English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For November 17/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.november17.20.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
For those who are self-seeking and who obey
not the truth but wickedness, there will be wrath and fury
Letter to the Romans 02/01-08/:”You have no
excuse, whoever you are, when you judge others; for in passing judgement on
another you condemn yourself, because you, the judge, are doing the very same
things. You say, ‘We know that God’s judgement on those who do such things is in
accordance with truth.’ Do you imagine, whoever you are, that when you judge
those who do such things and yet do them yourself, you will escape the judgement
of God? Or do you despise the riches of his kindness and forbearance and
patience? Do you not realize that God’s kindness is meant to lead you to
repentance? But by your hard and impenitent heart you are storing up wrath for
yourself on the day of wrath, when God’s righteous judgement will be revealed.
For he will repay according to each one’s deeds: to those who by patiently doing
good seek for glory and honour and immortality, he will give eternal life; while
for those who are self-seeking and who obey not the truth but wickedness, there
will be wrath and fury.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on November 16-17/2020
The French initiative In Lebanon Aims To
Rescue The Terrorist Hezbollah and Revive The Rotten Political Class/Elias
Bejjani/November 15/2020
Health Ministry: 1016 new cases of Corona, 10 deaths
Remain thankful to God in all circumstances with this Bible verse
Rai Demands Non-Partisan Lebanese Govt
President Aoun meets new Chairman of Coptic Orthodox Community in Lebanon, MP
Salim Aoun
Aoun, Berri Mourn Muallem as President Dispatches Minister
Macron to Discuss Lebanon with Pompeo after Futile Durel Visit
Wehbe Meets Shea, Requests Files Justifying Recent Sanctions
Wehbe partakes in first Ministerial meeting of Media Freedom Coalition: Media
freedom and Lebanon are inseparable
Army Commander, LAU President discuss academic cooperation
'Let Women Cook': Lebanese Mock Fahmi over Sexist Comment
ISF Says Virus Lockdown Has So Far Succeeded
'Rise from the Rubble': Lebanese Artist Turns Blast Debris into Symbol of Hope
Israeli Army Sets Plan to Prevent Infiltration From West Bank, Lebanon
Gebran Bassil, President Of Lebanon's Free Patriotic Movement: The FPM Disagrees
With Hizbullah On Core Issues; We Support Peace, Palestinian State, And Israel's
Right To Security
Lebanese Journalist Hazem Saghieh Slams Islamic Leaders For Justifying Muslim
Rage Against Muhammad Cartoons: The Leaders' Demand To Ban Offensive Cartoons Of
The Prophet Just As Holocaust Denial Is Banned Is 'Foolish And Ignorant'
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on
November 16-17/2020
Trump Aide Promises 'Very Professional Transition' to Biden
Pompeo says Europe, US need to work together to address Turkey's Erdogan's
actions
Bahrain foreign minister to make first visit to Israel this week
Trump National Security Adviser O'Brien Says Looks Now that Biden Has Won
1 Hurt in Iranian Gas Station Blast, No Fatalities Reported
Amnesty: Iran blacked out internet to hide ‘true scale’ of 2019 killings
Armenian Foreign Minister Resigns after Unpopular Karabakh Ceasefire
Iraq Hangs 21 on Terrorism Charges
Barzani: Kurdistan Region Is Ready to Agree With Baghdad on All Issues
UN Envoy Criticizes Israel's Move to Expand Key Settlement
Syria's Foreign Minister Walid Moalem Dies
Fatah, Hamas Delegations in Cairo to Finalize Palestinian Reconciliation Talks
Media Freedom Coalition ministerial communiqué
Titles For The Latest LCCC English
analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 16-17/2020
Europe's Lax Security Aids Islamist Terrorists/Con
Coughlin/Gatestone Institute/November 16/2020
The Americans Have Their Elections, and We Our Interests/Sam Menassa/Asharq Al-Awsat/November,
16/2020
The World Awaits the Policeman/Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al-Awsat/November, 16/2020
A Preview of Biden's Foreign Policy/James Stavridis/Bloomberg/November, 16/2020
Moderna says its vaccine is 94.5 per cent effective in preventing Covid-19/Paul
Carey/The National/November 16/2020
Iran ponders how to deal with new US president/Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab
News/November 16/2020
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on November 16-17/2020
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: 1016 new cases of Corona, 10 deaths
NNA/November 16/2020
The Ministry of Public Health announced, on Monday, the registration of 1016 new
Coronavirus cases, thus raising the cumulative number of confirmed cases to-date
to 106,446.
It also indicated that 10 death cases were also registered during the past 24
hours.
Remain thankful to God in all circumstances with this
Bible verse
Philip Kosloski/Aleteia/November 16/2020
Keep this Bible verse close at hand when you have difficulty being thankful to
God in difficult situations. It is relatively easy to be thankful to God for
positive blessings that we receive. Whether it is an enjoyable job, comfortable
house, or loving family, we are naturally grateful for the good things in life.
However, are we thankful to God for everything, even when situations look dire?
This can be a more difficult disposition to have, but it is a necessary one for
the Christian. We are challenged to be a people of hope, seeing God’s handiwork
in all circumstances, even the difficult ones. Here is a short Bible verse that
can help orient our spiritual life in the right direction. Keep it close at hand
for those times when we are not naturally thankful to God. It is a reminder that
God’s will is in every event, even when we don’t understand it.
Rejoice always. Pray without ceasing. In all circumstances give thanks, for this
is the will of God for you in Christ Jesus. (1 Thessalonians 5:17-18)
Rai Demands Non-Partisan Lebanese Govt
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
Lebanon’s Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rai called for forming an emergency,
neutral and non-partisan cabinet to address the pending economic and financial
crises, warning political forces against continuing to obstruct the creation of
a new government. During his Sunday sermon, he said that “seeing the outcry of
the hungry people and the wounds of the injured Beirut following the August 4
explosion as the state remains silent, and facing the urgency of friendly
nations to form a new government and embark on reforms, we are forced to ask
fateful questions.”“Is this persistence to obstruct the government formation and
recklessness toward the interests of the people and the nation part of a plan to
overthrow the State of Greater Lebanon?” he asked. The patriarch said he could
not find any purpose for the obstruction amid the unprecedented economic crisis,
accusing political leaders of impoverishing the people and turning them into
“beggars” and forcing the youth to immigrate. He said the Church rejects any
efforts that undermine partnership and turn Lebanon into an arena of conflict
between regional rivals. Last week, French President Emmanuel Macron’s advisor
for North Africa and the Middle East, Patrick Durel, urged Lebanese officials
“to expedite the formation of a competent government acceptable to all parties,
in order to carry out the required reforms and restore the confidence of the
international community.”
President Aoun meets new Chairman of Coptic Orthodox
Community in Lebanon, MP Salim Aoun
NNA/Monday, 16 November, 2020
President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, asserted the importance of
Christian presence in the Arab Mashreq region, and stressed the need to preserve
this presence to ensure diversity, openness and tolerance in this important era
in the history of monotheistic religions which arose in this world.
The President considered that “What Eastern Christians have been subjected to
during the past years has increased their determination to cling by their land,
identity and human role”.
“The whole world is called to protect the Christian presence in order to
contribute to confronting extremism, isolation and the clash of civilizations,
which has taken on violent and disturbing forms” President Aoun added.
President Aoun’s positions came while receiving the new Chairman of the Coptic
Orthodox Community in Lebanon, Father Timon the Syriac, today at Baabda Palace.
Father Timon was appointed by Pope Tawadros II, Pope of Alexandria and Patriarch
of Saint Mark Episcopate, as the Patron of the Coptic Orthodox Community, in
Lebanon and Syria on the 14th of September, succeeding the late Father, Roys Al-Orashalimi.
Father Timon was accompanied by Attorney General of the sect, lawyer Abdullah
Moussallem, and head of the Church Committee, engineer George Francis.
During the meeting, the Syriac Priest conveyed the greetings of Pope Tawadros
II, and his wishes for success, to President Aoun, in addition to his wishes for
success in leading the country towards the shores of safety. Father Timon also
stressed his continued prayers for the return of stability to Lebanon, and for
the country to enjoy an exit from the difficult conditions which it currently
passes through.
For his part, the President of the Republic wished the Syriac Priest success in
his newly assumed spiritual responsibilities, and conveyed his greetings to Pope
Tawadros II, recalling his meetings with him during past years, his spiritual
and patriotic stances and his constant endeavor to enhance the Christian
Presence in the Arab Mashreq.
MP Salim Aoun:
The President met MP, Salim Aoun, and deliberated with him general conditions
and the needs of Zahle and Beqaa region .
MP Aoun stated that he had raised the issue of the student dollar, with
President Aoun, in addition to the sufferings of students’ families and their
complaints about not implementing this law, especially since students abroad
need small amounts to be enabled to continue their studies. MP Aoun added that
this Parliament-approved law gives students part of their rights, knowing that
banks were well-aware of the content of this law, which old students benefit
from.
“Unfortunately, there is a delay in implementation, and the Cabinet’s position
was invoked at times. The implementation mechanism lies in the text of the law,
whose cost doesn’t exceed 8 Million US Dollars per month, whereas other funds
are spent in other areas where there is waste and abuse” MP Aoun said.
Then, MP Salim Aoun indicated that supporting Lebanese students abroad through
the Student Dollar, is an investment for the future, “Because these students
will return to their country after graduation to work and enhance scientific
expertise in their specialties”. Finally, MP Aoun confirmed that the President
supported the approval of this law, and is still providing all the support for
implementation.
Condolences to President Al-Assad:
President Aoun sent a condoling cable for Syrian President, Bashar Al-Assad, on
the death of late Deputy Prime Minister, and Foreign Affairs Minister, Walid AL-Mouallem,
noting the role he had played in his journey inside and outside Syria. President
Aoun also wished that peace returns to Syria “So that the brotherly Syrian
people enjoy the prosperity that they deserve”. ---Presidency Press Office
Aoun, Berri Mourn Muallem as President Dispatches
Minister
Naharnet/Monday, 16 November, 2020
President Michel Aoun on Monday sent a cable of condolences to Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad over the death of Syria’s Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem.
Lauding the role that Muallem played inside and outside Syria, Aoun hoped “peace
will return to Syria so that the brotherly Syrian people can once again enjoy
the prosperity they deserve.” Dispatched by Aoun, caretaker Social Affairs and
Tourism Minister Ramzi Msharrafiyeh meanwhile left for Syria to represent the
president at Muallem’s funeral. Speaker Nabih Berri also sent a cable of
condolences to Assad and another to Syrian Prime Minister Hussein Arnous. In the
cable sent to Assad, Berri hailed Muallem as a prominent Arab politician who
“did not bargain over principles” and who defended “Arabs and Arabism until the
last breath.”
Macron to Discuss Lebanon with Pompeo after Futile
Durel Visit
Naharnet/Monday, 16 November, 2020
French President Emmanuel Macron and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will
discuss Monday in a meeting in Paris “a host of files that concern both
countries, especially the situation in the region, and specifically the Lebanese
crisis,” informed diplomatic sources said. Macron and Pompeo will demonstrate
“the outcome of the efforts that have been exerted to guarantee the
implementation of the French initiative and the obstacles that are impeding it,”
the sources told al-Joumhouria newspaper in remarks published Monday. The French
team tasked with following up on the initiative will meanwhile meet to discuss
the “frail results” of French presidential envoy Patrick Durel’s visit to
Lebanon. “In light of Durel’s remarks and impressions, the fate of the
conference that France is preparing to help Lebanon will be decided as well as
the date of Macron’s third visit to Lebanon before the end of the year,” the
sources added. Political sources informed on the meetings that Durel held in
Lebanon meanwhile told Asharq al-Awsat newspaper that the visit “failed to
achieve the needed progress.”
