LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
September 05/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For today
But the scripture has imprisoned all things under the power of
sin, so that what was promised through faith in Jesus Christ might be given to
those who believe.
Letter to the Galatians 03/15-22: “I give an example from daily life: once a
person’s will has been ratified, no one adds to it or annuls it. Now the
promises were made to Abraham and to his offspring; it does not say, ‘And to
offsprings’, as of many; but it says, ‘And to your offspring’, that is, to one
person, who is Christ. My point is this: the law, which came four hundred and
thirty years later, does not annul a covenant previously ratified by God, so as
to nullify the promise. For if the inheritance comes from the law, it no longer
comes from the promise; but God granted it to Abraham through the promise. Why
then the law? It was added because of transgressions, until the offspring would
come to whom the promise had been made; and it was ordained through angels by a
mediator. Now a mediator involves more than one party; but God is one. Is the
law then opposed to the promises of God? Certainly not! For if a law had been
given that could make alive, then righteousness would indeed come through the
law. But the scripture has imprisoned all things under the power of sin, so that
what was promised through faith in Jesus Christ might be given to those who
believe.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News published on September 04-05/2019
Why was Nasrallah let off the hook? The IDF exposed – but did not
bomb – the Iranian precise missile plant in Lebanon
Hezbollah facing growing criticism in
Lebanon
Israeli army says it uncovers Lebanon’s Hezbollah missile site
Lebanon PM: Hezbollah Is A Regional Problem, Not Just A Lebanese Problem
U.S Has Agreement With Canada To Accept 100.000 Palestinians: Arab Report
IDF Pokes Fun At "Best Friends' Hezbollah, Syria, Iran On Nasrallah-Day
UNIFIL Says Hizbullah Attack Gross Violation, Urges No Arms South of Litani
S&P Warns on Foreign Currency Reserve, Hariri Vows to Keep Lira Pegged to Dollar
Duquesne Meets Hariri, Says Donors are 'Waiting' for Lebanon to Act
Report: Hariri to Travel to Paris Later this Month
Speaker Says 2020 Draft Budget May Be Distributed to Ministers Tomorrow
Maronite Bishops Laud Filing Complaint at Security Council against Israel
Lebanon Combats Customs Evasion Amid Doubts About Effectiveness
Lebanese Politician Mustapha Allouch: Lebanon Has Been Hijacked By Hizbullah And
Suffers From Stockholm Syndrome; Iran Calls The Shots
Shots Fired in Dispute between Arslan Guard, PSP Official
Is a conflict with Lebanon still on the horizon?
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports
And News published on September 04-05/2019
Trump on a meeting with Iran’s Rouhani: ‘Anything is possible’
US slaps sanctions on Iran shipping network over Syria oil
Iran says US sanctions on its space agencies ‘ineffective’
Brian Hook: US will not provide waivers for Iran credit line plan
Iran says will return to nuclear deal only under oil credit line
Rouhani: Iran will give EU countries two-month deadline to save nuclear deal
Iran announces steps to further scale back nuclear commitments
Iran says it will free seven crew members of detained UK tanker
US offering cash rewards to tanker captains of Iranian ships: FT
Sweden FM: Iran released seven crew members of seized tanker Stena Impero
Turkey’s Erdogan defies pressure not to have nuclear warheads
Netanyahu makes snap trip to London for Johnson talks
Kurdish official: Syria’s ‘safe zone’ off to a good start
Thousands of children in northwest Syria to miss school: NGO
Pressure on Netanyahu to Expand Hebron Settlement
Canada stands ready to respond to Hurricane Dorian
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on September 04-05/2019
Hezbollah facing growing criticism in Lebanon/Ynetnews/September 04/2019
Why was Nasrallah let off the hook? The IDF exposed – but did not bomb – the
Iranian precise missile plant in Lebanon/DEBKA File/September 04/2019
Israeli army says it uncovers Lebanon’s Hezbollah missile site/AFP,
Jerusalem/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
Lebanon PM: Hezbollah Is A Regional Problem, Not Just A Lebanese
Problem/Jerusalem Post/September 04/2019
U.S Has Agreement With Canada To Accept 100.000 Palestinians: Arab
Report/Jerusalem Post/September 04/2019
IDF Pokes Fun At "Best Friends' Hezbollah, Syria, Iran On Nasrallah-Day/Jerusalem
Post/September 04/2019
Lebanese Politician Mustapha Allouch: Lebanon Has Been Hijacked By Hizbullah And
Suffers From Stockholm Syndrome; Iran Calls The Shots/MEMRI/September 04/2019
Is a conflict with Lebanon still on the horizon?/Rachel Avraham/Israel Hayom/September
04/2019
Saudi Journalist: The Hadith Which Instructs Us To Fight Unbelievers Until Islam
Is The Religion Of The Entire World Contradicts The Quran And Is Exploited By
ISIS, Should Be Removed From The School Curriculum/MEMRI/September 04/2019
Italy: Salvini Down but Not Out/Soeren Kern/Gatestone Institute/September
04/2019
Boko Haram: Bloody Terror, No End in Sight.Uzay Bulut/Gatestone
Institute/September 04/2019
Egypt Reinstates Hate Preaching against Non-Muslims/Raymond Ibrahim/FrontPage
Magazine/September 04/2019
Brexit and its Effect on the Middle East/Tom Gross/Asharq Al Awsat/September 04
2019
Netanyahu to NY Times: Attacking Iran was ‘no bluff’/Ariel Kahana/Israel Hayom/September
04/201
ISLAM: The West’s “most formidable and persistent enemy”/Raymond
Ibrahim/FPM/September 04/2019
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News
published
on September 04-05/2019
Hezbollah facing growing criticism in Lebanon
تقرير من صحيفة يديعوت أحرونوت: حزب الله يواجه انتقادات متزايدة في لبنان
Ynetnews/September 04/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/78202/%d8%aa%d9%82%d8%b1%d9%8a%d8%b1-%d9%85%d9%86-%d8%b5%d8%ad%d9%8a%d9%81%d8%a9-%d9%8a%d8%af%d9%8a%d8%b9%d9%88%d8%aa-%d8%a3%d8%ad%d8%b1%d9%88%d9%86%d9%88%d8%aa-%d8%ad%d8%b2%d8%a8-%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%84%d9%87/
Mainstream media, social media and politicians are becoming more
vocal in their displeasure of the Iran-backed group’s decision to fire missiles
at an IDF base on Sunday, which resulted in a massive Israeli bombardment of a
southern Lebanon town. Criticism is growing in Lebanon over the actions of
Hezbollah, the Iran-backed terror group that this week attacked an Israeli
military base resulting in massive artillery fire in response.
While media outlets associated with Hezbollah were quick to report Sunday’s
border incident – in which Hezbollah fired anti-tank missiles at troops over the
border – as a victory for Lebanon, a different position began to appear both in
the mainstream media and on social media. Criticism of the group, its leader and
its Iranian benefactors have appeared with increasing frequency.A cartoon in the
Lebanese media accusing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hezbollah leader
Hassan Nasrallah of benefitting from Sunday's escalation
Former prime minister Fouad Siniora, who led the country during the 2006 war
between Israel and Hezbollah, told Sky News Arabic that the Shi’ite group was
entangling Lebanon in a mess and that his country needed a defense strategy.
“It is inconceivable that Hezbollah would launch such an operation,” he
said.Cartoon in the Lebanese media mocking Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah,
who has been mainly in hiding since the 2006 war
Meanwhile, a member of parliament from Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s
Future Movement party, said the Beirut government alone – and not Hezbollah –
must make decisions on the country’s defense policies.
Another parliamentarian accused Iran of “pulling the strings” and deciding for
Lebanon when and where such escalations would take place. “The decision to go to
war is unfortunately in the hands of Hezbollah,” he said.Cartoon in the Lebanon
media depicting Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah and his televised speeches as
a lighter that will ignite the region. Hariri’s current coalition government
includes Hezbollah, which made significant gains in last year’s parliamentary
elections while Hariri’s bloc lost a third of its seats. The group now holds two
ministries and a ministry of state, including for the first time the Ministry of
Health, which has one of the country’s largest budgets. The Finance Ministry
remains in the hands of a Hezbollah ally, Ali Hassan Khalil.
Why was Nasrallah let off the hook? The IDF exposed – but
did not bomb – the Iranian precise missile plant in Lebanon
موقع دبيكا الإسرائيلي: لماذا سُمِح لنصر الله أن يتفلت من العقاب؟ اسرائل كشفت
مكان مصنع تحديث صواريخ حزب الله لكنها لم تقصفه.
DEBKA File/September 04/2019
موقع دبيكا الإسرائيلي: ممارسات إسرائيل خلال الأيام الماضية أهدت حزب الله معلومات
قيمة مفادها أن بأمكانه الإستمرار في تحديث مخزونه من الصواريخ. قصف إسرائيل يوم
الأحد الماضي استهدف حقول فارغة وبعيدة عن قواعد حزب الله وأمكنه تواجد رجاله
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/78206/%d9%85%d9%88%d9%82%d8%b9-%d8%af%d8%a8%d9%8a%d9%83%d8%a7-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a5%d8%b3%d8%b1%d8%a7%d8%a6%d9%8a%d9%84%d9%8a-%d9%84%d9%85%d8%a7%d8%b0%d8%a7-%d8%b3%d9%8f%d9%85%d9%90%d8%ad-%d9%84%d9%86%d8%b5/
Who decided to let Hizballah get away with a rocket attack on the Israeli
military on Sunday, Sept. 1?
IDF retaliation was impressive. But the heavy smoke blanketing wide fields of
south Lebanon concealed the fact that the IDF had shelled empty fields, well
away from Hizballah bases or manpower.
Similarly, when the military spokesman reported an Israeli air strike against
the Hizballah rocket launch squad, no one was hurt.
The same policy appears to have been applied to the production in Lebanon of
precision missiles, despite the dire threats of destruction coming from Israel’s
leaders.
On Tuesday night, Sept. 3, the IDF made a big show of discovering a secret
Iranian-Hizballah factory upgrading surface rockets to precise missiles at Nebi
Shait in the Lebanese Beqaa valley.
While displaying a detailed diagram showing the inside workings of the factory,
the IDF spokesman omitted to explain why it was still standing and not
destroyed. And although the military spokesman could tell reporters that the
valuable production equipment was being dismantled and transported to hidden
storage sites, he left unanswered the question of why the trucks carrying the
equipment were not bombed in transit.
These unanswered questions lead to the conclusion that Israel has desisted from
offensive operations against Hizballah in Lebanon ever since its drone attack of
Aug. 24 on the Dahya suburb of Beirut.
Demonstrating the existence of a missile conversion factory in Lebanon to prove
Hassan Nasrallah’s denials were false was no big deal. After all, he never took
any prizes for telling the truth.
Could the IDF be pulling its punches to avoid an all-out war with casualties in
the short time left before the Sept. 17 general election?
Or do Israel’s government and military leaders trust that the information they
release will scare the Lebanese people into leaning hard on Hizballah to shut
down its missile upgrade project?
That would be naïve; trusting ordinary people to rise up against brutal leaders
has never worked in the Gaza Strip and is unlikely to work in Lebanon.
And, moreover, that policy has the dangerous side-effect of leaving the
initiative for violence in the hands of the enemy.
Israel’s conduct this week has already given Hizballah valuable information: he
understands that he can safely continue to upgrade his rocket arsenal.
Israeli army says it uncovers Lebanon’s Hezbollah missile site
AFP, Jerusalem/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
The Israeli army said on Tuesday it had exposed a Hezbollah site dedicated to
the manufacture of “precision-guided” missiles in Lebanon, just days after a
cross-border flare-up between the arch-foes.“The IDF is exposing a facility
belonging to Hezbollah... designed to convert and manufacture precision-guided
missiles,” the Israeli army said in a statement. It released what it said was an
aerial photograph of the site in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley, near the town of Nabi
Chit. The statement comes after the Iran-backed Shiite movement said Sunday its
fighters had fired anti-tank missiles into Israel, destroying a military vehicle
and killing or wounding those inside. Israel’s army said it had responded with
around 100 artillery shells after Hezbollah targeted a battalion headquarters
and military ambulance, hitting both. Israeli officials refuted claims of
casualties. Israel’s army said last week that Iran was collaborating with
Hezbollah to convert “stupid rockets into precision-guided missiles,” through a
plan to smuggle the required components into Lebanon. The facility near Nabi
Chit was established a few years ago by the Lebanese Shiite movement and its
ally Tehran, the Israeli army said on Tuesday. “Lately, various activities to
facilitate the manufacture and conversion of precision-guided missiles at the
facility have been identified,” it added. Such activities included “the
establishment of a dedicated assembly line for precision weapons and the
transfer of sensitive and dedicated equipment.”The facility hosted machines
designed to manufacture the motors and warheads of missiles “with an accuracy of
less than 10 meters,” with Iran supplying special machines and instruction for
manufacturing crews, the Israeli army said. It further alleged that Hezbollah
had “in fear of strikes, evacuated precious and unique equipment from the
compound to civilian locations in Beirut.” Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah on
Monday said his organization would respond to any further Israeli attacks with
strikes “deep inside Israel” and not just along the border. For his part,
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said during a cabinet meeting that he
was determined to guarantee Israel’s security. Israel must “prevent Iran from
supplying our enemies and its proxies, such as Hezbollah and others, with
precision weapons that endanger us,” he said.
