LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
October 19/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
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Bible Quotations For today
Be doers of the word, and not merely hearers who deceive
themselves
Letter of James 01/19-27/:”You must understand this, my beloved: let everyone be
quick to listen, slow to speak, slow to anger; for your anger does not produce
God’s righteousness. Therefore rid yourselves of all sordidness and rank growth
of wickedness, and welcome with meekness the implanted word that has the power
to save your souls. But be doers of the word, and not merely hearers who deceive
themselves. For if any are hearers of the word and not doers, they are like
those who look at themselves in a mirror; for they look at themselves and, on
going away, immediately forget what they were like. But those who look into the
perfect law, the law of liberty, and persevere, being not hearers who forget but
doers who act they will be blessed in their doing. If any think they are
religious, and do not bridle their tongues but deceive their hearts, their
religion is worthless. Religion that is pure and undefiled before God, the
Father, is this: to care for orphans and widows in their distress, and to keep
oneself unstained by the world.’
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News published on October 18-19/2019
Arrests, Injuries as Army Troops Disperse Riad al-Solh Protest by Force
Major Roads across Lebanon Blocked in 2nd Day of Protests
Riot police clash with Lebanese protesters in Beirut, injuries reported
2 Dead, 6 Hurt as Ahdab Bodyguards Open Fire at Tripoli Demo
2 Dead, Dozens Hurt and Most Roads Blocked as Protests Engulf Lebanon
Hariri Gives Parties 3 Days to Back His Reforms, Says Obstacles Put in His Way
Aoun and Hariri Call Off Cabinet Session, PM to Address Nation
Bassil Warns of 'Strife', Says Rival Political Parties Exploiting Protests
Jumblat Calls on PSP to Stage Peaceful Protests
Geagea Urges Hariri to Resign, Calls on LF to Join Protests
AMAL Warns 'Suspicious Elements' May Infiltrate Protests
Kataeb party leader MP Sami Gemayel Hails ‘Uprising,’ Calls for Early
Legislative Elections, Govt. Resignation
Former PMs Stand in Solidarity with Hariri
Lebanon in lock down as protesters demand new government
Kuwait, Egypt, US, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain issue warnings to citizens in Lebanon
Hizbullah Official: Presidency, Govt. and Hizbullah Not to Blame for Current
Crisis
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports
And News published on October 18-19/2019
Donald Trump says Erdogan told him he wants northern Syria cease-fire to work
Trump said that Erdogan had assured him that he wants the “cease-fire” with
Kurdish militants in northern Syria to work.
Trump says ‘pause’ in fighting in northeast Syria is back on
Erdogan Says Will Restart Syria Operation Tuesday Evening if Deal Not Respected
Turkey plans presence across northeast Syria, Erdogan says
Turkish air strike kills five civilians in northeast Syria: Monitor
Erdogan denies ongoing clashes in northeast Syria after ceasefire
Kurdish mayors replaced in Turkey in crackdown on criticism of Syria assault
European, US lawmakers jointly condemn Turkey invasion
France’s Macron criticizes NATO reaction over Turkish offensive
Iraqi govt. source challenges IRGC’s story of arrest of Iranian dissident
US ground troops will not enforce Syria safe zone, says defense secretary
Israeli guards kill Palestinian assailant in West Bank
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on October 18-19/2019
Debunking the myths over US withdrawal from Syria/Dr. John C. Hulsman/Arab
News/October 18, 2019
Modi and Xi convey message of cooperation/Michael Kugelman/Arab News/October 18,
2019
Mental illness sufferers need sympathetic local help/Asma I. Abdulmalik/Arab
News/October 18, 2019
Nobel Prize for Economics and a country blighted by hunger/Ranvir S. Nayar/Arab
News/October 18, 2019
The Syrian war and the demise of international diplomacy/Sinem Cengiz/Arab
News/October 18, 2019
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News
published
on October 18-19/2019
Arrests, Injuries as Army Troops Disperse Riad al-Solh Protest by Force
Associated Press/Naharnet/October 18/2019
Army troops and riot policemen used excessive force Friday evening to disperse
anti-government protesters, making a large number of arrests.
Violent clashes and riots had broken out in downtown Beirut following a speech
by Prime Minister Saad Hariri, who gave political parties a 72-hour ultimatum to
support his reform agenda or face a possible resignation.
Thousands of protesters have been rallying across the country for the past two
days, raging against top leaders including the president, prime minister and
parliament speaker whom they blame for decades of corruption and mismanagement
that have led to the current crisis.
The protests are the largest Lebanon has seen since 2015 and could further
destabilize a country whose economy is already on the verge of collapse and has
one of the highest debt loads in the world.
The protests, triggered partly by a proposal for a $6 monthly fee for WhatsApp
voicecalls, drew people from all religious and political backgrounds and were
largely peaceful, although violence erupted in several areas. Many said they
would remain on the streets until the government resigned.
Hariri said he understood the people's "pain" and anger at his government's
performance and said "we are running out of time."
Shortly after his speech, security forces fired tear gas and water cannons to
disperse the protesters in central Beirut, leading to confrontations between
police and young men in a downtown square. Others marched on the presidential
palace in Baabda.
Time and again, the protesters shouted "Revolution!" and "The people want to
bring down the regime," echoing a refrain chanted by demonstrators during Arab
Spring uprisings that swept the region in 2011.
They took aim at every single political leader in the country, including
President Michel Aoun and his son in law, Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil, as
well as the prime minister and parliament speaker, blaming them for systemic
corruption they say has pillaged the country's resources for decades.
"We are here today to ask for our rights. The country is corrupt, the garbage is
all over the streets and we are fed up with all this," said Loris Obeid, a
protester in downtown Beirut.
Schools, banks and businesses shut down as the protests escalated and widened in
scope to reach almost every city and province. Hundreds of people burned tires
on highways and intersections in suburbs of the capital, Beirut, and in northern
and southern cities, sending up clouds of black smoke in scattered protests. The
road to Beirut's international airport was blocked by protesters, stranding
passengers who in some cases were seen dragging suitcases on foot to reach the
airport. Major arteries including the Salim Salam tunnel that connects central
Beirut with the airport were blocked with sand dunes.
"We are here for the future of our kids. There's no future for us, no jobs at
all and this is not acceptable any more. We have shut up for a long time and now
it is time to talk," Obeid added.
In the northern city of Tripoli, bodyguards for a former member of parliament
opened fire at protesters who closed the road for his convoy wounding three of
them, witnesses said.
The tension has been building for months, as the government searched for new
ways to levy taxes to manage the country's economic crisis and soaring debt.
The trigger, in the end, was the news Thursday that the government was planning,
among other measures, to impose a tax on WhatsApp calls -- a decision it later
withdrew as people began taking to the streets.
Two Syrian workers died Thursday when they were trapped in a shop that was set
on fire by rioters. Dozens of people on both sides were injured.
Years of regional turmoil -- worsened by an influx of 1.5 million Syrian
refugees since 2011 -- are catching up with Lebanon. The small Arab country on
the Mediterranean has the third-highest debt level in the world, currently
standing at about $86 billion, or 150% of its gross domestic product.
International donors have been demanding that Lebanon implement economic changes
in order to get loans and grants pledged at the CEDRE economic conference in
Paris in April 2018. International donors pledged $11 billion for Lebanon but
they sought to ensure the money is well spent in the corruption-plagued country.
Despite tens of billions of dollars spent since the 15-year civil war ended in
1990, Lebanon still has crumbling infrastructure including daily electricity
cuts, trash piles in the streets and often sporadic, limited water supplies from
the state-owned water company.
Major Roads across Lebanon Blocked in 2nd Day of Protests
Agence France Presse/Associated Press/Naharnet/October 18/2019
Hundreds of protesters blocked major highways in Lebanon Friday, after thousands
angry at proposed tax increases thronged the streets overnight demanding the
government's resignation in the largest demonstrations in years. Public anger
has simmered since parliament passed an austerity budget in July to help trim a
ballooning deficit and flared on Thursday over plans to tax calls on messaging
applications such as WhatsApp, prompting the government to withdraw the deeply
unpopular proposal. On Friday morning, charred refuse bins, torched tires,
broken street signs and shattered glass from damaged storefronts littered the
streets of central Beirut -- the scene of violent confrontations between
security forces and protesters overnight. The government announced the
cancellation of a planned cabinet meeting as protesters gathered for a second
day, the state-run National News Agency reported. Prime Minister Saad Hariri is
expected to deliver a speech later in the day. Banks, state institutions,
schools and universities were closed as protesters blocked key highways
connecting the capital to the rest of the country with burning tires.
Demonstrators meanwhile cut the main road to Beirut airport for a second
straight day. Interior Minister Raya al-Hassan warned protesters "against
damaging public and private property and blocking roads."Security forces will
take necessary measures to protect the safety of civilians and their property,
she said on Twitter Friday.
Tax on Whatsapp calls
Dozens gathered near government headquarters in central Beirut, screaming
anti-government slogans and denouncing dire living conditions in a country with
one of the highest debt to GDP ratios in the world. "We are here today to ask
for our rights. The country is corrupt, the garbage is all over the streets and
we are fed up with all this," said Loris Obeid, a protester. "We are here for
the future of our kids. There's no future for us, no jobs at all and this is not
acceptable any more. We have shut up for a long time and now it is time to
talk," she added. A convoy of motorcycles drove towards the interior ministry,
followed by dozens of protesters on foot, who chanted the popular refrain of the
Arab Spring protests of 2011: "The people demand the fall of the regime."Yara, a
23-year-old graduate, said she joined up because the protests were not
sectarian. "For once people are saying it doesn't matter the religion, it
doesn't matter which political party you are following," she told AFP. "Today
what matters is that all of the Lebanese people are protesting together."
Protesters also gathered in the southern city of Sidon and in several towns in
the east and north. Their numbers were expected to swell though the day.