Wehbe Meets Shea, Requests Files Justifying Recent
Sanctions
Naharnet/Monday, 16 November, 2020
Caretaker Foreign Minister Charbel Wehbe met Monday with U.S. Ambassador to
Lebanon Dorothy Shea at the Foreign Ministry in Beirut.
Talks tackled "bilateral ties, means to enhance them and America’s support and
assistance for Lebanon in many fields, in addition to the issue of sea border
demarcation negotiations, the return of refugees to their country, and the phase
of transition from the current administration to the new administration in the
U.S.,” the Ministry said in a statement. Discussions also touched on the recent
U.S. sanctions against three Lebanese politicians. Wehbe told Shea that
“Lebanese authorities including the judiciary hope to obtain any information or
documents on which the U.S. administration relied in taking those measures,” the
statement said. In an interview published earlier, Wehbe described the meeting
with Shea as an "ordinary" visit, noting that he wanted to discuss with her “a
host of issues that concern our two countries.”“We are among the friends of the
United States and we have historic relations and broad and various common
interests,” the minister noted. “We must not forget that we are going through a
critical period in which the U.S. has a major role,” Wehbe added, citing
Washington’s roles in the sea border demarcation talks, military support for the
army and the international investigations into the August 4 port explosion.
Asked about the latest U.S. sanctions on several Lebanese politicians, Wehbe
said “this issue will certainly be on the meeting’s agenda.” “We are very
interested in knowing the foundations on which the sanctions on ex-ministers
Jebran Bassil, Ali Hassan Khalil and Youssef Fenianos were based, and our
embassy in Washington had submitted a request to obtain (documents)
incriminating these officials, at the instructions of the president of the
republic,” Wehbe added. “We and the United States respect international laws
aiming to combat corruption and what we are seeking is to obtain the documents
that led to these sanctions,” he went on to say. “It is our right and that of
the Lebanese to know the full truth related to these sanctions,” Wehbe said.
Wehbe partakes in first Ministerial meeting of Media
Freedom Coalition: Media freedom and Lebanon are inseparable
NNA/Monday, 16 November, 2020
Caretaker Minister of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants, Charbel Wehbe, on Monday
participated in the first ministerial meeting of the Media Freedom Coalition, at
the invitation of Canada's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Francois-Philippe
Champagne, and UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab.
Minister Wehbe underlined that media freedom and Lebanon are inseparable.
Army Commander, LAU President discuss academic cooperation
NNA/Monday, 16 November, 2020
Lebanese Army Commander, General Joseph Aoun, on a Monday welcomed at his Yarzeh
office President of the Lebanese American University (LAU), Professor Michel
Moawad, who visited him with an accompanying delegation
Talks reportedly discussed the best ways to strengthen academic cooperation
between the university and the military institution.
'Let Women Cook': Lebanese Mock Fahmi over Sexist Comment
Agence France Presse/Monday, 16 November, 2020
Lebanese have poked fun at caretaker Interior Minister Mohammed Fahmi after he
suggested the solution to a ban on deliveries during a coronavirus lockdown was
for women to start cooking. Lebanon started a two-week partial lockdown on
Saturday to try to stem the spread of the Covid-19 virus as cases topped 100,000
and intensive care hospital departments became overwhelmed. When a journalist
asked Fahmi what Lebanese should do on Sunday when a day-long curfew suspended
popular food deliveries from restaurants and supermarkets, he quipped: "Let
women cook a little." Appalled women reacted by lambasting the minister's sexist
comment on social media, and vowing they were #Not_cooking_on_Sunday. "#Sexism
results in deep rooted repression & discrimination against us women, national
'leaders' disgracefully support inequalities," associate professor Carmen Geha
responded on Twitter.
"I will cook happily the day they pick up and recycle garbage," she added,
referring to oft-criticized public services. Award-winning journalist Dalal
Mawad slammed what she called a "sample of the level of discourse and awareness
among this country's politicians." Lebanese men joined in posting images of
themselves dicing up vegetables or shaking pans on the stove, as they took on
the #Fahmi_challenge -- to be a man and cook. "I apologize, honorable minister,
that today I cooked for my sons," one user, a divorced man raising his sons on
his own, wrote beside a picture of him serving a meal on Facebook. "I apologize
because their mother is a doctor like me and the head of a department in France,
and I and my children are very proud of her."Lebanon is also reeling from a
devastating blast at Beirut's port in August that killed more than 200 people,
and a raging economic crisis that sparked mass protests last fall against
entrenched politicians viewed as incompetent and out of touch. "Gender equality
Mr. Fahmi, have you ever heard about it? Or too busy ruining our country with
your bunch of friends?," wrote another Lebanese man on Facebook in English.
Another one made a video to the tune of the "Mission: Impossible" soundtrack,
encouraging others to follow suit, and finishing with the revelation: "Men...
also do the washing up."
ISF Says Virus Lockdown Has So Far Succeeded
Naharnet/Monday, 16 November, 2020
The first two days of a two-week general lockdown imposed in Lebanon to curb
skyrocketing coronavirus cases were “largely successful,” an Internal Security
Forces spokesman said on Monday. “Until this morning, 6,873 fines were issued
against those who breached the lockdown,” ISF Public Relations Branch chief
Colonel Joseph Musallem said in a radio interview. “Municipalities have an
important role in securing the success of the genera lockdown,” he added.
Musallem also urged citizens to “cooperate in order to prevent a bigger spread
of the virus” and to “relieve the medical sector and lower the daily numbers of
deaths and infections.”
'Rise from the Rubble': Lebanese Artist Turns Blast
Debris into Symbol of Hope
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
She stands nearly three meters tall with her arm raised, the wind whipping the
hair away from her scarred face, and a broken clock at her feet with the hands
showing 6.08, the time that a blast ripped through Beirut port on the evening of
Aug. 4. The unnamed statue by Lebanese artist Hayat Nazer is made of broken
glass and twisted materials that belonged to people’s homes before the explosion
that killed 200 and injured 6,000, and symbolizes the city’s hopes of rising
from the rubble. “If you look at the statue, one half has a leg standing, the
hand looks surrendered, there is a scar on the face with the flying hair and the
clock on this side, as if the explosion is still happening,” Nazer told Reuters
Television. “But the other hand and the other leg...is leaning as if it is
starting to walk and the hand is raised, it wants to continue, it wants to keep
going and rise from the rubble. And this is the truth, this is our truth,” the
33-year-old said. The huge blast, which levelled a swathe of Beirut and made
some 300,000 residents homeless, has compounded Lebanon’s worst financial crisis
since the 1975-1990 civil war. Nazer believes in Lebanese resilience. She says
those affected by the blast who saw the 2.6-meter statue, temporarily displayed
in front of the damaged port, drew strength and hope to carry on. Nazer had
already started on a female sculpture before the blast, but volunteered to help
clean up destroyed houses and streets. At night, she would return to the
sculpture, using the shards of glass and metal pieces she had collected.
“I felt like Beirut was a woman...who despite what she suffered...is very
strong,” she said. Inspired by Lebanese singer Majida El Roumi’s “Beirut, Lady
of the World” and its lyrics “Rise from under the rubble”, Nazer says the statue
took her a little more than two months to complete.
She did not name the artwork because she wanted the public to do so. This is not
the first time Nazer has used debris in her art. Her previous works include a
model of the mythological Phoenix made out of pieces of protesters’ burnt tents,
and a heart-shaped sculpture from stones and empty teargas canisters collected
from clashes between protesters and security forces.
Israeli Army Sets Plan to Prevent Infiltration From West
Bank, Lebanon
Tel Aviv- Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
The Israeli army arrested a Lebanese citizen of Palestinian origins after
crossing the border on Sunday, announced military sources in Tel Aviv. The
sources said that the Israeli army arrested a man, in his forties, when he tried
to cross the Lebanese border towards al-Ghajar village.
The Shin Bet launched an investigation to determine whether he was a job seeker,
like many others who try to cross the border, or a Hezbollah operative sent to
check the standing of the army. The Israeli army spokesman said the forces shot
over 10 flares in the area and Chebaa Farms to uncover the reason for this
infiltration. Three months ago, the Israeli army announced a state of high alert
after Hezbollah declared it would avenge the assassination of one of its members
during an Israeli raid in Syria last July. The decision to put military forces
on high alert is strongly criticized by the Mossad, the national intelligence
unit. The head of Mossad, Yossi Cohen, indicated that putting thousands of
soldiers on high alert for more than three months harms the state. Cohen
suggested ending the state of alert and threatening Hezbollah and the Lebanese
government against any attempt to harm Israel.
However, the army remained on alert and the new infiltration attempts confirmed
its decision. The Israeli army warned that Palestinians would infiltrate through
the separation wall between Israel and the West Bank. It announced a new plan to
secure the area in the vicinity of Judea and Samaria and limit illegal entry
into Israel. The plan aims to protect the area between the separation fence and
Israel, dubbed the "seam zone," and includes the deployment of army and border
guards on the security fence to prevent illegal infiltrators from entering. The
army will deploy troops and guards near Qalqilya, Hableh, Deir Ballut, Saffa,
Bilin, Tulkarm, Pharaoh, and other villages. It warned against any attempt to
undermine the security fence in the “seam zone", stressing that any illegal
attempt to infiltrate, breach, or violate the fence puts the person in danger.
Gebran Bassil, President Of Lebanon's Free Patriotic Movement: The FPM Disagrees With Hizbullah On Core Issues; We Support Peace, Palestinian State, And Israel's Right To Security
MEMRI/November 16/2020
Former Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, the president of the Free
Patriotic Movement (FPM), said in a November 8, 2020 address that was streamed
live on YouTube by Newsgate (Lebanon) that while the FPM disagrees with
Hizbullah on many core issues, it has not been subjected to sanctions by Iran or
oppression by Hizbullah. He reiterated a previous statement of his that the FPM
wants Lebanon to be a non-religious state that would have domestic and external
peace based on justice, international law, an Arab right to land, the
Palestinians' right to a state, and Israel's right to security. Bassil also said
that Hizbullah supporters have attacked him on social media for having expressed
this view in the past. For more about Gebran Bassil, see MEMRI TV clips No.
8286, 7411, 7303, 6548, 6347, and 3033. Gebran Bassil: "We disagree with
Hizbullah on basic matters, and even ideological matters, such as peace in the
region and the existence of Israel. However, we have not seen Iran imposing
sanctions against us, nor have we seen Hizbullah oppressing us. "In February
2019, at the Mar Mikhaël Church, I said that Hizbullah needs to understand that
the [Free Patriotic Movement] does not have the same ideas and the same
narrative that Hizbullah has. This is why we made a memorandum of understanding.
We want Lebanon to be a civic state – not Muslim, not Christian. We want it to
be a state that wants to live with domestic stability that would be based on
agreement and on external peace. External peace is based on rights, justice, and
international law. "Lebanon wants peace, not war. It wants a peace based on the
Arab initiative, and on the basic principal of mutual rights. The Arabs have a
right to land, the Palestinians have the right to a state, and Israel has a
right to security. This is, in fact, Resolution 1701, and it has [reflected] the
situation on our border [with Israel] since 2006. This is exactly what I said in
February 2019, and a big dispute with Hizbullah erupted. Their supporters
attacked me on social media."
