LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
May 05/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
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Bible Quotations For today
Jesus Appears to Two Of The Disciples On the
Road to Emmaus & Explaines For Them The Scripture
Luke 24/13035/Now that same day two of them were going to a village called
Emmaus, about seven miles from Jerusalem. They were talking with each other
about everything that had happened. As they talked and discussed these things
with each other, Jesus himself came up and walked along with them; but
they were kept from recognizing him. He asked them, “What are you
discussing together as you walk along?” They stood still, their faces downcast.
One of them, named Cleopas, asked him, “Are you the only one visiting Jerusalem
who does not know the things that have happened there in these days?”
“What things?” he asked. “About Jesus of Nazareth,” they replied. “He was
a prophet, powerful in word and deed before God and all the people. The chief
priests and our rulers handed him over to be sentenced to death, and they
crucified him; but we had hoped that he was the one who was going to
redeem Israel. And what is more, it is the third day since all this took place.
In addition, some of our women amazed us. They went to the tomb early this
morning but didn’t find his body. They came and told us that they had seen
a vision of angels, who said he was alive. Then some of our companions
went to the tomb and found it just as the women had said, but they did not see
Jesus.” He said to them, “How foolish you are, and how slow to believe all that
the prophets have spoken! Did not the Messiah have to suffer these things
and then enter his glory?” And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he
explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself. As
they approached the village to which they were going, Jesus continued on as if
he were going farther. But they urged him strongly, “Stay with us, for it is
nearly evening; the day is almost over.” So he went in to stay with them.0 When
he was at the table with them, he took bread, gave thanks, broke it and began to
give it to them. Then their eyes were opened and they recognized him, and he
disappeared from their sight. They asked each other, “Were not our hearts
burning within us while he talked with us on the road and opened the Scriptures
to us?” They got up and returned at once to Jerusalem. There they found the
Eleven and those with them, assembled together and saying, “It is true! The Lord
has risen and has appeared to Simon.” Then the two told what had happened on the
way, and how Jesus was recognized by them when he broke the bread.
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on May 04-05/19
Guterres Renews Call for Hezbollah Disarmament, Demands Lebanon to Set Defense
Strategy
Syndicate of Banque du Liban Employees Declares 'Open Strike'
Bassil: Political Subordination Prevents Preservation of Lebanon Economy
Voice of Lebanon: Turning Just Questions into Muzzling Sword Will Not Go
Unnoticed
Rizk Condemns Campaign Against Journalists
Another Week of Strikes Looms Ahead in Lebanon
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on May 04-05/19
Dozens of Rockets Fired at Israel from Gaza, Israel Responds
US Seeks to Force Iran to Stop Enriching Uranium
U.S. Tightens Nuclear Restrictions on Iran
Iran President's Brother Sentenced to Prison for Corruption
Iran's Rouhani Urges Unity in Face of U.S. 'War on Hope'
National Iranian Oil Company to Open Office in Iraq
8 LNA Fighters Killed in Attack in Southern Libya
UAE Refutes Qatar’s Accusations of Racial Discrimination
Documents Reveal Israel's Nuclear Deceit of the US
At Least 7 Policemen Killed in Taliban Attack in Western Afghanistan
Damascus Accuses Kurd-Led Alliance of 'Treason'
Venezuela's Guaido Makes New Bid to Rally Military Support
Litles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on May 04-05/19
Terror, Racism and EugenicistsظEyad Abu Shakra/Asharq Al-Awsat/May 04/2019
The Spanish Election Is a Triumph of Logic/Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg View/May
04/2019
Palestinian Leaders and Inconvenient Truths/Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone
Institute/May 04/2019
From Venezuela to Lebanon, the US faces a world of tough decisions/Raghida
Dergham/The National/May 04/2019
Analysis/Who You Calling a Terrorist: Trump’s Conundrum With the Muslim
Brotherhood/Zvi Bar'el/Haaretz/May 04/2019
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News published
on May 04-05/19
Guterres Renews Call for Hezbollah
Disarmament, Demands Lebanon to Set Defense Strategy
Kataeb.org/Saturday 04th May 2019/UN Secretary-General Antonio
Guterres renewed his call for the Lebanese government to disarm Hezbollah,
saying that the group must turn into an armed political party and to end its
involvement in the Syrian war. In his semi-annual report released Friday,
Guterres stressed that the Lebanese government must have the development of a
national defense strategy among its top priorities, warning that the presence of
armed militias jeopardizes Lebanon’s security and stability. "The fact that
Hezbollah still has significant military assets beyond the control of the
Lebanese State remains very worrying,” Guterres said. The UN chief reiterated
his call for the Lebanese government to do whatever is needed to prevent
Hezbollah and other armed groups from acquiring weapons and to monopolize the
use of arms. “In a democratic state, it remains a fundamental anomaly that a
political party maintains a militia that has no accountability to the
democratic, governmental institutions of the state but has the power to take
that state to war,” he said.
Lebanon, Egypt Sign 4 Agreements to Boost Trade and
Investment
Naharnet/May 04/19/The Lebanese-Egyptian talks were concluded by the signing of
three memoranda of understanding, and an executive program to enhance trade and
investment relations between the two countries, Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s
press office said. The Lebanese-Egyptian Joint Higher Committee held a meeting
Friday evening at the Grand Serail, chaired by Prime Minister Saad Hariri and
his visiting Egyptian counterpart Mostafa Madbouly. After the meeting, Premiers
Hariri and Madbouly signed three memoranda of understanding and an executive
investment program. The memorandum deals with the exchange of tax experiences,
the export of Egyptian building materials (gravel and sand) to Lebanon, and the
field of communication and information technology. An executive program in the
field of investment promotion was also signed between the Egyptian Ministry of
Investment and International Cooperation and the Investment Development
Authority of Lebanon for the years 2019-2020. At the end of the meeting, Hariri
said: “Once again I welcome Dr. Mustafa Madbouly and the ministers, members of
the Egyptian delegation, who participated in the meetings of the ninth session
of the Lebanese-Egyptian Joint Higher Committee. We can say that we managed
through our negotiations to solve the problems that existed between the two
countries in various fields, especially industry, electricity, labor and others.
Premier Madbouly promised us to complete the files related to health and
medicine in a few weeks so we can sign a memorandum regarding these sectors and
start economic exchange. “Our talks focused on ways to develop economic
cooperation in light of the obstacles from both sides, particularly with regard
to bureaucracy, and we decided to work together to overcome them,” he added. For
his part, Madbouly said: "Allow me to convey the greetings of the Egyptian
President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi and his wishes of prosperity and progress to the
Lebanese president, government and people, and to convey a message from him of
Egypt’s support to Lebanon. "We need to increase economic relations between the
two countries by enabling the private sector to expand joint projects. There are
areas of investment in both countries, and we encourage the establishment of
joint companies that can invest in Egypt, Lebanon and other markets like Africa
or elsewhere, especially that there are several advantages that characterizes
the private sector," Egyptian PM added. He concluded saying that "it is very
important for the two sides to communicate directly, and we are keen to solve
all problems and deepen ties during the next period."
Syndicate of Banque du Liban Employees Declares 'Open
Strike'
Naharnet/May 04/19/The syndicate of Banque du Liban employees on Saturday
announced an open-ended strike in protest at the government’s possible plans to
reduce their salaries and benefits as part of austerity measures to cut the
budget deficit. The syndicate declared the strike will prolong “until political
authorities draw back their unjust decisions,” they announced. Stressing that
benefits and salaries of BDL employees “must not be touched,” they added saying
“we will not waiver our rights and plan to escalate measures to the fullest
extent.”However they said the decision “has nothing to do with the governor of
BDL,” noting that “Governor Riad Salameh does not support the strike.”During its
series of budget session to discuss an austere 2019 state budget, the Cabinet on
Friday discussed several articles including ones related to reduction in
salaries for BDL employees.