Demonstrations erupted across the country late on Thursday after the government
announced a $0.20 tax on the huge number of calls made on messaging
applications. They are the largest since a 2015 refuse collection crisis sparked
widespread anti-government protests. They come at a time of deep divisions
within the government over a raft of issues, including not only the economic
reform package, but also the allocation of public sector positions and
rapprochement with the resurgent Syrian government. In central Beirut, rioting
continued into the early hours of Friday.
Security forces finally dispersed the demonstrators shortly before dawn, firing
volleys of tear gas and rubber bullets after they tried to storm government
headquarters. The clashes wounded at least 23 protesters, according to the Red
Cross, and 60 security force personnel, according to police. NNA said two
foreign workers choked to death early Friday after they were trapped in a
building set alight by rioters. Other reports said the two men were Syrian.
In a sign of the scale of the popular anger, demonstrations were reported
Thursday in neighborhoods dominated by Hizbullah, a party not used to opposition
in its own bastions. Protesters also burned pictures of Hariri in the northern
city of Tripoli, where he is influential, and others protested near Beirut
against President Michel Aoun. Sami Nader, director of the Levant Institute for
Strategic Affairs think-tank, said the protests were "totally spontaneous" and
appeared to be against the entire political class. "The protests are a result of
a piling up of grievances, resulting mainly from government mismanagement," he
said.
'Give me light'
Residents suffer from constant electricity shortages and poor internet. "I want
the streets to be lit. I don't want to hear any more generators," Dima Abu
Hassan, 42, said. "Start there -- at least some infrastructure."The government
has also come under heavy criticism over its response to forest fires. Growth in
Lebanon has plummeted in the face of repeated political deadlock in recent
years, compounded by the impact of eight years of war in neighboring Syria.
"Most high-frequency indicators point towards a continuation of weak growth in
2019," the International Monetary Fund said Thursday. Lebanon's public debt
stands at around $86 billion -- more than 150 percent of gross domestic product
-- according to the finance ministry. Eighty percent of that figure is owed to
Lebanon's central bank and local banks. Last month, banks and money exchange
houses rationed dollar sales, sparking fears of a devaluation of the Lebanese
pound.
Riot police clash with Lebanese protesters in Beirut,
injuries reported
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Friday, 18 October 2019
In the second day of mass protests across Lebanon against the government’s
handling of an economic crisis, demonstrators in downtown district of Beirut
clashed on Friday evening with riot police who fired tear gas and used water
cannon to disperse them. Protesters also set tires ablaze and blocked some of
the main entrances to the capital, setting up barriers in the streets of
downtown Beirut. An Al Arabiya correspondent reported injuries among the
security forces personnel, while some protesters vandalized shops and cars
parked in the area. Security forces detained some protesters in central Beirut,
according to Reuters witnesses. In the vicinity of the presidential palace in
Baadba, east of the capital, protesters clashed with security forces as they
tried to reach the palace. Road blocking continued in different Lebanese
regions. No political leader, Muslim or Christian, was spared the protesters’
wrath. The protesters’ chants called for leaders including President Michel Aoun,
Hariri and parliament speaker Nabih Berri to step down. The mood was a mixture
of rage, defiance and hope. As night fell, crowds waving Lebanese flags marched
and drove through the streets with patriotic music blaring from loudspeakers
while shouting: “Our demands are one, our objective is one: the people want the
downfall of the regime,” Reuters reported. Some protesters, including men in
black hoods, used iron bars to smash store fronts in the posh downtown district
of Beirut. The Interior and Municipalities Minister, Raya al-Hassan, implored
protesters to avoid vandalizing public property, according to the Lebanese
national news agency (NNA). “I reiterate to all citizens participating in the
ongoing protests that the freedom to demonstrate and to express their demands is
a sacred right guaranteed by the constitution. In this vein, I urge all
protesters not to vandalize public and private properties and to avoid blocking
roads and traffic, as this fully contradicts with the ethics of Lebanese
citizens,” al-Hassan said via Twitter. The unrest lead Lebanon’s Prime Minister
Saad Hariri to issue a warning in a speech addressed to the nation, saying that
his “partners in the government” had 72 hours to show that they are serious
about reforms, or he will take a different approach. Meanwhile, the embassies of
Kuwait, Egypt, the US, and Saudi Arabia in Lebanon have asked their citizens on
Friday to avoid crowds amid protests against the country’s government. The
United Nations urged all sides to refrain from activities that could lead to
increased tensions and violence.
2 Dead, 6 Hurt as Ahdab Bodyguards Open Fire at Tripoli
Demo
Naharnet/October 18/2019
Two protesters were killed and six others were wounded when bodyguards of ex-MP
Mosbah al-Ahdab opened fire during an anti-government demo in the northern city
of Tripoli, media reports said. The violence erupted after the protesters
rejected Ahdab’s participation in their rally, pelting him with bottles.
The bodyguards opened fire to secure the ex-MP’s departure from the area. Angry
protesters later vandalized the offices of a company owned by Ahdab before
heading to his residence which was secured by army troops. One of the bodyguards
who opened fire has since been arrested. The Tripoli demo was part of the
sweeping anti-government protests that are engulfing the country.
2 Dead, Dozens Hurt and Most Roads Blocked as Protests
Engulf Lebanon
Associated Press/Naharnet/October 18/2019
Security forces fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of protesters in Beirut
early Friday after they tried to push through security barriers around the
government headquarters amid some of the largest demonstrations the country has
seen in years. The riots left two people dead and dozens wounded. The protests
erupted over the government's plan to impose new taxes during a severe economic
crisis, with people taking their anger out on politicians they accuse of
corruption and decades of mismanagement.
The protests started with a few dozen people gathering in central Beirut over
the imposition of a 20-cent daily fee on messaging applications, including
WhatsApp. They quickly escalated into some of the biggest demonstrations since
an uprising over a garbage crisis in 2015, with thousands of people taking part.
People gathered near the government headquarters and parliament building where
riot police were deployed, chanting: "Revolution!" and "Thieves!" — the latter a
reference to widespread corruption in a country that has one of the highest debt
loads in the world. Some protesters threw stones, shoes and water bottles at
security forces and scuffled with police. Security forces said at least 60 of
its members were injured in the clashes. Protesters were also injured.
State-run National News Agency said two foreign workers choked to death when
fire was set in a building where they were sleeping in downtown Beirut. George
Kittaneh, the head of the Lebanese Red Cross, said 22 people fainted and were
taken to a hospital while 70 were treated on the spot. Police showed restraint
as they were pelted with stones for several hours, firing volleys of tear gas
only after protesters broke through the first security barrier near the
government house. Police chased protesters through the streets of Beirut's
commercial district through the night. The protests could plunge Lebanon into a
political crisis with unpredictable repercussions for the economy which has been
in steady decline. Some of the protesters said they would stay in the streets
until the government resigns.
"The government is trying to help Lebanese citizens avoid a collapse," Interior
Minister Raya al-Hassan, who ruled out the possibility of a Cabinet resignation,
told the Lebanon-based Al-Mayadeen TV. "If another government is formed it will
take the same measures."Protesters closed major intersections with burning tires
and garbage containers, causing traffic jams. As the protests escalated, the
minister of education declared that public and private schools and universities
would close Friday. Years of regional turmoil — worsened by an influx of 1.5
million Syrian refugees since 2011 — are catching up with the small Arab
country. Lebanon has the third-highest debt level in the world, currently
standing at about $86 billion, or 150% of its gross domestic product.
"We refuse what's happening in Lebanon... The failure of our government to do at
least the minimum ... has given us no other choice than to take the streets,"
said writer and director Lucien Bourjeily.
"They are putting more and more taxes on us even though we can't take any more
taxes," he said. When the motorcade of Education Minister Akram Shhehayyeb
padded through downtown Beirut, protesters punched and kicked the cars. One
bodyguard jumped out of an SUV and fired an automatic rifle into the air.
ShehayYeb rushed out of his car and pushed the guard away and prevented him from
shooting again. No one was hurt in the incident.
Protesters also closed roads in other parts of Lebanon, including the northern
city of Tripoli, Tyre in the south and Baalbek in the northeast.
The government is discussing the 2020 budget, and new taxes have been proposed,
including on tobacco, gasoline and some social media telecommunication software
such as WhatsApp.
Telecommunications Minister MohamMed Choucair appeared on TV after the protests
began and said Prime Minister Saad Hariri has asked him to drop the proposed tax
on WhatsApp.
As protests continued, demonstrators clashed briefly with riot police outside
the government headquarters, an Ottoman-era compound known as the Grand Serial.
"We have no jobs, we have money and we have no future," one protester screamed.
International donors have been demanding that Lebanon implement economic changes
in order to get loans and grants pledged at the CEDRE economic conference in
Paris in April 2018. International donors pledged $11 billion for Lebanon but
they sought to ensure the money is well spent in the corruption-plagued country.
Despite tens of billions of dollars spent since the 15-year civil war ended in
1990, Lebanon still has crumbling infrastructure including daily electricity
cuts, trash piles in the streets and often sporadic, limited water supplies from
the state-owned water company. There are concerns over the country's financial
stability as well. Earlier this month, the local currency reached 1,650 Lebanese
pounds to the dollar at exchange shops after it had been stable at 1,500 since
1997.
Hariri Gives Parties 3 Days to Back His Reforms, Says
Obstacles Put in His Way
Naharnet/October 18/2019
Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Friday gave the country’s political parties a
72-hour ultimatum to back his reform agenda, in the face of unprecedented
massive protests that have brought the country to a standstill. “The country is
going through an unprecedented situation. The pain of the Lebanese is real and I
support every peaceful protest,” Hariri said in an address to the nation. "I'm
setting a very short deadline. Either our partners in the coalition government
give a clear, decisive and final response to convince me, the Lebanese people
and the international community... that everyone has decided on reforms, or I
will have something else to say," he added, suggesting that he might step down.