Lebanese Journalist Hazem Saghieh Slams Islamic Leaders For
Justifying Muslim Rage Against Muhammad Cartoons: The Leaders' Demand To Ban
Offensive Cartoons Of The Prophet Just As Holocaust Denial Is Banned Is 'Foolish
And Ignorant'
MEMRI/November 16/2020
In a November 8, 2020 article in the London-based Saudi daily Al-Sharq Al-Awsat,
Lebanese journalist Hazem Saghieh slammed three Islamic leaders - Turkish
President Erdogan, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan and former Malaysian
prime minister Mahathir Muhammad - for justifying the recent Islamist terror
attacks in Europe, and especially for endorsing an argument that is prevalent in
the Muslims world, namely that Europe is hypocritical in that it allows
publishing offensive cartoons of the Prophet yet condemns denial of the
Holocaust. Saghieh argues that comparing these two actions is "foolish and
outright ignorant," since denying the Holocaust does not involve publishing some
offensive words and pictures but denying the documented deaths of six million
victims whose names and faces are known. What is "truly disastrous," he says, is
that these three leaders have influence over tens of millions of citizens.
Saghieh adds that the reactionary mindset of the three leaders stem from the
fact that, although they have modernized their countries, they are ultimately
all Islamists. As such, he says, they import Western science and technology
while pushing back against Western ideas; more than that, they arm themselves
with Western technology only in order to fight the West and defeat it.
The following is an English translation of article published October 8, 2020 on
the English-language website of Al-Arabiya TV.[1]
"Pakistani journalist and writer Kunwar Khuldune Shahid expressed his outrage
over three leaders in the Islamic world: Recep Tayyip Erdogan, President of the
Republic of Turkey, Imran Khan, Prime Minister of Pakistan, and Mahathir Mohamad,
the former Prime Minister of Malaysia. In an article published by the Israeli
newspaper Haaretz, [2] Khuldune emphasized the three leader’s latest actions
justifying the recent terrorist acts in France. These three leader have also
expressed their unanimity regarding the hypocrisy of a widely circulated
argument in the Islamic world, which is how Western countries turn a blind eye
when it comes to the publication of offensive anti-Muslim cartoons, yet at the
same time, Holocaust denial is strictly forbidden and denounced.
"As we have noted, the three leaders voiced the same argument with the same
level of hostility, and their argument would have been valid if France had
allowed the publication of content offending Islam, while prohibiting the
publication of content offending Christianity or Judaism, but that is not the
case.
"As for this recent trend to compare the latest events with denying the
Holocaust, I can only say it is simply foolish and outright ignorant. It is
important to remind everyone, that when it comes to discussing the sensitive
topic of the Holocaust, we are not talking about a few offensive words or
pictures, we are talking about six million known victims whose names and
pictures are documented. We must remember that these are victims with living
relatives who can recount their stories, not to mention the few Holocaust
survivors who are still alive today and they still live with the physical and
mental scars of the horrors of that time.
"These three politicians are known for making such arguments. We have also
witnessed this obsession with denying the Holocaust or reducing the number of
its victims expressed across Islamic and Arab media since the late forties.
"In this context, what is truly disastrous is that these three leaders have
influence over tens of millions of citizens. When the leaders themselves have
this low level of awareness, then we cannot blame the public for their
unsophisticated backward reaction. As for the global response to such statements
and arguments, it ranges from despair to shock to ridicule.
"However, this line of thought and simple-minded comparisons are not new; in
fact, between 1962 and 1965 the Second Vatican Council, under the rule of Paul
VI, decided to exempt Jews from the collective responsibility for the
crucifixion of Jesus Christ. This led many Arab and Islamic figures to strongly
denounce this exoneration, and questioned its historic accuracy, despite the
fact that Muslims do not even believe that Jesus was crucified in the first
place.
"In this regard, we can safely say that there is a prevalence of ignorance among
these leaders. What makes this ignorance even more dangerous is that the three
aforementioned leaders are often praised for bringing about an 'economic
renaissance' and sometimes a 'cultural renaissance.' Indeed, the first
government formed by Mahathir Mohamad in Malaysia (1981-7) witnessed rapid
industrialization and remarkable economic growth, to which he is credited. This
paved the way for the establishment of a highly impressive infrastructure for
his country. These accomplishments ensured Mahathir’s repeated return to power.
"Meanwhile, Imran Khan, ten years before his electoral victory in 2018,
established an institute for technology called Namal Institute, and in 2005,
this institute partnered with the University of Bradford in the UK. Under his
rule, Pakistan made a major leap as a business-friendly country. In 2019,
according to the World Bank’s classification, Pakistan was considered among the
top 10 countries in the world most responsive to economic reforms.
"Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan speaks during a press conference at the
United Nations Headquarters in New York on September 24, 2019. (AFP)
"Similarly, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose popularity is currently plunging[3] in
lockstep with Turkey's collapsing economy, had a very successful start. In 2003,
during his first years in power as prime minister, Turkey recovered from the
financial crisis it faced in 2001, negotiations to join the European Union were
accelerated and intensified, not no mention the massive investments he
encouraged in infrastructure reforms, including roads, airports, and high-speed
trains.
"How can we begin to justify this dualism, how do we explain the lack of
alignment between the positive outcomes accomplished by these leaders and their
recent ill-advised actions, and what do these leaders have in common? These
questions can be answered in two ways. Firstly, all three leaders are
neoliberals who have little interest in changing society and fostering new
convictions that strengthen relations between society members by establishing
rational and modern foundations.
"Secondly, aside from neoliberalism or any other Western ideological doctrine,
these three leaders are all Islamists, albeit to varying degrees. Their
Islamism, in this case, pushes them to adopt that old theory that says: ‘we can
import Western science and technology, yet we must reject their ideas.’
"The continuation of this theory says: ‘Science and technology are the key to
Western strength, and we must acquire this key by arming ourselves with science
and technology in order to win the fight and defeat the West.’
"If we combine these two justifications together, we can understand why Mahathir
Mohamad made his last statement regarding the terrorist acts committed in
France. He stated that ‘Muslims have a right to be angry and to kill millions of
French people for the massacres of the past.’
"In my opinion, we can clearly note that many Islamists have no qualms about
being close to the West, learning their sciences, importing their technology,
and even immigrating to their countries, yet at the same time, they remain
resolute in their refusal to adopt any Western beliefs and values. Recent crimes
can be attributed to these prevalent mindsets. As long as both sides continue to
believe that the other side seeks its destruction then this mutual animosity
will keep growing."
[1] English.alarabiya.com, November 8, 2020.
[2] Haaretz.com, November 1, 2020.
[3] English.alarabiya.net, November 3, 2020.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on November 16-17/2020
Trump Aide Promises 'Very Professional Transition' to
Biden
Associated Press/November 16/2020
President Donald Trump's national security adviser promised a "very professional
transition" to the administration of President-elect Joe Biden in an interview
broadcast Monday, even as Trump continues to falsely claim he won the November
election. Speaking to the Global Security Forum hosted in part by Qatar, Robert
O'Brien several times mentioned the transition and referred to recent peace
deals that Bahrain, Sudan and the United Arab Emirates struck with Israel as "a
great legacy for the president to have as he leaves office." While caveating
that Trump did have outstanding court challenges, O'Brien's comments signaled
some of the firmest statements yet from a senior administration official
acknowledging Biden's win in the Nov. 3 vote. "If the Biden-Harris ticket is
determined to be the winner -- obviously things look that way now -- we'll have
a very professional transition from the National Security Council. There's no
question about it," O'Brien said. "They're going to have very professional folks
coming in to take these positions." He added: "We've passed the baton and had
peaceful, successful transitions even in the most contentious periods."Since
losing, Trump has made unsubstantiated claims about the election on Twitter.
There is no evidence of widespread fraud in the vote. Officials from both the
Democratic and Republican parties have said the poll went well, as have
international observers. The federal Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security
Agency also says: "The November 3rd election was the most secure in American
history." O'Brien, Trump's fourth national security adviser, previously served
as his special envoy on hostage affairs. Asked about American journalist Austin
Tice, who disappeared covering Syria's civil war in 2012 and is believed to be
held by Damascus, O'Brien said the U.S. was using "every lever" to get him back
home. "We are using every tool, whether it's through allies, whether it's
through adversaries," O'Brien said. "We would like to get him back and I'd like
to see him him back and I know the president would like to see him back before
he leaves office." Syria has not acknowledged holding Tice. A top Lebanese
security official said Saturday that he visited Syria for two days to speak with
officials there about Tice. O'Brien also said he hoped to see Qatar Airways be
able to overfly boycotting Arab countries "in the next 70 days" before the end
of Trump's presidency amid a yearslong political dispute. However, there's been
no public sign of tensions easing between Doha and Bahrain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia
and the UAE.
Pompeo says Europe, US need to work together to address Turkey's Erdogan's
actions
Reuters/November 16/2020
The US administration and Europe need to work jointly on addressing actions led
by Turkey in the Middle East over the past few months, Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo told French daily newspaper Le Figaro. "France's president Emmanuel
Macron and I agree that Turkey's recent actions have been very aggressive,"
Pompeo said, citing Turkey's recent support to Azerbaijan in the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Armenia as well as military moves in Libya and
the Mediterranean. "Europe and the US must work together to convince Erdogan
such actions are not in the interest of his people," Pompeo said, referring to
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan. Pompeo said increased use of Turkey's military
capability was a concern, but he did not say whether the country, which hosts US
military forces at its Incirlik Air Base, should stay in or quit the North
Atlantic Alliance. Pompeo told Le Figaro the US administration had still work to
do to maintain pressure on Iran.
Bahrain foreign minister to make first visit to Israel this week
AFP/November 16/2020
Foreign Minister Abdellatif al-Zayani to make first visit by senior Bahraini
official to Israel since signing of the Abraham Accords.
Bahrain's Foreign Minister Abdellatif al-Zayani is to make a visit to Israel on
Wednesday, the first by a senior Bahraini official since the two countries
signed a normalization deal, official media said. The BNA news agency said the
visit would "affirm Bahrain's strong and permanent position in favor of
supporting the peace process" and be focused on "the economic opportunities and
bilateral accords with Israel". Bahrain and its Gulf neighbor, the United Arab
Emirates, both signed US-sponsored normalization accords with Israel on
September 15 at the White House. Israel and the UAE last month signed agreements
on visa-free travel, civil aviation, investment protection, and science and
technology during a first official Emirati visit to the Jewish state. The UAE
led the way in forging ties between the Gulf and Israel, announcing its decision
in August, before Bahrain followed suit a month later.
Trump National Security Adviser O'Brien Says Looks Now that
Biden Has Won
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
US President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, Robert O’Brien, said on
Monday he will ensure a professional transition to the team led by Democrat Joe
Biden if Biden is deemed the winner of the 2020 presidential election and
“obviously things look like that now.”The Republican Trump has insisted the Nov.
3 election was “rigged” and that he will be declared the winner after a series
of legal challenges in several states. Speaking to the Global Security Forum,
O’Brien said that while he hoped Trump would turn out to have won a second
four-year term, he would work with a new administration headed by Biden and his
vice presidential running mate, Kamala Harris. “If there is a new
administration, look, they deserve some time to come in and implement their
policies,” O’Brien said. “If the Biden-Harris ticket is determined to be the
winner, and obviously things look like that now, we’ll have a very professional
transition from the National Security Council, there’s no question about
it.”Trump has so far failed to produce evidence that could overturn Biden’s
306-232 victory over Trump in the state-by-state Electoral College vote. States
face a Dec. 8 “safe harbor” deadline to certify their elections and choose
electors who will officially select the new president on Dec. 14. O’Brien said
it appeared Biden was prepared to bring in a professional national security
team. “The great thing is this is the United States of America,” the national
security adviser said. “We passed the baton and have had peaceful, successful
transitions even in the most contentious periods.”
