English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For November 24/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.november24.20.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
Come to me, all you that are weary and are
carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest . Take my yoke upon you, and
learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for
your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.’
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew
11/25-30/:”‘I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have
hidden these things from the wise and the intelligent and have revealed them to
infants; yes, Father, for such was your gracious will. All things have been
handed over to me by my Father; and no one knows the Son except the Father, and
no one knows the Father except the Son and anyone to whom the Son chooses to
reveal him. ‘Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens,
and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am
gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke
is easy, and my burden is light.’
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on November 23-24/2020
Health Ministry: 1041 new cases of Corona,
11 deaths
Arab, World Leaders Congratulate Aoun on Independence Day
Hassan: Pfizer COVID-19 Vaccine in Lebanon in February
Khalaf Launches ‘Recover the State’ Rescue Campaign
Israeli minister invites Aoun to direct border talks
European measures against any party obstructing political process in Libya
Berri's Press Office: All that is attributed to the House Speaker under 'Ain
Tineh sources' is unfounded
Three injured by gunfire in the areas of al-Nassrieh and al-Buwaida, north of
Hermel
Steps of Hope” Organization renovates more than 400 apartments in Beirut
Beirut's Justice Palace witnesses launching of national rescue initiative
Protesters’ military trials spark outcry in Lebanon
Protesters mark Lebanon’s Independence Day with brooms and basil/Najia Houssari/Arab
News/November 23/2020
Lebanon’s student elections were a victory, but will not save the nation/Makram
Rabah/Al Arabiya/November 23/2020
Lebanon on borrowed time not addressing Hezbollah’s weapons/Najia Houssari/Arab
News/November 24/2020
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
November 23-24/2020
AstraZeneca/Oxford Say Covid Vaccine Shows 70% Efficacy
US election: Trump political allies urge him to concede and begin transition
Saudi FM denies Netanyahu NEOM visit: ‘There were no Israelis present’
Israeli Reports Say Netanyahu Met Saudi Crown Prince, Riyadh Denies
Netanyahu meets Saudi crown prince MBS, Pompeo in Saudi Arabia/The plane
returned to Israel after only a few hours.
Israel’s El Al Airlines to fly 14 weekly flights from Tel Aviv to Dubai from
Dec.
Turkey summons EU, Italy, Germany envoys over weapons search of its ship to
Libya
Europe Threatens 'Measures' against Parties Obstructing Libya Peace
Saudi-led Coalition Says Huthi Attack on Jeddah Oil Facility Targets Global
Supplies
Conflict over Muslim Brotherhood still separating Egypt, Turkey
Syria's Assad: Lone Survivor of Arab Spring
Palestinians slam Pompeo over pro-settlement efforts
Titles For The Latest LCCC English
analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 23-24/2020
Gantz: Netanyahu hurt Israel by leaking Saudi
trip/Defense and foreign ministers left in dark on PM's Saudi trip/Gil
Hoffman/Jerusalem Post/November 23/2020
Netanyahu trip to Saudi Arabia shows importance of Israeli-Saudi ties/Seth
J.Frantzman/Jerusalem Post/November 23/2020
Cooperate with China or World War 3: Kissinger/Gordon G. Chang/Gatestone
Institute/November 23/2020
How Islam’s Own Blasphemy Laws Could Outlaw Islam/Raymond Ibrahim/November 23,
2020
The future of Iran’s ties with Al-Qaeda under new US president/Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab
News/November 23/ 2020
Can Biden help end the tragedy of Syria?/Chris Doyle/Arab News/November 23/ 2020
Feeling alienated, Iraqi Christians tempted to emigrate/The Arab Weekly/November
23/2020
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on November 22-23/2020
Health Ministry: 1041 new cases of Corona, 11 deaths
NNA/November 23/2020
The Ministry of Public Health announced, on Monday, the registration of 1041 new
Corona cases, thus raising the cumulative number of confirmed cases to-date to
117,476.
It also indicated that 11 death cases were also registered during the past 24
hours.
Arab, World Leaders Congratulate Aoun on Independence
Day
Naharnet/November 23/2020
President Michel Aoun, received more telegrams of congratulations on the 77th
anniversary of Independence from Arab and world leaders, the National News
Agency reported on Monday. In his cable, Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad
al-Thani, wished that “Lebanon and the Lebanese people would enjoy prosperity,
stability and peace.” Emperor of Japan, Naruhito, expressed “his best wishes”
for the President and for “the prosperity of your country.”Aoun also received
cables from: Italian President Sergio Mattarella, President of India Ram Nath
Covind, Deputy Emir of the State of Qatar Abdullah bin Hamad al-Thani, Qatari
Prime Minister Khalid bin Khalifa bin Abdulaziz al-Thani, Secretary General of
the Francophone Organization Louise Mushikiwabo.Lebanon celebrates Independence
Day on 22, November. But the country has cancelled all national festivities amid
the coronavirus pandemic.
Hassan: Pfizer COVID-19 Vaccine in Lebanon in February
Naharnet/November 23/2020
Caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hassan said Monday that Lebanon is expected to
receive Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine “not later than February 2021” if the vaccine
gets adopted. "If the vaccine gets regulatory approval in its final form,
Lebanon will receive it within a period not later than mid-February,” media
reports quoted Hassan as saying. He said Lebanon began “early talks” with the
multinational pharmaceutical corporation, which “allowed it to be among the
first countries that will get the vaccine at a competitive price.”
On any financial obstacle preventing Lebanon from getting the vaccine, Hassan
said: “There is no financial problem, taking into consideration the possibility
that the World Bank would increase the amounts of money transferred from the
loan to cover the expenses.” The Minister said that 15 percent of the Lebanese
will get vaccinated, prioritizing seniors in the first stage. Although Lebanon
is currently under a two-week lockdown that will end on November 30, the
Minister said more “people are testing positive for the virus.” “Nine days into
the lockdown, the ratio of people retracting the viruses is still considerably
high,” said Hassan, hoping to see a decline in positive cases in the second
week.
Khalaf Launches ‘Recover the State’ Rescue Campaign
Naharnet/November 23/2020
The head of the Beirut Bar Association, Melhem Khalaf, announced on Monday the
launch of a campaign to “recover the State” from the current political
authority, setting the foundations for the move. “The principles of this
initiative are insofar an implementation of the constitution, and is based on
the scale of the people’s pains and hopes,” said Khalaf at the opening of the
campaign launch. Khalaf asserted that the campaign is open for constructive
debate. In strong worded remarks, Khalaf added: “We will not accept the
continued collapse of the state and attrition, we will restore the State
together,” he emphasized. Lebanon is grappling with an unprecedented economic
and financial crisis that sparked mass anti-government protests, adding to the
repercussions of a colossal Beirut port explosion, and an outbreak of
coronavirus pandemic. The crisis is largely blamed on decades of systematic
corruption and mismanagement by Lebanon's ruling class. Lebanese politicians
missed a French initiative to help Lebanon steer out of the crisis. They were
unable to agree on a crisis Cabinet capable of implementing reforms in order to
unlock international assistance for the crisis-ridden country.
Horse-trading among political factions is common in Lebanon. They remain
deadlocked on which faction gets to have what key portfolio.
Israeli minister invites Aoun to direct border talks
Agence France Presse/November 23/2020
OCCUPIED JERUSALEM: Israel's Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz has invited
President Michel Aoun to direct talks in Europe on their countries' disputed
maritime border, a rare outreach between nations still technically at war.
Israel and Lebanon opened indirect negotiations on the border dispute under US
and UN auspices last month to clear the way for offshore oil and gas
exploration. Last week, Steinitz on Twitter accused Lebanon of undermining the
talks by continuously shifting its position and trying to widen the disputed
area under negotiation. That sparked a Twitter response from Aoun, who rejected
Steinitz's charges that Lebanon had been inconsistent. Steinitz, in a series of
tweets directed at Aoun on Monday, in both Hebrew and Arabic, said he had been
"enjoying the dialogue that has developed between us in recent days". "I am
convinced that if we could meet face-to-face in a European country in order to
have open, or secret, negotiations, we would have a good chance of resolving the
maritime border dispute once and for all." There was no immediate comment from
Aoun. Israel and Lebanon have been negotiating based on a map registered with
the United Nations in 2011, which shows an 860-square-kilometre
(330-square-mile) sea area as being disputed. But Lebanon considers that map to
have been based on wrong estimates. Aoun's tweet confirms that it is now
demanding an additional 1,430 square kilometres (552 square miles) of sea
further south.
European measures against any party obstructing
political process in Libya
NNA/November 23/2020
France, Britain, Italy and Germany threatened today to impose sanctions on the
sides obstructing negotiations between the two Libyan parties, which aim to
establish transitional institutions until elections are held in December 2021.
According to the French Press Agency, the four European countries said in a
joint statement published by the French Presidency: "We are ready to take
measures against those who obstruct the Libyan political dialogue forum and
other tracks of the Berlin process, as well as against those who continue to
plunder government funds and commit human rights violations in the country."
Berri's Press Office: All that is attributed to the House
Speaker under 'Ain Tineh sources' is unfounded
NNA/November 23/2020
House Speaker Nabih Berri's Press Office reiterated today the non-existence of
any such thing as "Ain Al-Tineh sources". In an issued statement, Berri's Press
Office affirmed that "all positions attributed to the House Speaker in terms of
'sources', whether on the subject of the election law, which is still under
discussion in the joint parliamentary committees, or any other political matter,
is totally groundless."
Three injured by gunfire in the areas of al-Nassrieh and
al-Buwaida, north of Hermel
NNA/November 23/2020
An exchange of fire and bomb shells took place between two families in the areas
of al-Nassrieh and al-Buwaida, north of Hermel district, due to the shooting
incident that occurred earlier today at the intersection of Hosh al-Sayed Ali,
which resulted in the wounding of 3 persons, NNA field correspondent reported
this evening. The Lebanese Army units and Intelligence Directorate are working
to deploy within the locality to control the situation and restore calm to the
vicinity.
Steps of Hope” Organization renovates more than 400
apartments in Beirut
NNA/November 23/2020
Sydney - The Australian "Steps of Hope" Organization continues its support for
Lebanon, especially the Beirut area affected by the port explosion, whereby it
has completed the restoration of more than 400 apartments within the framework
of the first phase, which will reach 500 apartments.
In this context, the Organization dispatched four containers to Lebanon,
provided by institutions and individuals in Australia, carrying food supplies,
medicines, household items and games for children on the occasion of the
holidays. Chairman of the Organization's Board of Directors, Charlie Ibrahim,
who returned to Sydney after spending nearly two months overseeing the
Organization's restoration works in Beirut, pointed out that "the main problem
today is not reconstruction, but rather reviving the economy on new foundations
other than those to which the Lebanese have been accustomed for decades.
""Production is the most important element in activating the economic cycle, and
we must train young people to work and produce through small businesses that do
not require large capital," he said."Financiers can invest in these productive
projects, which will reap benefit for both the investor and the producer,"
Ibrahim noted.
Beirut's Justice Palace witnesses launching of national
rescue initiative
NNA/November 23/2020
Marking Lebanon's 77th Independence Day, spiritual families, free professions
unions, universities, economic figures, labor bodies, and community forces
launched, on Monday, a national rescue initiative under the headline, "Together
We Recover the State," in a meeting organized at the Palace of Justice in
Beirut. Partaking in the initiative's launching were the Beirut and Tripoli Bar
Associations, the Beirut and Tripoli Doctors Syndicates, the Beirut and Tripoli
Dental Syndicates, and the Syndicates of Engineers, Press, Editors, Pharmacists,
Nurses and Physical Therapists, Accountants, Contractors Association, and Real
Estate Appraisers. The initiative included the signing of a document by the
participants. In his word during the launching event, Beirut Bar Association
Dean, Melhem Khalaf, said that this initiative is at the level of the people's
pains and sufferings, and their hopes for a better tomorrow; noting that its
principles are open for discussion. "At this historical moment, marking the
centenary of the state of Greater Lebanon and the anniversary of the
independence of the republic, in a dark apocalyptic scene unprecedented in the
history of the nation, we come together today...We are not seeking power, nor a
coup nor violence, but rather we wish to overcome the bitter reality with a
peaceful constitutional, human rights, and democratic path. We want to recover
the state by reconstituting power, we want the state to be restored in order to
rebuild the nation!" stated Khalaf.
"We are presenting a national rescue initiative that is far from any disputes
and from any narrow interests. It is a roadmap to get out of the moral crisis
that has clung to public life. It is an integrated initiative that cannot be
addressed in parts but as a whole, with humility, sympathy, courage, and without
excluding anyone," he added. "We call, first, on all citizens to join, and we
ask, secondly, all those concerned in the authority, to view it as quickly as
possible, and thirdly, we appeal to the whole world and every living conscience
to keep pace with its implementation, for through it is the salvation of Lebanon
and the Lebanese," Khalaf underscored. "Today people are desperate and hungry.
Today we decided to raise our voice, for we will not have a nation as long as we
are silent. We will not have a homeland, as long as we are distant from
demanding our right to life, freedom and dignity. We will not have a homeland,
as long as we keep disagreeing...We will not have a homeland, if we do not
restore the state with its institutions!" he corroborated. "We will not accept
the continued collapse of the state and we will recover it together," pledged
Khalaf, adding, "We have made our decision to stay in our land, to save our
homeland, to fulfill the hopes of our emerging generations, and to build the
foundations of the second centenary of Greater Lebanon." "No more words, it is
time for effective action at the level of the entire Lebanon!" he concluded.