“I do not regret the political settlement, because my duty was to protect the
country,” the PM said. Commenting on the sweeping anti-government protests, some
of which have turned violent, Hariri said anger is “a natural response to the
political performance in Lebanon and the obstruction of the state's work.”“All
kinds of obstacles were put in the way of all the reform efforts that I
proposed,” the premier lamented. He said the “real solution” is to “boost the
country's revenues through restoring the economy's growth.”“Reforms do not stand
for imposing taxes,” he noted. “What's important is how to address this
situation and find solutions,” he said, adding that for three years now he has
been trying to “address the reasons behind the people's pain.”
Aoun and Hariri Call Off Cabinet Session, PM to Address
Nation
Naharnet/October 18/2019
President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Friday called off a
cabinet session scheduled for the afternoon amid massive protests across the
country over government plans to hike taxes. The cabinet session had been
scheduled to be held at 2:00 pm at the Baabda Palace. The decision to convene
cabinet in an emergency session had been taken following phone talks overnight
between Aoun and Hariri after the protests escalated and turned violent in some
regions. The protests, the biggest in recent years, have left two people dead
and dozens injured while most roads in the country have been blocked.
Hariri's office meanwhile announced that the premier will address the nation
from his office at the Grand Serail at 6:00 pm.
Bassil Warns of 'Strife', Says Rival Political Parties
Exploiting Protests
Naharnet/October 18/2019
Free Patriotic Movement chief and Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil on Friday
warned that the ongoing mass protests might descend into “chaos” and “civil
strife,” as he lamented that some political parties are exploiting the demos to
topple the presidency, the government and the parliament.
“What happened is the result of accumulating crises and failures,” Bassil said
in a televised address from the Baabda Palace after meeting with President
Michel Aoun. “What’s happening may be a chance and it also may turn into a big
disaster and might plunge us into chaos and strife,” Bassil warned.
“Some domestic parties are exploiting the honest popular protests to achieve
their goals of toppling the presidency, the government and the parliament,”
Bassil added, in a possible reference to the Lebanese Forces, the Progressive
Socialist Party and the Kataeb Party.
Noting that “people have the right to demonstrate,” Bassil said that Prime
Minister Saad Hariri is “ready for reform,” Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan
Nasrallah is “standing by us” and Speaker Nabih Berri is “keen on the Baabda
economic paper.”“It is enough to show the people that we are serious,” he added.
“I'm willing to ask our ministers and MPs to lift their immunity and bank
secrecy,” he suggested. Pointing out that there is still “a rescue opportunity
within a few days” and “without empty promises,” Bassil said the government
parties “must meet and work despite the presence of the people on the streets.”
Bassil also warned that the alternative to the current government is “ambiguous”
and “might be much worse than the current situation, especially in the absence
of a government,” cautioning that a “known and unknown fifth column” might
infiltrate the protests and trigger “chaos” and “strife.”“What's happening on
the streets is not targeted against us; it is rather in harmony with our
demands,” he said. “The coming will be worse unless things are addressed,”
Bassil warned, noting that unrest could carry with it a financial meltdown and a
currency devaluation.
Jumblat Calls on PSP to Stage Peaceful Protests
Naharnet/October 18/2019
Progressive Socialist Party leader ex-MP Walid Jumblat on Friday called on his
party to take part in the massive anti-government protests in the country.
“Through its strongman, the presidential tenure is trying to put the blame on
others, after having impeded all the possible reform initiatives, against which
he incited through all available means,” Jumblat tweeted. “I call on comrades
and supporters to stage calm and peaceful protests against this presidential
tenure, which has ruined everything and monopolized everything,” Jumblat said.
“We will act in our regions in order not to stir sensitivities,” he noted. PSP
official Zafer Nasser had earlier said that the PSP will take part in protests
as of this afternoon after “the new presidential tenure failed to achieve the
promised reform.”
Geagea Urges Hariri to Resign, Calls on LF to Join Protests
Naharnet/October 18/2019
Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea on Friday called on Prime Minister Saad
Hariri to announce the government’s resignation, amid some of the biggest
protests that the country has witnessed in years. “I address a sincere call to
PM Saad Hariri for the resignation of this government in light of its
catastrophic failure in stopping the deterioration of the economic and living
situations in the country which has plunged us into the current state,” Geagea
said in a statement. “I know the size of the efforts that PM Hariri exerted to
address the situation, but the ministerial majority, unfortunately, was in
another place,” Geagea added. “The best that PM Hariri can offer in these
critical and difficult moments is submitting the resignation of this government
to pave the way for the formation of another totally different and new
government that can lead the process of the desired economic rise in the
country,” the LF leader went on to say.
Geagea later called on all LF members and supporters to "take part in the
ongoing popular protests according to the approach and atmosphere of these
protests, which means without party slogans or flags."
AMAL Warns 'Suspicious Elements' May Infiltrate Protests
Naharnet/October 18/2019
The AMAL Movement said Friday that the popular protests that have engulfed the
country are rightful and legitimate but warned that “suspicious elements” might
infiltrate the demonstrations. “We in the AMAL Movement stand by the legitimate
demands that the movement had called for realizing on several occasions, whether
during the drafting of the state budget or in terms of the implementation of the
reform paper,” a statement said. “The movement has always been against imposing
taxes and fees on citizens, especially low-income citizens,” the statement
added. “Based on our principled stance on preserving people’s rights, the AMAL
Movement calls for being vigilant against the infiltration of suspicious
elements with the aim of deviating the protests from their right course,” it
said.
Kataeb party leader MP Sami Gemayel Hails ‘Uprising,’ Calls
for Early Legislative Elections, Govt. Resignation
Naharnet/October 18/2019
Kataeb party leader MP Sami Gemayel on Friday hailed Lebanon’s “uprising” as
thousands of protesters thronged the streets calling for the government's
resignation, Gemayel said a statement released by his office. Gemayel said the
current government must “resign” and that a government of “specialists” must
replace it. He also called for early parliamentary elections. “We told you that
the Lebanese people are in anger, and urged you to leave with your own will but
you chose to be expelled. I call upon all the Lebanese including members and
friends of Kataeb to carry on with their protests,” said Gemayel. “There is no
room for fatigue, we will not let them stand in the way of the uprising, we will
all stand firm under the banner of the Lebanese flag until the goal is
achieved,” he added. “The demands are crystal clear. We demand the immediate
resignation of the government and the formation of a government of specialists
to be tasked with saving the economic and living situation, and the preparation
for early parliamentary elections. The Lebanese today have withdrawn their trust
from the political class,” he concluded.
Former PMs Stand in Solidarity with Hariri
Naharnet/October 18/2019
As thousands of demonstrators thronged the streets in Lebanon calling for the
government's resignation, ex-PMs Najib Miqati, Fouad Saniora and Tammam Salam
issued the following joint statement: Lebanon entered a delicate turning point
amid a looming political crisis and an understandable popular anger as a result
of the economic crisis and stifling living conditions. It is noteworthy to say
that the current happenings were preceded by escalation of positions mainly by
key participants in power who raised the ceiling of confrontation through direct
incitement. It has become evident that some attempt to evade responsibility for
the latest developments, throwing all the blame on the Prime Minister. This
approach coincides with repeated constitutional violations primarily aimed at
the premiership’s position and the role of the prime minister and the council of
ministers combined. From our national and political position as former PMs we
declare: First: Absolute understanding of the popular movement which expresses a
cry of soreness from the suffocating crises in Lebanon, and we call on all
citizens to maintain peaceful action without being dragged into reactions that
offend the noble slogans they express. Second: We appeal to all political
leaders to be aware of the delicate situation and not launch unnecessary
escalatory positions, and we urge them to cooperate to address the current
crises and meet the sufferings of citizens. Third: Full solidarity with PM Saad
Hariri in this ordeal and support for any position he takes to overcome the
crisis. Any attempts to make him alone shoulder the blame for the crises are
totally rejected. Although the PM is head of the executive authority, but the
majority of parties represented in the Cabinet are required morally required to
take part in finding a solution. We must also abide by the provisions of the
Constitution in terms of powers and tasks, without oversteeping or violating
them for the sake of imposing certain political approaches.
Lebanon in lock down as protesters demand new government
Jacob Boswall, Special to Al Arabiya English/Friday, 18 October 2019
Protesters have called on the Lebanese government to resign after unpopular new
tax proposals sparked two days of mass demonstrations. The protests are of
unprecedented nature in the mediterranean country, with people of all sects
calling for the same demands and taking on the established political order.
One protester died in the Lebanese city of Tripoli, after the bodyguards of a
former lawmaker allegedly fired at a demonstration to disperse the protesters,
with local media saying that the army arrested one of the shooters. Throughout
Thursday night, protesters in Beirut’s Martyrs’ Square burned anything they
could lay their hands on including advertising billboards, construction
material, tires and trees. Some protesters removed street signs and used them as
battering rams against advertising units and shop fronts while young men on
motorcycles dodged broken glass to feed the blaze with fresh bottles of
gasoline. The anarchic scenes in central Beirut continued throughout Friday, as
young men declared that the protests would not end until the government
resigned. “This is not the first protest in Beirut. But it could be the first
step of a movement because today all the sects have come out into the streets:
Muslim, Christian, Druze. We are all striking with one fist,” 28 year old Hasan
from Beirut told Al Arabiya English. People of all religious and political
stripes attended the protests, unified in their anger toward the country’s
precarious economic situation and widespread corruption among the political
class. Similar unrest has spread across the country, with thousands gathering in
Tripoli’s main square according to videos shared on social media. Elsewhere in
Beirut protesters blocked major roads and burned trash. Many Beirutis stayed at
home, fearing damage to their cars and personal safety.