1 Hurt in Iranian Gas Station Blast, No Fatalities Reported
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
An explosion at a gas station in Iran's capital Tehran on Monday injured at
least one person, Iranian state media reported. "A fuel tanker caught fire while
unloading at the gas station at Pirouzi Street in Tehran," fire department
spokesman Jalal Maleki told state TV, adding that the fire had been contained.
"One person was injured and there were no casualties ... everything is under
control and the cause of the blast is being investigated."
Amnesty: Iran blacked out internet to hide ‘true
scale’ of 2019 killings
Arab News/November 16/2020
‘Security forces used lethal force unlawfully against the vast majority of
protesters and bystanders killed’
Regime’s war against freedom of speech ‘is a losing battle,’ Iranian journalist
tells Arab News
LONDON: One year since anti-regime protests rocked Iran, a new report by Amnesty
International has exposed how Tehran used a massive internet shutdown to hide
the “true scale of the unlawful killings by security forces.”The human rights
group on Monday said it had verified 304 people killed by security forces during
the November 2019 protests, 23 of them children, but it suspects the real number
is far higher. Tehran instigated a violent crackdown after demonstrations
against a huge increase in the price of fuel morphed into widespread protests
against the regime. One of the distinguishing features of the crackdown, Amnesty
said, was the implementation of an internet blackout that began on the deadliest
day of the protests as a way to “hide the killings.”Amnesty’s report said:
“Security forces used lethal force unlawfully against the vast majority of
protesters and bystanders killed, shooting most to the head or torso, indicating
intent to kill. To this day, no official has been held accountable for the
unlawful killings.”Mansoureh Mills, Iran researcher at Amnesty, told Arab News
that the internet blackout was “a calculated move to stop more than 80 million
people inside Iran from reaching the outside world and sharing information about
the human rights violations that were being perpetrated by the authorities.”He
said shutting down the internet for an extended period meant that protesters
removed recorded evidence of human rights abuses from their phones for fear that
it would be used against them if detained.
He added that people interviewed by Amnesty had deleted swathes of evidence
documenting human rights abuses for this reason. “Imagine all the video footage
that has been lost in this way because of the internet shutdown. All of the
evidence of crimes and serious human rights violations are gone forever,” said
Mills. He urged the international community to take action through the UN
against Tehran. “International accountability is the only way to ensure
non-repetition of what we know happened in November 2019, otherwise the Iranian
authorities will know that they can get away with killing unarmed men, women and
children under the cover of an internet shutdown,” he said. Sadeq Saba, an
editor at Persian-language media organization Iran International, told Arab News
that Tehran “is really scared of the internet and social media in general. They
can control traditional media and news in the country, but not what people say
online and the news coming in from outside the country, so they try to shut down
the whole thing.”The regime’s war against freedom of speech “is a losing battle.
Doing things like shutting down the internet may work for a while, but in the
end they just become more ridiculous in the eyes of the people,” he said.
“Shutting down the internet doesn’t solve anything. There are deep-rooted
problems in the Islamic Republic. The regime is a failure in every sense:
Ideologically, economically, politically and diplomatically. They want to run a
modern, 21st-century country with rules made in the Middle Ages. This is the
root of the problem,” Saba added. “Iranians are fed up with this regime. They’re
doing their best to fight the Islamic Republic, and they’ll continue to do so
whether their communications are restricted or not.”
Armenian Foreign Minister Resigns after Unpopular Karabakh
Ceasefire
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan resigned from his post on Monday
in a sign of political fall-out in the ex-Soviet republic after a ceasefire in
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict that locked in territorial gains for Azerbaijan.
Mnatsakanyan, whose departure was announced by the ministry’s spokeswoman on its
Facebook page, had held the position since May 2018. Prime Minister Nikol
Pashinyan’s government has faced a popular backlash over the ceasefire accord
that ended six weeks of fighting, with thousands of protesters last week
demanding he resign. On Monday, hundreds of protesters rallied in the capital
Yerevan’s central Freedom Square. The ceasefire signed by leaders of Armenia,
Azerbaijan and Russia on Nov. 10 halted military action in and around
Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan
but populated by ethnic Armenians. Some 2,000 Russian peacekeeping troops are
now being deployed to the region. Mnatsakanyan met Azeri counterpart Jeyhun
Bayramov three times in the past month and a half in search of a ceasefire
arrangement, but each effort quickly broke down. For over 25 years until
fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh resumed on Sept. 27, ethnic Armenians held
military control over the entire mountainous pocket and substantial swathes of
Azeri territory ringing it. But when the guns fell silent, they had lost much of
the enclave itself - including its second city Shushi, which Azeris call Shusha
- as well as adjoining terrain. Pashinyan said on Monday the war could have been
avoided if Armenia had voluntarily ceded control of seven regions surrounding
Nagorno-Karabakh as well as Shushi. “But we took up the challenge of war,” he
told a news conference. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Anna Naghdalyan wrote on
Facebook shortly afterwards that giving up Shushi was never on the agenda at any
stage of negotiations between the sides. Pashinyan said the road through the
Lachin region that connects Nagorno Karabakh with Armenian state territory would
be reopened later on Monday, and that many displaced residents of the enclave
were returning to their homes. Russian President Vladimir Putin held a phone
call with French counterpart Emmanuel Macron on Monday to discuss the situation
in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Kremlin said. The two leaders said the situation in the
South Caucasus region had generally stabilized and that it was time to address
humanitarian issues, including the return of refugees.
Iraq Hangs 21 on Terrorism Charges
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
Iraq hanged 21 convicted terrorists and murderers on Monday, an interior
ministry statement said, the latest in a series of mass executions it has
carried out since defeating the ISIS group in 2017. Among those executed at a
prison in the southern Iraqi city of Nassiriya were people involved in two
suicide attacks that killed dozens of people the northern town of Tal Afar, the
statement said. It gave no further details of the identities of the people who
were executed or the crimes for which they were convicted. Iraq has put hundreds
of suspected extremists on trial and carried out several mass executions since
defeating ISIS fighters in a 2014-2017 US-backed military campaign. Human rights
groups have accused Iraqi and other regional forces of inconsistencies in the
judicial process and flawed trials leading to unfair convictions. Iraq says its
trials are fair.
ISIS captured a third of Iraq in 2014 and was largely defeated both there and in
neighboring Syria over the following three years.
Barzani: Kurdistan Region Is Ready to Agree With Baghdad on
All Issues
Erbil- Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
The Iraqi Kurdistan Region President, Nechirvan Barzani, slammed on Sunday the
passage of an emergency spending bill by the Iraqi parliament without the
approval of Kurdish lawmakers, as political failure and an effort to “punish”
citizens of the autonomous region. He asserted the need to find an agreement to
help stabilize the situation in Iraq. On Thursday morning, Iraqi lawmakers
passed the law with a majority of its members in the absence of representatives
from the Kurdistan Region, who boycotted the session over disagreements about a
clause that Kurdish lawmakers described as “unfair” for the autonomous region’s
share of the federal budget. “We view this as a dangerous development,” Barzani
said during a press conference held after a meeting among top Kurdistan Region
officials. Barzani asked Iraqi politicians, rhetorically, “is the Kurdistan
Region part of Iraq or not? Are the region’s employees a part of Iraq’s
employees?”Barzani added that unresolved outstanding issues between Erbil and
Baghdad “will hamper stability in Iraq.” “Our message to Iraqi political forces
is that the Kurdistan Region is ready to agree with Baghdad on oil and all other
issues.”A previous deal between Baghdad and Erbil stipulated that the federal
government would send the regional government 320 billion Iraqi dinars for three
months. The president asserted that approving the bill “is in direct opposition
to all the principles on which we built Iraq after 2003.”“Iraq’s problems are
not dealt with in this way, even if some parties in the Iraqi parliament have
the power to pass such laws.”“We are ready to agree on all oil imports and all
the other files, and we will present all these facts to Parliament.”He noted
that a Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) delegation would visit Baghdad soon
for bilateral talks.
UN Envoy Criticizes Israel's Move to Expand Key Settlement
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
The UN's Mideast envoy on Monday said he was "very concerned" by Israel's
decision to advance construction in a Jewish settlement in east Jerusalem that
would make it even harder to establish a contiguous Palestinian state. The move
also risks angering the incoming US administration, which is opposed to
settlement expansion and hopes to revive negotiations over a two-state solution.
The Israel Land Authority announced on its website Sunday that it had opened up
tenders for more than 1,200 new homes in the settlement of Givat Hamatos,
according to the Israeli anti-settlement group Peace Now. "If built, it would
further consolidate a ring of settlements between Jerusalem and Bethlehem in the
occupied West Bank," Nickolay Mladenov, the UN envoy to the Middle East peace
process, said in a statement. "It would significantly damage prospects for a
future contiguous Palestinian State and for achieving a negotiated two-state
solution based on the 1967 lines, with Jerusalem as the capital of both states.
Settlement construction is illegal under international law and I call on the
authorities to reverse this step."The Palestinian Authority and the European
Union's foreign policy chief have also criticized the move. The Palestinians
want a future state that includes east Jerusalem and the West Bank, territories
occupied by Israel in the 1967 war, and view settlements as a major obstacle to
peace. With nearly 500,000 settlers now living in the West Bank, and over
220,000 more in east Jerusalem, the Palestinians say the chances of establishing
their state are quickly dwindling. Israel has long dismissed international
criticism of settlement activity, but the decision to move ahead with
construction at Givat Hamatos could harm relations with President-elect Joe
Biden, who has promised to take a more even-handed approach to the conflict.
President Donald Trump has given unprecedented support to Israel, including by
abandoning the decades-old US position that settlements are illegitimate. US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo plans to visit a Jewish settlement in the
occupied West Bank later this week in a stunning departure from his
predecessors, who frequently criticized settlement construction.
Syria's Foreign Minister Walid Moalem Dies
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
Syria’s top diplomat and long-time foreign minister, Walid al-Moalem, a staunch
defender of Syrian president Bashar Assad’s bloody crackdown on peaceful
protesters that sparked a decade old conflict, died on Monday, the government
said. There were no details on the cause of death, but the 79-year old had for
years been in poor health with heart problems. A source close to the Syrian
government said it was widely expected his deputy, veteran diplomat Faisal
Mekdad, would replace his as foreign minister. Moalem, who was first appointed
foreign minister in 2006 and was also a deputy prime minister, held a succession
of top diplomatic posts, including envoy to the United States and was involved
in unsuccessful negotiations with Israel in the 1990’s on a peace settlement.
“He was known for his honorable patriotic positions,” the government said in a
statement, adding he died at dawn and would be buried later on Monday in
Damascus. The veteran diplomat saw his country’s tilt further towards Iran and
Russia, which have helped shore up Assad’s rule and allowed the authoritarian
leader to regain most of the territory he once lost to opposition factions.
Moalem, from from Damascus, publicly defended Moscow and Iran’s growing military
role, backed by its proxies in Syria, which many Syrian opponents of Assad
labelled as an occupation and blamed for fueling sectarian tension in the
country. Syria erupted into war nearly a decade ago after Assad in 2011 began a
crackdown on protesters calling for an end to his family’s rule.
Moalem accused the United States and others in the West of fueling his country’s
unrest and labelled the opposition “terrorists” in a conflict that has killed
hundreds of thousands and led to the exodus of millions of refugees. The veteran
diplomat’s last statements attacked the Caesar Act - the toughest US sanctions
yet against Damascus which came into force last June, saying they were meant to
starve Syrians. He vowed that his country would get economic help from Iran and
Russia to soften its blow. Washington says the goal of the new sanctions is to
hold Damascus to account for war crimes and deter it from further pursuing the
war. The sanctions exempt humanitarian aid.