Protesters’ military trials spark outcry in Lebanon
The Arab Weekly/November 23/2020
Around 90 civilians have been referred to the military justice system so far,
according to Legal Agenda, a human rights group based in Beirut.
BEIRUT - A year after mass protests roiled Lebanon, dozens of protesters are
being tried before military courts, proceedings that human rights lawyers say
grossly violate due process and fail to investigate allegations of torture and
abuse. Defendants tried before the military tribunal say the system is used to
intimidate protesters and prop up Lebanon’s sectarian rulers.
Around 90 civilians have been referred to the military justice system so far,
according to Legal Agenda, a human rights group based in Beirut.
“We expect many more people to be prosecuted,” said Ghida Frangieh, a lawyer
with the group.
Growing perils of activism
The trials underscore the growing perils of activism in Lebanon, where a string
of court cases and judicial investigations against journalists and critics has
eroded the country’s reputation for free speech and tolerance in a largely
autocratic Arab world.
Justice Minister Marie-Claude Najm did not respond to a request for comment.
Lebanese officials typically do not address the question of why civilian cases
are being tried in the military court system. Security forces have denied
beating and torturing protesters and activists in detention.
Frangieh said that security forces arrested around 1,200 people from the
beginning of the anti-government uprising in October 2019 through the end of
June. Lebanese authorities have prosecuted around 200 of them, including those
referred to the military judiciary, the monitoring group has found.
An activist’s ordeal
Last November, Lebanese activist Khaldoun Jaber was taking part in an
anti-government protest near the presidential palace outside Beirut when several
Lebanese intelligence officers in plainclothes approached and forcibly took him
away. The demonstration was part of a wave of protests sweeping Lebanon against
corruption and misrule by a group of politicians who have monopolised power
since the country’s civil war ended three decades ago.
Jaber didn’t know it then, but Lebanese security forces targeted him because of
his social media posts criticising President Michel Aoun.
What followed were 48 harrowing hours of detention during which security
officers interrogated him and subjected him to physical abuse, before letting
him go. “I was beaten, harmed psychologically and morally,” Jaber said. “Three
of my teeth were broken and I lost 70% of my hearing in my left ear.”
“I am still traumatised,” he added.
Two months after his arrest, Jaber received an official notice saying military
prosecutors were charging him with assaulting security forces at the Baabda
Palace when the plainclothes agents detained him.
“I was shocked when I was called to the military tribunal,” Jaber said.
The trial did not take place until October 7, when the military court declared
Jaber innocent of assaulting security officers, which is a military crime under
Lebanese law, but said it lacked jurisdiction over a second charge, that of
insulting the president. Like Jaber, many detained protesters only find out a
month or more after their release that authorities have referred them to
military courts. Many of these cases were scheduled for hearings this November
and December, Frangieh said, before a two-week nationwide lockdown over the
coronavirus pandemic temporarily closed the courts.
Fairness into doubt
Jaber’s case is an example of how military prosecutors try to claim jurisdiction
over civilian cases by usually filing more than one charge, including one that
is a military crime, said Frangieh, who represents protesters before the
military tribunal and is also part of the Lawyers’ Committee for Defense of
Protesters.
“There was no evidence,” Frangieh said about Jaber’s charge of assaulting
security officers. “He was kidnapped during a protest, but he was actually
targeted because of his social media posts that criticized the president.”
The military prosecutor’s office closed, without investigation, a torture
complaint that Jaber had submitted, she added.
According to Legal Agenda, the military courts usually issue summary decisions
on the same day of the trial, without issuing an explanation.
“There’s really a lot of doubt about the fairness and arbitrariness of the
decisions issued by the court,” she said, adding that when defendants are
sentenced, the legal basis of the conviction is not immediately shared with
their lawyers.
Military prosecutors often neglect to read the full case files prepared from
military intelligence reports, or abruptly drop or change charges during trials,
according to Frangieh and another lawyer with the committee representing
protesters, Ayman Raad.
“Military courts have no business trying civilians,” said Aya Majzoub, a
researcher with Human Rights Watch. The international rights group has called on
Lebanon’s parliament to end the troubling practice by passing a law to entirely
remove civilians from the military court’s jurisdiction.
Georges Abou Fadel was summoned for a military trial on October 30, after he was
detained during a protest a year ago in the town of Beit Mery, east of Beirut.
During his trial, the military prosecutor asked the judge for time to read the
case report, then asked to change the charge against Abou Fadel from assaulting
security forces to the lesser charge of nonviolently resisting arrest.
The court found him innocent but Abou Fadel said he wasn’t relieved, knowing
there’ll be more trials “for my friends, for the people protesting, for anyone
who is trying to call for his rights.”
Another node in the sectarian system’s web
Lawyers, rights activists and defendants describe the military tribunals’
prosecution of protesters and other civilians as another node in the web of
Lebanon’s sectarian system that protects the power of its top politicians rather
than the rights of citizens.
“This is one of the tools used by the sectarian parties,” said Abou Fadel —
keeping their people loyal through fear of the military courts.
Many of the judges at the military tribunal are appointed by the defense
ministry, which undermines the tribunal’s judicial independence, according to
rights activists.
The head of the military tribunal is customarily Shia, while the chief military
prosecutor is Maronite Christian.
Reforming the Lebanese judicial system is “one of the most important demands” of
the anti-government protesters, Raad said, including ending military trials for
civilians.
On November 13, Jad Al Rayess was fined 200,000 Lebanese Pounds ($132) by a
military court, 11 months after security forces detained him at a protest on
Beirut’s Ring Road.
The court has not yet released a statement with the charge for which he was
convicted.
The 32-year-old said that he plans to emigrate from Lebanon.
“We are not going to get any progress without blood, and that’s nothing I want
to be involved in,” he said.
Protesters mark Lebanon’s Independence Day with brooms and basil
Najia Houssari/Arab News/November 23/2020
The Lebanese fear the collapse of their state in the light of corruption, the
quotas that hinder the formation of the government and the failure to achieve
the reforms required to support Lebanon from abroad
BEIRUT: Many national celebrations for Lebanon’s 77th Independence Day on Sunday
were canceled amid the coronavirus pandemic, the political divide, the economic
downturn and the aftermath of Beirut’s port blast on Aug. 4.
However, several wreaths were laid on the graves of several independence
statesmen, while Army Commander in Chief General Joseph Aoun laid a wreath on
the memorial statue of the Lebanese Army martyrs.
The civil movement celebrated the day in a different way, suspending brooms and
wreaths of basil on the walls of public institutions such as the headquarters of
the government, the parliament, the Ministry of Economy, the Bank of Lebanon,
the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Finance, the Palace of Justice, the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Electricity of Lebanon, the Association of Banks
and the Port of Beirut. Basil wreaths are usually placed on the graves of the
dead but these carried the demands of the protesters.
“We chose this way of expression as we are unable to take to the streets again
because of the COVID-19 pandemic. We are sending a clear message to officials
that true independence will only be achieved by returning state institutions to
the people who are the source of all powers. We wanted to mourn the corrupt
authority,” activist Mahmoud Fakih told Arab News.The Lebanese fear the collapse of their state in the light of corruption, the
quotas that hinder the formation of the government and the failure to achieve
the reforms required to support Lebanon from abroad. The chaos surrounding
Lebanon’s economic crisis has deepened after international firm Alvarez & Marsal
terminated its contract to audit the central bank’s accounts.
On Sunday, the black market exchange rate for dollars in Lebanon soared to more
than 8,400 Lebanese pounds to the dollar.
HIGHLIGHT
The Lebanese fear the collapse of their state in the light of corruption, the
quotas that hinder the formation of the government and the failure to achieve
the reforms required to support Lebanon from abroad.
Many activists expressed their indignation on social media. Lawyer and activist
Nizar Siagha wrote on Twitter: “The independence of the people from the leaders
that have transformed the state into a fiesta is the independence for which we
are fighting today, the independence of equality, justice and solidarity without
discrimination.”Dr. Suzanne Hosri, a researcher at the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy
and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut, wrote: “This
year, I refuse to celebrate or even mention Independence Day. There is no
independence before the liberation of the homeland from the corrupt and failed
system. There is no sovereignty before holding leaders across the sectarian
spectrum accountable for our fear, disease and death. There is no freedom before
breaking the shackles of our intolerance and sectarianism toward an open and
responsible citizenship capable of defending its dignity and rights. No to a
fake and misleading Independence Day!”
Lebanese president Michel Aoun received congratulatory cables on the 77th
anniversary from presidents and kings alike, including China’s President Xi
Jinping, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Many of these cables held implied political messages. US Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo did not congratulate President Aoun or the government but simply said:
“The United States is committed to supporting the people of Lebanon, and we will
continue to stand by them through these unprecedented times.”“Our reality today
is not promising,” President Aoun said in a televised speech to mark
Independence Day, adding that Lebanon was a prisoner of corruption, political
scheming and external dictations.
“If we want statehood, then we must fight corruption and this begins by imposing
the forensic financial audit,” he said, adding he would not “back off” on the
issue.
Aoun made a veiled criticism of the prime minister in charge of forming the
government, without naming him, saying: “Is it not yet time to free the process
of forming the new government from conflicts and hiding behind rescue
initiatives to break the rules and standards that must be respected and applied
to all in order to establish the procedural authority and its work?”
There was also criticism from other Lebanese leaders. “Independence means
Lebanon’s dissociation from regional conflicts toward establishing a policy of
neutrality to promote its economy,” said Lebanese Maronite Patriarch Mar Bechara
Boutros Al-Rahi.
Al-Rahi added: “If we form a government like its predecessors, it will produce
total ruin, asking those who are hindering the formation of the government if
they realize that we have lost an invaluable year of reform?”
The Grand Mufti of the Lebanese Republic, Sheikh Abdul Latif Derian, said that
the anniversary of independence “comes at a time when the nation is suffering
from an unprecedented collapse in the absence of the state and the work of its
institutions. We fear the greatest and worst unless a government of national
salvation is formed that will gain the trust of the people and the Arab and
international community, or Lebanon shall be ruined!”
The Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch for the Archdiocese of Beirut, Metropolitan
Elias Audi, called on the President of the Republic to restore “the prestige of
the state by adopting accountability, activating the audit policy and stopping
politicians from controlling the institutions and the judiciary systems.”
“The disruption of governance is a crime. Conflict of interests, wars of mutual
abolition, the liquidation of absurd accounts and the implementation of external
agendas only lead to destruction,” he warned.
Lebanon’s student elections were a victory, but will
not save the nation
Makram Rabah/Al Arabiya/November 23/2020
Independent student factions recently achieved major wins Lebanese university
elections, a victory that was received by the majority of the Lebanese as a
positive sign ahead of potential national parliamentary elections that could
take place after the current term expires in Spring 2022.
Unfortunately, this optimism is totally unfounded. A proper reading of these
student elections in their national context reveals the corrupt political
establishment is still firmly entrenched and will likely win in any future
elections.
In Lebanon, student elections are somewhat of a national sport and a
long-standing tradition which takes places across university campuses every
Fall. They offer an occasion for different political parties, as well as
independent groups, to compete for different forms of student government and
earn bragging rights both on and off campus.
For the traditional political parties, success in student elections gives them a
public messaging victory that they can present as affirming their national
popularity. For the anti-establishment student factions, the elections might be
the only safe and democratic avenues to push through a new breed of independent
voices who, in contrast to the archaic political parties, practice what they
preach.
Over the years, elections in Lebanon’s main private universities – such as the
American University of Beirut (AUB), Lebanese American University (LAU), and the
University of Saint Joseph (USJ) – have witnessed independent students
challenging the hegemony of the traditionalists. This year, which has been
shaped by the onset of the October 17 2019 revolution, independents thrived as
traditionalists found it difficult to appeal to their usual voter bases.
But despite this noticeable and encouraging win, it is important to take a step
back and acknowledge that parliamentary elections are shaped by a range of other
objective factors and might not yield a similar outcome.
A primary difference is the conditions under which the elections take place.
Student elections in Lebanon’s main universities takes place under somewhat fair
and transparent conditions, where physical and moral intimidation is prohibited
by the university administration. Unlike the Lebanese state authorities, the
university administrations will not hesitate to take disciplinary measures
against any individuals or parties who try to bully their fellow students.
More importantly, the electoral system and the seat distribution for these
elections are based on a different, fairer electoral system. Whereas national
elections use a complicated formula to ensure all of Lebanon’s religious
communities are represented by quotas, universities have a level playing field
for non-affiliated independent students; AUB and LAU, for example, have
proportional representation on the model of “one man, one vote.” This helps
ensure that the traditional parties do not monopolize representation on campus,
in contrast to in national elections.
National elections are far removed from the logic or principle of equal
representation, as the various electoral laws are always tailored to ensure the
hegemony of whoever is in power. The recent election in 2018 is a case in point.
For a long time, many election enthusiasts have demanded the adoption of
proportional representation, which was implemented in some form in 2018.
However, the eventual system put in place replaced fairness with gerrymandering,
which instead of empowering independents made sure to stump them once and for
all. The ruling elite hammered out an electoral law that was proportional in
theory but kept large electoral districts with a high electoral threshold,
meaning that in reality it was impossible for non-party affiliates to break
through.