Economic anger
Anger has been building for weeks over an alleged shortage of US dollars within
Lebanon’s highly dollarized economy. The unofficial exchange rate has soared
above the authorized trading band of LBP 1,501-1,514 to the dollar, causing
fears of bread and fuel shortages. “Last month the dollar crisis, last week the
fuel crisis and the bread crisis. The Lebanese people can no longer take it,”
said Mohammed, a chef from North Lebanon’s rural Dinnieh. Mohammed was forced to
move to Beirut to find a job. He struggles to make enough money to pay rent in a
city where 25 percent of apartments built since 1996 are empty. “Now the
telecommunications ministry comes out and says we are going to charge you for
Whatsapp,” he continued. At a Cabinet session Thursday, Lebanese ministers
approved an unpopular per day fee for using internet-based phone calls over
services like WhatsApp. The government is also considering raising value-added
tax as part of the 2020 austerity budget, in an attempt to bring Lebanon’s
budget deficit to 7 percent of GDP in 2020. Lebanon has the third highest
debt-to-GDP ratio in the world, at around 150 percent. International credit
rating agency Fitch downgraded Lebanon’s economy in August to CCC, suggesting
that the country will only be able to pay back its debts under favorable
conditions. The proposed Whatsapp tax was enough to spark nationwide protests;
and yet Whatsapp and other social media platforms such as Facebook helped
galvanize protesters, some of whom were as young as 15. “It is revolution across
all of Lebanon. It is not the first time it has happened, but this time it is on
a bigger scale. The country is trash and the wages are rubbish,” said one
bare-chested teenager.
Demanding a new government
The protests represent a major challenge to Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s
government, who cancelled the scheduled Friday cabinet meeting in response to
the protests. Hariri is set to speak later this evening. Lebanon’s Progressive
Socialist Party (PSP) leader Walid Joumblatt, a historical ally of Hariri, has
called on his supporters to “peacefully” join the protests against the Lebanese
government, advising PSP members to protest within the party’s areas to “avoid
sensitivities.” Relations between the two party leaders have recently been
strained, after a Twitter spat over the summer. A common demand by demonstrators
is a rerun of last year’s parliamentary elections. “The MPs we voted to power
haven’t done anything for us. I don’t have faith in a single MP… wherever there
is money, they take it. Even the taxes we pay go into their pockets not into the
state. If it went to the state, Lebanon would be in excellent health,” continued
Mohammed. “In the North [of Lebanon] and Akkar, there is endless poverty. But
politicians in the North are the richest in Lebanon … Now we want to elect a new
government who have the interests of the country in their hearts.”
Kuwait, Egypt, US, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain issue warnings to
citizens in Lebanon
Reuters, Dubai/Friday, 18 October 2019
The embassies of Kuwait, Egypt, the US, and Saudi Arabia in Lebanon have asked
their citizens on Friday to avoid crowds amid protests against the country’s
government. “The embassy also calls on citizens currently in Lebanon to take
utmost care and stay away from crowds and demonstrations,” the Kuwaiti Embassy
said in its tweet. "The embassy calls on all Egyptian citizens in Lebanon to
avoid the areas of gatherings and protests, to be careful in their movements and
to abide by the instructions of the Lebanese authorities in this regard,"
Egyptian state news agency MENA said. Meanwhile, due to the road closures and
unrest, the US Embassy has temporarily restricted off-compound movement of its
personnel and instructed its citizens in the country to avoid crowds and areas
of demonstration. Saudi Arabia also instructed its citizens to quickly
communicate with it for preparations to leave Lebanon. Bahrain foreign ministry
called on its citizens in Lebanon to leave immediately, the ministry said in a
tweet..Protesters across Lebanon blocked roads with burning tires on Friday and
thousands marched in Beirut, calling on the government to resign over an
economic crisis.
Hizbullah Official: Presidency, Govt. and Hizbullah Not to
Blame for Current Crisis
Naharnet/October 18/2019
A senior Hizbullah official on Friday announced that the incumbent presidency
and government as well as Hizbullah cannot be blamed for the country’s current
economic crisis, as massive and unprecedented protests engulfed the entire
country. “The spontaneous popular protests that Lebanon is witnessing reflect
the magnitude of the living conditions crisis that the people are suffering,”
Sheikh Ali Daamoush, the deputy head of Hizbullah’s executive council, said. “We
have continuously warned that the wrong economic policies and the imposition of
more taxes and burdens on citizens would lead to a popular explosion,” Daamoush
added during a Friday prayer sermon. “People are expressing their plight and
pain and their scream must be heeded, but the protests must remain peaceful and
public and private properties should not be attacked,” Daamoush urged. He added:
“The crisis is an accumulated crisis that the incumbent presidency and
government are not responsible for but rather all the previous presidencies and
the successive governments.”Daamoush also said that Hizbullah must not be held
responsible, noting that his party has “rejected all forms of taxes on the poor
and the middle class and raised the banner of combating corruption.” “It is
unacceptable to hold it responsible for measures that it has rejected and tried
to prevent,” the Hizbullah official went on to say.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on October
18-19/2019
Donald Trump says Erdogan told him he wants northern Syria cease-fire to
work
President Donald Trump said Friday that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
had assured him that he wants the “cease-fire” with Kurdish militants in
northern Syria to work.
Arab News/October 18, 2019
WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump said Friday that Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan had assured him that he wants the “cease-fire” with Kurdish
militants in northern Syria to work. Trump, in a series of tweets, said he had
spoken to Erdogan and “he very much wants the cease-fire, or pause, to work.
“Likewise, the Kurds want it, and the ultimate solution, to happen,” the US
president said. “There is good will on both sides & a really good chance for
success,” he said. “The US has secured the Oil, & the Daesh Fighters are double
secured by Kurds & Turkey.”Trump also said that “some” European countries, which
he did not name, “are now willing, for the first time, to take the (Daesh group)
Fighters that came from their nations.”“This is good news, but should have been
done after WE captured them,” he said. “Anyway, big progress being
made!!!!“Trump also tweeted “DEFEAT TERRORISM!” in all capital letters in
response to a tweet by Erdogan saying “Mr. President, many more lives will be
saved when we defeat terrorism, which is humanity’s arch enemy.”Earlier Friday,
Erdogan warned that Ankara would resume military operations against Kurdish
forces in Syria if they did not withdraw from a “safe zone” along the
Turkey-Syria border. Turkey has agreed to suspend its offensive for five days in
northern Syria while Kurdish fighters withdraw from the area, after high-stake
talks with US Vice President Mike Pence in Ankara.'
Trump says ‘pause’ in fighting in northeast Syria is back
on
Reuters, Washington/Friday, 18 October 2019
US President Donald Trump said on Friday that a five-day ceasefire along the
Syrian-Turkish border had resumed, despite shelling and machine-gun fire earlier
on Friday. “There was some sniper fire this morning. There was mortar fire this
morning. That was eliminated quickly. And they’re back to the full pause,” Trump
told reporters. The United States and Turkey announced on Thursday they had
agreed to the pause in Turkey’s incursion into northern Syria to let the
Kurdish-led SDF militia, forces long allied with Washington, withdraw from an
area controlled by Turkish forces.
Erdogan Says Will Restart Syria Operation
Tuesday Evening if Deal Not Respected
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 18/2019
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan Friday warned Turkey would restart its
operation against Kurdish forces in Syria on Tuesday evening if they do not
withdraw from a "safe zone". "If the promises are kept until Tuesday evening,
the safe zone issue will be resolved. If it fails, the operation... will start
the minute 120 hours are over," Erdogan told reporters during a briefing in
Istanbul. Turkey agreed after talks with the US Thursday to suspend its
offensive in northern Syria while Kurdish fighters withdraw from the area.
Turkey plans presence across northeast Syria, Erdogan says
Reuters, Istanbul/Friday, 18 October 2019
Turkey will set up a dozen observation posts across northeast Syria, President
Tayyip Erdogan said on Friday, insisting that a planned “safe zone” will extend
much further than US officials said was covered under a fragile ceasefire deal.
Less than 24 hours after he agreed the five-day truce to allow Kurdish forces
time to pull back from Turkey’s cross border assault, Erdogan underlined
Ankara’s continued ambition to establish a presence along 300 miles of territory
inside Syria. On the border itself shelling could be heard near the Syrian town
of Ras al-Ain on Friday morning despite Thursday’s deal, and a spokesman for the
Kurdish-led forces said Turkey was violating the ceasefire, hitting civilian
targets in the town. But Reuters journalists at the border said the bombardment
subsided around mid-morning and a US official said most of the fighting had
stopped, although it would “take time for things to completely quiet down.”US
President Donald Trump said on Friday he had spoken with Erdogan who told him
there had been some “minor” sniper and mortar fire in northeastern Syria despite
the truce, but that it had been quickly eliminated. “He very much wants the
ceasefire, or pause, to work,” Trump said in a post on Twitter. “Likewise, the
Kurds want it, and the ultimate solution, to happen.”
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs described
the situation at “reportedly calm in most areas, with the exception of Ras
al-Ain, where shelling and gunfire continued to be reported earlier today,” UN
spokesman Stephane Dujarric told reporters in New York. The truce, announced by
US Vice President Mike Pence after talks in Ankara with Erdogan, sets out a
five-day pause to let the Kurdish-led SDF militia pull out of the Turkish “safe
zone.” The deal was aimed at easing a crisis that saw Trump order a hasty and
unexpected US retreat, which his critics say amounted to abandoning loyal
Kurdish allies that fought for years alongside US troops against ISIS.
Turkey’s offensive created a new humanitarian crisis in Syria with 200,000
civilians taking flight, according to Red Cross estimates. It also prompted a
security alert over thousands of ISIS fighters held in Kurdish jails.
Trump has praised Thursday’s deal, saying it would save “millions of lives.”
