English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For October 07/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.october07.20.htm
News Bulletin Achieves Since
2006
Click Here to enter the LCCC Arabic/English news bulletins Achieves since 2006
Bible Quotations For today
Beware of the yeast of the Pharisees, that
is, their hypocrisy. Nothing is covered up that will not be uncovered, and
nothing secret that will not become known.
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke
12/01-05/:”Meanwhile, when the crowd gathered in thousands, so that they
trampled on one another, he began to speak first to his disciples, ‘Beware of
the yeast of the Pharisees, that is, their hypocrisy. Nothing is covered up that
will not be uncovered, and nothing secret that will not become known. Therefore
whatever you have said in the dark will be heard in the light, and what you have
whispered behind closed doors will be proclaimed from the housetops.‘I tell you,
my friends, do not fear those who kill the body, and after that can do nothing
more. But I will warn you whom to fear: fear him who, after he has killed, has
authority to cast into hell. Yes, I tell you, fear him
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on October 06-07/2020
Ministry of Health: 1261 new coronavirus case, 10 deaths
President informed about path of reform laws by MP Kannan
Aoun Inclined to Hold Consultations Next Week, Miqati Likely Candidate
Report: No Govt 'Breakthrough' after Plane Meeting between Senior Officials
Report: LF, FPM ‘Go to Battle’ over Electoral Law
Israeli Merkavas Trespass Technical Fence in Adaisseh
Witnesses from Interior Ministry Testify in Port Blast Probe
Lebanon Affirms Deal to Take Back Migrants Sailing to Cyprus
Strong Lebanon Urges Govt. Deal before PM Designation
Protesters Enter Oil Directorate, Complain about Fuel Shortage
Damascus Refuses to Demarcate Syrian-Lebanese Borders
Lebanon: Criticism Mounts Over Delay of Port Explosion Investigations
Lebanon’s Unions to the Streets If BDL Stops Subsidizing Basic Goods
Lebanon’s Maronite Patriarch saddened by leaders’ neglect of people
Details of the scattered flying dialogue between the three presidents
Ship’s captain held in Lebanon over border plot to smuggle fuel to Syria/Najia
Houssari/Arab News/October 07/2020
Lebanon's 'Marshal Petain'/Alberto M. Fernandez/MEMRI Daily Brief/October
DM to dad in Heaven/Dr. Walid Phares/Face Book/October 07/2020
In Lebanon, Dutch Disease hangs over the torn country/Abdullah Malaeb/Al Arabiya/Tuesday
06 October 2020
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
October 06-07/2020
Out of hospital but still sick with coronavirus, Trump
abruptly cancels aid talks
US elections: Trump plans to attend debate, Biden says no if president has COVID
Armenian PM Blames Turkey for Deadly Karabakh Escalation
Israel Strikes Hamas Sites in Gaza Following Rocket Attack
A new era towards security and prosperity': UAE and Israeli foreign ministers
meet in historic first
Israel may halt its weapons sale to Azerbaijan, Armenian ambassador says
Russia may sell S-400 to Iran after UN embargo expires, ambassador says
Third, final Iranian tanker arrives in Venezuela
US ambassador to Israel warns Biden win could undermine consensus on Iran
Turkey’s Erdogan will visit Qatar and Kuwait on Wednesday
Canada/Joint statement by François-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Foreign
Affairs of Canada, Dominic Raab, and U.K. Foreign Secretary on situation in
Nagorno-Karabakh region
18 Killed in Bombing in Turkish-Controlled Syrian Town
Global Coalition-led Operation Arrests 3 ISIS Leaders in Deir Ezzor
Abkhazia to Open Embassy in Damascus
Syrian Victims of Chemical Attacks File Case With German Prosecutors
Erdogan, Sarraj Discuss Resignation
Israel Strikes Hamas Sites in Gaza Following Rocket Attack
Titles For The Latest LCCC English
analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on October
06-07/2020
Erdogan's Turkey: Drunk on power/Emily
Schrader/Jerusalem Post/October 06/2020
The Public's Right to Know about the President's Health vs. the President's
Right to Medical Confidentiality/Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute./October
06/2020
CIA Director Gina Haspel and the British Role in the Anti-Trump Plot/Chris
Farrell/Gatestone Institute/October 6, 2020
White House Deceptions Don’t Help Trump/Jonathan Bernstein/Bloomberg/October,
06/2020
Turkey’s rising role as a regional disrupter/Osama Al-Sharif/Arab News/October
06/2020
Even with new peace deals, Iraq seems a long way from normalizing ties with
Israel/Hussain Abdul-Hussain/Al Arabiya/Monday 05 October 2020
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on October 06-07/2020
Ministry of Health: 1261 new coronavirus case, 10
deaths
NNA/October 06/2020
The Ministry of Public Health announced 1261 new coronavirus infection cases,
which raises the cumulative number since February 21 to 46,918 confirmed cases.
Ten deaths have been registered over the past 24 hours.
President informed about path of reform laws by MP
Kannan
NNA/October 06/2020
President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, met the Chairman of the
Parliamentary Finance and Budget Committee MP, Ibrahim Kannan, today at the
Presidential Palace. MP Kannan briefed the President on the list of reforms
including draft laws, law proposals and decisions prepared by the Parliamentary
Finance and Budget Committee, to put them legally into effect and follow-up
through the Parliament. MP Kannan also stated that the meeting tackled the
course of recently issued laws which fall within the framework of combatting
corruption, especially the law of illicit enrichment, lifting bank secrecy, and
recovering looted funds, which was accomplished by the sub-committee emanating
from joint committees.Finally, MP Kannan considered that “What has been achieved
gives a positive signal at international and local levels, and ends the
paralysis at the level of accountability and judiciary, especially regarding
constitutional and political authorities which are covered by recent
legislations”. ----Presidency Press Office
Aoun Inclined to Hold Consultations Next Week,
Miqati Likely Candidate
Naharnet/October 06/2020
President Michel Aoun is inclined to schedule the binding parliamentary
consultations for picking a new PM for next week, media reports said on Tuesday.
“In light of the proposal made by (ex-PM Najib) Miqati, which did not face any
objections, Miqati is one of the likely candidates,” sources informed on the
governmental file told LBCI television. The sources also noted that the
reactivation of the caretaker cabinet is out of the question and that Aoun might
carry out quick contacts ahead of the official consultations. Moreover, the
sources said Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will visit Lebanon on
October 29 for talks with Lebanese officials.
Report: No Govt 'Breakthrough' after Plane Meeting
between Senior Officials
Naharne/October 06/2020
The meeting between President Michel Aoun, Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, and
outgoing PM Hassan Diab on board the plane forth to Kuwait and back to Beirut
again, did not produce a “magic bullet" for the government formation after the
resignation of PM-designate Mustafa Adib, al-Akhbar daily reported on Tuesday.
But, according to information obtained by the daily, the three officials “almost
agreed to hold a round of consultations for a short period, in an attempt to
revitalize the French initiative.”Shall these endeavors fail to lead to a
solution, one of the alternatives calls for the formation of a “one-sided”
government similar to the cabinet of Diab, said the daily. It added that the
above suggestion was discussed before between Hizbullah and Amal Movement on one
hand, and the Free Patriotic Movement on the other “based on concerns that the
country must not be left in a state of chaos and total collapse,” said al-Akhbar.
Report: LF, FPM ‘Go to Battle’ over Electoral Law
Naharnet/October 06/2020
At a stage open to all possibilities for “changing the system” in Lebanon,
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri has called for a joint meeting of the
parliamentary committees on Wednesday to study draft laws related to the
parliamentary elections, al-Joumhouria daily said on Tuesday.
Upon Berri’s invitation, the joint session will be held for the committees of:
Budget and Finance, Administration and Justice, National Defense, Interior and
Municipalities, to study the following electoral draft law proposals:
-An election draft law proposal submitted by MPs Anwar el-Khalil and Ibrahim
Azar
-An election draft bill presented by MPs Najib Miqati, Nicolas Nahhas and Ali
Darwish
-An election draft bill to elect a Senate submitted by MPs Anwar el-Khalil and
Ibrahim Azar
In remarks to the daily, Lebanese Forces MP Wehbe Qatisha of the Strong Republic
bloc said the “LF refuse discussing an (new) election law. Our position will be
clear inside and outside the joint session tomorrow, and that is to study draft
law proposals related to the parliamentary elections."
He said shall the Free Patriotic Movement agree on that “we will be together on
the ground.”For his part, Free Patriotic Movement MP George Atallah of the
Strong Lebanon bloc said: “If some want an electoral law to benefit from while
keeping everything else the same, then this is not an option for us.
“On the other hand, we are open to any proposal that leads us all to an
understanding on the concept and form of a civil state,” he added.
Atallah said his bloc is ready for negotiations if the concept involved aims for
“development and progress,” otherwise “we won’t agree” on any change in the
current proportional representation electoral system for the mere reason that
some believe it “inappropriate for their own interests.”
Israeli Merkavas Trespass Technical Fence in
Adaisseh
Associated Press/October 06/2020
Two Israeli Merkava tanks trespassed the technical fence in the town of Adaisseh
without crossing the Blue Line, the National News Agency reported on Tuesday.
Earlier on Tuesday, an Israeli reconnaissance plane violated the Lebanese
airspace and flew at low altitude above the southern town of Nabatieh and Iqlim
Touffah. Israeli and Lebanon are technically at war. Israel violates Lebanon’s
airspace on an almost daily basis.On Friday, Lebanon and Israel have reached an
agreement on a framework of indirect, U.S.-mediated talks over a longstanding
disputed maritime border between the two countries. But U.S. Assistant Secretary
of State for Near Eastern Affairs David Schenker had assured that talks have
nothing to do with the establishment of diplomatic relations or normalization
between Lebanon and Israel.
Witnesses from Interior Ministry Testify in Port
Blast Probe
Naharnet/October 06/2020
Judge Fadi Sawan, the Judicial Investigator into the Beirut port blast, on
Tuesday heard the testimonies of two more people, the National News Agency said.
NNA said Sawan questioned two officials from the Interior Ministry’s “gunpowder
department” as witnesses. He will on Wednesday and Thursday hear the testimonies
of two chemical experts, two explosives experts and a pyrotechnic expert, also
as witnesses.
Lebanon Affirms Deal to Take Back Migrants Sailing
to Cyprus
Associated Press/October 06/2020
Cyprus and Lebanon on Tuesday reaffirmed an agreement for Lebanese authorities
to take back migrants aboard boats trying to reach Cypriot shores.
Cypriot Interior Minister Nicos Nouris said Lebanese and Cypriot police and
naval forces will intercept migrant boats departing from Lebanon. He said
European Union member Cyprus and Lebanon would also seek assistance from the
bloc's border agency Frontex in coastal surveillance.
"We're sending out a clear message that we won't tolerate anyone engaging in the
trafficking of human beings and that we're defending the interests of our two
states," Nouris said after talks with Lebanon's General Security chief
Major-General Abbas Ibrahim. The two officials said all migrants aboard boats
attempting to reach Cyprus will be returned. "Any person who leaves Lebanon, in
accordance with the deal reached with Cyprus, should be returned home in
coordination between the two countries," Ibrahim said. In recent weeks, numerous
boatloads of migrants have sailed to Cyprus -- approximately 172 kilometers from
Tripoli, Lebanon -- alarming Cypriot authorities that say the island can't
handle any more migrants seeking asylum for economic reasons. Ibrahim said that
most of the migrants trying to reach Cyprus by boat aren't Lebanese and may be
trying to flee worsening economic conditions in Lebanon.
"Living conditions in Lebanon have become more difficult because of the economic
crisis that we are passing through and this is what is maybe making these people
migrate to nearby countries," Ibrahim said. The Lebanese official said
international agencies usually praise Lebanon for the way it treats more than 1
million migrants now living on its territory, but a worsening economy may be
prompting many to flee. Cyprus has come under fire by Human Rights Watch for
allegedly pushing back 200 migrants and refugees arriving from Lebanon aboard
boats last month without heeding their claims for asylum while in some instances
using violence and coercive tactics. Nouris said the Cypriot government has
received no such complaints and that Cypriot authorities acted lawfully and in
line with EU directives. He said all migrants were returned to Lebanon safely
under a Cypriot police escort.
Strong Lebanon Urges Govt. Deal before PM
Designation
Naharnet/October 06/2020
The Strong Lebanon parliamentary bloc said Tuesday that efforts aimed at
guaranteeing that a new cabinet will be formed should precede the designation of
a new PM. “There is a pressing need to form a government that would be in charge
of the needed reform process,” the FPM-led bloc said in a statement issued after
a weekly e-meeting chaired by FPM chief Jebran Bassil. “Experiences have proved
that this formation cannot be secured through the mere designation of a premier,
but rather that the issue needs prior efforts to guarantee formation after
designation,” the bloc added.
It accordingly called on parliamentary blocs to “understand the seriousness of
this period and facilitate the formation of a productive, efficient and
reformist government that would commit to implementing the reform program agreed
on as part of the French initiative.” The bloc’s stance comes after resigned
PM-designate Mustafa Adib failed to form a government due to hurdles that
emerged during the formation process -- mainly a standoff related to Shiite
representation in the new cabinet, especially in connection with the finance
portfolio.