Bassil: Political Subordination Prevents Preservation of
Lebanon Economy
Naharnet/May 04/19/Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil kicked a visit to the district
of Jbeil on Saturday and said during a meeting with industrialists that Lebanon
is unable to protect its economy because of “political subordination to the
outside.”“What prevents us from protecting our economy and products is political
subordination to the outside, this needs to be liberalized through an economic
policy,” he said. He said Lebanon was heading towards a solution for the
economic crisis because it is afraid of an economic collapse. Lebanon “is facing
an exceptional opportunity for economic reform in the country because of the
difficult situation and the fear that exists," said Bassil. “Because we are
afraid of financial and economic collapse, we are heading towards a solution,"
he added. The Minister said that one of the conditions of the Free Patriotic
Movement to approve the budget is a political commitment to some of the steps
required to address the imbalance in the trade balance. “Political commitment to
specific steps to address the imbalance in the trade balance is one of the
conditions to approve a budget,” he said.
Voice of Lebanon: Turning Just Questions into Muzzling
Sword Will Not Go Unnoticed
Kataeb.org/Saturday 04th May 2019/Voice of Lebanon radio station on Saturday
stood behind its presenter Nawal Lichaa Abboud who has been referred to the
Publications Court based on a lawsuit filed by the Lebanese University President
Fouad Ayyoub over an episode she had hosted to discuss the conditions of the
state-run academic establishment. “Once again, Voice of Lebanon finds itself in
the struggle arena, defending the freedom of expression and opinion," read a
statement issued by the radio station. “Dr. Ayoub did a good job by resorting to
the judiciary so that it would judge who's keen to respect the other's opinion
and the one holding firm to a unilateral point of view." The statement stressed
that the questions asked by the host during her contested episode serve as a
small sample of the numerous inquiries shrouding the Lebanese University and its
presidency.
"Turning just and justified questions into a sword to silence the voice of truth
will not go unnoticed," the statement stressed. “Voice of Lebanon only fulfilled
its job by putting forward the people’s concerns," it affirmed. “No one will
untie the bond between Voice of Lebanon and freedom."
Rizk Condemns Campaign Against Journalists
Kataeb.org/Saturday 04th May 2019/As Lebanon's journalists and media figures are
being targeted by a suppression campaign whose latest victims are Voice of
Lebanon radio host Nawal Lichaa Abboud and Kataeb website writer Sonia Rizk, the
latter wondered if the journalist nowadays becomes immediately subject to
prosecution just by relaying somebody else's positions. Rizk was summoned before
the ISF's Cybercrimes Unit over an article she had written, and posted on the
Kataeb.org website, about the corrupt behavior of a minister's adviser. “My case
has been referred to the Public Prosecution. What wrongdoing did I commit in
simply conveying my source’s statement and information? Does the messenger have
to be punished?” she said in a report aired on Voice of Lebanon radio station.
Another Week of Strikes Looms Ahead in Lebanon
Kataeb.org/Saturday 04th May 2019/Another week of nationwide strikes is looming
ahead as major state institutions are set to carry on their protest action to
condemn the government's alleged plan to cut the salaries of public servants as
part of its 2019 austerity budget. Head of the General Confederation of Lebanese
Workers, Bechara Asmar, warned that the situation in the country is turning
sour, stressing on the workers’ unity in facing the government's plan. Moreover,
the syndicate of Banque du Liban employees declared an open-ended strike to
denounce the campaign targeting the Central Bank and protest attempts to reduce
their salaries and benefits. In a statement issued on Saturday, the Central Bank
employees affirmed that they won’t back down on the strike, and threatened
escalation should the government fail to pay heed to their demands. The
syndicate noted that the Central Bank's budget is independent from that of the
state, thus assuring that it does not affect neither the state nor its budget.
“We are heading towards extreme escalation; the Central Bank's employees should
remain untouched,” the statement noted. “The current austere budget harms civil
servants, knowing that there are other ways to reduce squandering and state
deficit."“We are coordinating with the General Confederation of Lebanese Workers
so that the strike would be taken to an all-inclusive, large scale,” the
statement added. “Governor of the Central Bank does not support our strike, but
told us that the law grants us the right to stop working until our demands are
met,” it explained. The Central Bank employees affirmed that they will not keep
mum about any salary cut even if it will apply to the entire country, saying
that they have been the first to adopt austerity in the public sector. "For
instance, the advance payment we used to obtain along with the end-of-service
pensions was annulled more than 10 years ago, and our salary bonuses have been
curtailed from 8% to 3% ," they explained. Likewise, the National Social
Security Fund employees announced that they will carry on with their open
strike, urging all their colleagues across the country to joi the protest set to
be staged on Monday outside the NSSF's head office in Beirut's Wata Al-Msaytbeh.
During this week, employees at Electricite du Liban, the National Social
Security Fund, the Regie Tobacco company, Ogero, the Litani River Authority,
water authorities across the country, the Beirut Port and other public
administrations stopped working to pressure that their demands be met.
Latest LCCC English Miscellaneous Reports & News published
on May 04-05/19
Dozens of Rockets Fired at Israel from Gaza, Israel Responds
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 04/19/Gaza militants on
Saturday fired a barrage of dozens of rockets at Israel, which responded with
strikes that killed a Palestinian, officials said, as a fragile ceasefire again
faltered. Israel said around 90 rockets were fired from the Palestinian enclave
and its air defences intercepted dozens of them. The army said it had targeted
two rocket launchers in Gaza with an air strike in response and its tanks had
hit a number of military posts used by Hamas, the Islamist movement that rules
the territory. A Gazan security source said that a series of Israeli strikes hit
at least three separate areas of the Gaza Strip and that three "resistance
fighters" were wounded. The Gazan health ministry reported one person killed and
several wounded. No casualties had been reported on the Israeli side.Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was planning to hold consultations with
security chiefs, a spokesman said.
Visit to Cairo
The escalation follows the most violent clashes along the Gaza border in weeks
on Friday. Four Palestinians, including two Hamas militants, were killed after
two Israeli soldiers were wounded in a shooting during weekly protests on the
border. Israel and Palestinian militants in the blockaded Gaza Strip have fought
three wars since 2008 and fears remain of a fourth. A ceasefire between Israel
and Hamas brokered by Egypt and the United Nations had led to relative calm
around Israel's April 9 general election. But on Tuesday, Israel reduced the
offshore fishing limit it imposes for vessels operating out of Gaza after a
rocket was fired from the territory by Palestinian militants. The rocket fell
into the Mediterranean. The Israeli army blamed its launch on Hamas ally Islamic
Jihad. On Thursday, Israel said its aircraft struck a Hamas military compound
after balloons carrying firebombs and explosives were launched across the
border. Palestinians in Gaza have frequently fitted balloons with firebombs in a
bid to damage Israeli property and have in the past succeeded in setting fire to
large areas of farmland. Following the air strike, the Israeli military said two
rockets were launched from Gaza toward Israel, setting off sirens in parts of
the south. With the ceasefire at risk, a Hamas delegation led by its Gaza head
Yahya Sinwar left the enclave for Cairo on Thursday for talks with Egyptian
officials on the truce. The ceasefire has seen Israel allow Qatar provide
millions of dollars in aid to Gaza to pay salaries and to finance fuel purchases
to ease a severe electricity shortage. Palestinians have participated in regular
demonstrations and clashes along the Gaza border for more than a year, calling
on Israel to ease its crippling blockade of the enclave. At least 270
Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire since the protests began in March
2018, the majority along the border. Two Israeli soldiers have been killed in
that period. Israel accuses Hamas of using the protests as cover to carry out
attacks and says its actions are necessary to defend the border and stop
infiltrations. The results of a UN investigation released at the end of February
found that Israel may have committed crimes against humanity in responding to
the border protests, as snipers "intentionally" shot civilians including
children, journalists and the disabled. Israel rejected the report "outright"
but Hamas called for Israel to be held accountable.
US Seeks to Force Iran to Stop Enriching Uranium
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 4 May, 2019/The United States acted on
Friday to force Iran to stop producing low-enriched uranium and expanding its
only nuclear power plant even as it granted waivers allowing some countries to
conduct civilian nuclear cooperation with the country. In line with the 2015
nuclear deal, which was negotiated under former president Barack Obama and still
enjoys strong support among European powers, Iran was limited to keeping 300
kilograms of uranium enriched up to 3.67 percent -- far below the level needed
to build nuclear weapons. As part of the agreement, Iran was to sell any
enriched uranium above that threshold on international markets in return for
natural uranium, with Russia a key player. But in Friday's policy change,
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the United States would start to impose
sanctions on anyone involved in the trade of natural for enriched uranium -- as
well as in the storage of Iranian heavy water that was in excess of limits. "The
Trump administration continues to hold the Iranian regime accountable for
activities that threaten the region's stability and harm the Iranian people.