Lebanon PM: Hezbollah Is A Regional Problem, Not Just A Lebanese Problem
Jerusalem Post/September 04/2019
"Look, Hezbollah is not a Lebanese problem — only — it is a regional problem,"
said Hariri.
Lebanon's Prime Minister Saad Hariri stated that Lebanon is not responsible for
Hezbollah and that the terrorist organization is a regional problem, not just a
Lebanese problem, according to CNBC. "Look, Hezbollah is not a Lebanese problem
— only — it is a regional problem," said Hariri. "Israel wants to have ... this
scenario that Lebanon is responsible, with what Netanyahu says, and if you want
to buy it, buy it. But he knows and the international community knows that this
is not true."Referencing recent sanctions by the United States on the Jammal
Trust Bank due to its facilitation of Hezbollah's finances, Hariri stated that
such banks should "expect the consequences" of handling Hezbollah funds.
"If a bank misuses this trust, we don’t like it, definitely. We try to stop it,
I try to stop it," said the prime minister, acknowledging that the US "had to
take this action, and I don’t like it and I wish this bank didn’t go through
(with) what they did."The prime minister acknowledged that he is limited in his
ability to keep Hezbollah under control. "I am a pragmatic person, and I know my
limits, and I know the limits of this region. If people were serious about this
issue, they would have done things 10, 15, 20, 30 years" ago, said Hariri to
CNBC.
Tensions between Israel and Hezbollah have escalated since last week when two
explosive drones fell in Beirut near crates containing equipment for precision
guided missiles and Israel carried out an airstrike in Syria which led to the
deaths of two Hezbollah terrorists.
On Monday, Hezbollah-affiliated Al Manar news published footage of the attack
carried out on Sunday from the Lebanese side of the border, claiming that it
refuted "all the claims that the attack failed to hit Zionist soldiers." The
footage showed that two missiles were fired from two positions. Israeli
officials stated that no IDF troops were injured. Minutes after the Hezbollah
anti-tank missiles hit, soldiers with bandages and fake blood were flown by
helicopter to Rambam Medical Center in Haifa. They were taken off the
helicopters in stretchers and were discharged after the round of fighting ended.
Hezbollah broke "the biggest red line for dozens of years" for Israel by
targeting it across border, not in the contested Shebaa farms area where the
group had previously targeted IDF troops, said Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.
The attack against Avivim was a message to Israel, Nasrallah warned. "We no
longer have red lines. This is the start of a new phase. Remember this date."
*Anna Ahronheim contributed to this report.
U.S Has Agreement With Canada To Accept 100.000 Palestinians: Arab Report
Jerusalem Post/September 04/2019
Canada would receive 100,000 Palestinians from Lebanon and Syria and Spain would
receive 16,000 Palestinians from Lebanon, alongside similar agreements with
Belgium and France. The Lebanon-based newspaper Al Akhbar reported that an
official source in one of the Palestinian factions revealed that there is an
understanding between the United States and Canada for Canada to receive 100,000
Palestinians (40,000 from Lebanon and another 60,000 from Syria). In addition,
there is a further understanding with Spain to receive 16,000 Palestinians from
Lebanon, alongside similar agreements with Belgium and France. The
understandings would lead to the reduction of the cost of migration from $12,000
to $7,000 per person. The representative of Hamas in Lebanon, Ahmed Abdel-Hadi,
told Al Akhbar that part of the Deal of the Century aims to resettle between
75,000 to 100,000 Palestinians in Lebanon and displace the rest to more than one
country. About 40,000 Palestinians have left Lebanon in the last four years
through legal immigration. Others have taken illegal routes. Many Palestinian
youth are trying to emigrate from Lebanon at all costs, but many attempts end in
tragedy, according to Al Akhbar. Some who try to emigrate die while trying to
cross seas or deserts. Those who have emigrated so far have been the "victims"
of humanitarian and life pressures, the shrinking of UNRWA and the fabrication
of security events, as well as organized networks that influence young people
and families to persuade them to emigrate as American pressure grows to
implement the deal of the century, according to Abdel-Hadi. "Hamas has developed
a strategy to counter migration based on an understanding with Lebanon in order
to relieve the pressure so that the Palestinians will feel that they are living
a dignified life, achieve human rights achievements, pressure UNRWA to improve
services and have Palestinian factions contribute to projects that provide jobs
for youth," said Abdel-Hadi. The Trump administration’s "Deal of the Century"
peace plan is not expected to be released until after Israel's Sept. 17
elections,as per US special envoy Jason Greenblatt.
IDF Pokes Fun At "Best Friends' Hezbollah, Syria, Iran On
Nasrallah-Day
Jerusalem Post/September 04/2019
The somewhat humorous video includes animated images and not-so-subtle jibes
about the three leaders, including a reference to Nasrallah as "bunker boy." The
IDF tweeted a satirical video showing Syrian President Bashar Assad and Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Corps Commander Qasem Soleimani texting birthday wishes to
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, including promises to deliver gifts of
weapons. The video begins with Nasrallah making a group with the two allies
titled, "You forgot my birthday [sad face emoji]."Soleimani was quick to put the
Hezbollah leader at ease, ensuring that they had not forgotten his birthday and
were just busy. The IRGC commander also promised that Iran's presents are on
their way, prompting Assad to complain that Hezbollah always gets "the better
toys."Israel has warned repeatedly that it would not allow for an Iranian
presence in Syria, and has admitted to hundreds of airstrikes to prevent the
transfer of weapons such as ammunition and surface-to-air missile kits to
Hezbollah in Lebanon, and its forces in the Golan. The somewhat humorous video
includes animated images and not-so-subtle jibes about the three leaders,
including a reference to Nasrallah as "bunker boy."
In the chat, Soleimani apologizes to Nasrallah as some of the "gifts" did not
make it all the way to Lebanon, to which Assad apologized for his borders not
being what they used to be. The list of gifts included precision guided missiles
and rocket launchers. In a similar spirit to the video released on Wednesday,
the IDF on Monday tweeted a spoof version of the game "Cards Against Humanity"
titled "Iran Against Humanity." The game is similar to the popular card game
Apples to Apples, with a card with a statement with a blank that must be filled
in. The IDF tweeted two example fill-in-the-blank cards, including one asking on
what Soleimani should be focusing instead of arming Hezbollah with precision
guided missiles and another asking what secret love Hezbollah is hiding in
addition to the weapons it hides in Lebanese homes. The IDF announced on Tuesday
that Hezbollah has set up a production and conversion site for precision
missiles in Lebanon’s Bekaa, adding that the facility was established in recent
years as a site for the production of weapons led by Iran and Hezbollah.
*Anna Ahronheim contributed to this report.
UNIFIL Says Hizbullah Attack Gross Violation, Urges No Arms
South of Litani
Naharnet/September 04/2019
UNIFIL Head of Mission and Force Commander Major-General Stefano Del Col held
talks Wednesday with Prime Minister Saad Hariri in Beirut, after which he
described Hizbullah’s latest anti-Israel attack as a “gross violation,”
stressing that the area south of the Litani River must be free of any weapons
other than those of the government. “I had very useful discussions with the
Prime Minister today. I shared my serious concern at the incident of 1 September
in UNIFIL area of operations when anti-tank missiles claimed by Hizbullah were
fired from southern Lebanon across the Blue Line. This was a serious breach of
the cessation of hostilities and a gross violation of U.N. Security Council
resolution 1701,” said Del Col after the meeting. “The missile attack triggered
retaliatory shelling by the Israel Defense Forces (Israeli army) and could have
led to unwanted escalation of the situation that UNIFIL and the parties might
not have been able to control, hence endangering the safety of the local
population,” Del Col noted. He said his priority was to quickly de-escalate the
situation and restore calm in the area, which was achieved through “intensive
engagement with the parties during the course of the developments.”“Once again
UNIFIL’s liaison and coordination mechanism played a critical role in
deconflicting the situation along the Blue Line. At this time, we remain closely
engaged with the parties to contain tensions and incidents and enable a safe and
secure environment in the area,” Del Col added.
Saying that he was very encouraged by Hariri’s “strong reaffirmation” in the
meeting of Lebanon’s continued commitment to the cessation of hostilities under
Resolution 1701, the UNIFIL chief said that it is of paramount importance that
the area between the Blue Line and the Litani River is “free of any armed
personnel, assets and weapons other than those of the Government of Lebanon and
UNIFIL.”He added: “We also agreed on the importance of strengthening the
capabilities of the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) in the UNIFIL area of operations
in order to enable it to take greater security responsibilities along the Blue
Line. I assured the Prime Minister of UNIFIL’s continued efforts to this
end.”Hizbullah said its cross-border missile attack on an Israeli military
vehicle in the Avivim settlement was aimed at avenging an Israeli strike in
Syria that killed two of its members. It has meanwhile vowed a separate response
to a drone explosion blamed on Israel that rocked its stronghold in Beirut’s
southern suburbs on August 25.
S&P Warns on Foreign Currency Reserve, Hariri Vows to Keep
Lira Pegged to Dollar
Associated Press/Naharnet/September 04/2019
An international ratings agency warned Wednesday there is a risk that customer
deposit flows, particularly by nonresidents, could continue to decline in
Lebanon, resulting in an accelerated drawdown of foreign currency reserves that
would test the highly indebted country's ability to maintain the local currency
peg to the U.S. dollar. Prime Minister Saad Hariri, however, pledged to keep the
national currency pegged to the dollar, as it has been since 1997. In an
interview with CNBC, Hariri said the government will not consider an
International Monetary Fund program that would leave it to the markets to decide
the price of the Lebanese pound. "This is something that we have extreme
sensitivity on," Hariri said. "We believe that keeping the Lebanese pound at
1,500 (to the dollar) is the only stable way to move forward with these
reforms." Standard & Poor's said it estimates that Lebanon's usable reserves
will decline to $19.2 billion by the end of 2019, from $25.5 billion at the end
of last year. Lebanon has one of the world's highest public debts, standing at
150% of gross domestic product. Growth has plummeted and the budget deficit has
reached 11% of GDP and remittances from Lebanese living abroad shrank. Last
month, international ratings agency Fitch downgraded Lebanon's long-term foreign
currency issuer default rating to CCC from B-, while Standard & Poor's Global
Ratings affirmed its long- and short-term foreign and local currency sovereign
credit ratings for Beirut at B-/B, saying the country's outlook remains
negative.
In February, Moody's downgraded Lebanon's issuer ratings to Caa1 from B3 while
changing the outlook to stable from negative.
On Monday, the country's political leaders declared what they called an
"economic state of emergency" following a meeting aimed at finding a solution to
the country's economic crisis. Hariri warned after that meeting that Lebanon
could face the fate of Greece, which is still suffering from an economic crisis
that began a decade ago. The downgrades and tensions over the border with Israel
and inside Lebanon led for the first time in years to the U.S. dollar reaching
1,560 Lebanese pounds on the black market in recent weeks for the first time in
more than two decades. Standard & Poor's warned it could downgrade Lebanon in
six months if the conditions don't improve. "In our view, the central bank's
foreign currency (FX) reserves remain sufficient to fund the government's
borrowing requirements and the country's external deficit over the next 12
months," Standard & Poor's said. It warned that there is a risk that customer
deposit flows could continue to decline, "resulting in an accelerated drawdown
of FX reserves that would test the country's ability to maintain the currency
peg to the U.S. dollar." "A continuation of these trends during the next six
months could trigger a downgrade to 'CCC' rating category," Standard & Poor's
warned. Hariri vowed in the interview with CNBC to fight corruption, adding that
the Cabinet will work on bringing down the budget deficit to GDP to 7% in 2020.
