa May, while Labour lost
half of the seats it had held in the previous parliament.
The fragmentary outcome of these elections should not be confused in
politicians’ minds with the lack of a clear message. It is a message of deep
dissatisfaction with them for not addressing their citizens’ most basic concerns
and being detached from their experiences, priorities and hardships. It remains
to be seen whether the establishment in Brussels is capable of listening,
learning and changing.
**Yossi Mekelberg is professor of international relations at Regent’s University
London, where he is head of the International Relations and Social Sciences
Program. Twitter: @YMekelberg