LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
May 24/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.may24.19.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
Jesus cures the Blind Man In Bethsaida
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Mark 08/22-26:”They came to
Bethsaida. Some people brought a blind man to him and begged him to touch him.
He took the blind man by the hand and led him out of the village; and when he
had put saliva on his eyes and laid his hands on him, he asked him, ‘Can you see
anything?’And the man looked up and said, ‘I can see people, but they look like
trees, walking.’Then Jesus laid his hands on his eyes again; and he looked
intently and his sight was restored, and he saw everything clearly. Then he sent
him away to his home, saying, ‘Do not even go into the village.’”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on May 23-24/19
3 Sons of ex-MP Yaaqoub Arrested in Bednayel
Kanaan Unveils Huge Numbers of Illegally Hired State Employees
Jumblat: Finalizing Budget More Important than Futile Debate
Khalil Signals Preparations for 2020 State Budget
Hajj Hassan Reveals Political Interference in Mobile Sector
Bassil: Budget Steps Insufficient, Some Decisions Need Courage
Report: Bassil’s 12 Suggestions that Pushed Budget Approval Until Friday
Israeli Troops Try to Nab Shepherd, Seize 200 Goats Instead
Najarian: Country's Problems Not Being Treated Thoroughly
Structural Reforms May Push Lebanon's Fiscal Deficit Down to 1.2% by 2023, IIF
Says
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on May 23-24/19
Pentagon to present plans for 10,000 more troops to Mideast
Iran, US tension is a ‘clash of wills’: Guards commander
Saudi Arabia Downs Explosive-Laden Drone from Yemen
Trump torpedoes meeting with Democrats, blasts Pelosi’s ‘cover-up’ accusation
Pelosi Warns Move to Impeach Trump Now Premature, 'Very Divisive'
Ankara Stops Buying Iran Oil Out of Respect for U.S. Sanctions
Pompeo: Huawei Not Truthful about Ties with China's Government
Trump 'Less Prepared' than Putin for Key Meeting, Says Tillerson
Two air strikes kill 14 Afghan civilians
Deadly New Air Strikes as Syria Army Battles Jihadists
Hamas sympathizer threatening to blow up Trump Tower arrested
UN Agency for Palestinians Rejects US Call to Dismantle It
Palestinians Confirm Will Not Attend U.S.-Led Meeting in Bahrain
Israel Cuts Gaza Fishing Limit after Fire Balloons
British Government Postpones Brexit Vote
Dutch, UK Polls Open, Starting 4 Days of European Election
US, Japan, S.Korea, Australia hold first naval drills in Western Pacific
Pakistan test-fires nuclear-capable missile
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on May 23-24/19
Structural Reforms May Push Lebanon's Fiscal Deficit Down to 1.2% by 2023, IIF
Says/The National/May 24/2019
Saber-rattling alone will not scare Iran/Mohamed Chebaro/Arab News/May 23/2019
EU threatened by its failure to focus on real issues/Ana Palacio/Arab News/May
23/2019
Abe to continue charm offensive as Trump visits Japan/Andrew Hammond/Arab
News/May 23/2019
Lieberman returns to defense in next Netanyahu government. IDF will stop firing
at Gaza rioters/Debeka File/May 23/2019
Palestinians: The New Hamas List of 'Traitors'/Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone
Institute/May 23/2019
Iran: Planning to Kidnap and Kill More Americans/Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone
Institute/May 23/2019
Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News
published on May 23-24/19
3 Sons of ex-MP Yaaqoub Arrested in Bednayel
Naharnet/May 23/2019/Three sons of controversial ex-MP Hassan Yaaqoub were
arrested Thursday in the Baalbek district town of Bednayel. The National News
Agency said an army patrol apprehended the trio at their home, seizing weapons
and amunition. The development comes after a verbal dispute between ex-MP
Yaaqoub and Bednayel mayor Ali Jawad Suleiman escalated into gunfire.The dispute
was linked to the removal of a construction violation on land owned by Yaaqoub,
which resulted in the wounding of a Syrian man. The patrol also raided the house
of a man from the Suleiman family without finding him.
Kanaan Unveils Huge Numbers of Illegally Hired State Employees
Naharnet/May 23/2019/The head of the finance parliamentary committee MP Ibrahim
Kanaan on Thursday unveiled a final report related to the file of employment in
public administrations, disclosing that 5,473 civilian employees were hired
after August 21, 2017, among them only 460 in a legal manner. “32,009 people
were hired before August 2017 in a blatant crime,” Kanaan lamented. He added
that the committee has lodged the documents and reports it has with the Court of
Audit to facilitate its inspection mission, noting that the committee has
recommended suspending all employment pending a “comprehensive survey and
restructuring of administration and public institutions.”
Jumblat: Finalizing Budget More Important than Futile Debate
Naharnet/May 23/2019/Progressive Socialist Party leader ex-MP Walid Jumblat on
Thursday called for finalizing the stalled 2019 state budget. Lamenting that the
PSP's recommendations on seaside properties and a progressive taxing system were
rejected by the majority of political forces, Jumblat tweeted that “finalizing
the budget is more important than impeding it or engaging in a futile and
obstructive debate.”“It's about time we reached a result in order to discuss the
2020 budget,” he urged. The Cabinet has held around 17 sessions to finalize the
budget and several parties have accused Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil of
hindering the discussions with side proposals. Lebanon has vowed to slash public
spending to unlock $11 billion worth of aid pledged by international donors
during an April 2018 conference in Paris. Last month, Hariri vowed to introduce
"the most austere budget in Lebanon's history" to combat the country's bulging
fiscal deficit, sparking fears among public sector employees that their salaries
may be cut. Lebanon is one of the world's most indebted countries, with public
debt estimated at 141 percent of GDP in 2018, according to credit ratings agency
Moody's.
Khalil Signals Preparations for 2020 State Budget
Naharnet/May 23/2019/Minister of Finance Ali Hassan Khalil circulated a memo to
the ministries and state departments to start preparing the draft budget of
2020, were discussions will expectedly start with ministers next week, LBCI
reported on Thursday. In that regard, Interior Minister Raya el-Hassan earlier
noted that the government must finalize the 2019 state budget discussions
because by law the budget of 2020 must be submitted in one month. “We should not
be too late with the 2019 budget. We have to be aware that we are looking at the
budget of 2019 while having to submit the budget of 2020 in a month. We can not
handle everything at once. We have to give a positive signal to the markets and
the international community,” Hassan told the daily. The Cabinet has held around
17 sessions to finalize the budget and several parties have accused Foreign
Minister Jebran Bassil of hindering the discussions with side proposals. Lebanon
has vowed to slash public spending to unlock $11 billion worth of aid pledged by
international donors during an April 2018 conference in Paris. Last month,
Hariri vowed to introduce "the most austere budget in Lebanon's history" to
combat the country's bulging fiscal deficit, sparking fears among public sector
employees that their salaries may be cut. Lebanon is one of the world's most
indebted countries, with public debt estimated at 141 percent of GDP in 2018,
according to credit ratings agency Moody's.
Hajj Hassan Reveals Political Interference in Mobile Sector
Naharnet/May 23/2019/MP Hussein Hajj Hassan, Head of the Media and Telecom
parliamentary committee revealed on Thursday that there had been political
interventions in the past to allow certain companies to operate Lebanon's mobile
phone services, the National News Agency reported. "There had been political
interference in the past by some ministers to annul some tenders in order to
give them to specific companies," the Minister said in a press conference held
at the Parliament. "We have started the study of the capital and operating
expenses with a total value of $222 million," added Hassan. "We have also
requested a feasibility study for all the tenders that took place in 2018," he
concluded.
Bassil: Budget Steps Insufficient, Some Decisions Need
Courage
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/May 23/2019/Free Patriotic Movement chief and
Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil on Thursday described the austerity measures
included in the 2019 draft state budget as “insufficient,” urging “courage” in
taking some painful decisions. “What has been so far accomplished in Cabinet is
insufficient,” Bassil said at a press conference he held after an emergency
meeting for the FPM-led Strong Lebanon parliamentary bloc. “We are before a
chance that will not be repeated,” he warned, urging further reforms. Cautioning
that some inside and outside the country “want to leave the country and the
presidential tenure under the mercy of the crisis,” Bassil said his dispute is
not with a single person but rather with several parties. “Do not intimidate us
by saying that some don't want a state budget. We all want a speedy state
budget,” Bassil added. And lamenting that “we lack a political decision to
shoulder the cost of an austerity budget,” the FPM chief pointed out that “every
reform has a cost and someone has to bear it.”He reassured: “The state budget
will be finalized and the deficit has been lowered but we're seeking a bigger
reduction and there is no need for scaring people.”“We want a drastic solution,
not painkillers, and we have offered the necessary sacrifices in our
ministries,” Bassil said. He added: “We reject the persistence of this situation
and we have an economic plan to resolve the crisis. We are not imposing it on
anyone, but we have a responsibility towards the Lebanese.”“I've been hearing
calls for postponing things for the past ten years in Cabinet, so when will the
decision to rescue the country be taken?” Bassil asked. “We have reached a lot
of reforms in the state budget and this is something good for everyone who has
participated in it, from the finance minister to the rest of those concerned,
but we consider it insufficient,” he went on to say. As for Friday's cabinet
session on the state budget, Bassil said: “We will continue our positive work
and we're not pressing regarding anything, but there are decisions that need
courage in order to be taken.”“Is it acceptable that the Lebanese are paying
compensations for the family of an MP who won his seat in 1947?” the FPM chief
wondered, referring to proposals to slash the salaries of incumbent and former
ministers and MPs. He added: “We want the state budget to restore people's
confidence in the state, encourage investment, reassure the international
community, restore confidence in the markets and activate the economic
cycle.”“Only 5,000 Syrians in Lebanon have work permits, is this acceptable?”
Bassil decried. As for his tense ties with Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil,
the foreign minister said: “We don't want a problem with anyone, but rather
solutions for the sake of Lebanon and the Lebanese.”The Cabinet has held around
17 sessions to finalize the budget and several parties have accused Bassil of
hindering the discussions with side proposals. Proposals he made in Wednesday's
session prompted Prime Minister Saad Hariri to give ministers 48 hours to study
them. Lebanon has vowed to slash public spending to unlock $11 billion worth of
aid pledged by international donors during an April 2018 conference in Paris.