Duquesne Meets Hariri, Says Donors are 'Waiting' for
Lebanon to Act
Naharnet/September 04/2019
Pierre Duquesne, the French inter-ministerial delegate for the Mediterranean who
is in charge of following up on the implementation of the CEDRE conference
resolutions, on Wednesday called on Lebanon to speed up the implementation of
key financial and economic reforms. “I left with an impression that the premier
is moving forward on the path of the necessary transformations for the Lebanese
economy within the framework of the CEDRE conference,” Duquesne said after
meeting Prime Minister Saad Hariri. “The meeting that was held two days ago at
the presidential palace indicated that the entire political class is aware of
the urgent situation and I believe that this is important,” the French diplomat
added. “As for donors, the message that I’m carrying is that there are present
and always ready to help Lebanon and will not let it down, but they are waiting”
for Lebanon to act, Duquesne went on to say.
Report: Hariri to Travel to Paris Later this Month
Naharnet/September 04/2019
Prime Minister Saad Hariri is expected to meet in Paris later in September
French President Emmanuel Macron to follow on the pledged billions in loans and
grants agreed at the CEDRE conference in Paris last year, the Saudi Asharq al-Awsat
reported on Wednesday.
The daily said Hariri is expected to fly to Paris on September 20 to meet
Macron. On Tuesday, Pierre Duquesne, the French inter-ministerial delegate for
the Mediterranean tasked with following up on the results of CEDRE, met with
Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil and Minister of Economy and Trade Mansour
Bteish. Duquesne is expected to meet the Premier today. The French diplomat
discussed with Lebanese officials several issues related to CEDRE, to the 2020
state budget and the reforms it introduced. He expressed “cautious satisfaction
with the official moves to face the deepening financial crisis, and encouraged
the acceleration of measures starting with the completion of the 2020 draft
budget,” said the daily. Donors at the so-called CEDRE conference last year in
Paris pledged $11 billion in aid and soft loans to Lebanon, which has promised
to reduce its public spending including on electricity. The objective of the
CEDRE conference for the international community was to support the development
and the strengthening of the Lebanese economy as part of a comprehensive plan
for reform and for infrastructure investments as prepared by the Lebanese
authorities and presented during the conference.
Speaker Says 2020 Draft Budget May Be Distributed to Ministers Tomorrow
Naharnet/September 04/2019
Speaker Nabih Berri on Wednesday said Lebanon can steer away from the economic
crisis if it implements the items agreed at an emergency economic meeting
earlier this week, adding that the 2020 draft state budget “may” be distributed
to ministers at the Cabinet meeting tomorrow. Berri said Lebanon can “teer away
from the economic pressure if it puts into action 22 items discussed at an
emergency economic meeting” at Baabda on Monday, he said at his weekly meeting
with lawmakers. On the 2020 draft budget, Berri said “ministers might get a copy
of the draft budget during the Cabinet meeting scheduled tomorrow.” He stressed
that “approval of the state budget within the constitutional deadlines and
addressing the problematic issue of electricity sector, which accounts for one
third of the fiscal deficit are positive indicators for Lebanon.”
The Speaker declared he made five proposals on the economic dialogue table,
including activation of a law on public-private partnership so that the state
does not continue to borrow from abroad.
Maronite Bishops Laud Filing Complaint at Security Council against Israel
Naharnet/September 04/2019
The Maronite Bishops on Wednesday lauded Lebanon’s move in filing a complaint to
the United Nations Security Council against Israel’s aggression, and commended
the “initiative” of President Michel Aoun in declaring a state of economic
emergency in Lebanon.
“The Maronite Bishops commend President Aoun’s initiative by holding a
political-economic meeting in Baabda. We ask the government to refrain from
imposing new taxes mainly on low-income earners, stop the waste of public funds
and to control smuggling in public facilities,” the Bishops said in a statement
after their monthly meeting in al-Diman. As for the Israeli drone attack on
Beirut's southern suburbs, the Maronite bishops voiced support for Lebanon’s
official move in filing a complaint with the UN Security Council. “We support
Lebanon’s official move to the Security Council regarding Israel’s aggression,”
they said. The bishops finally hoped that the state would implement the required
reforms at the economic level "in a peaceful climate, in which reason and
dialogue prevail over individual interests."
Lebanon Combats Customs Evasion Amid Doubts About
Effectiveness
Beirut - Caroline Akoum/Asharq Al Awsat/September 04 2019
Director General of the Lebanese Customs Badri Daher told Asharq Al-Awsat that
an anti-smuggling plan launched several weeks ago has reached "good results." He
announced that smuggling operations had stopped by 70 percent at illegal
crossings on the eastern and northern borders of Lebanon and 90 percent at
legitimate border posts. Minister of Finance Ali Hassan Khalil had earlier
talked about the presence of 136 illegal crossings known by the names of persons
or the type of certain goods, pointing out that the phenomenon of smuggling
“threatens the country’s economy, contributes to the fiscal deficit and reduces
imports.” He had also complained of the inability to take “real steps” to combat
smuggling. In contrast, Defense Minister Elias Bou Saab announced that 90
percent of the smuggling took place through legal crossings and only 10 percent
through illegal ones. Daher, for his part, stressed that estimates indicating
that the volume of smuggled goods was around $600 million were exaggerated,
noting that those did not exceed $200 million. He pointed out that Lebanon
imported products and goods worth $20 billion annually, 51 percent of which are
not subject to customs duties, according to the law. He also said that the
customs directorate suffered from a significant shortage of staff. In this
regard, he emphasized that the customs needed 10,000 employees to carry out the
tasks assigned to it, but only 1,000 elements were currently working in the
directorate, distributed as follows: 500 staff in the administrative and
logistical departments, 300 in legal posts and only 100 monitoring illegal
crossings. As for the equipment used in the fight against smuggling, Daher said:
“We do not have more than one hundred cars, which are on average 15 years-old,
while we face smuggling mafias that use new four-wheel drive vehicles. We also
don’t have modern mechanisms and techniques for surveillance.”The Lebanese Army
plays a key role in countering smuggling operations. This was also confirmed by
Daher and military sources, who underlined constant cooperation along the
borders.
Lebanese Politician Mustapha Allouch: Lebanon Has Been
Hijacked By Hizbullah And Suffers From Stockholm Syndrome; Iran Calls The Shots
MEMRI/September 04/2019
Mustapha Allouch, a Lebanese politician who is a member of the March 14
Alliance, said in an interview that was uploaded to the Internet by Orient Net
that Hizbullah has hijacked Lebanon and the authority to make decisions
regarding war and peace in the region. He said that the Lebanese people suffer
from Stockholm syndrome since they are sympathizing with and defending Hizbullah,
and he stated that everybody in Lebanon knows that Iran and Hizbullah call the
shots rather than the Lebanese government and military. Mustapha Allouch: "Hizbullah
has not only appropriated the [authority to make] decisions about war and peace
in Lebanon. "It has appropriated the [authority to make] decisions about war and
peace anywhere between Iran and the Mediterranean Sea – in Syria, in Iraq, and,
of course, in Yemen. "The question now is: Where does this all lead? A person
who was kidnapped should not be asked for his opinion about his kidnapper. There
is no doubt that we are a state that has been hijacked by Hizbullah. What is
happening to us is a consequence of this hijacking. The hijacked country is
acknowledging [Hizbullah's] right to hijack it. It even defends this hijacking.
I believe that us Lebanese people are all suffering from Stockholm syndrome. We
have become sympathetic towards our kidnappers. We all know that the Lebanese
state and military are not calling the shots here. Decisions begin in Iran and
end in Dahieh, Beirut."
Shots Fired in Dispute between Arslan Guard, PSP Official
Naharnet/September 04/2019
A dispute between a guard of MP Talal Arslan and a Progressive Socialist Party
official escalated into gunfire Wednesday in the town of Choueifat. “LDP member
and MP Talal Arslan’s personal bodyguard Fahd Jadallah Azzam intercepted the
head of the PSP Choueifat-Khalde department Marwan Abi Faraj and slammed his car
into the latter’s car,” the PSP-affiliated al-Anbaa news portal reported. “Once
Abi Faraj got out of the car, Azzam fired five gunshots from his gun towards
him,” al-Anbaa added, noting that Abi Faraj “escaped unharmed miraculously.”
Azzam then fled towards Arslan’s palace, leaving behind his cellphone and a
firearms license issued by the army’s Intelligence Directorate, al-Anbaa said.
Later on Wednesday, the LDP issued a statement saying the incident occurred
after Abi Faraj repeatedly sought to “provoke” Azzam by passing in front of his
car several times, noting that the latter is a guard of Arslan’s palace and not
a personal bodyguard. “The guard asked him about the reason behind his
provocation, which prompted Abi Faraj to shout in a loud voice, ‘It’s none of
your business,’ and to make an insulting gesture with his hand,” the LDP said.
“Abi Faraj and the guard later met for a second time while in their cars on one
of the city’s internal roads, during which Abi Faraj intentionally slammed his
car into the guard’s car, prompting the guard to exchange shouting with him and
to carry a stick that was in the place with the aim of deterring him,” the LDP
added.
“At that point, Abi Faraj brandished his gun and opened fire at the guard who
responded by firing in the air,” the LDP went on to say. Arab Tawhid Party
leader Wiam Wahhab meanwhile urged everyone “in Choueifat in particular and in
Mount Lebanon in general to resort to rationality instead of resorting to
weapons upon any dispute.” “All of Mount Lebanon’s sons reject the use of arms
and the army and security forces should be in charge. We reject strife, we
reject intimidation and we reject aggression. We want Mount Lebanon to be a safe
oasis,” Wahhab tweeted. Choueifat had witnessed a deadly incident between the
PSP and the LDP in the wake of the 2018 parliamentary elections. A PSP supporter
was killed in that incident as the assailant reportedly fled to Syria. In June
2019 another deadly clash between the two parties in the Aley town of Qabrshmoun
sparked a 40-day political crisis in the country after two bodyguards of State
Minister for Refugee Affairs Saleh al-Gharib were killed in the incident. The
standoff was resolved after a reconciliation was reached between the two
parties’ leaders on August 9.
Is a conflict with Lebanon still on the horizon?
Rachel Avraham/Israel Hayom/September 04/2019
US sanctions on Iran have resulted in big budget cuts for Hezbollah. This and
Israeli operations have compromised its preparedness for battle. But the battle
is coming: It’s not a matter of if but when.
Recent days have been extremely tense in northern Israel after Hezbollah fired a
missile at an IDF vehicle. Although no one was wounded in that missile attack,
pundits are wondering whether a Third Lebanon War is on the horizon.
Hezbollah has since asked Israel to bring the conflict to a halt and the firing
has ceased. But IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi reiterated that the UN
Interim Force in Lebanon needs to stop Hezbollah’s missile program or Israel
will. According to a recent report in The Jerusalem Post, Hezbollah is currently
setting up a precision missile site in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley.
According to Mendi Safadi, head of the Safadi Center for International
Diplomacy, Research, Public Relations and Human Rights: “Israel is prepared and
ready for any scenario, both from Lebanon and the Syrian border; every small
shell will be answered by heavy artillery that will paralyze the source of the
shooting.” Nevertheless, he notes, “Hezbollah does not have the physical ability
to launch a continuous war with Israel.”
According to Safadi, due to the Iran sanctions implemented by US President
Donald Trump, Hezbollah’s budget has been decreased significantly. This, along
with Israeli operations in Syria, has compromised its preparedness for battle.
The Syrian Civil War has exhausted Hezbollah’s resources and ability to fight
against Israel. Moreover, “Hezbollah has lost the support of the Lebanese street
and finds itself facing a frontal collision with most of the Lebanese public,
even within Shia homes.” For this reason, when Israel began to respond to
Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, many locals decided to flee north and abandon the
area, which forced Hezbollah head Hassan Nasrallah to “abandon the ongoing
attack on Israel. It would have been a suicidal act with devastating
consequences.”
Though Hezbollah is not now in the best position to take Israel on, it still
seeks to threaten the Jewish state. Interestingly, just a few months ago, former
Education Minister Naftali Bennett, speaking at Shurat HaDin’s annual Law and
War Conference, said that Hezbollah now has 140,000 missiles aimed at Israel:
“Now, they have piled up tens of thousands of missiles, embedded them within
homes, and they can shoot at population centers in Israel in order to kill
Israelis. You come into a home in a Lebanese village in southern Lebanon and
there is a parents’ room, the children’s room, the kitchen, the living room and
there is the rocket room. There is a rocket room, literally. There is a rocket
targeted toward Israel. There is a movable ceiling so, like a convertible car,
you can move the ceiling, shoot, and then you close it. So, they might have a
dog, a cat, and a missile in their home.”
The placing of missiles in civilian homes in southern Lebanon is a callous
strategy utilized by Hezbollah. “Deliberately, in the beginning, they build the
homes around the missiles,” Bennett explained. “It’s a long-range missile. It is
a pretty big thing. You cannot bring it in after you build the homes, so there
are some homes that they actually built around the missiles. Quite literally.