Protesters Enter Oil Directorate, Complain about
Fuel Shortage
Naharnet/October 06/2020
Amid a looming fuel and diesel crisis, a group of protesters entered the General
Directorate of Oil protesting a shortage of gasoline, pushing Lebanese to stand
in queues at fuel stations. “Smuggling fuel into Syria must be stopped.
Officials are required to take a strict decision on this,” the protesters
said.They engaged in arguments with Director General of Oil, Aurore Feghali, who
told protesters that the “crisis is having its toll” on herself too and her
family. The Central Bank is expected to end subsidies on fuel, wheat and
medicine which heralds a sharp increase in prices, in light of an economic
crisis and depleting local currency. Since the local currency’s collapse, the
bank has been using its depleting reserves to support imports on these basic
goods. Already, after the blow of the financial crisis, half the Lebanese
population is below the poverty line. Lifting subsidies will further fuel
inflation and could be a trigger for food riots. Smuggling fuel into neighboring
Syria adds to the country’s woes. In May, the Lebanese army removed around
30-meter fuel smuggling pipeline at the country’s northern border with Syria. A
video recording of trucks smuggling fuel into Syria has gone viral on social
media. Aware of smuggling routes between the two countries, authorities did
little to stop the fuel drain.
Damascus Refuses to Demarcate Syrian-Lebanese Borders
Beirut - Mohammed Choucair/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday,
6 October, 2020
Banque du Liban’s determination to lift fuel subsidies as of January opens the
way for talks about Lebanon’s attempts to demarcate the common borders with
Syria, which extend over a length of 357 kilometers.
The issue was publicly raised for the first time during the national dialogue
conference, which was hosted by parliament Speaker Nabih Berri in April 2006. At
that time, Damascus did not respond to Lebanon’s request, despite the fact that
Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah had pledged to communicate with the
Syrian leadership over the matter. Demarcating or delineating the
Lebanese-Syrian borders remained unresolved until it was decided to raise it
again following a visit by then-Prime Minister Saad Hariri to Damascus in 2010
in response to a Saudi mediation. Accordingly, then-Minister of Administrative
Development, Jean Hogassapian, was assigned the task of preparing the second
visit that Hariri undertook at the head of a ministerial and administrative
delegation that included 12 ministers, during which he met with his Syrian
counterpart Muhammad Naji Al-Atri and the concerned Syrian ministers. The
meeting ended with the signing of 28 agreements. However, the Syrian side,
represented by Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem, requested to postpone the
discussion on the border demarcation file, saying that Damascus was busy
demarcating the Syrian-Jordanian border. Al-Muallem also suggested that the
disputed Shebaa Farms should not be included in the process.Until now, the
regime in Damascus has been refraining from demarcating the common border
between the two countries. Only two meetings were held during Hariri’s
assumption of the premiership: the first between the governor of North Lebanon
and the governor of Tartous, and the second between the governor of the Bekaa
and his Syrian counterpart, the governor of Homs. Al-Muallem has explicitly
refused to start the demarcation process, in response to the IMF demand to close
all illegal crossings and demarcate the common borders in order to stop
smuggling operations from Lebanon to Syria. Consequently, the issue was raised
again after BDL’s announcement of lifting subsidies and the continuous smuggling
of fuel across the border. In this context, sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that
local parties in the Bekaa are sponsoring smuggling operations, thus
circumventing the American Caesar Act, which imposes sanctions on Syria.
Therefore, Damascus has no interest in demarcating the borders or in cooperating
with the Lebanese authorities to stop organized smuggling operations.
Lebanon: Criticism Mounts Over Delay of Port Explosion Investigations
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 6 October, 2020
Lebanese President Michel Aoun said he would not sign any of the draft decrees
to dismiss three public directors, who are under investigation over the Beirut
port explosion, without a formal cabinet decision.
“Pursuant to the provisions of the constitution and the laws in force, the
President of the Republic will not sign any of these draft decrees, as long as
no decisions regarding them have been issued nominally and individually by the
Council of Ministers,” the presidential office said on Monday. For his part, the
head of the Progressive Socialist Party (PSP), Walid Jumblatt, criticized the
stalling in the investigations. “The heroes of the fire brigade and civil
defense are left behind. Beirut municipality does not exist. Customs officers
and agents with their fancy cars are like crows over a carcass. The army alone
is trying to collect the rubble in a ground soaked in burning oils. The silos
are full of contaminated wheat and corn, which merchants are trying to steal and
sell,” he said in a tweet. Resigned MP Paula Yacoubian, also criticized the
delay in the probe, saying: “Two months have passed since the explosion and the
investigations are blown into the unknown. Unfortunately, the result is
expected. The mafia does not condemn itself.”The families of the victims of the
fire brigade in the port explosion threatened to escalate their moves in
response to the stalling in the probe.
“If our call is not met, we will not be silent. We will not rest until the truth
is known… We will not allow corruption to obscure our rights,” a representative
of the families of the victims told a news conference on Monday.
“We call for an urgent parliamentary session to lift the immunity of those
involved in the case. We want to see the course of the investigation, lift its
secrecy, and announce August 4 as a national day of mourning,” she added.
The Judiciary has so far arrested 25 persons in the case, including the Customs
Director General Badri Daher, the director of land and maritime transport, Abdel
Hafiz Kaissi and the port’s director-general Hassan Koraytem.
Lebanon’s Unions to the Streets If BDL Stops Subsidizing Basic Goods
Beirut- Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 6 October, 2020
Lebanon’s labor syndicates and unions threatened on Monday to take to the
streets if the Central Bank (BDL) stops subsidizing basic goods, including fuel
oil, medicine, and wheat. “We hold the caretaker government responsible for any
decision to stop subsidizing basic goods, particularly fuel oil, because this
step would be the spark to ignite the country,” the Land Transport Union said
Monday. Last week, BDL Governor Riad Salameh said he can no longer exhaust the
remaining foreign currency reserves to subsidize fuel oil, wheat, and
pharmaceutical products in a few months. “I informed the government not to use
BDL’s compulsory reserve in foreign currencies for the purpose of subsidies. We
can continue supporting fuel, wheat, and medicine for another two or three
months at an exchange rate of LL1,500 against the dollar,” he said. In a press
conference held by the heads of the relevant sectors from the land transport
sector federations and unions, head of the land transport sector federations and
unions Bassam Tlais said that lifting the subsidies on goods, foodstuffs, fuel,
medicine, and wheat would lead to a major social explosion. “The lifting of
subsidies on gasoline and diesel will raise the price of a gasoline plate to
70,000 Lebanese pounds (today its price is about LL25,000) and diesel to between
45 and 50 thousand pounds, which will lead to a social disaster in light of the
difficult economic conditions the country is going through,” he said. Tlais
stressed that according to the information available to him, the beginning of
the lifting of subsidies on gasoline will be the end of this month. He warned
the government not to take this step because it will be the spark to ignite the
country. For his part, President of the General Labor Union, Bechara Asmar,
said, “As soon as any step to lift support is announced, we will immediately
take to the streets, because what is happening is unacceptable and is a call to
displace the Lebanese people.”He said the Unions will not agree to the decision
to lift the subsidy. Last August, an official source told Reuters that Lebanon's
central bank will only subsidize fuel, wheat, and medicine for three more
months.
Lebanon’s Maronite Patriarch saddened by leaders’ neglect of people
MEM/October 06/2020
Lebanon’s Maronite Patriarch Bechara Al-Rai said he was deeply saddened by the
ruling elite’s neglect of the Lebanese people and their pain. “We are deeply
hurt by the political authority’s neglect of its people and control of our
country and the powerful people’s relentlessness to thwart the government
formation, after they succeeded in forcing the Prime Minister-designate to
resign, despite the friendly initiative which was kindly proposed by French
President Emmanuel Macron,” Al- Rai said during Mass yesterday. Al-Rai also
called to preserve Lebanon’s neutrality and distance it from regional conflicts.
He added that two months have passed since the Beirut port blast on 4 August,
yet the forensic investigation has not yet yielded any results. The explosion
happened when 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, stored unsafely in Beirut port’s
warehouse 12 for six years prior to the explosion, ignited. Nearly 200 people
were killed in the blast which injured thousands more and made at least 300,000
of Beirut residents homeless. In the aftermath of the blast, letters written by
Daher and sent to Lebanon’s “judge of urgent matters” were unearthed, detailing
how the custom chief was aware the highly explosive substance was stored
unsafely in the port. In letters sent in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017, Daher warned
of the “dangers if the materials remain where they are affecting the safety of
(port) employees”, according to the Associated Press (AP). It was later revealed
both Aoun and caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab were warned by security
officials the dangerous substance was stored in the port but failed to take
action. In a secret letter to the pair sent on 20 July, Aoun and Diab were
warned of the security risk the chemical posed. The pair admitted they knew the
substance was stored in the port but claimed the port was not under their
authority when asked why they took no preventative action.
Details of the scattered flying dialogue between the three presidents
AlKhaleej Today/October 06/2020
Al-Gomhoria wrote: In the midst of the current stalemate, the tripartite
presidential visit that took Presidents Michel Aoun, Nabih Berri and Hassan Diab
together to Kuwait yesterday, where they offered condolences to the Emir of
Kuwait, Sheikh Nawwaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, to the late Emir Sheikh Sabah
Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah. The Emir of Kuwait assured the Lebanese presidential
delegation that “during his term, Kuwait will remain alongside Lebanon and
continue its march of support for the good of its people and its revival,
indicating the position of Lebanon and the Lebanese in the hearts of
Kuwaitis.”It is noteworthy in this context that this visit coincided with
internal “expectations”, which considered that the opportunity for a meeting in
the air, specifically between Presidents Aoun and Berri, might lead to the
emission of white smoke regarding binding parliamentary consultations, to choose
the Sunni figure to form the new government. According to the information of the
“Republic”, the air meeting between the three presidents is the first between
Aoun and Berri since the French president’s visit to Beirut, and the failed
assignment stage of Mustafa Adeeb, and it is the first between them also after
Berri announced an agreement within the framework of negotiations to demarcate
the southern sea and land borders. It is also the first face-to-face meeting
between Berri and Diab since before Hassan Diab resigned. Consequently, the
“flying dialogue”, whether on the trip to Kuwait or on the return trip to
Beirut, was general and dispersed between the inside and outside, leading to
Trump’s health. Consequently, he did not go into the depth or details of any
file. And that the common tendency was for the caretaker government to be
present effectively in this period, until the formation of the new government.
And if the government file has been passed over, specifically between Presidents
Aoun and Berri, and from the angle that it is not permissible to remain in the
status of commentator indefinitely, but what is certain in this context is that
the priority is to agree on the personality that will head the government, and
therefore not President Aoun and Berri possess neither of them alone, the key to
this file, especially in front of the “tight lock” that has confused this file
until now, which is represented in the absence of a Sunni figure to assign it to
form the government. The candidates’ club for this responsibility is completely
empty, according to what is confirmed by the various political levels on both
sides of the government vacuum, which means that the final word in proposing
this personality, and with specifications that are supposed to be consensual, is
in the court of the main Sunni forces, whether political or non-political.
These were the details of the news Details of the scattered flying dialogue
between the three presidents for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by
giving you the full details and information. To follow all our news, you can
subscribe to the alerts system or to one of our different systems to provide you
with all that is new. It is also worth noting that the original news has been
published and is available at saudi24news and the editorial team at AlKhaleej
Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely
transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its
main source.
Ship’s captain held in Lebanon over border plot to smuggle fuel
to Syria
Najia Houssari/Arab
News/October 07/2020
BEIRUT: A ship’s captain and a shipping agent were arrested in Lebanon on
Tuesday on charges of trying to smuggle 4 million liters of petrol into Syria.
The arrests have shone a light on flagrant violations in Lebanon of the US
Caesar Act, which targets trade with the Assad regime and imposes sanctions for
noncompliance. Bashir Matar, head of Al-Qaa border municipality, told Arab News
that smuggling was rife on Lebanon’s border with Syria, with illegal transport
of fuel as well as people trafficking, and that rival gangs fought over
lucrative routes. “On the outskirts of the Al-Qaa plain on the border, battles
broke out … between Syrian and Lebanese families and clans over a plot of land
used as a crossing for smuggling,” he said.
“We are witnessing attempts by several groups to seize land close to the borders
to be used for smuggling.”Security sources told Arab News the
Panamanian-registered Jaguar S was intercepted off the Lebanese coast at Zahrani,
a notorious stronghold for the Iran-backed Hezbollah group and the Amal
Movement. Investigators believe the ship’s crew intended to circumvent the
Caesar Act, and Lebanese military intelligence and police suggested the two
detainees had confessed to planning to unload the fuel in Lebanon before
smuggling it into Syria.
The vessel’s journey began in Istanbul, and it sailed to the Greek island of
Crete before arriving off Lebanon at the end of September. “The ship switched
off its GPS device before entering Lebanese waters so that its movement could
not be monitored via satellites,” a security source told Arab News.