Fatah, Hamas Delegations in Cairo to Finalize Palestinian
Reconciliation Talks
Ramallah - Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 16 November, 2020
Delegations from the Hamas and Fatah movements arrived in Cairo on Sunday to
finalize Palestinian reconciliation discussions. The two delegations are looking
forward to reaching agreements on outstanding issues before President Mahmoud
Abbas issues a decree on setting dates for holding legislative and presidential
elections, informed sources told Asharq Al-Awsat. Hamas said on Sunday its
delegation, which is headed by deputy chief of its politburo Saleh al-Arouri,
wants to complete discussions and talks with Fatah on national reconciliation.
It underlined its insistence on ensuring the success of efforts to establish a
joint strategy for “struggle” that will include all Palestinian patriots to
confront challenges facing the Palestinian cause. The Hamas delegation also
includes bureau member Khalil al-Hayya. The Fatah delegation is headed by
Secretary-General of its Central Committee Jibril Rajoub and committee members
Rawhi Fattouh and Ahmed Halas. The meetings put an end to speculation that Fatah
was withdrawing from the reconciliation efforts in wake of Joe Biden’s victory
in the US election. Some reports had accused Abbas of pulling out from the talks
because he wanted to use the reconciliation to pressure the US and Israel by
forging an alliance with Hamas, which is designated as terrorist by Washington
and Tel Aviv, against the US peace proposal and Israeli annexation plan. Fatah
and Hamas had agreed in Istanbul in September to first hold the general
elections, then presidential polls, followed by the election of the Palestinian
Liberation Organization (PLO) national council, within six months.
Media Freedom Coalition ministerial communiqué
Canada/Ottawa/November 16/2020
We, the members of the Media Freedom Coalition, held our first ministerial-level
meeting on November 16, 2020, to exchange views and coordinate action in the
defence of media freedom worldwide.
The ministerial meeting took place as part of the second Global Conference for
Media Freedom, co-hosted by Canada and Botswana.
The Media Freedom Coalition is a partnership of countries working together to
advocate for and support media freedom, online as well as offline, and the
safety of journalists and media workers. The Coalition aims to promote
accountability for those who harm journalists and media workers or unduly
restrict them from doing their job.
All members have signed the Global Pledge on Media Freedom. As signatories, each
member has made the commitment to work together to improve media freedom and the
safety of journalists both at home and abroad.
We recalled that attacks on media freedom are also attacks on human rights,
including the right to freedom of expression enshrined in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, and international human rights treaties, including
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
We underlined that media freedom is essential to the protection of human rights
by making the facts about human rights violations and abuses public.
We further affirmed that a free media is the cornerstone of democracy. People
need free and independent media to provide them with accurate information,
facilitate informed public debate and discussion, hold governments accountable,
and serve as a watchdog for the public interest.
We underlined the link between media freedom and economic development and
prosperity, including the Agenda 2030 Sustainable Development Goals.
We expressed alarm at the continued decline in media freedom driven in part by
the rise of authoritarianism and the use of digital technologies to restrict
media freedom. This has resulted in, inter alia, unduly restrictive laws,
arbitrary and/or unlawful surveillance, censorship, undue interference in the
circulation of information online, and physical violence, exacerbated by
financial threats to media independence and sustainability.
We commended the crucial role played by journalists and media workers and paid
tribute to those who have lost their lives in the exercise of their profession.
Media Freedom Coalition ministers met in the midst of the unprecedented COVID-19
pandemic, which is affecting all parts of the world, imposing a tremendous cost
on societies, exacerbating pre-existing vulnerabilities, causing societal
changes, and further undermining media freedom.
We commended journalists and other media workers, including those reporting on
this health crisis. Their work serves to keep societies informed, to promote
proper health measures, and to counter false or misleading information.
We expressed concern at the efforts of some states to use the crisis as an
excuse to put in place undue restrictions on a free and independent media. We
also expressed concern that some states have undertaken pandemic-related
disinformation campaigns to undermine trust in democratic political systems and
their pandemic responses.
We urged governments to continue guaranteeing the freedom and independence of
the media and the safety of journalists and other media professionals, as well
as to refrain from imposing undue restrictions in the fight against COVID-19.
We recognized the worrying growth of threats against journalists, both online
and offline, that attempt to intimidate journalists and media organizations into
silence.
We condemned unequivocally all attacks and violence against journalists and
media workers, such as torture, extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances,
and arbitrary detention, as well as intimidation and harassment in both conflict
and non-conflict situations.
We urged governments to promote a safe and enabling environment for journalists
to perform their work without undue interference, including interference by
means of legislative measures, unlawful or arbitrary surveillance, enforcement
of excessive libel laws, and other measures that prevent journalists from
carrying out their work.
We recognized that impunity for attacks against journalists constitutes one of
the main challenges to strengthening the protection of journalists.
We called upon governments to do their utmost to prevent violence against
journalists and media workers, to ensure accountability through the conduct of
investigations into alleged violence against journalists within their
jurisdictions, to bring the perpetrators of such crimes to justice, and to
ensure that victims have access to appropriate remedies.
We underlined that human rights, including those involving media freedom, must
be protected online just as they are protected offline and acknowledged the
transformative role of digital technologies in supporting access to and the
dissemination of information and ideas.
We reaffirmed the responsibilities of intermediaries, such as social media
platforms and search engines, to respect human rights and defend media freedom,
given their effects on the exercise of the right to freedom of expression.
We expressed concern regarding measures taken by intermediaries to limit access
to or remove content online, including through automated processes, such as
algorithms, which have not been made transparent and the use of which may unduly
restrict access to information.
We expressed profound concern about and condemned the growing trend of
intentional, government-imposed Internet shutdowns, as well as targeted content
filtration and removal. Government-imposed network restrictions, whether partial
or complete, limit media freedom and the ability of journalists and human rights
defenders to report on human rights violations or abuses and hold governments
accountable.
We acknowledged the profound impact the use of artificial intelligence may have
on media freedom, including the potential for enhanced capacity for large-scale
unlawful and/or arbitrary surveillance of journalists and censorship of the
media, and the algorithmic curation of news without transparency or
accountability.
We expressed concern at laws, punitive legal measures and physical violence that
have restricted journalists’ and media organizations’ vital work, often under
the guise of addressing disinformation.
We expressed profound concern about the chilling effect on media freedom of the
proliferation of overly broad “fake news” laws and the rise in arrests and
detentions of journalists on the charge of “fake news.”
We expressed concern about the erosion of public trust, due to the proliferation
of misinformation and disinformation, interfering with the public’s need to
access information of public interest and value for democratic participation.
We stressed the need for potential solutions to disinformation to be rooted in
respect for human rights, freedom of expression, and democracy.
We commended initiatives by civil society to tackle the issue of access to
reliable information during infodemics, and we called on intermediaries,
including social media platforms, to be part of global efforts to protect media
freedom while respecting the key principles of transparency and respecting human
rights.
On the 25th anniversary of the Beijing Declaration and Platform of Action, we
recognized the imperative to undertake a gender-responsive approach to the
protection and promotion of media freedom and recalled the important role media
plays in shaping the public’s perception of women in society and the media’s
role in the advancement of gender equality.
We acknowledged the gender-specific risks faced by women journalists in the
exercise of their work, including sexual and gender-based violence, harassment,
online and offline attacks, stalking, and intimidation.
We underlined that the multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination,
intimidation, and violence against women journalists have a broader negative
effect on gender equality and women’s rights and empowerment by silencing the
voices of women, including their experiences and concerns.
A healthy information ecosystem depends on a free, independent, plural,
accessible, and diverse media. This includes diversity of representation, with
different lived experiences within media organizations themselves, acknowledging
the importance of intersectionality in promoting inclusion and respect for
diversity.
We therefore recognized the importance of representation in the media of groups
that have often themselves been the subject of multiple and intersecting forms
of discrimination and other human rights violations and abuses, including
members of racial, ethnic and religious minorities; persons with disabilities;
and lesbian, gay bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) persons.
We acknowledged the additional risks faced by journalists based on their sexual
orientation, gender identity or gender expression.
We recognized the unprecedented economic challenges facing media due to a
significant decline in advertisement revenue and the far-reaching effects of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
We expressed concern that these challenges may significantly affect the health
of the global information ecosystem by reducing the diversity of views
disseminated to the public and putting at risk the independence of the press,
with potentially corrosive effects on democratic governance. We welcomed the
launch of a new working group to address the issue of media sustainability by
the Forum on Information and Democracy.
Ministers discussed a range of policy options and best practices to strengthen
media freedom worldwide.
We called on members of the Media Freedom Coalition to consider:
providing safe refuge for journalists at risk who have been targeted for their
work
increasing coordination and investment in media development spending to support
media independence, accessibility, and sustainability
providing consistent and long-term support for building robust collaborative
national efforts addressing the safety of journalists and the issue of impunity
engaging in concerted advocacy as a vocal group committed to defending media
freedom
strengthening measures to foster an enabling legal environment for freedom of
expression, including for members of the media
seeking greater inclusion of the issue of the safety of journalists in the
processes of the relevant UN and regional human rights bodies
implementing gender-responsive measures to protecting the safety of journalists
that recognize and address the gender-specific risks faced by women and
intersecting marginalized groups, including racial, ethnic and religious
minorities, persons with disabilities, and persons in vulnerable situations,
including LGBTI persons
adopting and applying targeted sanctions against known perpetrators of human
rights violations and abuses in response to the repression of journalists and
restrictions on media freedom
condemning all attacks against journalists and countering the increasing
stigmatization and denigration of journalists by public officials
working with digital intermediaries, such as social media platforms, to promote
preventative measures against the misuse of their products in ways that unduly
restrict media freedom
exploring best practices to tackle the rise of infodemics and reflecting upon
the proposals made by the group of experts from the Forum on Information and
Democracy
We underscored the important role played by international and regional
organizations in the protection and promotion of media freedom, including the
UN, UNESCO, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, the Organization of
American States, the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, and the
Council of Europe.
We welcomed Belize and Botswana as the newest members of the Media Freedom
Coalition, expanding the ranks of those countries supporting the objectives of
media freedom.
We welcomed the ongoing work of the independent High Level Panel of Legal
Experts on Media Freedom to provide advice to governments to prevent and reverse
repression of media freedom.
We noted with appreciation the recommendations contained in the initial reports
of the High Level Legal Panel on the use of targeted sanctions to protect
journalists and on consular assistance.
We look forward to the publication of subsequent reports for our consideration
ahead of the next ministerial-level meeting of the Media Freedom Coalition.
We commended the work of the civil society Advisory Network of the Media Freedom
Coalition in providing expert counsel and in identifying cases of concern to be
addressed through diplomatic intervention.
We committed to strengthen the working methods of the Coalition to be more
responsive to cases of concern identified by the Advisory Network and other
members of the Coalition.
We welcomed the progress made by UNESCO in supporting initiatives through the
Global Media Defence Fund, including for grassroots organizations around the
world.
We welcomed the contributions of new donors to this fund, which will expand the
reach and sustainability of the fund.
We look forward to the next ministerial meeting of the Media Freedom Coalition,
in Estonia in 2021, to renew commitments and to discuss emerging threats and
opportunities.
We look forward to the World Press Freedom Conference, on December 9 and 10,
2020, in The Hague, organized by the Netherlands and UNESCO.
Afghanistan, Argentina, Austria, Botswana, Bulgaria, Canada, Costa Rica, Cyprus,
the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Ghana, Greece,
Honduras, Iceland, Japan, Kosovo, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Maldives,
Montenegro, the Netherlands, North Macedonia, Serbia, Seychelles, Slovakia,
Sudan, Switzerland, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, Uruguay, the United States
Ottawa/November 16, 2020
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 16-17/2020
Europe's Lax Security Aids Islamist Terrorists
Con Coughlin/Gatestone Institute/November 16/2020
"I expect an end to the misconceived tolerance, and for all the nations of
Europe to finally realise how dangerous the ideology of political Islam is for
our freedom and the European way of life." — Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz,
Die Welt, November 3, 2020.