This includes denying Iran any pathway to a nuclear weapon," State Department
spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said. At the same time, Pompeo renewed waivers of US
sanctions allowing Russia, China and European countries to pursue cooperation
programs designed to prevent Iran from reactivating a defunct nuclear weapons
program. Facilities in the waiver extensions include the Bushehr nuclear power
plant, the Fordow enrichment facility, the Arak nuclear complex and the Tehran
Research Reactor, the State Department said. But, it said, the renewable waivers
would be granted only for 90 days, a shorter period than the previous 180 days.
The moves are part of the Trump administration's efforts to impose international
political and economic isolation on Tehran that began with the US withdrawal in
May 2018 from the nuclear deal. It was the third punitive action taken against
Iran in as many weeks. Last week, it said it would grant no more sanctions
waivers for countries buying Iranian oil, accelerating its plan to push Iran's
oil exports to zero. The Trump administration also took the unprecedented step
of designating Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps as a foreign terrorist
organization.
U.S. Tightens Nuclear Restrictions on Iran
Kataeb.org/Saturday 04th May 2019/The United States announced on
Friday that it will tighten restrictions on Iran's nuclear program as part of
the administration’s "unprecedented maximum pressure campaign" to address the
full range of Tehran's activities."The Trump administration continues to hold
the Iranian regime accountable for activities that threaten the region’s
stability and harm the Iranian people. This includes denying Iran any pathway to
a nuclear weapon," read a statement issued by the State Department. "Starting
May 4, assistance to expand Iran’s Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant beyond the
existing reactor unit could be sanctionable," it announced. "In addition,
activities to transfer enriched uranium out of Iran in exchange for natural
uranium could be sanctionable." The U.S. State Department stressed that Iran
must stop all proliferation-sensitive activities, including uranium enrichment,
affirming that Washington will not accept actions that support the continuation
of such enrichment. "We will also no longer permit the storage for Iran of heavy
water it has produced in excess of current limits; any such heavy water must no
longer be available to Iran in any fashion." The statement pointed out that
Secretary Mike Pompeo took steps to permit the continuation of projects that
help restrict Iran’s ability to reconstitute its past nuclear weapons program.
"Our policy preserves oversight of Iran’s civil nuclear program, reduces
proliferation risks, constrains Iran’s ability to shorten its breakout time to a
nuclear weapon, and prevents the regime from reconstituting sites for
proliferation-sensitive purposes.""We reserve the right to revoke or modify our
policy covering these nonproliferation activities at any time if Iran violates
its nuclear obligations or commitments or we conclude that such projects no
longer provide value in constraining Iranian nuclear activities," the statement
said. "The United States will continue to impose maximum pressure on the Iranian
regime, and remains committed to denying Iran any pathway to a nuclear weapon,"
it concluded.
Iran President's Brother Sentenced to Prison for Corruption
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 4 May, 2019/Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani’s brother was sentenced to an unspecified term in prison for corruption,
reported the semi-official ISNA news agency on Saturday. Hossein Fereidoun, a
close confidante of the president, will be able to appeal the verdict. The
financial misconduct charges date back to 2016, and were brought by hardliners
who dominate the country's judiciary. Rouhani changed his surname decades ago.
Fereidoun's trial began in February, and he's been free on bail since spending a
night in prison in 2017. He had played a role as part of the team that
negotiated Iran's 2015 nuclear agreement with world powers.Iran has in the past
jailed allies of former presidents for similar charges.
Iran's Rouhani Urges Unity in Face of U.S. 'War on Hope'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 04/19/Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani on Saturday called for the country to "resist and unite" against US
pressure in what he called a "war on hope" waged against the Islamic republic.
It is almost a year since President Donald Trump reimposed crippling US
sanctions after exiting a landmark nuclear agreement between major powers and
Iran. "America will only let go of this game when it realises it cannot achieve
anything. We have no way but to resist and unite," Rouhani said in a televised
speech. Iran's economy has been battered since sanctions returned. Inflation has
shot up, its currency has plummeted and imports are now vastly more expensive.
Upping the ante, the White House announced last week it would end oil purchase
waivers granted to Iran's main customers -- including China, India and Turkey --
cutting Iran's access to its main source of foreign currency revenue. "Our war
today is the war on hope. They want to break our hope, and we have to break
their hope" of defeating Iran, said Rouhani. "They want to cut our foreign
currency supply ... they seek to sow discord in the country. They want us to be
divided, to stand against each other," he added. Rouhani has vowed that Iran
will continue to supply oil to its major customers despite the unilateral
measures adopted by the United States.
National Iranian Oil Company to Open Office in Iraq
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 4 May, 2019/The National Iranian Oil
Company (NIOC) will open an office in Iraq, the semi-official Fars News Agency
said on Saturday. The new office “will facilitate cooperation in the oil
industry and the transfer of engineering and technical services” to Iraq, it
said. The announcement comes as Iran faces US sanctions on its oil exports.
Earlier, President Hassan Rouhani said Iran must counter the sanctions by
continuing to export its oil as well as boosting non-oil exports. His comments,
carried live on Iranian TV, came a day after Washington acted to force Iran to
stop producing low-enriched uranium and expanding its only nuclear power plant,
intensifying a campaign aimed at halting its ballistic missile program and
curbing its regional power. “America is trying to decrease our foreign reserves
... So we have to increase our hard currency income and cut our currency
expenditures,” Rouhani said. “Last year, we had we non-oil exports of $43
billion. We should increase production and raise our (non-oil) exports and
resist America’s plots against the sale of our oil.” Friday’s move, which
Rouhani made no direct reference to, was the third punitive US action taken
against Iran in as many weeks. Last week, it said it would stop waivers for
countries buying Iranian oil, in an attempt to push Iran’s oil exports to zero.
The United States also blacklisted Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps.Efforts by
the Trump administration to impose political and economic isolation on Tehran
began with last year’s US withdrawal from the nuclear deal it and other world
powers negotiated with Iran in 2015.
8 LNA Fighters Killed in Attack in Southern Libya
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 4 May, 2019/Eight fighters from Libyan National Army (LNA)
were killed Saturday in an attack on their training camp in the southern city of
Sebha, announced head of the local municipality Hamed al-Khaiyali.
A source from the LNA accused the ISIS terrorist group and Chadian opposition
fighters of being behind the attack. The LNA, commanded by Khalifa Haftar, had
launched last month an operation against Tripoli to liberate it from terrorist
gangs and militias loyal to the Government of National Accord.Haftar’s forces
have been marching steadily on the capital, with the LNA bringing in
reinforcements in recent days.
UAE Refutes Qatar’s Accusations of Racial Discrimination
Geneva - Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 4 May, 2019/The United Arab Emirates on
Friday strongly refuted the racial discrimination allegations made by Qatar to
the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in Geneva. “Qatar’s
complaints have no legal basis,” a statement by the UAE declared. “Doha’s
complaint before the Committee is part of a malicious Qatari campaign based on
falsehoods and aimed at distracting attention from the dire consequences of
Qatar’s state-sponsored terrorism,” the statement added, according to the WAM
news agency. UAE further outlined in its statement the measures taken to
facilitate the entry of Qatari nationals to the country in spite of Doha’s
destructive policies and promotion of extremism in the region. “When it severed
its relations with Qatar in 2017, the UAE took a series of measures in
compliance with international law and in response to Doha’s refusal to honor its
international obligations. These measures were not meant to target the people of
Qatar."The statement read: “The UAE has instituted a requirement for all Qatari
citizens overseas to obtain prior permission for entry into the UAE. Qatari
citizens already resident in the UAE need not apply for permission to continue
residence in the UAE. However, all Qatari citizens resident in the UAE are
encouraged to obtain prior permission for re-entry into UAE territory. All
applications for entry clearance may be made for free online or through a
telephone hotline.”Abdullah Hamdan al-Naqbi, Director of the International Law
Department at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation and
UAE representative before the Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination, said that the complaint should not have been lodged with the
panel in the first place as it had no connection to any form of racial
discrimination. He said that it was yet another Qatari attempt to
politicize the committee. Naqbi continued: “The UAE measures regarding Qatari
citizens are compliant with international law and cannot be classified under any
forms of racial segregation combated by the Committee whose mandate is to fight
all forms of distinction, exclusion, restriction or preference based on race,
color, descent, or national or ethnic origin. Accordingly, the UAE can never be
accused of violating the agreement in any way." The statement drew the
Committee’s attention to the fact that Qatar is simultaneously filing a similar
complaint with the International Court of Justice, urging it to consider Doha’s
two complaints as an abuse of the complaint system.