“Upon docking, its cargo was supposed to be unloaded in cooperation with
complicit parties and transported in installments by land to Syria, protected by
forces that benefit from this operation and control the illegal crossings
between Lebanon and Syria.
“An inspection of the manifest by Lebanese customs showed that the ship, which
is flying the flag of Panama, had changed its name more than once in the past
years.
“The Syrian Al-Naem Co., based in Harasta, Damascus, is communicating with
influential people in Lebanon to get the shipment of petrol through Lebanese
territory in order to be smuggled into Syria by land to bypass the Caesar Act.”
Lebanon's 'Marshal Petain'
Alberto M. Fernandez/MEMRI Daily Brief/October
06/2020
البرتو فرنندس/ممري: مارشال بيتان لبنان
October is a fateful month for Michel Aoun. Four
years ago this month he was elected Lebanon's president by the country's
parliament.
Thirty years ago this month, he survived an assassination attempt, and was later
forced out of the Lebanese Presidential Palace by an invading Syrian Arab Army
supported by allied Lebanese militia.[1] That was the end of two years of Aoun
serving as interim Lebanese prime minister ruling over mostly
Christian-populated parts of East Beirut and Central Lebanon. Aoun's career
recalls that of France's Marshal Petain, a World War One hero turned World War
Two villain, a man of consequence certainly, but much of it bitter.[2]
Today derided by activists – with considerable evidence – as senile and
bumbling, Aoun was once a military hero. During the Lebanese Civil War, he is
best remembered for his leadership in 1983, during the battle of Souq Al-Gharb,
when his 8th Infantry Brigade of the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) held off
repeated attempts by Syria-supported Druze and Palestinian militiamen to take
that strategic hill town. Aoun's victory was helped immeasurably by naval
artillery from the U.S. 6th Fleet off Lebanon's coast. Aoun's unit was mostly
Christian, but included soldiers from Lebanon's other faiths as well, so at the
time then Brig.-Gen. Aoun was not seen as a particularly sectarian figure.
With Syria's allies in Lebanon blocking the selection of a new president,
outgoing President Amin Gemayel took the constitutional but unusual step in
September 1988 of naming an interim military government, placing it under then-LAF
Commander Aoun whose primary role would be to engineer the selection of a new
president. It would be a fateful decision, fateful certainly for Aoun and
disastrous for Lebanon.
Aoun would reveal himself as an adept demagogue whose brusque strongman style
would play well with a segment – particularly Christian – of Lebanon's
population. The general's own unique brand of Levantine Poujadism would
eventually enable him, in 1989, to loose fanatical mobs on Lebanon's Maronite
Catholic Patriarch, ransacking his residence at Bkerke.[3] During his rule as
interim prime minister – and simultaneously serving as Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Interior, and Education and Fine Arts – he would announce the launch of
two bloody, dramatic, and totally inconclusive wars. Both appealed to at least
some part of popular sentiment.
In March 1989, he launched the "Liberation War" against the brutal Syrian regime
which had controlled much of Lebanon since 1976.
In January 1990, he launched the "Elimination War" against his allies in the
Lebanese Forces (LF) militia, aiming to "unify" Christian military ranks.
Both conflicts led to thousands of dead and wounded, billions of dollars in
damages, and a wave of emigrants, mostly from the ranks of Lebanon's beleaguered
Christian population.
Aoun did not gain a single inch of Syrian-controlled territory, nor did he
absorb the LF. Seeking help against Syrian President Hafez Al-Assad, he allied
with Iraq's Saddam Hussein, who offered Aoun everything from "bullets to FROG-7
missiles" against his Baathist rival.[4]
Assad would counter by using the world's biggest mortars against East Beirut's
civilian population.[5] After Saddam became an international pariah following
his 1990 invasion of Kuwait, Aoun stood alone. He had bet on Saddam and chosen
poorly in the deadly game of Middle East power politics. Even though he had
boasted that he would fight alone until the end and be buried in the rubble of
his command center, when that end came, on October 13, 1990, he abandoned his
troops and fled to the French Embassy.[6] Hundreds of his soldiers were killed
by the Syrians. Aoun would spend the next 15 years in gilded exile in France,
returning in 2005 after the Syrian military withdrawal.
Feeling that he did not get his due from the anti-Syria and anti-Hizbullah March
14 Alliance, the aging Aoun – still proud and ambitious – would, in February
2006, forge a political alliance with Hizbullah that would not waver even during
an astonishing series of events. This included Hizbullah's destructive 2006 war
with Israel and a string of assassinations, blamed on Hizbullah, of opposition
figures journalists and military officers, many of them Christians (none of them
Aounists, of course).
This sturdy alliance was notable more for what it was against than what it was
for: against the March 14 Alliance, against the Lebanese Sunnis represented by
Hariri, and against any Christian voice other than General Aoun. The alliance
has proven to be more valuable than the old relationship with Saddam, despite
fraying a bit in recent months. It endures to this day, but probably reached its
peak with the 2016 election of Aoun as president.
Surprisingly for a figure who wraps himself not only in the mantle of Lebanese
nationalism, but also in a type of chauvinistic Lebanese Christian populism,
Aoun has now presided over two waves of accelerated Christian emigration. He
even mocked Lebanese citizens who demonstrated for their rights and a better
economic future, telling them to leave if they didn't like it.[7] Since those
remarks in 2019, Lebanon has only sunk deeper into a vicious cycle of economic
collapse, runaway inflation, and administrative incompetence.
Some Lebanese observers tell me that the 85-year old Aoun is only sufficiently
alert to work a couple of hours a day – a charge denied by Aoun's partisans. His
chief collaborator and heir is, of course, his son-in-law and former Lebanese
foreign minister, the widely reviled Gibran Bassil, the man who negotiated the
2006 Mar Mikhail agreement with Hizbullah.
As recently as 2018, Aoun's presidency, and this alliance, had not seemed to
have hurt him much. The pro-Aoun coalition did quite well in parliamentary
elections that year, allying with Sunni and Shia parties in different areas.[8]
An objective observer might conclude that Aoun's six years in power have been
nothing short of disastrous. "Strong Lebanon" has never looked so weak. But as a
politician and a mobilizing political force, the Aoun phenomenon has been a
resounding success, if measured in cynical terms of political survival and in
aggressively climbing the ladders of power in this fragmented country.
Whether he is today only a passive symbol or still a willing collaborator in the
catastrophic Lebanese status quo, Aoun, the brash champion of Lebanon's
Christian rights since 1989, has become the undertaker of the historic Christian
presence in this country. He did not accomplish this on his own, of course.
Lebanon's implosion was a multi-confessional multi-party conspiracy bringing
down the entire country. But since 2006, his alliance with Hizbullah has given
that terrorist group an extensive sectarian and political cover that it might
not have had otherwise – only making a bad situation worse.
*Alberto M. Fernandez is Vice President of MEMRI.
[1] Youtube.com/watch?v=9tkSykwB0z4, November 28, 2019.
[2] Forward.com/news/134313/the-name-of-petain-hero-and-villain-is-cleansed-fr,
December 29, 2010.
[3] Youtube.com/watch?v=TnN5wJtL6i0, April 19, 2009.
[4] Youtube.com/watch?v=yShfyFruOp0, April 24, 2019.
[5] Nationalinterest.org/feature/the-russian-armys-super-gun-city-destroyer-17416,
August 20, 2016.
[6] Youtube.com/watch?v=9tkSykwB0z4, November 28, 2019.
[7] Alhurra.com/archive/2019/11/13/%D9%8A%D8%B1%D9%88%D8%AD%D9%88%D8%A7-%D9%8A%D9%87%D8%AC%D9%91%D9%88%D8%A7-%D9%85%D9%88%D8%AC%D8%A9-%D8%BA%D8%B6%D8%A8-%D8%AA%D8%B5%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%AD-%D8%B9%D9%88%D9%86-%D8%AA%D8%AC%D8%A8%D8%B1-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B1%D8%A6%D8%A7%D8%B3%D8%A9-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AA%D9%88%D8%B6%D9%8A%D8%AD,
November 13, 2019.
[8] Washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/what-does-hezbollahs-election-victory-mean-for-lebanon,
May 8, 2018.
DM to dad in Heaven
Dr. Walid Phares/Face Book/October 07/2020
Today is the 30th anniversary of your last journey on Earth. You left us on that
October 3rd in 1990, while in the hospital in Batroun, Lebanon, surrounded first
by my mother then by the rest of the family, except me. Between us were armies
and militias blocking me from the last palabra with you. I did everything I
could to be present at the last goodbye, but destiny decided otherwise. Had I
walked behind the casket for your last ride on Earth, I would have had to
relinquish all the thought I had developed, all the books, all the articles, and
pledge allegiance to totalitarians. You passed in an occupied zone while I was
living my last days the country in the free zone. Had I satisfied my emotions
and come to pay respects, I would never have had a second chance in my life to
promote freedom, this time in my adopted country America, the world’s symbol for
liberty. It was a choice that kept a wound open in my heart for thirty years,
but that was destiny too, decided by higher powers.
When you passed, I had no idea that ten days later I would leave the mother
country for my adopted one. During that red October, I thought liberation of the
old country was finally close and I would soon be praying at your grave. But
your unexpected death was an omen of another unexpected death, the death of
liberty in the country of my birth. On October 13, the invasion spread across
the free areas, forcing me to make another decision. Live under occupation or
leave to freedom.
Our peaceful life as a family stretched for over 30 years between the old
quarters of Beirut and the sunny hills of Mount Lebanon. Nothing could have
compelled me to emigrate during the golden years of our daily lives in Peace.
Visiting the world, yes, but uprooting myself, no. But lives of millions, before
and after my personal journey to the new world, have experienced a similar
destiny: Leaving everything dear to remain free. That is the story of large
swaths of humanity, and it is the story of welcoming nations like America and
its sister host countries in the free world.
Since you left, Dad, the world has changed many times. The Cold War ended, the
War on Terror started, social media was born, the Arab Spring exploded, mass
violence reemerged, regional wars spread, but no, we haven’t yet landed on Mars,
even three decades later. In the old country, tragedies deepened: 15 years of
occupation followed by 15 years of terror. It is worse now than when you were
alive.
In my adopted country, we have oscillated between war and peace. The 1990s were
calm and peaceful, but the following 20 years were rough. America was badly hit
on 9/11 by Jihadists. It responded twice in the East, with very long wars, which
in many respects are still ongoing. But politicians in America split into two
camps. One camp was determined to overcome the threat, and the other camp
preferred to turn their eyes away hoping to postpone the clash. With the
presidential election in 30 days, we are hurtling headlong toward a huge choice.
You were a sensitive man, lived under Peace throughout your life and had to live
a war during your most senior years. You preferred poetry and prose over the
sharp diatribes of politicians. I inherited a difficult gene combined from you
and mother, who joined you in heaven in 2007: Sensitive on the inside,
determined to fight for truth on the outside. I acted more like your uncle,
Reverend Joseph Phares, the Jesuit social worker and intellectual advisor to
decision makers. Yes, in my American life, I literally spent 30 years trying to
spread awareness around me and across the nation. I published books, lectured,
and advised leaders and governments. I inherited your fairness and
justice-seeking heart and mind, and unfortunately the default of trusting too
fast.
Yes, I became an American, and for most of my adult life, not because I had to,
but because I wanted to. I am keen to remember my roots, and yours, as long as I
live, but I have adopted and was adopted by the greatest country in the world,
and despite its follies at times, it remains my homeland and the home of the
brave and the land of the free.
Until we meet again, Dad.
Virginia, October 3, 2020
In Lebanon, Dutch Disease hangs over the torn country
Abdullah Malaeb/Al Arabiya/Tuesday 06 October 2020
French President Emmanuel Macron addressed the Lebanese political class after
they failed to form a cabinet within two weeks, accusing the political elite of
betraying their promises to the French initiative that Macron laid out after the
deadly Beirut port explosion in August.
In his speech, Macron also offered another chance for the Lebanese leaders to
form a government and begin work on the roadmap, giving them four to six weeks.
However, Lebanon has been struck by a case of Dutch Disease – a paradox in which
good news, typically the discovery of oil, has negative implications at a
macroeconomic level.
While Lebanon has not discovered oil or gas, even though it has begun offshore
exploration for gas reserves, another Dutch Disease is present today in the
country.
And Macron has failed to realize or addressed the country’s deeply rooted
problems that hinder macroeconomic development.
Further, the French president has called for the restoration of the political
system that created the import-dependent and service economy that lacks
industrial and agricultural production.
The Taif agreement, which ended the civil war in 1989, reconstructed the
politics of the country, authorizing Syria’s control over Lebanon in exchange
for Hafez al-Assad’s acceptance to participate in the peace process with Israel.
The unprecedented power given to the Syrian state gave it control over the
reconstruction process that was led by Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri who
brought the country several economic and financial projects, attracted direct
foreign investments, and rebuilt the shattered economy.
But Lebanon remained in Syria’s backyard. The Taif Accord ensured that militias
disbanded – with the exception of Hezbollah that refused to turn in its arms –
and organized the Lebanese army. But it also fitted it with an internal police
that had to coordinate with the Syrian security and military apparatus,
including Syria’s intelligence agency, the Mukhabarat.
