English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For November 16/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.november16.20.htm
News Bulletin Achieves Since
2006
Click Here to enter the LCCC Arabic/English news bulletins Achieves since 2006
Bible Quotations For today
I desire mercy, not sacrifice. For I have
come to call not the righteous but sinners/Those who are well have no need of a
physician, but those who are sick
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint
Matthew 09/09-13/:”As Jesus was walking along, he saw a man called Matthew
sitting at the tax booth; and he said to him, ‘Follow me.’ And he got up and
followed him. And as he sat at dinner in the house, many tax-collectors and
sinners came and were sitting with him and his disciples. When the Pharisees saw
this, they said to his disciples, ‘Why does your teacher eat with tax-collectors
and sinners?’But when he heard this, he said, ‘Those who are well have no need
of a physician, but those who are sick. Go and learn what this means, “I desire
mercy, not sacrifice.” For I have come to call not the righteous but sinners.’”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on November 15-16/2020
The French initiative In Lebanon Aims To
Rescue The Terrorist Hezbollah and Revive The Rotten Political Class/Elias
Bejjani/November 15/2020
Health Ministry: 1163 new cases of Corona, 11 deaths
Al-Rahi Links Govt. Delay to 'Plot to Topple State of Greater Lebanon'
French Envoy Secured Phone Call between Hariri, Bassil
Bassil: Audit of BDL Accounts a National Duty, Ultimate Priority
Army Arrests Palestinian who Crossed into Lebanon from Israel
Geagea: Hariri Alone Trying to Improve Nature of New Govt.
Israeli Army Fires in Air after 'Suspects' Approach Border with Lebanon
Lebanon’s independent student campaign secures major wins against traditional
parties
Lebanon's informal capital controls explained: Why can't Lebanese access their
money?
Lebanon between an outgoing Trump and an incoming Biden administration/Hanin
Ghaddar/Al Arabiya/November 15/2020
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on
November 15-16/2020
Azerbaijan vows to protect Christian churches ahead of
takeover of Armenia-held areas
Trump Retracts Apparent Admission of Defeat
UAE-Israel relations: Dubai’s Fresh Market opens first-ever Israeli produce
display
Trump Loyalists Mount Last Stand in Washington
Erdogan Says Cyprus Made Up of 'Two Separate States'
Israel Advances Plans for New Jerusalem Settler Homes
Israel Strikes Hamas Positions after Rockets Fired from Gaza
U.S., Israel Worked Together to Track and Kill Qaida No. 2 in Iran
Armenian Politician Arrested over Alleged PM Assassination Plot
Ethiopia's Tigray Region Claims Rocket Strikes on Eritrea Airport
World's Largest Free Trade Agreement Signed in Coup for China
Post-Brexit Talks Enter Crunch Week with Failure Looming
Titles For The Latest LCCC English
analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 15-16/2020
Britain: Two-Stepping Toward Totalitarianism/Andrew
Ash/Gatestone Institute/November 15/2020
Divided we Stand, Divided we Fall/Charles Elias Chartouni/November 15/2020
Showdown in the Western Sahara/Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/November
15/2020
How Biden will benefit from some of Trump’s achievements/Raghida Dergham/The
National/November 15/2020
rtsakh Territory Has Always Been Armenian/There was no country on the planet
called Azerbaijan before 1918/November 15/2020
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News & Editorials published
on November 15-16/2020
The French initiative In Lebanon Aims To Rescue The
Terrorist Hezbollah and Revive The Rotten Political Class
Elias Bejjani/November 15/2020
المبادرة الفرنسية في لبنان ولدت ميتة
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/92382/elias-bejjani-the-french-initiative-in-lebanon-aims-to-rescue-the-terrorist-hezbollah-and-revive-the-rotten-political-class/
It is a horrible mistake and a mere political miscalculation to hail and
build any hope on the French Initiative that is endeavoring to form what is
called a “Mission Cabinet”.
Sadly the initiative although it sounds glamorous, it is in reality a mere
reviving SOS means for both the occupier Hezbollah and the Iscariot, rotten and
corrupt “Political Class”.
The initiative as officially declared is based on the following distorted and
biased basis:
*The initiative is carried out by the French officials in a bizarre and bold
coordination with the occupier and the terrorist Hezbollah.
*The initiative does not overtly or covertly address by any means Hezbollah’s
weaponry, occupation, Ministate, wars, terrorism or its total affiliation to the
Mullah’s Iranian dictatorship regime.
*The initiative keeps a complete blind eye in regards to all the UN resolutions
that address Lebanon, namely the Armistice Agreement with the State of Israel,
UN Resolutions 1559, 1701, and 1680 .
In this regard it is really very suspicious and questionable how this initiative
does not address the UN resolution 1701 in particular, while France is one of
the major participates in the UNIFIL force that is assigned and entusted by the
UN to safeguard the implementation of this resolution.
*The initiative in a dire bias has agreed that the Shiite Hezbollah and Amal
Movement would retain their iron fist on the Ministry of Finance, which means
that it has accepted to keep money, weapons and power under the control of
Hezbollah, and thus blocking any reforms, no matter big or small.
*The initiative did not seriously call for any role for the uprising activists.
*The initiative supports strongly Mr. Saad Al Hariri in forming the new
government despite the knowledge of French officials, especially President
Macron, that this individual is a failure, lazy, corrupt, surrounded by crooked
people, a servant to Hezbollah, easily manipulated by the House Speaker Nabih
Berri and the Druze politician Walid Jumblat, and a key partner in the
presidential deal plot that handed over the country to the terrorist Hezbollah.
*The initiative gave the Shiites (Hezbollah and Amal Movement) and the Druze (Walid
Jumblat) the right to name their own representatives in the government to be
formed by Al Hariri, while at the same time denied the Christians this right. It
gave this right to Saad Al Hariri who is a loser and a mere corrupt politician.
*In conclusion, the French initiative, has ended from day one and apparently its
main goal is not to help the Lebanese people, but to rescue and revive the roles
of both the occupier Hezbollah as well as the rotten and corrupt “Political
Class”.
Health Ministry: 1163 new cases of Corona, 11 deaths
NNA/November 15/2020
The Ministry of Public Health announced, on Sunday, the registration of 1163 new
Corona cases, thus raising the cumulative number of confirmed cases to-date to
105,430.
It also indicated that 11 death cases were also registered during the past 24
hours.
Al-Rahi Links Govt. Delay to 'Plot to Topple State of
Greater Lebanon'
Naharnet/November 15/2020
Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi on Sunday wondered if the ongoing delay in
the cabinet formation process is “part of a plot to topple the State of Greater
Lebanon” in order to “seize control of what remains.”“We cannot see another
objective behind this persistent obstruction, which is accompanied by a
systematic destruction of the financial and banking capabilities and by
impoverishing the people… and forcing their vibrant sectors and educated youths
to emigrate,” al-Rahi said in his Sunday Mass sermon. And calling for the
formation of “a government that can pull the country from its dire financial,
economic and social situations,” the patriarch said the people want “a
government whose entire ministers are independent and not only a part of
them.”“This is the only solution to resolve the crisis,” he stressed.
French Envoy Secured Phone Call between Hariri, Bassil
Naharnet/November 15/2020
French presidential envoy Patrick Durel managed to secure a phone call between
PM-designate Saad Hariri and Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil during
his latest visit to Lebanon, media reports said. “The phone call lasted for
seconds, without producing results that can contribute to speeding up the
formation of the government,” political sources told Asharq al-Awsat newspaper
in remarks published Sunday. The call “indicated that the problem between them
is political and not personal,” the sources added. Most of the political forces
that Durel met meanwhile held President Michel Aoun and Bassil responsible for
the ongoing delay in the cabinet formation process, endorsing “Hariri’s
viewpoint” in this regard, the sources said. “Hariri is insisting on consulting
with Aoun, who should not allow another partner to interfere in these
consultations,” the sources went on to say.The sources also revealed that Durel
did not agree to Aoun’s suggestion that the latest U.S. sanctions on Bassil have
“obstructed the cabinet formation mission.”And denying that Durel has
threatened French sanctions on obstructors during his visit, the sources said
the French envoy did not visit Beirut seeking “the formation of a government at
any cost,” noting that Paris still wants the formation of “a government of
independents and specialists who do not belong to parties and who enjoy
competency and integrity.”
Bassil: Audit of BDL Accounts a National Duty, Ultimate
Priority
Naharnet/November 15/2020
Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil on Sunday said a forensic audit into
the central bank’s accounts is “a national duty and an ultimate priority.”In a
tweet, he added that such a move would “allow the auditing of all public
expenditure” and would also “highlight the financial gap, unveil violations and
determine the fate of looted, donated and transferred funds.”“The government
must impose the audit through the power of the existent laws, and parliament
must support and immunize while Banque du Liban must respond immediately under
the pressure of people’s rights,” Bassil added. He also noted that the FPM is
“unified and decisive over this demand,” pointing out that “any talk of
submitting an additional law if necessary reflects keenness on accomplishing the
audit and not obstructing it.”
Army Arrests Palestinian who Crossed into Lebanon from Israel
Naharnet/November 15/2020
A Lebanese Army intelligence patrol on Sunday arrested a Palestinian who crossed
into Lebanon from Israel, the Lebanese National News Agency said. NNA said the
man, 43-year-old M. A. Abdul Qader, crossed the border into the Lebanese town of
al-Dhayra. He has since been moved to a Lebanese Army intelligence post for
interrogation.
Geagea: Hariri Alone Trying to Improve Nature of New Govt.
Naharnet/November 15/2020
Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea on Sunday acknowledged that only Prime
Minister-designate Saad Hariri is “trying to improve the nature of the new
government.”“The other parties only care about their game, which is to defeat
America, regardless of what citizens are going through. This is not important to
them,” Geagea said during a meeting with a delegation from the LF’s doctors
department. “Due to the fact that one of those allied with the Axis of
Resistance, (ex-)Minister Jebran Bassil, is the one who was hit with U.S.
sanctions, they want to compensate him through giving him gains in the cabinet
formation process, which has impeded the formation of the government,” Geagea
lamented. He added: “We are in dire need for a new government, but for the Axis
of Resistance this issue does not matter. They also don’t care if the people
will starve, seeing as their only important concern is the advancement of the
Axis of Resistance.”Geagea's stance on Hariri's efforts comes despite the fact
that their ties have been strained in recent weeks.