Documents Reveal Israel's Nuclear Deceit of the US
Tel Aviv - Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 4 May, 2019 /Two researchers, an American
and an Israeli, published Friday documents that illuminate for the first time
the full scope of the confrontation between US President John F. Kennedy and
Israeli Prime Ministers David Ben-Gurion and Levi Eshkol at the beginning of the
1960s over Israel’s nuclear program. The two researchers are: Avner Cohen, a
professor of nonproliferation studies, and William Burr, a senior analyst at the
National Security Archive, George Washington University. In recent days, they
published a collection of nearly 50 classified documents that include the entire
exchange of messages between the leaders of the two countries, archiving the
visits of US inspectors to the Israeli Dimona reactor in 1964. A former
high-level science adviser Prof. Yuval Ne’eman, told the researchers 25 years
ago that Israelis in the know saw the situation as a real crisis and Eshkol
(Ben-Gurion’s successor) and his associates saw Kennedy as presenting Israel
with a real ultimatum.Ne’eman said: “There was even one senior Israeli official.
The former Israel Air Force commander Maj. Gen. (res.) Dan Tolkowsky, who
seriously entertained the fear that Kennedy might send US airborne troops to
Dimona.”In the fall of 1960, the outgoing Eisenhower administration first became
aware of the Dimona reactor that Israel and France had begun building in secret
in 1958. The CIA issued a Special National Intelligence Estimate (SNIE) that
determined that “plutonium production for weapons is at least one major purpose
of this effort.”Furthermore, the estimate predicted that if the Arab world
believed that Israel was acquiring a nuclear-weapons capability, it would cause
“consternation,” and the US and France would be blamed for their presumed
support of the project.
Outgoing Secretary of State Christian Herter told Kennedy that the Dimona
reactor would be able to produce 90 kilograms of weapons-grade plutonium in two
years, urging him to press hard for inspections of Dimona. Dimona's management
team explained before the US inspectors that the aim of the project was to gain
experience in building and operating nuclear reactors that could be used in the
future for peaceful power generation. The team was “satisfied that nothing was
concealed from them and that the reactor is of the scope and peaceful character
previously described.”Ben-Gurion presented to Kennedy during a meeting in New
York, on May 31, 1961, a consistent justification with what the Dimona
management team had told the American scientists: The nuclear project was
peaceful in nature; it was about energy and development. However, Ben-Gurion
added: “For the time being, the only purposes are for peace. … But we will see
what will happen in the Middle East. It does not depend on us.” The meeting with
Ben-Gurion helped to clear the air for some time, but it did not remove
lingering American doubts and suspicions about Israel’s nuclear intentions. The
Americans began trying to arrange a second visit to Dimona and after frequent
requests over several months, that such visit finally took place for no more
than 45 minutes on September 26, 1962. A senior CIA official was quoted as
saying: “There were certain inconsistencies between the first and second
inspection reports.” Kent Sherman, director of the Office of National Estimates,
warned that “Israel’s policy toward its neighbors would become more rather than
less tough… it would … seek to exploit the psychological advantages of its
nuclear capability to intimidate the Arabs and to prevent them from making
trouble on the frontiers.”
At Least 7 Policemen Killed in Taliban Attack in Western
Afghanistan
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 4 May, 2019/At least seven policemen were killed in an
overnight Taliban attack against security checkpoints in Afghanistan’s western
Badghis province, official said Saturday. Mohammad Naser Nazari, a provincial
councilman, said that three other security forces were wounded during the attack
in Qadis district. The Taliban did not comment on the attack. The Afghan defense
ministry said Saturday that two separate airstrikes conducted Friday night by
coalition forces in coordination with Afghan forces killed at least 43 militants
from the ISIS group in eastern Kunar province. The statement said the airstrikes
targeted ISIS in Chapara district and killed several Pakistani and Uzbek
nationals. Both the Taliban and ISIS are active in eastern Afghanistan,
especially in Kunar and neighboring Nangarhar provinces, which border Pakistan.
The United States has about 14,000 troops in Afghanistan as part of a NATO-led
mission, known as Resolute Support, that is training and assisting Afghan
security forces in their battle against Taliban fighters and extremist groups
such as ISIS and al Qaeda. US special peace envoy for Afghanistan Zalmay
Khalilzad, an Afghan-born US diplomat, entered a sixth round of talks with the
Taliban in Qatar this week in a bid to end America’s longest war. The envoy
should stop calling on Taliban militants to lay down their arms and tell the
United States to end the use of force instead, the Taliban said on Friday. “In
our opening session, I underscored to the Talibs that the Afghan people, who are
their brothers & sisters, want this war to end,” Khalilzad said in a tweet. “It
is time to put down arms, stop the violence, & embrace peace.”Taliban spokesman
Zabihullah Mujahid issued a series of sharp tweets in response. “@US4AfghanPeace
(Khalilzad’s twitter handle) should forget about the idea of us putting down our
arms,” he said. “Instead of such fantasies, he should drive the idea home (to
the US) about ending the use of force and incurring further human and financial
losses for the decaying Kabul administration.”After five rounds of talks,
Khalilzad reported some progress towards an accord on withdrawing US troops and
on how the Taliban would prevent extremists from using Afghanistan to launch
attacks. The Taliban insist that talks cannot move ahead until foreign forces
leave.
Damascus Accuses Kurd-Led Alliance of 'Treason'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 04/19/The Syrian government has accused
Kurdish leaders of "treason" for organising a conference with allied Arab tribes
to plot out the political future of territory under their alliance's control.
The Kurds and their Arab allies control a vast swathe of the north and northeast
that makes up around a third of Syrian territory, much of which they captured in
the long and costly campaign against the Islamic State group. Buoyed by its
recapture of most of the rest of Syria, Damascus is now demanding that
alliance-held areas too return to central government control. Weakened by the
decision of its main ally Washington to withdraw most of its troops following
the defeat of the last vestige of IS's "caliphate" in March, the Kurdish-led
alliance has opened talks with Damascus. But its leaders are determined not to
accept the negotiated surrender of a "reconciliation agreement" like those
imposed by Damascus on various rebel groups, and on Friday convened a conference
of Arab tribes to seek their support. The state SANA news agency quoted a
foreign ministry source as accusing organisers of the conference in the
alliance-held but mainly Arab town of Ain Issa of "treason". It claimed that the
meeting in a town "held by armed militia dependent on the United States and some
European countries" had ended in "failure" as a result of a "boycott by most of
the tribes". "Such gatherings are clear embodiments of the treason of their
organisers, whatever their political, ethnic or racial allegiances," the source
added. In his address to Friday's conference, the leader of the Syrian
Democratic Forces, Mazloum Kobani, said that Damascus would need to recognise
the authority of the Kurdish administration in northeastern Syria as well as the
"special status" of the alliance and its role in defending the region against
IS.
He said there could be no going back to the situation before the civil war
erupted in 2011 when the Kurds were denied any official recognition as a
minority that accounts for some 15 percent of the population. "It is not
possible to reach a democratic and pluralistic Syria without full recognition of
the rights of Syria's Kurds," he said. The SDF has been cornered into seeking an
accommodation with Damascus by two-pronged pressure from the looming US troop
withdrawal and a longstanding threat by Turkey to send troops across the border
to end the experiment in self-rule by Kurdish forces it regards as "terrorists".