It is true that Hariri’s policies brought the country vast economic gains. But
these gains had limitations as another stipulation under the Taif Accord was the
assurance that power was balanced among sects. A form of power sharing that
preserved Syria’s supremacy was institutionalized, thus prohibiting Lebanon from
having an independent and strong economy.
Building a proper agricultural sector and strengthening Lebanese industry would
have harmed the Syrian economy and threatened Assad’s grip over Lebanon by
decreasing the Syrian influence over the country, which was directly maintained
by Lebanese President Emile Lahoud at the time.
The system set up allowed for all kinds of foreign meddling, and further had no
means to strengthen domestic sectors.
Many in Lebanon saw coming the economic crisis that erupted at the end of 2019.
At the time, Lebanon was facing economic instability and many felt the country
had been on the brink for years as a result of failed policies. These decisions
created a country of extreme libertarianism where privatization is forced upon
the economy. Lebanon’s economy today operates on loans, grants, and donation
conferences. The country has never had a rigid economic plan to build a sturdy,
self-sufficient economy.
In an interview at a Lebanese TV station three months ago, Ahmad Fatfat, a
former Lebanese parliamentarian belonging to the Future Movement bloc, said that
resigned Hezbollah parliamentarian Nawaf Al-Moussawi told him that Hezbollah
replaced the former Syrian control, becoming the new security regulator in
Lebanon. Hezbollah has abused several provisions in the Taif Accord, and in
turn, the Iran-backed group has heavy control over state institutions. This has
been the state of play in Lebanon for decades.
Yet, Macron erroneously assumes the previous period was a golden age. Where he
calls for a government that would strengthen the ties between the ruling elite
and its protector Hezbollah, what is needed is a government of transition. This
transitional government would need to adopt a new economic approach. It is about
time that Lebanon creates an economy that can stand on its own through the
formation of a non-sectarian political system that diversifies the economy and
improves productive sectors of the economy, without measuring these improvements
on the scale of sectarian benefit or having to be limited by Hezbollah’s
calculations. If President Macron really wants to set Lebanon down the path of
reformation, he has to understand that the economic growth of the previous era
was at the expense of the social and economic wellbeing of many Lebanese.
Quality education, social protection, favorable work conditions, and scientific
progress are internationally known to be rights, not privileges. These rights
will not be preserved nor protected by attempts to reinstall and upgrade the
current political and economic system.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on October 06-07/2020
Out of hospital but still sick with coronavirus, Trump
abruptly cancels aid talks
Reuters/Wednesday 07 October 2020
President Donald Trump, still being treated for COVID-19, on Tuesday broke off
talks with Democrats on an economic aid package for his pandemic-hit country and
drew rebukes from Facebook and Twitter for spreading misinformation about the
coronavirus. His tweet ending talks for a new round of stimulus spooked Wall
Street, sending stocks down as much as 2 percent from their session highs, a
serious hit at one of the metrics that the Republican president has held up as a
sign of success. Visit our dedicated coronavirus site here for all the latest
updates. Trump's action drew immediate criticism from congressional Democrats
and at least one Republican, who said more was needed to help the millions who
have lost their jobs in a health crisis that has killed more than 210,000
Americans. After days of conflicting messages from doctors and aides about his
condition, Trump, 74, showed he still had what it takes to fire off his
signature tweets while being treated with powerful medications including
steroids. Trump returned to the White House on Monday after three nights in the
hospital. Officials said he was working from makeshift office space in the
residence rather than the Oval Office, with only a few senior staff gaining
face-to-face access. Support for his Democratic rival Joe Biden has grown by
about four percentage points since mid-September, according to Reuters/Ipsos
polling from Oct. 2 to 6, with 52 percent of likely voters backing Biden
compared to 40 percent for Trump. In his first major policy pronouncement since
returning to the White House, Trump abruptly called off negotiations with
Democratic lawmakers on coronavirus relief legislation until after the election,
even as cases of the virus are on the rise across much of the country. "I have
instructed my representatives to stop negotiating until after the election when,
immediately after I win, we will pass a major Stimulus Bill that focuses on
hardworking Americans and Small Business," Trump wrote on Twitter.
'Showed his true colors'
"Today, once again, President Trump showed his true colors: putting himself
first at the expense of the country," Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy
Pelosi said, adding, "the White House is in complete disarray." In a call with
fellow Democrats, Pelosi suggested Trump's judgment had been affected by one of
the drugs he was taking, the steroid dexamethasone, which is normally used in
the most severe cases of COVID-19. "There are people who thought, who think that
steroids have an impact on your thinking," Pelosi said, according to a person
who had been on the call. Trump's doctor said on Tuesday that the president
reported no COVID-19 symptoms and was doing "extremely well."Republican
Representative John Katko also criticized the decision to break off talks. "With
lives at stake, we cannot afford to stop negotiations on a relief package,"
Katko said on Twitter. "I strongly urge the President to rethink this move." The
bipartisan House Problems Solvers Caucus released a statement condemning the end
of talks. But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican, said he
agreed with Trump's decision, telling reporters that "his view was that they
were not going to produce a result and we need to concentrate on what’s
achievable." Democrats' chances of capturing a Senate majority inched higher in
recent days as three nonpartisan US elections analysts added Lindsey Graham's
seat to the list of now-10 Senate seats in play, which includes eight
potentially vulnerable Republicans and two vulnerable Democrats. Republicans
hold a 53-47 majority in that chamber. McConnell aims to keep his focus on
pushing through with confirming Trump's third Supreme Court nominee, Amy Coney
Barrett, which would cement a 6-3 conservative majority. That nomination
presented Trump and his fellow Republicans with an opportunity to turn the focus
of the presidential campaign away from the coronavirus, prior to Trump's
illness.
Downplays risk
Trump tested positive for coronavirus last week after months of playing down the
deadly infection, and he stood by that message on Tuesday. "Many people every
year, sometimes over 100,000, and despite the Vaccine, die from the Flu. Are we
going to close down our Country? No, we have learned to live with it, just like
we are learning to live with COVID-19, in most populations far less lethal!!!"
Trump wrote on Twitter and Facebook. Twitter Inc responded by putting a warning
label on the post, saying it included potentially misleading information.
Facebook Inc removed the Trump post for breaking its rules on COVID-19
misinformation, according to CNN. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious
disease expert, said the threat from COVID-19 was "very, very much different"
than influenza's reach. The United States has the world's highest death toll
from the pandemic, with more than 210,000 deaths. By comparison, influenza
typically kills between some 22,000 and 64,000 people a year in the United
States, US government statistics show. Trump had no public events listed for
Tuesday and it was unclear when he would resume a full schedule of presidential
duties and campaigning ahead of Election Day, Nov. 3. He has not been seen in
public since Monday night but tweeted that he was looking forward to a scheduled
second debate with Democratic election opponent Joe Biden on October 15. Many
Trump aides and confidants have been diagnosed with the disease since he
revealed Friday that he had tested positive, intensifying scrutiny and criticism
of the administration's handling of the pandemic. The top US military leaders
are isolating after the Coast Guard's No. 2 tested positive for the coronavirus,
Pentagon officials said.
US elections: Trump plans to attend debate, Biden says
no if president has COVID
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya EnglishTuesday 06
October 2020
US President Donald Trump is planning to take part next week’s presidential
debate with Democratic nominee Joe Biden, but the former VP said Tuesday the
debate should not take place if the president still has the coronavirus.
“The President intends to participate in person,” Tim Murtaugh, the director of
communications for Trump’s 2020 re-election campaign, told Al Arabiya English in
an email.Questions are being asked about the fate of the second debate,
scheduled for Oct. 15 in Miami, Florida, following the hospitalized of Trump
after he and First Lady Melania Trump tested positive for the coronavirus last
week. Trump was discharged from the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center
on Monday evening after being admitted on Oct. 2. After the president’s positive
test results, several White House officials, staff and politicians close to
Trump also tested positive. But Biden said Tuesday night that next week’s debate
should not take place if the president still has the coronavirus. “If he still
has COVID we shouldn’t have a debate,” Biden told reporters traveling with
him.The vice-presidential debate slated for Wednesday night between VP Mike
Pence and Biden’s running mate, Senator Kamala Harris, may have plexiglass
barriers separating the two.
Armenian PM Blames Turkey for Deadly Karabakh
Escalation
Agence France Presse
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said Tuesday that Turkey's encouragement
of Azerbaijan was to blame for the outbreak of fighting over the disputed
Nagorno-Karabakh region, as Ankara renewed its support for Baku.
"Without Turkey's active engagement this would not have begun," Pashinyan told
AFP in an interview in Yerevan, after a tenth day of fighting over a
decades-long territorial dispute that has claimed nearly 300 lives.
"The decision to unleash a war was motivated by Turkey’s full support," he said.
Earlier Tuesday, Turkey's Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu urged world leaders
to back Azerbaijan, questioning the point of a new ceasefire during a visit to
Baku. Armenian officials meanwhile reported further shelling of Karabakh's
regional capital, Stepanakert. AFP journalists heard explosions in the city
after days of intermittent shelling and saw residents walking past an unexploded
shell wedged in a street in the city center, which was strewn with glass and
debris. Cavusoglu's comments came a day after Russia, the United States and
France urged an "unconditional" halt to the fighting, calls echoed Tuesday by
Britain and Canada, which voiced particular concern over the shelling of
civilian areas. The fierce clashes that erupted on September 27 between
Armenian-backed separatists and Azerbaijani forces over the disputed
Nagorno-Karabakh region show no sign of letting up, with both sides vowing to
continue the fight.
- 'Those who are right' -
Western powers are urging Turkey, a longstanding ally of Azerbaijan, to use its
influence to restore calm, but Cavusoglu said world leaders should instead throw
their weight behind Azerbaijan. "To put these two countries on equal footing
means rewarding the occupier," the Turkish foreign minister said. "The world
must be on the side of those who are right, namely on the side of Azerbaijan."
The territorial dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh dates back to the 1990s when the
ethnic-Armenian enclave broke away from Azerbaijan, sparking a brutal conflict
that has never been fully resolved.Neither side has shown any inclination to
slow the recent hostilities despite mounting civilian deaths. Azerbaijan has
repeatedly said it will not agree to a ceasefire until Armenia withdraws
its troops, a line reiterated Tuesday by Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov who
added: "We will be fighting until the end."
- 'Fighting until the end' -
As Azerbaijan heard supportive rhetoric from its loyal patron Turkey on Tuesday,
Pashinyan said he was confident that his country's longtime backer Russia would
rally if fighting escalated. Christian-majority Armenia is in a military
alliance of former Soviet states led by Moscow, which has a permanent base in
the country, but Russia has shown no appetite for military escalation. Pashinyan
told AFP he was sure Russia would come to Armenia's defense if necessary and
that "Russia will uphold its treaty obligations." On Tuesday, Azerbaijan's
defense ministry and Karabakh's foreign ministry both said fighting was
continuing on several fronts on Tuesday. During a call with Iranian leader
Hassan Rouhani, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev claimed his forces had
captured territory bordering Iran and planned soon to set up border posts and
deploy frontier troops. Both sides continued to claim to have inflicted heavy
losses in manpower and equipment, and to accuse each of other of targeting
civilian areas. The conflict has expanded in the last few days with the shelling
of big cities, including the regional capital Stepanakert and Azerbaijan's
second-largest city, Ganja. Azerbaijan's defense ministry claimed the
separatists had incurred major losses and been forced to retreat. It said its
forces had destroyed an ammunition depot near Stepanakert as well as rocket
launchers and artillery.
Rising deaths -
The two sides have reported a total of 286 deaths since the fighting erupted,
including 46 civilians -- but the real total is expected to be much higher.
Most of the confirmed deaths are from the Armenian side, which has reported 240
fatalities among separatist fighters. Azerbaijan is not releasing any figures on
its military deaths. Turkey is a loyal ally of Azerbaijan, a fellow Muslim and
Turkic country, and has been accused of dispatching mercenaries from Syria and
Libya to join the fighting. Moscow and leaders in several Western capitals have
condemned the reported deployment of foreign fighters via Turkey and urged
Ankara to work instead towards a political settlement to the fighting.
The director of Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service, Sergei Naryshkin, said
that fighters from terror groups including al-Qaida-linked Jabhat al-Nusra were
fighting in Karabakh while the Kremlin said the situation was deteriorating.
"People are still getting killed, which is absolutely unacceptable," Russian
President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. Karabakh's declaration
of independence from Azerbaijan during the collapse of the Soviet Union sparked
a war in the early 1990s that claimed 30,000 lives. Talks to resolve the
conflict -- mediated by Russia, the United States and France -- have made little
progress since a 1994 ceasefire agreement.
Israel Strikes Hamas Sites in Gaza Following Rocket
Attack
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 6 October, 2020
An Israeli aircraft struck what the it claimed said was a Hamas military target
in the southern Gaza Strip late Monday, shortly after a rocket was fired from
Gaza into Israel. The rocket landed in an open area and did not cause any damage
or injuries, however it broke a weeks-long lull in the area, The Associated
Press (AP) reported. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the
rocket fire. But Israel holds Gaza's Hamas rulers responsible for all fire out
of the territory and usually responds to rocket attacks with airstrikes on Hamas
targets.