Last month, Hariri vowed to introduce "the most austere budget in Lebanon's
history" to combat the country's bulging fiscal deficit, sparking fears among
public sector employees that their salaries may be cut.Lebanon is one of the
world's most indebted countries, with public debt estimated at 141 percent of
GDP in 2018, according to credit ratings agency Moody's.
Report: Bassil’s 12 Suggestions that Pushed Budget Approval Until Friday
Naharnet/May 23/2019/As the government was finalizing its budget discussions
during a session on Wednesday, Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil made 12
suggestions to include in the budget and slash the deficit which pushed its
approval until Friday, media reports said on Thursday.
Bassil had insisted that his proposal constitutes an “opportunity” to take
advantage of the largest reduction in deficit rate, which Finance Minister Ali
Hassan Khalil strongly opposed because “we are short on time,” al-Joumhouria
daily reported.
According to the daily, Bassil raised the issues of:
- Measure No 3 which was referred to Defense Minister Elias Bou Saab, Interior
Minister Raya Hassan and head of the Internal Security Forces.
-Subjecting Banque du Liban to interest tax.
-Setting a ceiling for educational grants - reducing high salaries - stopping
the scales or their financial effect - abolishing illegal public employment that
violated law No 46- closing the country’s illegal crossings, controlling the
borders, stopping tax evasion and reducing the contributions - fees on yachts,
raising the tax on sand and gravel from 1000 to 15,000 Lebanese pounds.
-An additional reduction in the budgets of ministries of health, social affairs,
youth and sports. Bassil announced his willingness to slash the budget of his
ministry by LBP10 billion, and he urged for the abolition of the ministry of the
displaced, according to the daily. Media reports said that Prime Minister Saad
Hariri was “dismayed” by Bassil’s proposals and addressed him saying: “Do you
want to trigger a social revolution.”On Wednesday, the Cabinet failed anew to
finalize the 2019 state budget and will hold another session on Friday to
continue the discussions. The session reportedly witnessed "heated discussions
over what some ministers described as time waste in discussing and approving the
state budget."Information Minister Jamal al-Jarrah said new proposals were
raised during the session, prompting Hariri to give the ministers a 48-hour
timeframe to study them. The Cabinet has held around 17 sessions to finalize the
budget and several parties have accused Bassil of hindering the discussions with
side proposals. Lebanon has vowed to slash public spending to unlock $11 billion
worth of aid pledged by international donors during an April 2018 conference in
Paris. Last month, Hariri vowed to introduce "the most austere budget in
Lebanon's history" to combat the country's bulging fiscal deficit, sparking
fears among public sector employees that their salaries may be cut. Lebanon is
one of the world's most indebted countries, with public debt estimated at 141
percent of GDP in 2018, according to credit ratings agency Moody's.
Israeli Troops Try to Nab Shepherd, Seize 200 Goats Instead
Naharnet/May 23/2019/An Israeli force on Thursday failed to kidnap the shepherd
Ismail Z. who was grazing his flock in the Jabal al-Shahel area west of the
southern border town of Shebaa, the National News Agency said. “The seven-member
patrol chased him for dozens of meters north of the border line without managing
to abduct him,” NNA added.“It instead seized 200 goats and took them into the
occupied Shebaa Farms,” the agency said.
Najarian: Country's Problems Not Being Treated Thoroughly
Kataeb.org/May 23/2019/Kataeb's Secretary-General Nazar Najarian on Thursday
voiced regret that problems are not treated thoroughly in Lebanon where things
are dealt with in a reckless and random way, expressing concern that the
simplistic approach adopted to discuss the 2019 budget draft would lead to
future problems. "The government is seeking to reduce the budget deficit
randomly just to appease the international community in order to unlock the
CEDRE funds," Najarian said in an interview on Tele Liban. "We fear that the
government won't be able to commit to the figures included in the budget because
the country's problems are not being treated in depth," he added. Najarian
stressed the need for the government to examine the state's structure, reduce
expenses, control the state's resources and halt tax and customs evasion. "They
are seeking to boost the state's revenues by snatching LBP 5000 from here and
LBP 10,000 from the citizens' pockets, while billions are being squandered in
public institutions or through tax and customs evasion." Najarian stressed the
need to regain the international community’s trust, calling on the government to
implement drastic structural reforms in the economy, administrations, resources
management and spending.
Structural Reforms May Push Lebanon's Fiscal Deficit Down to 1.2% by 2023, IIF
Says
The National/May 24/2019
The fiscal goals set by Lebanon's government, which is vying to push through its
2019 budget this week, will help one of the world’s most indebted countries to
reduce its ballooning public debt, spur economic growth and reduce the fiscal
deficit.
“Our projections show that the fiscal deficit could narrow from 11.2 per cent of
the gross domestic product in 2018 to 8.4 per cent in 2019 and 1.2 per cent by
2023,” Garbis Iradian, chief economist for the Middle East and North Africa at
the Institute of International Finance (IIF) said in the latest report on
Lebanon. With the reduction in fiscal deficit, the public debt-to-GDP ratio,
around 150 per cent now, will be “placed on a firm downward trajectory”,
declining to 130 per cent by 2023, he added. Bleak forecasts had projected the
debt-to-GDP ratio to surge to 180 per cent if structural reforms are not
implemented. Lebanon is behind only the most highly indebted countries such as
Japan, Greece, Sudan and Venezuela.Lebanon amassed its public debt, which
currently stands at $86.2 billion (Dh316bn), after the end of its 15-year civil
war in 1990 as the country rebuilt its devastated infrastructure. Subsequent
skirmishes, a war with Israel and various junctures of internal political
bickering that left the country without a president or government for prolonged
periods over the past decade, also delayed much needed structural reforms.
One of the key steps to Lebanon’s recovery will be exploring “serious
revenue-enhancing measures”, accompanied by significant cuts in non-productive
expenditures, according to the IIF. Reforming the wage bill to minimise the
negative impact on poorer segments of the population and restructuring the
utility company Electricite du Liban, which has been bleeding funds and raising
tax revenues, should be the priorities for policymakers. The electricity company
costs the government more than $2bn a year in subsidies.
Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s government is on the cusp of pushing through a
contentious austerity budget for 2019 that has been lambasted by civil servants,
pensioners and employees of the central bank amid fears of salary cuts.
Access to about $11bn of concessional loans from friendly nations, which is
contingent on the implementation of fiscal and structural reforms, is critical
for Lebanon’s economy and its ability to revive growth. These funds will help
change the debt dynamics and would also contribute to higher growth and lower
interest rates, the IIF said.
For every one-percentage point increase in growth, the public debt-to-GDP ratio
would decline by 1.5 per cent a year, according to IIF estimates. A reduction in
the interest rate on debt by one percentage point would decrease the debt-to-GDP
ratio by 1.4 per cent a year.
“In the absence of meaningful adjustment and external support, Lebanon would
remain in a vicious cycle of rising debt, high interest rates, depressed private
investment and subdued growth,” said Iradian. If the intended reforms are not
carried out as planned, Lebanon’s fiscal deficit would remain above 11 per cent
of GDP, and the debt-to-GDP ratio would increase further to 180 per cent by
2023, which would threaten the stability of the exchange rate. Addressing
corruption and improving governance should be the essential components of fiscal
and structural reforms,” said Iradian. However, fighting corruption is likely to
be a gradual process requiring strong political will and can bring substantial
fiscal benefits, including lower revenue leakage, less waste in expenditures and
a higher quality of infrastructure, he said.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on May 23-24/19
Pentagon to present plans for 10,000 more troops to Mideast
The Associated Press, Washington/Thursday, 23 May 2019/The Pentagon on Thursday
will present plans to the White House to send up to 10,000 more troops to the
Middle East, in a move to beef up defenses against potential Iranian threats, US
officials said. The officials said no final decision has been made yet, and it’s
not clear if the White House would approve sending all or just some of the
requested forces. Officials said the move is not in response to any new threat
from Iran but is aimed at reinforcing security in the region. They said the
troops would be defensive forces, and the discussions include additional Patriot
missile batteries, more ships and increased efforts to monitor Iran. The
officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the plans have not been
formally announced. Thursday morning’s meeting comes as tensions with Iran
continue to simmer, and it wasn’t clear if a decision would be made during the
session. Any move to deploy more forces to the Middle East would signal a shift
for President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly emphasized the need to reduce
America’s troop presence in the region. US officials have provided few details
about possible Iranian threats but indicated they initially involved missiles
loaded onto small Iranian boats. This week, officials said the missiles have
been taken off the boats near Iran’s shore, but other maritime threats continue.
Sending more troops could also raise questions on Capitol Hill. During
back-to-back closed briefings for the House and Senate on Tuesday, defense
leaders told congressional officials the US doesn’t want to go to war with Iran
and wants to de-escalate the situation. In early May, the US accelerated the
deployment of an aircraft carrier strike group to the Mideast and sent four B-52
bomber aircraft to the region. The Pentagon also decided to move a Patriot air-defense
missile battery to an undisclosed country in the area. The Trump administration
has evacuated nonessential personnel from Iraq, amid unspecified threats the
administration said are linked to Iranian-backed militias in the country. On
Sunday, a rocket was fired into Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone, landing
less than a mile from the sprawling US Embassy. There were no injuries and no
group claimed responsibility, but the rocket was believed to have been fired
from east Baghdad - which is home to Iran-backed Shiite militias.
Iran, US tension is a ‘clash of wills’: Guards commander
Reuters/May 232019/GENEVA: The standoff between Iran and the United States is a
“clash of wills,” a senior commander of Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards
said on Thursday, suggesting any enemy “adventurism” would meet a crushing
response, Fars news agency reported. Tensions have spiked between the two
countries after Washington sent more military forces to the Middle East in a
show of force against what US officials say are Iranian threats to its troops
and interests in the region.“The confrontation and face-off of the Islamic
Republic of Iran and the malicious government of America is the arena for a
clash of wills,” Iran’s armed forces chief of staff Major General Mohammad
Baqeri said. He pointed to a battle during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war where Iran
was victorious and said the outcome could be a message that Iran will have a
“hard, crushing and obliterating response” for any enemy “adventurism.”On
Sunday, US President Donald Trump tweeted: “If Iran wants to fight, that will be
the official end of Iran. Never threaten the United States again!“Trump restored
US sanctions on Iran last year and tightened them this month, ordering all
countries to halt imports of Iranian oil or face sanctions of their own.