This happens primarily in Shiite villages but not only. You got villages where
30 to 40% of the houses are hosting missiles right now. The rest of the villages
are booby-trapped.” Bennett noted that when you have 140,000 missiles aimed at
Israel, this gives Hezbollah the ability to fire 1,000 missiles into Israeli
civilian population centers per day over a period of five months.
For this reason, though another Lebanon war was temporarily averted, many
believe that a Third Lebanon War is just a matter of time. Former Consul General
Dr. Yitschak Ben Gad noted, “It is not if but when. In my opinion, Israel is
changing the rules of the game. Israel is not going to tolerate Hezbollah
getting accurate missiles. Israel has to take the take initiative and remove
this danger of 140,000 missiles threatening our population. Now, if we listen to
what [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu says, we have a problem with Lebanon,
not with just Hezbollah alone. Hezbollah is part of the government of Lebanon.
This means if a war starts, it is Israel against Lebanon and that will be a
catastrophe for Lebanon. It is like a war between the US and Mexico. The US
would destroy Mexico.”
However, Ben Gad added that there are many Lebanese who do hate Hezbollah and
these people could potentially try to rein in Hezbollah: “Most of the Lebanese
think Hezbollah is a troublemaker and proxy of Iran. They are saying, what do we
have to do with Iran? We are not Iran but Lebanon. Hezbollah is serving the
interests of Iran, not Lebanon. They are putting Lebanon into trouble with
Israel.”
Though Hezbollah seeks to threaten Israel, it is not interested in
self-destruction. Its leaders still remember what happened during the Second
Lebanon War in 2006, when two Israeli soldiers were abducted and killed. Lebanon
suffered massive destruction during that war. Its people are still traumatized.
According to Nasrallah: “Had I known the results of this war, I would not have
kidnapped those two soldiers.” Ben Gad concludes, “It doesn’t pay for Hezbollah
to start troubles. If many Israeli soldiers and civilians get killed, that will
start a war between Israel and Lebanon.”
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on September 04-05/2019
Trump on a meeting with Iran’s Rouhani:
‘Anything is possible’
AFP, Washington/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday declined to rule out meeting with Iran’s
President Hassan Rouhani even as his administration piled more sanctions on
Tehran. Asked at the White House whether he might meet with the Iranian leader
at the United Nations, Trump responded: “Sure, anything is possible.”Rouhani had
announced earlier Wednesday that Tehran was poised to take another step back
from its commitments under a 2015 nuclear deal, from which the US withdrew from
in May. A short time after Rouhani’s statement, US officials announced new
sanctions on Iran, this time targeting a shipping network it said was run by
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard to smuggle oil. Brian Hook, the State Department
coordinator on Iran, also ruled out a French-proposed credit line that Tehran
said could bring it back into full compliance with the 2015 deal curbing its
nuclear program.
US slaps sanctions on Iran shipping network over Syria oil
Agencies/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
The United States on Wednesday sanctioned an “oil for terror” network of firms,
ships and individuals allegedly directed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps that supplied Syria with oil worth hundreds of millions of dollars in
breach of US sanctions.
The US action intensified a “maximum pressure” campaign aimed at driving to zero
Iran’s oil exports, the country’s main source of income, and almost certainly
will increase tensions that erupted when President Donald Trump withdrew last
year from an international accord designed to stop Tehran from producing nuclear
weapons. Iran has been gradually reducing its compliance with the 2015 agreement
in a bid to pressure European countries to compensate it for the severe damage
done to its economy by multiple rounds of US sanctions. Tehran was expected to
announce further breaches sometime this month. The 10 individuals blacklisted on
Wednesday included Rostam Qasemi, a former Iranian oil minister, and his son,
the US Treasury Department said in a statement. Also hit were subsidiaries of an
Indian company with an interest in the Adrian Darya, the Iranian tanker
suspected of carrying oil for Syria that has been cruising the Mediterranean
since its release from detention by British authorities off Gibraltar in July,
it said. The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control action froze
any assets in the United States of the designated entities and generally
prohibited US citizens or companies from doing business with them. US officials
said that the Qods Force, the IRGC’s elite foreign paramilitary and espionage
arm, and Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Lebanese militia movement, profited
financially from the sales of Iranian oil and petroleum products, mostly to
Syria, that this spring alone were worth more than $750 million. “Treasury’s
action against this sprawling petroleum network makes it explicitly clear that
those purchasing Iranian oil are directly supporting Iran’s militants and
terrorist arm, the IRGC-Qods Force,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in
the statement. US officials said that the Qods Force used the network to hide
its involvement in the oil sales to Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government
and other unidentified “illicit actors” and relied heavily on Hezbollah
officials and front companies to broker the contracts. The Qods Force and
Hezbollah have been major backers of Damascus in the civil war that erupted in
2011 against decades of Assad family rule. The Qods Force and Hezbollah are on
the US list of foreign terrorist organizations. “This vast oil-for-terror
shipping network demonstrates how economically reliant Tehran is on the IRGC-QF
and Hezbollah as financial lifelines,” said Sigal Mandaker, the senior Treasury
official who oversees sanctions. On Tuesday, the United States imposed sanctions
on the three Iranian space agencies, the Treasury Department said, as Washington
ramps up pressure over Tehran's nuclear program. The Treasury targeted the Iran
Space Agency, Iran Space Research Center and the Astronautics Research
Institute, according to a statement on its website. “The United States will not
allow Iran to use its space launch program as cover to advance its ballistic
missile programs,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement.
Iran says US sanctions on its space agencies ‘ineffective’
Reuters, Dubai/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
Iran rejected on Wednesday as “ineffective” US sanctions imposed on Tehran’s
civilian space agency and two research organisations for allegedly being used to
advance the country’s disputed ballistic missile program. “Americans are
addicted to sanctions. These sanctions are totally ineffective,” Iran’s
semi-official Tasnim news agency quoted Foreign Ministry Mohammad Javad Zarif as
saying. On Tuesday, the US Treasury sanctions targeted the Iran Space Agency,
Iran Space Research Centre and the Astronautics Research Institute, according to
a statement on its website.
Brian Hook: US will not provide waivers for Iran credit line plan
Agencies/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
The United States Special Representative for Iran Brian Hook said on Wednesday
that the United States would not provide any sanctions waivers to accommodate a
French proposal to extend a $15 million credit line to Iran. “We did sanctions
today. There will be more sanctions coming. We can’t make it any more clear that
we are committed to this campaign of maximum pressure and we are not looking to
grant any exceptions or waivers,” Hook told reporters. Hook said Iran engages in
“nuclear extortion” in talks with west. He added, however, that he has not yet
seen a “concrete” French proposal and could therefore not comment on the
idea.Hook was speaking to discuss the latest volley of US sanctions on Iran. He
noted that the United States also imposed other sanctions on Iran on Friday and
Tuesday and warned, “There will be more sanctions coming,” according to AFP.
France has proposed offering Iran about $15 billion in credit lines until
year-end if Tehran comes fully back into compliance with its 2015 nuclear deal,
a move that hinges on Washington not blocking it, Western and Iranian sources
said. French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves le Drian said talks on the credit
arrangement, which would be guaranteed by Iranian oil revenues, were continuing,
but US approval would be crucial.
Iran says will return to nuclear deal only under oil credit
line
Reuters, Dubai/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
A senior Iranian official confirmed on Wednesday that Tehran would return to its
nuclear deal commitment only if it gets $15 billion for oil sales over four
months, as stipulated in a draft French plan to salvage the accord, Iran’s Fars
news agency said. France has proposed offering Iran about $15 billion in credit
lines until year-end if Tehran comes fully back into compliance with its 2015
nuclear deal, a move that hinges on Washington not blocking it. “Our return to
the full implementation of the nuclear accord is subject to the receipt of $15
billion over a four-month period, otherwise the process of reducing Iran’s
commitments will continue,” Fars quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi as
saying.
Rouhani: Iran will give EU countries two-month deadline to save nuclear deal
Reuters/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
Iran will give another two-month deadline to EU countries to save its 2015
nuclear deal, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said on Wednesday, according to
ISNA. Rouhani added that it is unlikely that the country would reach an
agreement with the EU to salvage the nuclear deal. If the EU countries fail to
take effective measures by September 7, then Iran will take the third step in
scaling down its commitments to the nuclear deal, Rouhani told a cabinet meeting
according to Iran's semi-official Mehr news agency. Rouhani also said that new
steps to further scale back Tehran’s commitments under a 2015 pact with major
powers will accelerate Iran’s nuclear activity, state TV reported. “We will
announce (cuts in commitments) which will accelerate the activities of Iran’s
nuclear programme,” Rouhani was quoted as saying by Iran’s state TV. On the same
day, a senior Iranian official confirmed that Tehran would return to its nuclear
deal commitment only if it gets $15 billion for oil sales over four months, as
stipulated in a draft French plan to salvage the accord, Iran’s Fars news agency
said. Meanwhile, the Iranian army confirmed it has recently conducted secret
military missions and will continue to do so.
Iran announces steps to further scale back nuclear
commitments
Reuters, Dubai/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani says Tehran will further scale back its nuclear
commitments, adding that “the country's leadership will take all actions to
secure Iranians’ interests.”During his speech, Rouhani said that Iran’s third
nuclear step involved the development of centrifuges.
His comments came after the United States sanctioned a sprawling network of
firms, ships and individuals allegedly directed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps that supplied Syria with oil worth tens of millions of dollars.
Iranian officials appeared to give a guarded welcome to a French proposal to
save the atomic pact by offering Iran about $15 billion in credit lines until
the end of the year if Tehran comes fully back into compliance. On Tuesday, the
United States imposed sanctions on the three Iranian space agencies, the
Treasury Department said, as Washington ramps up pressure over Tehran's nuclear
program.
Iran says it will free seven crew members of detained UK tanker
Reuters/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
Iran will free seven crew members of the detained British-flagged tanker Stena
Impero, Iranian state television reported on Wednesday. The owner of the
UK-flagged tanker Stena Impero said Wednesday that arrangements are underway for
the release of the seven crew members by Iran. The vessel’s owner added that no
confirmation of a release date has been directly received from Iranian
authorities, adding that the remaining 16 crew members will remain on board to
operate the vessel. Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi told the TV that
the seven, who include Indian citizens, were allowed to leave the tanker on
humanitarian grounds and could leave Iran soon. “We have no problem with the
crew and the captain and the issue is violations that the vessel committed,”
Mousavi said. The Swedish-owned Stena Impero was detained by Iran’s
Revolutionary Guards on July 19 in the Strait of Hormuz waterway for alleged
marine violations, two weeks after Britain detained an Iranian tanker off the
territory of Gibraltar. That ship was released in August. The seizure of the
Iranian tanker exacerbated tensions between Tehran and the West since the United
States last year pulled out of an international agreement curbing Iran’s nuclear
program and reimposed economic sanctions.
US offering cash rewards to tanker captains of Iranian ships: FT
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
The United States is offering cash rewards to captains of Iranian tankers in a
bid to “disrupt and deter illicit oil exports” of the Iranian regime as part of
their “maximum pressure” campaign, a report by the Financial Times shows.
According to the report, the Indian captain of the Adrian Darya 1 – formally
known as the Grace 1 – received an email from the US Special Representative for
Iran Brian Hook in which he was offered several million dollars if he steered
the Iranian vessel toward a country that would seize it on behalf of Washington.
“With this money you can have any life you wish and be well-off in old age,”
Hook wrote in one of several emails to Kumar seen by the Financial Times. “If
you choose not to take this easy path, life will be much harder for you,” Hook
also warned in the message. According to Hook, the offer was part of the US
State Department’s “Rewards for Justice” program established in 1984 in which
the US Secretary of State is authorized to offer and pay cash rewards to persons
with counter-terror information. “The majority of reward offers are up to $5
million; however, all reward payments are made at the sole discretion of the
Secretary of State,” according to the State Department. On Aug. 30, the US
sanctioned Iranian oil tanker Adrian Darya 1 and its captain for enabling Iran’s
Revolutionary Guard Corps to “ship and transfer large volumes of oil… to fund
the regime’s malign activities and propagate terrorism.” The Adrian Darya 1 was
ordered released by Gibraltar on August 15 and was last registered off the coast
of Lebanon and Syria on Monday. A day later, it appeared to have turned off its
transponder in the Mediterranean west of Syria. The vessel was detained by
British Royal Marine commandos off Gibraltar on July 4 as it was suspected to be
en route to Syria in violation of European Union sanctions.