There were no reports of casualties from the Israeli airstrike. In the Israeli-occuped
West Bank, meanwhile, the Israeli army said it opened fire at three Palestinian
men who were throwing firebombs at troops near the settlement of Einav. It said
one of the suspects was hit, while the two others managed to flee. According to
AP, there were no further details on the condition of the man who was shot.
A new era towards security and prosperity': UAE and
Israeli foreign ministers meet in historic first
James Haines-Young and Mina Aldroubi/The
National/October 06/2020
Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed said he and Gabi Ashkenazi discussed co-operation on
energy and scientific research. The UAE hopes its burgeoning relationship with
Israel will "strengthen international stability", Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed,
Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Co-operation, said on Tuesday.
Sheikh Abdullah was speaking alongside Israel's Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi
after a meeting on Tuesday as the two countries begin to forge relations. "Our
meeting today is filled with hope," he said, adding the pair had discussed
co-operation in energy and scientific research.
Both ministers said the accord heralded a new era of stability in the Middle
East.
Sheikh Abdullah said that "tolerance and pluralism" must be strengthened in the
region. "Dialogue with the UAE contributes to solving regional issues," Mr
Ashkenazi said. "The peace treaty signed also contributes towards the region's
stability and challenges, most notably the coronavirus pandemic."
Sheikh Abdullah affirmed the UAE's support for a two-state solution to the
Israel-Palestine conflict.
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas hosted the first face-to-face sit down
between Sheikh Abdullah and Mr Ashkenazi since the Abraham Accord was signed.
Under the agreement, the UAE and Israel, and Bahrain and Israel, began to
normalise ties. The accord was signed at an event hosted by US President Donald
Trump on the White House lawn on September 15.
Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed and his Israeli counterpart Gabi Ashkenazi visit the
Holocaust memorial together with German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas prior to
their historic meeting in Berlin, Germany. Reuters
The UAE hopes its burgeoning relationship with Israel will "strengthen
international stability", Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, Minister of Foreign Affairs
and International Co-operation, said on Tuesday.
Sheikh Abdullah was speaking alongside Israel's Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi
after a meeting on Tuesday as the two countries begin to forge relations. "Our
meeting today is filled with hope," he said, adding the pair had discussed
co-operation in energy and scientific research.
Both ministers said the accord heralded a new era of stability in the Middle
East.
Sheikh Abdullah said that "tolerance and pluralism" must be strengthened in the
region. UAE Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan speaks during a
news conference with his Israeli counterpart Gabi Ashkenazi and German Foreign
Minister Heiko Maas (not pictured) following their historic meeting at Villa
Borsig in Berlin, Germany. Reuters
"Dialogue with the UAE contributes to solving regional issues," Mr Ashkenazi
said. "The peace treaty signed also contributes towards the region's stability
and challenges, most notably the coronavirus pandemic."
Sheikh Abdullah affirmed the UAE's support for a two-state solution to the
Israel-Palestine conflict.
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas hosted the first face-to-face sit down
between Sheikh Abdullah and Mr Ashkenazi since the Abraham Accord was signed.
Under the agreement, the UAE and Israel, and Bahrain and Israel, began to
normalise ties. The accord was signed at an event hosted by US President Donald
Trump on the White House lawn on September 15.
Earlier on Tuesday, the three foreign ministers visited the Holocaust Memorial
in central Berlin. Wearing masks in line with coronavirus guidance, they bumped
elbows in greeting before taking a tour of the memorial.
Sheikh Abdullah left a long message in the visitor book at the site, including
the words "never again", a phrase used to remember the holocaust and prevent
such an atrocity happening again.
"This very important place immortalises the memory of the falling of a
constellation of human beings who were victims of extremism and hatred," he
wrote. Sheikh Abdullah wrote that it "advocates and at the same time emphasises
noble human values that call for co-existence, tolerance, empathy, acceptance of
others, and respect of all religions and beliefs.
"My country has established these values that will always remain a main driving
force for its development journey."
Mr Maas said before the visit: “It is a great honour that the Israeli and
Emirati foreign ministers have chosen Berlin as the location for their historic
first meeting.
"We are doing everything we can to be good hosts for the dialogue between the
two countries on how to shape their future bilateral relations.”
The visit comes as part of Sheikh Abdullah's tour of European capitals. after
visiting French and British officials in recent days. The accords are the first
between Arab states and Israel since 1994, when Jordan became the second state
to make peace with Israel. The only other state with official ties is Egypt,
having signed another US-brokered peace agreement in 1979.
The latest move was hailed by international figures as a major step that could
build momentum in the stalled Palestinian-Israeli peace process and promote
regional harmony.
The UAE says the deal with Israel is contingent on a stop to annexation of lands
in the Jordan Valley and West Bank, which are crucial to the viability of a
future independent Palestinian state. Arab League chief Ahmed Aboul Gheit said
last week that the deal ended the “certainty” of annexation.
“I fully understand Palestinian concerns but on the other hand, I have
personally focused on a very specific point, and that’s that the UAE and the US
reached an understanding that was forced upon the Israeli side to suspend the
annexation of Palestinian lands," Mr Aboul Gheit said.
– Additional reporting by agencies
Israel may halt its weapons sale to Azerbaijan,
Armenian ambassador says
Jerusalem Post/October 06/2020
Renewed hostilities broke out between Armenia and Azerbaijan on September 27,
over the contested Nagorno-Karabakh territory. Israel may halt commercial weapon
sales to Azerbaijan, Armenian Ambassador to Israel Armen Smbatyan told The
Jerusalem Post, as fighting intensified for the ninth day between the two
countries. “I believe that due to the appeal by the international organizations
and many individual states for an immediate de-escalation, Israel may halt its
arms sales to Azerbaijan,” Smbatyan said.“There is no alternative to a peaceful
negotiated solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and all regional countries
should bring their contribution to stabilize the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh,”
he added. “The number of casualties is increasing every day, including the
civilian population. Azerbaijan should cease hostilities and get back to
negotiations to find a peaceful resolution to this conflict,” Smbatyan said. He
had made similar comment to the Armenian news outlet Factor. Last week, Armenia
recalled Smbatyan for consultations to protest the sale of Israeli made weapons,
including drones, to Azerbaijan, which have been used against its forces. The
Foreign Ministry said it would not comment on Smbatyan’s words or on Jerusalem’s
export policy with regard to defense matters. Renewed hostilities broke out
between Armenia and Azerbaijan on September 27, over the contested
Nagorno-Karabakh territory.
Israel has strong ties with both counties and has sought to remain neutral in
the conflict, but it receives 40% of its oil supply from Azerbaijan, making its
ties with that country particularly important. The commercial Israeli weapons
sales to Azerbaijan have also made it hard for Jerusalem to maintain a position
of neutrality, in a conflict that has threatened to involve the larger parties
of Russia, which backs Armenia, and Turkey, which supports Azerbaijan. Fuad
Akhundov, head of sector for work with foreign media in the administration of
the president of the Republic of Azerbaijan, told The Jerusalem Post that any
reports that sales would be halted were “fake news” and he lauded the tight ties
between his country and Israel. “Israel is our partner,” as part of that
partnership Azerbaijan had contracts with Israel to purchase military hardware,
but that the contracts only dealt with hardware and did not involve greater
involvement.
Akhundov confirmed Azerbaijan was using Israeli drones in its battle with
Armenia, which he called the aggressor in the situation. Azerbaijan, once
provoked by Armenia, was simply reclaiming its territory and that its right to
that land was supported by international law, Akhundov said.
“We are fighting not against the Armenian people,” he said.
It was his presumption that Armenia sought to involve both Russia and Turkey in
the conflict, Akhundov said. Armenia has a military pact with Russia, through
the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), by which Moscow is bound to
come to its aid in certain situations.
BOTH ARMENIA and Azerbaijan accused each other on Monday of attacking civilian
areas on a ninth day of fighting, the deadliest in the south Caucasus region in
more than 25 years. Hundreds of people have been killed in the latest outbreak
of war over Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountain enclave that belongs to Azerbaijan
under international law but is populated and governed by ethnic Armenians. The
fighting intensified over the weekend, and prospects for a ceasefire appeared
remote after an uncompromising speech from Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev
on Sunday.
In a televised address to the nation, Aliyev said Azeri forces were advancing
and retaking lands that they lost to ethnic Armenians in the early 1990s –
though Armenia disputes these gains. He demanded that Armenia set a timetable
for withdrawing from Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding Azeri territories, and
said Azerbaijan would not cease military action until that happened. “Azerbaijan
has one condition, and that is the liberation of its territories,” he said.
“Nagorno-Karabakh is the territory of Azerbaijan.”Speaking immediately
afterward, Armenian Defense Ministry official Artsrun Hovhannisyan said: “I
don’t think that there is any risk for Yerevan [the Armenian capital], but
anyway we are in war.” The fighting has raised international concern about
stability in the south Caucasus, where pipelines carry Azeri oil and gas to
world markets, and about the possibility that other regional powers – including
Russia and Turkey – could be dragged in.
*Reuters contributed to this report.
Russia may sell S-400 to Iran after UN embargo expires, ambassador says
Al-Monitor/October 06/2020
Russia’s ambassador to Iran said Saturday that the Kremlin may sell its S-400
missile defense system to Tehran after the UN arms embargo expires later this
month. “We have provided Iran with the S-300. Russia does not have any problem
to deliver the S-400 to Iran, and it did not have any problem before, either,”
Ambassador Levan Dzhagaryan told Tehran-based Risalat newspaper, according to
Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency. “We have said since the very first day
that there will be no problem for selling weapons to Iran from Oct. 19,”
Dzhagaryan said, adding that Russia is not concerned with US threats. Why It
Matters: The seriousness of Dzhagaryan’s suggestion remains unclear. The Kremlin
has floated the proposal before, though no formal request by Iran has been
publicized. But if Iran were to obtain the S-400, it would be a slap in the face
to the Donald Trump administration and is unlikely to be taken kindly by Israel.
Russia already delivered its S-300 missile defense system to Iran in 2016 after
the signing of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action during the Barack Obama US
presidential administration.The Trump administration failed to convince even its
major European allies Germany, Britain and France to support the renewal of the
yearslong arms embargo. The S-400 long-range air defense system is highly
advanced and could pose a threat to US-built aircraft flown by the United States
and its regional allies in case of conflict with Iran. What’s Next: The UN arms
embargo is set to expire on Oct. 18, and the United States has said it will
unilaterally “snap back” international sanctions on Tehran, despite opposition
from Russia and China and objection from US allies. Despite the setbacks, the
Trump administration shows no sign on of letting up its thrust to isolate and
economically cripple Iran in hope of bringing its leaders back to the
negotiating table. Know More: Russia’s sale of the S-400 to Turkey has helped
push Washington’s relations with Ankara to one of the lowest points since Turkey
joined NATO in 1952, but the Pentagon says it has no plans to give up on its
presence in Incirlik just yet. And Anton Mardasov explains how Russian leaders
may weigh possible arms sales to Iran with regard to the Kremlin’s broader
interests in dealing with the United States and the Middle East.
Third, final Iranian tanker arrives in Venezuela
Al-Monitor/October 06/2020
The final fuel tanker in a series of Iranian ships has reached Venezuela. The
safe arrival of the fuel is a success for Iran and its South American ally amid
continued pressure from the United States. The Iran-flagged tanker Faxon docked
in Venezuela’s Puerto La Cruz port on Sunday, according to data from the Marine
Traffic website. Earlier last week, two other Iranian fuel tankers reached
Venezuela. Together, the three tankers brought more than 800,000 barrels of fuel
to the country. Venezuela is suffering from gasoline shortages. Though it has a
wealth of oil reserves and is a member of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries, Venezuela’s oil refining industry, which turns oil into
usable materials such as gasoline, has fallen into disarray, in part due to
underinvestment and lack of maintenance. Harsh US sanctions prevent Venezuela,
which has a socialist government that Washington opposes, from importing fuel
from many countries. Iran must also contend with US pressure and sanctions when
selling its fuel internationally. As a result, the Islamic Republic has stepped
up to meet Venezuela’s energy needs and the two have developed a strong
political and economic relationship.
The tankers’ delivery shows Iran is still able to conclude fuel deals with
Venezuela. In August, the United States seized a group ships for allegedly
bringing Iranian fuel to the country. The owners of the tankers challenged the
move in court but did not complete their shipment. Faxon and the other two
tankers arrived without US interference this time.