Trump wants Iran to come to the negotiating table to reach a new deal with more
curbs on its nuclear and missile programs. Reiterating Iran’s stance, the
spokesman for its Supreme National Security Council said on Thursday that “There
will not be any negotiations between Iran and America.”Keyvan Khosravi was also
quoted as saying by the state broadcaster that some officials from several
countries have visited Iran recently, “mostly representing the United States.”
He did not elaborate, but the foreign minister of Oman, which in the past helped
pave the way for negotiations between Iran and the United States, visited Tehran
on Monday. “Without exception, the message of the power and resistance of the
Iranian nation was conveyed to them,” he said. In Berlin, a German diplomatic
source told Reuters that Jens Ploetner, a political director in Germany’s
Foreign Ministry, was in Tehran on Thursday for meetings with Iranian officials
to try to preserve the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and cool tensions in the region.
Saudi Arabia Downs Explosive-Laden Drone from Yemen
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/May 23/2019/Saudi Arabia on Thursday shot down a
bomb-laden drone deployed by rebels in neighbouring Yemen to attack an airport
in the kingdom, the Riyadh-led coalition fighting on the side of Yemen's
government said. "An explosive-laden drone sent by the terrorist Huthi militia
to target Najran airport" was intercepted and destroyed by the Saudi air force,
coalition spokesman Colonel Turki al-Maliki was quoted by state media as saying.
The Yemeni rebels' Al-Masirah TV said the attack -- the third against Najran
airport in 72 hours -- had targeted a Patriot air defence system.
Maliki said "the rebels attacked a civilian airport" and warned of a
"response."An armed drone sent on Tuesday had hit a weapons depot at the same
airport, setting off a blaze, according to Al-Masirah. Maliki said on Tuesday
that the rebels attacked a "civilian installation" in Najran province bordering
Yemen with an explosives-laden drone, but did not report casualties. The
Saudi-led coalition intervened in Yemen in March 2015 to push back an advance by
the Iran-backed Huthi rebels, who continue to hold the capital Sanaa, and to
restore to power President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi. Since then, the conflict has
killed tens of thousands of people, many of them civilians, relief agencies say.
It has triggered what the U.N. describes as the world's worst humanitarian
crisis, with 24.1 million -- more than two-thirds of the population -- in need
of aid.
Trump torpedoes meeting with Democrats, blasts Pelosi’s
‘cover-up’ accusation
Reuters/Thursday, 23 May 2019/President Donald Trump on Wednesday abruptly cut
short a White House meeting with Democratic lawmakers on infrastructure, then
ripped into them over House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s accusation that he is engaged
in a cover-up and asserted that he could not work with them unless they dropped
multiple investigations. “I don’t do cover-ups,” the Republican president,
clearly agitated, told reporters at a previously unscheduled Rose Garden
appearance after his brief meeting with Democratic congressional leaders that
Pelosi described as “very, very, very strange.”
Unleashing a familiar litany of gripes about Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s
Russia probe and the follow-up congressional inquiries that he has been
stonewalling, Trump also complained that Democrats had met to discuss whether to
impeach him - or, as he called it, “the I-word.”The rupture bodes ill for any
possible cooperation between the president and the Democrats who control the
House of Representatives on legislation on infrastructure or other matters as
Trump seeks re-election in 2020, signaling deepening political gridlock in
Washington. Pelosi, the top congressional Democrat, did not back down afterward
and pointedly mentioned the possibility of impeachment, the US Constitution’s
process for the House and Senate to remove a president from office. “The fact
is, in plain sight in the public domain, this president is obstructing justice
and he’s engaged in a cover-up - and that could be an impeachable offense,”
Pelosi said in an event at the Center for American Progress, a liberal
Washington policy advocacy group. The president is stonewalling congressional
investigations by ignoring subpoenas, refusing to let current and former
advisers testify and not handing over documents in the aftermath of the April
release of Mueller’s report that detailed Russian interference in the 2016
election to boost Trump’s candidacy. In the run-up to the infrastructure
meeting, Trump was stewing over Pelosi’s cover-up remarks, according to a White
House official. Pelosi, amid growing talk about impeachment, had told reporters
about an hour before the scheduled meeting that Trump is engaged in a cover-up.
As the meeting neared, Trump told aides he wanted to hold an event in the Rose
Garden to make a statement. When Pelosi and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck
Schumer arrived in the Cabinet Room, Trump walked in, stood at the head of a
long boardroom table, and told them he had asked them over to talk about
infrastructure, but that the speaker had just accused him of a cover-up. The
meeting lasted only three to five minutes, the official said. Once Trump exited,
Pelosi told Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and others in the room that prior
presidents like Theodore Roosevelt had brought people together on infrastructure
but Trump had walked out, two sources familiar with the meeting said. Trump
senior adviser Kellyanne Conway asked Pelosi, “Do you have a response to what
the president actually said?” Pelosi fired back, “I’m going to engage directly
with the president, not the staff.”“That’s very pro-woman of you,” Conway fired
back, the sources said. Afterward, Trump strode to a podium adorned with a
professionally made sign that read, “No Collusion, No Obstruction” and that also
listed the cost and length of the Mueller probe. Trump said, “I walked into the
room and I told Senator Schumer, Speaker Pelosi, I want to do infrastructure. I
want to do it more than you want to do it. I’d be really good at that - that’s
what I do. But you know what? You can’t do it under these circumstances. So get
these phony investigations over with.”
Pelosi Warns Move to Impeach Trump Now Premature, 'Very
Divisive'
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/May 23/2019/Democrats are not yet ready to
initiate impeachment proceedings against US President Donald Trump, the party's
congressional leader Nancy Pelosi said Thursday, warning that such a course of
action would be "very divisive." The powerful House speaker, whose high-profile
rivalry with Trump spilled into open warfare this week, also said the president
himself is "disappointed" that Democrats have not launched formal steps to
remove him from office because such a move could fire up his conservative base
and help his re-election effort. But she reiterated her position that
impeachment was not presently the path forward for holding Trump to account. "We
can get the facts to the American people through our investigation," she told
reporters, referring to ongoing congressional probes that Trump has resisted.
"It may take us to a place that is unavoidable in terms of impeachment or not,
but we're not at that place."Pelosi reaffirmed her charge that Trump is engaged
in a "cover-up" related to alleged efforts to obstruct justice regarding the
special counsel's probe of Moscow's election interference and Trump's
connections with Russia, but she cautioned that "impeachment is a very divisive
place to go in our country.""The House Democratic caucus is not on a path to
impeachment -- and that's where he wants us to be," the veteran Democrat said.
Several Democratic lawmakers and 2020 presidential contenders are eager to
assert constitutionally mandated congressional oversight powers as a check
against the executive. But there are concerns the impeachment tactic could
backfire, energizing Trump's base ahead of the election. "The white House is
just crying out for impeachment," Pelosi added. The speaker also repeated her
concern that Trump on Wednesday walked away from negotiations aimed at
concluding a trillion-dollar infrastructure plan because he could not deal with
Democrats on policy until "phony investigations" are brought to a close. Trump
weighed into that debate again early Thursday in a series of tweets. "The
Democrats are getting nothing done in Congress," Trump wrote. "It is not
possible for them to investigate and legislate at the same time" because
Democrats are focused on a "fishing expedition" regarding the Russia report, he
added.
Ankara Stops Buying Iran Oil Out of Respect for U.S.
Sanctions
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 23/2019/Ankara stopped importing oil from Iran
at the beginning of May out of "respect" for American sanctions despite
disagreeing with them, a Turkish official said Wednesday. "As a strategic ally"
of the United States, "we respect" the sanctions, said the official, who asked
to remain anonymous, during Turkish Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Yavuz
Selim Kiran's visit to Washington. Since pulling out of the landmark Iran
nuclear deal a year ago, President Donald Trump's administration has hit Iran
with severe sanctions prohibiting the export of Iranian oil, as well as
targeting countries that continue to purchase it. Turkey was among eight
countries, also including China, India and Japan, that were initially exempt
from the sanctions and allowed to continue importing Iranian crude, but the
exemption ended May 2 and has not been renewed.
Ankara initially appeared unwilling to comply, but according to the anonymous
official, Turkey did stop importing Iranian oil after May 2. While meeting with
Trump, the Turkish delegation in Washington discussed the various points of
tension between the two NATO allies, including Ankara's recent controversial
purchase of the S-400 missile defense system from Moscow. Washington says the
deal with Moscow is a threat to Western defense and in April suspended Ankara
from the F-35 fighter jet program in a bid to halt the purchase. "It's a done
deal," the Turkish deputy minister told journalists in Washington, reaffirming
the country's stance on maintaining the contract with Moscow. The Turkish
government proposed a joint technical working group with the Trump
administration to help dispel any fears on the part of the U.S., which worries
that the S-400s will be used to collect technological data on NATO military
aircraft, which Russia will be able to access. "We're still waiting for their
answer" on the technical group, added the Turkish official. U.S.-Turkish
relations have grown tense over multiple issues, including U.S. support for
Syrian Kurdish forces labelled terrorists by Ankara, and Washington's refusal to
extradite Pennsylvania-based Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen, who is accused of
being behind a failed coup in Turkey in 2016.
Pompeo: Huawei Not Truthful about Ties with China's Government
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 23/2019/U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
charged Thursday that Chinese telecoms giant Huawei is not truthful about its
relationship with China's government. When Huwawei says it is not working with
that government, "that's just false. That's just false," Pompeo told CNBC. "To
say that they don't work with the Chinese government is a false statement,"
Pompeo said of Huawei, which has effectively been banned by the U.S. over
worries that Beijing uses it as a tool for espionage. Huawei CEO Ren Zhengfei,
Pompeo said, "isn't telling the American people the truth, nor the world."
Trump 'Less Prepared' than Putin for Key Meeting, Says Tillerson
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 23/2019/US President Donald Trump was less
prepared than Vladimir Putin for their first meeting, allowing his Russian
counterpart to promote his own agenda and leaving US officials at a
disadvantage, former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has told lawmakers.