Israeli Army Fires in Air after 'Suspects' Approach
Border with Lebanon
Naharnet/November 15/2020
Israeli troops fired shots in the air Sunday evening after two individuals
raised suspicions on the Lebanese side of the border, the Israeli army said.
Troops “fired in the air after detecting two suspects who approached the
security fence with Lebanon,” Israeli army spokesman Avichay Adraee said on
Twitter.
“The two suspects then left the area,” Adraee added, warning that the Israeli
army “will not tolerate any attempt to breach the sovereignty of the State of
Israel.”Lebanon’s National News Agency meanwhile reported that the Israeli
soldiers fired “three shots in the air to terrorize two people who were on the
Lebanese side of the town of Mays al-Jabal, after an (Israeli) military vehicle
speedily arrived to an area near the electronic fence south of the (Israeli)
settlement of Manara.”The development comes following two border-crossing
incidents over the past 24 hours. On Saturday, a Lebanese national said to be
mentally disturbed was arrested by Israeli forces after crossing the border from
the al-Wazzani River area. Israel fired gunshots and several flares during the
incident. And on Sunday, the Lebanese Army announced the arrest of a Palestinian
man who crossed into Lebanon from Israel.
Lebanon’s independent student campaign secures major
wins against traditional parties
Rawad Taha, Al Arabiya English/November 15/2020
Independent student bodies secured a landslide victory at the American
University of Beirut on Friday, in unprecedented success against blocs aligned
with traditional political parties.Student elections at AUB saw two independent
lists win 65 seats out of 82 in the student council and 15 out of the 19 spots
on the university’s Committee for Professors and Students. Activists and
emerging political parties from the October 17 uprising supported the Campus
Choice (AUB Secular Club) and Change Starts Here campaigns. Both campaigns
adhered to what activists called the principles of the October 17 uprising,
including fighting sectarianism and the enriched corruption by “establishment”
political parties. This victory is the third win for the independent student
movement in Lebanon after similar successes at the Lebanese American University
and Rafik Hariri University. Last month, the independent student campaigns made
significant gains at LAU’s Beirut campus, securing a majority in the student
elections for the first time against traditional political parties. Leen El
Harake, an activist student and co-manager of the independent campaign at LAU,
said that leading the first student election after the nationwide
anti-government protests, ensuing economic crisis and, most recently, the Aug. 4
Port of Beirut blast was both a challenge and a responsibility. “It was a
responsibility because everyone in the country was desperately waiting for
change. We had to make sure that we lived up to people’s hopes because we knew
it would impact student voters in other universities,” she told Al Arabiya
English. “After our elections, we started seeing a ripple effect, and we
couldn’t be happier. From RHU to AUB and soon in [other Lebanese universities],
independent councils are unstoppable today,” she added.
For Siba Mroueh, the VP of Communications and Political Identity at Change
Starts Here, the student elections are always important because the university
is “a microcosm of the Lebanese society.”She told Al Arabiya English that the
student elections were “parallel” to all the political work done since the
October 17 uprising. “The students who are voting now in these elections are the
people who will vote later in parliamentary elections,” she said. Independent
candidate Oussama Obeid said the win was not only about securing seats in
university elections, but it was about showing people that there was hope for
change. “The Secular Club’s discourse accumulated over the past few years after
being involved in a set of political activities, including the 2015
anti-establishment protests during the garbage crisis, the 2016 Beirut
Municipality elections, and the 2019 October uprising,” said Karim Safieddine,
former president of the AUB Secular Club. Meanwhile, Hussein El-Achi from
Minteshreen, a new youth-led political party that supported both campaigns at
AUB, said student elections had always been crucial in Lebanon to determine
shifts in public opinion among the youth.
He said this explains why traditional political parties expend significant
resources and efforts during student elections to show that public opinion still
supports each one of those parties. “This year, the elections had greater
importance because they follow one of the most [significant] modern Lebanese
history events: the October 17 uprising,” he told Al Arabiya English. “It is
important to note that many traditional political parties avoided those
electoral battles,” he said, explaining that the reason for this was an expected
victory for independents.
Lebanon's informal capital controls explained: Why
can't Lebanese access their money?
Fatima Al-Mahmoud, Al Arabiya English/November 15/2020
Transferring money abroad from Lebanon has become nearly impossible.
“They have found a way to put obstacles in our path in every way possible,” said
a Lebanese final-year medical student while trying to transfer money abroad to
cover his tuition and living expenses. Karim is one of hundreds of students who
are pursuing degrees abroad and have hit hurdles while trying to transfer money
out of Lebanon. Students aren’t the only people affected. Ad hoc – and illegal –
capital controls have made a once mundane task burdensome as banks have put
locks on depositors savings. The only people who don’t seem to be affected are
politicians and the politically connected.
Capital controls are defined as lawful measures that are implemented to regulate
the flow of foreign currency transactions in and out of a country’s domestic
economy. They’re typically used during an economic crisis to prevent the
extraction of remaining funds from a struggling economy. In 2015, during
Greece’s economic crisis, the country implemented capital control measures that
were not fully lifted until 2019.
Why does Lebanon need capital controls?
To protect the remaining dwindling foreign currency reserves and avoid further
depreciation of the Lebanese lira in the parallel market, lawful capital control
measures must be put in place, experts say. For many years now, Lebanon has
followed a rentier model in which the ruling elite group lives off income from
property and investments. The country highly relies on external sources for
revenue and thus does not have a strong domestic productive sector. The Lebanese
economy has been fueled by unsustainably high interest rates for years and has
been boosted with the occasional injection of massive international funds, but
this model is no longer feasible according to Finance 4 Lebanon, an expert-led
blog on the Lebanese financial crisis. Where Lebanon imports a lot and exports a
little, the country’s foreign reserves have dried up quickly as the main methods
of cash flow have stopped. This imbalance contributed to the current dollar
shortage, which triggered a public run on the banks in the last quarter of 2019.
To regulate this outpour of foreign capital, the Lebanese ruling class should’ve
quickly implemented capital control measures, experts say. Despite a
much-awaited draft law for capital controls being presented in June 2020 and
later in September 2020, it has yet to be passed. The law, presented by the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) as a prerequisite for reform and a condition
for aid, is still on the table. But as Lebanon’s economy slides further into the
abyss, de facto capital controls are still in place.
Did Lebanon’s ruling class implement capital controls?
Legally, no.
These de facto measures illegally limit the public’s access to their own money
and savings, while making exceptions for the powerful and politically
connected.By early September 2019, as Lebanon began to feel the blow of its
fast-coming economic downfall, Lebanese depositors were denied access to their
dollars through ATMs, and banks had started imposing arbitrary cash withdrawal
limits. Informal capital control measures persisted when Lebanese banks closed
down mid-October after becoming the target of public rage in nationwide
protests. When banks reopened at the beginning of November, depositors were left
at the mercy of their discretionary choices in the absence of any parliamentary
regulations. On the other hand, the ruling class and their in-crowd were merely
one “wasta” – the Lebanese slang word for nepotism – away from moving their
money as they please, said former chairman and CEO of Standard Chartered Bank
Dan Azzi.
According to Azzi, one politically exposed person (PPE) was able to transfer
$273 million from one of Lebanon’s top banks in December 2019, i.e. after de
facto capital control measures were implemented. He explained that this is
equivalent to the tuition of 27,000 students under the new Student Dollar
Circular, which allows for a one-time transfer of $10,000 per year at the
official exchange rate of 1,515 Lebanese pounds to the dollar; it applies only
to students who began their studies abroad before the academic year 2020-2021.
“Every person who blocked this law was on the wrong side of history and
criminally negligent,” Azzi continued. Who blocked the capital control law?
“Kellon ya3ne kellon,” said a confidential source from the Association of Banks
in Lebanon in reference to the popular slogan of the October 17 revolution which
translates to “all of them means all of them.”
“They all have a shared responsibility,” the source said. Despite the initial
opposition of capital control measures for fear of harming Lebanon’s free
economy, central bank Governor Riad Salameh later agreed to the de facto
arrangements and tried to standardize them, issuing one central bank circular
after the other. Many of the ruling parties also opposed capital control
measures, explained Azzi, and despite a promise made by former Prime Minister
Hassan Diab’s government to legally impose capital control, it never happened.
But Lebanon never had the luxury of choosing whether or not capital controls
would be implemented. It was inevitable, the ABL source said. “There’s a reality
limitation,” he explained. “People have deposits but banks don’t have enough
money to give back these deposits.”
What happens now?
Even if capital control measures are passed now, according to Azzi, it’s not
enough. Without financial and economic reforms, capital control laws are not
enough. Read more: Lebanon central bank governor says he hopes depositors will
recuperate their money
According to the ABL source, capital control is merely a temporary fix to
regulate the distribution of Lebanon’s scarce capital. They work as a
“sedative,” rather than a long-term fix. But the source added that they must be
in place to help pull Lebanon out of its rut. If capital controls are put in
place, the next step would be to improve the economy and focus on creating a
productive and more self-sufficient economy. However, without capital controls
in place, ongoing abuse of the system, and a political class that shows no will
to reform, Lebanese people will continue to bear the brunt of the crisis.
Lebanon between an outgoing Trump and an incoming
Biden administration
Hanin Ghaddar/Al Arabiya/November 15/2020
The next couple of months will be a critical time, not only for the internal US
political scene and national security, but also for US foreign policy, which
could create decisive scenarios for the Middle East, some that might not be
overturned when US President elect Joe Biden takes office in January.
Lebanon could be one of the scenes where these scenarios could unfold, seeing
how the Trump administration immediately moved after the US elections to
sanction Gebran Bassil, the president of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM)
political party and member of Lebanese Parliament, under the Global Magnitsky
Act. It has become clear that the Trump administration is going to use the
remaining few weeks of transition to escalate its maximum pressure campaign
against the Iranian regime and its regional proxies. According to sources who
spoke to Israeli journalist Barak Ravid, the Trump administration, in
coordination with Israel and several Gulf states, “is pushing a plan to slap a
long string of new sanctions on Iran in the 10 weeks left until Joe Biden’s
inauguration on Jan. 20.” The administration’s envoy for Iran Elliott Abrams
arrived in Israel last week and met Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
National Security Adviser Meir Ben-Shabbat to discuss the sanctions plan. He
then traveled from Israel to Abu Dhabi and Riyadh to discuss the sanctions plan.