"We see very clearly that terrorist actions can actually be led by some people
who use migratory flows to threaten our territory." — French President Emmanuel
Macron, Politico, November 5, 2020.
For once, the sudden upsurge in terror attacks appears to have prompted European
leaders to acknowledge the glaring deficiencies in their ability to protect
Europe against Islamist-inspired acts of terrorism.
The belated realisation by Europe's leaders about the inadequacies of their
ability to defend the continent from further acts of Islamist-inspired terrorism
is as welcome as it is long overdue. Pictured: Austrian Chancellor Sebastian
Kurz (left) and French President Emmanuel Macron attend a summit addressing an
EU-wide response to recent terror attacks.
The latest wave of Islamist-inspired terror attacks to strike Europe has yet
again exposed lamentable flaws in the ability of European security agencies to
provide adequate protection for their citizens. In all three instances -- the
attacks in Paris, Nice and Vienna -- it has emerged that those held responsible
for carrying out the attacks had links to global jihadi networks that went
undetected by European security officials. Moreover, the ease with which some of
those involved in the attacks were able to travel freely across the continent
has once more raised concerns about Europe's lax border controls as defined by
the European Union's Schengen Agreement, and the ability of radicalised jihadis
to exploit them. In the most recent attack in the Austrian capital Vienna on
November 2, it transpires that the 20-year-old gunman who killed four people and
wounded 22 others before he was himself shot dead by police had travelled to
neighbouring Slovakia in July to buy ammunition.
This was after the terrorist responsible for the atrocity, Kujtim Fejzulai, had
been released early from prison in December after serving two-thirds of a
22-month term for trying to join ISIS in Syria.
And while the Austrian interior ministry still contends that the gunman acted
alone, there are suspicions that he may have been in contact with extremists in
other parts of Austria and neighbouring Switzerland. And even though Fejzulai
was on a watch list by Austria's BVT counter-terrorism agency, this did not
prevent him from travelling to Slovakia to purchase ammunition.
Similar questions about the effectiveness of Europe's security forces have been
raised by the attack in Nice, France, where it now transpires that the terrorist
suspected of carrying out the murders had arrived by train from Italy, which he
had reached from Tunisia after being picked up by a humanitarian organisation in
the Mediterranean. Reports have also surfaced in France that the Chechen
terrorist responsible for murdering schoolteacher Samuel Paty, who was
decapitated outside his school in a Paris suburb last month after showing his
class two cartoons of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and discussing freedom of
expression, had been in contact with an Islamist fighter in Syria prior to
carrying out the attack.
France's Le Parisien newspaper has reported that, prior to the murder, Abdullakh
Anzorov made contact with an as yet unidentified Russian-speaking jihadist in
Syria, who was located through an IP address that had been traced back to Idlib,
a jihadist holdout in north-western Syria.
A French television station also reported that the killer, who arrived in France
aged six with his Chechen parents and had been granted asylum and a residence
permit until 2030, had first established contact with the jihadist in September
this year via Instagram.
In an audio message in Russian, Anzorov said after the killing he had "avenged
the prophet", whom Paty had portrayed "in an insulting way". Amid references to
the Qur'an and Islamic State, he added: "Brothers, pray that Allah accepts me as
a martyr."
French security officials have subsequently embarked on a nationwide round-up of
suspected Muslim extremists, with French President Emmanuel Macron ordering the
closure of a Paris mosque said to have links with the Palestinian terror group
Hamas. Mr Macron said French security officials believed that the Cheikh Yassine
Collective, named after a slain Hamas leader, was to be dissolved because the
French authorities had information that the group was "directly implicated" in
the attack.
For once, the sudden upsurge in terror attacks appears to have prompted European
leaders to acknowledge the glaring deficiencies in their ability to protect
Europe against Islamist-inspired acts of terrorism.
In Austria, Chancellor Sebastian Kurz has called on Europe to form a common
front in what he calls a "war on Islamism", and says he will push for such an
alliance against political Islam when European Leaders meet for a summit later
this month.
Speaking to the German newspaper Die Welt, Mr Kurz commented:
"I expect an end to the misconceived tolerance, and for all the nations of
Europe to finally realise how dangerous the ideology of political Islam is for
our freedom and the European way of life."
In France, Mr Macron has responded to the attacks on French soil by calling for
a "deep overhaul" of the Schengen agreement. Appearing alongside his Europe and
Interior Ministers this week, the French President committed France to double
the number of guards at its national borders from 2,400 to 4,800 due to the
rampant terror threat. "We see very clearly that terrorist actions can actually
be led by some people who use migratory flows to threaten our territory," he
said. The belated realisation by Europe's leaders about the inadequacies of
their ability to defend the continent from further acts of Islamist-inspired
terrorism is as welcome as it is long overdue. For, without tighter controls and
monitoring, security officials will struggle to prevent further acts of
Islamist-inspired carnage from taking place on the streets of Europe.
*Con Coughlin is the Telegraph's Defence and Foreign Affairs Editor and a
Distinguished Senior Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 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.
The Americans Have Their Elections, and We Our Interests
Sam Menassa/Asharq Al-Awsat/November, 16/2020
The US elections have never taken this route, alien to Western democracies in
general, nor have US elections ever garnered so much internal and external
interest.
US internal unrest and unprecedented polarization have become so extreme that
doubts have been raised about the elections’ integrity and institutions’
legitimacy. At the same time, some are skeptical that the transition of power
will be peaceful. All of this has made many states reluctant to congratulate
President-Elect Joe Biden. Foremost among them Russia, with Vladimir Putin
following the vote-counting process and election results meticulously. Russia is
followed by China, whose congratulations were around a week late, indicating
that it is not excited about a Democrat succeeding Donald Trump.
No one denies that this chaos demonstrated the flaws in the US electoral system
and process and destabilized democratic practice at large in the world’s most
powerful country, especially at the level of the ruling elites. Indeed, the
political debate on social media reminds observers of that seen in the third
world and undemocratic states. Does this mean that the US will become turbulent,
unstable, and rife with internal strife? The answer is no, because no matter how
sharp the attacks on the US democratic process become, it nonetheless remains
stronger than we think. It is capable of healing itself, and this is what we are
witnessing today as votes are recounted.
Most of the electoral analyses which examine demographic, racial, and ethnic
voting patterns demonstrate that what had been said about a split in US society
along these lines, racially between whites and blacks, or, ethnically, over
immigration, is not accurate. The split is partisan and political, not more and
not less. President Donald Trump’s character and his untraditional behavior have
perhaps made its acuteness more apparent. What was said about a civil war is a
joke; the protests, like the celebrations, were peaceful and did not exceed the
bounds that we are used to seeing in the US, despite the armed marches we saw in
particular places. We will likely see power peacefully transferred to the
president-elect, but not in accordance with the traditions and principles abided
by throughout US history and not with the smoothness that presidents’ mandates
have begun and ended over the past 250 years.
Perhaps, it is best for us Arabs to leave US issues to Americans. Those among us
betting on the lawsuits, appeals, and chaos they are heralding would be better
off if they distanced themselves. Let us focus on the steps needed to deal with
the forthcoming changes in the US and US behavior towards the Middle East and
issues that concern us as Arab states considered allies or friends of
Washington.
We already know the contours of the newly elected Democrat administration’s
policies, and the president-elect has elaborated on them during his electoral
campaign and the few days after being elected. In advance, we can say that his
foreign policy will not be an exact copy of that of his Democrat predecessor
Barack Obama, because the world, in its West and East, has changed significantly
over the past four years, whereby it would not be an exaggeration to say that if
Obama returned to power he would change his policies. Our region is not exempt
from this change, and much new input has to be factored into the regional
equation. The legacy of the obdurate nationalist discourse is no longer useful,
and it has become essential that we become aware that cooperation and
partnership do not imply dependence, dissolution, or congruence.
We say all of this out of a concern that Arab states grasp the new
administration’s approach and how they will alter their policies and stances
towards the most central dilemmas they face, which can be summed to five: Iran’s
role in the region and its expansionist interventionist policy, the ongoing wars
in Syria and Yemen, the battle against terrorism and extremism, the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the processes of normalizing relations with
Israel.
At this stage, before the president-elect is sworn into office on January 20,
the Arabs need to crystalize their positions on these issues and their vision
for how to deal with them. Firstly, they must determine their policies and
secondly, they must decide on their demands of the new administration.
Clarifying stances starts with reaching a joint Arab vision on such issues.
Unfortunately, the impossibility of reaching a unified Arab position is more
apparent today than it had ever been in the past. For this reason, the immense
burden for forming a path that determines policies falls on Washington’s friends
and allies, especially the Gulf states. In this context, it must be pointed out
that working with the president-elect’s team, at this stage, is more important
than working with the president-elect himself, and that briefing the next
president’s team is a pressing task for the Arab states.
Regarding the Iran dilemma, we must make it clear that we seek healthy and
peaceful relations with the Iranian regime and are therefore not absolutely
opposed to potential US-Iranian settlements. Our concern is that such agreement
are not reached at the expense of our security and identity, that they do not
lead to our societies’ disintegration by provoking sectarian and minoritarian
strife through the actions of its proxies tasked with establishing statelets
within states.
On the issue of the wars in Syria, Yemen, and Libya, we must stress the urgency
of putting an end to the failed states phenomenon because of its disastrous
political, security, and humanitarian repercussions on the whole world. We
should also emphasize the importance of curbing the ambitions of regional and
international players, shrinking their swollen influence to their natural size,
as well as expressing our intention to enter the club of democratic countries.
As for terrorism, extremism, and militant political Islam, total clarity has
become pressing. Just like Washington, decades later, has come to realize that
there is no distinction between Sunni and Shiite terrorism, on our part, we also
have to realize that terrorism, in all its forms, is terrorism, and extremism is
extremism. The Arab position on this issue must be crystal clear, and we must
abandon the customary addition of an exculpatory “but” and the weak arguments
that follow it. Concerning the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the issue of the
two-state solution, the Gulf states and other US-allies Arab states, such as
Egypt and Jordan, must pressure the Americans into adopting a balanced and fair
political position. This is especially pertinent today after the normalization
process began. We are aware that Washington will not abandon Israel’s security
and interests. Nonetheless, we must push it to take Arab interests into account,
especially those of the Palestinians.
Just as crucial as determining what we want from the US is forming a clear
vision of what we, as Arab states, can do to help solve some of these dilemmas,
as some of them are beyond our capacities, such as the Iranian nuclear issue and
the Palestinian question. We can also contribute to resolving other critical
issues that are of mutual concern, besides those that concern us directly,
especially issues related to the climate, environment, water, and
desertification.
We will not be able to define what we want from America and what we can offer to
solve the regions’ problems unless rational and pragmatic Arab voices are loud
and clear in Washington’s decision-making circles. They must express a clear
vision of what is to be done to build a new partnership. We can’t just sit back
and wait for the presidential election results to be declared. What is required,
to repeat, is that we leave for the Americans to deal with their alone and work
on solidifying an Arab position and influencing American policy. We should not
allow it to use our differences, which it knows very well, against us, which it
does very well.
The World Awaits the Policeman
Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al-Awsat/November, 16/2020
The man knows about America. He knows a number of those who took over the White
House, the State Department, and the Defense office. He knows Americans and
worked closely with them. He does not need to be reminded of the ability of US
administrations to commit colossal and costly mistakes. He understands that
America belongs to another world, which often finds it difficult to perceive the
size of the dormant revolutions in our history and the scale of obstacles that
block our aspirations to the future.