Tillerson, who was fired by Trump last March, delivered his assessment of
Trump's approach to the talks in Hamburg in 2017, in remarks to a Congress
committee Tuesday reported by the Washington Post. "We spent a lot of time in
the conversation talking about how Putin seized every opportunity to push what
he wanted," a committee aide told the newspaper. "There was a discrepancy in
preparation, and it created an unequal footing." Trump met with Putin on the
sidelines of the G20 summit in July 2017 under a cloud of rebuke for his
reluctance to criticize the Russian leader directly over Moscow's meddling in US
elections the previous year. He later said he got along with Putin "very, very
well" at the meeting. Tillerson attended the Hamburg talks, which were intended
to be a brief meeting but span out into a two-hour discussion on a variety of
global issues, anonymous committee aids told the Washington Post. The following
year Trump met again with Putin for their first formal summit in Helsinki,
dismissing top aides for two hours of talks, in a sharp break with standard
diplomatic practice. The businessman-turned-politician has previously expressed
skepticism about the importance of preparation for high-stakes diplomacy,
describing "attitude" as more useful than research. Ahead of his first meeting
with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore last year, Trump said with
characteristic bravado: "I don't think I have to prepare very much... It's about
attitude, it's about willingness to get things done."Trump dismissed Tillerson's
remarks, claiming he was "perfectly prepared" for meetings with Putin. "We did
very well at those meetings," he said, according to the newspaper. Tillerson has
previously described Trump as an "undisciplined" figure who repeatedly wanted to
break the law -- leading the US president to respond that his onetime cabinet
member was "dumb as a rock" and lazy as hell."
Two air strikes kill 14 Afghan civilians
AFP, Kabul/Thursday, 23 May 2019/Two air strikes have killed 14 civilians in
Afghanistan in recent days, the United Nations said Thursday, as the US
intensifies its air war across the country. According to the UN Mission in
Afghanistan (UNAMA), five women and seven children were among the 14 civilians
killed in Helmand province in the south on May 20, and Kunar province in the
east on May 22. “Civilian casualty toll from airstrikes in Afghanistan continues
to rise,” UNAMA said on Twitter. “Parties must respect international obligations
to protect civilians from harm.”While the Afghan military does have a fledgling
air force, most strikes are led or supported by American air power. US Forces
Afghanistan declined to comment. According to US Air Force Central Command, the
US dropped 7,362 bombs in Afghanistan in 2018, the highest number since at least
2010.
In April, UNAMA published a report saying Afghan civilians are for the first
time being killed in greater numbers by US and pro-government forces than by the
Taliban and other insurgent groups. During the first three months of 2019,
international and pro-government forces were responsible for the deaths of 305
civilians, whereas insurgent groups killed 227 people, UNAMA said. The
development comes as the US steps up its air campaign in Afghanistan while
pushing for a peace deal with the Taliban, who now control or influence more
parts of the country than at any time since they were ousted in 2001. At least
eight police officers were killed May 16 in southern Afghanistan during a
“friendly fire” strike from US forces. And UNAMA last week said it was probing
allegations of civilian casualties resulting from US air strikes against
purported drug-making facilities in western Afghanistan. The allegations center
on strikes conducted earlier in May in Farah and Nimroz provinces, where dozens
of structures said to have been used to produce heroin and other illegal drugs
were destroyed.
Deadly New Air Strikes as Syria Army Battles Jihadists
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 23/2019/Syrian government aircraft bombed
several towns in northwestern Syria on Thursday killing five civilians as troops
and militia battled jihadists on the ground, a monitor said. The new bombardment
of the largely jihadist-controlled region of Idlib followed strikes on Tuesday
night and Wednesday that killed 23 civilians, 12 of them at a busy market. In
neighbouring Hama province, Syrian troops battled for a third straight day to
repel a jihadist counterattack around the town of Kafr Nabuda, leaving 15
combatants dead, 11 of them jihadists, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
said. Syrian government forces retook the town on May 8 but the jihadists retook
most of it on Wednesday, the Britain-based monitor said. More than 100
combatants have been killed in the fighting around Kafr Nabuda since Tuesday.
The Hayat Tahrir al-Sham alliance, which is led by l-Qaida's former Syria
affiliate, controls much of Idlib as well as adjacent slivers of Aleppo, Hama
and Latakia provinces. The jihadist-dominated region is nominally protected by a
buffer zone deal, but the government and its ally Russia have escalated their
bombardment in recent weeks, seizing several towns on its southern flank. The
United Nations has warned that an all-out offensive on the Idlib region would
lead to a humanitarian catastrophe for its nearly thee million residents. More
than 200,000 people have already been displaced by the upsurge of violence since
April 28, the U.N. has said. A total of 20 health facilities have been hit by
the escalation -- 19 of which remain out of service, it added.
Hamas sympathizer threatening to blow up Trump Tower
arrested
AFP, New York/Thursday, 23 May 2019/A young man threatening to blow up Trump
Tower and the Israeli consulate in New York was arrested Wednesday in New
Jersey, the state’s federal prosecutor said. Investigators found a series of
threatening message posted on social media by Jonathan Xie, 20, a sympathizer of
the al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas. Xie, originally from the
affluent New Jersey neighborhood Basking Ridge, was charged with two counts of
attempting to provide material support to a terrorist organization – each
punishable by up to 20 years in prison – two counts of making false statements
and one count of transmitting a threat in interstate commerce. “The threat from
homegrown violent extremists who self-radicalize remains persistent,” said US
Attorney Craig Carpenito in a statement. “While more Americans may be familiar
with ISIS, we take seriously those who wish to help any designated terrorist
organization.”In December, according to the prosecution’s statement Xie sent
$100 via virtual transfer to an individual in Gaza whom he believed to be a
member of the al-Qassam Brigades. He then bragged about it on Instagram,
posting, “Pretty sure it was illegal but I don’t give a damn.”
He said in February he wanted to join the US army “to learn how to kill.” In
April, he posted photos of Trump Tower on Instagram superimposed with text
saying he wanted to plant a bomb there. On one photo, he added a “Yes/No” poll
asking, “Should I bomb Trump Tower?” along with as a bomb emoji.
Later in the month, he posted an Instagram live video in which he displayed a
Hamas flag and a handgun, stating he wanted to go to a “pro-Israel march” and
wanted “to shoot everybody” there, the statement added. The last attempted
attack in New York was in December 2017, when a Bangladeshi man, inspired by
ISIS, tried to detonate a bomb in a tunnel below the Port Authority bus
terminal, not far from the iconic Times Square. The bomb, which he strapped to
his body with zip wires, did not detonate as planned and failed to seriously
injure anyone other than himself. Convicted last November, he faces a maximum
sentence of life in prison when he is sentenced on September 10, 2019.
UN Agency for Palestinians Rejects US Call to Dismantle It
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 23/2019/The head of the United Nations
organisation for Palestinian refugees on Thursday rejected a US call to
dismantle the agency, saying it cannot be blamed for stalled peace efforts.
UNRWA's commissioner general Pierre Krahenbuhl rebuffed the criticism from US
envoy Jason Greenblatt during a visit to the Gaza Strip. "I unreservedly reject
the accompanying narrative that suggests that somehow UNRWA is to blame for the
continuation of the refugee-hood of Palestine refugees, of their growing numbers
and their growing needs," he said in response to a question about Greenblatt's
comments. "The fact that UNRWA still exists today is an illustration of the
failure of the parties and the international community to resolve the issue
politically -- and one cannot deflect the attention onto a humanitarian
organisation," he told a press conference in Gaza City. The United States last
year cut off its roughly $300 million annual donation to UNRWA, and
administration officials now argue the agency has run its course. Speaking to
the UN Security Council on Wednesday, Greenblatt said the "UNRWA model has
failed the Palestinian people." He said it was time to hand over services
assured by the UN agency to countries hosting Palestinian refugees and NGOs. He
said the US had given $6 billion in aid to UNRWA since it was founded in 1949
"and yet year after year UNRWA funding fell short.""We need to be honest about
the situation. UNRWA is a bandaid and the Palestinians who use its services
deserve better," said Greenblatt. More than 700,000 Palestinians were expelled
or forced to flee their lands in the 1948 war surrounding the creation of Israel
and they and their descendants make up the millions of Palestinians refugees
across the Middle East. UNRWA provides education, health and other key services
for the refugees with funding from international donors. The US and Israel say
the agency perpetuates the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, in particular by
classifying refugees' descendants as refugees too. UNRWA argues it is simply
providing services until a political solution is found.
The US is due to hold an economic conference in Bahrain on June 25-26 as the
first part of the administration's long-delayed Israeli-Palestinian peace plan,
though the Palestinians will not attend, accusing the United States of seeking
to eliminate their cause. UNRWA hosts a conference on June 25 at which
international donors are expected to pledge financial support.
Palestinians Confirm Will Not Attend U.S.-Led Meeting in Bahrain
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 23/2019/The Palestinian leadership confirmed
Wednesday they would not attend a U.S.-led peace conference in Bahrain next
month. The White House announced Sunday it would co-host the June 25-26
conference in Manama focusing on economic aspects of President Donald Trump's
long-delayed Israeli-Palestinian peace plan, with the declared aim of achieving
Palestinian prosperity. The Palestinians had already said they had not been
informed about the event and were expected not to attend but confirmed the
stance late Wednesday. "Palestine will not attend the Manama meeting," a
statement on the Palestine Liberation Organization's (PLO) website said. "This
is a collective Palestinian position, from President Mahmoud Abbas and the PLO
Executive Committee to all Palestinian political movements and factions,
national figures, private sector and civil society." The White House has so far
not provided details on attendees but a number of prominent Palestinian
businessmen have said they rejected invites to the event. The Palestinians have
boycotted the U.S. administration since President Donald Trump broke with
decades of consensus and recognised Jerusalem as Israel's capital in December
2017. They consider the eastern part of the city the capital of their future
state and have opposed the proposed U.S. peace plan, which they fear will be
heavily biased in favour of Israel. The Trump administration is expected to
unveil the long-awaited plan possibly as early as next month. The Bahrain
conference could see large-scale investment pledges for the Palestinian
territories but is unlikely to focus heavily on the political issues at the core
of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Israel Cuts Gaza Fishing Limit after Fire Balloons
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 23/2019/Israel reduced the offshore fishing
limits it imposes for vessels operating out of Gaza from Thursday after
Palestinians floated balloons fitted with incendiaries over the border,
officials said. The cut came just two days after Israel restored the limits to
those set in April ahead of an Israeli general election. "A decision was taken
this Wednesday evening to reduce the fishing zone off the Gaza Strip to 10
nautical miles until further notice," said COGAT, the defence ministry unit that
oversees such regulations. "The decision was taken after the launch of
incendiary balloons from Gaza towards Israel," it added. Palestinians in Gaza
have frequently floated balloons fitted with firebombs over the border to damage
Israeli property and have in the past succeeded in setting fire to large areas
of farmland. Israel banned fishing completely when two days of deadly violence
erupted earlier this month, but lifted the ban with a restriction of up to 12
nautical miles following a truce. The 15-nautical-mile limit that had been
restored on Tuesday was the largest allowed in years by Israel, which has fought
three wars with Palestinian militants in the enclave and has blockaded it for
more than a decade.