Secondly, student elections are monitored and administered by the various
university administrations, mainly their deans of student affairs, who have no
direct stake in the outcome of the result and thus are under no obligation to
meddle or to rigg the results. Unfortunately, this cannot be said for the
government entities that oversee the national elections. It is customary for the
majority of the cabinet, including the premier and the minister of the interior,
to be entrusted with running the electoral process – even though they themselves
are running for office, undermining any notion of impartiality. To add insult to
injury, the appointment of an independent commission to monitor the elections
was nothing but a charade; the members of the commission rubber-stamped the
results despite them being riddled with irregularities and even fraud.
The role of coercion is also an important factor. On campus, the resources of
the traditional political parties as well as the arms of their militias
including Hezbollah are useless and cannot be used to sway the vote. In
contrast, Hezbollah has no shame in suppressing the vote or even fixing the
national election ballot results in the areas of the country it controls, a
practice in which the Lebanese authorities were also complicit.
The Lebanese as a whole are still looking for an easy way out of their current
predicament. One hope is that elections will deliver salvation. However, no
amount of student council wins can change the reality that democracy cannot
exist in Lebanon when the Lebanese state is controlled by the ruling oligarchs
who have established a bond with Hezbollah and its weapons. This pact ensures
that any thrust for democratic reform is quickly dismissed.
Until they reclaim their state, the Lebanese cannot count on elections to
provide the salvation they need.
*Makram Rabah is a lecturer at the American University of Beirut, Department of
History. His forthcoming book Conflict on Mount Lebanon: The Druze, the
Maronites and Collective Memory (Edinburgh University Press) covers collective
identities and the Lebanese Civil War.
Lebanon on borrowed time not addressing Hezbollah’s weapons
Najia Houssari/Arab News/November 24/2020
BEIRUT: A Lebanese academic has warned politicians that the country is at risk
from the group Hezbollah, despite various factions coming together to try to
launch a rescue initiative, as it struggles to resolve a myriad of crises
currently affecting the eastern Mediterranean state.
There has been no progress yet on the formation of a new government since the
collapse of the previous administration in August, and consequently, no
negotiations with the International Monetary Fund over a bailout.
American economist Steve Hanke said in a tweet on Monday: “While Venezuela
continues to hold the top spot in my world inflation table, Lebanon has finally
passed Zimbabwe for 2nd place. It’s rather shocking to watch Lebanon’s
politicians fiddle, while Beirut burns.”
The inflation rate in Lebanon has now reached around 365 percent.
In light of this stalemate, during a press conference at the Palace of Justice
in Beirut on Monday, trade unions, universities, economic organizations, labor
bodies and civil society forces launched a national rescue initiative under the
slogan “Recovering the State,” while joint parliamentary committees will meet on
Wednesday to discuss a new electoral law.
The head of the Beirut Bar Association, Melhem Khalaf, said in the press
conference: “We want to restore the state by reconfiguring the authority to
rebuild the country.” Khalaf added: “The initiative is easy to implement and
relates to the size of people’s pain, and is open to constructive discussion in
a way that reassures all concerns.”
The head of the North Bar Association, Mohammed Al-Murad, explained the details
of the rescue initiative.
He said that the initiative “includes the necessity to form an effective,
purposeful, fair and reliable government of independent specialists with
specific and limited legislative powers within a specific time frame.”
He added: “Government priorities should an endorsement approving the start of
implementing a financial, economic and social rescue plan, achieving full
justice for the explosion at the Beirut Port and the implementation of a
national plan to combat the coronavirus disease pandemic and limit its spread.”
Murad said that the initiative was based on “launching the path of immediate
reforms to combat all forms of corruption, auditing all independent institutions
and state administrations,” as well as the creation of a Senate and adopting a
new electoral law to move the country away from sectarianism.
Parliament, meanwhile, is expected to hold a session of the joint parliamentary
committees to discuss a controversial electoral bill.
Speaker Nabih Berri’s bloc is pressing for the approval of a bill it presented,
based on proportional representation, and which treats Lebanon as one
constituency.
This issue raised concerns from Christian MPs, especially those affiliated with
the Free Patriotic Movement and the Lebanese Forces.
Edy Maalouf, an MP from the Lebanese Forces bloc, said: “Today, the country does
not need such a controversial suggestion.”
He spoke of coordination between the Lebanese Forces and the Free Patriotic
Movement to “reject the proportional representation bill and treating Lebanon as
one constituency.”
Mario Aoun, a Free Patriotic Movement MP, stressed his refusal “to make Lebanon
one electoral constituency, although we are in favor of amending the loopholes
in the current electoral law based on which the last elections were held and
proved its usefulness.”
Lebanon’s Deputy Parliament Speaker Elie Ferzli, who will chair the joint
committee session, said: “The committees have several electoral bills, and the
debate is not limited to one formula. It is better to have a law agreed upon
early so that we do not reach the due date without a law.”
However, Dr. Mona Fayad, member of the Lebanese Association of Women
Researchers, said that the rescue initiative “does not address the issue of
illegal weapons outside the constitution, that is, Hezbollah’s weapons.”
Fayad told Arab News: “We are a country with its own borders and army. Since
2006, Hezbollah has not fired a single bullet from the south at Israel. Are we
supposed to keep its shop open so that it can use it to fight here and there and
not close it? Then Hezbollah comes to rule us in the name of the resistance, how
can that be possible?”
**Dr. Fayad added: “How could the rescue initiative ask Parliament to implement
the constitution by electing a Senate? Isn’t the current Parliament inherently
against the constitution and illegal? And how can elections be held under (the
threat of) weapons?
“I fear that what is happening now is a mutual collusion process between
Parliament and these civilian forces.”
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on November 23-24/2020
AstraZeneca/Oxford Say Covid Vaccine Shows 70%
Efficacy
Agence France Presse/November 23/2020
British drugs group AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford on Monday said
their jointly-developed vaccine against Covid-19 has shown "an average efficacy
of 70 percent" in trials. "This vaccine's efficacy and safety confirm that it
will be highly effective against Covid-19 and will have an immediate impact on
this public health emergency," AstraZeneca chief executive Pascal Soriot said in
a statement. However the vaccine has produced lower average efficacy compared
with coronavirus vaccines produced by rivals Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna which
have come in above 90 percent.
US election: Trump political allies urge him to concede and begin transition
Bloomberg/November 23/2020
President Donald Trump is facing rising pressure from business leaders and
prominent Republicans to begin a transition to President-Elect Joe Biden -- or
even concede defeat -- as Trump’s long-shot legal challenges fail to gain
traction. Several key allies for Trump appeared to lose their patience over the
weekend. Blackstone Group Inc. Chief Executive Officer Stephen Schwarzman,
Trump’s highest-profile supporter on Wall Street, said Monday that he considers
Biden the president-elect, while the New York Times reported that a group of
business and finance leaders was preparing an open letter urging the start of a
transition. Republican senators Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Kevin Cramer of
North Dakota -- one of Trump’s staunchest allies -- on Sunday called for the
transition to Biden to begin, while Republican Senator Pat Toomey congratulated
Biden on his victory on Saturday after Trump suffered another legal defeat in
Pennsylvania.
The comments show a growing chorus within the party acknowledging that Biden won
the election -- or is all but certain to -- and that delaying the transition of
power risks impeding critical programs like the US response to the coronavirus
pandemic. Still, only a minority of Republicans have spoken out, and several
have taken a hedged stance that Trump should begin the transition while
continuing his legal fight. But even the court challenges are losing support.
Longtime Trump adviser Chris Christie said Sunday the president’s legal team had
become a “national embarrassment after pushing conspiracy theories about voter
fraud in a series of bizarre media appearances.
Larry Hogan, the Republican governor of Maryland who’s an outspoken Trump
critic, responded to an insult the president tweeted about him by telling Trump
to “stop golfing and concede.
Other national-level figures, most notably Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, have
declined to speak out so far. On Monday, a group of leading GOP national
security experts pressured Republican lawmakers to demand President Trump
concede the election and immediately begin the transition in a statement signed
by more than 100 leaders, the Washington Post reported.
The signers included former Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge, who served
under President George W. Bush, former CIA Director Michael Hayden and John D.
Negroponte, who served as director of national intelligence.The president’s time
is running out, as states including Michigan and Pennsylvania prepare to certify
their election results as soon as Monday, sealing Biden’s victory. Pennsylvania
Republicans filed another lawsuit on Sunday seeking to block certification.
“It’s past time to start a transition, to at least cooperate with the
transition. I’d rather have a president that has more than one day to prepare,
should Joe Biden, you know, end up winning this, Cramer told Meet The Press on
Sunday. Cramer said the election is “very likely over but isn’t yet over, and
gave Trump leeway to keep up his legal fight. “I don’t know why we’re so easily
offended by a president that’s carrying out all of his legal options in court,
he said.More than 100 executives plan to send a memo on Monday demanding that
Emily Murphy, head of the General Services Administration, affirm that Biden has
won the election and issue the paperwork required for his team to begin a
transition, the Times reported. Schwarzman’s public acknowledgment of Biden’s
victory was first reported by Axios.
“I supported President Trump and the strong economic path he built, Schwarzman
said in a statement. “Like many in the business community, I am ready to help
President-elect Biden and his team as they confront the significant challenges
of rebuilding our post-Covid economy.
Biden’s team has become more vocal in calling for the transition to start,
warning that the delay could impede the rollout of a coronavirus vaccine and
hinder other key government programs. Biden plans to begin naming his cabinet
this week. Trump has pursued a range of unconventional moves to undo the
election result and has frequently claimed without substantiation that the vote
was rigged. Trump has even pressured some state lawmakers to overrule voters and
award their states’ Electoral College votes to him instead of Biden, a move that
no senator has backed and Toomey called illegitimate.
Most senators, though, have stayed silent, avoiding the risk of angering the
outgoing president who remains popular with Republican voters and who has a
record of attacking those who cross him politically.
Angering Trump and his supporters risks suppressing GOP turnout in a pair of
runoff elections in Georgia that will determine whether Republicans keep a
majority in the Senate. On Sunday, Senator David Perdue of Georgia backed
Trump’s request for a third count of Georgia’s ballots, this time including a
review of signatures on absentee ballot envelopes — even though the ballots have
long since been separated from those envelopes to ensure voter privacy.
Trump has increasingly sparred with Republicans who demand proof of fraud, such
as House Republican Conference Chair Liz Cheney, or who say they think Biden
won, such as Ohio Governor Mike DeWine. The president is now openly stoking a
primary challenge against DeWine.
Trump’s also racing ahead to lock in his policies, such as accelerating troop
withdrawals from foreign posts and ratcheting up tension with China. He briefly
took part in Group of 20 sessions this weekend, but left each day’s program
early to head to his golf course.
Republican dissent had been growing before the weekend. Senator Mitt Romney said
Trump is trying to “subvert the will of the people. Retiring Senator Lamar
Alexander said Friday that Biden “looks like he has a very good chance of
winning. Former president George W. Bush has also congratulated Biden.
But Trump’s attempts suffered another blow Saturday, when a federal judge in
Pennsylvania threw out a lawsuit aimed at blocking certification of the state’s
election results. Toomey said that Trump had “exhausted all plausible legal
options in Pennsylvania, and that it was time to concede that Biden had won.
Calls for Trump to either present evidence or concede have also grown in the
aftermath of a press conference Thursday, featuring lawyers Rudy Giuliani, Jenna
Ellis and Sidney Powell.
They alleged a range of unspecified fraud, with Powell accusing Venezuela, China
and George Soros of conspiring to defraud American voters and insisting that
Trump had won. By Sunday, the Trump campaign had distanced itself from Powell.
In a joint statement, Giuliani and Ellis said that Powell isn’t a lawyer for the
Trump campaign or Trump personally.
Ellis had described the three lawyers as Trump’s “elite strike force team at the
news conference. But even if legal challenges continue, many Republicans say the
transition process should still be underway to ensure a smooth handover on
critical issues like the coronavirus task force’s work fighting the pandemic.
“Clearly, it would be better if the Biden task force was able to coordinate,
learn from and provide insight to and from the White House task force. It would
just be better, said Michael Leavitt, a former Utah governor who served in
Bush’s cabinet, including as health secretary. He, like many Republicans, has
argued that the legal fight doesn’t preclude a transition process from starting.
“I’m one of those who believes these processes can be carried out
simultaneously, and should be.
Moncef Slaoui, one of the senior officials leading the Trump administration’s
push to fast-track a vaccine, told Meet The Press on Sunday that he’d been
instructed not to share any details with anyone not in the administration. He
said he thought the process would go smoothly regardless.
“All the decisions are made. The train is running. Whether one administration or
the other, it doesn’t frankly make a difference. I hope there is no disruption
in any way, Slaoui said.
Saudi FM denies Netanyahu NEOM visit: ‘There were no
Israelis present’
Mohammed Alyahya, Al Arabiya English/23 November ,2020
Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan denied Israeli media
reports Monday that a meeting occurred between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Israel’s Army
Radio and Kan Radio both reported that the Israeli Prime Minister and the head
of Israel’s spy agency, the Mossad, Yosef Meir Cohen, secretly flew to NEOM from
Tel Aviv to meet Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince, Reuters earlier reported. “I
received and bid farewell to Secretary of State Pompeo in the airport in NEOM
and attended his meeting with the Crown Prince. There were no Israelis present,”
Saudi Arabian foreign minister Prince Faisal told Al Arabiya English. Prince
Faisal had previously denied rumors that a meeting between the two leaders took
place in February.