Turkey cast it as a victory in its campaign to control territory more than 30 km
(around 20 miles) deep into Syria and drive out Kurdish fighters from the YPG,
the SDF’s main Kurdish component. “As of now, the 120-hour period is on. In this
120-hour period, the terrorist organization, the YPG, will leave the area we
identified as a safe zone,” Erdogan told reporters after Friday prayers in
Istanbul. The safe zone would be 32 km deep, and run “440 km from the very west
to the east”, he said. But the US special envoy for Syria, James Jeffrey, said
the accord covered a smaller area where Turkish forces and their Syrian rebel
allies were fighting, between two border towns of Ras al Ain and Tel Abyad, just
120 km away. Speaking to journalists later on Friday, Erdogan said Turkey plans
to set up 12 observation posts in northeast Syria. A map of the region showed
the planned posts stretching from the Iraq border in the east to the Euphrates
river 300 miles to the west.
Russia, Iran fill vacuum
With the United States pulling its entire 1,000-strong contingent from northern
Syria, the extent of Turkey’s ambitions is likely to be determined by Russia and
Iran, filling the vacuum created by the US retreat. The government of Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad, backed by Moscow and Tehran, has already taken up
positions in territory formerly protected by Washington, invited by the
Kurds.Jeffrey acknowledged that Turkey was now negotiating with Moscow and
Damascus over control of areas that Washington was vacating and were not covered
by the US-Turkish truce pact. “As you know we have a very convoluted situation
now with Russian, Syrian army, Turkish, American, SDF and some Daesh (ISIS)
elements all floating around in a very wild way,” Jeffrey said. “Now, the Turks
have their own discussions going on with the Russians and the Syrians in other
areas of the northeast and in Manbij to the west of the Euphrates. Whether they
incorporate that later into a Turkish-controlled safe zone, it was not discussed
in any detail.”
Lifting sanctions?
The joint US-Turkish statement released after Thursday’s talks said Washington
and Ankara would cooperate on handling ISIS fighters and family members held in
prisons and camps - an important international concern. Pence said US sanctions
imposed on Tuesday would be lifted once the ceasefire became permanent. In
Washington, US senators who have criticized the Trump administration for failing
to prevent the Turkish assault in the first place said they would press ahead
with legislation to impose sanctions against Turkey, a NATO ally. The Turkish
assault began after Trump moved US troops out of the way following an Oct. 6
phone call with Erdogan. Turkey says the “safe zone” would make room to settle
up to 2 million Syrian war refugees - roughly half the number it is currently
hosting - and would push back the YPG militia, which Ankara deems a terrorist
group due to its links to Kurdish insurgents in southeast Turkey.
Turkish air strike kills five civilians in northeast Syria:
Monitor
Beirut, AFP/Friday, 18 October 2019
A Turkish air strike on a village near the battleground border town of Ras
al-Ain in northeastern Syria killed five civilians on Friday, a war monitor
said. “Five civilians were killed in Turkish air strikes on the village of Bab
al-Kheir, east of Ras al-Ain,” Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights, said.
Erdogan denies ongoing clashes in northeast Syria after
ceasefire
Al Arabiya English, Reuters/Friday, 18 October 2019
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan denied on Friday the presence of ongoing
clashes in northeastern Syria a day after Turkey agreed with the United States
to pause its offensive in Syria for five days to let Kurdish-led forces
withdraw. A Reuters correspondent and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
reported on shelling and gunfire resonating in northeast Syria’s Ras al-Ain city
earlier on Friday. Erdogan also said the “safe zone” will stretch 440 km along
the Syrian-Turkish border with an eastern edge on the border with Iraq and added
that a depth of 32 km was agreed on with the United States.
The President added that Turkey will continue its offensive into northeast Syria
more rapidly than before if the agreement is not fully implemented. Erdogan also
told journalists that it was not a problem for Turkey if Syrian government
forces, backed by Russia, were to enter areas cleared of the Syrian Kurdish YPG
militia, adding that Ankara had no intention to stay in areas under its control
in northern Syria. He also said he had informed US President Donald Trump about
the offensive in a phone call a day before launching it, adding that “what is
necessary will be done when the time is right” about a letter from Trump in
which he told Erdogan to not be a “fool” and “tough guy.”
White House: Ceasefire “takes time”
The ceasefire was agreed on Thursday after talks between US Vice President Mike
Pence and Erdogan in Ankara. The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces said that
they are willing to abide by the ceasefire. Asked about the fighting in the
region despite the pause agreement, White House spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham
told Fox News in an interview that the US delegation was “successful in a
ceasefire, but that takes time,” adding that she would not discuss operations on
the ground. As fighting continued on Friday, Amensty International accused
Turkish forces and Syrian rebel allies of committing “war crimes,” including
summary executions, during their offensive.
Kurdish mayors replaced in Turkey in crackdown on criticism
of Syria assault
Reuters, Turkey/Friday, 18 October 2019
Turkey replaced the mayors of a Kurdish-majority town in its southeast with a
state official, the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) said, amid a
crackdown at home on criticism of Ankara’s offensive in Syria. The HDP said five
of its co-mayors in the southeastern Kurdish-majority towns of Hakkari,
Yuksekova and Nusaybin, had been jailed pending trial on Thursday. Two other
co-mayors in the district of Ercis were detained earlier this week and remain in
custody, it said. Turkey has launched a crackdown against dissent in its
majority Kurdish areas following its assault against Kurdish-controlled parts of
neighboring Syria. Protests have been broken up with tear gas and scores of
people have been arrested for criticizing the military campaign online. The HDP
governs many cities in the mainly Kurdish southeast of Turkey. It typically
appoints one male and one female co-mayor to promote gender equality. Semire
Nergiz and Ferhat Kut, co-mayors of Nusaybin, were accused of being members of a
terrorist organization and replaced by a state-appointed trustee on Friday, the
HDP said. Yuksekova co-mayors Remziye Yasar and Irfan Sari were jailed for their
interviews, columns and social media posts. It was not immediately clear what
the Hakkari mayor Cihan Kahraman was accused of. The state-owned Anadolu news
agency said on Friday local administrators had been appointed to replace mayors
in Yuksekova and Hakkari. Nusaybin is a town on the Syrian border in the
southeastern Mardin province, while Hakkari and Yuksekova are situated on the
border with Iran. Nusaybin has been the target of cross-border attacks during
the operation, with a mortar and rocket attack by Kurdish militants last week
killing eight people and wounding 35 others. Friday’s moves came just hours
after Turkey agreed with the United States to pause its offensive in Syria for
five days to allow Kurdish forces to withdraw from a planned “safe zone” in
Syria’s northeast. While most of Turkey’s opposition parties have backed the
offensive against the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia, the HDP has called for it to
stop, describing it as an “invasion attempt.” HDP says the operation was an
attempt by the government to drum up support amid declining public backing. The
former co-leaders of the pro-Kurdish HDP have both been jailed since 2016 on
terrorism charges, with several other prominent members accused of supporting
terrorism over what the government says are links to the banned PKK insurgent
movement. The HDP denies supporting the PKK.
European, US lawmakers jointly condemn Turkey invasion
AFP, Washington/Friday, 18 October 2019
European and US lawmakers united on Friday in condemnation of Turkey’s invasion
of Syria and President Donald Trump’s troop withdrawal from the country, warning
it would trigger a “resurgence of terrorism.”The chairs of foreign affairs
committees in the British, French, German, and European parliaments and the US
House of Representatives assailed the Turkish operation as a “military
aggression” and violation of international law. “We... jointly condemn in the
strongest terms the Turkish military offensive in northeastern Syria,” said the
lawmakers who include Tom Tugendhat, chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee
in the British House of Commons, and Eliot Engel who heads the US House Foreign
Affairs Committee. Norbert Rottgen of the German Bundestag, Marielle de Sarnez
of the French National Assembly, and the European Parliament’s David McAllister
also signed on. Representing voices across the political spectrum, they said
they “unite across parties and nationalities to demonstrate our commitment to
our common values.”The lawmakers directly criticized Trump for his sudden
withdrawal of US forces, saying they “deeply regret” the desertion of Kurdish
forces who were partners in the fight against ISIS extremists. “We consider the
abandonment of the Syrian Kurds to be wrong,” the lawmakers said, adding that
such global coalition partners “massively contributed to the successful yet
unfinished fight against (ISIS) in Syria and incurred heavy losses by doing
so.”The withdrawal “marks another landmark in the change of American foreign
policy in the Near and Middle East,” they said, warning that the turmoil caused
by Turkey’s offensive “may contribute to a resurgence of terrorism” and
undermines peacekeeping efforts. The lawmakers also called on the European Union
to launch a conflict resolution effort. The statement came as a US-brokered
ceasefire between Turkish and Kurdish forces appeared to crumble, with Turkish
air strikes and mortar fire by its Syrian proxies killing 14 civilians,
according to a war monitor.
France’s Macron criticizes NATO reaction over Turkish
offensive
Reuters, AFP, Brussels/Saturday, 19 October 2019
France’s president on Friday bemoaned Turkey’s offensive into northern Syria as
“madness” and decried the North Atlantic Organization’s (NATO) inability to
react to the assault as a “serious mistake.” “I consider what’s happened in the
last few days as a serious mistake from the West and NATO in the region and it
weakens our credibility to find partners on the ground who will be by our side
thinking they are protected in the long-term and so that raises questions on how
NATO functions,” Emmanuel Macron told reporters after a European Council summit
in Brussels. Macron said he had discovered the US decision to withdrawal from
northern Syria through Twitter and that, coupled with Ankara’s unilateral
offensive, it was making Europe a junior ally in the Middle East. “I understood
that we were in NATO, that the United States and Turkey were in NATO,” Macron
told reporters at an EU summit. “Like everyone else, I learned by tweet that the
United States had decided to withdraw its troops.”Macron added that he, British
Prime Minister Boris Johnson and German Chancellor Angela Merkel would use a
NATO summit in London in December to confront the Turkish president over the
operation against Kurdish forces. “It’s important to meet and coordinate between
the three Europeans and Turkey,” he said. “We need to see where Turkey is going
and how to bring it back to a reasonable position which makes it possible to
elaborate its internal security with the respect of our agenda and the correct
solidarity at the heart of NATO.”