But human rights activists note that it still falls short of the 20 nautical
miles agreed under the Oslo accords of the 1990s. Israeli authorities have not
said whether the 15-mile limit was one of the understandings reached as part of
the May 6 ceasefire in Gaza but Israel media reported on Monday that it was. The
additional nautical miles are important to Gaza fishermen as they bring more
valuable, deeper water species within reach. Four Israeli civilians and 25
Palestinians, including at least nine militants, were killed in this month's
exchanges across the border.
British Government Postpones Brexit Vote
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 23/2019/The British government on Thursday
postponed a crucial Brexit vote scheduled for the first week of June, following
an outcry from hardline Brexiteers over concessions made by Prime Minister
Theresa May. The beleaguered premier is in the last throes of a tumultuous
period in power focused all-but exclusively on guiding her fractured country out
of the European Union. "We will update the house on the publication and
introduction of the Withdrawal Agreement Bill on our return from the Whitsun
recess" on June 4, government official Mark Spencer told MPs. Spencer said the
government had planned to hold the vote on a landmark piece of legislation to
implement Brexit on June 7 but had not been able to fix this date. May is under
intense pressure to resign after holding out the prospect of a parliamentary
vote on a second referendum to try and persuade MPs to support the divorce deal
she has struck with EU leaders.The deal has already been rejected three times in
parliament, forcing a delay to the planned date of Brexit on March 29, and still
faces strong cross-party opposition.
'Brexit fiasco'
Meanwhile there are already several leading Conservatives, including members of
her own cabinet, who are campaigning to take over from May when she quits. The
prime minister's woes were made worse on Wednesday when Andrea Leadsom -- one of
cabinet's strongest Brexit backers -- resigned from her post as the government's
representative in parliament over her handling of the slowly-unfolding crisis.
"I no longer believe that our approach will deliver on the (2016) referendum
results," Leadsom said in her resignation letter. In her response May thanked
Leadsom for her "passion, drive and sincerity", but took issue with her
assessment of the government's Brexit strategy. "I do not agree with you that
the deal which we have negotiated with the European Union means that the United
Kingdom will not become a sovereign country," May said. Many of Thursday's
newspaper front pages pictured May leaving Downing Street late on Wednesday
apparently with tears in her eyes. "May set to go after Brexit fiasco," said The
Sun tabloid. Thursday's European elections are being interpreted in Britain as a
referendum on Brexit and on May's ability to get the job done. They make grim
reading for the government team, with Nigel Farage's Brexit Party well ahead in
the polls.The current deadline for Brexit set by EU leaders is October 31. The
Brexit Party and leading Conservatives are calling for Britain to leave the EU
on that date without an overall deal but businesses fear this could cause severe
disruption.
Dutch, UK Polls Open, Starting 4 Days of European Elections
Associated Press/Naharnet/May 23/2019/Dutch and U.K. polls opened Thursday in
elections for the European Parliament, starting four days of voting across the
28-nation bloc that pits supporters of deeper integration against populist
Euroskeptics who want more power for their national governments. A half hour
after voting started in the Netherlands, polls opened across the United Kingdom,
the only other country voting Thursday, and a nation still wrestling with its
plans to leave the European Union altogether and the leadership of embattled
Prime Minister Theresa May. The elections, which end Sunday night, come as
support is surging for populists and nationalists who want to rein in the EU's
powers, while traditional powerhouses like France and Germany insist that unity
is the best buffer against the shifting economic and security interests of an
emerging new world order. French President Emmanuel Macron says the challenge is
"not to cede to a coalition of destruction and disintegration" that will seek to
dismantle EU unity built up over the past six decades. In a significant
challenge to those centrist forces, populists appear largely united heading into
the elections. On Saturday, Italy's anti-migrant Interior Minister Matteo
Salvini was joined at a rally by 10 other nationalist leaders, including include
far-right leaders Marine Le Pen of France's National Rally party and Joerg
Meuthen of the Alternative for Germany party. On Thursday morning, U.K. Labour
leader Jeremy Corbyn released a message with a warning that "the far-right is on
the rise" and adding that "the actions we take now will have huge consequences
for our future." Voters across Europe elect a total of 751 lawmakers, although
that number is set to drop to 705 when the UK leaves the EU. The Dutch make up
just 26 currently and 29 after Brexit. The UK has 73 European lawmakers, who
would lose their jobs when their country completes its messy divorce from the
EU. Results of the four days of voting will not be officially released until
Sunday night, but Dutch national broadcaster NOS will publish an exit poll after
ballot boxes close Thursday night.
The Netherlands could provide a snapshot of what is to come. Polls show the
right-wing populist Forum for Democracy led by charismatic intellectual Thierry
Baudet running neck-and-neck with the center-right VVD party of Prime Minister
Mark Rutte. While the country, an affluent trading nation, profits from the EU's
open borders and single market, it also is a major contributor to EU coffers.
Skeptical Dutch voters in 2005 rejected a proposed EU constitution in a
referendum. Baudet, whose party emerged as a surprise winner of provincial
elections in March, identifies more with hard-line Hungarian Prime Minister
Viktor Orban than with the nationalist populist movement led by Salvini,
although in a debate Wednesday night he called Salvini a "hero of Europe" for
his crackdown on migration. "The immigration we get here from Africa and the
Mideast is completely contrary to our culture, our values, our way of life,
tolerance, love of women and so on," Baudet said. "That has to stop and it will
not happen at the European level."
US, Japan, S.Korea, Australia hold first naval drills in
Western Pacific
Reuters, Tokyo/Thursday, 23 May 2019/US Navy ships conducted joint drills with
warships from allies Japan, Australia, and South Korea in their first combined
exercise in the Western Pacific, the US Navy said on Thursday. The Pacific
Vanguard exercise near the US island of Guam takes place ahead of President
Donald Trump’s visit to Japan this weekend, as Washington looks to allies in
Asia to help counter China’s military might in the region. “Pacific Vanguard
joins forces from four, like-minded maritime nations that provide security
throughout the Indo-Pacific based on shared values and common interests,” Vice
Admiral Phillip Sawyer, commander of the US Navy’s Seventh Fleet, said in a
statement. The six-day exercise involves two Japanese destroyers, two Australian
frigates and a destroyer from South Korea, with as many as 3,000 sailors
participating. The US Navy has deployed five ships as well as fighter jets and
maritime patrol planes for the drills, which include live fire and
anti-submarine warfare exercises. Pacific Vanguard is the latest show of
combined naval force in the Asia Pacific region. This month US ships conducted
drills with French, Japanese and Australian ships in the Bay of Bengal, and held
separate exercises with a Japanese helicopter carrier and warships from India
and the Philippines in the disputed South China Sea. China claims almost all of
the strategic South China Sea, through which passes about a third of global
seaborne trade. Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan, and
Vietnam have competing claims to the waterway. On Wednesday, the US Navy sent
two ships through the Taiwan Strait, its latest transit through the sensitive
waterway and a move likely to anger Beijing at a time of tense relations between
the world’s two biggest economies.
Taiwan is one of a growing number of flashpoints in the US-China relationship,
which also include a bitter trade war, US sanctions and China’s increasingly
muscular military posture in the South China Sea, where the United States also
conducts freedom-of-navigation patrols.
Pakistan test-fires nuclear-capable missile
The Associated Press, Islamabad /Thursday, 23 May 2019/Pakistan’s military says
it has successfully test-fired a long-range ballistic missile capable of
carrying a nuclear warhead. A statement from the military says the
surface-to-surface Shaheen-II missile, which has a range of 1,500 kilometers,
was launched on Thursday and ended in the Arabian Sea. The announcement comes
after a six-week general election in neighboring India, Pakistan's chief
regional rival. Both nations have nuclear arms and have fought three wars since
gaining independence from Britain in 1947. They regularly test-fire
missiles.Vote counting in India shows Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his party
have a commanding lead, making another five-year term for the Hindu nationalist
leader very likely.
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on May 23-24/19
Saber-rattling alone will not scare Iran
Mohamed Chebaro/Arab News/May 23/2019
The war of words between Washington and Tehran continues on an almost daily
basis. Will there be war? Or just low intensity skirmishes that result in a
stalemate, which will hurt the US and its allies in the region more than the
sanctions-resilient, ostracized Iran? On the one side, you are led to deduce
from statements like those made by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
that Iran is not pursuing war, and that “the difference between us and them is
that they are afraid of war and don’t have the will for it,” as Maj. Gen.
Hossein Salami, the head of the elite IRGC, told Fars News Agency this week. But
should we believe him?
On the other side, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and the US could not be seen to waver
after a series of carefully synchronized attacks that fell short of disrupting
oil shipments.
An assessment issued this week by the Norwegian Shipowners’ Mutual War Risks
Insurance Association concluded that the IRGC was “highly likely” to have
facilitated last week’s attacks on four oil tankers, including two from Saudi
Arabia, off Fujairah in the UAE. The report stipulates that the attacks were
likely carried out by a surface vessel operating close by that dispatched
underwater drones carrying 30 to 50 kilograms of high-grade explosives, which
detonated on impact.
In a joint letter sent to the UN Security Council, the UAE, Saudi Arabia and
Norway said the attacks had been deliberate and could have resulted in
casualties and spillages of oil or harmful chemicals.Saudi Arabia has announced
that it wants to avert war in the region but stands ready to respond with “all
strength” following last week’s attacks on its oil assets; telling Iran that the
ball was now in its court. Riyadh has accused Tehran of also ordering the drone
strikes on two oil pumping stations in the Kingdom, claimed by Yemen’s
Iran-aligned Houthis.