Israeli Reports Say Netanyahu Met Saudi Crown Prince,
Riyadh Denies
Agence France Presse/23 November ,2020
Israeli media reports and a government source said Monday that Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu had held landmark talks in Saudi Arabia with Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman, but Riyadh denied any such meeting took place. The reports
fueled speculation that the Jewish state may be getting closer to normalizing
ties with the biggest Gulf power after its historic US-brokered deals since
September with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. Israeli public broadcaster
Kan and other media said Netanyahu and Mossad spy agency chief Yosef Meir Cohen
had met Saudi de facto ruler Prince Mohammed, together with US Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo, in the futuristic Red Sea city of NEOM on Sunday. An Israeli
government source who requested anonymity confirmed the reports to AFP. Saudi
Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan then strongly denied the report which
suggested Saudi Arabia was moving away from its decades-old stance of refusing
dialogue with the Jewish state until the Palestinian conflict is resolved. "I
have seen press reports about a purported meeting between HRH the Crown Prince
and Israeli officials during the recent visit by @SecPompeo," Prince Faisal
tweeted.
"No such meeting occurred. The only officials present were American and Saudi."
Pompeo has confirmed he was in NEOM as part of a Middle East Tour and met with
Prince Mohammed, who is widely known by his initials MBS. The U.S. State
Department declined to confirm a three-way meeting.
Netanyahu, asked about the Saudi trip during a public meeting Monday of his
Likud party, said: "Are you serious? I have never commented on these things and
I do not intend to start now."
Abraham Accords -
Israel's normalization deals with the UAE and Bahrain, known as the Abraham
Accords, were brokered under U.S. President Donald Trump, who leaves office in
less than two months. Sudan has also agreed in principle to normalize ties with
Israel. A delegation from the Jewish state headed to Khartoum on Monday, the
first since the deal was announced last month. There has been speculation
Washington may push for other Arab states to join the accords before
President-elect Joe Biden is sworn in. The Palestinians have condemned them and
urged Arab states to hold firm until Israel ends its occupation of Palestinian
territory and agrees to the creation of a Palestinian state. Saudi Arabia -- a
close U.S. ally and oil-rich buyer of military goods -- has publicly insisted it
will stick to the decades-old Arab League position of not having ties with
Israel until it reaches a peace deal with the Palestinians.
But some experts have said that Biden's upcoming inauguration may have created
urgency in Riyadh, which has dealt discreetly with Israel over a joint desire to
contain common foe Iran.
Damaging leak?
Prior to the Abraham Accords, Israel only had peace treaties with two Arab
nations, its neighbors Egypt and Jordan. But in late August, Netanyahu said
Israel was holding "unpublicized meetings with Arab and Muslim leaders to
normalize relations with the state of Israel", without naming any countries.
Amid speculation that smaller Arab states like Oman were also interested in a
deal, Saudi Arabi has stood out as the key target for Israel, given the
kingdom's wealth and influence. Sunni Arab states and especially Israel worry
that Biden may seek to revive the Iran nuclear deal agreed between Tehran and
world powers during Barack Obama's presidency that was scrapped by Trump. Under
its deal with Israel, the Emiratis also secured rights to purchase advanced U.S.
military hardware, something likely attractive to the Saudis, said Yoel Guzansky
of Israel's Institute for National Security Studies think-tank.
Guzanky, a former national security aid to Netanyahu, said the Saudis were
denying the talks to limit "damage in their (domestic) public opinion", but that
Riyadh has plenty to gain from a US-brokered deal with Israel, including rights
to purchase even more "sophisticated weapons." Trump's administration has
downplayed human rights issues in international diplomacy and was particularly
cautious about criticizing Saudi Arabia's record, notably over the murder by
Saudi agents of prominent journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Multiple Israeli analysts
have said the Biden administration would face a backlash from the progressive
left faction of his Democratic party if it pushed for an Israeli-Saudi peace
deal without meaningful human rights commitments from Riyadh. Speaking to AFP in
the days after the November 3 election, Netanyahu's former envoy to Washington,
Michael Oren, said it would likely not be "worth Biden's while to take on his
party" over a Saudi-Israel pact.
Netanyahu meets Saudi crown prince MBS, Pompeo in Saudi
Arabia/The plane returned to Israel after only a few hours.
Jerusalem Post/November 23/2020
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Mossad chief Yossi Cohen met with Saudi
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Neom, Saudi Arabia on Sunday, Israeli
sources confirmed. Netanyahu used a private plane belonging to businessman Udi
Angel, which he has used for past diplomatic trips. The plane left Israel at 5
p.m. on Sunday and returned after midnight. The Israeli and Saudi sides
discussed Iran and normalization, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing a
Saudi source. Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan denied the meeting
took place on Twitter, saying only Saudi and American officials were present.
Yet Education Minister Yoav Gallant confirmed the meeting, calling it an
“amazing achievement” and “a matter of great importance” in an interview with
Army Radio. The trip was kept tightly under wraps as it was planned for over a
month, with Netanyahu not informing Defense Minister Benny Gantz or Foreign
Minister Gabi Ashkenazi before it took place. "Gantz is playing politics while
the prime minister is making peace," Netanyahu's social media adviser Topaz Luk
tweeted as reports of the visit came out. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also
met with Netanyahu and MBS, as the crown prince is known, in Neom, a new city in
northern Saudi Arabia on the Red Sea meant to show of the Kingdoms’
technological advancement. Pompeo has encouraged Saudi Arabia and other Arab
states to follow the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain in establishing diplomatic
relations with Israel. Thus far, Saudi Arabia has only allowed Israel to fly
over its airspace. On Sunday, however, Prince Faisal told Reuters that
normalization with Israel would only come after "a permanent and comprehensive
peace agreement between the Palestinians and the Israelis including the
establishment of a Palestinian state on 1967 borders."
The minister said his country has "supported normalization with Israel for a
long time," pointing out that they authored the Saudi Peace Initiative that
would have the Arab world establish ties with Israel in exchange for their
vision of a two-state solution.
US President Donald Trump mentioned the possibility that Saudi Arabia would join
the Abraham Accords Israel signed with other Gulf States, but soon after,
reports came out of a generational divide, by which the 84-year-old King Salman
remained loyal to the traditional Saudi position regarding normalization and the
Palestinians, while the 35-year-old MBS supports open ties with Israel. However,
soon after, Saudi Prince Bandar bin Sultan Al Saud, the former longtime
ambassador to the US, gave an interview to the Saudi-backed news channel Al-Arabiya
sharply criticizing the Palestinian leadership.
Meetings between Netanyahu and senior Saudi officials had been discussed several
times in the past, going back nearly 10 years. A former official close to the
prime minister said that early in the previous decade, there were attempts to
have Netanyahu meet top Saudi officials on an American ship in the Red Sea,
which did not come to fruition. The meeting would have taken place around the
same time as the coronavirus cabinet meeting was expected to take place. The
Prime Minister's Office released a statement explaining that the meeting would
be pushed off because ministers Izhar Shay and Ze'ev Elkin needed more time to
work on their digital surveillance program, which turned out to be a cover
story.The Prime Minister’s Office did not comment on the matter.
Israel’s El Al Airlines to fly 14 weekly flights from Tel Aviv to Dubai from Dec.
Reuters/23 November ,2020
Israel and the UAE agreed in September to establish diplomatic relations, paving
the way for economic cooperation.
Subject to regulatory approvals, Israeli flag carrier El Al plans to operate
three flights a day on Sundays and Thursdays and two flights on other days of
the week. Flights will be on Boeing 737-900 and 787 Dreamliner aircraft, it
said. El Al noted that until the mutual visa entry agreement enters into force
between the countries, or until there is another bilateral solution, Israeli
travelers can enter the UAE with a foreign passport that allows entry to the
destination and/or receive a valid visa prior to the flight. Israel’s borders
have for the most part been closed to foreigners during the COVID-19 pandemic,
with only Israeli passport holders allowed entry. Smaller rivals Arkia and
Israir have said they plan to begin flights to Dubai next month. State-owned
Dubai airline flydubai also said it would start twice-daily fights between the
UAE’s business hub and Tel Aviv this month. El Al and Etihad Airways, the United
Arab Emirates’ national airline, last week signed a deal to explore deeper
cooperation such as joint codesharing between Abu Dhabi and Tel Aviv and other
destinations. Etihad has said it intends to start daily flights between Abu
Dhabi and Tel Aviv starting on March 28 next year.
Turkey summons EU, Italy, Germany envoys over weapons
search of its ship to Libya
Tuqa Khalid/Al Arabiya English/23 November ,2020
Turkey summoned the envoys to Ankara of the European Union, Italy and Germany on
Monday to protest over a German attempt to search a Turkish cargo ship for a
suspected arms shipment to Libya, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. “The
German warship “Hamburg”, as part of this operation, hailed and interrogated in
detail the Turkish-flagged commercial vessel “M/V Roseline A”, which was
transporting paint, paint-related material and humanitarian aid from the Port of
Ambarlı to Misrata,” the ministry said in its statement. “We deeply regret that
our vessel, which as became apparent has not violated the arms embargo, was
withheld from her route for hours under severe weather conditions and that
during the inspection the crew were treated as if they were criminals. We
protest this unauthorized and forceful act,” the ministry added. “Rights to
compensation of the relevant natural and legal persons for the damages and
losses that may arise from this act naturally remain reserved.” “It is essential
to obtain flag state consent before interfering with commercial ships in
international waters. UN Security Council resolutions on the Libyan arms embargo
do not overrule this obligation.” Earlier, Germany accused Turkey of preventing
German forces belonging to an EU military mission from fully searching the ship.
Soldiers from the frigate Hamburg, part of an EU mission enforcing a UN arms
embargo, boarded the Roseline A overnight but withdrew after Turkey raised
objections with the EU mission, which had ordered the search, the German Defense
Ministry said. Turkey released footage showing armed men in military uniform
marshalling sailors with their hands on their heads on the bridge of what it
said was the Roseline A, at sea southwest of the Greek Peloponnese peninsula.
The incident comes at a time of friction between Turkey and the European Union.
The EU's foreign policy chief has said ties are reaching a "watershed moment"
over Turkish oil prospecting in waters claimed by Greece and Cyprus, and that
sanctions could be imposed next month. Germany said that, after four hours had
passed with no reply to a request to board, it was standard practice to consider
this as implicit permission. "All procedures were followed correctly," a Foreign
Ministry spokeswoman said. The German Defense Ministry said the soldiers had not
found anything suspicious by the time they were ordered off the ship.
Europe Threatens 'Measures' against Parties
Obstructing Libya Peace
Agence France Presse/23 November ,2020
European states involved in efforts to end the conflict in Libya on Monday
threatened sanctions against any parties that harm the fragile peace process.
Britain, France, Germany and Italy in a joint statement urged "all Libyan and
international parties to refrain from any parallel and uncoordinated initiative"
that risked undermining the UN-led efforts. Their statement said they were
"ready to take measures against those who obstruct" the process, plunder state
funds or commit rights abuses. It did not name other states but Europe has in
the past accused both Russia and Turkey of interfering in Libya. Moscow has been
accused of backing mercenaries fighting the UN-backed Tripoli Government of
National Accord (GNA) while Turkey has deployed its military as well as drones
to back the GNA. The four European countries said they welcomed the roadmap
agreed by the Libyan parties to pave the way to national elections scheduled for
December 24 following an October ceasefire deal. "This is an important step to
restore Libya's sovereignty and the democratic legitimacy of its institutions,"
the statement said. It said that the four countries shared the opposition of
Libyans "to all foreign interference, and support their willingness to come
together in peaceful and patriotic dialogue". French President Emmanuel Macron
has been a particularly vocal critic of Turkey's role in the Libya conflict,
accusing it of seeking new influence in the eastern Mediterranean, in one of a
number of issues that have triggered grave tensions between Paris and Ankara.
Last month's ceasefire formally ended fighting between forces of the
Ankara-backed GNA and those of eastern strongman Khalifa Haftar, who was long
favoured by Russia. The ceasefire aims to end years of conflict following the
2011 killing of dictator Moamer Kadhafi. Stephanie Williams, UN acting special
envoy for Libya, said last week that rival forces in Libya had failed to begin
withdrawing as required under an October ceasefire agreement.
Saudi-led Coalition Says Huthi Attack on Jeddah Oil
Facility Targets Global Supplies
Associated Press/23 November ,2020
Yemen's Houthi rebels said they struck a Saudi oil facility in the port city of
Jeddah on Monday with a new cruise missile, just hours after the kingdom
finished hosting its virtual Group of 20 leaders summit. An unnamed official at
the kingdom's Ministry of Energy acknowledged the attack in a statement carried
by the official Saudi Press Agency late Monday. It came after videos of a small
explosion at a Saudi Arabian Oil Co. facility in Jeddah circulated on social
media all day. A projectile struck a fuel tank at the Jeddah distribution
station and ignited a fire, the official said. Col. Turki al-Maliki, a spokesman
for the Saudi-led coalition fighting the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen, blamed
the Yemeni rebels for what he called "a cowardly attack which not only targets
the kingdom, but also targets the nerve center of the world's energy supply and
the security of the global economy." U.N. chief Antonio Guterres and the
Organization of Islamic Cooperation have condemned the attack, according to the
Al-Arabiya news network. Brig. Gen. Yehia Sarie, a Houthi military spokesman,
tweeted that the rebels fired a new Quds-2 cruise missile at the facility. He
posted a satellite image online that matched Aramco's North Jeddah Bulk Plant,
where oil products are stored in tanks. That facility is just southeast of
Jeddah's King Abdulaziz International Airport, a major airfield that handles
incoming Muslim pilgrims en route to nearby Mecca. Online videos appeared to
show a tank farm similar to the bulk plant on fire, with wailing sirens heard
and police cars alongside a highway by the facility. Details of the videos
posted predawn Monday matched the general layout of the bulk plant. However,
passers-by could not see damage to the tank farm from the highway running beside
the facility later Monday morning. A satellite photo from Planet Labs Inc. later
published by TankerTrackers.com appeared to show damage to one of the tanks at
the bulk plant and what appeared to be fire-suppression foam on the ground near
it.