Iraqi govt. source challenges IRGC’s story of arrest of
Iranian dissident
Yaghoub Fazeli, Al Arabiya English/Friday, 18 October 2019Text size A A A
An Iraqi government source has challenged the story of the arrest of an Iranian
opposition journalist put forward by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
Ruhollah Zam, who Iran’s IRGC claimed to have captured in a “complex operation,”
was in fact arrested by Iraqi intelligence services in Baghdad and handed over
to Iran, according to an Iraqi government source cited by media reports. The
IRGC claimed on Monday that it arrested opposition figure Zam, who ran
“counter-revolutionary” Telegram channel Amadnews, in a “sophisticated and
professional operation.”
The statement did not say when or where he was arrested, but hours later,
state-run TV showed Zam saying that he is full of “regret” for his opposition to
the Islamic Republic. Media reports have now surfaced that challenge the IRGC’s
account of the events.
Zam was arrested by Iraqi intelligence services – not the IRGC – shortly after
landing in Baghdad on Saturday and later handed over to Iran, according to the
Persian services of Al Arabiya, the BBC and the Independent, who based their
reports on an “informed source in the Iraqi government.”
Zam was kept with the Iraqi intelligence service for over a day and then handed
over to Iran based on an extradition agreement signed between the two countries
in 2011, said the source.
Zam’s wife Mahsa Razani confirmed that her husband had flown to Iraq. She had
not heard from him for a day, and then later had a phone conversation with him
where he did not speak “normally,” she told the BBC Persian.
Zam was among thousands arrested during the 2009 Iranian presidential elections
protests. He fled the country after being released and was granted political
asylum in France. Zam’s father is cleric Mohammad-Ali Zam, a reformist
politician who served in senior government positions in the 1980s and 1990s.
According to the Iraqi source, when the plane carrying Zam landed in Baghdad on
Saturday, he was not allowed to get off the plane. Zam was arrested at 03:30 AM
local time and was handed over to the Iranian authorities over a day later, the
source added.
Zam was transferred to Iran by land, according to the source. The Iraqi
intelligence service had no long-term knowledge of any plan to arrest Zam and
received a last-minute request to arrest Zam from the Iranians – presumably in
line with the extradition agreement – on Thursday, October 11.
Zam was interrogated by Iranians after his arrest in Iraq, the source added.
Zam’s channel on messenger app Telegram attracted a lot of attention for
covering the anti-regime protests that broke out in Iran between December 2017
and January 2018 in over 100 cities.
US ground troops will not enforce Syria safe zone, says
defense secretary
Reuters, Washington/Friday, 18 October 2019
US Defense Secretary Mark Esper said on Friday that no US troops will take part
in enforcing the so-called safe zone in northern Syria and the United States “is
continuing our deliberate withdrawal from northeastern Syria.”Turkish President
Tayyip Erdogan earlier on Friday said Turkey will set up a dozen observation
posts across northeast Syria, insisting that a planned “safe zone” will extend
much further than US officials said was covered under a fragile ceasefire deal.
The truce, announced by US Vice President Mike Pence after talks in Ankara with
Erdogan, sets out a five-day pause to let the Kurdish-led SDF militia pull out
of the Turkish “safe zone.” The deal was aimed at easing a crisis that saw
President Donald Trump order a hasty and unexpected US retreat, which his
critics say amounted to abandoning loyal Kurdish allies that fought for years
alongside US troops against ISIS.
“No US ground forces will participate in the enforcement of the safe zone,
however we will remain in communication with both Turkey and the SDF,” Esper
told reporters, referring to the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). He will be
traveling to the Middle East and Brussels in the coming days to discuss issues
including the future of counter-ISIS campaign. Esper said he had spoken with his
Turkish counterpart on Friday and reiterated that Ankara must adhere to the
ceasefire deal and ensure safety of people in areas controlled by Turkish
forces. “Protecting religious and ethnic minorities in the region continues to
be a focus for the administration. This ceasefire is a much needed step in
protecting those vulnerable populations,” Esper said. He added that he reminded
Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar of Turkey’s responsibility for maintaining
security of the ISIS prisoners in areas affected by Turkey’s incursion. A US
defense official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the United States
would continue aerial surveillance in northeastern Syria to monitor prisons
holding alleged ISIS militants.
Israeli guards kill Palestinian assailant in West Bank
AFP, Jerusalem/Saturday, 19 October 2019
Israeli security guards at a West Bank crossing into Israel shot dead a
Palestinian assailant who ran at them with a knife on Friday, the Israeli
defense ministry said. Civilian guards employed by the MOD Crossing Points
Authority called on the man to stop but when he kept coming he was shot and
killed, the ministry said in a statement. The incident took place just outside
the occupied West Bank city of Tulkarem. The Palestinian health ministry
confirmed that a man was killed by Israeli fire but did not immediately identify
him.
Israeli troops injured 48 Palestinians
In clashes on Friday along the Gaza-Israel border, Israeli troops injured 48
Palestinians, 15 of whom were hit by live fire, the health ministry said
earlier, without giving their condition. An Israeli military spokeswoman told
AFP that around 4,500 Palestinians staged disturbances along the border fence,
some throwing petrol bombs and explosive devices. “A number of suspects breached
the fence in the north of the strip but they immediately went back into the
strip,” she said in Hebrew. “Response was with riot control means in accordance
with the rules of engagement,” she added. Palestinians have been gathering for
weekly demonstrations at various points along the border of the blockaded
territory since March 2018.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on October 18-19/2019
Debunking the myths over US withdrawal from Syria
Dr. John C. Hulsman/Arab News/October 18, 2019
Over the present Syria crisis, precipitated by Donald Trump withdrawing around
1,000 US troops from the Syrian-Turkish border in the wake of Ankara’s
threatened military lunge toward the Syrian Kurds, the usual American
interventionist suspects have predictably decried the president’s actions. Like
the mythical Chicken Little, the same US right-wing neoconservatives and
Democratic hawks who precipitated the Iraq disaster now blithely tell us the sky
is falling down.
Their first false argument is that Russia is now poised to dominate the Middle
East as a result of the US withdrawal from northern Syria. Let us be clear — and
this cannot be overstated — Russia has a gross domestic product the size of the
state of Texas. By any political, economic, or demographic standard, Russia is a
fading power, not a rising one.
Even regionally, Russia is not remotely a dominant player. Syria is the only
country in the Middle East where Russia has a military base; in contrast,
America has troops in Afghanistan, Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar,
Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey, and the UAE. So it is nothing short of hysterical
to say that, by increasing its role in peripheral Syria, Russia now dominates
the region.
The second false argument is that, in withdrawing, the US is betraying its
Kurdish allies. Here it is time for everyone to take a deep breath and grow up.
It is certainly true that the Kurds were vital allies, working intimately with
America in destroying Daesh’s supposed caliphate, taking 11,000 casualties while
the US provided the logistics, air power, training and intelligence.
But this is international relations, where ever since the dawn of time foreign
policy has been primarily based on a country’s interests. To pretend otherwise
is simply to ignore the past 3,000 years of history. The Kurds helped the US
because there was an obvious common interest in destroying Daesh. The Kurds also
assisted American efforts in Syria because they were well-paid and supplied by
the US to do so. There is absolutely nothing wrong with this — it is the way of
the world. But to pretend that they did so out of some general love for the US,
playing Butch Cassidy to the American Sundance Kid, is to think in terms of
fairy tales.
All alliances are temporary and dissipate when the common interests that led to
the entente in the first place fade away. This is what has happened over the
past few weeks in Syria. Think of the counterfactual: Was Trump supposed to
actively go to war with long-term NATO ally Turkey, a country that houses US
nuclear weapons at its base in Incirlik, in order to stand by the Kurds? Of
course not. And, as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made crystal clear in
his now infamous call with Trump, that amounts to the other American option.
Rightly, Trump let US interests dictate his response.
The current developments are both a consequence of Turkey’s new neo-Ottoman
emphasis on the Middle East, and Trump’s Jacksonian turn away from the region.
The third interventionist argument is that Daesh, in the midst of this
country-wide chaos, will quickly reconstitute itself. In terms of
re-establishing a physical caliphate in eastern Syria and western Iraq, the
smashed Daesh fighters are simply in no position to do so. Well before Trump’s
standing down on the Syrian border, Daesh morphed into primarily a terrorist
threat, rather than amounting to a regional power player.
This is a real problem, but one that ought to be manageable by global policing
and intelligence sharing. Daesh will surely strike again, but this is a
second-order difficulty, one that has not materially changed as a result of
Trump’s actions. Daesh’s over-hyped resurrection is also not a reason for the US
to remain in Syria endlessly.
So if all this is what is not happening in Syria, what is happening? First, in
terms of grand strategy, the US drawdown is yet another step on the road to it
moving toward a more offshore, balancing role in the Middle East. It is staying
in the region but in a more limited way as its attention turns to Asia, the
region that in the coming years will contain much of the world’s political risk,
but also much of its economic reward.
Second, and despite the cobbled-together cease-fire, the longstanding US-Turkish
alliance is well and truly over. In erratically tactically acquiescing in the
Turkish invasion of northern Syria, and then just as quickly censuring Erdogan,
in the short run Trump finds himself in the worst of all political worlds: Hated
by interventionists for giving way to Ankara, and distrusted by
noninterventionists as he attempts to be tough with Turkey, long after the horse
has left the stable.