Meanwhile, steps by the US to cut down staff at its missions in Iraq and
elsewhere in the Middle East coincided with a missile falling in Baghdad’s Green
Zone, close to the US Embassy. Last week’s attacks took place against a backdrop
of US-Iranian tension following Washington’s decision to try to cut Tehran’s oil
exports to zero and beef up its military presence in the Gulf in response to
what it called Iranian threats.
In short, the situation in the Gulf is nothing but a barrel full of explosive
powder short of a fuse.
Across Iran’s capital, the talk seems to always come back to how things may get
worse, according to the Associated Press. But most believe that war will not
come to the region despite the US saber-rattling.
In short, the situation in the Gulf is nothing but a barrel full of explosive
powder short of a fuse.
The attacks by drones operated by the IRGC or its many Arab agents in the
region, such as the Houthi rebels in Yemen, the Popular Mobilization Forces in
Iraq or Hezbollah in Lebanon, bear the hallmarks of Tehran’s modus operandi. One
would be foolish to believe that saber-rattling alone will scare Iran or
compound its problems, as its theocratic regime has been thriving on threats
since it dared to take US hostages at their own embassy in Tehran in 1979.
I am not an advocate of war, but history has shown that Iran has been emboldened
time and again to take occasional shots at the US in the region or to undermine
the state authority of various countries. Empty threats from the Trump
administration will hinder rather than help the prospects of peace and security
in the Gulf, and risk further denting the stature of the US and its allies in
the region.
Iran’s brinkmanship and its ability to maneuver and outplay the international
community is evident. Tightening the noose on what is already a pariah state
energizes the resolve among its ranks, regardless of the starving Iranians at
home.
Over many years, the theocracy in Tehran has developed a key operation manual
that is activated whenever the going gets tough. It raises the level of rhetoric
and then fires a few strategic warning shots via its many proxies — and this is
usually enough for the West to retreat.
Iran is in breach of international law if it is proven to be the mastermind of
the attacks on the cargo ships in UAE waters and the oil installations in Saudi
Arabia. It has done so before and maybe the world then chose to go after the
proxy rather than the source.
Iran is likely to go further, as many say it has nothing to lose. Tehran could
reactivate its nuclear program as a reaction to what it perceives as the US and
its allies’ belligerent acts to suffocate its economy. It may carry out a test
of a new and more lethal long-range missile, in defiance of the international
community. Tehran could even further harden its anti-American stance in Syria,
Yemen, Iraq, Gaza and Lebanon. Last but not least, the country’s leadership has
repeatedly warned that, if Iran is squeezed, it could deport nearly 3 million
Afghan refugees, creating an unprecedented wave of migration that could force
Western liberal democratic countries to buckle.
This brinkmanship, played by Tehran all along and now played by Washington too,
could miraculously be a prelude to a new deal. But, make no mistake, the Middle
East nowadays is not home to miracles. The Iran regime can withstand all US
pressure short of a military strike and, unless the Iranian people decide enough
is enough, the regime has proven in the past its impressive resilience and
ability to outplay its opponents, ensuring its grip on power outlasts the
relatively short political life of all its Western opponents.
*Mohamed Chebaro is a British-Lebanese journalist with more than 25 years’
experience covering war, terrorism, defense, current affairs and diplomacy. He
is also a media consultant and trainer
EU threatened by its failure to focus on real issues
Ana Palacio/Arab News/May 23/2019
This year’s European Parliament elections have spurred months of nail biting.
Will the pro-European center hold? Will the body be too fractured to function?
Will a vocal contingent of nationalist-populists disrupt every sitting?
While important, discussion of these questions has missed the forest for the
trees. Now that the election is finally here, Europe can stop obsessing about
its possible outcome and focus on the real challenges ahead.
The first challenge is the coming economic downturn. A decade after the
financial crisis upended Europe’s economy, throwing its politics and social
model into disarray, average annual growth remains a sluggish 1.5 percent. And
there are strong signals that worse is to come: Debt levels are rising fast and
the European Central Bank has relaunched stimulus measures to stave off
recession.
Unlike the crisis of 10 years ago, the damage caused by the coming slowdown will
not be concentrated in Southern Europe; it will hurt the euro zone as a whole,
including almighty Germany. The EU barely survived the first crisis: A recession
that hits the EU core would amount to a serious, even existential, threat.
One would think that 10 years would be enough to take steps to prevent history
from repeating itself. But initiatives like the creation of a banking union and
the completion of the single market have not been realized because Europe’s
leaders have insisted on discussing issues at the margins, rather than
implementing difficult reforms. It is as if they haven’t noticed the lowering
clouds on the economic horizon.
It is time to look up. The new European Parliament must urgently do what it
takes to buttress the EU. But the impetus for such action must come, first and
foremost, from the EU’s largest and most influential members — in particular,
Germany and France.
The second core challenge that Europe faces is the fracturing of liberal
democracy. This is not strictly a European phenomenon: It can be seen throughout
the liberal democratic world, not least in the US. But growing support for
populist appeals to emotion, nostalgia and resentment have been particularly
pointed in a Europe still feeling the effects of the last financial crisis and
facing growing questions over the viability of its social model.
To address the manifold problems it faces, the EU must recognize that member
states are steering the boat, and adjust accordingly.
So far, efforts to resist the populists have been underwhelming and sometimes
misguided. Some, such as Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, have made the mistake
of mimicking their message and approach. Others, such as French President
Emmanuel Macron, have peddled largely hollow visions of hope, with mixed
results. Then there were the poorly conceived efforts to connect the EU to the
people, exemplified by the series of chaotic televised debates that have marked
this year’s campaign for the European Commission presidency.
If they are truly to counteract the populist trend and reinvigorate support for
liberal democratic principles, the leaders of the EU and its member states must
do a better job of reconnecting with citizens. Finding a better approach will
require a broader, more nuanced perspective and strong political will. Part of
this entails constructing a compelling narrative for the European project and
much of it, frankly, involves delivering results.
This is all the more important, given a third key challenge that is confronting
Europe: The growing divide between the EU’s liberal and illiberal governments.
In the last five years, a crack has grown into a chasm, as Hungary and Poland
have suppressed independent media, attacked nongovernmental organizations and
undermined judicial independence. This has driven EU leaders to take the
unprecedented step of triggering Article 7 sanctions procedures against Poland
and Hungary for eroding democracy and failing to adhere to fundamental EU norms.
But, though majorities in the European Parliament backed these measures, support
has been less than enthusiastic, leaving the EU’s institution-driven process
toothless. Yet again, a lack of common purpose is undercutting the EU’s ability
to do what is needed — in this case, bring illiberal governments to heel.
The final challenge the EU faces is structural. This includes, of course, Brexit,
which — no matter what form it ultimately takes — will profoundly reshape the
EU. But the more fundamental issue is that the EU continues to pretend that it
is a transnational construction, even as decision-making is largely, and
increasingly, conducted at the intergovernmental level. To address the manifold
problems it faces, the EU must recognize that member states are steering the
boat, and adjust accordingly.
None of the challenges the EU faces come as a surprise. Yet its leaders have so
far utterly failed to address them, let alone build broader resilience into the
system. Instead, they have allowed institutional power rivalries to divert their
focus from genuine problem-solving. The EU’s push to bolster its defense
capabilities is a prime example, with as much energy being devoted to who will
control programs and manage funding as to developing the programs themselves.
This lack of focus on real issues could well bring about the downfall of the EU.
Europeans have begun to recognize this. In 11 of 14 countries recently
surveyedby YouGov and the European Council on Foreign Relations, the majority of
respondents reported anticipating a possible EU collapse within the next 10 to
20 years. For a project that once seemed like a beacon of hope for values-based
global cooperation, this is a devastating reversal.
Whatever the next European Parliament’s composition, the imperative for Europe
is the same: EU institutions must trade ambition for humility, focusing their
attention not on their own power or status, but rather on upgrading and
fortifying the project for which they claim to stand. If they fail, the road
ahead will only become more perilous.
*Ana Palacio is former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Spain and former Senior
Vice President and General Counsel of the World Bank Group. She is a visiting
lecturer at Georgetown University.
*Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019.
www.project-syndicate.org
Abe to continue charm offensive as Trump visits Japan
Andrew Hammond/Arab News/May 23/2019
Donald Trump starts on Saturday a multi-day trip to Japan with a packed agenda,
including preparations for next month’s G-20 summit. The primary reason for the
visit, from Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s viewpoint, is the opportunity
to deepen his personal bond with the mercurial president and fortify US-Japan
ties in the face of significant international uncertainty.
Top of the agenda is not just the unraveling US-North Korean talks, but also the
potential for finalizing a US-Japan trade deal, which Trump and Director of the
US National Economic Council Larry Kudlow have, remarkably, said could be done
by the end of the month — an assessment that seems very optimistic. The fact
that Trump is visiting Japan so soon before next month’s G-20 meeting in Osaka,
and after the two leaders met only last month in the US, underlines the relative
warmth of Washington-Tokyo relations right now. Abe, in particular, has invested
massive personal political capital in the relationship — even reportedly
nominating the US president for the Nobel Peace Prize.
To be sure, Abe’s charm offensive has paid some dividends. This includes the
energy that is now being put into the US-Japan free trade deal, with Kudlow
scheduled to be in Tokyo on Friday to try to accelerate the negotiations.
However, Japan has also been caught by surprise on several fronts by Trump
during his presidency. This includes North Korea, as Tokyo was concerned,
especially last year, about the speed with which the US president appeared to be
pushing forward talks with Kim Jong Un.
While Abe asserted that Trump showed “courage” in doing so, including the summit
in Singapore last year, the prime minister has been wary about where the talks
could lead. There has been particular anxiety that Tokyo’s key interests are
pressed by Trump in the talks, including the issue of Japanese nationals
abducted in the 1970s and 1980s.
Abe has also been worried that Trump may look to a do a deal with Kim without
taking Japan’s broader security interests into account. This included Pyongyang
potentially agreeing to give up missiles capable of reaching the US, without
eliminating the short and medium-range missiles that threaten Japan and other
nearby countries.
One of the key reasons Abe is keen to be so close to Trump is Japanese concerns
about a 'rising China.’