The Saudi energy official said that firefighters had brought the blaze under
control and the strike had not resulted in any casualties or damage to oil
supplies. Earlier, the U.S. Consulate in Jeddah said it wasn't aware of any
casualties from the claimed attack. It urged Americans to "review immediate
precautions to take in the event of an attack and stay alert in case of
additional future attacks." Saudi Aramco, the kingdom's oil giant that now has a
sliver of its worth traded publicly on the stock market, did not immediately
respond to a request for comment. Its stock traded slightly up Monday on
Riyadh's Tadawul stock exchange as crude oil prices remained steady above $40 a
barrel. The claimed attack comes just after a visit by outgoing U.S. Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo to the kingdom to see Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman , a
meeting that reportedly included Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The
kingdom also just hosted the annual G-20 summit, which concluded Sunday. A
Saudi-led coalition has been battling the Houthis since March 2015, months after
the rebels seized Yemen's capital, Sanaa. The war has ground into a stalemate
since, with Saudi Arabia facing international criticism for its airstrikes
killing civilians.The Houthis have used Quds, or "Jerusalem," missiles to target
Saudi Arabia in the past. The Quds-1 has a copy of a small, Czech-made TJ-100
jet engine, with a range of 700 kilometers (435 miles). United Nations experts
have said they don't believe the missiles are built in Yemen and instead have
been sold or traded to them in violation of an arms embargo. Iran uses a copy of
TJ-100 engines in its drone program. U.N. experts, Arab countries and the West
say Iran supplies arms to the rebels, allegations denied by Tehran. The Quds-1
was used in a missile-and-drone strike on the heart of the kingdom's oil
industry in 2019 that shook global energy markets. The U.S. believes Iran
carried out that attack amid a series of escalating incidents last year between
Tehran and Washington, something Tehran denies.
Conflict over Muslim Brotherhood still separating Egypt,
Turkey
The Arab Weekly/November 23/2020
CAIRO – Well-informed Egyptian sources revealed that the close relations between
Egypt and Saudi Arabia did not prevent “each country from keeping a margin of
independence to move as it sees fit at the level of the region.”
Thus, two days ago, Riyadh showed an apparent flexibility towards Turkey, while
Cairo has not yet taken any specific step towards Ankara to indicate a reaction
to the many political messages sent by senior Turkish officials.
The sources told The Arab Weekly that “the Egyptian leadership likes to proceed
slowly and cautiously and not take the initiative in this kind of complex
crisis, especially when the components of the crisis are unstable and controlled
by different parties. It prefers to bet on the time factor, which can create a
reality with ill-suited colours.”The sources indicated that “Egypt understands
the motives for the change in the Saudi position” towards Ankara, given Riyadh’s
assessments that a positive development will not harm its interests and goals at
this delicate stage. The problem, according to the sources is that the Turkish
leadership “is not sincere and will never have completely clear intentions. They
kept the file of Jamal Khashoggi’s assassination open intentionally so that they
can use it for political gains at any moment.”
The sources said that Egypt and Saudi Arabia had in the past differt readings of
what was happening in both Syria and Yemen, not to mention Iran, and yet their
relations were not affected at any stage because of their shared understandings
on the broad outlines that maintain their alliance.
Cairo and Riyadh intersect with Ankara in the files of Qatar and the Muslim
Brotherhood. The first file is rather a major problem, and Riyadh seems to be
willing to overlook a good chunk of the obstacles in that file if the current US
administration is determined to find an appropriate settlement for the crisis
and not leave it to the watch of the new administration.
Cairo, however, has a different angle on the dilemma with Qatar, in that this
dilemma is intertwined with the second file, namely Qatar’s support for the
Muslim Brotherhood. From an Egyptian perspective, the crisis with Qatar cannot
be defused without reaching a deal that includes the Brotherhood file in which
Ankara and Doha have similar views. The issue becomes even more difficult in
light of the fact that Turkey is dealing with the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood in
Turkey as a project for an Egyptian “government in exile” waiting for the
opportunity to return home and resume pursuing their initial goals. This in turn
represents a covert questioning of the legitimacy of the current Egyptian
regime, and justifies embracing the Egyptian Brotherhood, despite all of its
failures.
The sources said that Cairo is waiting for what will emerge from the recent
phone conversation between the Saudi monarch, King Salman bin Abdulaziz, and
Turkish President RecepTayyip Erdogan.
Senior Saudi officials have already announced that “there was no problem with
Turkey,” and there is persistent talk about a dialogue already in motion between
the two countries.
The countries boycotting Qatar consider Egypt to be the major counterweight to
Turkey’s support for Doha, since Cairo, with its human and political weight,
will always be an obstacle to any Turkish expansion in the region.
Turkey, however, has invested heavily economically, politically and in the media
on its project, presenting it as a plan for radical change. This in turn means
that the depth of the crisis between the two countries is beyond the stage of
being resolved by a couple of reconciliation sessions.
Egyptian political sources ruled out that Qatar would back down from its support
for the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood and its efforts to restore their rule in
Egypt, even if Turkey was able to change some of its stances towards Egypt. The
sources indicated in a statement to The Arab Weekly that Cairo had drawn a red
line for Ankara in Libya, which has held up until now, while Turkey has placed a
similar line in the trenches of its Muslim Brotherhood project, and it is still
holding as well. What Cairo is doing is waiting to see how far can this line
hold up in the midst of a remarkable ebb and flow of the situation.
The sporadic messages recently sent by Ankara to Cairo did not explicitly
address the fate of the exiled Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, and focused on hints
related to the eastern Mediterranean and Libya issues, in which Cairo had
already taken steps to keep Turkey at bay and resist its provocations by forming
a regional and international safety net, in which any change needs great
coordination efforts with different parties.
Observers say that the card of the Brotherhood is important for both Turkey and
Egypt, and none of them will neglect it, except under certain pressures or
tempting gains. The Turkish regime believes that sacrificing the Egyptian
Brotherhood will cost it dearly, since it espouses the same ideology and
approach to power as the Brotherhood, and giving all of that up is a heavy price
to pay, unless, of course, the alternative offer is much more generous.
Cairo is not interested in settling the Brotherhood file with Ankara, because it
is a card that gives it a broad space for continuing on the path of its
hard-line policy towards the Islamist current funded by Turkey and Qatar, and
any reconciliation with Ankara would implicitly lead to an easing up of this
tough policy. Observers do not rule out a sudden change in Egyptian calculations
regarding the Brotherhood file due to the arrival of Democratic President Joe
Biden to the White House, and thus the probability of reaching an understanding
with Turkey regarding this file in the near future becomes rather strong,
because doing so may rid both Cairo and Ankara of one of the bothersome tools of
political pressure on each party in the coming period.
They add that the dilemma and the solution at the same time lie in the fact that
some Western countries may decide to classify the Muslim Brotherhood as a
terrorist group, in light of the recent bloody terrorist attacks that occurred
in France and Austria. Egypt may find in this development the perfect
opportunity to go on undermining the group, and Turkey will be forced to
increase the distance between it and Egypt so as to exclude trading off the
Islamist current.
Cairo-based Turkish researcher, Mohamed Obaidallah, said that Erdogan is
preparing to make an about-turn towards the West to ease off his tense
relationship with it. He, Erdogan, fears the scenario where the anti-Erdogan
campaign in Europe intensifies to such an extent that Joe Biden will jump on its
bandwagon with enthusiasm. The Turkish president had already received warnings
about the consequences of continuing his transgressions, and even might face now
sanctions for his previous blackmailing.
In a statement to The Arab Weekly, Obaidullah considered that such a turnabout
could give Cairo a good opportunity for further political movement, because it
means that Erdogan will not be as willing as before to exercise his passion for
creating pressure on some countries by his involvement in crises and hot spots
here and there, including Libya, which would represent a great threat to the
Egyptian national security.
The Egyptian government tends not to abandon its wait-and-see policy in dealing
with developments in the region, before choosing the best path to follow,
usually the one with least risks and damages, especially as the Middle East will
soon come under the scrutiny of a new administration at the White House.
Egyptian sources who spoke to The Arab Weekly did not expecta change to occur in
Cairo’s current position, regardless of the extent to which the Saudi open talks
with Turkey could reach. Egypt’s battle with Ankara began years before Riyadh’s,
and the escalation processes went on in separate episodes, related to each
country’s calculations. So, if the central knot in Egypt’s crisis with Turkey
lies in the latter’s embrace of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood and supporting
extremists, then it will also be the key to resolving the crisis or perpetuating
it.
Syria's Assad: Lone Survivor of Arab Spring
Agence France Presse/23 November ,2020
When the Arab revolts that were sweeping the region and toppling autocrats like
dominoes reached Syria, Bashar al-Assad's days at the helm looked numbered. Ten
years on however, he has defied the odds, surviving international isolation and
the temporary loss of two thirds of the national territory to claw his way back
into relevance and hold on to power. It seemed doubtful in March 2011, when
protests broke out in Syria, that his ruling Alawite minority would be capable
of withstanding the tide of uprisings dramatically reshaping the region. The
leadership mettle of the London-trained ophthalmologist, a reluctant heir when
his iron-fisted father Hafez died in 2000, was also being questioned. But his
patience and cool combined with myriad factors -- including his grip on the
security apparatus, the West's disengagement, and the support of Russia and Iran
-- to save him from defeat, analysts say. "Years after the whole world demanded
he leave and thought he would be toppled, today it wants to reconcile with him,"
veteran Lebanese politician Karim Pakradouni said.
'Long game' -
"Assad knew how to play the long game," said the politician, who has often acted
as a mediator between the Damascus regime and various Lebanese parties. In 2011,
Assad chose to repress peaceful protests with force, sparking a complex war
involving rebels, jihadists and world powers in which any fighter not on his
side was called a "terrorist". The conflict has since killed more than 380,000
people, displaced more than half the country's pre-war population, and seen tens
of thousands thrown behind bars. Ordinary Syrians have seen food prices soar and
the local currency plummet in a desperate economic crisis the government has
blamed on Western sanctions. But Assad is still in power and, after a string of
Russia-backed victories, his forces are back in control of around 70 percent of
the country. The Syrian president always insisted he would come out on top.
"He has never faltered. He has stood firm on all his stances without concession,
and has managed to take back most of Syria with military might," Pakradouni
said.
Loyal army
Despite tens of thousands of defections, Syria's army also played a major role
in his survival, he said. "This is what made Assad an exception in the so-called
Arab Spring." In Tunisia, the army abandoned Zine El Abidine Ben Ali when street
pressure mounted, Egypt's military also let go of Hosni Mubarak, and in Libya,
top brass had already turned against Moamer Kadhafi before his demise. Analyst
Thomas Pierret said: "Army leadership remained loyal because for decades it had
been stacked with relatives of Assad and fellow Alawites"."The latter probably
made up more than 80 percent of the officer corps by 2011 and held virtually
every single influential position within it," said the researcher at the
Institute of Research and Study on the Arab and Muslim Worlds. A Syrian
researcher based in Damascus who asked to remain anonymous said Assad's
"determination and rigour" were also key.
"He was able to concentrate all decisions in his hands and ensure the army was
entirely on his side," the researcher said, adding the regime's structure
ensured nobody could build up enough influence to tee up a challenge.Instead,
Assad gambled on Syria's complex social structure -- ethnic divisions between
Arabs and Kurds, as well as religious differences between Sunni Muslims, his
Alawite clan, and other minorities. "He benefitted from people's fear of chaos,
from his own (Alawite) environment's fear about their survival if he fell," the
Syrian researcher said.
No alternative
When Islamists and jihadists became more prominent, he sought to present himself
as a protector of minorities including Christians. But Assad also benefitted
from the absence of any effective political opposition, the researcher said. In
2012, as Assad's forces were losing on the ground, more than 100 countries
recognised an opposition alliance, known as the Syrian National Coalition, as
the sole legitimate representative of the Syrian people. Assad appeared
increasingly isolated and many regional and world powers, betting on his
downfall, slapped his regime with a raft of sanctions and turned him into a
global pariah. But Syria's domestic and exiled political opposition failed to
present a united front, or a credible alternative to Assad with which the
international community could engage. The armed opposition became increasingly
fractured as the conflict evolved, and Assad was able to instrumentalise the
rise of jihadist groups to cast himself as a rampart against terrorism.
US failure to use force
The rebels needed air power to help them, but the West wanted to avoid a Syrian
repeat of the NATO fiasco in Libya. As years went by, Assad grew increasingly
confident that no US warplanes would come anywhere near Damascus. In 2013,
following an alleged regime chemical attack on two rebel-held areas outside
Damascus that killed more than 1,400 people, then US president Barack Obama
balked at air strikes to punish the crossing of a "red line" he himself had set.