In the next few weeks, the Trump administration will probably use many tools as
it seeks to achieve two goals: First, to make it difficult for the Biden
administration to fulfill its own policy, mainly regarding walking back some of
the sanctions. Second, Trump also would like to use these measures to strengthen
his image and chances of winning the 2024 US presidential elections, now that
he’s said that he intends to run again.
Of course, the question remains: Will there be more sanctions against Lebanese
corrupt officials in the coming two months of transition, now that the Trump
administration decided to escalate against Iran? And more so, will a Biden
administration continue these efforts against Iran its Lebanese allies?
Sanctions placed on individuals are designed with the element of surprise as a
key element to ensure that targeted officials have no time to sort out their
finances. Therefore, it is unlikely that anyone would know beforehand who will
be targeted with sanctions and when.
But we might assume that the escalation against Iran would target its support
for terrorism in the region, especially that US efforts are coordinated with
Israel and the Gulf states.
The Trump administration will probably sanction more Lebanese political and
business figures in its last few weeks in power.
The US Department of the Treasury that is responsible for issuing sanctions has
been working on targeting a vast list of Lebanese officials and businessmen –
from all sects and political parties – and now would be the time to start
rolling-out those sanctions.
It is important to note that Biden and his team will likely focus less on the
Middle East compared to Russia and China. Even Iran is not at the top of the new
administration’s list.
That being said, the Biden administration might not see sanctions as the most
effective tool for its vision for Middle East policy.
Instead, they will rely on diplomacy and coordination with Europe. But that
doesn’t mean that Biden’s administration won’t continue targeting corruption and
terrorism in the region.
However, where Biden served as President Barack Obama’s vice president, it is
important to note that Biden could very well adopt a different Iran policy as
circumstances and priorities have shifted; Biden’s outlook on the region has
also been different.
For example, Obama’s relation with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was
marked with tension and antagonism, and Obama’s outlook toward Israel in general
was different from other Democratic presidents and officials.
However, Biden has been very clear on this issue. He considers Israel’s security
as one of his priorities, and many in Israel are feel assured that a Biden
administration policy on Israel will mean bilateral relations remain strong.
While Biden has said many times that he will seek to reinstate some form of
nuclear deal with Iran, he has said Obama’s 2015 nuclear deal framework would be
a starting point for negotiations with Iran, rather than the end goal. Biden is
likely to include regional allies and other stakeholders in an Iran deal 2.0 and
up pressure on Iran.
Biden’s Iran policy will probably be seen across the region. That is to say,
where Iran and its proxies threaten US allies and interests, US policy on Iran
will be implemented. Lebanon, as Hezbollah’s headquarters will be seen as one of
these arenas, and Biden’s previous views on Lebanon will probably remain
unchanged.
In May 2009, Vice President Biden visited Lebanon before the parliamentary
election. Speaking to reporters back then, Biden warned that US aid to the
country could be reevaluated in the event of a win by Hezbollah.
“I do not come here to back any particular party or any particular person. I
come here to back certain principles,” Biden said. “We will evaluate the shape
of our assistance programs based on the composition of the new government and
the policies it advocates.”
These words still resonate, and Lebanon’s political elite must remember them
well.
*Hanin Ghaddar is the Friedmann Fellow at The Washington Institute’s Geduld
Program on Arab Politics, where she focuses on Shia politics throughout the
Levant.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on November 15-16/2020
Azerbaijan vows to protect Christian churches ahead of
takeover of Armenia-held areas
The Associated Press/November 15/2020
The president of Azerbaijan is promising that Christian churches will be
protected when the strongly Muslim country takes possession of areas formerly
controlled by Armenians, as residents burned down their homes and fled in cars
and trucks ahead of Sunday's expected takeover. President Ilham Aliyev’s office
said he made the promise in a telephone call with Russian President Vladimir
Putin, who is deploying peacekeeping forces in the areas under an agreement that
ended six weeks of fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the
Nagorno-Karabakh region. Ethnic Armenian forces had controlled Nagorno-Karabakh
and sizeable adjacent territories since 1994, after the end of a separatist war.
Fighting resumed in late September and ended with an agreement that calls for
Azerbaijan to regain control of the outlying territories as well as allowing it
to keep parts of Nagorno-Karabakh that it seized during the recent fighting.The
first of the territories, Kalbajar, was to be turned over on Sunday. But
Azerbaijan agreed at the last minute to give Armenian forces and civilians until
Nov. 25 to withdraw. Kalbajar is home to the well-known Dadivank monastery of
the Armenian Apostolic Church. On Saturday, a day before the territory’s
expected handover, workers removed many of the monastery’s sacred objects.
Azerbaijani presidential spokesman Hikmet Hajiyev said Sunday that the delay was
requested by Armenia and granted “taking into account the worsening weather
conditions and the difficult mountainous terrain.”
Civilians fleeing the region caused huge traffic jams on the single road leading
to Armenia. Ethnic Armenian Garo Dadevusyan wrenched off his home's metal roof
in Kalbajar in the last few days, trying to figure out how to destroy it. “In
the end, we will blow it up or set it on fire, in order not to leave anything to
Muslims,” Dadevusyan said. He piled the roof and family goods onto an old
flatbed truck but their final destination was unclear.“We are homeless now. We
do not know where to go and where to live ... It is very hard,” his wife, Lusine,
said, choking back tears as the couple gave their house a final look. Azerbaijan
is about 95 percent Muslim and Armenians fear that churches would be damaged or
closed when it takes control of the territories. "President Aliyev said that
Christian churches in Azerbaijani territories, which are returned to Azerbaijan
in accordance with the trilateral statement, will also be properly protected by
the state. Christians of Azerbaijan will have access to these churches,” said
the statement from his office. Hundreds, if not thousands, of combatants and
civilians have been killed since fighting flared anew in late September.
Trump Retracts Apparent Admission of Defeat
Agence France Presse/November 15/2020
U.S. President Donald Trump appeared accidentally to admit his election defeat
in a tweet on Sunday morning -- before reversing course to claim he won, and
once again push unsubstantiated claims of mass fraud in the vote. Trump has
refused to concede the November 3 U.S. election to challenger Joe Biden, and
repeatedly said he intends to overturn the result through legal cases. His aides
say he is preparing for a second term in office despite the vote count
confirming Biden's clear victory. "He won because the Election was Rigged,"
Trump tweeted early Sunday. The phrasing -- coming two days after a slip in
which he said "time will tell" if he remains president -- was immediately seized
upon as one more step towards admitting defeat. But the president soon followed
up with a sharp U-turn, tweeting "He only won in the eyes of the FAKE NEWS
MEDIA. I concede NOTHING! We have a long way to go." Thousands of Trump
supporters rallied in Washington on Saturday, backing his claims of fraud, with
clashes erupting in the evening with rival protesters. At least 20 people were
arrested, reports said, including four for firearm violations and one for
assault on a police officer.
Trump himself made a drive-past of the rally in his armored motorcade, on his
way to play golf, smiling through his limousine window to wild cheers and signs
saying "Best prez ever" and "Trump 2020: Keep America Great."
Large pro-Trump rally -
Many of Trump's tweets over the weekend alleging the election was rigged against
him have been tagged by Twitter as containing "disputed" information.
John Bolton, Trump's former national security advisor, told CNN's "State of the
Union" show on Sunday that "as every day goes by, it's clearer there isn't any
evidence" of fraud. "Donald Trump lost... by a free and valid election," Bolton
said, adding "I don't expect him to go graciously. I do expect him to go."
On Saturday, at least 10,000 people -- few wearing masks -- massed in
Washington's Freedom Plaza before marching to the Supreme Court in a raucous
atmosphere reminiscent of a Trump campaign rally. After dark, groups of Trump
supporters and counter-protesters clashed on the streets, scuffling and throwing
punches. Trump seemed to be following the evening's events, accusing the city's
mayor of "not doing her job" and calling on the police to "get going -- do your
job and don't hold back." The latest vote tallies gave the Democrat Biden a
clear win in the state-by-state Electoral College that decides the presidency,
with 306 votes against Trump's 232. Two hundred and seventy votes are required
for election.
UAE-Israel relations: Dubai’s Fresh Market opens first-ever
Israeli produce display
Al Arabiya English/November 15/2020
The Fresh Market in Dubai’s Ras al-Khor opened on Saturday its first ever
Israeli produce display as part of the two countries’ efforts to establish
diplomatic and business links, the Emirates News Agency (WAM) reported. The
Fresh Market, an UAE-based grocery chain, plays a key role in positioning Dubai
as a regional hub for trading and the sale of local and imported produce,
according to WAM. “Together with our colleagues in Dubai, we are beginning to
see the ‘fruits of peace’ today. The export of fresh agricultural products from
Israel to the UAE market has a significant advantage because of the geographical
closeness and the speed with which the products can be transported directly to
markets in the UAE and beyond,” Shlomi Fogel, Chairman of Carmel Agrexco, told
WAM. The United Arab Emirates and Israel in September signed a historic
bilateral agreement, called the Abrahams Accord, at the White House in
Washington. Along with establishing diplomatic relations, the UAE and Israel
agreed to promote investment and tourism, as well as launch direct flights
connecting the two countries. Direct flights between the UAE and Israel are set
to start on November 26 through Dubai-based airline Flydubai.
Trump Loyalists Mount Last Stand in Washington
Agence France Presse/November 15/2020
Thousands of die-hard Donald Trump supporters rallied for a last stand Saturday
in Washington, chanting "four more years" and blaming fraud for an election
defeat that will force the president to vacate the White House after just one
term.
Trump himself made a drive-past in his armored motorcade, on his way to play
golf, smiling through his limousine window to wild cheers and signs saying "Best
prez ever" and "Trump 2020: Keep America Great." "We wanted to show our support,
we're feeling they are trying to steal the election," said Pam Ross, who drove
eight hours from Ohio to join the rally, referring to the president's political
opponents. The Republican incumbent is sticking to discredited claims of mass
fraud and claiming he defeated President-elect Joe Biden in the November 3 vote,
marking another unprecedented challenge to US democratic norms as his time in
office runs down. Later Saturday, he took to Twitter with a series of tweets and
retweets that included claims of voting machines potentially being hacked and
complaints about news networks' coverage of the rally. Twitter slapped labels on
at least eight of the posts as containing "disputed" information. At least
10,000 people -- few wearing masks -- massed on the city's Freedom Plaza before
marching to the Supreme Court in a raucous atmosphere reminiscent of a Trump
campaign rally. "President Trump deserves to see who's behind him, he deserves
to feel the love," Kris Napolitana, from Baltimore, told AFP. "I believe that
he's going to win when all the fraud and cheating is found out."