Tensions between the two sides on this issue most recently surfaced this month,
when the long-time security allies appeared to disagree over Pyongyang’s recent
launch of short-range ballistic missiles. Tokyo criticized the move as a
violation of UN resolutions, while Trump said he did not believe the moves were
a “breach of trust” by Kim.
On the economic front, Abe is pleased with the energy that is being put into the
US-Japanese talks, even though he and other Japanese officials are skeptical
that the negotiations can be concluded this month. In part, this is because the
Washington-Tokyo negotiations come in the context of previous political tensions
over the bilateral economic relationship, including Trump’s often negative
comments about Japan on the 2016 US president election trail.
Securing close ties with Washington is important for Abe, who is on track to
become the longest-serving premier in post-war Japanese history. One of the key
reasons Abe is keen to be so close to Trump is Japanese concerns about a “rising
China” in the Asia-Pacific region.
The prime minister has particular worries about China’s growing influence in the
context of the uncertainties that Trump’s presidency has brought, including the
US withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership. This is a trade and investment
deal originally intended to lock Washington into deeper economic partnerships
with its traditional allies in the region.
In this fluid geopolitical landscape, Abe is seeking to align his long-standing
foreign policy plans around that of Trump’s “America First” agenda. Thus, in a
context whereby the president appears to want a more internationally assertive
Japan, the prime minister has a long-held ambition to overturn much of the
remaining legal and political underpinning of the country’s post-war pacifist
security identity so that it can become more externally engaged. Here, it is no
coincidence that one of the visits Trump may reportedly make during his trip is
to a naval base in Yokosuka. This will see him visit a destroyer that has been
refitted as what is being depicted as Japan’s first post-war aircraft carrier.
One big, specific measure Abe wishes to push for is the abolition of Article 9.
This is the clause in Japan’s post-war constitution that constrains the
country’s military to a strictly defensive role, rather than a conventional
army, and has meant that defense spending has most often remained below 1
percent of gross domestic product.
To overturn this, Abe would need not just a two-thirds majority in both chambers
of the legislature, but also a simple majority in a national referendum. This
could prove a major challenge, however, given the large body of Japanese public
opinion that still values its post-war pacifism. Japan remains the only country
in the world to have ever been attacked with nuclear weapons.
Taken overall, Trump’s trip therefore represents Abe’s latest move to fortify
Japan’s US alliance in the face of China’s rise. He would dearly love to cap his
long period of office off with historic change around the country’s post-war
pacifism, which may enable it to become more internationally engaged, but at the
risk of significantly inflaming tensions with Beijing.
*Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economic
Lieberman returns to defense in next Netanyahu government. IDF will stop firing
at Gaza rioters
Debeka File/May 23/2019
Avigdor Lieberman stands ready to regain the defense portfolio in the cabinet
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu hopes to put together next week. He has
already taken part in a security conference with IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen.
Aviv Kochavi and Shin Bet Director Nadav Argaman on the Gaza situation. Reports
abound about some sort of six-month ceasefire deal having been concluded between
Israel and Hamas. Much is made of Israeli concessions compared with vague
Palestinian commitments to de-escalate terrorist violence. This information is
mostly pumped out by the IDF spokesman. It reflects the imprecise nature of the
deal. For months, negotiations led by Egypt have meandered uncertainly back and
forth in Cairo, interrupted by Palestinian rocket fire, incendiary balloons and
explosive clashes between the Israeli military and Hamas-inflamed mobs on the
Gaza-Israeli border. However, according to our sources, one provision is crystal
clear: Israel’s army chiefs have agreed to stop firing on the Palestinian mobs
rampaging on the border week after week, provided only that they don’t cross a
300-meter deep boundary line.
This one-sided concession is unprecedented in any national army’s fight against
terrorists.
The rest of the “deal,” drawn up between Israel, Hamas, Egypt and Qatar, is full
of holes and unlikely to hold up any longer than its precedents. Egypt and Qatar
are backing Hamas’ refusal to commit to any reciprocal specifics, such as a
ceasefire, a cessation of hostilities, or non-belligerence. Therefore, what
happens next in the Gaza crisis remains open to speculation, like the content of
Liberman’s conference with Gen. Kochavi and Argaman ahead of his return to the
Defense Ministry.
Even before this happens, Hamas offered him a timely reminder of who called the
shots in the past year and still held the initiative. On Wednesday, May 22, amid
exceptionally hot, dry and windy weather conditions, Palestinian terrorists
released a cloud of incendiary balloons which started 11 blazes in Israel
fields. In a further attempt to push the caretaker Israeli government to the
wall, Hamas on Thursday, released a list of alleged “promises” which Israel was
accused of failing to uphold. The terrorists gave Israel one week to keep them
or face renewed violent demonstrations and rocket fire.
One of those “promises” concerned paychecks for Hamas’ armed wing operatives,
i.e. active terrorists. Qatar, which with Israel’s approval has been pumping
large sums into Gaza to cover the needs of its distressed Gaza population, is
blamed for giving every fighter a $50 food coupon instead of his wages.
Hamas is feeling the pinch since Israel cut off the funds owing to the
Palestinian Authority in Ramallah over its insistence on allocating payments to
convicted terrorists. A portion of those funds was regularly diverted to the
Hamas government. And so, Israel finds itself in the paradoxical position of
de-funding certain Palestinian terrorists, on the one hand, while being required
to allow Qatar to cover the paychecks of the Palestinian terrorists of Gaza.
It turns out, therefore, that Hamas is taking a hand – not just in the fate of
the communities of southern Israel but also attempting to assert its will on the
formation of Israel’s next coalition government. Its leaders feel they are
sitting pretty, owing to two developments: 1. The favorable deal taking shape
with Israel and the IDF; and 2. Its rival terrorist movement, the Palestinian
Islamic Jihad, is immobilized by a leadership split. DEBKAfile reveals that
Jihad’s Gaza-based leaders, Muhammed al Hindi and Muhammed al Batsh, have broken
with Ziyad Nahaleh, who operates out of Beirut or Tehran.
The outcome of the current maneuvers around Gaza is likely to be an undefined
deal being struck between Hamas and Israel with Egyptian and Qatari
intercession, after the Palestinian group is awarded a much larger slice of
funding. Hamas won’t give up a cent of the hundreds of millions of Qatari cash
due in the coming six months.
Barring unforeseen events, Binyamin Netanyahu will meanwhile establish a
government coalition next week; Lieberman will be sworn in for his second stint
as defense minister; and the IDF will abide by its commitment to refrain from
firing live bullets into Gaza. It may be recalled that Lieberman quit as defense
minister on Nov. 14, 2018, in protest against what he called the government’s
“surrender to terrorism” in the Gaza Strip. It was his resignation that led to a
general election on April 9 and a new government.
Palestinians: The New Hamas List of 'Traitors'
Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/May 23/2019
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14251/palestinians-hamas-traitors
One of the Arabs who have dared to speak the truth about Hamas and Islamic Jihad
is Nadim Koteich, a prominent Lebanese journalist, who recently accused Islamic
Jihad of starting the last round of fighting with Israel.
In an interview with the Lebanese LDC TV channel, Koteich said that Hamas and
Islamic Jihad, representing the Muslim Brotherhood and Iran respectively, should
have turned the Gaza Strip after Israel's withdrawal in 2005 into an opportunity
for a national Palestinian compromise.
Instead, he said, the two groups have "thwarted all opportunities for peace" and
have ended up in a prison called Gaza."
Such voices from some Palestinians and Arabs are a sign they may have finally
woken up to realize that Palestinian leaders, particularly Hamas and Islamic
Jihad, are leading their people towards the abyss. If the voices of the critics
grow, then there will be hope that one day the extremist camp among the
Palestinians will be weakened.
The Palestinian Hamas movement that rules the Gaza Strip has never tolerated any
form of criticism. Hamas claims that Palestinian Authority and Fatah leaders who
dare to speak out against it are "traitors" and "collaborators" working with the
"Zionist enemy."
The Palestinian Hamas movement that rules the Gaza Strip has never tolerated any
form of criticism. It does not accept any criticism from Palestinians living
under its rule in the Gaza Strip. It does not accept any criticism from its
rivals in the Palestinian Authority (PA) and its ruling Fatah faction. It
certainly does not accept any criticism from Israel or the United States.
Now, Hamas is saying that it does not tolerate any criticism from Arabs. Hamas
claims that Palestinian Authority and Fatah leaders who dare to speak out
against it are "traitors" and "collaborators" working with the "Zionist enemy."
Arab media personalities who recently criticized Hamas and its allies in the
Gaza Strip have now been placed on its list of "traitors" and "collaborators."
Recently, some Arabs, particularly in the Gulf states, Lebanon and Egypt, have
spoken out publicly against Hamas and held it responsible for the continued
suffering of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. These Arabs, in other words, have
dared to speak the truth about Hamas and Islamic Jihad, the two major forces in
the Gaza Strip.
One of those Arabs is Nadim Koteich, a prominent Lebanese journalist, who
recently accused Islamic Jihad of starting the last round of fighting with
Israel. In an interview with the Lebanese LDC TV channel, Koteich said that
Hamas and Islamic Jihad, representing the Muslim Brotherhood and Iran
respectively, should have turned the Gaza Strip after Israel's withdrawal in
2005 into an opportunity for a Palestinian national compromise. Instead, he
said, the two groups have "thwarted all opportunities for peace and have ended
up in a prison called Gaza."
This logical and constructive criticism of Hamas and Islamic Jihad, however, has
sparked a wave of vicious condemnations against the Lebanese journalist on
various Palestinian and Arab social media platforms. Koteich only spoke the
truth, particularly his remark about a missed opportunity after the Israeli
withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. Back then, some Palestinians were dreaming of
turning the Gaza Strip into the "Singapore of the Middle East."
Instead, the situation in the Gaza Strip has since gone from bad to worse. The
deterioration reached its peak when Hamas violently seized control of the Gaza
Strip after overthrowing President Mahmoud Abbas's Palestinian Authority in the
summer of 2007.
Hamas, nevertheless, refuses to acknowledge that its rule over the Gaza Strip is
the main reason for the ongoing suffering of the Palestinians there. It also
refuses to admit that its rocket attacks on Israel have brought disaster on the
Palestinians living under its rule. Instead of listening to the voices of its
critics, the Hamas leaders continue to blame everyone but themselves for the
economic and humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip.