"The Obama administration was not interested in the Syrian conflict," Pierret
said. "It had been elected on the promise that it would withdraw from Iraq,
hence was reluctant to return to the Middle East." A US-led coalition did launch
strikes in Syria the following year, but that was to back Kurdish-led fighters
battling the Islamic State group whose newly-proclaimed "caliphate" had become
the focus of global attention.
Russia stepped in the year after in support of Assad and launched its first air
raids in 2015, turning the tide of the conflict. It "seized a historical
opportunity to retrieve its lost superpower status by filling a strategic void
left by Obama's partial disengagement from the region," Pierret said.
- 'Impossible equation' -
Once clamouring for Assad to leave, Western powers are now eager for a political
solution to stem the conflict before presidential elections next summer. "Today
the Syrian regime cannot be accepted back into the international system, but
also cannot remain outside it," the Damascus-based researcher said. "This
impossible equation will leave us in a quandary for years to come, without
solution or stability," he said. Without a political solution to unlock
international reconstruction funds, the Syrian people will continue to pay the
price of the country's "slow bleeding out", he said. Assad is already in his
third decade in power at 55 and a fourth mandate in 2021 looks all but
guaranteed, as tens of thousands of the Syrians who peacefully protested to
demand his removal almost a decade ago are now exiled, jailed or dead.
Palestinians slam Pompeo over pro-settlement efforts
AP/23 November ,2020
US actions ‘will not change international consensus,’ says former UN envoy
AMMAN: Palestinian officials have downplayed the effectiveness of a statement by
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during his recent visit to Israeli settlements
in the West Bank. The statement included a move to allow products made in the
occupied territories to be labeled “Made in Israel,” a clear contradiction to
recent UN Security Council resolutions and efforts by the EU to reject such
labeling. Nasser Al-Kiddwa, former Palestinian envoy to the UN, told Arab News
that the US efforts are “dangerous,” despite being ineffective. “This is a
dangerous move even though it will not have much of an effect and is
reversible,” he said. In harsh comments, Al-Kiddwa said that, while President
Donald Trump’s administration is keen to help Israelis and settlers, the
country’s efforts constitute helping Israel “commit a war crime.” “While the
Trump team wants to support settlements and settlers, their action makes the US
an accomplice in a war crime,” he said. Al-Kiddwa said the Pompeo statement
violates UN Council Resolution 2334, which calls for differentiating between the
West Bank and Israel. He said it was also a clear violation of the Fourth Geneva
Convention. Jamal Dajani, a lecturer at San Francisco State university, said the
Trump administration is not “recognizing the reality on the ground,” but rather
creating its own fictitious reality by implementing Benjamin Netanyahu’s
settler-colonial vision. Dajani, who previously served as director of strategic
communications and media in the Palestinian prime minister’s office, said the
“true reality on the ground” is that Area C in the West Bank is an
internationally recognized occupied territory. He added that the presence of
Israeli colonial settlements in the region is a violation of the Fourth Geneva
Convention, which states: “The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer
parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.” Al-Kiddwa,
who is a member of the Fatah Central Committee, told Arab News that the US
action will not alter the international consensus. “This is a biased
administration that does not care about international law or the future of the
region.” He called on the newly elected administration in the US to reverse the
decision. “As a world citizen, I believe that the new administration must
reverse all the decisions that were carried out without coordination with the US
Congress, which are in clear violation of the way things are carried out,” he
said. Wadie Abunassar, a Haifa-based political analyst and the director of the
International Centre for Consultations, told Arab News that the Trump
administration has ignored the more than 7 million Palestinians to the west of
the Jordan River. “This administration repeatedly damaged US chances to be
perceived as an honest broker by the vast majority of Middle East residents. The
US would do well by respecting international law and encouraging Israel to do
so.” Senior Palestinian officials contacted by Arab News said that the gifts
being bestowed on the Netanyahu government will not change anything on the
ground. “Trump and Pompeo are playing in lost time and their actions will not
change anything regarding the occupied territories.”
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on November 23-24/2020
Gantz: Netanyahu hurt Israel by leaking Saudi trip/Defense
and foreign ministers left in dark on PM's Saudi trip
Gil Hoffman/Jerusalem Post/November 23/2020
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did not inform Alternate Prime Minister Benny
Gantz or Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi when he went to Saudi Arabia on Sunday
night, political sources revealed on Monday.
Netanyahu continued the trend of not informing Gantz and Ashkenazi of key
diplomatic developments. He also did not inform them in advance of the
agreements he reached with United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.
Mossad chief Yossi Cohen went to Saudi Arabia with Netanyahu and US Secetary of
State Mike Pompeo to meet with Saudi Crown Prime Muhammad bin Salman and not
Gantz, who is minister of defense.
Gantz criticized Netanyahu, not for not telling him about the visit before it
took place but for telling the world about it afterward. "Leaking the secret
flight of the prime minister was irresponsible," Gantz said. "That is not what I
would do as prime minister, and that is not how I have ever behaved. I think the
citizens of Israel should be worried." Sources close to Gantz and Ashkenazi said
they were not upset about being left in the dark again. “It is improper that I
was not told of the deal in advance but what matters is that the deal was made
at all,” Gantz told The Jerusalem Post in September about the UAE deal. “There
is a difference between a basic surprise out of nowhere, being astounded, which
is not what this was, and a situational surprise, that it happened now." Gantz
criticized Netanyahu for postponing Sunday's security cabinet meeting from
Sunday to Monday. It turned out the reason for the delay was the flight to Saudi
Arabia. Netanyahu's associates criticized Gantz for forming a ministerial
committee to investigate the purchase of submarines while Netanyahu was on the
way to Saudi Arabia. "While Gantz is playing politics, Netanyahu is making
peace," Netanyahu's social media adviser Topaz Luk wrote on Twitter.
Netanyahu trip to Saudi Arabia shows importance of
Israeli-Saudi ties
Seth J.Frantzman/Jerusalem Post/November 23/2020
While Riyadh has suffered diplomatic setbacks on the world stage in recent
years, it has been trying to shore up support.
A reported trip by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Saudi Arabia on
Sunday showcased the importance of Israel-Saudi Arabia ties in the last months
of the Trump administration. This is important for numerous reasons, including
regional alliances and security and economic ties that are flowering between
Israel the Gulf states after the Abraham Accords.
Israeli prime minister adviser Topaz Luk tweeted about Netanyahu “doing peace.”
KAN correspondent Amichai Stein tweeted Monday morning that the prime minister
traveled to Saudi Arabia for a meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman and
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
Pompeo tweeted yesterday about his “Constructive visit with Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman in NEOM today. The United States and Saudi Arabia have come
a long way since President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and King Abdul Aziz Al Saud
first laid the foundation for our ties 75 years ago.”
Haaretz reported the secret flight. Avi Scharf reported about the unusual
business jet flight that left Israel and flew to Saudi Arabia and back.
The meeting came as Iranian-backed Houthi rebels fired ballistic missiles at an
Aramco installation in Jeddah, which is far south of Neom, where the apparent
meeting took place. Boris Johnson had noted during the recent G20, hosted by
Saudi Arabia, that he wished he could have visited.
In this sense the center of the story is also about Saudi Arabia’s future.
Riyadh has been talking more about climate change and trying to showcase the
city of the future, the planned city of Neom which will cost hundreds of
billions to build but will show what Saudi Arabia’s future can be.
WHILE RIYADH has suffered diplomatic setbacks on the world stage in recent
years, it has been trying to shore up support. Working with the current US
administration and supporting peaceful outreach from Bahrain and the UAE to
Israel have been part of that. Saudi Arabia was the main engine behind the Arab
peace initiative of 2002 and supported the concept of peace and normalization
with Israel, with a Palestinian state being created. It doesn’t want to go back
on that promise.
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The UAE, however, has posited that peace has helped stop Israeli annexation.
Yousef al-Otaiba, the UAE ambassador to the US and Hend al-Otaiba, the
spokesperson at the Foreign Ministry who recently penned an op-ed in Tablet,
have stressed this point.
The Emirates and Bahrain are deeply investing in coexistence and interfaith
initiatives, and Israelis are running to embrace them. Saudi Arabia, the larger
of the countries and a global power in the Muslim world, has been more cautious,
but has the same overall agenda as it speaks about reform and change.
However, Saudi Arabia has challenges abroad. It has been critiqued for human
rights abuses in recent years, especially in the wake of breaking relations with
Qatar in 2017. Qatar and Turkey have mobilized state media and allies in Western
governments, academia and media to portray Saudi Arabia as a human rights
violator. The truth is more complex. Riyadh has been a monarchy for the last
century and has had the same human rights issues in the 1990s as it has today.
The sudden daylight in relations that Riyadh feels from Western powers is about
more than just an objective view of the situation in the kingdom, it is about
some agendas being pushed by those in the West who seek a redress to decades of
the West being close to Middle East Gulf countries. There are also claims that
those who are more close to Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood have driven this
narrative, trying to portray Riyadh more negatively than Qatar and Turkey.
THE RESULT has been much closer visible work between Saudi Arabia and Egypt, as
well as between the UAE, Bahrain, India, Jordan, Greece and Egypt and Israel.
This system of countries is juxtaposed with the Iranian alliance that includes
its proxies in Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen, and the Turkey-Qatar alliance
that includes Hamas.
These countries work on opposite sides in Yemen, Iraq and Lebanon. Riyadh is a
supporter of Sunnis in Lebanon and Iraq, for instance, but must seek to fight
for their hearts and minds against Turkey. This is a global struggle that also
involves Pakistan and Malaysia. And it also involves Israel.
That is why the Pompeo visit, fresh from meeting the Taliban in Afghanistan, the
Saudi hosting of the G20, the Houthi missile fire and reports of Netanyahu’s
trip are all part of the same story. Saudi Arabia appeared to be moving toward
peace with Israel. That would open many doors. But there are questions in Riyadh
about what will change next year under President-elect Joe Biden.
Biden has been critical of Saudi Arabia and also of Turkey. US commentators
critique the Riyadh-led war against the Houthis in Yemen. Major think tanks,
some of which are warmer toward Iran or Qatar, seek to tarnish Saudi Arabia’s
image. But at the G20 meeting Riyadh and Ankara appeared to be getting along
better. Many wonder what comes next. Closer Saudi-Israeli ties could be on the
list. Riyadh has been flexible about flights and more openly supportive of the
Abraham Accords. There is a role that Israel could play in the Saudi economy and
cities like Neom if there were normalization. It could also mean a re-alignment
of other issues from Iraq to Lebanon.
These are essential and important talks and Pompeo’s presence was key. Whether
there will be a new groundbreaking announcement will be seen in the coming
weeks.
Clearly the willingness to be more open about these types of meetings is part
and parcel of a movement in a direction that has been paved by Abu Dhabi and its
innovative approach to rapidly expanding ties. Flights begin on November 26 to
Dubai, for instance. That is symbolic, as symbolic as the business jet that left
Israel at five in the afternoon yesterday and appeared headed to Neom.
Trump helped to create a safe space for these kinds of meetings. But as he
leaves office, the countries must work together closely and create their own
future – that they will then present to the world.
Cooperate with China or World War 3: Kissinger
Gordon G. Chang/Gatestone Institute/November 23/2020
[I]n a little over 14 minutes Kissinger managed to totally misinterpret Chinese
history, support Beijing's most important foreign policy goal, and give deeply
misguided advice to Joe Biden. Kissinger has evidently learned nothing from
years of dangerous Chinese behavior, which is partly the result of his policy
formulations.
China's troubled past, in short, is an excuse. What, after all, is it in history
that justifies present-day Chinese aggression against India, Bhutan and Nepal,
or its designs on Tajikistan, the Philippines and Malaysia? Moreover, what
justification is there for the Communist Party's declaration of a "people's war"
on the United States in May of last year?
Xi Jinping, the one man in China's system, is now propagating the audacious
concept of tianxia, that "all under heaven" owe allegiance to Beijing.
There are, unfortunately, some points in history when dialogue makes matters
worse because hardline leaders perceive others' desire to talk as a sign of
weakness.
What is the best indication that Kissinger is wrong? Beijing at the moment is
waging a concerted propaganda campaign to push his views as widely as possible.
When your enemy wants you to do something, it is almost always not in your
interest.
China is aggressive and militant at this moment because of the nature of its
communist regime, which is quickly driving the country back to one-man rule and
totalitarianism. Xi Jinping, the one man in China's system, is now propagating
the audacious concept of tianxia, that "all under heaven" owe allegiance to
Beijing. (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
"I would think we need first of all a dialogue with the Chinese leadership in
which we are defining what we're attempting to prevent and in which the two
leaders agree that whatever other conflicts they have they will not resort to
military conflict," Henry Kissinger told Bloomberg News Editor-in-Chief John
Micklethwait on November 16 at the Bloomberg New Economy Forum. "Unless there is
some basis for some cooperative action, the world will slide into a catastrophe
comparable to World War I."
Of course no one wants war of any type with China, but in a little over 14
minutes Kissinger managed to totally misinterpret Chinese history, support
Beijing's most important foreign policy goal, and give deeply misguided advice
to Joe Biden. Kissinger has evidently learned nothing from years of dangerous
Chinese behavior, which is partly the result of his policy formulations.