As part of Washington’s “maximum pressure campaign”, Hook told Al Arabiya in a
previous interview that imposed oil sanctions on Iran alone will deny the regime
50 billion dollars in revenue annually, adding that the pressure is going to
continue. On Wednesday, the US sanctioned an “oil for terror” network of firms,
ships, and individuals allegedly directed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps that supplied Syria with oil worth hundreds of millions of dollars in
breach of US sanctions.
Sweden FM: Iran released seven crew members of seized
tanker Stena Impero
Reuters/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
Iran has released seven of the 23 crew members of the British-flagged tanker
Stena Impero that was seized earlier this summer, Sweden’s foreign minister said
on Wednesday. The Swedish-owned Stena Impero was detained by Iran’s
Revolutionary Guards on July 19 in the Strait of Hormuz waterway for alleged
marine violations, two weeks after Britain detained an Iranian tanker off the
territory of Gibraltar. That vessel was released in August. Sweden’s Foreign
Minister Margot Wallstrom said in a statement that the Swedish embassy in Tehran
had confirmed that seven of the 23 members had been released. “I note with
relief that part of the crew has been released. I now look forward to the
release of the entire ship and the rest of the crew. This is, of course, very
gratifying for the crew and their relatives,” Wallstrom said. The statement did
not say which of the crew members had been released or mention their current
whereabouts. Wallstrom said Sweden had been in daily contact with Iran, on a
high political level since the vessel was seized. “It was also an important item
on the agenda when I met Foreign Minister Zarif in Stockholm. Although the ship
is British-flagged, we have done everything we could to assist,” Wallstrom said.
Earlier on Wednesday Erik Hanell, Stena Bulk’s chief executive and president,
said in a statement that seven members would be released and that the remaining
crew would remain onboard the vessel to safely operate the vessel. Earlier on
Wednesday, Iran’s state television reported that Tehran would free seven of the
crew on humanitarian grounds.
Turkey’s Erdogan defies pressure not to have nuclear warheads
AFP, Istanbul/Thursday, 5 September 2019
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday lashed out at pressure on
some countries - including his own - not to acquire missiles with nuclear
warheads. “Some (countries) have missiles with nuclear warheads in their hands
but I shouldn’t have it. I do not accept this,” he said in a speech in the
eastern city of Sivas. Turkey does not possess nuclear weapons and has been a
party to the nuclear nonproliferation treaty since 1980. The Turkish leader’s
remarks come amid burgeoning defense ties between Turkey and Russia in defiance
of Ankara’s NATO ally the United States. Washington has reacted to Turkey’s
purchase of the S-400 by kicking the country off its F-35 fighter jet program.
The US says Russia will be able to glean sensitive technical knowledge about the
new fighter if it is operated alongside the S-400. On Friday, Erdogan suggested
Turkey could look to Russia for an alternative after its F-35 exclusion.
Netanyahu makes snap trip to London for Johnson talks
AFP, Jerusalem/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
With less than two weeks to go before Israel’s general election, Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said he is to visit London on Thursday for talks
with Prime Minister Boris Johnson. It said Netanyahu, facing what could be a
tough fight for re-election on September 17, would also meet US Defense
Secretary Mark Esper while in the British capital. Netanyahu returns to Israel
on Friday. It would be his first meeting with Johnson or Esper since the two
took up their current posts, his office said in a statement. “The PM will
discuss with British prime minister Johnson the situation in the (Middle East)
region and how to repel Iranian terror and aggression,” it said. The meeting
with Esper, it added, would focus on “Israel’s security needs” after the two had
spoken by phone on Tuesday and agreed to “expand their conversation in London.”
Israeli media have said that the United States and Israel are discussing the
possible announcement of some form of defense alliance, likely to boost
Netanyahu’s image as an international statesman. Just ahead of inconclusive
April 9 parliamentary polls, US President Donald Trump acknowledged Israeli
sovereignty over the Golan, in what amounted to a major pre-election gift to his
close ally Netanyahu. On March 25 the two men met in Washington for a signing of
Trump’s order recognizing Israel’s right to the strategic Golan Heights it
captured from Syria in the 1967 Six-Day War.
Kurdish official: Syria’s ‘safe zone’ off to a good start
The Associated Press, DarbasiyahWednesday, 4 September 2019
A senior Syrian Kurdish official says the creation of a so-called “safe zone” in
northeastern Syria is off to good start, with US-backed Kurdish-led forces
pulling back from an initial part of the border with Turkey. But she says calm
can only prevail if Turkey also removes its troops. Ilham Ahmed of the US-backed
Syrian Democratic Council says details are still being worked out but an
understanding was reached last month between Ankara and Washington. It was
announced after repeated Turkish threats of a military offensive in northeastern
Syria. Turkey views the US-backed Kurdish People’s Protection Units as an
extension of a Kurdish insurgency within Turkey. Ahmed says the arrangement
could include joint US-Turkish patrols in areas from which Kurdish-led forces
pulled out. Syrians in Turkey could start returning home.
Thousands of children in northwest Syria to miss school: NGO
AFP, Beirut/Wednesday, 4 September 2019
Thousands of children risk missing out on their education in northwestern Syria
after a months-long regime assault on the extremist-run bastion that has closed
dozens of schools, a charity said. A fragile ceasefire has held in the Idlib
region since Saturday, following four months of air strikes that have killed
hundreds of civilians and caused mass displacement. “Thousands of children due
to start the school year in northwest Syria may not have access to education”
after the latest violence, Save the Children said. Classes are set to start at
the end of September, but just over half of the region’s 1,193 schools can still
operate, it said.“As the new school year starts, the remaining functional
schools can only accommodate up to 300,000 of the 650,000 school-age children,”
it said. The heavy bombardment since late April has damaged or impacted 87
educational facilities, the Britain-based NGO said. A further 200 schools are
being used as shelters for those displaced by the fighting, it added. The Idlib
region is home to some three million people, almost half of whom have been
displaced from other parts of Syria in the country’s eight-year war. Children
make up nearly half of the region’s total population, the United Nations says.
The violence since late April has killed more than 960 civilians, according to
the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, and displaced more than 400,000 people,
the UN says. After bombardment damaging schools or forcing them to close, many
parents are scared to send their children to those still open, Save the Children
said. “Teachers are telling us that parents are pleading with them to shut
schools for fear of them being attacked,” the group’s Syria country director
Sonia Khush said. “Many children are dealing with losing their homes, loss and
grief. They should not have to fear losing their lives whilst they try to
learn,” she added. Idlib has since January been ruled by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham,
an alliance led by Syria’s former al-Qaeda affiliate. Syria’s conflict has
killed more than 370,000 people and displaced more than half of the country’s
pre-war population since starting in 2011 with the brutal repression of
anti-government protests.
Pressure on Netanyahu to Expand Hebron Settlement
Tel Aviv - Ramallah- Nazir Magally and Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday,
4 September, 2019 - 11:45
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is facing pressure by settlers to
announce an expansion of the Jewish settlement in Hebron, political sources have
revealed. The Palestinian Authority warned of an expected visit by Netanyahu to
Hebron, describing this visit as a “colonial” move. The sources said that
Netanyahu is likely to yield to pressure despite the international criticism and
strong Palestinian condemnation he would be subjected to. Netanyahu’s planned
visit is “racial and colonial,” the Palestinian Foreign Ministry said, noting
that it comes at a time he is seeking to secure more votes from the right-wing.
It pointed out that the visit comes also in line with “Israeli plans to Judaize
the old city of Hebron, including the Ibrahimi Mosque.” The Ministry further
deplored policies on settlement expansion in the occupied Palestinian
territories, along with the crimes of destroying houses, mosques and
institutions.
It also warned of the risks and consequences of the Israeli PM’s visit,
especially after the occupation authorities took discriminatory measures against
the residents of Tel Rumeida, the Old City and its vicinity in preparation for
the visit.The Ministry called on the international community and international
organizations to “assume legal and moral responsibility towards the suffering of
the Palestinian people in Hebron.” Hebron was a prosperous commercial city,
until a settler doctor carried out a massacre in 1994 when he entered the
Ibrahimi Mosque during fajr prayers and shot the worshipers, killing 29
Palestinians, while the Israeli army killed 20 others. Yitzhak Rabin’s
government was offered the chance to evict settlers from Hebron, but he failed
to do so and he protected them militarily with a fence, which was later used to
tighten the noose on the city mainly under Netanyahu’s rule.
Canada stands ready to respond to Hurricane Dorian
September 4, 2019 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Honourable Chrystia Freeland, Minister of Foreign Affairs, and the
Honourable Maryam Monsef, Minister of International Development and Minister for
Women and Gender Equality, today issued the following statement regarding
Hurricane Dorian:
“Canadians remain gravely concerned by Hurricane Dorian and we express our
condolences to all those affected by its devastation.
“Canadian government officials have been deployed to the Bahamas to assess the
situation.
“An airport engineering specialist is now in Nassau as part of two Regional
Rapid Needs Assessment Teams led by the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management
Agency (CDEMA). As they gain access to the hardest hit areas, these assessment
teams will help provide a clearer picture of the storm’s impact on the affected
populations and their associated needs.
“Two additional Canadian officials are arriving in Nassau today to provide added
capacity and expertise as well as support to Canadians.
“In the aftermath of Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas, Canada is also announcing
up to $500,000 in emergency assistance to support experienced humanitarian
organizations. Canada’s contribution will support the efforts of humanitarian
partners to respond quickly to needs once assessments are completed of those
communities most affected by the disaster. We continue to work closely with
CDEMA and the Government of the Bahamas to identify how Canada can best support
the provision of emergency assistance.
“Canada takes the safety and security of Canadians abroad very seriously. We
continue to closely monitor Hurricane Dorian’s trajectory and the situation in
the affected areas and stand ready to provide consular assistance to Canadian
citizens as required.
“We encourage Canadians to regularly consult the Travel Advice and Advisories
for updated information and to register with the Registration of Canadians
Abroad service to receive the latest advice.
“Canadians in the affected areas should monitor local media for information and
advice and follow the instructions of local authorities and emergency workers.
We urge Canadian citizens in the affected areas to contact and reassure their
loved ones, even if they have not been affected by the hurricane.
“Canadian citizens requiring emergency consular assistance can contact Global
Affairs Canada’s 24/7 Emergency Watch and Response Centre in Ottawa at
1-800-387-3124 (toll-free), 1 613-996-8885 or email
sos@international.gc.ca.
“The Government of Canada remains in close contact with all its partners in the
Caribbean and stands ready to continue to respond as needed and appropriate.”
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on September 04-05/2019
Saudi Journalist: The Hadith Which Instructs
Us To Fight Unbelievers Until Islam Is The Religion Of The Entire World
Contradicts The Quran And Is Exploited By ISIS, Should Be Removed From The
School Curriculum
MEMRI/September 04/2019
Saudi Arabia recently published its new school textbooks for the 2019 school
year. Following the publication of the books Dr. Suhaila Zain Al-'Abidin Hamad,
a researcher of Islam and the daughter of Sheikh Zain Al-'Abidin Hamad (d.
1975), a former imam and preacher at the Prophet's Mosque in Medina, published
an article in which she opposed the inclusion in the high school curriculum of a
hadith (tradition attributed to the Prophet) which calls for fighting the
non-Muslims until they convert to Islam. Writing in the Al-Madina daily, she
argued that the hadith is not authentic because it contradicts the Quran, and
said that it has been included in the curriculum only because it is quoted in
the two most important Sunni collections of hadiths, Sahih Bukhari and Sahih
Muslim, which grants it credibility in the eyes of many.
Hamad noted that Muslim jurisprudents have used this hadith to issue fatwas
condoning the killing of all non-Muslims, and of Muslims who do not fulfill all
the commandments of Islam, and calling to fight them until Islam is the religion
of the entire world. Furthermore, she said, the Islamic State (ISIS) has used it
and the fatwas based upon it to justify its acts of terror.
Suhaila Zain Al-'Abidin Hamad (Source: Alarabiya.net, November 5, 2013)
The following are translated excerpts from Hamad's article:[1]
"[According to a hadith, the Prophet said:] 'I have been commanded to fight
against people until they testify that there is no god but Allah, that Muhammad
is the Messenger of Allah, and fulfill the obligation of prayer, and pay the
zakat; and if they do it, their lives and property are guaranteed my protection
on condition that [they conduct themselves] according to the law of Islam, and
[on Judgement Day] Allah [will determine] their fate.'