Venezuela's Guaido Makes New Bid to Rally Military Support
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 04/19/Opposition leader Juan Guaido will make
a fresh bid on Saturday to rally Venezuela's armed forces behind him with
protests at military bases in the crisis-hit country. The protest call by Guaido
-- the head of the National Assembly legislature, who is recognized as interim
president by more than 50 countries -- comes just days after he urged the
military to rise up against the socialist president, Nicolas Maduro.
"Peacefully, civically... we are going to deliver a simple document, a
proclamation to the Armed Forces to listen to the Venezuelan call, that a rapid
transition is possible to produce free elections," Guaido told a press
conference in Caracas. A small group of military personnel heeded Guaido's call
to rise up on Tuesday, but the effort petered out, triggering two days of
protests against the government in which four people were killed and several
hundred injured.
Venezuela's military leadership has since reiterated its support for the
government, and Maduro is standing his ground. The country's attorney general
Tarek William Saab said Friday that 18 arrest warrants had been issued for
"civilian and military conspirators" following the failed uprising, with
lieutenant colonels among the uniformed personnel being sought. Tensions in
Venezuela have soared since Guaido, the 35-year-old head of the National
Assembly, invoked the constitution to declare himself acting president on
January 23, claiming Maduro's re-election last year was illegitimate. The
standoff has drawn in major world powers, with the US throwing its support
behind Guaido and Russia and China backing Maduro. The United States has imposed
tough sanctions and Trump has refused to take the threat of military action off
the table, in an intensifying campaign to drive Maduro out. But President Donald
Trump adopted a strikingly conciliatory tone after a more than hour-long
conversation with Vladimir Putin on the Venezuela crisis, describing the Friday
talks with his Russian counterpart as "very positive."
'People are starving'
"He is not looking at all to get involved in Venezuela other than he'd like to
see something positive happen for Venezuela," Trump said of Putin. "And I feel
the same way. We want to get some humanitarian aid. Right now people are
starving." Venezuela has suffered five years of recession marked by shortages of
basic necessities as well as failing public services, including water,
electricity and transport. Trump's tone came in stark contrast to that of his
top advisors, in particular Secretary of State Mike Pompeo who charged this week
that Maduro had been poised to flee to Cuba, but was talked out of it by the
Russians.
US-Russian tensions have spiked over the months-long standoff in Venezuela, and
the Kremlin's assessment of the Trump-Putin call differed substantially from
that coming from the White House. "Interference in internal affairs, attempts to
change the leadership in Caracas through force, undermine the prospects for a
peaceful settlement of the conflict," said a Russian statement. "Vladimir Putin
stated that only the Venezuelan people have the right to decide the future of
their country," it added. The United States is insisting Maduro's days are
numbered, but experts say its options for breaking the stalemate are limited,
and that Washington may have overestimated the opposition leader's strength.
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on May 04-05/19
Terror, Racism and Eugenicists
Eyad Abu Shakra/Asharq Al-Awsat/May 04/2019
I recall a famous quote by the Tony Benn, the former British Leftist Labor
minister which is: “The Marxist analysis has got nothing to do with what
happened in Stalin's Russia: it's like blaming Jesus Christ for the Inquisition
in Spain”.
Indeed, it is inappropriate to directly link an idea, ideology or a value system
whose followers tolerate opposition and accept coexistence with those who
disagree with him or her, with individuals or groups -from any religion,
ideology or race – resorting to imposition, suppression or elimination against
opponents.
In the last few days we witnessed a heinous massacre in Sri Lanka. Within a
short time, we learned that behind what happened were the same groups that have
strived to force Islam and Muslims everywhere in “Zero option” war against the
whole world. Furthermore, as if launching this “war” against Christian civilians
in the West was not enough, these groups have now turned against the Buddhists
and Hindus in south Asia.
Sure enough, by targeting Buddhist civilians, the absurd and dubious crimes are
not going to lessen the suffering of the innocent Rohingya Muslims. And through
killing innocent Hindus, they are not going to weaken Hindu extremists, like
India Prime Minister Narendra Modi who is fighting crucial “marathon” elections;
in fact, the opposite is true.Moreover, we have seen how the absurd crimes –
falsely committed under the banners of religion – have increased the popular
support for extreme Christian racists throughout Europe and the Americas, and
recently, Australia and New Zealand. In Europe, voters are expected to vote soon
in the European parliamentary elections amid high expectations that racist and
populist right would make big gains throughout the continent.
This phenomenon, indeed, is not limited to Europe, which is now the first
destination to would-be refugees and immigrants from Asia and Africa, as
anti-immigrants and anti-Muslims right has been riding high in the Americas too.
Given the above, the one thing that must not be forgotten is that the biggest
and earliest damage done by the self-claimed “Islamist’” extremism took place in
the Arab and Muslim countries. In these countries the extremists, be they Sunnis
or Shiites, have slaughtering, burning, and murdering Muslims in indiscriminate
explosions.
“Islamist” extremism has directly contributed to the destruction these
countries’ institutions, ruined their economies, denigrated their sovereignty,
displaced their populations, and driven out their best brains and skills.
Thus, what we are at is actually a mass suicidal war; one in which Islam, as a
religion, a civilization, an identity, a people, is being thrown into unequal
and unwinnable confrontation against the world and human civilization.
Anyway, those who are still capable of analyzing world affairs must try to
monitor the social and political developments that are affecting our world.
Early last year, the British The Independent newspaper published a noteworthy
article entitled, “Support for eugenics never really went away, but this is how
it's becoming mainstream again” by Dr. Louise Raw. In this article Raw mentioned
meetings taking place in one of London top universities and organized by groups
that are interested in “improving” the human race; and went on to detail the
main philosophical, political and cultural currents that developed ideas and
beliefs serving that goal.
Raw explained that the idea of “improving” the human race was not new but goes
back to the days of Plato (381 BC) who considered the desirability of “selective
breeding” for the ruling elite; then added that in the 18th century “English
curate Thomas Malthus’s work contradicted the contemporary view that human
societies were naturally improving. Instead, he argued that better living
conditions lead inexorably to population growth and scarcity of resources.
Malthus became extremely influential and was read by Charles Darwin”. Darwin’s
research on evolution and inherited traits, as Raw said “would form the basis
for the work of his cousin Frances Galton, who would coin the word ‘eugenics’
(from the Greek word ‘eugenes’ which means ‘well-born’) in 1883. While Darwin
praised Galton’s earlier work, at least to him, he was always dubious about
crude attempts to apply his scientific findings to the real world. This,
unfortunately, was precisely Galton’s aim”.
With Galton, who visited the Middle East, had a thoroughly racist attitude. He
went much further than Darwin’s usage of words like “savages” and “favored
races” to establish a fully-fledged school in elucidating racial discrimination
and inherited specificities. As Raw put “Galton’s work leads to appalling and
inevitable conclusions: that a more brutal solution is required to resolve the
‘problem’ of non-white races, and that disabled or less physically strong
working-class people are of no use to society, and deserve to starve”.
Hence, going the history of the Eugenicists, one must not be surprised how
theories of “pure race” and “superior nation” or the impossibility of bridging
the gap between “advanced” and “backward” peoples. This means that neither Adolf
Hitler nor Josef Mengele invented or developed anything. Even, before them
racist exclusionist practices known to humanity were the rule rather than the
exception. Perhaps, naivety and tragedies of wars were the prime promoters of
utopian slogans like “Liberty, Equality and Fraternity” and “Life, Liberty and
the pursuit of Happiness”, as well as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
(1948). Such slogans have made really believe that we can build a civilized
world at peace with itself.
Well, leaving Galton now and going back to Malthus, we are confronted by two
stark realities, one economic, the other technological. These two realities do
not encourage us to expect any end to racism, selfishness and fight for survival
any time soon. We can all see that the mainstays of capitalism that preach
unrestricted “free market”, “globalization” and “free movement of goods and
services” are shaking and all but collapsing. Astonishing technological advances
are speedily killing off long regarded givens, jobs and practices, and
revolutionizing the people’s lifestyles, means of communication, interests, as
well as redefining their needs and remedies. Today we live in a rapidly changing
world. It is changing much faster than our expectations, and even our
perceptions.