US ambassador to Israel warns Biden win could
undermine consensus on Iran
Al-Monitor Staff/Al-Monitor/October 06/2020
US policy toward Iran could take a turn for the worse from the perspective of
Israel's government and Washington’s Gulf allies if Joe Biden is elected
president in November, US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman said on Sunday, in
the latest example of a sitting Trump administration official vouching for the
current president’s policies ahead of his reelection bid. “Joe Biden was part of
the Obama administration, which negotiated and implemented the Iran deal,
something that President [Donald] Trump — and I share his view — thinks was the
worst international deal the United States has ever entered into,” Friedman said
in an interview with the United Arab Emirates’ al-Ain news site. “It created a
pathway for Iran to gain a nuclear weapon. It did nothing to restrain Iran from
its malign activity, whether supporting terrorists throughout Syria, Lebanon,
Iraq, Yemen,” Friedman said. “It did nothing to restrain their building of
ballistic missiles.” Friedman went on, “If we continue on this path, we think
Iran will ultimately have no choice but to end its malign activity. … I’d hate
to think that a new administration would undermine that, but regrettably, if
Biden wins, I think they might.”Why it matters: Friedman — who previously
advised the 2016 Trump campaign and legally represented Trump in his bankruptcy
battles over his Atlantic City casinos — is the latest administration official
treading on longstanding norms by promoting the president’s policies ahead of
the November election.
Last week, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spoke to a conservative pro-life
organization in the key swing state of Florida, touting the administration’s
record on immigration, North Korea, the Islamic State and assassinating Iranian
commander Qasem Soleimani as examples of the administration “respecting
life.”During a visit to Israel last month, Pompeo addressed the Republican
National Convention back in the United States moves that raised concerns about
potential violations of the 1939 Hatch Act, which bars officials in the
executive branch from engaging in certain political activities. What’s next: The
Biden campaign has said it could renegotiate the 2015 deal with Iran, with
additional provisions to inhibit Tehran's ballistic missile program. The
position has raised concerns in Israel that a Biden administration may not be
tough enough on Iran’s ambitions in the region. Biden has called the Trump
administration’s Iran policy a failure, pointing out its inability to rally even
the United States' closest allies to reimpose the UN arms embargo on Iran,
despite evidence of Tehran’s exportation of ballistic missile and drone
technology to conflict zones in the region.
Earlier this year, Iran successfully launched a satellite into space. US
officials say Iran’s space program could be a front for long-range ballistic
missile research. Last month, an anonymous senior US official said Iran could
obtain enough fissile material to build a nuclear weapon by the end of the year
and that Iran’s government was working with North Korea on long-range weapons.
Know more: Ben Caspit lays out Israeli officials’ concerns and hopes ahead of
the election as speculation grows that Iran may be waiting out the election to
reapproach the negotiation table.
Turkey’s Erdogan will visit Qatar and Kuwait on
Wednesday
Tuqa Khalid, Al Arabiya English/Wednesday 07 October 2020
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will visit Qatar and Kuwait on Wednesday,
his office said on Tuesday.“As part of his visit to Kuwait, President Erdogan
will meet with Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Nawaf al-Ahmad al-Jaber al-Sabah, who has
taken office after the late Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Jaber
al-Sabah, and extend his condolences. All aspects of the bilateral relations
will be addressed and views on regional developments will be exchanged at the
talks,” the Turkish Presidency statement read. During Erdogan’s visit to Qatar
he will meet Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani. “The two leaders are expected
to review the opportunities aimed at further enhancing the current cooperation
between Turkey and Qatar, and to discuss regional and international issues,” the
statement added. Ankara and Doha have grown increasingly close in recent years
since Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt cut ties with Qatar in 2017,
accusing it of supporting terrorism – a charge Doha denies. Qatar also helped
Turkey shore up its foreign reserves with a $15 billion deal announced in May to
help Turkey’s struggling economy. Doha also supports Ankara’s intervention in
Libya, where it helped the Government of National Accord (GNA) in its clashes
against the Libyan National Army (LNA), commanded by Khalifa Haftar and backed
by Egypt and the UAE.
Canada/Joint statement by François-Philippe Champagne,
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, Dominic Raab, and U.K. Foreign Secretary
on situation in Nagorno-Karabakh region
October 6, 2020 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Honourable François-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Foreign Affairs and
Dominic Raab, Foreign Secretary of the United Kingdom, today issued the
following statement:
“Canada and the United Kingdom reiterate the urgent need to end the continuing
military action in and around the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone.
“We are particularly concerned by reports of the shelling of civilian areas and
wish to express our condolences to the families of those who have tragically
lost their lives. The parties to the conflict must stop the violence and respect
the ceasefire agreement.
“We firmly support the statements made by the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group.
We urge all external parties and friends of both states to redouble their
efforts in support of an end to hostilities and to refrain from taking actions
that risk exacerbating the crisis.
“A comprehensive resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is overdue. That
can only be delivered through a negotiated settlement and not through military
action. All parties must urgently return to the negotiating table to work toward
this aim without preconditions.”
Contacts
Media Relations Office
Global Affairs Canada
343-203-7700
18 Killed in Bombing in Turkish-Controlled Syrian Town
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 6 October, 2020
An explosives-laden truck ignited Tuesday on a busy street in a northern Syrian
town controlled by Turkey-backed opposition fighters, killing at least 18 people
and wounding dozens, Syrian opposition activists reported. The blast in the town
of al-Bab took place near a bus station where people often gather to travel from
one region to another, according to the opposition's Civil Defense, also known
as White Helmets. The explosion caused widespread damage to buildings in the
area and set vehicles on fire in the town located in Aleppo province, activists
said. The victims included a number of women and children, the report by
Turkey's Anadolu news agency said. “The blast was in the middle between the
(station), residential homes and a small market,” said an activist based in
northern Syria who goes by the name of Abu al-Haitham. The Civil Defense said
the blast killed 19 and wounded more than 80.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition war
monitor, reported that 18 people were killed and 75 others were wounded in the
attack. It added that some of the wounded were in critical condition and the
death toll could rise. Differing casualty figures are not uncommon in the
aftermath of explosions in Syria. It was the latest in a series of attacks in
Turkish-controlled areas of northern Syria that have killed and wounded scores
of people. Turkey has blamed a Kurdish militia group, known as the People’s
Protection Units, for the attacks. There was no immediate claim of
responsibility for Tuesday’s attack, but Anadolu said local security officials
were looking into the possibility that it was also carried out by Kurdish
militants. Last month, an attack on a Turkish Red Crescent vehicle in al-Bab
killed a member of the aid agency and wounded another. Armed masked men wearing
camouflage clothing traveling in two cars without license plates attacked the
Red Crescent vehicle as it traveled through the town. Turkey-backed opposition
fighters took control of al-Bab in a military offensive in 2016 that was
launched to drive out Kurdish fighters and ISIS group militants from a border
area.
Global Coalition-led Operation Arrests 3 ISIS Leaders in
Deir Ezzor
Hasakeh - Kamal Sheikho/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 6 October, 2020
A security operation led by the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS in the eastern
countryside of Syria’s Deir Ezzor, resulted in the arrest of three ISIS
commanders, announced a top Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) leader. The source
said that the detainees are head of Zakat, head of the Finance Diwan and
commander of assassinations in Deir Ezzor. He revealed that the forces raided
the homes of the suspects in the town of Diban, and arrested them along with
eight others on charges of secretly dealing with active cells affiliated with
ISIS. Official military spokesman for Operation Inherent Resolve (OIR), Colonel
Wayne Marotto announced that the coalition forces conducted a series of strikes
on ISIS camps in a remote area of the Syrian Desert, or Badiya, in the early
hours of October 4. The desert is a known terrorist safe haven with a large
concentration of ISIS fighters, said Marotto, adding that ISIS “uses these
desolate, war-torn spaces to train fighters and plot their malicious terrorist
attacks throughout the region and abroad.” The spokesman asserted that the
coalition and SDF will not stop denying terrorists these safe havens, saying it
"remains the most effective force against ISIS in Syria." Meanwhile, the Kurdish
Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria, announced it will allow
thousands of Syrians, including families of ISIS fighters, in al-Hol camp to
leave for their areas. The co-chair of the Syrian Democratic Council, the
political wing of Syrian Democratic Council (SDC), Riad Derar said that Syrians
will leave al-Hol and only foreigners will remain. Syrian relatives of the
extremist group fighters “will be released with guarantees from their families”,
Derar was quoted by AFP. The official did not provide a date for the release and
said the decision does not include Syrian extremists held by the SDF.
Abkhazia to Open Embassy in Damascus
Damascus- Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 6 October, 2020
Abkhazia and Damascus signed an agreement Monday on enhancing bilateral
relations and on mutual exemption of visas for the citizens in both countries
for bearers of diplomatic, official, and private passports. The announcement
came during the visit of an Abkhazian delegation to Damascus, chaired by head of
the Administration of the President Alkhas Kvitsinia and Foreign Minister Daur
Vadimovich Kove, who will participate in the opening ceremony of the Abkhazian
Embassy in Syria on October 6. Kvitsinia met Monday with President Bashar Assad,
Prime Minister Husein Arnus, and Minister of Foreign Affairs Walid Moallem. The
delegation conveyed greetings from President Aslan Bzhania and wishes for peace
and prosperity to the people of Syria. Kvitsinia noted that the people of
Abkhazia support to the people of Syria in their desire to protect the country
from terrorism and to preserve its sovereignty and territorial integrity. The
delegation’s meeting with Moallem tackled bilateral relations and means of
enhancing them in different areas. Members of the Abkhazian delegation also
expressed the importance of the historic decision by the two sides to establish
diplomatic relations as a basis of cooperation in all fields, particularly in
economy, trade, and investment. Syria recognized Georgia’s two Russian-occupied
regions of Abkhazia and Tskhinvali as independent states back in 2018, a step
which was condemned by the international community. Since the Russia-Georgia
2008 war, the regions have been recognized as independent states only by Russia,
Venezuela, Nicaragua, Nauru, and Syria. The move came one day after Moallem
received a copy of the credentials of Turki Mahmood al-Busaidi, the
extraordinary and plenipotentiary Ambassador of Oman to Syria, to become the
first Gulf ambassador who returns to Damascus since the war erupted in the
country in 2011.
Syrian Victims of Chemical Attacks File Case With German
Prosecutors
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 6 October, 2020
Lawyers representing victims of chemical weapons attacks in Syria say they have
filed criminal complaints with Germany's federal public prosecutor against
Syrian officials they blame for the deaths of hundreds of civilians in
rebel-held areas. Germany, which is home to 600,000 Syrians, has "universal
jurisdiction" laws that allow it to prosecute people for crimes against humanity
committed anywhere in the world. That offers a rare legal avenue for action
against the government of President Bashar al-Assad. Attempts by Western powers
to set up an international tribunal for Syria have been blocked by Russia and
China at the UN Security Council. The Syrian government denies it has used
chemical weapons against its own civilians. A spokesman for Germany's Public
Prosecutor General (GBA) was not immediately available to confirm the complaint
had been submitted. The complaints are based on what the lawyers say is the most
comprehensive body of evidence so far on the use of substances such as sarin gas
in Syria in Ghouta in 2013 and in Khan Sheikhoun four years later, which killed
at least 1,400 people. They include testimonies from 17 survivors and 50
defectors with knowledge of the Syrian government's chemical weapons program or
plans to carry out the two attacks, they say. "Prosecutors may ultimately
determine they have sufficient evidence to issue arrest warrants for members of
the Assad regime," said Steve Kostas, a lawyer with the Open Society
Foundation's Justice Initiative, one of three organizations behind the
complaints. "This would be a major step in the longer-term process to secure
trials against Syrian officials."
GAS ATTACKS
A UN-commissioned investigation to identify those behind chemical weapons
attacks in Syria concluded in 2016 that Syrian government forces had used
chlorine and sarin gas. "It is a small step but it gives us hope that maybe one
day we could see justice," said a volunteer medic who was injured while rescuing
victims of the attack in Ghouta. "The world has started to forget about us and
our complaints are a reminder that the world has a moral obligation to help put
on trial people who used chemical weapons," added the women, who fled to Germany
in 2015 and requested anonymity, citing safety fears. Syrian lawyers and victims
of alleged torture are also pursuing cases against former Syrian military and
security officials living in Germany and suspected of human rights violations.
The first trial of suspected members of Assad's security services for crimes
against humanity, including torture and sexual assault, started in a German
court in April. The country's prosecutor general has also issued an
international arrest warrant for the head of the Syrian Air Force Intelligence
on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The Assad government
denies it tortures prisoners. "The significance of the complaints is to send a
signal to the Syrian regime's main backers - Russia and Iran - that there can be
no resolution to the conflict without accountability for crimes against
civilians," said Mazen Darwish, director of the Syrian Centre for Media and
Freedom of Expression.
Erdogan, Sarraj Discuss Resignation
Ankara - Saeed Abdul Razzak/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 6 October, 2020
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan met on Sunday with Libyan Prime Minister
of the Government of National Accord Fayez al-Sarraj in Istanbul. During the
meeting, Erdogan inquired about Sarraj’s decision to resign and relayed Ankara’s
stance on the matter. The two also discussed ongoing Libyan political settlement
talks. The meeting comes about two weeks after Sarraj announced his intentions
to resign by the end of October, against the backdrop of the declaration of a
ceasefire on August 21. Erdogan received Sarraj’s announcement with contempt,
saying that Turkey did not feel comfortable with Sarraj's decision to step down.