We start with history, because Kissinger was once an accomplished historian and
his incorrect opinions on China today appear to flow from his unsupportable
views of the Chinese past. He makes the case that Americans cannot understand
Beijing's insecurity.
"Americans have had a history of relatively uninterrupted success," he noted.
"The Chinese have had a very long history of repeated crises. America has had
the good fortune of being free of immediate dangers. Chinese have usually been
surrounded by countries that have had designs on their unity."
Even if his comments were true, no country now threatens China. China, in fact,
has not faced any credible external threat to its unity for more than seven
decades. The Communist Party dwells on history, such as the so-called "Century
of Humiliation," the subject of ruler Xi Jinping's National Day speech last
October, because that telling of history suits the needs of today's insecure
regime.
China's troubled past, in short, is an excuse. What, after all, is it in history
that justifies present-day Chinese aggression against India, Bhutan and Nepal,
or its designs on Tajikistan, the Philippines and Malaysia?
Moreover, what justification is there for the Communist Party's declaration of a
"people's war" on the United States in May of last year?
China is aggressive and militant at this moment because of the nature of its
communist regime, which is quickly driving the country back to one-man rule and
totalitarianism. Xi Jinping, the one man in China's system, is now propagating
the audacious concept of tianxia, that "all under heaven" owe allegiance to
Beijing.
There are, unfortunately, some points in history when dialogue makes matters
worse because hardline leaders perceive others' desire to talk as a sign of
weakness.
In any event, dialogue assumes that Chinese leaders can compromise, which at
this point is a dubious proposition. For instance, Beijing last compromised a
territorial claim in 2011 — with Tajikistan, when it took Tajik territory — but
now is trying to reopen the settlement to grab even more. Since then, Beijing
has added new claims — to the South China Sea — and has laid the groundwork for
additional ones, especially over Japan's Ryukyu chain.
The absence of Chinese goodwill leaves America a last resort: deterrence.
Kissinger, often cited as a deterrence expert, is now not a fan of it. When
Micklethwait asked him whether he favored the notion of Biden advisors that
democracies should unite in a coalition, the 97-year-old "grand consigliere of
American diplomacy" — the Financial Times's description — was noncommittal. "I
think democracies should cooperate wherever their convictions allow it or
dictate it," he replied. "I think a coalition aimed at a particular country is
unwise, but a coalition to prevent dangers is necessary where the occasion
requires it." In Kissinger-speak, that is a "no" to international cooperation
against Beijing.
Given what could be happening inside Communist Party political circles, there
may now be no way to avoid war with a militant Chinese state. Yet whether peace
is possible or not, it should be clear to Kissinger that the approach he has
supported, and which has been adopted by every American president since
President Nixon went to China in 1972, has contributed to Chinese
aggressiveness. Kissinger, by urging conciliation when Beijing has made clear it
cannot be appeased, has helped produced today's grave situation.
Let us remember that Kissinger has always been intimidated by large communist
states. He advocated détente in the early 1970s when he assumed there was no way
to prevail over the Soviet Union. Reagan, after refusing to accept the USSR as a
given, proved him dead wrong.
And Kissinger is dead wrong now. "Trump has a more confrontational method of
negotiation than you can apply indefinitely," Kissinger told Micklethwait,
appearing to speak to Joe Biden. That, James Fanell, the noted Swiss-based China
strategist told Gatestone, is "an unambiguous declaration of Dr. Kissinger's
defeatism."
As Fanell, a former director of Intelligence and Information Operations of the
U.S. Pacific Fleet, said, Kissinger believes the U.S. "cannot compete with the
People's Republic of China."
America, however, is far stronger than China's regime and has allies, which
China, other than North Korea, does not. Moreover, the U.S. is knitting together
a formidable coalition — the Quad with Australia, India, and Japan — giving
Washington the ability to continue to confront Beijing on every front. The
Chinese state is no match for nations, both near and far, it seems determined to
antagonize.
What is the best indication that Kissinger is wrong? Beijing at the moment is
waging a concerted propaganda campaign to push his views as widely as possible.
When your enemy wants you to do something, it is almost always not in your
interest.
Kissinger essentially said the choice for America is cooperation or war, a
narrative he has propagated in recent interviews. Yet repetition will not make
his false dichotomy so. Countries can, between these two extremes, choose
confrontation and deterrence. World War II in Europe, for example, started
because Britain and France chose not to confront the Third Reich when doing so —
in 1936 during the attempted remilitarization of the Rhineland — would have
ended the German military threat.
Micklethwait started out the interview by asking about the Congress of Vienna,
the subject of Kissinger's A World Restored: Metternich, Castlereagh and the
Problems of Peace 1812-22. "Whenever peace—conceived as the avoidance of war—has
been the primary objective of a power or a group of powers, the international
system has been at the mercy of the most ruthless member of the international
community," he wrote. "Whenever the international order has acknowledged that
certain principles could not be compromised even for the sake of peace,
stability based on an equilibrium of forces was at least conceivable."Kissinger
ducked the question and, for some reason, is now suggesting the United States
put itself at the mercy of the world's most ruthless regime.
*Gordon G. Chang is the author of The Coming Collapse of China, a Gatestone
Institute Distinguished Senior Fellow, and member of its Advisory Board. Follow
him on Twitter and Parler @GordonGChang.
© 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.
How Islam’s Own Blasphemy Laws Could Outlaw Islam
Raymond Ibrahim/November 23, 2020
Muslims everywhere—from the heads of the most prestigious institutions, such as
Egypt’s Al Azhar, to the common rank and file—are calling for the international
equivalent of their own blasphemy laws, which ban any critical or offensive talk
against Islam and its prophet Muhammad, often on pain of death.
Although the recent beheading of a French teacher who showed a Charlie Hebdo
cartoon of the prophet of Islam in the context of free speech occasioned this
latest demand, in fact, Muslim calls to criminalize free speech against Islam
regularly flare out whenever Muslims kill Westerners in the context of
exercising their rights to free expression.
For example, in 2015, after Muslim gunmen killed 12 people at Charlie Hebdo
offices for publishing the same satirical caricatures of Muslim prophet
Muhammad, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), the “collective voice
of the Muslim world” and second largest inter-governmental organization after
the United Nations, called—and is again predictably calling—for the United
Nations to criminalize “blasphemy” against Islam, or what it more ecumenically
calls, the “defamation of religions.”
Yet the OIC, Al Azhar, and countless other Muslim groups and individuals seem to
miss the grand irony: if international laws would ban free speech, cartoons,
books, and films on the basis that they defame Islam, they would also, by
logical extension, have to ban the entire religion of Islam itself—the only
religion whose core texts actively and unequivocally defame other religions,
including by name.
To understand this, consider what “defamation” means. Typical
dictionary-definitions include “to blacken another’s reputation” and “false or
unjustified injury of the good reputation of another, as by slander or libel.”
In Muslim usage, defamation simply means anything that insults or offends
Islamic sensibilities.
However, to gain traction among the international community, the OIC and others
cynically maintain that such laws should protect all religions from defamation,
not just Islam (even as Muslim governments regularly ban churches, destroy
crucifixes, and burn Bibles). Disingenuous or not, such wording suggests that
any expression that “slanders” the religious sentiments of others should be
banned.
What, then, do we do with Islam’s core religious texts—beginning with the Koran
itself, which slanders, denigrates and blackens the reputation of other
religions? Consider Christianity alone: Koran 5:73 declares that “Infidels are
they who say God is one of three,” a reference to the Christian Trinity; Koran
5:72 says “Infidels are they who say God is the Christ, [Jesus] son of Mary”;
and Koran 9:30 complains that “the Christians say the Christ is the son of God …
may God’s curse be upon them!”
Considering that the word “infidel” (kafir) is not only Islam’s most derogatory
term, but sharia requires Muslims to subjugate or kill infidels, what if a
Christian book or Western cartoon appeared declaring that “Infidels are they who
say Muhammad is the prophet of God—may God’s curse be upon them”? If Muslims
would consider that a great defamation against Islam—and they would, with the
attendant rioting, murders, etc.—then by the same standard it must be admitted
that the Koran defames Christians and Christianity.
Similarly, consider how the Christian crucifix, venerated among millions, is
depicted—is defamed—in Islam: according to canonical hadiths, when he returns,
Jesus (“Prophet Isa”) will destroy all the crosses; as for Muhammad, who never
allowed the cross in his presence, he once ordered someone wearing a cross to
“throw away this piece of idol from yourself.” Unsurprisingly, the cross is
banned and often destroyed whenever visible in many Muslim countries.
What if Christian books or Western movies declared that the sacred things of
Islam—say the Black Stone in Mecca’s Ka’ba, which Muslims venerate and adore
while circumambulating—are “idolatry” and that Muhammad himself will return and
destroy them? If Muslims would consider that defamation against Islam—and they
would, with all the attendant rioting, murders, etc.—then by the same standard
it must be admitted that Islamic teaching defames the Christian Cross.
Here is a particularly odious form of defamation against Christian sentiment,
especially to the millions of Catholic and Orthodox Christians. According to
Islam’s most authoritative Koranic exegetes, including the revered Ibn Kathir,
Muhammad is in paradise married to and copulating with the Virgin Mary.
What if a Christian book or Western movie portrayed, say, Muhammad’s “favorite”
wife, Aisha—the “Mother of Believers”—as being married to and having sex with a
false prophet in heaven? If Muslims would consider that a great defamation
against Islam—and they would, with all the attendant rioting, murders, etc.—then
by the same standard it must be admitted that Islam’s most authoritative Koranic
exegetes defame the Virgin Mary.
Nor is such defamation of Christianity limited to Islam’s core scriptures;
modern day Muslim scholars and sheikhs agree that it is permissible to defame
and mock Christianity. “Islam Web,” which is owned by the government of Qatar,
even issued a fatwa that legitimizes insulting Christianity.
The grandest irony of all is that the “defamation” that Muslims complain
about—and that prompts great violence and bloodshed around the world—revolves
around things like cartoons and movies, which are made by individuals who
represent only themselves; on the other hand, Islam itself, through its holiest
and most authoritative texts, denigrates and condemns—in a word, defames—all
other religions, not to mention calls for violence against them (e.g., Koran
9:29).
It is this issue, Islam’s perceived “divine” right to defame and destroy, that
the international community should be addressing—not free speech and expression
in the guise of silly cartoons.
The future of Iran’s ties with Al-Qaeda under new US
president
Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab News/November 23/ 2020
The announcement of the killing of Al-Qaeda’s deputy commander in Tehran has
again raised questions about the Iranian regime’s relationship with the
terrorist organization and has provided a fresh reminder of the need to analyze
the regime’s strategy based on using the organization as an asset and providing
safe havens for its leaders. On Nov. 14, 2020, American media outlets cited
reports from US officials confirming that a covert joint operation by US and
Israeli intelligence services had resulted in the assassination of Al-Qaeda
commander Abu Mohammed Al-Masri in the heart of Tehran on Aug. 7, 2020. Al-Masri
was involved in the attacks on the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.
The Iranian Foreign Ministry predictably dismissed the reports of Al-Masri’s
killing on Iranian soil, describing them as “fake news.”
In the face of significant evidence from various sources repeatedly confirming
the longstanding relationship between Iran and Al-Qaeda, the regime in Tehran
insists on sticking unyieldingly to its policy of denial. It cites sectarian
differences and conflicting ideological views as supposedly compelling evidence
of the lack of any connection between Tehran and Al-Qaeda, and it reiterates the
animosity between the two sides. However, a closer look at both the trajectory
of relations between the two sides and their ideological similarities will
quickly reveal the deep-rooted ties between them and show the Iranian regime’s
success in forging an alliance with Al-Qaeda and employing its operatives to
meet Iranian objectives.
In theory, there are two different schools of thought within Al-Qaeda in
relation to dealing with Shiites in general and with Iran in particular. The
first school of thought, spearheaded by Ayman Al-Zawahiri and Abu Mohammed Al-Maqdisi,
believes that targeting Iranians and Shiites in general is not a priority for
the organization because they are excused for their ignorance of the “true”
understanding of Islam, which Al-Qaeda claims to monopolize. Also, this school
is somewhat more lenient and flexible in its attitude toward Shiites when
compared to the second school of thought, which will be discussed in the
following lines. According to this first school of thought, precedence should be
given to confronting the more evident enemy: The West, the US and those aligned
with them.
The second school of thought within Al-Qaeda was spearheaded by Abu Musab
Al-Zarqawi, a student of Al-Maqdisi and the assassinated leader of Al-Qaeda in
Iraq, who believed in the necessity of expanding the organization’s terrorist
operations against Shiites with the aim of sparking a Sunni-Shiite civil war in
Iraq. On the ground, meanwhile, Iran’s regime has provided a safe haven for
Al-Qaeda operatives who had been trapped in Afghanistan following the US
invasion of Kabul in 2001. Many members of Al-Qaeda and its affiliated groups
found they had no choice but to escape to Iran, particularly in light of the
Iranian regime sharing the organization’s animosity toward the US and feeling
they had no hope of fleeing to Pakistan given the strong CIA presence there.
By having these Al-Qaeda members and affiliates on its soil, Iran found
additional assets for extending its terrorist capabilities in the region and
beyond. These assets had the potential to carry out whatever terrorist
operations the Iranian regime wished to mount or potentially serve as a useful
bargaining chip with the US, to be swapped — if necessary — to achieve its
interests against the US.