"This hadith contradicts the Quran, according to which Allah says:
"1. 'And had your Lord willed, those on earth would have believed – all of them
entirely. Then, [O Muhammad], would you compel the people in order that they
become believers? And it is not for a soul to believe except by permission of
Allah, and He will place defilement upon those who will not use reason.' [Quran
10:99-100]
"2. 'And if your Lord had willed, He could have made mankind one community; but
they will not cease to differ. Except whom your Lord has given mercy, and for
that He created them. But the word of your Lord is to be fulfilled that, "I will
surely fill Hell with jinn and men all together."' [Quran 11:118-119]
"3. 'There is no coercion in religion.' [Quran 2: 256]
"4. 'Not upon you, [O Muhammad], is [responsibility for] their guidance, but
Allah guides whom He wills.' [Quran 2:272]
"5. 'Indeed, [O Muhammad], you do not guide whom you like, but Allah guides whom
He wills. And He is most knowing of the [rightly] guided.' [Quran 28:56]
"Presenting [Quran] 8:39 – 'And fight them until there is no fitna and [until]
the religion, all of it, is for Allah. And if they cease – then indeed, Allah is
Seeing of what they do' – as proof [of the need to force non-Muslims to convert]
is [also] inappropriate, for this verse descended in the context of the infidels
of Mecca, who led the Muslims astray and tormented them, forcing them to
emigrate to Al-Habash [a region in the Horn of Africa] and later to Al-Madina,
after they conspired to kill the Prophet Muhammad. It did not [descend] in the
context of fighting all non-Muslims until they convert.
"Although this [hadith] contradicts all of these Quranic texts, it turns out
that those in charge of our religious studies insist on including it in the high
school curriculum on the topic of tawhid,[2] or the oneness of God..., because
it appears in the [major collections of hadiths considered authentic in Sunni
Islam], Sahih Bukhari... and Sahih Muslim... [Bukhari and Muslim, who compiled
these collections] apparently failed to notice that this hadith contradicts the
Quran, [but 8th century theologian] Imam Malik [ibn Anas] omitted it from his
[compilation of hadiths,] the Muwatta... because it contradicts the Quran.
Hadith scholars agree that texts which contradict the Quran must not be accepted
as authentic, for [whoever does so] attributes greater sanctity to the books of
Bukhari and Muslim than to the Quran.
"Some scholars relied on this hadith in issuing fatwas that accuse others of
heresy and permit the killing of any [Muslim] group which refrains from saying
certain prayers or [performing certain religious] duties... Some [scholars] even
issued fatwas obliging [the Muslims] to fight until all religion [in the world]
is for Allah. If we follow this fatwa, we must fight until Judgement Day in
order to impose Islam on the entire human race.
"Fatwas like these strengthen the lies of the Orientalists, that Islam was
spread by the force of the sword. The members of ISIS used this hadith and the
fatwas based upon it to justify the killing of people whom they accused of
heresy, including Muslims. In fact, they went very far in accusing Muslims of
heresy, killed them and their families, destroyed their property, and captured
and raped their wives.
"How long will we remain hostage to the understanding and interpretations of
religious texts provided by certain ancient religious scholars, despite the fact
that [these interpretations] are clearly at odds with the Quran? [How long will
we] accept the authenticity of hadiths that lack a chain of transmission
[leading back to] the Prophet even though they contradict the Quran? Who
benefits from [including] this hadith in our curricula in the age of terror
organizations that exploit hadiths of this sort to justify their acts of terror
and the accusations of heresy they make against others?"
[1] Al-Madina (Saudi Arabia), August 23, 2019.
[2] Tawhid is the oneness of God, i.e., the belief in Allah alone (monotheism)
and the public declaration of this by means of the phrase "There is no god but
Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah." The Salafi-jihadi stream stresses
the centrality of this Islamic principle and its adherents and even use the term
muwahhidoun ("those who declare the oneness of God") to designate themselves.
Italy: Salvini Down but Not Out
Soeren Kern/Gatestone Institute/September 04/2019
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14817/italy-matteo-salvini
The new governing alliance, if realized, may be short lived. In an interview
with the Italian daily La Stampa, former Interior Minister Roberto Maroni of the
Lega Nord party said that the new government, if it comes to fruition, will be
"intrinsically weak" because it would exist, "not for a shared political project
but only to avoid elections." He added that there was a possibility that the new
government could last for the entire legislature "in order to avoid delivering
the country to Salvini."
"Do you think I am afraid of a few months in opposition?" Salvini asked in a
Facebook video. "You have not got rid of me with your political games. You do
not know me, I do not give in." He has called for a protest against the new
government in Rome on October 19. Polls show that 67% of Italians are in favor
of early elections.
"We Hungarians will never forget that you [Salvini] were the first Western
European leader to make an effort to prevent illegal migrants from flooding
Europe via the Mediterranean Sea. Irrespective of future political developments
in Italy and of the fact that we belong to different European party groups, we
consider you as a brother in arms in the fight to preserve Europe's Christian
heritage and stop migration." — Hungarian President Viktor Orbán.
Matteo Salvini, Italy's deputy premier and interior minister since 2018, has
been shut out of the Italian government after his gambit to force snap elections
to become prime minister backfired. (Photo by Ernesto S. Ruscio/Getty Images)
Matteo Salvini, Italy's deputy premier and interior minister since 2018, has
been shut out of the Italian government after his gambit to force snap elections
to become prime minister backfired.
As the de facto leader of Europe's anti-mass-migration movement, Salvini's
departure from government may set back efforts to slow illegal immigration to
the continent. Many analysts, however, believe that Salvini, who continues to
lead his rivals in opinion polls, will be back in government soon and in an even
stronger position than before.
On August 8, after months of public feuding, Salvini declared the governing
coalition between his League party and the anti-establishment Five Star Movement
(M5S) unworkable. He accused M5S of blocking the League's main policies and said
that the only way forward was to hold fresh elections.
The League and M5S, ahead of an inconclusive election in March 2018, had been
political adversaries. Three months later, however, they formed an unlikely
alliance. Their June 2018 coalition agreement, outlined in a 39-page action
plan, promised to crack down on illegal immigration and to deport up to 500,000
undocumented migrants.
Since then, Salvini has accused M5S of failing to implement parts of the
coalition agreement. Tensions came to a head on August 7, when, during a session
in Parliament, M5S voted against a project supported by Salvini for a high-speed
train link with France. "It is useless to go ahead with 'no's' and quarrels,"
Salvini wrote on his Facebook page. "Italians need certainty and a government
that works, not a Mr. 'No.'" Salvini called for new elections to be held on
October 13.
In an effort to avoid early elections, which polls show that Salvini would win,
M5S reached out to the rival center-left Democratic Party (PD), cutting
Salvini's League party out of power. M5S and PD clinched a preliminary coalition
agreement on August 28, and a day later Italian President Sergio Mattarella
asked Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, an independent, to form a new coalition
government. Although the League is Italy's most popular party, M5S and PD are
the two largest forces in parliament.
Although the anti-establishment, anti-EU M5S and the pro-establishment, pro-EU
PD have long been political enemies, M5S appears to have set aside many of its
core principles to meet PD's demands. For now, M5S has insisted on maintaining a
hardline anti-illegal immigration law passed with the League in November 2018.
The law, championed by Salvini, saw public support for the League skyrocket from
17% in the March 2018 election to 38% in August 2019.
The new government — which aims to govern until the next general election, due
to be held no later than May 2023 — will have to be approved in a vote of
confidence by both houses of Parliament.
The new governing alliance, if realized, may be short lived. In an interview
with the Italian daily La Stampa, former Interior Minister Roberto Maroni of the
Lega Nord party said that the new government, if it comes to fruition, will be
"intrinsically weak" because it would exist, "not for a shared political project
but only to avoid elections." He added that there was a possibility that the new
government could last for the entire legislature "in order to avoid delivering
the country to Salvini."
Several Italian newspapers reported on efforts by German Chancellor Angela
Merkel and other European officials to prevent early elections in Italy — solely
to stop Salvini from becoming prime minister. Merkel reportedly ordered leaders
of the PD to reach a coalition agreement with M5S. "Make the agreement and stop
Salvini," she reportedly said.
A leaked document showed that outgoing EU Budget Commissioner Günther Oettinger
had offered to relax EU rules on public debt in exchange for "a pro-European
government that does not work against Europe."
Writing for the Italian daily Il Giornale, political correspondent Andrea Indini
noted:
"Berlin's interference with the decisions of the Democratic Party are not
surprising at all. As we have reported in recent days, the first meeting between
M5S and PD dates back to July 16, when Ursula von der Leyen was elected
president of the European Commission, thanks in part to support from M5S and PD.
Von der Leyen is not just any person, she is Merkel's clone. Her election is
part of a strategy executed alongside French President Emmanuel Macron to split
the nationalist bloc in Europe. It is certainly not a coincidence that, moments
after Salvini pulled the plug on his government, [former Italian prime minister
and former European Commission president] Romano Prodi, faster than a slingshot,
called for Italy to be governed by an 'Ursula Coalition' that is formed by the
same political forces [M5S and PD] that helped to elect von der Leyen.
"That there are international interests behind the formation of the new
coalition government is now clear to most. 'The Democratic Party is at the
service of foreign countries,' Salvini said last night during a rally in Pinzolo.
'They think we are all sheep and slaves, ready to wait for what they say in
Brussels and Paris, but the League defends the Italians, because we are free
men.' At this point Salvini has no choice but to play the next match against the
opposition with the weapons he has available. His men have already made it known
that they will pass nothing in the Parliament that comes from M5S-PD, but above
all from those who sponsor them: Merkel, Macron and Ursula von der Leyen."
Salvini's political rivals relished his departure from government. Former
Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, in a Facebook post, proclaimed: "Today,
Salvini has left the political stage. Institutions 1 — Populism 0."
Salvini, however, has vowed to fight:
"While PD and others are fighting over government positions, we are preparing
for the Italy that is to come from among the people. They will not be able to
run away from the elections for long, let's get ready to win!"
"Do you think I am afraid of a few months in opposition?" Salvini asked in a
Facebook video. "You have not got rid of me with your political games. You do
not know me, I do not give in." He has called for a protest against the new
government in Rome on October 19. Polls show that 67% of Italians are in favor
of early elections.
International commentators agree that Salvini remains a political force to be
reckoned with. International Business Editor of The Daily Telegraph, Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard, noted that Salvini is down but not out:
"Be careful what you wish for in Italian politics. The exile of the volcanic
Matteo Salvini is a Faustian Bargain for the EU establishment and the defenders
of the euro project.
"There must be a high chance that the Lega strongman — and de facto leader of
the Continent's anti-EU rebellion — will sweep back into power with an
overwhelming majority next year or soon after.
"He may then be strong enough to push revolutionary changes through the Italian
constitutional system that would be impossible sooner: A New Deal spending blitz
backed by a politically-controlled Bank of Italy and a parallel "minibot"
currency that neutralizes the enforcement tools of the European Central Bank.
"His departure this week means that others will be left to grapple with Italy's
intractable stagnation. It is they who will have to push through €23bn of
austerity cuts to comply with the EU's stability pact and the fiscal compact,
the paraphernalia of arcane budget rules concocted by lawyers and unworkable in
a serious downturn. Mr. Salvini's hands will be clean. 'It is a win-win
situation for us,' said Claudio Borghi, the Lega's economics chief."
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán thanked Salvini for his efforts
"benefitting Italy and the whole of Europe including Hungary." In a letter
published by the Hungarian news agency MTI, Orbán wrote:
"We Hungarians will never forget that you were the first Western European leader
to make an effort to prevent illegal migrants from flooding Europe via the
Mediterranean Sea. Irrespective of future political developments in Italy and of
the fact that we belong to different European party groups, we consider you as a
brother in arms in the fight to preserve Europe's Christian heritage and stop
migration."
On August 30, meanwhile, 62 Pakistani migrants landed on an island off Gallipoli
in southern Italy. On September 1, Salvini, who remains acting interior
minister, banned the Alan Kurdi, a ship operated by the German charity Sea-Eye,
with 13 migrants aboard, from entering Italian waters. Another ship, the Mare
Jonio, is anchored a kilometer from the Italy's southernmost island of Lampedusa
with 34 migrants who were rescued on August 28 off the coast of Libya.
Salvini has warned that the new coalition would end his ban on migrant boats
arriving from Africa: "If the PD wants to reopen the doors and allow the
business of illegal immigration to start up again, it should tell that to
Italians."
*Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Boko Haram: Bloody Terror, No End in Sight
Uzay Bulut/Gatestone Institute/September 04/2019
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14785/boko-haram-bloody-terror
Every year, Nigeria's Boko Haram, which has gained a foothold in the neighboring
African countries of Cameroon, Chad and Niger, appears to be growing stronger.
Suicide bombings and other deadly attacks committed by Boko Haram terrorists
over the past decade have claimed the lives of tens of thousands of innocent
people, while more than two million others have been displaced.