We live a time of redefining identities, along with interests, friends and
enemies. The Independent’s above-mentioned article was, thus, absolutely right
to say that discrimination, based on race and color, has returned to the
political “mainstream”, after being temporarily concealed under a films cover.
We are really living the era of the “clash of civilizations”, and there are
those not only cannot wait for the clash to happen, but are keen to justify it.
The Spanish Election Is a Triumph of Logic
Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg View/May 04/2019
The recent Spanish election was keenly watched by people seeking confirmation
for theories about the direction of European democracy. The inconclusive outcome
made sure no one was wrong — but it also showed that, broadly, the old
left-right political paradigm is still alive and each flank still can win on its
traditional strengths. In one European election after another, political
fragmentation has made countries difficult to govern with increasingly difficult
coalitions required, and Spain was a prime example of this trend. Center-left
political forces were struggling everywhere, and Spain’s Socialists, led by
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, were incapable of winning a majority despite the
huge negative ratings dragging down their historical rival, the center-right
Popular Party. The far-right populist resurgence continued, and even in Spain,
where anti-immigration sentiment is weaker than almost anywhere in Europe, a
far-right party, Vox, was doing surprisingly well in the polls.
Well, all of this held true. Though the Socialists dramatically increased their
representation in parliament, going to 123 seats from 85 in 2016, they only won
28.7 percent of the vote. The fragmentation means Sanchez will find it hard to
cobble together a majority government. Even for a minority one, he may need the
cooperation of the Catalan separatists who caused the early election in the
first place by refusing to back Sanchez’s budget proposal. And Vox got into
parliament, the first time such a hard-core rightist force has done so since the
last ally of Francisco Franco lost his parliament seat in 1982. Sanchez may be
determined to move Franco’s remains from their lavish mausoleum near Madrid, but
the dictator’s spirit will be kept alive (with some modern restrictions imposed)
by the 24 Vox members in the 350-seat lower chamber of parliament.
On the other hand, if one wanted to argue that establishment parties can
successfully fight off nationalist populists if they take a principled stand on
the issues and pick charismatic leaders, the Socialists’ performance would allow
that, too. Sanchez, telegenic and a persuasive campaigner, took a risk in
calling the election when the combined right-wing forces polled better than the
left and emerged a clear winner, in part thanks to the Spanish electoral laws
that reward the front-runner with extra parliament seats. Vox only won 10.2
percent of the vote, less than comparable parties have been getting in other
western European countries. A nonpartisan look at the outcome, however, would
suggest somewhat different conclusions. Spain — like most other European
countries — has roughly similar numbers of right-wing and left-wing voters.
About 11.2 million Spaniards supported the Socialists and their likely coalition
partners, left-wing populist force Podemos; slightly fewer than 11.2 million
voted for PP, the liberal Ciudadanos (or Citizens) party and Vox, which would
have formed a coalition had they gained a combined majority. In 2016, when the
turnout was lower, 9.5 million backed the Socialists and Podemos and 11 million
voted for PP and Citizens.
The fracturing of traditional two-party systems doesn’t mean the left-right
divide has been erased. It merely means voters on each flank have a broader menu
of more precisely targeted options. The right-wing vote in Spain is now more
evenly split between liberals, conservatives and nationalist populists than it
used to be when PP was the umbrella party for all three persuasions. And
Sanchez’s win has, to a large extent, come at the expense of Podemos, which lost
15 mandates. Apart from the prime minister’s charisma and campaigning skill,
both that redistribution and the higher turnout gains are likely explained by
the Sanchez government’s generosity: It has increased the minimum wage by 22
percent. So the traditionalist leftist method of buying votes with social
spending still seems to work. Now, Sanchez will seek to cement his victory by
more handouts — pension and benefit hikes and increased spending on science and
education. Europe’s current political fragmentation is only a problem where the
established parties are squeamish about teaming up with populists on their flank
and seek to exclude them from governing coalitions. In Germany, for example, the
creepy nationalism of the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party rules it out as a
partner for Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, and the
Communist heritage of Die Linke, the far-left party, makes it hard for the
Social Democrats to team up with them on the national level. The result is an
uneasy grand coalition of the center-right and the center-left.
In Spain, the traditional parties appear to have no qualms about forging
alliances with other forces on their flanks. Sanchez will seek partners that
help set Spain on a more socialist course after years of austerity and
de-escalate tensions in secessionist Catalonia, to the relief of both Catalans
and international investors.
Palestinian Leaders and Inconvenient Truths
Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/May 04/2019
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14167/palestinians-inconvenient-truths
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas understood that he had made a
grave error in calling out his Arab brothers for their tightfistedness. This was
a massive mistake because his Arab brothers do not tolerate any form of
criticism. For them, Abbas should only be criticizing Israel and the US.
This is the old Palestinian blame game: always make Israel or the U.S. appear
responsible for the suffering you inflict on your own people.
Like most Palestinians, Abbas is well aware that the Arab states are no longer
willing to serve as a cash machine for ingrates. Under the current
circumstances, the Palestinians are more likely to succeed in cajoling money
from duped Western donors than from their loving brothers. From the Palestinian
leaders' point of view, however, this is an inconvenient truth best hidden from
their people.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is well aware that the Arab states
are no longer willing to serve as a cash machine for ingrates. Under the current
circumstances, the Palestinians are more likely to succeed in cajoling money
from duped Western donors than from their loving brothers.
The Arab states continue to lie to the Palestinians. At the last meeting of Arab
foreign ministers in the Egyptian capital of Cairo, the Arabs "affirmed their
commitment to support the budget of the state of Palestine by activating the
resolution of the Arab summit in Tunisia to provide a $100 million safety net
[to the Palestinians] each month."
The Arab foreign ministers announced their decision after listening to a speech
by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who complained that his
government was facing a financial crisis because of Israeli and US measures.
Abbas was referring to Israel's decision to deduct payments made by the
Palestinian Authority (PA) government to families of security prisoners and
"martyrs" from tax revenues that Israel collects each month on behalf of the
Palestinians.
Earlier this year, the Israeli government announced it is deducting hundreds of
millions of shekels from the tax funds it collects on behalf of the Palestinians
because of the PA's policy of paying salaries to terrorists and their families.
The decision was in accordance with an Israeli law passed in July 2018. Under
the law, the payments made by the PA government would automatically be frozen by
the Israeli government, in accordance with the Paris Protocol, an agreement
signed between Israel and the PLO in 1994 that allows Israel to collect and
transfer to the PA government the import taxes on goods that were intended for
the Palestinians.
The law also requires the Israeli Defense Ministry to provide the cabinet with
data on the amount the PA pays terrorists and their families. Israel's Finance
Ministry will then withhold that amount from the tax funds it transfers.
Abbas was also referring to the steep cuts in US financial aid to the United
Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), the United
States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the PA government.
Abbas went to the Arab League meeting in Cairo with the seeming hope that the
Arab countries would help him overcome the severe financial crisis his
government has been facing in the past few months. He was apparently hoping that
the Arab countries would implement the decision of the Arab summit held in
Tunisia in late March to provide financial aid to the Palestinians.
As it turns out, however, both the Arab summit in Tunisia and the Arab League
meeting in Cairo have given the Palestinians nothing but empty promises and
meaningless statements of support and solidarity with the Palestinian cause.
Earlier this week, Abbas revealed during a meeting of his cabinet in the West
Bank city of Ramallah that despite the pledges of financial support from the
Arab states, the Palestinians still have not received any funds. He further
disclosed that he had asked the Arab countries for a loan -- a request which he
said has also been ignored by the Arab states.
"We asked our Arab brothers to provide us with a financial safety net," Abbas
said, referring to his speech at the Arab League foreign ministers meeting in
Cairo.
"But we're not pinning high hopes on them. God willing, something will happen.
We asked for $100 million each month. We told them to consider it a debt, which
we will pay you back. However, we haven't received an answer even regarding the
debt request."
At this point in his speech, Abbas became aware that his remarks were being
broadcast live on Palestine TV. It was at that moment that he stopped speaking
about the failure of the Arab states to fulfill their promises to the
Palestinians. What happened was that Abbas realized that his criticism of the
Arab states was likely to enrage the Arab heads of state.