The final nail in the coffin will be when the US removes the 50 B61 nuclear
gravity bombs from Turkey’s Incirlik base. Though they remain under the strict
custody of US Air Force personnel, their (rightful) removal will signal what we
all now know: Neither the US nor Turkey trusts the other over vital security
matters. Strategically, this is both a consequence of Turkey’s new neo-Ottoman
emphasis on the Middle East, and Trump’s Jacksonian turn away from the region.
Ironically, as was true with the Kurdish alliance, bereft of common interests,
Washington and Ankara are definitively going their own ways.
*Dr. John C. Hulsman is the president and managing partner of John C. Hulsman
Enterprises, a prominent global political risk consulting firm. He is also
senior columnist for City AM, the newspaper of the City of London. He can be
contacted via www.chartwellspeakers.com.
Modi and Xi convey message of cooperation
Michael Kugelman/Arab News/October 18, 2019
In the current era of international diplomacy, high-level summitry has become a
very public spectacle, replete with pageantry and photo opportunities. Top
leaders meet at beautiful venues; they exchange lovely gifts; offer effusive
praise to each other; and, outside of some obligatory private discussions, the
cameras never stop rolling — thereby enabling the international commentariat to
scrutinize their every move and word.
Not surprisingly, this trend has coincided with the era of Donald Trump, a
leader who relishes the theatrics and wall-to-wall media coverage afforded by
such affairs.
The latest such summit took place this week between Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping in Mamallapuram, an Indian town
about 60 km from the megacity of Chennai. It was a follow-up to a similar event
in the Chinese city of Wuhan last year.
There was, as expected, all kinds of pageantry. The two leaders drank coconut
beverages, toured international heritage sites, and enjoyed sumptuous working
dinners — all against a lovely beachfront backdrop on the southeastern coast of
India.
However, we shouldn’t dismiss this Modi-Xi event as just another example of
high-level diplomatic gimmickry. Indeed, any formal engagement between the
leaders of the world’s two most populous nations should never be taken lightly.
In that regard, the main takeaway from the summit is that two of the world’s
most powerful players, despite being strategic rivals and grappling with a
longstanding border dispute, are making very real efforts to keep their
relationship cordial. And that is a good thing, because the last thing the world
needs right now is a conflict between the two Asian giants — or even the threat
of one.
In the aftermath of the summit, there has been much talk of how little was done
to address the tension points in India-China relations. Beijing opposed New
Delhi’s move back in August to repeal the special status of Jammu and Kashmir,
but the issue of Kashmir did not come up at the summit. New Delhi opposes
Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) because the mammoth transport corridor
project is expected to wend through disputed territory claimed by India. BRI was
not an agenda point either. And the border dispute — the trigger for an
India-China war in 1962 and a more recent standoff in 2017 — was not addressed
in any meaningful way.
High-level summitry is not about delving into contentious issues — that is for
leaders’ underlings to do in more unspectacular and private settings. Not
surprisingly, the Modi-Xi exchange focused on underscoring the convergences in
interests and shared goals of the India-China relationship. The two leaders
emphasized their mutual concern about radicalization and terrorism. They spoke
of the robust China-India trade partnership, and they agreed to launch a new
high-level mechanism meant to address a trade deficit stacked in China’s favor.
Significantly, an Indian Foreign Ministry statement released shortly after the
summit stated that “both sides will prudently manage their differences and not
allow differences on any issue to become disputes.”
One can justifiably dismiss all this as mere rhetoric. Still, rhetoric is
important in international diplomacy because it showcases how countries wish to
pitch their relationships to the rest of the world. Clearly, India and China
want to prioritize the positive side of their partnership.
Rhetoric is important in international diplomacy because it showcases how
countries wish to pitch their relationships to the rest of the world.
To be sure, Beijing and New Delhi are destined to be strategic rivals well into
the future, with competition over everything from military modernization to the
world’s raw materials. Additionally, China’s close ties to Pakistan, India’s
bitter enemy, will limit prospects for India-China cooperation. Furthermore, New
Delhi’s deepening security partnership with Washington — driven in great part by
a shared desire to push back against Beijing’s growing clout in Asia — will be a
constant tension point.
Yet India and China still find ways to partner on the world stage. Not only do
they enjoy one of the world’s largest bilateral trade relationships (by volume),
but they also work together in regional forums such as the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization and in new and increasingly influential international economic
institutions such as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, as well as in
emerging groupings such as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership. The
US, incidentally, is not a part of any of these entities.
Beijing and New Delhi also see eye to eye on many key foreign policy and
geopolitical issues, from support for a negotiated settlement to the war in
Afghanistan to full-throated endorsement of any and all efforts to expunge the
Daesh terror group.
It is this spirit of joint engagement in a changing world order that Modi and Xi
wished to convey, amid all the pageantry and flashiness, at their recent summit.
And, in a world rife with bad news stories, such a simple yet positive message
from two powerful global players is a very good thing indeed.
*Michael Kugelman is deputy director of the Asia Program and senior associate
for South Asia at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. Twitter:
@michaelkugelman
Mental illness sufferers need sympathetic local help
Asma I. Abdulmalik/Arab News/October 18, 2019
Close your eyes for a minute and imagine being in an empty room. The room is
dark and the walls feel like they are closing in on you. You are sitting in a
damp corner, hugging your legs tight. The world is a gloomy place; you are
engulfed with a crashing wave of grief. The world does not understand you; your
family does not understand you. Maybe they would be better off. Maybe the world
would be better off without you.
It is often difficult to imagine that anyone would want to take their own life.
You have probably known someone or heard of someone who has died by suicide, be
it a member of your community, a loved one or a celebrity. You will wonder if
there was anything you or anyone else could have done to prevent it. You will
scrutinize all your moments with them to see if you possibly missed the signs.
Last week, the world observed Mental Illness Awareness Week to raise awareness
of the various mental health conditions and provide support, assistance and care
for sufferers. This year, the World Health Organization focused on suicide
prevention. According to its website, somebody dies by suicide every 40 seconds.
What compels someone to commit suicide? The reasons are many, and they are
compound. Some mental illnesses can cause one to commit suicide, including
schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Other worldly conditions can be a factor,
including bullying, traumatic stress, addictions, loss or fear, chronic pain and
terminal conditions. However, one of the leading reasons that can drive someone
to a state of hopelessness is severe depression.
Where you are and how you identify yourself often determines how you react and
judge suicide. In Islam, the act of committing suicide is considered a grave
sin. The Qur’an makes it very clear that human life is sacred: “And do not kill
yourselves. Surely, God is most merciful to you” (Qur’an 4:29). One cannot take
one’s life out of despair, calamity or any world-related problems. Muslims have
to thus practice patience and look toward their faith.
In some cases in Islam, however, one’s mental capacity predetermines judgment.
For example, a person in a Muslim society may develop a mental or physical
illness or condition that affects his or her mental capacity so much that they
do not know what they are saying or doing. In this situation, they are unaware
of their actions and are thus not condemned.
It is my presumption to wonder if we as a society oversimplify the matter. Where
most see it as binary, our religion is actually more nuanced, especially with
the explanation above on when individuals have a mental illness. For starters,
there is a wide spectrum of conditions, with some that do not necessarily reduce
you to a mentally incapacitated state. The question is, when do we consider an
individual mentally sound and who determines that — a religious or a medical
professional?
To reach a state where someone considers taking their own life is very complex
to understand and treat. People who die by suicide do not want to die, but to
end their pain. It is thus very reductive to look at it through a single lens.
Patients with mental illnesses and individuals who are going through the darkest
periods of their lives require our compassion, support and help, not the threat
of internal condemnation.
What we lack is basic information and services for those who are having or
exhibiting suicidal behavior and wanting help.
I understand that many would argue that, if we did not have a harsh stance on
suicide, many others might feel more inclined to commit it and, as a society, we
would be more forgiving of it. Some may even escalate the argument to the point
where they would claim we are encouraging it. I am arguing, however, for a
better and more realistic understanding of the causes, consequences and
treatment.
Suicide is prevalent everywhere, including among Muslim-majority counties. No
society, age group, gender or religion is immune to it. While we are beginning
to break the stigma around mental health issues, we are still alarmingly
cautious when talking about it.
There are significant gaps in research on suicidal behavior in Muslim societies.
According to Dr. Rania Awaad, the clinical director of the Bay Area branches of
the Khalil Center, the largest clinic in the US for Muslim mental health issues:
“There is very little research on suicide among Muslims because Muslim countries
don’t report deaths by suicide to the World Health Organization.” The media also
under-reports it and hardly analyzes it. Most of the research has been linked to
specific cases, such as those that follow rape or violence. It fails to take
into account age groups and socioeconomic and ethnic backgrounds.
More importantly than everything mentioned above, what we lack is basic
information and services for those who are having or exhibiting suicidal
behavior and wanting help. A quick bit of research online will overwhelm you
with the amount of information, resources, support groups, and helplines
available in Western countries. This is because they understand suicide is a
fact and because they are keen on providing assistance and helping to save
lives. Anybody is able to access information from any international website, but
we owe it to them to provide local assistance that is in line with their culture
and religion — assistance that does not make them feel judged and gives them
hope.
*Asma I. Abdulmalik is an Emirati civil servant and a writer interested in
gender and development issues. Twitter: @Asmaimalik
Nobel Prize for Economics and a country blighted by hunger
Ranvir S. Nayar/Arab News/October 18, 2019
Last week, Abhijit Banerjee, an Indian-born economist, became one of three joint
winners of the 2019 Nobel Prize in Economics for their work on alleviating
poverty.
The news was reported by the Indian media with much pride, as Banerjee was only
the second Indian-born economist honored with a Nobel. Twenty years earlier,
Amartya Sen was rewarded for his work on the same subject: Fighting poverty and
famine.