One of the techniques Hamas uses to discredit its critics is accusing them of
being Israeli and American agents and puppets.
Consider, for example, Hamas's response to the criticism of the Lebanese
journalist. Raafat Morra, a senior Hamas official, lashed out at Koteich and
other Arab media personalities who dared to speak out against the rulers of the
Gaza Strip. "Any [Arab] media figure who attacks the resistance in Palestine or
speaks out against our people in the Gaza Strip, needs to check his DNA," the
Hamas official said. "Perhaps they will discover that their mothers breastfed
them from the cow of the Children of Israel."
In other words, the Hamas official is implying that the Lebanese journalist and
any Arab who dares to tell the truth about the situation in the Gaza Strip must
be a Jew or somehow connected to Jews.
Morra and other Hamas officials have also strongly denounced Atef Abu Seif, the
Palestinian Authority Minister of Culture, who recently said that the Gaza Strip
"may be one of the filthiest and worst places in the world because its
controlled by Muslim fundamentalists." Of course, Abu Seif was referring to
Hamas's responsibility for the harsh conditions of Palestinians in the Gaza
Strip.
No one knows how bad the situation in the Gaza Strip is better than Abu Seif.
Last March, he was badly beaten by masked men in the Gaza Strip believed to be
members of Hamas. He was transferred to a Palestinian hospital in the West Bank
for medical treatment. A few weeks later, Abu Seif was appointed Minister of
Culture in the new Palestinian government headed by Prime Minister Mohammed
Shtayyeh.
Hamas is now accusing Abu Seif of treason for speaking out against its bad
policies and repressive measures against Palestinians. "The Palestinian
Authority Minister of Culture is promoting treachery to appease the [Israeli]
occupation," Morra, the senior Hamas official, said on Twitter. "Shame on you,
and you should not hold any position related to culture. The culture of our
people is one of dignity, patriotism, steadfastness and resistance. We call on
all Palestinian academics to move quickly to seek the dismissal of Abu Seif from
his job as Minister of Culture."
Another Hamas official, Hazem Qassem, accused the minister of "promoting Israeli
propaganda" by criticizing the situation in the Gaza Strip. By criticizing
Hamas, Qassem said, the minister was assisting Israel in its campaign to
"demonize the Gaza Strip and the Palestinian resistance groups there." The Hamas
official went on to make a more serious charge against Abu Seif: "Exonerating
Israel from its responsibility for the blockade and covering up for the criminal
sanctions imposed by the Palestinian Authority leadership on the residents of
the Gaza Strip."
If the Palestinian minister ever returns to the Gaza Strip, he would probably be
executed by Hamas on charges of "high treason."
Abu Seif is rather fortunate that Hamas allowed him to leave Gaza after he was
physically assaulted there. Hamas possibly regrets that he survived the assault.
Moreover, it is safe to assume that Hamas also regrets that it allowed him to
leave the Gaza Strip for medical treatment in the West Bank.
Koteich, the Lebanese journalist, will also never set foot in the Gaza Strip
after what he said about Hamas and Islamic Jihad -- nor will Abbas or any of his
senior officials in the West Bank who have been condemning Hamas for the past
decade. Hamas has already said that if and when Abbas ever returns to the Gaza
Strip, he will be out on trial for "high treason" -- a crime, in the world of
the Palestinians, punishable by death.
In an encouraging development, however, Hamas's bloody threats seem to hold
little fear for some Arab media figures who continue publicly to state the truth
about the Gaza Strip and the Palestinian "resistance" groups there. In recent
months, a growing number of Arabs have begun speaking out against Hamas and
Islamic Jihad, holding them responsible for destroying the lives of Palestinians
in the Gaza Strip.
It is refreshing to see how these Arabs are not afraid to denounce Hamas and
tell the truth about its responsibility for the violence with Israel. Take for
example, what Saudi writer and journalist Abdullah al-Sharif recently said:
"Hamas is committing foolish acts against our people in the Gaza Strip. It fires
primitive rockets [at Israel] and, in response, brings daily [Israeli] military
strikes against the defenseless people. Then, Hamas cries over what has happened
to the people. It is better for us to stop the farce of some Palestinian leaders
that is killing our people because of the unprecedented stupidity of these
leaders."
Such voices from some Palestinians and Arabs are a sign they may have finally
woken up to realize that Palestinian leaders, particularly Hamas and Islamic
Jihad, are leading their people towards the abyss. If the voices of the critics
grow, then there will be hope that one day the extremist camp among the
Palestinians will be weakened.
Meanwhile, it seems that only a handful of Arabs and Palestinians are prepared
to take the risk of speaking the truth for fear of being labeled "traitors" and
"Zionist collaborators" in the social media and mosques.
*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.
Iran: Planning to Kidnap and Kill More Americans
د.ماجد رافيزادا/معهد كايتستون: إيران تخطط
لخطف وقتل المزيد من الأميركيين
Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/May 23/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/75143/%d8%af-%d9%85%d8%a7%d8%ac%d8%af-%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%81%d9%8a%d8%b2%d8%a7%d8%af%d8%a7-%d9%85%d8%b9%d9%87%d8%af-%d9%83%d8%a7%d9%8a%d8%aa%d8%b3%d8%aa%d9%88%d9%86-%d8%a5%d9%8a%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%86-%d8%aa%d8%ae/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14254/iran-kidnap-kill-americans
A leading Republican lawmaker, Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas), also the ranking
Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, has pointed out that recent
intelligence obtained about Iran's threat was extremely detailed.
These are simply preemptive measures that any rational state would take in the
face of those clear threats. They were being taken to save the lives of American
citizens and prevent the world's official leading state sponsor of terrorism
from destabilizing the region.
What do critics of the Trump administration expect the American government to
do...? Do these critics want the Trump administration to ignore Iran and its
terror groups until another terrorist act like 9/11 occurs? Or is it possible
that these critics, deep-down, do not care about U.S. national security and the
lives of ordinary citizens?
According to leaked reports, Qassem Soleimani, the head of the Quds Force, the
elite branch of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), recently
traveled to Iraq and instructed the leaders of Iraqi Shiite militia groups,
which operate under the name Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), to "prepare for
proxy war".
While plans were being concocted to harm or murder Americans, it is
mind-boggling that people -- even entire governments -- were criticizing the
Trump administration for preparing preemptive measures against multiple credible
threats from the Iranian government and its forces.
While people were squabbling over the choices the Trump administration was
making, the Iranian leaders, known to have mastered conducting asymmetric
warfare, were giving directives to kidnap and kill American soldiers.
A leading Republican lawmaker, Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas), also the ranking
Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, has pointed out that recent
intelligence obtained about Iran's threat was extremely detailed.
"To the extent I can discuss it, it was human intelligence," he said, and added
that, "One of the Hezbollah cells is known for its kidnapping and killing
operations, and their directive was to go in and kill and kidnap American
soldiers."
According to leaked reports, Qassem Soleimani, the head of the Quds Force, the
elite branch of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) that is mandated to
advance Iran's revolutionary and political interests in foreign nations,
recently traveled to Iraq and met with the leaders of Iraqi militia groups that
the Iranian regime controls.
Iran's most senior general instructed the Iraqi Shiite militias to "prepare for
proxy war". Iran's leaders continue to exert significant influence both directly
and indirectly in Iraq through a conglomerate of more than 40 Iraqi militia
groups that operate under the name Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF).
Soleimani is also well known as one of the Middle East's deadliest operatives,
and is considered by many Iran's most dangerous man. The Quds Force has, in
addition, given birth to a variety of designated terrorist groups, including
Asaib Al-Haq and Kataib Al-Imam Ali (KIA), which use horrific tactics of torture
similar to the Islamic State (ISIS).
Kataib Al-Imam Ali is, like ISIS, known for showing videos of beheadings and
burning bodies; Asaib Al-Haq reportedly receives more than $2 million a month
from Iran.
A recent report showed that Iran has murdered more Americans in Iraq than was
previously thought. This is in addition to the thousands of innocents —
including Iraqi children and women — who have been killed by the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps, the Quds Force, and their militias.
It is not the first time that the Quds Force had prepared militias and proxies
to carry out attacks against foreign entities. The Quds Force has been accused
of failed plans to bomb the Saudi and Israeli embassies in the US, and to
assassinate the Saudi Ambassador to the U.S. at the time, Adel Al-Jubeir. An
investigation further revealed that the Quds Force was also behind the
assassination of Lebanon's Sunni Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, and implicated in
the 9/11 attacks. US Federal Judge George Daniels issued an order stating that
Iran, its Lebanese Shiite proxy Hezbollah and Al-Qaeda were jointly responsible
for those terrorist attacks.
In Iraq, the Quds Force has been busy stoking unrest by providing deadly,
sophisticated bombs such as improvised explosive devices (IEDs) that have killed
countless soldiers and civilians, including Iraqis and Americans.
The Quds Force rules over roughly 20,000 members and it can also use forces from
the IRGC and Basij paramilitary group in cases that are considered emergencies,
or hire fighters from a multitude of countries, including Afghanistan, to fight
as proxies.
As a result, considering these serious threats, the U.S. State Department
recently ordered all non-emergency employees immediately to leave Iraq. There
are approximately 5,000 American troops in Iraq. The U.S. also took preemptive
measures by deploying an aircraft carrier, along with B-52 bombers and other
military forces, to the Middle East. In addition, President Trump stated to Iran
that if it threatens the US, Tehran would meet its "official end".
These were simply preemptive measures that any rational state would take in the
face of those clear threats. They were being taken to save the lives of American
citizens and prevent the world's official leading state sponsor of terrorism
from further destabilizing the region.
What do critics of the Trump administration expect the American government to
do, aside from putting the issue "temporarily on hold"? Do these critics want
the Trump administration to ignore Iran and its terror groups until another
terrorist act like 9/11 occurs? Or is it possible that these critics, deep-down,
do not care about U.S. national security and the lives of ordinary citizens?
*Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a business strategist and advisor, Harvard-educated
scholar, political scientist, board member of Harvard International Review, and
president of the International American Council on the Middle East. He has
authored several books on Islam and US Foreign Policy. He can be reached at
Dr.Rafizadeh@Post.Harvard.Edu
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.