Abbas understood that he had made a grave error in calling out his Arab brothers
for their tightfistedness. This was a massive mistake because his Arab brothers
do not tolerate any form of criticism. For them, Abbas should only be
criticizing Israel and the US. Sure enough, to avoid a crisis with the Arab
countries, Abbas's official news agency, Wafa, deleted from its report about his
speech the critical remarks he had made about the Arab states.
The Palestinian news agency evidently does not want Palestinians to know that
their Arab brothers are refusing to help them financially. It appears, instead,
to want the Palestinians to believe that Israel and the US are solely
responsible for the financial crisis facing the Palestinian Authority
government. In fact, this is how the Palestinian propaganda machine has long
been functioning. This is the old Palestinian blame game: always make Israel or
the U.S. appear responsible for the suffering you inflict on your own people.
The Arab betrayal of the Palestinians is not new. Instead of supporting their
Palestinian brothers, the Arab states have been cutting aid to them. According
to one report, Arab financial aid to the Palestinians has dramatically dropped
in the past two decades. Another report revealed that donations from the Arab
world to the Palestinians has been slashed over the past few years by 50%. A
mere quarter of the PA's 2017 budget of approximately $3.7 billion has come from
Arab states, the report said.
The Palestinians are right to believe that the Arab world no longer cares about
them and their problems. The Arab countries have their own problems,
particularly financial ones. Most Arab countries seem sick of the Palestinians
and see them as ungrateful, particularly after the PLO's support for Saddam
Hussein's 1990 invasion of Kuwait – one of several wealthy Arab countries that
funded the Palestinians to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars in the
70s and 80s.
The PLO's support for Saddam Hussein was a wake-up call for Kuwait and many Arab
countries, who are now telling the Palestinians: "Here's some tough love: you
spit in our faces, we cut off your allowance."
Like most Palestinians, Abbas is well aware that the Arab states are no longer
willing to serve as a cash machine for ingrates. Under the current
circumstances, the Palestinians are more likely to succeed in cajoling money
from duped Western donors than from their loving brothers. From the Palestinian
leaders' point of view, however, this is an inconvenient truth best hidden from
their people.
*Khaled Abu Toameh, an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem, is a
Shillman Journalism 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.
From Venezuela to Lebanon, the US faces a world of tough
decisions
Raghida Dergham/The National/May 04/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/74491/%D8%B1%D8%A7%D8%BA%D8%AF%D8%A9-%D8%AF%D8%B1%D8%BA%D8%A7%D9%85-%D8%A3%D8%B3%D8%A7%D8%A8%D9%8A%D8%B9-%D9%85%D8%B5%D9%8A%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%A9-%D9%81%D9%8A-%D9%85%D9%84%D9%81%D8%A7%D8%AA-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A8/
In the folds of growing global disquiet lies the strained relationship between
Washington and Moscow
The hardline policies of US President Donald Trump’s administration on Venezuela
and Iran are becoming clearer, with the White House now openly talking about
military force as an option.
The coming days may thus see a shift in US attitudes and measures against the
two countries, unless peaceful transition takes place in Caracas, and Tehran
decides that its interests require co-operation, rather than escalation in
response to Washington’s oil embargo.
Another tough stance emerging from Washington relates to the potential
designation of the Muslim Brotherhood as a terror group.
Already, this has antagonised Turkey and could lead President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan to engage in further grandstanding, for example by supporting his friend
in Caracas, President Nicolas Maduro.
Mr Maduro, whose regime has managed to impoverish what was once the region’s
richest nation also counts among his friends Bashar Al Assad, the Iranian regime
and the leaders of Bolivia, Nicaragua and Cuba.
The Colombian president Ivan Duque has called on Venezuela’s armed forces to
join the opposition leader Juan Guaido, who is backed by most South American
governments, as well as the US and other major western nations. Calling the army
to back the civilian movement led by Mr Guaido is practical, because moving from
authoritarianism to civil rule now seems impossible without it.
This has been the case in Algeria, and in Libya, where a military settlement
seems a prerequisite, as well as Sudan, where there is now a valuable
opportunity to achieve an accord between civilians and military.
In the folds of all these developments, especially as it relates to Venezuela,
lies the strained relationship between Washington and Moscow, as the two powers
exchange accusations and warnings.
Inside the US, meanwhile, the presidential campaigns have started in earnest,
amid deep divisions and structural weakness in the Democratic Party. In this
febrile climate, there has been a lot of posturing about foreign policy issues,
including Venezuela, the Muslim Brotherhood and Yemen, which former vice
president Joe Biden has used to attack Mr Trump.
In truth, Mr Biden himself backed the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood to power
and supported its hijacking of the Arab uprisings, not to mention having called
for the partition of Iraq.
According to informed sources, US-Iranian escalation could come to a head this
week. Mr Trump intends to announce strict measures against countries that
violate the US oil embargo on Iran by continuing to purchase Iranian crude after
the expiry of sanctions waivers.
According to informed sources, US-Iranian escalation could come to a head this
week
According to sources, he will also issue a stern warning to Tehran not to take
any retaliatory measures, especially in the Strait of Hormuz or against Saudi
and other Arab Gulf oil exports. The same sources say that there is a strong
Iranian inclination to retaliate against US oil restrictions, with preparations
being made to hit pipelines that feed into Saudi refineries.
Despite these gloomy predictions, there remain two views on what is about to
happen. One is that Tehran will never escalate, because it is aware that Mr
Trump will not hesitate to take military action against it. The other, however,
is that Mr Trump’s measures will lead to the collapse of the Iranian regime, so
the hardliners will not hesitate to act.
In the past, Washington extended security cover to Lebanon, making it clear that
the failure of this small country was a red line. According to officials, the US
has run out of patience. Now, they say, there is a real chance the US may end
its security guarantees if the Lebanese do not stand up to Hezbollah and stop it
from putting Iranian interests ahead of those of Lebanon itself.
Meanwhile, some circles in New York and Washington are raising questions about
the prospects of Mr Trump opening the door to military action in Iran and
Venezuela. The US is divided here too. Democrats are automatically opposed to
everything that Mr Trump decides, and they will be placing their bets on popular
opposition to any military involvement.
On Venezuela, the Trump administration has a coherent policy. Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo, National Security Adviser John Bolton, Special Envoy Elliott
Abrams, and Vice President Mike Pence all agree on being robust, even if that
requires military intervention for a limited transitional period, in order to
secure civilian rule with the help of the country’s armed forces.
Mr Pompeo and Mr Bolton have both accused Moscow of meddling in Venezuela. They
say that the Kremlin is resisting transition in Caracas and has convinced Mr
Maduro not to leave for Cuba. Russia’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, has said
that Washington’s interference in Venezuelan affairs violates international law
and that such “aggressive moves” will have serious ramifications. Mr Pompeo has
said that his boss prefers peaceful transition but that he was “clear and firm”
that military action remains an option.
At present, it seems that peaceful transition is unlikely, unless the Venezuelan
military overthrows Mr Maduro, or Mr Maduro’s friends abandon him and convince
him to step down. However, it is the Kremlin that matters most here. If Russian
President Vladimir Putin decides that Venezuela is an asset – given its
strategic location and vast oil reserves – worth risking relations with
Washington for, then the crisis is set to escalate.
To some extent, it seems that the solution is in the hands of the Venezuelan
military, which can side with the people against Mr Maduro and back Mr Guaido as
an interim president.
Some have accused the Trump administration of supporting military takeovers
around the world, including in Algeria, Libya, and Sudan. But the Obama
administration supported Islamist takeovers, based on the Turkish model, and
backed the Muslim Brotherhood, despite its rejection of the separation of powers
and its quest to impose its will on the constitution and state. If the choice is
between this and temporary military rule, it would seem that temporary military
rule is the lesser evil.