Tight security
With right-wing militia group the Proud Boys among those attending, a large
security presence was deployed to prevent clashes with anti-Trump events outside
the Supreme Court. As night fell, police formed lines on either side of a street
leading to the White House, separating hundreds of rival protesters.
"We're just holding back people who want to fight," one officer told AFP. After
dark, groups of Trump supporters and counter-protesters clashed on the streets,
scuffling and throwing punches, video posted by the Washington Post showed. At
least 20 people were arrested during the day, reports said, including four for
firearm violations and one for assault on a police officer. Trump seemed to be
following the evening's events, taking to Twitter to accuse the city's mayor of
"not doing her job" and calling on the police to "get going — do your job and
don't hold back."
- 'Whole system's rigged' -
The latest vote tallies gave the Democrat Biden a clear win in the
state-by-state Electoral College that decides the presidency, with 306 votes
against Trump's 232. Two hundred and seventy votes are required for election.
But Margarita Urtubey, 49, a horse breeder from Miami, said the election was "so
corrupt," adding, "Trump won by a landslide. We are here to march for the 'stop
the steal' of this election, to make our voice heard." Trump tweeted that
"hundreds of thousands" had turned out -- while his spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany
made the greatly exaggerated claim that more than a million people were present.
But the turnout was undoubtedly high for a strongly Democratic city, boosted by
protesters from around the country, from Florida to Pennsylvania to Colorado.
Darion Schaublin, who drove from Columbus, Ohio, said "the whole system's
rigged... in the way that the information is getting to the people."
"The truth never actually gets out," added the 26-year-old, who said he lost his
job in a restaurant after refusing to wear a mask to help stop the spread of
Covid-19. Kathlin Erickson, who said she flew from Colorado on a plane "filled
with Trump supporters," kept alive hopes of a second Trump administration.
"A Trump victory? That's a long shot, but anything is possible with God," she
said. Trump is impeding Biden's transition ahead of the inauguration on January
20 and has filed numerous lawsuits -- unsuccessfully -- to challenge vote counts
around the country.
He said Friday "time will tell" if he remains president, in a momentary slip of
his refusal to concede defeat.
Biden prepares for power
Despite his own intelligence officials' declaration this week that the election
was "the most secure in American history," Trump and his right-wing media allies
show no sign of giving up their quest to get the results overturned. After
driving past the marchers in Washington, Trump headed to his golf club outside
the capital as he kept to his regular weekend routine. Biden on Saturday went
biking in a Delaware state park with his wife Jill and a security detail. When
asked if he was closer to choosing his cabinet, he replied "yes."
Erdogan Says Cyprus Made Up of 'Two Separate States'
Agence France Presse/November 15/2020
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Sunday he favors a permanent
division of Cyprus into two states, during a visit to the breakaway Turkish-held
north decried as a "provocation" by the internationally recognized
Greek-speaking south. The comments marked a further setback to hopes for an
eventual reunification of the Mediterranean island which is split between EU
member the Republic of Cyprus, which controls the island's southern two thirds,
and the north occupied by Turkey since 1974. "There are two peoples and two
separate states in Cyprus," said Erdogan. "There must be talks for a solution on
the basis of two separate states." During his visit, Turkish jets left vapor
trails in the sky in the shape of the star and crescent of the Turkish flag --
mirroring a huge flag painted decades ago on a rocky mountainside in the north.
Erdogan's visit to the Turkish-held statelet recognized only by Ankara comes
amid heightened tensions on the island and in the Eastern Mediterranean and was
condemned as a "provocation without precedent" by the Republic of Cyprus. His
trip marked the 37th anniversary of the self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of
Northern Cyprus (TRNC) where an estimated 30,000 Turkish troops are stationed.
The Turkish president was later to attend a "picnic" in the disputed beachfront
area of Varosha along the UN buffer zone that has divided the island since
Turkey's invasion. Ghost town 'picnic' Varosha -- once the playground of
celebrities and dubbed a "Jewel of the Mediterranean" -- has since been a fenced
off ghost town, where former luxury hotels and restaurants have fallen into
disrepair and overgrown by weeds. Turkish troops partially reopened the seafront
of Varosha on October 8, sparking international criticism. The last
U.N.-sponsored peace talks, based on a reunification of the island, failed in
2017. An eventual reunification has looked more remote since an Erdogan-backed
Turkish nationalist, Ersin Tatar, was elected leader of the north last month.
Unlike his predecessor, Mustafa Akinci, who advocated reunification in the form
of a federal state, Tatar also favors a two-state solution. The 1974 Turkish
invasion was launched in response to an Athens-engineered coup in Nicosia
designed to unify Cyprus with Greece, and was followed on November 15, 1983 by
the declaration of the TRNC. Erdogan insisted Sunday that "the only victims in
the Cyprus issue are the Turkish Cypriots whose rights and existence have been
ignored for years".His visit comes as Turkey has openly sparred with neighbors
Greece and Cyprus over maritime territories believed to hold vast gas deposits.
The Turkish leader stressed that "we will continue our seismic research and
drilling activities in the Eastern Mediterranean until a fair agreement can be
reached."Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades condemned Erdogan's visit, as well
as what he called the historical "secessionist act of the declaration of the
illegal regime" in the north. He said Erdogan's visit served to "torpedo"
U.N.-led efforts to work toward resolving "the Cyprus problem" in talks between
Greek and Turkish Cypriots, Athens, Ankara and former colonial power London.
Erdogan's increasingly assertive stance has sparked protests in the south -- but
also in the north, where many Turkish Cypriots resent Ankara's interference in
the island's politics. "No interference! Freedom for all!" hundreds of Turkish
Cypriot protesters chanted in northern Nicosia on Tuesday to denounce Erdogan's
visit.
Israel Advances Plans for New Jerusalem Settler Homes
Agence France Presse/November 15/2020
Israel has pushed on with plans to build a new Jewish settler neighborhood in
east Jerusalem, a watchdog group said Sunday, warning such efforts were being
stepped up before U.S. President Donald Trump leaves office. The Trump
administration has broken with decades of bipartisan U.S. practice by not
opposing Jewish settlement activity in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem and the
occupied West Bank. President-elect Joe Biden has said his administration will
restore U.S. opposition to the settlements which are considered illegal under
international law and that many governments view as an obstacle to peace. The
latest move saw the Israel Land Authority issue construction tenders in Givat
Hamatos, a currently uninhabited area of east Jerusalem next to the mainly
Palestinian neighborhood of Beit Safafa. In February, Israel's right-wing Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the approval of 3,000 homes in the area.
He said 2,000 would be allocated for Jews, and 1,000 for Arab residents of Beit
Safafa. Last week, the Land Authority issued tenders for the construction of
more than 1,200 mostly residential units in Givat Hamatos. Ir Amim, an
Israeli civil society organization that tracks settlements in Jerusalem and
called attention to the tenders on Sunday, warned that the next two months in
the lead-up to the change in Washington "will be a critical period." "We believe
that Israel will attempt to exploit this time to advance moves that the incoming
administration will potentially oppose," it said in a statement.
Ir Amim reiterated concerns that settlement construction in Givat Hamatos would
be a devastating blow to peace negotiations because it would cut east Jerusalem
off from Bethlehem, disrupting the territorial continuity of a future
Palestinian state. Nabil Abu Rudeina, a spokesman for Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas, said the Givat Hamatos tenders amounted to an attempt by Israel
"to kill the internationally-supported two state solution." The east Jerusalem
tenders follow the approval of 96 new east Jerusalem settler homes in the Ramat
Shlomo neighborhood last week. Settlement construction approvals in Ramat Shlomo
in 2010 caused a major rift between Netanyahu and former president Barack Obama
and then vice president Biden. Israel took control of east Jerusalem during the
1967 Six Day War, before annexing it in a move not recognized by most of the
international community.
Israel Strikes Hamas Positions after Rockets Fired from
Gaza
Agence France Presse/November 15/2020
Israel's military said it struck Hamas positions Sunday morning following a
rocket attack from the Gaza Strip overnight. Two rockets were fired into
southern Israel from Gaza late Saturday, the Israeli army said, although there
were no immediate reports of any casualties or damage. The Israeli army tweeted
they had "struck Hamas underground infrastructure & military posts in Gaza.""The
IDF (Israeli army) is conducting an ongoing situational assessment & remains
prepared to operate against any terror activity," they added. An army source
told AFP in a WhatsApp message that fighter jets, helicopters and tanks were
deployed. Security sources in Gaza said there were a number of strikes
overnight, including in Khan Younes, Rafah and Beit Hanoun, without reporting
any casualties. Israeli media said the rockets from Gaza came down in
uninhabited areas, but a military spokeswoman was unable to confirm the reports.
Speaking at the opening of his weekly cabinet meeting on Sunday afternoon, Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would not tolerate such attacks. "I'm
warning the terror organizations in Gaza, even during the coronavirus crisis --
don't try us," he said in remarks relayed by his office. "I never elaborate on
our operational plans, but I'm telling you -- the price of continued aggression
will be heavy, very heavy." The strike from Gaza -- which has not been claimed
-- comes days after the anniversary of the assassination of senior Islamic Jihad
leader Baha Abu Al-Ata, killed in a strike on his home in Gaza City on November
12 last year. Ahead of the anniversary, the Israeli military were reportedly on
high alert within the Gaza Strip, where roughly two million Palestinians
live.Sources close to Hamas indicated officials from the movement were expected
in Cairo later Sunday.