The man criticizes US policies in more than one area, but he later concludes
that the world needs a captain or a policeman and that America is the only
qualified power to assume such a role.
China is not yet qualified to play the role of the captain or policeman. Its
recent rise is both impressive and disturbing. It replaced Japan by becoming the
world’s second economy and now threatens to steal the first position from
America, perhaps in a decade or less. China has made an economic miracle and
tampered with Mao Zedong’s commandments; yet, it maintained absolute control of
the Communist Party over every aspect of life. The party is a huge network of
nearly eighty million people. It represents a means of perpetuity for any
repression in the eyes of its opponents. This is why Donald Trump regarded the
Chinese Communist Party as the first enemy; a position previously occupied by
the Soviet Union.
Russia is also not qualified to play the role of the policeman, except in
certain parts of the world. From the Soviet system, the Russian machine
inherited an extraordinary capacity for disinformation. But the facts indicate
that Russia’s current powers are not as strong as the Soviet weight that was
more able to obstruct than to take over leadership. There are those who believe
that the Syrian experience itself shows the limits of Russian power. After years
of engagement, Syria is still an arena for wars and interventions.
Saving the regime is an important step for Russia, but the recent conference on
the displaced revealed the weakness of Moscow’s capabilities and its failure to
rally international and regional support to crown its military intervention in a
reconstruction process that would facilitate the return of the refugees.
Europe is out of the race to lead the world. At best, it can play an auxiliary
role to the policeman, but cannot assume a mission of such magnitude. Europe has
really aged in the absence of wars. It became addicted to security, prosperity,
safety, and an almost carefree life. The Old Continent is no longer willing nor
able to pay the price of changing the world.
The French-German locomotive will get weaker with Merkel’s departure in the
coming year. Britain has turned into a soloist and may soon realize that it has
lost the European orchestra without winning a love contract with a post-Trump
America.
The task of the policeman cannot be assigned to the Secretary-General of the
United Nations. The matter has nothing to do with his name or his country.
Security Council decisions remain unimplemented if they are not backed by
powerful members, with the White House at their forefront.
Nuri al-Mismari, Muammar Gaddafi’s protocol chief and shadow, once told me a
very expressive story.
Kofi Annan came to Libya to speak about the Lockerbie bombing. The Libyan leader
decided to intimidate him. He asked that they bring the visitor at night and
turn off the lights in the area except for the tent. The tent was set up 200
meters away from the coastal road, but the instructions were to do a long detour
before arriving at the camp.
Annan felt scared, especially when he heard the grunting of the camels. He asked
Mismari if this was the roar of lions and the latter reassured him and noticed
that his face went white with fear. Gaddafi ordered that Annan be taken back
along the same road.
Hosni Mubarak was taken to the same road, which upset him greatly. He vowed
never to return to Libya if he would be taken to the desert.
However, the US power alone was able to force Gaddafi to search for a solution
to the Lockerbie crisis and to stop sending explosives by land, sea, and air.
The colonel was scared when the American policeman sent his warplanes to bomb
his headquarters in the Bab al-Aziziyah barracks. Later, he panicked when he
felt that his fate might be similar to that of Saddam Hussein.
The world cannot sail without a captain. The world always needs a policeman. It
is true that a policeman may commit mistakes and sins, but the price of his
absence is greater than that of carrying out his role. The policeman is an
international and regional need, as long as he always seeks to downsize his role
by highlighting the strength of the United Nations and stressing the need for
the playing field to accommodate more than one player.
World leadership is essential in front of great problems. Only a policeman the
size of the United States can reassure countries that are trembling with fear of
the Chinese dragon. Only a policeman of this type can prevent the Red Army from
cutting off parts of the European mold. The same is true for deterring regional
wolves and pushing them to think well before they destroy the surrounding maps
and tear them apart with militias and mercenaries.
Leading the battle against pandemics also needs a policeman, who can participate
in a collective tango in which responsibilities and roles are divided. America
is a must, says the man who knows it. But you must know it well and learn the
language of interests, roles, and the complexities of decision-making.
It is true that Joe Biden is not a hawk and advocate of war, but America is
obligated to a certain degree to assume the role of policeman, even if it
refrains from using its armies and fleets.
The policeman can use the weapons of economics, diplomacy, and impressive
military maneuvers.
While waiting for the US election battles to subside, the world is asking when
the US policeman will resume his role. Trump used the weapon of sanctions. Every
boss has his own style. A new policeman in a different world.
A Preview of Biden's Foreign Policy
James Stavridis/Bloomberg/November, 16/2020
I got to know Joe Biden when I was a combatant commander for the Barack Obama
administration, first at the US Southern Command and then most deeply in my four
years at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Once, at a dinner hosted by
America’s NATO ambassador in Brussels, I watched the then-vice president meet
with ambassadors and foreign ministers from the 27 other nations then in the
alliance.
Biden walked around the large table and was able to comment in depth on any
number of the countries, from huge Germany to tiny Iceland, with a short
vignette about a visit to this or that city, or a telling anecdote concerning a
head of state, or a comment on current policy. This was not the result of
memorized crib sheets from his staff: Biden did it off the top of his head, and
it was a natural and unforced demonstration of his long term of service not just
domestically, but also in the larger world.
While the 2020 election campaign understandably focused on domestic issues,
Biden is a former chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and
reinforcing America’s geopolitical primacy will be high on his agenda.
He will bring a deeply experienced team of foreign and security policy advisers
with him into government, many veterans of the Obama administration. Having
worked alongside nearly all of them, I would say this might be the deepest
initial bench any president has brought to the White House in the post-Vietnam
era. Among them: Nicholas Burns, William Burns and Tony Blinken held top jobs at
the State Department; Avril Haines and Michael Morell similarly helped guide the
CIA; Michele Flournoy, Lisa Monaco and Jeh Johnson filled senior roles involving
defense and homeland security; Susan Rice was ambassador to the United Nations
and national security adviser.
Whether all of these serious players will take on official roles remains to be
seen, but it is a very good start. And a real strength of a Biden foreign policy
team would likely be stability. Donald Trump has had four national security
advisers in as many years. Look for members of a Biden team to have long terms.
As we begin to contemplate the Joe Biden approach to the world, it is worth
examining the similarities and differences with the outgoing Trump
administration. It may come as a surprise, but many aspects of foreign and
security policy will likely continue on their current trajectory, albeit with
different style and grace notes. Biden has signaled that he intends to take a
relatively tough stance on China, for example. This will include continuing to
address the pre-Covid basket of challenges the US has with Beijing: claims of
territoriality and construction of artificial islands in the South China Sea;
trade and tariff imbalances; intellectual property theft; and shadowy conflicts
in cybersecurity.
There will also be continuing pressure on various terrorist groups, including
al-Qaeda, the so-called ISIS, and Al Shabaab in East Africa. Likewise with
economic and diplomatic pressure on the corrupt Nicolas Maduro regime in
Venezuela. And the general idea of bringing home troops from “the forever wars”
is likely, albeit at a more measured pace based on conditions on the ground. But
the differences are going to be far more pronounced than the similarities. At
the top of the list will be an immediate (and sensible) return to the Paris
Climate Accords, moving the US back into a leadership role in international
environmental efforts. This is a potential zone of cooperation with China that I
suspect will be explored seriously. This more collegial global effort in climate
will lay alongside a generally higher appreciation for cooperation with other
international organizations: the World Health Organization and other United
Nations entities; regional groups such as the Organization of American States
and Association of Southeast Asian Nations; and, dear to my heart, NATO.
Similarly, this team will be more inclined to invest in treaties as tools to
help shape the world in ways that help US objectives. At the top of the list
will be a new strategic arms limitation agreement with Russia, to replace the
expiring New START pact, and perhaps over time with China. Russia has signaled a
willingness to hammer out an accord.
A Biden administration will also consider revisiting the intermediate-range
nuclear forces treaty, which was abandoned by the Trump administration; the open
skies agreement for nuclear weapons verification; and possibly the Iranian
nuclear deal. All of this will signal a return to classic diplomacy.
I am being asked often about the defense budget under President Biden. Despite
some calls from the left wing of the Democratic Party to slash defense deeply, I
suspect the dollar amount will stay flat or drop by a percentage or two.
There will, however, be a realignment within that budget to emphasize
21st-century tools of warfare: cybersecurity; unmanned vehicles (not just aerial
drones, but also satellites, unmanned submarines, and surface ships); Special
Forces; hypersonic weapons; and artificial intelligence. This will come at the
expense, probably, of troop levels and some number of very expensive large
platforms (aircraft carriers and Army brigade combat teams). Modernization of
the nation’s nuclear arsenal, begun under Obama, may be put on hold.
In terms of individual nations, the degree of similarity and difference between
Trump and Biden will vary. Iran should expect a return to negotiations, but not
to the exact previous nuclear deal. North Korea may find a willingness to
consider creative solutions, such as allowing it some number of nuclear weapons
but with restrictions and inspections on delivery systems.
Moderna says its vaccine is 94.5 per cent effective in
preventing Covid-19
Paul Carey/The National/November 16/2020
Vaccine hope as company says its shots provide strong protection.
US biotech company Moderna gave new hope for an effective weapon against
Covid-19 on Monday by announcing its experimental vaccine was 94.5 per cent
effective in preventing the virus.
Moderna is the second US company to report results that far exceed expectations.
A week ago, competitor Pfizer announced its own Covid-19 vaccine appeared
similarly effective – news that puts both companies on track to seek permission
within weeks for emergency use in the US.
Moderna hailed its Covid-19 vaccine as a potential “game changer”.
"We are going to have a vaccine that can stop Covid-19,” said Dr Stephen Hoge,
Moderna’s president. He welcomed the “really important milestone” but said
having similar results from two different companies is what is most reassuring.
“That should give us all hope that actually a vaccine is going to be able to
stop this pandemic and hopefully get us back to our lives,” Dr Hoge said.
“It won’t be Moderna alone that solves this problem. It’s going to require many
vaccines” to meet the global demand, he said.
Stéphane Bancel, Moderna's chief executive, said: “This is a pivotal moment in
the development of our Covid-19 vaccine candidate. Since early January, we have
chased this virus with the intent to protect as many people around the world as
possible. All along, we have known that each day matters. This positive interim
analysis from our Phase 3 study has given us the first clinical validation that
our vaccine can prevent Covid-19 disease, including severe disease.”
Both the Pfizer and Moderna shots rely on a technology called messenger RNA that
has never been used to build an approved vaccine. Soon, millions of people
around the world could be spared from the illness by the breakthroughs.
A preliminary analysis of data from more than 30,000 volunteers showed Moderna’s
vaccine prevented virtually all symptomatic cases of Covid-19, the disease
caused by the coronavirus, the company said.
A key advantage of Moderna's vaccine is that it does not need ultra-cold storage
like Pfizer's, making it easier to distribute.Moderna expects it to be stable at
normal fridge temperatures of 2°C to 8°C for 30 days and it can be stored for up
to six months at minus 20°C. Pfizer's vaccine must be shipped and stored at
minus 70°C, the sort of temperature typical of an Antarctic winter. It can be
stored for up to five days at standard refrigerator temperatures or for up to 15
days in a thermal shipping box.
Moderna, part of the US government's Operation Warp Speed programme, expects to
produce about 20 million doses of the vaccine for the US this year, millions of
which the company has already made, and is ready to ship if it receives FDA
authorisation.
"Assuming we get an emergency use authorisation, we'll be ready to ship through
Warp Speed almost in hours," Dr Hoge said. "So it could start being distributed
instantly."The UK government has committed to buying 5 million vaccines, which
is enough for 2.5 million people.