Turkish Presidential Spokesperson Ibrahim Kalin said that the GNA’s Presidential
Council could be restructured. Kalin pointed out that Sarraj’s intention to
resign from his post will take place at the end of October, adding that his
resignation may be a reaction to some controversial issues in Libya. He also
stated that Turkish-Libyan relations are not based on certain figures, in an
oblique hint at Sarraj’s planned resignation, stressing Ankara’s support for the
GNA, and its commitment to all military and security cooperation agreements
signed between the two countries. The GNA, for its part, said the meeting took
place with the participation of senior officials from both sides. It said the
talks dealt with developments in Libya and included enhancing the prospects for
joint cooperation with Turkey. Erdogan on Monday also discussed Libya with NATO
Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg. In other news, at least 25 Somali and Libyan
soldiers were killed on Sunday in a clash over unspecified dispute in a military
base located in the western Turkish city of Isparta. According to a report by
the Somali Guardian, the incident follows rising tensions between Somali and
Libyan soldiers who have recently received a commando training in Turkey and is
the first deadly clash between the two sides since Turkey began offering
military training to Libya and Somalia national armies.
Israel Strikes Hamas Sites in Gaza Following Rocket Attack
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 6 October, 2020
An Israeli aircraft struck what the it claimed said was a Hamas military target
in the southern Gaza Strip late Monday, shortly after a rocket was fired from
Gaza into Israel. The rocket landed in an open area and did not cause any damage
or injuries, however it broke a weeks-long lull in the area, The Associated
Press (AP) reported. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the
rocket fire. But Israel holds Gaza's Hamas rulers responsible for all fire out
of the territory and usually responds to rocket attacks with airstrikes on Hamas
targets.
There were no reports of casualties from the Israeli airstrike. In the Israeli-occuped
West Bank, meanwhile, the Israeli army said it opened fire at three Palestinian
men who were throwing firebombs at troops near the settlement of Einav. It said
one of the suspects was hit, while the two others managed to flee. According to
AP, there were no further details on the condition of the man who was shot.
The Latest LCCC English analysis &
editorials from miscellaneous sources published on October 06-07/2020
Erdogan's Turkey: Drunk on power
Emily Schrader/Jerusalem Post/October 06/2020
The raging conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh has
given Turkey another opportunity to expand its violent, imperialist tendencies
under the iron fist of President Recep Erdogan.
In fact, the sudden outbreak of violence between Armenia and Azerbaijan is more
than likely orchestrated in part by Turkey, given the current Turkish regime’s
increasingly aggressive international policies. From Libya to Syria to Greece to
Iraq to Azerbaijan, and yes, even to Israel, Turkey’s actions are far beyond
acceptable by any standards of international law – or morality. As if the bloody
civil war in Syria wasn’t complicated enough, Turkey took advantage of the chaos
in Syria and took aggressive military action beginning as early as 2016, and
continues until today, occupying parts of Syria in order to oppress the local
Kurdish populations, claiming they were clearing “terrorist zones.”Multiple
independent organizations reported that Turkey carried out ethnic cleansing and
other war crimes against local minority populations. Despite this, international
bodies and the United States did nothing to hold Turkey accountable. As
frequently happens with human rights violators when they aren’t held
accountable, Turkey’s aggression and war crimes haven’t stopped with Syria.
Turkey has also begun to recruit local populations in Syria to fight foreign
wars in Libya, another brewing violent conflict in which Turkey is meddling, and
there also reports of Ankara recruiting Syrians to fight against Armenia as
well. Most recently, Turkish involvement expanded to Azerbaijan, as Turkey is
backing the violence against Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh. Turkey has repeatedly
bombed Kurdish areas in northern Iraq, and is regularly threatening Greece over
maritime access to gas exploration. Its military invasion in Libya and enhanced
ties with the war-torn nation have also led to increased tensions with Cyprus
and Israel over the EastMed energy deal. Turkey has been on the literal warpath,
and no one seems to be paying attention.
Meanwhile, Erdogan’s interests are expanding to Israel. Erdogan is a longtime
supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood, and has routinely aligned himself with
Muslim Brotherhood-supporting nations such as Qatar. He has provided support to
Hamas terrorists repeatedly, including welcoming them to Turkey and even
granting them citizenship. Within Turkey as well, Erdogan has brutally oppressed
political dissidents and aided in the Islamization of historic sites, such as
turning the Hagia Sophia into a mosque.
Unsurprisingly, in response to the United Arab Emirates and Bahraini peace
deals, Turkey sided against the Arab world and publicly condemned peace, siding
with some the world’s worst human-rights abusers: Iran, Qatar and Palestinian
leaders. Despite being allies of Hamas, earlier this month, Erdogan shared a
bizarre tweet glorifying Ottoman control over the city of Jerusalem that stated,
“Jerusalem is ours,” and claiming the Ottomans “lived with the Palestinian
people for centuries.” Ironic, considering the bloody history of the Ottomans in
fighting against the local Arab population in order to control the city of
Jerusalem.
Erdogan has made his foreign policy intentions crystal clear in recent years,
and the international community would do well to heed the warning. Turkey is a
bad-faith actor that has committed, and is committing, gross human rights
violations – not only against its own population with censorship and oppression
of journalists and dissidents, but in Syria, Libya and potentially Azerbaijan.
While Israel’s position is extremely complex in dealing with Azerbaijan and
Armenia, due to alliances against Iran, Israel too should be very careful in
aligning itself with Azerbaijan (and as such, Turkey) in this conflict. We
should not ignore Erdogan’s aggression. We must hold Turkey accountable and put
an end to its meddling in the region.
*The writer is the CEO of Social Lite Creative LLC.
The Public's Right to Know about the President's Health vs. the President's
Right to Medical Confidentiality
Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute./October 06/2020
But there is a countervailing right which few in the media have written about.
All Americans have the right to medical confidentiality. This right is assured
by federal law, state law, medical ethics and the long traditions of the medical
profession. What a patient tells his doctor, or what the doctor observes from
the patient, are confidential, subject only to a few limited exceptions.
Among these exceptions is the obligation of doctors to report threats to other
people, such as a highly contagious disease. It also includes the obligations of
doctors and other professionals to report when they learn of abuse of or by the
patient. There is no explicit exception for high ranking public officials,
including the president.
All current White Houses leak like sieves. Staff members develop quid pro quo
relationships with the media: in exchange for leaking information, the media
promises to treat them well. That is the reality of contemporary journalism.
Perhaps the law should be changed and government doctors should have their first
obligation to the public. But such a change would come with a high cost:
presidents would not disclose to these government doctors information that they
did not want to be made public. That might have a negative impact on their
medical treatment.
The pubic has a right to know the details of the president's medical situation.
But the president has the right to keep his medical information confidential.
There is a conflict between these rights, even when they involve the president
of the United States, who is a candidate for reelection. The reason the public
has the right to know about the president's medical history is self-evident. He
is the most powerful person in the world and he is seeking a second term. Voters
are entitled to know the truth about his medical condition. No one would dispute
that.
But there is a countervailing right which few in the media have written about.
All Americans have the right to medical confidentiality. This right is assured
by federal law, state law, medical ethics and the long traditions of the medical
profession. What a patient tells his doctor, or what the doctor observes from
the patient, are confidential, subject only to a few limited exceptions. Among
these exceptions is the obligation of doctors to report threats to other people,
such as a highly contagious disease. It also includes the obligations of doctors
and other professionals to report when they learn of abuse of or by the patient.
There is no explicit exception for high ranking public officials, including the
president.
Most, but not all presidents, have disclosed their medical conditions. Among
those who were not fully candid were Grover Cleveland, Woodrow Wilson, Franklin
Delano Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon. But during those times, the
media was not as persistent, and leaks were not as common. Moreover, the media
cooperated, particularly with popular presidents, such as John F. Kennedy, in
keeping his medical secrets from the public.
Today there are few, if any, secrets. All current White Houses leak like sieves.
Staff members develop quid pro quo relationships with the media: in exchange for
leaking information, the media promises to treat them well. That is the reality
of contemporary journalism.
The law does not currently have an exception to confidentiality by government
doctors. All presidents have their own private doctors, but they are also
treated by White House doctors who are paid by the government. Although these
doctors are employees of the government, their obligation of confidentiality to
the patient is as compulsory as it is for private doctors. Perhaps the law
should be changed and government doctors should have their first obligation to
the public. But such a change would come with a high cost: presidents would not
disclose to these government doctors information that they did not want to be
made public. That might have a negative impact on their medical treatment.
We know from experience that whenever the law compels disclosure of medical
information -- as in child abuse cases -- patients become increasingly reluctant
to confide in doctors who are obligated to disclose their secrets. When it comes
to balancing privacy and disclosure, there are no free lunches. The obligation
to publicly disclose carries the cost of less private disclosure to the doctor.
That is simply the reality.
One conclusion that is beyond any dispute is that no doctor has the right to
deliberately and willfully mislead the public, even if his patient tells him to.
I am not accusing any doctor of doing that in this case. But the rules of the
profession are clear: a doctor can refuse to disclose based on patient
confidentiality; or a doctor can disclose with the consent of the patient; but a
doctor cannot lie to the public even if the patient demands that he do so.
This is a complex area of medical ethics, law and public policy. It requires
nuanced solutions that serve both the short-term public interest and the
long-term need to maintain medical confidentiality. These issues should be
discussed in a non-partisan, non–ideological and non-political manner.
*Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law, Emeritus at
Harvard Law School and author of the book, Guilt by Accusation: The Challenge of
Proving Innocence in the Age of #MeToo, Skyhorse Publishing, 2019. His new
podcast, "The Dershow," can be seen on Spotify, Apple and YouTube. He is the
Jack Roth Charitable Foundation Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
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.
CIA Director Gina Haspel and the British Role in the
Anti-Trump Plot
Chris Farrell/Gatestone Institute/October 6, 2020
In the next paragraph, [Washington Post reporter Shane] Harris notes
breathlessly: "... Trump has accused the United Kingdom of conspiring with
American intelligence to spy on his presidential campaign."
President Trump certainly has made that claim, and one believes for very good
reasons that seem to compound weekly.
Having the British run an aggressive intelligence collection operation against
Team Trump targets, bypassing US legal prohibitions, and then laundering the
intelligence "take" back to US officials via the UK-US liaison relationship is
precisely something an "honorary UK desk officer" might be good and adept at
accomplishing. Certainly, these subjects and questions deserve closer
examination, without the phony prophylactic defense of grave warnings about
"sources and methods."
CIA Director Gina Haspel can answer all of those questions, and she does not
even have to touch upon classified information to do so. The American public is
due her answers.
It appears CIA Director Gina Haspel (while serving as London Chief of Station
from 2014 to early 2017) was an active, knowledgeable party to the efforts to
target candidate Trump with an FBI-instigated foreign counterintelligence
operation. Pictured: Haspel is sworn in before the Senate Intelligence Committee
during her confirmation hearing to become the CIA director, on May 9, 2018 in
Washington, DC. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
We have raised and discussed serious matters of fact and questions about the
role of CIA Director Gina Haspel in the Anti-Trump conspiracy. It appears Haspel
(while serving as London Chief of Station from 2014 to early 2017) was an
active, knowledgeable party to the efforts to target candidate Trump with an
FBI-instigated foreign counterintelligence operation. That seditious conspiracy
carried forward to a more sophisticated and aggressive plan to carry out a soft
coup against President Donald J. Trump.
Looking back on news reporting concerning Haspel, we turn (with caution) to a
Washington Post article from July 2019 by Shane Harris, titled: "The quiet
director: How Gina Haspel manages the CIA's volatile relationship with Trump".
We are supposed to believe that Haspel and her office did not cooperate with the
reporter for the article. Harris disclaims Haspel involvement by writing:
"This report is based on interviews with 26 current and former officials who
have worked with Haspel in the United States, particularly when she served in
senior management roles at headquarters, and in London, where Haspel served two
tours as the CIA's top representative — chief of station — a plum post that is
usually the steppingstone to the agency's highest ranks."
No Washington Post article in the last decade has contained such a scrupulous
sourcing statement. Of course, Haspel had nothing to do with the article.
Remember that, won't you?
Haspel, twice-over Chief of Station in London, had close connections with the
British intelligence and security services. Given the nature of the "special
relationship" between the two countries, that is hardly surprising. Harris's
interviews of British intelligence officers take things a step further, however:
"... what she lacked in after-hours sociability she made up for with deep
professional ties to the upper echelon of the British security establishment.
'She had access to anyone in our service,' the former British intelligence
official said."
Harris goes on to explain:
"Haspel has become the CIA's linchpin to the Secret Intelligence Service, or
MI6, its most important foreign partner. Her British colleagues say that she
knows them so well — warts and all — that they call her the 'honorary U.K. desk
officer.'"
In the next paragraph, Harris notes breathlessly:
"... Trump has accused the United Kingdom of conspiring with American
intelligence to spy on his presidential campaign."
President Trump certainly has made that claim, and one believes for very good
reasons that seem to compound weekly. Reasons that make the "intelligence
community" and 95% of "official Washington" extremely nervous. It is the sort of
statement that presidential aides and counsels look nervous about, wring their
hands and respectfully, earnestly plead: "But Mr. President, you just can't say
that sort of thing!" Truth be damned.