"Nigeria's government has proved itself to be incompetent at best, and at worst,
complicit in the attacks." — International Christian Concern's regional manager
for Africa, Nathan Johnson, to Gatestone Institute.
"The United States Agency for International Development (USAID), for example,
gives billions of dollars in aid to northeastern Nigeria. The problem is that
aid, which helps fix small amounts of damage, is not a sufficient answer. As
long as groups such as Boko Haram are able to keep destroying whole villages and
infrastructure -- while devastating populations -- NGOs will never be able to
keep up." — International Christian Concern's regional manager for Africa,
Nathan Johnson, to Gatestone Institute.
Boko Haram just celebrated the 10th anniversary of its establishment. Every
year, the Nigerian terrorist group, which has gained a foothold in the
neighboring African countries of Cameroon, Chad and Niger, appears to be growing
stronger. Pictured: Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau, from a November 2018
propaganda video by the group.
Boko Haram, the ISIS-aligned group seeking to establish an Islamic caliphate in
Nigeria, just celebrated the 10th anniversary of its establishment. Contrary to
initial and subsequent assessments, however, the terrorist group, also known as
Islamic State's West Africa Province (ISWAP), was not to be easily defeated. On
the contrary, every year, the jihadist group, which has gained a foothold in the
neighboring African countries of Cameroon, Chad and Niger, appears to be growing
stronger.
Suicide bombings and other deadly attacks committed by Boko Haram terrorists
over the past decade have claimed the lives of tens of thousands of innocent
people, while more than two million others have been displaced. These figures do
not even include the thousands of women and children abducted, some of whom,
according to the Counter Extremism Project (CEP), "have been forced to carry out
suicide missions."
The CEP explains:
"Boko Haram has increased the number of female suicide bombers due to the easy
concealment of weapons under hijabs and Islamic customs that forbid men to frisk
women."
According to International Christian Concern (ICC), so far in 2019, Boko Haram
has kidnapped 179 people in Niger alone, mostly women and girls, a number that
amounts to nearly one person per day. This does not include the many unreported
abductions or those that took place in Nigeria or Cameroon.
ICC's regional manager for Africa, Nathan Johnson, recently told Gatestone that
"this increase in abductions in Niger is worrying, because it shows that Boko
Haram's influence and power are spreading."
Johnson continued: "Islamic extremism has found a home in Africa for multiple
reasons. The first is insecurity. A lack of governmental control has allowed
jihadist groups to hold vast areas of land and have sway over millions of
people's lives. This provides the terrorists with space to train and rest, a
population from which to recruit operatives and the opportunity to raise or
steal money.
"The second reason is poverty and illiteracy. Millions families live in the
poorest of circumstances in Africa's Sahel region. Four of the 10 countries in
the Sahel are among the 25 poorest countries in the world. Their lack of money
means that infrastructure, education and healthcare, among other things, suffer.
With all of these issues, extremist groups find an easy source of volunteers
when they are able to offer money and power.
"The third reason is easy access to weapons. With funding and support from
outside sources such as ISIS, groups like Boko Haram can easily get weapons that
match or beat those of the local militaries of these countries. When Muammar
Gaddafi fell in Libya, a flood of weapons hit the black market and were made
available to terror groups across West Africa. This has made it easier for them
to attack both civilians and soldiers, as well as capture lands.
"Finally, Islam holds a historical claim to much of Africa. It is clear that the
farther north in Africa you go, the stronger Islam's hold. Many North African
countries also already adhere to a very strict and extreme interpretation of
Islam. Mauritania, Algeria and Sudan, for instance, constantly persecute
Christians and other non-Muslims. This means that they are also more likely to
support terrorist groups that share their beliefs. Sudan is a known supporter of
terrorism, for example.
"Nigeria has been the most devastated by Boko Haram, which roughly translates as
'Western education is forbidden.' Until very recently, the Nigerian government
continued to claim that Boko Haram was defeated. Although the terrorist group
did lose territory and power between 2015 and 2017, however, it has regained
almost all of it. Nigeria's government has proved itself to be incompetent at
best, and at worst, complicit in the attacks.
"Many groups have been working for years in Nigeria to help those most affected
by Boko Haram. The United States Agency for International Development (USAID),
for example, gives billions of dollars in aid to northeastern Nigeria. The
problem is that aid, which helps fix small amounts of damage, is not a
sufficient answer. As long as groups such as Boko Haram are able to keep
destroying whole villages and infrastructure -- while devastating populations --
NGOs will never be able to keep up. The attacks have to stop before there can
ever be real healing in those areas."
Boko Haram's campaign of death and destruction includes: An attack on the U.N.
headquarters in Abuja, the capital of Nigeria, in 2011.
The abduction of nearly 300 children from the mostly Christian town of Chibok,
Nigeria in 2014. About 112 Chibok schoolgirls are still missing.
The multi-day massacre of the northern town of Baga and surrounding villages in
2015 that killed approximately 2,000 civilians;
The 2018 attack on a military base in Borno state, which left about 100 soldiers
dead;
The July 2019 attack on a funeral gathering in northeastern Nigeria, in which 65
people were killed;
The July 2019 release of a video of six Christian aid workers in Nigeria begging
for their lives after being kidnapped by Boko Haram
The July 29, 2019 attack on the Christian village of Kalagari in northern
Cameroon, reportedly kidnapping at least eight Christian women and cutting off
their ears.
The August 2019 night raid in southeastern Niger, which left 12 villagers dead.
*Uzay Bulut, a Turkish journalist, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the
Gatestone Institute.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Egypt Reinstates Hate Preaching against Non-Muslims
Raymond Ibrahim/FrontPage Magazine/September 04/2019
Egypt’s leading authorities have reinstated a notoriously “radical” cleric and
hate preacher to the pulpit (minbar), despite strong opposition.
According to Arab Weekly, “The Egyptian Ministry of Religious Endowments, which
controls the mosques, gave Yasser Burhami, the deputy head of the Salafist Call,
the umbrella organisation of Salafi movements, approval to deliver sermons
before Friday prayers at the Wise Caliphs Mosque in Alexandria.”
“Everybody is shocked at the decision to allow this man to preach at the
mosques,” said Saad al-Zunt, the head of the Strategic Studies Centre, a local
think-tank.
“Salafists adhere to a strict version of Islam,” the report explains. “They do
not believe in women’s rights and call for women to be clothed from head to toe.
The Salafists adopt a hostile stance towards non-Muslims, saying they are not
full citizens.”
Indeed, Sheikh Yasser al-Burhami has authored numerous fatwas—edicts based on
Islamic scriptures—that demand hate and hostility for non-Muslims, most
specifically the nation’s largest and most visible minority, the Christian
Copts, whom Burhami has referred to as “a criminal and infidel minority,” one
that he regularly invokes “Allah’s curse” on.
For example and in keeping with the doctrine of al-wala’ w’al bara’ (“Loyalty
and Enmity”), Burhami has called on all Muslims to hate all non-Muslims—going as
far as to say that, although a Muslim man is permitted to marry Christian or
Jewish women (ahl al-kitab), he must make sure he still hates them in his
heart—and show them this hate—because they are infidels; otherwise he risks
compromising his Islam.
Burhami has stated that churches—which he refers to as “places of polytheism
(shirk) and houses of infidelity (kufr)”—must never be built in Egypt. He issued
a separate fatwa forbidding Muslim taxi and bus drivers from transporting
Christian clergymen to their churches, an act he depicted as being “more
forbidden than taking someone to a liquor bar.”
Burhami has also stated that Egypt’s Christians must pay jizya—“protection”
money in exchange for a measure of tolerance, a la Koran 9:29—or be fought to
death.
Even so, the wily sheikh insists that circumstance is the ultimate deciding
factor. In a 2013 video, Burhami said that “Destroying churches is
permissible—as long as the destruction does not bring harm to Muslims, such as
false claims that Muslims are persecuting Christians leading to [foreign]
occupations.”
He further added that “the reason we agree to their being built … and the reason
we do not collect the jizya from the Christians, is because the condition of
Muslims in the current era is well known to the nations of the world—they are
weak and deteriorating among the people.”
Burhami went on to explain that, when the Muslims first conquered Egypt in the
seventh century, and because Christians still far outnumbered their Muslim
overlords, churches were allowed to remain—“just as the prophet allowed the Jews
to remain in Khaibar after he opened [conquered] it, but once Muslims grew in
strength and number, [second caliph] Omar al-Khattab drove them out according to
the prophet’s command, ‘Drive out the Jews and Christians from the Peninsula.’”
Burhami elaborated on the importance of circumstances in an earlier video:
The Jews of Medina represent a paradigm—laid by the prophet [Muhammad]—that
shows how Muslims should deal with infidels. ….. Today in Gaza, we do not tell
Muslims to launch rockets every day and so destroy the country, but we tell them
“Refrain from action and respect the truce.” When the Prophet first arrived in
Medina, he made conciliation with the Jews, conciliation without jizya [i.e.,
equal-term conciliation without forcing Jews to pay tribute and live as
second-class dhimmis]—this is a pattern that can be followed whenever
circumstances dictate…. Yes we can deal with those Christians [Egypt’s Copts] as
the Jews were dealt with in Medina; it is an option. The Prophet made the
Hudaybiya Reconciliation with the infidels and held a truce for ten years [which
he abrogated on becoming stronger]; that is also an option…. So, it is
legitimate to choose from examples set by the Prophet, depending on what suits
the situation of Muslims now.
In plain language, when strong, wage jihad—including by destroying churches and
forcing jizya/extortion money from non-Muslims; when weak, preach peace and
coexistence, including with the “archenemy,” Israel.
Even so, according to the reinstated Salafi cleric, no circumstance ever
requires Muslims to be on friendly terms with non-Muslims. Burhami has
accordingly issued fatwas banning Muslims from congratulating the nation’s
Christian minorities during the latter’s religious holidays; banning Muslims
from in anyway participating in such festivities; and, in an effort to further
impoverish the nation’s Christians, banning Muslims from going to Christian
businesses, pharmacies, hospitals, or any other place of business.
One can go on and on with Burhami’s fatwas—including calling for the persecution
of apostates, permitting Muslim husbands to abandon their wives to rape,
permitting “marriage” to 12-year-old girls, and banning Mother’s Day—but his
quality should be evident by now.
Dr. Naguib Ghobrial, a Coptic activist, politician, and head of the Egyptian
Union for Human Rights Organization—which over the years has lodged 22 separate
complaints against Burhami—expressed his shock concerning the hate preacher’s
reinstatement in a recent video. He repeatedly questioned the leading religious
authorities of the Egyptian Ministry of Religious Endowments, and the Grand Imam
of Al Azhar, how they could allow for the return of Burhami:
Is what Burhami teaches truly what Islam teaches—is that why no one has done
anything to him [in regards to the 22 complaints lodged against him]? Truly I’m
shocked! Please answer Sheikh of Al Azhar; please answer Grand Mufti: are the
things Burhami teaches what Islam teaches? Is this why none of you oppose him or
joined us when we lodged complaints against him?… Why are you so silent?
Amazing!
Egypt’s Muslim leaders are not alone in their silence and/or complicity; as the
Arab Weekly explains, Egyptian President Sisi is also involved, even if for
“political” reasons:
By allowing the Salafists to be present, despite public opposition, Sisi perhaps
wants to discredit Muslim Brotherhood propaganda that his government is waging a
war against Islam, in general, and political Islam, in particular. Sisi has been
a champion of religious reform, calling several times for removing extremist
content from textbooks used in religious schools, reforming religious discourse
and renewing the understanding of religious texts…. Sisi, however, appears to be
repaying the Salafists [Egypt’s most radical Muslims] for backing him all
through.
At day’s end, and whether for political or religious reasons—which in Egypt are
often one and the same—the reinstatement of a notorious hate preacher is an
official nod from the nation’s highest religious and political authorities to
the ongoing radicalization of Egypt—with the nation’s Christian minority the
first to feel the brunt.
Brexit and its Effect on the Middle East
Tom Gross/Asharq Al Awsat/September 04 2019
Britain is in frenzy over Brexit. The country almost seems to be experiencing
some kind of collective ‘mid-life crisis’. Many economic and social decisions
are on hold, and both major political parties, the Conservatives and Labour, are
engaged in bitter infighting over whether, how and when to leave the European
Union. Politics is decidedly domestic at present, so it is not surprising that
there has been little discussion in Britain about how Brexit might affect the
country’s foreign policy. Key international players, including Donald Trump,
Vladimir Putin and the Chinese leadership, are eager for Brexit to proceed
because they believe (correctly, in my view) that it will result in both a
weaker EU and a weaker Britain, and hence boost their own global power and
influence. In order to encourage Britain to make a clean break with Europe,
Trump has asserted that Brexit would enhance Britain’s standing in the world.