Hajj inspiration
Lebanese-American virologist Hadi Yassine played a pivotal role in the
development of the vaccine.
He fell ill in 2013 after completing the hajj pilgrimage to Makkah.
The breakneck speed at which the US team was able to roll out a vaccine
candidate – the shot was given to the first volunteer during trials after just
63 days – is down to groundbreaking work that the US National Institutes of
Health did in 2013 with Dr Yassine and the common coronavirus that returned with
him from Makkah. The team worked on Sars and Mers before turning their attention
to other coronaviruses. The work done by the NIH in 2013 through to 2017 has
directly informed the progress that the institutes have made on pandemic
preparedness in the run-up to the coronavirus outbreak.
Dr Yassine’s discovery has not only led to the lightning-fast roll-out of the
Moderna vaccine trials but is also the science behind about half the other
vaccine candidates now in the race to stop Covid-19.
Shares quadruple
Moderna's shares, which have more than quadrupled this year, rose 15 per cent in
premarket trading while European stocks and Wall Street stock futures jumped on
the vaccine update. The benchmark S&P 500 futures rose 1.3 per cent, stopping
just short of a new record high, while the pan-European STOXX 600 hit
late-February highs.
"Just as their initial dose of vaccine bullishness appeared to be waning, the
markets got another injection of good news this Monday," said Spreadex analyst
Connor Campbell. "One-upping BioNTech and Pfizer, Moderna has claimed its
preparation is nearly '95 percent effective' after a trial involving 30,000
Americans. "As with Pfizer, there is still a way to go before Moderna's vaccine
is approved. However, investors were only thinking about the long term, flashing
forward to the end of this nightmare."
World oil prices soared by more than 3.5 per cent as the Moderna news stoked
hopes of a recovery in energy demand.
Only five participants who received two doses of the vaccine became ill,
compared with 90 coronavirus cases in participants who received a placebo,
according to a review by an independent data safety monitoring board appointed
by the US National Institutes of Health.
The vaccine also appeared to be effective in preventing the most serious
Covid-19 infections. There were no severe cases among people who got the
vaccine, compared with 11 in volunteers who received placebo shots, according to
Moderna.
Volunteers vaccinated
If the US Food and Drug Administration allows emergency use of Moderna’s or
Pfizer’s candidates, there will be limited, rationed supplies before the end of
the year. Both require people to get two shots, several weeks apart. Moderna
expects to have about 20 million doses, earmarked for the US, by the end of
2020. Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech expect to have about 50 million
doses globally by the year’s end.
Sheikh Abdullah bin Mohammed Al Hamed, chairman of the Department of Health Abu
Dhabi, receives a vaccine during a clinical trial for the third phase of the
inactive vaccine for Covid-19. Courtesy Wam.
Moderna’s vaccine, created with the National Institutes of Health, is being
studied in 30,000 volunteers who received either the real vaccination or a
placebo.
The study is continuing, and Moderna acknowledged the protection rate might
change as more Covid-19 infections are detected and added to the calculations.
Also, it is too soon to know how long protection lasts. Both cautions apply to
Pfizer’s vaccine as well.
But Moderna’s independent monitors reported some additional, promising details:
all 11 severe Covid-19 cases were among placebo recipients, and there were no
significant safety concerns.
The main side effects were fatigue, muscle aches and injection-site pain after
the vaccine’s second dose, at rates that Mr Hoge characterised as more common
than with flu shots, but on par with others such as the shingles vaccine.
Andrew Hill, senior visiting research fellow in the department of pharmacology
at the University of Liverpool, said: "This vaccine would be much easier to
transport and administer than the one from Pfizer. Also the preliminary evidence
suggests that it can prevent severe Covid-19 disease.
A patient is transported outside of Tisch Hospital in New York, US. AFP
However, the Moderna vaccine is more expensive and there are fewer doses
available in the next year. No vaccine company has enough supplies available to
protect everyone in need. We will need all the available vaccines with over 90
per cent efficacy to cover global demand."
Stephen Evans, professor of pharmacoepidemiology at the London School of Hygiene
and Tropical Medicine, said: "This announcement is a further encouragement that
vaccines will be found to not only have an acceptable efficacy, but an efficacy
that is much greater than we had anticipated.
"The range of minor adverse effects reported are unsurprising and typical of
almost any vaccine. These reactions tend to be local to where the injection was
given and are rarely long-lasting or severe.
"Although they reported efficacy being over 94 per cent, there is statistical
uncertainty in this; but based on these data, the likely efficacy will be better
than 85 per cent, which would be greater than most scientists would have
expected."
Europe testing
The US’s top infectious disease expert said the news “is really quite
impressive”.
Dr Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, said that Moderna’s finding, along with similar results from Pfizer
last week, “is something that foretells an impact on this outbreak”.
“So now we have two vaccines that are really quite effective, so I think this is
a really strong step forward to where we want to be about getting control with
this outbreak,” Dr Fauci said.
Eleanor Riley, professor of immunology and infectious disease at the University
of Edinburgh, said: "It is likely that vaccines that prevent symptomatic disease
will reduce the duration and level of infectiousness, and thus reduce
transmission, but we don't yet know if this effect will be large enough to make
any meaningful difference to the spread of the virus within communities."
Europe's health regulator said on Monday it had launched a real-time "rolling
review" of Moderna's vaccine, following similar reviews of vaccines from Pfizer
and AstraZeneca.
Iran ponders how to deal with new US president
Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab News/November 16/2020
Over recent months, Iran has, at least publicly, pursued a wait-and-see policy
regarding the outcome of the US presidential election.
The choice was between either a second term for President Donald Trump — which
Tehran did not even want to think of — or a triumph for Joe Biden, the vice
president under Barack Obama, during whose tenure relations between Washington
and Tehran improved, stopping just short of full normalization, which had a
significantly positive impact on the Iranian regime.
Now, the vision is substantially clearer. Democrat Biden has been unofficially
declared the winner of this month’s vote. However, President Trump continues to
contest the result of the election.
Official statements coming out of Iran have been consistent with the narrative
of the supreme leader. According to the official narrative, Iran’s regime is not
interested in the outcome of the US election, which it insists is an internal
American affair. The Iranian regime has also reiterated there is no difference,
from their viewpoint, between Trump and Biden, although some officials,
including ambassador to London Hamid Baeidinejad, have publicly celebrated
Trump’s defeat, deeming this a triumph for Iran and a blow to its enemies.
Despite this official narrative, most Iranian newspapers extensively discussed
the US election on their front pages. This curiosity was in stark contrast to
the official narrative, which attempted to suggest apathy and indifference
toward the vote and the outcome.
This attention paid to the election by the Iranian state-approved press, which
publishes nothing without the regime’s approval, shows that, despite Tehran’s
official narrative, it had in fact been eagerly awaiting the end of President
Trump’s term of office and the Democratic Party’s return to power. It should
also be remembered that the new president-elect, as Obama’s former vice
president, has access to many details of the Iran-US negotiations that took
place between 2013 and the end of Obama’s time in the White House.
Despite the Iranian regime’s claim that there is no difference between the two
US parties, Foreign Minister Javad Zarif has in the past said that he and Biden
maintain a strong friendship. Besides, since the preliminary results of the US
election began to emerge, the price of gold in Iran declined and the Iranian
currency restored some of its value against foreign currencies. These two
economic indicators confirm that the US election impacted Iran more than any
other country.
After Biden was declared the winner, Abbas Mousavi, a former spokesman for the
Iranian Foreign Ministry and Iran’s current ambassador to Azerbaijan, posted on
Twitter: “Just as Iran saw no difference between Carter and Reagan, Clinton and
Bush and between Obama and Trump, the status quo does not represent any
difference for Iran either. It is likely that Joe Biden will possibly be the
same as his predecessors. But Iran should have its own Joe Biden and reach the
peak of pride via the mixture of belief, vigor and zeal.” Mousavi was
subsequently prompted to delete this tweet due to vast criticism, along with the
mockery, derision and condemnation of such a tweet being posted by someone who
is supposedly a high-ranking Iranian diplomat.
Despite the varying forecasts about how Iran will deal with President-elect
Biden, there is no doubt there are divergent viewpoints in Iran regarding the
best mechanism to pursue. President Hassan Rouhani’s government believes it is
necessary to open early channels of communication with Biden, making some gains
at home for the so-called reformist/moderate movement before the end of
Rouhani’s presidential term. Meanwhile, the fundamentalists want to wait until
Biden’s position on Iran becomes clearer, rather than rushing to embrace him —
although such a policy could be potentially damaging for Iran’s hopes of making
greater gains. One should not rule out the possibility that the Iranian regime
will attempt to test the red lines set by the new president.
In addition to their stance on Biden, the fundamentalists also seek to weaken
their opponents domestically with the aim of taking complete control of the
state’s institutions. This difference between the reformists/moderates and the
fundamentalists is solely related to Iranian domestic policy, since foreign
policy and security-related issues rest wholly with Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
I believe Khamenei’s position is closer to that of the fundamentalists than the
position adopted by Rouhani’s moderate government and the political blocs
backing it.
One should not rule out the possibility that the Iranian regime will attempt to
test the red lines set by the new president, especially when it comes to
Tehran’s regional behavior and support for terrorist and sectarian militias and
groups in Iraq, Lebanon and Yemen. Iran will no doubt continue to provide covert
support for such groups, awaiting a response from the US.
In the period before the new US administration takes any decisions on the
country’s unilateral sanctions on Tehran — such as on the sale of oil and
petrochemical derivatives or on the Iranian financial and banking sectors — Iran
will continue to circumvent them. The regime will seek to gauge the seriousness
of the new US administration’s approach to implementing these sanctions before
arriving at the phase of negotiations between Washington and Tehran.
Moreover, Tehran will continue its relations with the European countries that
are supportive of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action in an effort to
convince the new US administration to immediately return to the 2015 nuclear
deal and lift the unilateral American sanctions. Tehran could raise the level of
its demands by seeking to obtain compensation from Washington for the damage it
incurred following the US’ unilateral withdrawal from the nuclear deal. Tehran
is fully aware that obtaining compensation from the US would be virtually
impossible, but issuing such a demand would strengthen its negotiating position
and prove a face-saving exercise with the public at home. To conclude, Iran is
totally convinced that reversing the consequences of the Trump administration’s
policies in the region will be extremely difficult. Also, the change in the
political scene in the region, with some Arab countries normalizing relations
with Israel, is not in the interest of the Iranian regime’s expansionist
project. The increased awareness of the Arab region’s peoples, especially the
Shiite communities in Iraq and Lebanon, and their negative position toward Iran
may force Tehran to reconsider the wisdom of retaining some of its previous
gains, at least until it restores its prestige and reshapes its image at home
and overseas. Despite all the aforementioned points, however, Tehran will not
cease its efforts and will continue knocking on various doors as it seeks to
achieve some of its objectives, or at least alleviate the economic and political
pressures from which it is currently suffering. If Iran truly wishes peace and
good ties with its Arab neighbors, it should abandon its worn-out, repetitive
and tedious narrative linking the positions of the region’s countries with those
of the US and other powers.
The problem with Iran lies in its hostile behavior toward its neighbors, its
support for sectarian militias and terrorism, and how it conceals this policy
behind deceptive statements that oppose the reality on the ground. If Iran
continues to pursue its current approach, which the region’s countries know all
too well and have become all too familiar with due to Tehran’s endless
repetition, the problem will remain unresolved regardless of who sits in the
White House.
• Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami is Head of the International Institute for Iranian
Studies (Rasanah). Twitter: @mohalsulami