U.S., Israel Worked Together to Track and Kill Qaida No. 2
in Iran
Associated Press/November 15/2020
The United States and Israel worked together to track and kill a senior al-Qaida
operative in Iran earlier this year, a bold intelligence operation by the two
allied countries that came as the Trump administration was ramping up pressure
on Tehran. Four current and former U.S. officials said Abu Mohammed al-Masri,
al-Qaida's No. 2, was killed by assassins in the Iranian capital in August. The
U.S. provided intelligence to the Israelis on where they could find al-Masri and
the alias he was using at the time, while Israeli agents carried out the
killing, according to two of the officials. The two other officials confirmed
al-Masri's killing but could not provide specific details. Al-Masri was gunned
down in a Tehran alley on Aug. 7, the anniversary of the 1998 bombings of the
U.S. embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Al-Masri was
widely believed to have participated in the planning of those attacks and was
wanted on terrorism charges by the FBI. Al-Masri's death is a blow to al-Qaida,
the terror network that orchestrated the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the U.S, and
comes amid rumors in the Middle East about the fate of the group's leader, Ayman
al-Zawahiri. The officials could not confirm those reports but said the U.S.
intelligence community was trying to determine their credibility. Two of the
officials -- one within the intelligence community and with direct knowledge of
the operation and another former CIA officer briefed on the matter -- said al-Masri
was killed by Kidon, a unit within the secretive Israeli spy organization Mossad
allegedly responsible for the assassination of high-value targets. In Hebrew,
Kidon means bayonet or "tip of the spear."The official in the intelligence
community said al-Masri's daughter, Maryam, was also a target of the operation.
The U.S. believed she was being groomed for a leadership role in al-Qaida and
intelligence suggested she was involved in operational planning, according to
the official, who like the others, spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss
sensitive intelligence. Al-Masri's daughter was the widow of Hamza bin Laden,
the son of al-Qaida mastermind Osama bin Laden. He was killed last year in a
U.S. counterterrorism operation in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. The news of
al-Masri's death was first reported by The New York Times. Both the CIA and
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office, which oversees the Mossad
intelligence agency, declined to comment.
Israel and Iran are bitter enemies, with the Iranian nuclear program Israel's
top security concern. Israel has welcomed the Trump administration's withdrawal
from the 2015 Iranian nuclear accord and the U.S. pressure campaign on Tehran.
At the time of the killings, the Trump administration was in the advanced stages
of trying to push through the U.N. Security Council the reinstatement of all
international sanctions on Iran that were lifted under the nuclear agreement.
None of the other Security Council members went along with the U.S., which has
vowed to punish countries that do not enforce the sanctions as part of its
"maximum pressure" campaign on Iran.
Israeli officials are concerned the incoming administration of President-elect
Joe Biden could return to the nuclear accord. It is likely that if Biden does
engage with the Iranians, Israel will press for the accord to be modified to
address Iran's long-range missile program and its military activity across the
region, specifically in Syria and its support for groups like Hizbullah, Hamas,
and Islamic Jihad. The revelations that Iran was harboring an al-Qaida leader
could help Israel bolster its case with the new U.S. administration. Al-Masri
had been on a kill or capture list for years. But his presence in Iran, which
has a long history of hostility toward al-Qaida, presented significant obstacles
to either apprehending or killing him. Iran denied the reports, saying the
government is not harboring any al-Qaida leaders and blaming the U.S. and Israel
for trying to foment anti-Iranian sentiment. U.S. officials have long believed a
number of al-Qaida leaders have been living quietly in Iran for years and
publicly released intelligence assessments have made that case. Al-Masri's
death, albeit under an assumed name, was reported in Iranian media on Aug. 8.
Reports identified him as a Lebanese history professor potentially affiliated
with Lebanon's Hizbullah and said he had been killed by motorcycle gunmen along
with his daughter. Lebanese media, citing Iranian reports, said that those
killed were Lebanese citizen Habib Daoud and his daughter Maryam. The deaths of
al-Masri and his daughter occurred three days after the catastrophic Aug. 4
explosion at the port of Beirut and did not get much attention. Hizbullah never
commented on reports and Lebanese security officials did not report that any
citizens were killed in Tehran. A Hizbullah official on Saturday would not
comment on al-Masri's death, saying Iran's foreign ministry had already denied
it. The alleged killings seem to fit a pattern of behavior attributed to Israel
in the past. In 1995, the founder of the Palestinian militant group Islamic
Jihad was killed by a gunman on a motorcycle in Malta, in an assassination
widely attributed to the Mossad. The Mossad also reportedly carried out a string
of similar killings of Iranian nuclear scientists in Iran early last decade.
Iran has accused Israel of being behind those killings. Yoel Guzansky, a senior
fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies and former analyst on
Iranian affairs in the prime minister's office, said it has been known for some
time that Iran is hiding top al-Qaida figures. While he had no direct knowledge
of al-Masri's death, he said a joint operation between the U.S. and Israel would
reflect the two nations' close intelligence cooperation, with the U.S. typically
stronger in the technical aspects of intelligence gathering and Israel adept at
operating agents behind enemy lines.
Armenian Politician Arrested over Alleged PM Assassination
Plot
Agence France Presse/November 15/2020
An opposition leader in Armenia has been arrested and accused of preparing to
kill the prime minister, his lawyer said, adding to the political turmoil
created by a controversial peace deal with neighboring Azerbaijan. Artur
Vanetsyan, head of the center-right Homeland party, was arrested on Saturday
after being summoned to the headquarters of the Armenian security forces, his
lawyers Lusine Sahakyan and Ervand Varosyan said. They called the detention a
"persecution" and denied the allegations against their client -- that he was
preparing to seize power after the murder of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.
Pashinyan has faced violent street protests and fierce criticism from Armenia's
political opposition since he signed a peace deal with Azerbaijan to end
fighting over the disputed region of Nagorny Karabakh which erupted in
September. Armenia faced heavy losses by technologically superior Azeri troops
and Pashinyan agreed to cede large parts of the mostly Christian and ethnically
Armenian region to Muslim-majority Azerbaijan in order to bring an end to the
hostilities. Vanetsyan, a former boss of Armenia's security services known for
his links to Russia, was also briefly detained last week along with other senior
opposition figures during anti-government protests which saw the prime minister
called a "traitor."Armenian security services announced the arrest late on
Saturday of another unnamed man "with anti-government views" who was allegedly
found in possession of a "large number of weapons."He was preparing "an
assassination attempt against a public figure and the seizure of power" in step
with "politicians with anti-government views and their supporters."
Ethiopia's Tigray Region Claims Rocket Strikes on Eritrea
Airport
Agence France Presse/November 15/2020
The leader of the Tigray region of Ethiopia on Sunday claimed responsibility for
rocket strikes on the airport in neighboring Eritrea's capital, a move that
ratcheted up fears of a wider conflict in the Horn of Africa region. Diplomats
told AFP Saturday night that multiple rockets had struck the capital, Asmara,
landing near the airport, though communications restrictions in Tigray and
Eritrea made the reports difficult to verify. Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy
Ahmed announced November 4 he had ordered military operations in Tigray in a
dramatic escalation of a long-running feud with the region's ruling party, the
Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF). "Ethiopian forces are also using the
airport of Asmara," TPLF leader Debretsion Gebremichael told AFP Sunday, saying
this made the airport a "legitimate target" for the strikes. He added that his
forces had also been fighting "16 divisions" of Eritrean forces in recent days
"in several fronts". The TPLF has previously accused Abiy's government of
enlisting military support from Eritrea, something Ethiopia denies. There
was no immediate response from the Eritrean or Ethiopian governments on Sunday.
It was not clear how many rockets were fired on Saturday night, where in Tigray
they were fired from, whether they hit their targets or what damage they
inflicted. The United States embassy in Asmara posted an advisory to its website
Sunday about "a series of loud noises" at around 7:50 pm Saturday night.
"Unconfirmed reports indicate they may have been explosive devices believed to
be in the vicinity of the Asmara International Airport. There are no indications
the airport was struck," the advisory said. The TPLF dominated Ethiopian
politics for nearly three decades and fought a brutal 1998-2000 border war with
Eritrea that left tens of thousands dead. Abiy came to power in 2018 and won the
Nobel Peace Prize the following year in large part for his effort to initiate a
rapprochement with Eritrea.
- Fleeing refugees -
Hundreds of people are reported to have been killed so far in the conflict in
Africa's second most populous country, some in a gruesome massacre documented
last week by Amnesty International. Over 20,000 Ethiopians have fled as refugees
into Sudan, a figure that continues to rise, Sudanese officials say.
Among them are Ethiopians returning to camps where they and their families
sought refuge from devastating famine decades ago. To cross the river at the two
countries' border, they climb into small boats crammed with other exhausted and
terrified Ethiopians seeking safety. "I am filled with immeasurable sadness,
because when I left, 20 years ago, I never thought that I would come back as a
miserable refugee," said Gabriel, a 40-year-old farmer who arrived in eastern
Sudan this week, asking to be identified by his first name because he feared for
his safety. Back in Ethiopia, the UN is pushing for full humanitarian access to
Tigray, where Debretsion says hundreds of thousands have been displaced
internally by fighting that has featured multiple rounds of government air
strikes. - Conflicting narratives - Ever since Abiy took power in 2018 on the
back of anti-government protests, the TPLF has complained of being sidelined and
scapegoated for Ethiopia's woes. The feud grew more intense after Tigray went
ahead with its own elections in September -- defying a nationwide ban on all
polls imposed because of the coronavirus pandemic -- and tried to brand him an
illegitimate ruler. The immediate catalyst for the military operations in Tigray,
Abiy has said, was a TPLF attack on federal military camps. The TPLF has denied
the attack ever occurred, though Abiy's office has seized on a recent interview
with Tigrayan media in which a senior TPLF official, Sekuture Getachew, said "it
was imperative to take a thunder-like strike". "Had it not been for the mission
maybe Abiy had a chance to command dictatorially for a short term," Sekuture
said in the interview, adding that the TPLF now controlled most of the firepower
of the Ethiopian military's Northern Command. Other TPLF leaders have not
commented on the interview.
- No talks yet -
Ethiopian lawmakers have backed a plan to install a caretaker administration in
Tigray, and officials have issued arrest warrants for Debretsion and other TPLF
leaders. Abiy's government has said the TPLF needs to be disarmed before
negotiations can begin, frustrating world leaders who are calling for an
immediate cessation of hostilities. Meanwhile there continue to be fears the
conflict could draw in other regions of Ethiopia. On Saturday the TPLF claimed
responsibility for rocket attacks on two airports in Amhara region, which
borders Tigray to the south.