Analysis/Who You Calling a Terrorist: Trump’s Conundrum
With the Muslim Brotherhood
تسفي باريل/هآرتس:من هو الذي تسميه إرهابياً ولغز ترامب وجماعة الإخوان المسلمين
Zvi Bar'el/Haaretz/May 04/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/74494/%D8%AA%D8%B3%D9%81%D9%8A-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%84-%D9%87%D8%A2%D8%B1%D8%AA%D8%B3-%D9%85%D9%86-%D9%87%D9%88-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B0%D9%8A-%D8%AA%D8%B3%D9%85%D9%8A%D9%87-%D8%A5%D8%B1%D9%87%D8%A7%D8%A8/
When political considerations meet reality, the technical definitions of a
terrorist group get pushed aside. The U.S. calls Hezbollah terrorists but still
sells missiles to Lebanon, while Israel transfers Qatari money to Hamas.
Waiting on U.S. President Donald Trump’s desk is a request from his Egyptian
counterpart, Abdel-Fattah al-Sissi, to designate the Muslim Brotherhood a
terrorist organization. A similar request was presented two years ago by Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan concerning Fethullah Gulen’s Hizmet movement.
Trump is taking Sissi’s request seriously and has asked his national security
adviser, John Bolton, to start the process for approval, while Turkey has
already been told that no, the evidence on Gulen, who lives in exile in
Pennsylvania, and his movement isn’t enough to prove terror.
How much do the lists rely on evidence and how much are they products of
political and diplomatic considerations? This can be learned from Trump’s
positions on his two counterparts’ requests – and from the differences between
the American list and the EU list. The American roster includes 68 organizations
and movements. The most recent addition was Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, which
was added on in the middle of last month.
The European list includes only 21 organizations, or parts of organizations. For
example, all of Hezbollah, both its political and military wings, are on the
U.S. list, while the European Union – except for Britain – treats Hezbollah’s
military wing as a terrorist group but the political wing, which includes three
Lebanese cabinet ministers, as a legitimate organization. Brussels views it as
“part of Lebanon’s political framework.”
This difference, in the case of Lebanon for example, can be important when
Beirut seeks loans from European banks or cooperation agreements with EU member
states. While Hezobllah’s participation in the government doesn’t damage
Lebanon’s ability to conduct normal diplomatic relations with European
countries, in similar cases the United States might put up obstacles or even
freeze military aid to Beirut.
At least that’s the way it looks on paper. But in April the United States sent
Lebanon six drones worth some $11 million, and in February it equipped the
Lebanese army with laser-guided missiles worth about $18 million. This aid was
justified by Washington’s desire to help Lebanon fight terrorism and Iranian
influence. This is the same Lebanon with its Hezbollah cabinet members.
Tricky Turkey
The Turkish paradox is even more convoluted. Turkey defines the Kurdistan
Workers’ Party, the PKK, as a terrorist organization, as do both the United
States and the European Union. But Turkey has expanded this definition to also
include the Kurdish military units operating in Syria. Ankara is demanding that
the EU and United States adopt this definition, saying these militias are allies
of the PKK and take orders from it.
The problem is that the Kurdish defense units were the most important force in
the war against the Islamic State in Syria; a great part of the victory against
the group belongs to them. The United States provided these units with air
support, training, weapons, ammunition and funds – and views these militias as
important allies who deserve protection.
One of the worst sticking points between Ankara and Washington lies in this gap
between the Turkish and American definitions. This disagreement naturally has a
direct effect on Washington’s willingness to agree to Turkey’s request to
recognize Gulen’s movement as a terrorist organization – and its refusal to
extradite him to Turkey. If the United States decides to put this movement on
its terrorism list, it will have to extradite Gulen and others, block the
group’s funding and freeze its assets.
But the chances of this happening are slim, partly because of Turkey’s decision
to buy S-400 anti-aircraft missile systems from Russia, in defiance of
Washington’s staunch position on the matter.
It’s unclear if Trump would have agreed to the Turkish demands if the S-400 deal
wasn’t in the way, but surely the tensions between the two countries haven’t
encouraged the White House to help Erdogan in his fight against Gulen.
This is the EU’s position too. The EU rejected Turkey’s request to include
Hizmet on its terrorism list and doesn’t see Erdogan’s war on the movement as a
fight against terror, but as the persecution of a political rival in which
“terrorism” is being used to stifle freedom of expression, conduct mass arrests
on suspicion of membership in the movement, and strike a mortal blow to human
rights.
Turkey, which is running a slander campaign against European countries and has
called their leaders “supporters of terrorism” because of their refusal to take
the Turkish line on Gulen's movement, has rejected a request from Egypt, Saudi
Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to name the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist
organization. The Brotherhood enjoys freedom of action in Turkey, which sees
itself as a patron along with Qatar and other Muslim countries. Turkey’s support
for the Brothers may be the main reason for the wide rift between Egypt and
Turkey, and between Sissi and Erdogan.
If the Trump administration and Congress – whose approval is necessary – put the
Muslim Brotherhood on the U.S. list of terrorist organizations, they could
create more friction with Turkey. Trump will have to consider what’s more
important to him: to placate Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE – which all
consider the Brotherhood a terror group – or reconcile with Turkey and reject
Sissi’s request. Trump’s decision will be based on strategic considerations, not
the intelligence community’s assessments.
The pesky Revolutionary Guards
Political considerations are what is dictating the EU’s position on Iran’s
Revolutionary Guards. It seems the EU could use the American justifications to
include the Guards on its blacklist. There’s no shortage of proof of the Guards’
involvement in terrorist attacks, including in Europe. The EU’s definition of
terrorism is broad enough to include the entire Guards organization.
But a deep dispute exists between most European countries and the Trump
administration over Washington’s leaving of the Iranian nuclear deal. Most EU
nations see the agreement as the height of diplomatic success and proof that
it’s possible to negotiate with Iran and produce sustainable results. But the
United States sees the agreement as the surrender of the Western powers to
Iranian intimidation and a serious threat to “world peace,” especially to
Israel.
As a result, some European countries still implement – with no great success –
the alternative mechanism for bypassing the American sanctions on Iran: Trying
to encourage Iran to negotiate over additional issues such as its missile
program and support for Hezbollah. This strategy doesn’t let the EU include the
Revolutionary Guards on its list of terror groups because officially the Guards
are an arm of government, for which no precedent exists for being declared a
terrorist organization.
Estimates are that the American decision will affect some 11 million Iranians,
of whom over 300,000 are serving in the Guards and the Basij volunteer militia.
Hundreds of thousands more work in plants and businesses owned by the Guards.
But beyond the formal aspect, the chance of preserving the nuclear deal and
encouraging negotiations with Iran could evaporate if the EU joins the United
States in its declaration. The American decision to add the Guards to the terror
list had plenty of opponents in the State Department and Pentagon, who feared an
Iranian response against American forces in the Persian Gulf and Iraq.
Some even attributed the decision to the many steps Trump has taken to
strengthen Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu such as recognition of Israeli
sovereignty over the Golan Heights and the recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s
capital. They also mention a wish by Trump to throw a bone to the Saudis, who
have been scorched in Congress over the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi and
the unending civil war in Yemen. In any case, people in the U.S. administration
are having a hard time explaining the timing of Trump’s decision; Iran has been
in the sights of the war on terror for decades.
“Declaring an organization or movement a terrorist organization is largely a
political statement whose practical meaning is limited,” a European diplomat
told Haaretz. “Most of the organizations on these lists don’t manage their
accounts in banks in Europe or the United States. And anyway, activists linked
to these organizations who live in Europe and the United States are under
surveillance or have been warned about continued cooperation with these groups.”
As he put it, “American law states that a terrorist organization can only be a
foreign organization that’s not American, while the American organizations and
movements that incite to terrorism on a racial or religious basis enjoy legal
protection – and in some cases a blind eye from the president.”
Israel can provide evidence to support the diplomat’s view in its handling of
Hamas. The definition of Hamas as a terrorist group hasn’t prevented Israel from
approving the transfer of Qatari aid in return for calm and the ramping down of
the protest marches at the Gaza border fence. This is the same Qatar that
supports the Muslim Brotherhood, doesn’t recognize the legitimacy of Sissi, is
the enemy of Saudi Arabia and the UAE, and is an ally of Turkey and Iran.
Will Trump label Qatar a state that supports terrorism because of its support
for Hamas or the Muslim Brotherhood if he puts them on the terrorism list? Don’t
hold your breath. The United States has its biggest military base in the Middle
East in Qatar. Trump’s war on terror will have to find a way to maneuver around
these dilemmas.