A few days later, while Banerjee’s achievement was still being celebrated and he
was pursued for interviews by every Indian media outlet, a report from Ireland
noted that India had slipped to position 102 on a list of 117 countries on the
Global Hunger List. Humiliatingly for country with what is often touted as the
world’s fastest-growing major economy, India, with a score of 30.3, found itself
rated worse even than civil war-afflicted African countries such as Mali (24.2),
Nigeria (27.2), Burkina Faso (25.8) and Niger (30.2). All of India’s neighbors,
other than Afghanistan, were rated much higher, with Sri Lanka (17.8) leading
the pack of South Asian nations.
According to the index, India has been consistently slipping in the global
rankings since 2014, when it was ranked 55th in a smaller sampling of 76
nations. In 2017, Pakistan was ranked behind India; two years later, India has
ceded its position to its neighbor.
Certainly, India has made progress in addressing some of the parameters of
hunger and malnutrition. For instance, its overall score has consistently
improved since 2005 from 38.9 to 30.3. Fairly good progress has also been made
in reducing the prevalence of stunting (below-average growth) in children from
54.2 in 2000 to 37.9 now, while the proportion of undernourishment has gone from
22.2 in 2010 to 14.5 now.
However, the most worrying aspect of the 2019 report is that wasting, or acute
malnourishment, has increased sharply since 2014, when it affected 16.5 percent
of children, and now affects 20.8 percent. Malnourishment has long been an issue
in India, even before independence, when famines were not so rare.
In the past four decades, India has made sizable advances in addressing this
problem through the reorganization of the public distribution system to ensure
that every family receives a set minimum amount of food each week.
The free or heavily subsidized food-distribution system was strengthened in 2006
with the launch of the particularly impressive Mahatma Gandhi National Rural
Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), which guaranteed at least 100 days of work
each year to every adult or, if no jobs are available, that the government will
pay the equivalent of the wages. In the first year of the scheme, more than 21
million households benefited. The numbers rose sharply each year for the next
five years, in 2011 reaching 55 million: almost half of the country.
The scheme is credited as one of the key factors in the economic development of
the rural poor in India. A recent UN Development Program report noted that more
than 270 million Indians were lifted out of poverty between 2005 and 2015.
The benefits of MGNREGA spread far beyond impoverished villages. With a
guaranteed income to rely on, the rural spend on a variety of items other than
food — including household goods, consumer items, electronics and vehicles —
boomed. This was one of the biggest contributors to a jump in India’s GDP growth
rate, which quickly approached 9 percent a year.
Not surprisingly, MGNREGA features prominently in leading business and economics
schools as a case study of how a government can use policy interventions not
only to fight malnutrition, but also poverty and inequality. It is also credited
with securing a second term for the Congress party, which enjoyed a comfortable
victory in the 2009 elections.
Unfortunately for the poor in particular, and the Indian economy in general, the
change of government after the 2014 elections brought with it drastic cuts to
MGNREGA. Prime Minister Narendra Modi had stridently campaigned against the
scheme, describing it as a colossal waste of public finances and prone to
corruption. Despite strong advice and words of caution from Nobel-winning
economist Sen, the government virtually disbanded the scheme soon after being
sworn in.
If only the government had consulted leading economists, in particular the two
Nobel winners, about its economic policies, the Indian growth story over the
past four years would have been totally different.
Another big blow for the poor in India came in the form of demonetization in
2016, when the government withdrew the notes in circulation and replaced them
with new ones. The exercise was so poorly planned and executed that it shaved
more than 2.5 percent off GDP growth. Hundreds of millions of people in the
unorganized sector (accounting for almost 80 percent of the national economy)
found themselves out of work as their employers no longer had cash to buy
anything or pay salaries.
It took the banks more than a year to start functioning normally again and
restore the ability to dispense cash from ATMs. The botched exercise was heavily
criticized by many leading economists, including Sen and Banerjee, who called it
a monumental mistake with long-lasting repercussions.
Barely a year later, the government delivered another shock to the economy, this
time through the hasty introduction of a new tax code that was supposed to make
it easier to do business in India. Instead, a terrible implementation process
sent GDP growth crashing.
If only the government had consulted leading economists, in particular the two
Nobel winners, about its economic policies, the Indian growth story over the
past four years would have been totally different. Instead, the country finds
itself faced with a GDP growth rate that has fallen from nearly 10 percent to
just 5 percent. Even now, though, it might not be too late for the Modi
government to start heeding the advice of economists. Banerjee has warned that
the current malaise could extend long into the future, and recommended urgent
and significant rises in wages under the MGNREGA scheme.
He also advised that the frequent interference by the all-powerful office of the
prime minister, which seems to be the place where all decisions are made these
days, should be curbed. Will the prime minister listen?
*Ranvir S. Nayar is the editor of Media India Group, a global platform based in
Europe and India that encompasses publishing, communication and consultation
services.
The Syrian war and the demise of international diplomacy
Sinem Cengiz/Arab News/October 18, 2019
The Middle East has experienced many political crises, conflicts and proxy wars,
but never has diplomacy sunk as low as it has now. The Syrian crisis has caused
diplomacy, mediation, the rules of war and politics to fall apart at the seams.
Allow me to list the most recent developments and then evaluate what they mean
for the region:
• Turkey launched Operation Peace Spring in northern Syria.
• The EU called for sanctions on Turkey in response to its actions in Syria.
• Russian President Vladimir Putin requested a meeting with Turkish counterpart
Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Sochi.
• US President Donald Trump’s scandalous letter to Erdogan.
• The visit by a US delegation to Ankara in the shadow of all these
developments.
Prominent Syria expert Metin Gurcan correctly pointed out in a recent article
that “there are four fronts of Operation Peace Spring: The military front on the
ground, the diplomatic front, the optical front (in the eyes of Western public
opinion and the international community) and the domestic front.”
All of the developments listed above should be considered within the framework
of these four fronts. As we know, Operation Peace Spring, which Ankara launched
on Oct. 9, is the third in a series of cross-border anti-terror operations in
northern Syria targeting terrorists affiliated with Daesh, and the PKK’s Syrian
offshoot the People’s Protection Units (YPG). Although such an operation had
long been expected, it still came as a surprise to many.
Western powers strongly condemned Turkey for its actions and announced a series
of sanctions, including a ban on arms sales. Erdogan responded by escalating the
dispute, threatening to open the gates to Europe to nearly 4 million refugees
hosted by Turkey.
Ankara has said from the start that its operation has two objectives: To
eliminate a terrorist threat and create a safe zone for the resettlement of
Syrian refugees. The reaction from European governments to the Turkish operation
reflects public opinion in these countries, as the Kurdish issue has
historically been viewed with sympathy in Europe.
However, threats of sanctions or of a flood refugees as part of a war of words
between two sides blaming each other for the situation in Syria will get them
nowhere.
In a prudent article, former Turkish diplomat Sinan Ulgen highlighted the fact
that Turkey and the West need each other’s help to influence the future of
Syria. The US and Europe need to forget sanctions and adopt a results-oriented
policy when dealing with Ankara.
I could not agree more, given that Turkey is the only NATO country bordering
Syria, a country in which Russia and Iran are increasing their sphere of
influence with each passing day. It is significant to note that a more
understanding approach from the West to Turkey’s security concerns might even
lead Ankara to rely less on Russia and Iran in dealing with the Syrian crisis.
From the way the letter is written, it seems obvious that it is designed to
appeal to public opinion in the US, where a presidential election will be held
next year. Trump wants to convince his critics, and the public, that he did not
give the green light for the Turkish operation.
Against the backdrop of this tense atmosphere between Turkey and Western
nations, Putin invited Erdogan to Sochi and they will meet on Oct. 22 to discuss
Syria. Russia deployed its military on Oct. 15, quickly filling the void left by
the withdrawal of US troops from northern Syria. Moscow seems to be trying to
maintain relationships with Turkey, the Syrian regime and the Kurds. Unlike
Western countries, Russia has also reiterated that it understands Turkey’s
security concerns and, therefore, is trying to keep the door open for
discussion.
It is obvious that both Putin and Erdogan are keen to play smart. However, the
Turkish side needs to keep in mind that the relationship between Russians and
Kurds dates back to the establishment, with strong Soviet support, of the
Republic of Mahabad in 1946. Although this pro-Soviet Kurdish republic existed
for less than a year, it inspired Kurds to pursue their aspirations for an
independent state. Russia has supported Kurdish nationalism ever since.
Speaking in Baku, where he was attending the seventh summit of the Turkic
Council, Erdogan said the that Syrian regime entering Manbij city was “not very
negative” for Turkey as long as “terrorists” are removed from the region. Moscow
called for cooperation between Turkey and Syria to be based on the Adana Accord.
This 1998 security pact set out the terms under which Turkey can carry out
cross-border security operations, and placed an obligation on Damascus not to
harbor members of the outlawed PKK. It worked quite well until Syrian war.
The start date of Operation Peace Spring, Oct. 9, is symbolic. It was the date
in 1998 on which the Syrian regime deported PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan to Russia
after the Adana Accord was signed. However, it is crucial to remember that it
was the Syrian regime that allowed the YPG to take control of this region of
Syria during the civil war as retaliation against Turkey, which was supporting
the opposition. The ball is now in Moscow’s court to convince Turkey that such a
scenario will not happen again.
And so we come to the most recent, and shocking, development: Trump’s Oct. 9
letter to Erdogan. Defying all recognized norms of diplomacy, the US president
warns his Turkish counterpart not to be “a fool.”
From the way it is written, it seems obvious that it is designed to appeal to
public opinion in the US, where a presidential election will be held next year.
Trump wants to convince his critics, and the public, that he did not give the
green light for the Turkish operation.
However, the letter, which Turkish sources said was immediately thrown in the
trash, not only provoked institutional distrust between the two countries but
also overshadowed the visit to Turkey of a US delegation headed by Vice
President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
Thus, just like the Syrian war, international diplomacy and statecraft have
fallen into a deep crisis.
*Sinem Cengiz is a Turkish political analyst who specializes in Turkey’s
relations with the Middle East. Twitter: @SinemCngz