World's Largest Free Trade Agreement Signed in Coup for
China
Agence France Presse/November 15/2020
Fifteen Asia-Pacific countries on Sunday signed the world's biggest free trade
deal, seen as a huge coup for China in extending its influence. The Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) includes 10 Southeast Asian economies
along with China, Japan, South Korea, New Zealand and Australia, with members
accounting for around 30 percent of global GDP. First proposed in 2012, the deal
was finally sealed at the end of a Southeast Asian summit as leaders push to get
their pandemic-hit economies back on track. "Under the current global
circumstances, the fact the RCEP has been signed after eight years of
negotiations brings a ray of light and hope amid the clouds," said Chinese
Premier Li Keqiang after the virtual signing. "It clearly shows that
multilateralism is the right way, and represents the right direction of the
global economy and humanity's progress." The agreement to lower tariffs and open
up the services trade within the bloc does not include the United States and is
viewed as a Chinese-led alternative to a now-defunct Washington trade
initiative. The RCEP "solidifies China's broader regional geopolitical ambitions
around the Belt and Road initiative", said Alexander Capri, a trade expert at
the National University of Singapore Business School, referring to Beijing's
signature investment project that envisions Chinese infrastructure and influence
spanning the globe. "It's sort of a complementary element." But many of the
signatories are battling severe coronavirus outbreaks and they are also hoping
the RCEP will help mitigate the crippling economic cost of the pandemic.
Indonesia recently tumbled into its first recession for two decades while the
Philippine economy shrunk by 11.5 percent on-year in the latest quarter. "Covid
has reminded the region of why trade matters and governments are more eager than
ever to have positive economic growth," said Deborah Elms, executive director of
the Asian Trade Centre, a Singapore-based consultancy.
- India absent -
India pulled out of the agreement last year over concerns about cheap Chinese
goods entering the country and was a notable absentee during Sunday's virtual
signing. Signatories to the agreement said they hoped New Delhi would rejoin in
the future, acknowledging its "strategic importance" to the deal which already
covers more than two billion people. The pact should help shrink costs and make
life easier for companies by letting them export products anywhere within the
bloc without meeting separate requirements for each country. The agreement
touches on intellectual property, but environmental protections and labor rights
are not part of the pact. The deal is also seen as a way for China to draft the
rules of trade in the region, after years of US retreat under President Donald
Trump which have seen Washington pull out of a trade pact of its own, the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). Though U.S. multinationals will be able to
benefit from RCEP through subsidiaries within member countries, analysts said
the deal may cause President-elect Joe Biden to rethink Washington's engagement
in the region.
This could see the US eye the potential benefits of joining the TPP's successor
deal, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership
(CPTPP), said Rajiv Biswas, APAC chief economist at IHS Markit.
"However, this is not expected to be an immediate priority issue... given the
considerable negative response to the TPP negotiations from many segments of the
U.S. electorate due to concerns about US job losses to Asian countries," he
added.
Post-Brexit Talks Enter Crunch Week with Failure Looming
Agence France Presse/November 15/2020
British and EU negotiators launched a desperate final stretch of trade talks
Sunday, with both sides determined not to give ground, despite the looming
threat of failure. Britain's David Frost returned to meet his EU counterpart
Michel Barnier after a shake-up in Number 10 personnel left some wondering if
the London might soften its stance. But there was no sign of that in the message
that Prime Minister Boris Johnson's envoy tweeted as he headed back to Brussels.
"We are working to get a deal, but the only one that's possible is one that is
compatible with our sovereignty and takes back control of our laws, our trade,
and our waters," Frost said. "That has been our consistent position from the
start and I will not be changing it."On Friday, Johnson's senior aide Dominic
Cummings -- one of the architects of the "leave" victory in the 2016 Brexit
referendum -- was sacked, amid faction fighting in Number 10, but there has been
no sign this will change the direction of trade talks. Britain left the European
Union in January, but the full economic effect of the bitter divorce will be
felt at the end of the year when an 11-month transition period closes. Relations
between Britain and Europe could then be governed by a trade deal, but only if
negotiations currently under way deliver, which is hardly guaranteed given still
wide divergences. Frost said the parties now "largely have common draft treaty
texts, though significant elements are of course not yet agreed. We will work to
build on these and get an overall agreement if we can. "But we may not succeed,"
he warned. Officials on both sides of the Channel are looking to an EU leaders
video summit on Thursday as the de facto last chance for a breakthrough, leaving
just enough time for the EU Parliament to ratify an agreement. This gives
Barnier and Frost four days and nights to bridge differences that have remained
unchanged since March. "Logic and reason would all point to a deal," said one EU
diplomat with a close eye on the talks. "But if anything became clear in the
past three years, when it comes to Brexit, economic rationale and pure logic are
not enough to explain what's happening," the diplomat said.
- 'Not great' -
Failure would see Britain's ties with the European economy governed by WTO
rules, slapping high tariffs, quotas and other impediments to cross-Channel
trade that flowed unencumbered for decades. Today's British economy, the sixth
biggest in the world, was built on EU membership, with the London financial hub
and a tapestry of car plants and multinationals enjoying access to the EU's 450
million consumers and complex supply chains. Given the danger, British big
business implored the government to find middle ground and replicate the
benefits of membership as closely as possible, even if this came with the
condition that the UK align closely with EU rules. But, when the pro-Brexit
Johnson became prime minister last year, London went the other way, asking for a
zero-tariff deal on goods and services that must, he insisted, leave the country
sovereign to make its own decisions. With positions starkly apart, the talks
became bogged down on three core issues. Fishing has been the least economically
significant but most politically explosive issue, with Europe eager to keep open
access to the UK's bountiful waters. Fishermen in France, Belgium, Denmark and
the Netherlands have trawled British waters for centuries, but London wants
access rethought to satisfy Britain's coastal communities, which voted strongly
for Brexit. Belgian Greens MEP Philippe Lamberts said, on fishing, Europeans
giving ground was "inevitable" but that any trade deal agreed now "won't be
great".
- 'Fall apart' -
The other obstacle is the lack of faith among the Europeans that once outside
the EU single market Britain will play fair in terms of competition rules, even
with a deal. This view sharpened when Johnson's government introduced a bill in
parliament that effectively ripped up the terms of the divorce pact, potentially
in violation of international law. Under the trade deal, will British companies
enjoy easier rules on the environment or food safety only to sell their goods
cheaply in the EU, where their rivals must abide by stricter measures? Seeking
to maintain what it calls a "level playing field", the EU is demanding that
Britain make a commitment to not backtrack on standards as well as to cooperate
on how these evolve in the future. The EU is also worried about how Britain will
subsidize companies. Too much taxpayer largesse could prove unfair towards firms
in Europe, where state aid oversight is strict. To solve those problems, the EU
is insisting that the deal hold some sort of emergency mechanism, that could
swiftly inflict penalties if either side breaks the terms. "Either the British
accept and we then move on to difficult negotiations on fisheries, or they
refuse, and we will then be out of time and the negotiations fail," a senior
European diplomat warned.
The Latest LCCC English analysis &
editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 15-16/2020
Britain: Two-Stepping Toward Totalitarianism
Andrew Ash/Gatestone Institute/November 15/2020
It has become an almost daily occurrence to find news stories of parents being
'called out' by their newly politicised children for expressing on social media
'wrong', 'unwoke' views, or of people being fired for something they may or may
not have said years ago.
This sense of entitlement has come to characterise a group whose younger
demographic seem to have no comprehension of the horrors of a war -- or indeed,
of many authentic hardships -- in their own relatively comfortable lives.
This lack of respect for, or understanding of, history, along with an apparent
need to invent, import, or re-animate grievances from the past, then lead these
protestors to advocate inflicting what they decide is the appropriate revenge
for a grievance on people who have had no part in causing it.
Tolerance is to be expected only from others.... One man's freedom, it seems,
has become another man's cause for resentment.
The protestors' dismissal of British heritage, a bid to 'cancel' history,
appears a threat to the nation. We supposedly have nothing to be proud of. Our
achievements have presumably been little more than the spoils of an evil,
bigoted patriarchal system. These malcontents, by pledging allegiance to the
Marxist architects of that narrative, not only insult the memory of those who
have fought and died for the freedoms we now take for granted; they are also
two-stepping towards totalitarianism.
When the statue of Winston Churchill in London's Parliament Square was
vandalised, the police, evidently held hostage to political correctness, stood
by and watched as their role was publicly undermined by open disregard for the
law.
There was a time when the British were known for their stoicism, their ability
to battle through hardship, no matter the odds. The so called 'blitz spirit' of
eighty years ago, that saw the nation 'pull together and carry on', regardless
of the Nazi bombardment of our cities, characterised a generation that had
suffered two world wars yet could not be bowed.
During the Covid pandemic, however, this 'blitz spirit' has been noticeably
absent. There has been certainly very little in the way of a nation pulling
together; in its place, there has been just a lot of bickering, mud-slinging and
name calling-among politicians, activists, and the increasingly fragmented
populace.
Predictably, Covid-19 was quickly turned into a divisive political issue by many
in the oppositional media. The assertion now -- that anyone against face
coverings, vaccines, or testing is assumed to be on the extreme right, while
those obeying the safety rules, are on the left -- is as simplistic as it is
loopy. One might have imagined that a deadly pandemic would act as a great
uniter, finally bringing an end to the squabbling that has characterised UK (and
US) politics for the last few years. Instead, we have been baked in identity
politicking, making an already turbulent time more turbulent than ever.
Some malcontents have taken their vitriol to new levels of malice, publicly
hoping, for instance, that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson would not
recover from the coronavirus. No pulling together there. No blitz spirit. No
compassion. Just bitterness, feuding and ever-deepening separation.
The fertile, if airy, 'soil' of cyberspace has become the perfect breeding
ground for radicals of every stripe to spread their doctrines of division
amongst the young, politically ripe millennials during lockdown. Pitching
everyone against everyone -- left against right, young against old, black
against white, women against men, trans (seemingly) against everyone -- appears
to be the aim. All of that successfully seems to be driving a wedge of seething
resentment between communities.