Concurrent with the FBI's anti-Trump foreign counterintelligence operation,
launched from the United Kingdom (with Haspel's affirmative "coordination"),
keep in mind that the UK's version of the National Security Agency -- the
Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) -- was engaged in an aggressive
Signals Intelligence campaign later codified in UK law as the Investigatory
Powers Act (and referred to colloquially as the "Snoopers' Charter"). Having the
British run an aggressive intelligence collection operation against Team Trump
targets, bypassing US legal prohibitions, and then laundering the intelligence
"take" back to US officials via the UK-US liaison relationship is precisely
something an "honorary UK desk officer" might be good and adept at
accomplishing.
Certainly, these subjects and questions deserve closer examination, without the
phony prophylactic defense of grave warnings about "sources and methods." No one
examining the coup against President Trump is seriously interested in the
precise technical collection techniques of GCHQ -- they just want to know if the
Brits were involved in an attempt to subvert a presidential campaign and then
overturn the results of an election. CIA Director Gina Haspel can answer all of
those questions, and she does not even have to touch upon classified information
to do so. The American public is due her answers.
*Chris Farrell is a former counterintelligence case officer. For the past 20
years, he has served as the Director of Investigations & Research for Judicial
Watch. The views expressed are the author's alone, and not necessarily those of
Judicial Watch.
© 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.
White House Deceptions Don’t Help Trump
Jonathan Bernstein/Bloomberg/October, 06/2020
My immediate reaction to President Donald Trump’s Covid-19 diagnosis on Thursday
was to urge the administration to practice full disclosure and avoid factual
mistakes. The Washington Post’s Karen Tumulty had the same response, writing:
“Starting right now, Americans must demand briefings from the medical personnel
— presumably military doctors — treating the president. The medical team should
make public the specifics of Trump’s symptoms, test results, vital signs and his
treatment regimen.”
One very long weekend later, that obviously hasn’t happened. Instead, we’ve
learned that Trump’s first instinct was to try to cover up his illness. It seems
quite plausible that had Bloomberg’s Jennifer Jacobs not broken the news that
senior adviser Hope Hicks had tested positive, and had Trump’s case proved
relatively mild, the public might never have learned of it. Since then, we’ve
had a series of statements that had to be walked back, reversed or significantly
revised. Several basic questions still haven’t been answered.
The consequences were predictable. Instead of press coverage focused on the
world’s concern about the president and wishes for his rapid recovery, we have
headlines like: “Trump’s Doctor Delivers Confusion” and “confusion continues
over his health” and “Trump Recuperates Amid Questions About His Health and
Campaign.”
In other words, no one knows if Trump’s condition is as good as the
administration says or a great deal worse. Since neither Dr. Sean Conley nor the
White House staff nor Trump himself can be trusted to disclose the truth,
they’ve lost the ability to frame the story in a sympathetic way. That means
that not only will reporters keep pushing on all the unanswered questions, but
they’re also not going to take further statements at face value.
It doesn’t help when Trump stages photos of himself “working” by signing blank
sheets of paper, or goes on a ride outside the hospital that practically every
doctor and other expert thinks was reckless and irresponsible. It also doesn’t
help when he records video addresses to the nation that make no mention of the
millions of others who have been sick or died, or that he seems far more focused
on the election than on governing.
It’s true that a president falling ill is always going to be a tough story for
the White House, particularly a month from Election Day. And even if staffers
had been entirely honest and open, there were going to be questions about
Trump’s obvious failure to follow safety protocols, and about how his case
symbolized the various ways that the administration has botched the pandemic.
But the White House has managed to turn a story that might’ve elicited some
favorable coverage (and did elicit warm words from many who oppose the
president, from Joe Biden on down) into a story about the usual Trump
administration falsehoods.
Turkey’s rising role as a regional disrupter
Osama Al-Sharif/Arab News/October 06/2020
With Turkey’s latest intervention in the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan is extending his country’s foreign adventures from the
Caucasus to North Africa, raising questions about Ankara’s controversial role as
a major regional disrupter. Erdogan’s populist approach to regional crises
reflects a desire to reshape Turkey’s place in the international arena. But what
is it exactly that he wants to achieve?
In a speech last week, he complained about the failures of the post-Second World
War order, just as he had before about Turkey’s grievances following the First
World War, which restricted his country’s maritime access in the Aegean. In his
words: “There is no chance left for this distorted order, in which the entire
globe is encumbered by a handful of greedy people, to continue to exist the way
it currently does.” In almost all of his speeches, Erdogan underlines the
so-called Turkish exceptionalism while portraying the country as a victim.
Pundits have talked about Erdogan’s obsession with reviving Turkey’s Ottoman
past. His foreign adventures betray a desire to reshape the region’s
geopolitical status under an emerging, militarized Turkey. Even as he sides with
Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, he does so out of a superior
approach as the titular head of the Turkic peoples, egging Azeri President Ilham
Aliyev not to accept an unconditional cease-fire. By sending Syrian mercenaries
and weapons to Azerbaijan — an allegation denied by Aliyev — Erdogan is
demonstrating how he views the region and its people: Former Ottoman territories
and subjects that he can manipulate.
His unconventional approach to regional conflicts has put Turkey in a unique,
albeit difficult, position. Despite being a major NATO member, he has built a
shaky alliance with Russia’s Vladimir Putin, as well as with Iran over Syria,
where his ultimate objectives remain vague and suspicious. Against US warnings,
he has obtained the Russian S-400 air defense system, thus forcing Washington to
cancel its F-35 fighter jet deal with Ankara and impose sanctions.
While being an ally of Moscow in Syria, Erdogan has taken the side of the
Government of National Accord (GNA) in Libya as Putin backs the Libyan National
Army of Khalifa Haftar. His support for the GNA has gone beyond diplomatic
backing: He has violated UN resolutions by sending weapons and mercenaries to
support Tripoli’s fragile government. Erdogan also signed a controversial
maritime deal with GNA Prime Minister Fayez Al-Sarraj that encroaches on
Greece’s territorial sovereignty. Top aides have described Libya as a former
Ottoman territory and have pledged never to leave.
In the ongoing intra-Libyan peace discussions, the main stumbling block is the
removal of all foreign players. Ankara’s position on this crucial issue is vague
and the risks of the talks collapsing because of this are high.
In Syria’s Idlib, Turkey continues to provide support to extremist groups, while
Erdogan has pledged that Turkey will wipe out the groups it deems to be
terrorist — i.e., the Syrian Kurds — if others fail to keep their promises.
Turkey has become part of the problem that is preventing a political solution to
the nine-year-old Syrian conflict. It has been accused of transferring Syrian
refugees to populate abandoned Syrian Kurdish towns in the north of the country.
In both Syria and Libya, Erdogan’s kinship to the Muslim Brotherhood has been a
key ideological factor in charting his policy.
Last week, the EU threatened Turkey with sanctions over its dispute with Greece
in the eastern Mediterranean. Relations between Ankara and the EU, particularly
France, have been tense over Syria, Libya and now Greece. After weeks of
heightened tensions, Turkey agreed to recall an exploration vessel from the
Aegean and begin talks with Athens. Turkey’s grievances over maritime borders
may be reasonable, but its maverick style of violating Greek and Cypriot waters
does not help its case.
Today, Ankara is involved in active disputes with all of its neighbors and
beyond. Erdogan’s foreign adventures have hurt the Turkish economy and reversed
much of its gains. His popularity at home has been dented. The main question
remains: What does Erdogan really want? His alliances with Moscow and Tehran are
temporary, as the agendas of these countries intersect with his at times and
contrast at others. Turkey’s policies have polarized the Sunni world and
isolated it from its neighbors. Now Erdogan finds himself on the opposite side
to Putin over Nagorno-Karabakh, while their agreement in northern Syria faces
collapse.
Erdogan is demonstrating how he views the region and its people: Former Ottoman
territories and subjects that he can manipulate.
With all these conflicts, which reflect badly on Turkey’s economy, currency and
human rights, Erdogan is overreaching and he may soon find himself facing
multiple foreign policy challenges. It is ironic that, in the course of the past
few years, he has failed to respond to calls for, or even suggest, peaceful
engagement. Syria’s Kurdish minority is not the issue, but Turkey’s Kurds are.
He has squandered multiple opportunities to fix this problem peacefully.
In the end, while complaining about a distorted world order, Erdogan has become
a major disrupting force in that very same order.
*Osama Al-Sharif is a journalist and political commentator based in Amman.
Twitter: @plato010
Even with new peace deals, Iraq seems a long way from
normalizing ties with Israel
Hussain Abdul-Hussain/Al Arabiya/Monday 05 October 2020
Before the biggest Jewish population in the Middle East lived in Israel, it
lived in Iraq where its roots go as far back as the Neo-Babylonian dynasty that
ended in 539 BCE. If there is any Arab country that a majority of Israelis feels
connected to, it would be Iraq. Yet, thanks to the rule of socialist Arab
Baathism, followed by the dominance of Iran’s equally authoritarian political
Islam, Iraq now seems far away from peace and normalization with Israel.
Compounding the problem is Iraq’s failing state. An Iraqi government that cannot
secure the safety of diplomatic missions in Baghdad is not really in charge, and
cannot be expected to deliver on any peace treaty that it might sign with
Israel, or any other treaty for that matter.
But to give the cabinet of Mustapha al-Kadhimi credit where credit is due, it
should be noted that when asked to comment on Emirati-Israeli peace, the Iraqi
prime minister said that peace between any Arab country and Israel was a
sovereign issue, and that it was up to the Emiratis to decide how to handle its
relations with Israel.
Prime Minister Mustapha Al-Kadhimi’s statement reflected growing awareness in
Iraq and Lebanon that national interests trump old tired pan-Arabist slogans
about Palestine. At the virtual Arab League meeting on Sept. 9, when the
Palestinian delegation tabled a motion to denounce the UAE and any other member
state that might sign peace with Israel, both the Iraqis and the Lebanese
abstained.
Beirut understood that anti-peace populism, as dictated by the Iranian regime,
could wait. The UAE houses one of the biggest Lebanese expat communities in the
world. Despite slowing heavily, expat remittances is the only lifeline left for
Lebanon’s free falling economy.
Weeks later, Lebanon put its interests ahead of Iranian dictates and empty
slogans and agreed to talk to Israel to delineate shared borders. Lebanon hopes
to produce gas from border areas on a scale big enough to generate foreign
currency revenue that can replenish its overdrawn treasury. However, so far,
offshore exploration missions have found no gas.
So while signs that the Lebanese are crawling from underneath the Iranian thumb
and taking some baby steps on the Israeli issue that are in their national
interests, Iraqis have yet to show such awareness. Granted that Al-Kadhimi’s
statement on UAE’s sovereign decision and his vote at the Arab League indicate
some savviness, yet the Iraqi political establishment remains far from coming to
terms with the idea of peace with Israel.
Right after the downfall of the Saddam Hussein regime in 2003, a Shia mob in
Baghdad hurled stones on Palestinian refugees, that numbered some 5,000, forcing
them to take shelter at a UN camp on the border with Jordan. A majority of the
Shia hated late president Hussein and perceived many Palestinians as working as
his enablers, hence the Palestine cause never won traction with these Iraqis.
But years of Iranian domination shifted the needle, even if Iran’s Iraqi puppets
cannot argue their case against peace with Israel.
Qais al-Khazaali, the head of pro-Iran militia Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq, once commented
that peace with Zionists means spreading of homosexuality inside Iraq. Other
pro-Tehran Iraqi politicians have expressed similar nonsense.
On the other side of the Iraqi political spectrum are Sunni loyalists of Saddam,
who styled himself as Saladin, the conqueror of Crusader Jerusalem. In the
1980s, Saddam’s inspiration and uncle, Khairallah Talfah, printed a book in
which he argued that three are not worth living: the Jews, the Persians and
flies. Talfah was clearly impressed by Nazi propaganda among the Arabs,
propaganda that eventually led to Jewish exodus from Iraq.
Unlike how Lebanon and Israel share disputed borders and fought decades of
bloody wars, Iraq shares nothing with Israel and does not house Palestinian
refugees. In their history, Iraq and Israel clashed only twice, when Tel Aviv
bombed Iraq’s nuclear reactor, and ten years later when Saddam fired 39 Scud
missiles on Tel Aviv, which resulted in no casualties. Eventually, Hussein
agreed to pay Israel $74 million in compensation. The money was taken out of
Iraq’s oil-for-food UN program.
Iraq says ‘not happy’ with ‘dangerous’ threat by Washington to pull out troops
Aware of the thin history of aggression between the two, former lawmaker Mithal
al-Alusi has been the most outspoken politician openly calling for peace with
Israel. After al-Alusi visited Israel in 2005, his two sons were murdered,
either by pro-Iran or Baathist militias.
But the mood in Iraq is against both: Shia militias and Sunni ISIS, many of
whose leaders are holdouts from Saddam’s regime. The tens of thousands of Iraqis
who took to the streets last October are citizens with awareness of benefit and
cost, and realize that peace in general, probably including with Israel, means
more trade, jobs and opportunity.
Like all other issues in Iraq that depend on restoring state sovereignty and the
elimination of ISIS and the pro-Iran militias, Iraqi peace with Israel is
incumbent on Iraq ridding itself of Iran’s dominance and becoming, once again, a
normal state.