But that is not what I hear in private from influential politicians both in
Washington and elsewhere. “We’ve already downgraded the UK,” a senior foreign
policy adviser to a long-standing Republican senator on the influential US
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, told me in private.
Indeed we already see signs of a weakened Britain, as other countries test the
UK’s resolve. Iran seized a British ship in the Gulf in July and arrested 23
crew members. The British government called it “state piracy” but initially did
little in response (though they announced on September 2 that they are now
sending drones). China continues to push back on its treaty with Britain
guaranteeing rights and freedoms in Hong Kong – the UK only agreed to hand the
territory to China [in 1997] on that basis. Yet the British response has been
timid. Observers have noted that criticism of China over Hong Kong by Prime
Minister Boris Johnson has been more muted than that by leaders in Australia and
Canada, for example.
The UK may well continue to be immersed in domestic issues even after Brexit,
not least because many in Scotland and perhaps also Northern Ireland may step up
their campaigns to break away from the UK. They see Brexit as a form of English
nationalism, rather than a British phenomenon. They don’t want to be “England’s
last colonies”. Despite all this, the UK remains an important world power.
It is one of five permanent members of the UN Security Council. It has (with
France) one of the two strongest militaries in Europe. London will remain an
important international financial capital. And British companies and media will
continue to have global influence.
And what of the Middle East? Will Britain change its policies, post-Brexit? In
some ways, perhaps yes. But it is worth remembering that even while the UK was
in the EU there were sharp differences on key issues, most notably the 2003 Iraq
war. The UK, along with Poland, Italy, the Netherlands and others, backed the
American-led overthrow of Saddam, whereas France, Germany and other EU states
rejected American calls to help. On the questions of Iran, and the
Israeli-Palestinian issue, however, the consensus Britain currently enjoys with
the EU may change after Brexit.
On a visit to London last month, US national security adviser John Bolton said
that the US is enthusiastic about “no deal Brexit” and said the US may be
prepared to sign quick trade deals with the UK, sector by sector, rather than
wait for a comprehensive deal which may take years to conclude.
What Bolton did not make explicit is that the Trump administration, as part of
these negotiations, may require the UK to fall into line with American positions
on the Iranian regime. This would please many in both the Arab world and
Israel who share Bolton’s view that the EU-backed “Iran nuclear deal” increases
not decreases the chances of Iran acquiring nuclear weapons in the medium term.
As for Israel, so long as the British Conservatives remain in power, the UK may
also move closer to American p
Netanyahu to NY Times: Attacking Iran was ‘no bluff’
Ariel Kahana/Israel Hayom/September 04/2019
Lengthy New York Times piece shows the extent to which Obama administration
pressured Israeli leader not to attack Iran. US also tested 30,000-pound bomb,
report says. “If I’d had a majority, I would have done it, unequivocally, ”
Netanyahu tells Times.
Netanyahu warns Iran: 'Our planes can reach anywhere in the Middle East' The US
monitored Israeli activity to make sure Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would
not carry out an uncoordinated strike against Iran’s nuclear program, The New
York Times reported on Wednesday.
According to the report, the US believed that Israel was on the verge of
attacking the Islamic republic in 2012, and at one point discovered that Israel
was allegedly carrying out extensive intelligence operations without its
knowledge through Azerbaijan.
The Times said that the information was gathered through “interviews with dozens
of current and former American, Israeli and European officials over several
months reveal the startling details of how close the Israeli military came to
attacking Iran in 2012.”
The interviews also showed “the extent to which the Obama administration felt
required to develop its own military contingency plans in the event of such an
attack, including destroying a full-size mock-up of an Iranian nuclear facility
in the western desert of the United States with a 30,000-pound bomb; how
Americans monitored Israel even as Israel monitored Iran, with American
satellites capturing images of Israel launching surveillance drones into Iran
from a base in Azerbaijan; and previously unknown details about the scope of
Netanyahu’s pressure campaign to get Trump to leave the Iran deal.”
Netanyahu is quoted in the report as saying “this [the potential attack] was not
a bluff – it was real. And only because it was real were the Americans truly
worried about it.”
“If I’d had a majority, I would have done it,” Netanyahu said. “Unequivocally.”The
Times reported that “a parade of top American officials began flying to Israel
during Barack Obama’s first term to take the measure of the Israeli planning and
to convince Netanyahu and [then Defense Minister] Ehud Barak that the United
States was taking the problem seriously and that Iran was hardly on the brink of
getting the bomb.”Regarding the possibility that the Trump administration would
strike another deal with Iran rather than continue the pressure on Tehran,
Netanyahu told the Times that “this time, we will have far greater ability to
exert influence [compared to during the Obama presidency].”
ISLAM: The West’s “most formidable and persistent enemy”
Raymond Ibrahim/FPM/September 04/2019
At the height of Western dominance over Islam in the early twentieth century,
the European historian Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953) made a remarkably prescient
observation that may have seemed exaggerated at the time:
Anyone who doubts that Islam has been “the most formidable and persistent enemy
which our civilization has had,” should familiarize themselves with Islam’s long
offensive record vis-à-vis the West. A succinct summary follows:
According to Islamic history, in 628, the Arabian founder of Islam, Muhammad,
called on the Byzantine Emperor, Heraclius—the symbolic head of Christendom—to
recant Christianity and embrace Islam. The emperor refused, jihad was declared,
and the Arabs invaded Christian Syria, defeating the imperial army at the
pivotal Battle of Yarmuk in 636.
This victory enabled the Muslims to swarm in all directions, so that, less than
a century later, they had conquered the greater, older, and richer part of
Christendom, including Syria, Egypt, and North Africa.
Their drive into Europe from the east was repeatedly frustrated by the Walls of
Constantinople; after the spectacularly failed siege of 717-718, many centuries
would pass before any Muslim power thought to capture the imperial city. The
Arabs did manage to invade Europe proper through and conquered Spain but were
stopped at the Battle of Tours in 732 and eventually driven back south of the
Pyrenees.
For more than two centuries thereafter, Europe continued to be pummeled by land
and sea—untold thousands of Christians were enslaved and every Mediterranean
island sacked—in the ongoing Muslim quest for booty and slaves, as what
historians have dubbed “the Dark Ages” descended on the continent.
The vicissitudes of war ebbed and flowed—the Eastern Roman Empire (“Byzantium”)
made a major comeback against Islam in the tenth century—though the border
largely remained the same. This changed when the Turks, under the leadership of
the Seljuk tribe, became the new standard bearers of jihad. They nearly
annihilated eastern Anatolia, particularly Armenia and Georgia in the eleventh
century and, after the Battle of Manzikert, 1071, overran Asia Minor.
By now, however, Western Europe’s military might had so matured that when the
Pope called on the knights of Christendom to come to the aid of the Christian
East, the First Crusade was born. Western Christians, led by the Franks, marched
into the beast’s lair, defeated their adversaries in several encounters and
managed to establish a firm presence in the Levant, including in Jerusalem,
which they recaptured in 1099—only to lose it less than one hundred years later,
in 1187, after the fateful Battle of Hattin. By 1297, the Crusader presence was
eliminated from the Middle East.
But if it failed in the East, the Crusade succeeded in the West. A handful of
years after the Muslim invasion and conquest of Spain around 711, fugitive
Christians holed in the northern mountains of Asturia began the Reconquista; by
1085 it had proven effective enough to prompt two new Muslim invasions from
Africa to counter it. Again, the ebb and flow of war dominated the landscape,
but by 1212, at Las Navas de Tolosa, Spain’s indigenous Christians gave Islam
its death-stroke, so that by 1252 it was confined to Granada at the southernmost
tip of Iberia.
Around that same time, a violent but relatively short-lived Mongolian storm
overwhelmed much of the east; both Christians (notably Russians) and Muslims
were pummeled. A new Turkish dynasty arose from the Seljuk ashes: the
Ottomans—whose identity revolved around the concept of jihad more than any of
their predecessors—renewed Islam’s perennial war on Christendom. They managed to
enter Eastern Europe, defeated a combined army of Crusaders at Nicopolis in
1396, took much of the Balkans, and crowned their achievement by fulfilling
Muhammad’s desire of conquering Constantinople—and enslaving and raping
thousands of its inhabitants in ways that ISIS tries to mimic—in 1453.
But mourning was soon tempered by joy: to the west, Spain finally conquered
Granada in 1492, thereby snuffing out Islam as a political power; to the east,
the most overlooked chapter of Muslim-Christian conflict was also coming to an
end. The Russians, who had lived under distinctly Islamic rule for nearly two
centuries, finally cast off the “Tatar Yoke” in 1480.
Even so, the Ottomans continued to be the scourge of Christendom; they continued
making inroads into Europe—reaching but failing to capture Vienna in 1529—and
sponsored the seaborne jihad originating from North Africa. While the Muslims
largely failed to capture new European lands, Barbary pirates and Crimean
slavers captured and sold approximately five million Europeans.
In 1683, over 200,000 Ottoman jihadis attempted to take Vienna again. Even
though their failure marked the Ottoman Empire’s slow decline, Muslim slavers of
the so-called Barbary States of North Africa continued to wreak havoc all along
the coasts of Europe—reaching even Iceland.
The United States of America’s first war—which it fought before it could even
elect its first president—was against these Islamic slavers. When Thomas
Jefferson and John Adams asked Barbary’s ambassador why his countrymen were
enslaving American sailors, the “ambassador answered us that it was founded on
the laws of their Prophet, that it was written in their Koran, that … it was
their right and duty to make war upon them [non-Muslims] wherever they could be
found, and to make slaves of all they could take as prisoners.”
Europe’s final triumph over the Barbary States in the early 1800s ushered in the
colonial era. By 1900, most of the Muslim world was under European control; by
1924, the more than 600 year-old Ottoman caliphate was abolished—not by
Europeans but Muslim Turks, as the latter sought to emulate the successful ways
of the former. Islam was viewed as a spent force and virtually forgotten, until
recent times when it reemerged again.
Such has been the true and most “general” history between the Islamic and
Western worlds.
The above map (© Sword and Scimitar) should give an idea of how far reaching and
multi-tentacled the perennial jihad was. The darkest green shading represents
Western/Christian nations that were permanently conquered by Islam; the lighter
green shading represents those Western/Christian nations that were temporarily
conquered by Islam (sometimes for many centuries, as in Spain, Russia, and the
Balkans); green stripes represent areas that were raided, often repeatedly,
though not necessarily annexed by Islam; the crossed swords mark the sites of
the eight most landmark battles between Islam and the West.
From a macrocosmic perspective, the consequences of the historic jihad are even
more profound than first appears. After writing, “For almost a thousand years,
from the first Moorish landing in Spain [711] to the second Turkish siege of
Vienna [1683], Europe was under constant threat from Islam,” Bernard Lewis
elaborates:
The “loss” of North Africa and the Middle East “was sorely felt” by premodern
Europeans because they thought more along religious and civilizational lines
than nationalist ones. And before Islam burst onto the scene, most of Europe,
North Africa, and the Middle East were part of the same religio-civilizational
block. As such, Islam did not merely invade and eventually get repulsed from
Europe; rather, “Muslim armies conquered three-quarters [or 75 percent] of the
Christian world,” to quote historian Thomas Madden.
Thus what is now called “the West” is actually the westernmost remnant of what
was a much more extensive civilizational block that Islam permanently severed,
thereby altering the course of “Western” history. And, once Muslims overran
Africa and the Middle East, most of its Christian subjects, to evade fiscal and
social oppression and join the winning team, converted to Islam, thereby
perpetuating the cycle, as they became the new standard bearers of jihad against
their former coreligionists north and west of the Mediterranean.
Such are the rarely noted ironies of history.
Returning to Hilaire Belloc, one can also see how an accurate understanding of
true history—as opposed to the widespread indoctrination in “alternate”
histories that prevails throughout American schools—leads to an accurate
prognosis of the future. For Belloc was not only correct about the past but the
future as well:
It [Islam] is, as a fact, the most formidable and persistent enemy which our
civilization has had, and may at any moment become as large a menace in the
future as it has been in the past…. The whole spiritual strength of Islam is
still present in the masses of Syria and Anatolia, of the East Asian mountains,
of Arabia, Egypt and North Africa. The final fruit of this tenacity, the second
period of Islamic power, may be delayed —but I doubt whether it can be
permanently postponed (emphasis added).
Note: The historical portion of this article follows the outline of Ibrahim’s
recent Sword and Scimitar: Fourteen Centuries of War between Islam and the West—
a book that CAIR did everything it could to prevent the U.S. Army War College
from learning about.