It has become an almost daily occurrence to find news stories of parents being
'called out' by their newly politicised children for expressing on social media
'wrong', 'unwoke' views, or of people being fired for something they may or may
not have said years ago. Anyone who openly dares to emphasise the 'Great' in
'Great Britain' is simply asking to be labelled a 'racist'. For those naïve
enough to believe in basic biology -- that the anatomy of women and men are
different – the gulag awaits you. If you dare to utter the unthinkable, that
'all lives matter', prepare to leave town.
Many agitators --- unconcerned by either civility or tolerance -- continue
perpetuating the notion, developed by precocious two-year-olds, that if you
shout for long enough, your wishes might be served up. This sense of entitlement
has come to characterise a group whose younger demographic seem to have no
comprehension of the horrors of a war -- or indeed, of many authentic hardships
-- in their own relatively comfortable lives. This lack of respect for, or
understanding of, history, along with an apparent need to invent, import, or
re-animate grievances from the past, then lead them to advocate inflicting what
they decide is the appropriate revenge for a grievance on people who have had no
part in causing it. Tolerance is to be expected only from others. For many
'progressives', there is no such thing as a two-way street. Agitators now seem
to put their energy and focus into prioritising pet causes to which they feel
everyone else ought to acquiesce. These might include men who have changed
gender competing in female sports; defunding the police so that the most
disadvantaged communities will be even further unable to protect themselves;
expanding censorship in academia and Big Tech, or paying billions in taxpayer
funds to other countries for promises to stop using fossil fuels at some far-off
date and with no means of enforcement. Oh, and by the way, there is no debating
anything. Just do what you are told.
While the Remainer-disruptors dragged out their opposition to Brexit as long as
they could, seeing off two different prime ministers in the process, they may
have relished their power. It was only after the Tories' landslide victory in
December 2019, that they finally let go of their dream of overturning Brexit –
but not before having branded all those in favour of leaving the EU as bigoted
xenophobes.
That slur is a particular slap in the face to the people of this patient nation.
For decades, they have done their best to move in step with the creeping,
'progressive' times in which we live. The acceptance of a variety of often
controversial societal changes, such as the ever encroaching desires of various
sexual lobbies, ushered in under the banner of 'human rights', seems lost on the
liberals, so intent are they on pushing their identity politics agenda. If this
is how appreciation is shown for the British public's quiet, respectful
acceptance of often controversial, 'tipping point' changes within society, then
no wonder much of the public may have decided that they have had enough of this
new orthodoxy.
Although the coronavirus outbreak, with its restrictions of movement, briefly
muted woke activism for a short time, it was not long before the extreme,
activist milieu became restless. Until the death of George Floyd, a black
American seemingly killed by a white policeman, these individuals had been busy
berating figures on the right for not taking Covid-19 seriously enough.
Suddenly, none of that mattered anymore. A frenzy of orchestrated Black Lives
Matter protests erupted across Britain, despite the incident bearing absolutely
no similarity to anything happening on Britain's streets, and despite the
relative anonymity of the BLM movement in Britain until that point.
Many in the media, nevertheless, made sure that the message was loud and clear:
protesting against perceived racism -- even if on another continent -- was more
important than any pandemic.
Thus, after months of being told we would be prosecuted for breaching the Covid
rules, we then had to observe on television thousands of protestors, not just
flouting the safety rules, but tearing down historical monuments -- all off the
back of a grievance that felt largely imported.
Even as the protests turned violent, no one was arrested. Up until this point,
the government had made clear that any breach of lockdown rules would be met by
the full force of the law -- no caveats, no exceptions. Probably no one was
happy about it, but still we complied -- for the greater good.
Then, all of a sudden, chaos was erupting in towns and cities across the UK.
There on the news, amidst the violence of civil unrest, not only were the
lockdown rules being flouted, but, under the banner of Black Lives Matter, a
raft of widespread anti-social behaviour was being tolerated. When the statue of
Winston Churchill in Parliament Square was vandalised, the police, evidently
held hostage to political correctness, stood by and watched as their role was
publicly undermined by open disregard for the law.
The protestors' dismissal of British heritage, a bid to 'cancel' history,
appears a threat to the nation. We supposedly have nothing to be proud of. Our
achievements have presumably been little more than the spoils of an evil,
bigoted patriarchal system. These malcontents, by pledging allegiance to the
Marxist architects of that narrative, not only insult the memory of those who
have fought and died for the freedoms we now take for granted; they are also
two-stepping towards totalitarianism.
While the rights of sexual and ethnic minorities appear to be immovably written
in stone, the freedom to visit our families, the pub, or the library can be
withdrawn by the state at a moment's notice. Thousands of protestors marching
through cities on the same day: no problem. Crowds flocking to the seaside on a
summer day: the risk of arrest. One man's freedom, it seems, has become another
man's cause for resentment.
So what will we be left with, as we try to reclaim our post-Covid lives in a not
yet post-woke world? An increasing atmosphere of distrust and walking on
eggshells. People are increasingly afraid to speak their minds. Even law
enforcement is in a state of politically correct paralysis (here, here, here and
here) .
While the UK was busy promoting multiculturalism and demoting choices such as
Christianity, the nuclear family and a cultural heritage caringly assembled by
people frequently written off as white and dead, we seem have failed to notice
the societal divisions it has caused. According to reports, for example, about
19,000 of our children have been groomed and gang raped. The coronavirus
pandemic, rather than bringing us together, has served to highlight divisions
that are transforming the United Kingdom into something regressive, unevolved,
and unrecognisable. Sadly, the United Kingdom is anything but united at this
time.
© 2020 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Divided we Stand, Divided we Fall
Charles Elias Chartouni/November 15/2020
The statement of a disgruntled Democrat and an Abraham Lincoln Republican *
The electoral outcomes of the late Presidential and Congress elections in the US
have displayed the ever widening rifts of a Nation that has not yet reckoned
with its deeply seated cleavages. The pending electoral counts controversies,
the thin margins in both chambers, the growing cultural wars chasms, and the the
lingering disputes over the constitutional transition, testify to the depth of
the divides that weigh on the course of political life. The appeal unto unity
and healing of divisions, sounded by President-Elect Joseph Biden, are still
without echoes not only on account of ongoing Republican electoral auditing and
deliberate hobbling, but on the inability of Democrats to overcome their moral
and political self righteousness, and readiness to engage Republicans on the
basis of a bipartisan platform which enables the US to overcome the state of
bilateral obstructionism.
This childish and perverse messianic overtones of the Democratic celebrations
betray moral arrogance and political oversight, insofar as, the ongoing cultural
wars playing out for decades, and their incidence on national cohesion and
foreign policy projections. It’s a monumental misread when the rickety political
consensus amongst Democrats deals with the forthcoming transition as a
conventional constitutional procedure, and overlooks the lingering political
divisions and their incidence on constitutional deadlines and controversies.
Donald Trump was barely defeated on account of his style of governance and its
roller coaster tectonics, the overall disparaging effects of the pandemic and
the yearning for more political stabilization, and not as an endorsement for the
Democrats ideological planks, and that will soon resurface in the wake of the
transition and its aftermath. The rifts between the aspirational statement and
the discretionary unilateralism flaunted by President-elect, Joseph Biden, and
his forthcoming administration and its projected political program, is far from
assuaging the disagreements and normalizing the future political course.
Swaying Republican obstructionism should get us into a renewed political
consultation, in a country where a long hauled cultural war has been going on
for the last three decades, on account of seminal normative, political,
economic, social and environmental differences. When the national narrative and
the basic covenant have no more incidence on the nuts and bolts of political
life, and the constitutional debates around originalism and pragmatism are taken
over by ideological polarization and political self righteousness and inhibit
the political conversation, something must be wrong and needs to be addressed on
due time. The strident political polarization and standoff should invite both
parties to tame their extremes, tone down their ideological differences, and
reengage each other on the basis of their covenantal commitments and eagerness
to search for a common ground. The voluntarism displayed by President Trump, in
multiple regards, has proven instrumental in many respects, however
controversial might have been its implements and legal framing, therefore the
blanket sanctioning doesn’t seem appropriate or helpful mending the rifts, and
bringing back the civic and political dialogue unto the political foreground.
The replay of the dismissive arrogance of Hillary Clinton towards Trump’s
electoral base, or the vindictive postures of Nancy Pilosi and Chuck Schumer,
and the ideological diktat of the identitary left, have provided over the years
the carburant for an offensive nativism and rekindled the post civil war
cleavages, and the inceptive controversies between Federalists and
Anti-Federalists. The political stonewalling across the divide is a fact,
principled statements are not sufficient, and political condescendence is far
from being the good answer. It takes leadership, political acumen and civic
commitment to reopen the channels of communication and reach an understanding
over the incoming transition, restore bipartisanship, and prepare the way for an
open-ended dialogue around the issues of a transforming world.
*I pity the Democratic Party actual predicament when I think of the older
generation: the Kennedy’s ( John, Robert, Edward ), Lyndon Johnson, Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, Thomas O’Neill, Claiborne Pell, Lee Hamilton, George Mitchell,
Robert Drinnan SJ,..... Thirty years after being a registered Democratic and an
Abraham Lincoln Republican.
Showdown in the Western Sahara
Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/November 15/2020
Presently, the Polisario Front appears to be trying to create "facts on the
ground" outside of any legal framework, presumably in the hope that the
international community will view them as irreversible.
International help would be greatly appreciated to prevent this showdown in the
Sahara from escalating further.
A member of the United Nations peace mission MINURSO at a UN base in Bir-Lahlou,
in the Western Sahara, on March 5, 2016. While much of the world was looking the
other way, distracted by China's coronavirus and its economic aftermath, a
separatist militia group backed by Algeria, the Polisario Front, have been
militarily exploiting the crisis. For weeks, the Polisario Front have blocked
the only road leading southward from Morocco to Mauritania in the buffer zone of
Guerguerat. Currently, around 200 trucks find themselves stranded there, while
UN peacekeepers (MINURSO), on whom Morocco relies to enforce the tense 30-year
ceasefire, apparently feel overwhelmed. Ever since Spain withdrew from its
former colony in the Western Sahara in 1975, the Polisario Front have been
trying to claim the territory, rich with phosphates and fishing rights, as an
independent state for themselves. Since that time, however, Morocco has served
as the sole sovereign, offering the Western Sahara autonomy but not
independence.