Meanwhile, Al-Zarqawi directed his extremist vision toward the Shiites in Iraq
in order to cause the greatest possible disruption for the remaining US troops
in Iraq in order to drive them out of the country, enabling Iran to take control
of Iraq. It is worth noting that Al-Zarqawi had first fled to Iran following the
2001 US invasion of Afghanistan before moving to Iraq.
Although 20 years have passed since the confrontation between the US and
Al-Qaeda reached its peak, Iran still maintains the organization as an asset and
bargaining chip, harboring senior Al-Qaeda commanders such as Saif Al-Adel, a
high-level member of the organization’s shoura council, on its soil. Experts
believe that Al-Adel has tremendous field experience, with most observers
agreeing that he is still in Iran according to a UN report released in 2018.
Other prominent Al-Qaeda associates still in Iran include the family of the
terrorist organization’s deceased founder, Osama bin Laden.
With the “alliance and employment” relationship between Al-Qaeda and Iran’s
regime proven and well-documented, it seems probable that the future of the
Washington-Tehran relationship under the incoming US President Joe Biden will
put the Iranian regime under significant US pressure no less than the extreme
pressure imposed on the regime by President Donald Trump.
Despite the expected gradual settlement of the crisis surrounding the nuclear
deal during Biden’s time in office, the problems resulting from all the other
Iranian excesses will emerge more than ever before. These excesses include
Iran’s expansionism across the Middle East, the regime’s support for armed
militias and terrorist groups, its human rights abuses and the issue of
detainees with dual Iranian-European citizenship in Iranian prisons. Each of
these excesses and aggressions by Iran’s regime is sufficient to provoke
sanctions against Tehran and they should be as severe as those imposed on it due
to its nuclear activities. The foregoing is based on the assumption that US
sanctions will be lifted all in one go after Biden comes to power, which we
believe to be rather unrealistic.
For its part, Iran, for the first time, announced the upcoming release of
several detainees from its prisons shortly after the announcement of Biden’s
victory in the US presidential election. After Trump filed lawsuits challenging
the validity of the voting process in a few states, Iran slowed down in taking
the remaining steps to release the detainees. This was in addition to the
growing debate within the Iranian ruling elite about the possible future
scenarios in relation to the US position on the nuclear deal under Biden and the
best way to deal with them. The policy of ‘alliance and employment’ that Iran
has pursued with Al-Qaeda may come to an end.
While dragging its heels on releasing some detainees, Iran was expected to
release some of the imprisoned dual nationals. A significant number of dual
nationals have been arrested while visiting their relatives in Iran. The regime
levels various implausible allegations at detained dual nationals, such as
accusing them of carrying out espionage missions for Western countries, and
effectively uses them as bargaining chips during its negotiations with the West.
One of the best known among these cases is that of Iranian-British dual citizen
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, detained in Tehran since April 2016.
Based on all the mentioned points, even if the assassination of Al-Qaeda leaders
in Iran carried out by the US and Israel results in the close relationship
between Tehran and Al-Qaeda coming to the fore again, this will serve Iran
indirectly, relieving the regime of the burden of harboring Al-Qaeda commanders,
and significantly reducing the likelihood of future escalation between Iran and
the Biden administration. This is especially so when we put the killing of Al-Masri
in Iran on Nov. 14, 2020, side by side with the success of French forces in
killing Bah Ag Moussa, an Al-Qaeda military leader in the organization’s North
African wing on Nov. 13, 2020, and with Afghanistan’s announcement of the
killing of one of Al-Qaeda’s senior commanders on its soil, Mohammad Hanif Rezai,
on Nov. 12, 2020.
This means there are a number of files related to Al-Qaeda and its collaboration
with certain governments, first and foremost Iran, that are about to be closed,
meaning the policy of “alliance and employment” that Iran has pursued with
Al-Qaeda may come to an end. In the meantime, the current US administration is
hastening its withdrawal of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, making them
conducive arenas for the spread of terror activities of Iranian militias
operating on the ground in both countries.
*Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami is head of the International Institute for Iranian
Studies (Rasanah). Twitter: @mohalsulami
Can Biden help end the tragedy of Syria?
Chris Doyle/Arab News/November 23/ 2020
Former US President Barack Obama admitted in an interview this month that he is
“still tormented by the tragedy in Syria.” He certainly should be. In the
international arena, no conflict in his two terms saw so much destruction and
loss of life, and arguably so little positive impact from the US. If it haunts
him, one wonders what it does to President-elect Joe Biden, who as vice
president was also a key pillar in shaping the Obama administration’s Syria
policy.
The Obama-era policies in terms of Syria were largely a costly exercise in
wishful thinking. Without deploying serious military force in concert with
allies, why did he start the regime-change bandwagon? It fed the fantasies that
the US would lead the charge to kick out the Assad regime, which from the outset
Obama had no intention of doing.
In Obama’s recently published memoirs, he is clear about the situation in 2011
regarding Syria: “Our options were painfully limited.” If so, why — in tandem
with British, French and German leaders — did Obama call for Bashar Assad to
step aside when he had no intention to back that up? Why did Obama allow red
lines to be drawn that he had no intention of policing, as was painfully made
clear after his decision not to respond to the Assad regime’s chemical weapons
attacks in 2013? Why indeed was the red line only defined in terms of chemical
weapons when conventional weapons had killed hundreds of thousands? All of this
matters because so many of Biden’s likely team were a core part of the Obama
administration. Will they still be married to notions of regime change? This
might be unlikely. Tony Blinken, a key Biden ally and likely secretary of state,
wrote: “The last administration has to acknowledge that we failed, not for want
of trying, but we failed. We failed to prevent a horrific loss of life. We
failed to prevent massive displacement of people internally in Syria and, of
course, externally as refugees. And it’s something that I will take with me for
the rest of my days.”
Philip H. Gordon, former White House coordinator for the Middle East, was
similarly critical: “What we ended up doing was support the opposition enough to
escalate and perpetuate a tragic horrible devastating civil conflict, with huge
humanitarian repercussions, refugee flows, spillover effects in the neighbors,
exacerbation of terrorism, but not enough to actually bring about the change of
regime.”
It begs the question as to how much engagement a Biden administration will have
with the remnants of the Syrian political opposition, who appear more divided
and impotent than at any point in the last decade.
When Blinken was asked about normalization with the Assad regime, he said: “It
is virtually impossible for me to imagine that.” This did not rule it out, but
it is safe to assume it is not a likely scenario in the next four years.
A more pertinent question is whether Biden will maintain or even intensify
sanctions on Syria. They will not be lifted, but perhaps the aims could be
altered, including goals such as producing certain key reforms or safe voluntary
return of refugees.
Biden will have to engage in diplomacy, to reach out to allies to make up for
President Donald Trump’s disinterest in Syria. Given the power arrangements on
the ground, Biden’s relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin will be
key. Can Biden reengage with the UN political process and find a means of
working with his Russian counterpart? Putin will want to know what will be in it
for him.
But then there is Turkey. In one unguarded comment at a talk at Harvard’s
Kennedy School in 2014, Biden told the audience of students: “Our allies in the
region were our largest problem in Syria.” This led Turkish President Recep
Tayyep Erdogan to demand an apology, which after two days Biden did, but not
before Erdogan had described their relationship as “history.”
Biden will have to handle Erdogan delicately to resolve many areas of acute
tension, not least over the S-400 missile system that Turkey bought from Russia.
Biden also angers Erdogan because he insists that the US should not ditch its
Kurdish allies in Syria, an accusation he throws at Trump.
Turkey sees these American allies as terrorists. Biden’s support of these
Kurdish groups is one reason why he will not pull forces from Syria, if Trump
has left any behind. Sen. Chris Coons, another close Biden ally, was clear that
he would “support a continued presence by United States troops on the ground in
Syria and Afghanistan to retain the capacity, to prevent groups like Al-Qaeda
and ISIS (Daesh) to establish physical strongholds and to launch, again,
terrorist attacks against our nations.”
Biden made similar comments himself: “These ‘forever wars’ have to end. I
support drawing down the troops. But here’s the problem, we still have to worry
about terrorism and (Daesh).”
Biden will want to see less of an Iranian footprint in Syria, and almost
certainly will not step in to halt Israeli attacks on Iranian targets in the
country.
Another reason is oil. Key advisers to Trump persuaded him to return a US
presence in part because of Syrian oil. In fact there is not much oil present,
and it is not clear that the Biden team considers the oil as something the US
will be holding on to, unlike Trump. Blinken sees the oil as “a point of
leverage because the Syrian government would love to have dominion over those
resources. We should not give that up for free.”
Overall, Biden will have other priorities, and as with Trump, the focus in the
Middle East will be on Iran, albeit with the aim of securing a deal. The Assad
regime will hope this leads to some sanctions relief for Syria, something the
Syrian people certainly need in this economic crisis even if the regime’s record
does not merit it. Biden will want to see less of an Iranian footprint in Syria,
and almost certainly will not step in to halt Israeli attacks on Iranian targets
in the country.
The optimistic if unlikely scenario is that American diplomatic muscle will be
directed to ensuring significant progress in the UN-led political process in
Geneva, including with the constitutional committee. This may be the only way
that Biden can find a small degree of success, a tiny way of helping those
people out of this never-ending tragedy that still torments his former boss.
**Chris Doyle is director of the London-based Council for Arab-British
Understanding. Twitter: @Doylech
Feeling alienated, Iraqi Christians tempted to emigrate
The Arab Weekly/November 23/2020
BAGHDAD - The bells of St. Joseph’s Chaldean Cathedral echo across Baghdad,
signalling the start of Mass for the dwindling congregation that has stayed in
the scarred Iraqi capital against all odds.
“This is a safe space,” says Mariam, a 17-year-old Chaldean Catholic among the
few dozen attending the service. Elderly women pray solemnly, their hair covered
in delicate black veils. Red ropes block off every other row to enforce social
distancing in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, but there aren’t enough
worshippers to fill the church in any case.
A few hundred thousand Christians are left in Iraq, where a US-led invasion in
2003 paved the way for bloody sectarian warfare that devastated the country’s
historic and diverse Christian communities. Like Mariam, the 53-year-old deacon
of St. Joseph’s Cathedral preferred to identify himself only by his first name,
Nael. “My father, mother and siblings emigrated after 2003. I’m the only one
left in Iraq, and I stayed because I was hoping the situation would get better,”
he said.
But after 35 years serving at St. Joseph’s and watching the parish shrink year
by year, Nael has little hope. “It used to be full even on regular weekdays,” he
recalled. “But there’s been a drop in numbers and ongoing emigration in the last
three or four years, especially from this parish,” he lamented.
Dwindling numbers
As hardliners fought each other starting in 2006, Iraq’s ancient Christian
communities — Assyrian, Armenian, Chaldean, Protestant and more — were directly
targeted. One of the most horrific attacks was in 2010, when gunmen took hostage
and eventually killed dozens of Christians at the Our Lady of Salvation Church
in Baghdad. Then in 2014, the “Islamic State” (ISIS) extremist group swept
across Nineveh province, the heartland of Iraq’s minorities. Christians — but
also the esoteric Yazidis, Shia Turkmen and other communities — streamed out of
their homes as the jihadists closed in, or were forced to convert under their
rule.
There are no reliable statistics on the number of Christians who fled Iraq
during these consecutive waves of bloodshed. According to William Warda,
co-founder of the Hammurabi Human Rights Organisation, Christians left in Iraq
number up to 400,000, down from 1.5 million in 2003. Their absence is stark.
Churches across Baghdad have shuttered, including the Holy Trinity Church in the
Baladiyat district, closed to regular services for four years.
At the Armenian Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a terracotta
structure in the Karrada area, a rusted lock has barred entry since 2007.
The churches that have remained open are surrounded by a labyrinth of concrete
blast walls and security forces. The southern Baghdad district of Dora was once
home to a thriving community of 150,000 Christians, including doctors,
businessmen and cafe owners, Warda said.
Now, “there are only 1,000 left,” he told AFP.
– Discrimination –
Iraq declared ISIS defeated three years ago, but “threats, kidnappings,
extortion and deaths still persist,” said Yonadam Kanna, a leading Christian
politician. While Iraq’s constitution ostensibly affords the same level of
protection to all communities, Chaldean Patriarch Louis Sako said de facto
prejudice was locking Christians out of society. “There’s no direct pressure on
Christians today, but there’s day-to-day discrimination. If you’re Christian,
there’s no place for you in state institutions,” the head of the Chaldean
Catholic Church said. “It’s caused by corruption and it leads to emigration.”
That has eroded the feeling of belonging, some told AFP.
“There’s a sense among Christians that the country is becoming more
conservative, and that Christians — or even secular Muslims — can no longer live
in it,” Warda said. Ninos, a beautician looking to emigrate, agreed.
“Sometimes, I can see myself here. But most of the time, I find I have no home
in Iraq,” the 25-year-old said. “The situation isn’t compatible with my work,
the way I think or how I aspire to develop myself.”For others, it is a matter of
livelihoods.
Iraq has been hit hard by the twin shocks of an oil price collapse and the novel
coronavirus pandemic, leading to the worst fiscal crisis the country has seen in
decades. That has pushed Mariam to consider greener pastures outside her beloved
homeland. “Honestly, everybody wants to stay in their own country,” she said. “I
dream of travelling, but I dream at the same time that my country could provide
me everything that others have, so I could stay here.”