Last week, on Thursday night, Morocco finally responded to the Polisario Front's
roadblock at Guerguerat by creating a security cordon and promising to "restore
free circulation of civilian and commercial traffic" between Morocco and
Mauritania -- an act that the Polisario Front called a "provocation."
The Polisario Front had announced the Monday before that any movement of troops
by Morocco to the buffer zone area "will be considered as a flagrant aggression
to which the Sahrawi [Polisario] side will respond vigorously in self-defence
and to defend its national sovereignty. This will also mean the end of the
ceasefire and the beginning of a new war across the region."
"The Sahrawi government," they warned, "also holds the United Nations and the
Security Council in particular responsible for the safety and security of
Sahrawi civilians."
Presently, the Polisario Front appears to be trying to create "facts on the
ground" outside of any legal framework, presumably in the hope that the
international community will view them as irreversible.
As a result of the Polisario Front's blockade, and in a move likely intended as
a blow to Morocco, all traffic has been prevented from transporting goods not
only to Mauritania, but to all of sub-Saharan Africa. Morocco, especially since
it joined the African Union, has enjoyed warm, strong relations with other
countries on the continent. Until now, Morocco has avoided conflict by relying
on UN Security Council and its MINURSO. The Polisario Front nonetheless on
Friday claimed that Morocco had broken the ceasefire and "ignited war." Morocco,
for its part, insists that there have been no armed clashes and that the
ceasefire still stands. The UN Security also recently strengthened Morocco's
stance by not only demanding that the Polisario Front honor the terms of its
ceasefire, but the UN also designated Algeria as a stakeholder in the dispute.
On Friday, Saudi Arabia as well openly supported Morocco's refusal to have its
territory seized by force. An open conflict at this time would be immensely
damaging for all the parties involved as well as for Europe -- particularly
France, always deeply immersed in African policy. International help would be
greatly appreciated to prevent this showdown in the Sahara from escalating
further.
*Khaled Abu Toameh, an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem, is a
Shillman Journalism Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
How Biden will benefit from some of Trump’s achievements
Raghida Dergham/The National/November 15/2020
The world is almost unanimously convinced that there is no path left for US
President Donald Trump to secure a second term in the White House following the
presidential election earlier this month. But many of the world’s leaders may be
feeling unsettled by his refusal to concede defeat to Joe Biden, and by the
tactics he may or may not use to remain in power beyond January 20, when his
first term comes to an end. Some leaders may be assessing the cost of their
position vis-a-vis the Trump administration, while others are probably figuring
out how Mr Trump will shackle Mr Biden’s hands during this period of political
transition in Washington.
One country whose leadership will be anxiously waiting and watching is Iran.
Lame duck period as this may be, the Trump administration might consider
slapping more sanctions on the regime in Tehran, as well as on its allies and
proxies elsewhere in the Middle East. The scope of these sanctions may be
widened to target the regime’s ballistic missile programme, support for
terrorism around the world and domestic repression. The calculus behind this
likely decision could be that, while the incoming Biden administration may be
able to roll back sanctions on Tehran’s nuclear weapons programme, it will be
hard-pressed to limit others, especially if they are backed by the US Congress.
These punitive measures would make it very difficult for Mr Biden to revive
American-Iranian relations that had improved during the presidency of Barack
Obama and vice presidency of Mr Biden, and culminated in the 2015 nuclear deal.
Such speculation comes at a time when US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is on a
seven-nation tour of Europe and the Middle East. Mr Pompeo's primary objective
may be to assess the readiness of the countries he is visiting for if and when
sanctions are announced against Iran. Could the Trump administration be
contemplating military strikes on Iranian targets as well? While this seems
highly unlikely, given that there is so little time left between now and January
20, don’t rule out the possibility.
At the same time, it is not a foregone conclusion that a Biden administration
will be all that eager to reactivate the nuclear deal, which Mr Trump walked out
of in 2018. This is in part because, despite providing indications that the
Biden team might be willing to reach out to the Iranian regime, it is not clear
with whom exactly it will get in touch with – the civilian camp led by President
Hassan Rouhani, or the increasingly powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Interestingly, the Biden team has spoken about the need for Iranian “compliance”
in the context of the nuclear deal as a precursor to talks. In September, Tony
Blinken, the former deputy secretary of state and an adviser to Mr Biden, said:
“If Joe Biden is president, if Iran returns to compliance with the nuclear
agreement, we would do the same. But then we would use that as a platform,
working with our allies and partners to try to strengthen and lengthen it.”
Could the words “allies and partners” be instructive? Where does that leave
Russia and China, who are no allies or partners of the US but, nonetheless,
joint signatories of the 2015 nuclear deal?
Let's talk about the allies first. A Biden presidency will no doubt please the
European Union. The President-elect will work towards reducing tensions in
transatlantic relations and within Nato – tensions that existed due to Mr
Trump’s lack of interest in sustaining age-old alliances that have underpinned
the global security architecture for decades. There is also a common interest in
the West to renegotiate the terms of the nuclear deal with Iran to cover its
ballistic missile programme and regional expansionist agenda as well. In other
words, the emphasis could be on securing a new deal, rather than reviving the
original one.
The good news for the outgoing and incoming administrations is that this would
receive bipartisan support in the US. And yet, unsure of Mr Biden’s actions, the
Trump team seems determined to double down on Tehran.
But what about the Russians? From my conversation with Fyodor Lukyanov, research
director at the Valdai Discussion Club and Chairman of the Council on Foreign
and Defence Policy, it seems to me that Moscow is concerned about deliberately
being excluded from any future US-Iran negotiations. Mr Lukyanov, who does not
see a return to the 2015 deal, said: “It would be very interesting to see
whether Russia will be invited to participate [in future discussions] or not,
because I don’t believe Biden’s administration will be very keen to do it.”
This, according to Mr Lukyanov, could have an impact on Russia-Iran relations,
although he added that “when there are interests which coincide, then Russia and
Iran find ways how to do it”. Both countries have an interest in securing the
future of the Syrian regime led by Bashar Al Assad. And both countries will be
right to worry about a continuation of the Caesar Act under a Biden
administration, which currently sanctions the Syrian government as well as its
allies and partners at various levels.
While Mr Biden is likely to be tougher on Russia than Mr Trump was, on China, a
Biden presidency will certainly not divorce itself from the Trump doctrine. The
latter is especially of consequence, not just because of blossoming China-Iran
relations but Beijing's rising power on the world stage.
It seems that Mr Biden will broadly pursue the following plan with Beijing: the
appointment of a special envoy to China in order to ensure that dialogue is not
dependent exclusively on high-level summit meetings; political and military
de-escalation of tensions; a gradual resumption of trade negotiations; and a
greater focus on China’s internal matters, including the future of its
territories such as Hong Kong.
In short, in some regards there won't be a radical departure in US policy from
one president to the other.
*Raghida Dergham is the founder and executive chairwoman of the Beirut Institute
and a columnist for The National
Artsakh Territory Has Always Been Armenian/There was no
country on the planet called Azerbaijan before 1918
Պատմություն Արվեստ Մշակույթ
ارتساخ أرمنية منذ آلاف السنين في حين أن أذربيجان لم تكن موجودة قبل العام 1918
November 16/2020
*If Azerbaijan claims that Artsakh has been its territory – Why did they built
Armenian churches in a Muslim country?
*There was no country on the planet called Azerbaijan before 1918.
*Where was Azerbaijan when a monastery was built in Artsakh in the 4th century?
Who built Tigranakert founded in the 80 BC ?
*Gandzasar Monastery (4th century) and St. Hovhannes Mkrtich church (1216-1238)
*Dadivank (4th century) and Catholic (9-11th century)
*Amaras Monastery (4th century)
*St. Gevorg of Tsitsernavank (4-5th century)
*Gtchavank (4-13th century)
Yeghishe Apostle Monastery (Jrvshtik) (5th century), Mataghis
*Vankasar White Cross (5th century)
*Qataro Monastery of Dizapayt and St. Mary (5th century)
*Bread Bri (7-17 century)
*Mokhrenis Okht door monastery (7-17th century)
*St. Hakobavank of Kolatak (9th century)
*The Holy Savior of Zori (9th century)
St. Stepanos of Tsmakahogh (9-10th century)
*Spitak cross monastery of Hadrut Vank village (10th century)
*Chartari Yeghisha Kusi desert (12th round)
*St. Gevorg of Zankatagh (12th century)
*Khotavank (12-13th century)
*St. Mary’s virgin desert of Karvachar (12-13th century)
*Saint Paul’s Savior (12-13th century)
*Miss Shoshkavank St. Mary (13th century)
*Horeka Monastery (13th century)
*Kavakavank (14th century)
*Gospel St. Gayane’s desert (1616)
*The Holy Resurrection of Hadrut (1621)
*Pirumashen (1641)
*St. Mary of the Gospel (1651)
*St. Stepanos of the Cross (1654)
*Shoshi New Church (1655)
*St. Pandaleon of Berdadzor (Parin Pij) (1658)
*Ghevondyants desert of Moshmhat (1658)
*Haki St. Minas (1673)
*St. Grigoris church of Herher (1676)
*Tsakuri Tsakhkavank St. Mary’s (1682)
*Yeritsmank monastery (1691)
*Kashunik Masrik church (1694)
*Desert Saint the Savior (Napat) (17th century)
*Saint Stepanos (17th century)
*Bovurkhan Monastery Complex (17th century)
*St. Hovhannes Mkrtich of the line (1736)
*Holy Mother of God (1740)
*St. Stepanos of Padara (18th century)
*St. Mary of Mushkapat (18th century)
*St. Mary of Dashushen (1843)
*St. John the Baptism of Shushi (1847)
*St. Mary of Nngi (1853)
*St. John Karapet of Martakert (1857)
*St. Mary of Aygestan (1860)
*St. Mary’s Stone (1862)
*Holy Savior of Shushi (1868-1887)
*St. Mary of Ashan (1896)
*St. Gevorg of Astghashen (1898)
*St. Gevorg of Mataghis (1898)
Posting Footnotes: 1.) I am not the originator of this content as it can be
found in other FB postings (H/T to Ara Topouzian) , but it is intriguing and
important for context. 2.) The photos are of an Ancient Map of Armenia, Colchis,
Iberia, Albania, showing that the border between Caucasian Albanian and Armenia
follows the Kur River; and a map of where some of the Artsakh/NKR monasteries
can be found in the region.