English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For April 24/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews21/english.april24.21.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
Lord, to whom can we go? You have the words of eternal
life. We have come to believe and know that you are the Holy One of God
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint
John 06/60-71/:”When many of his disciples heard it, they said, ‘This teaching
is difficult; who can accept it?’But Jesus, being aware that his disciples were
complaining about it, said to them, ‘Does this offend you? Then what if you were
to see the Son of Man ascending to where he was before? It is the spirit that
gives life; the flesh is useless. The words that I have spoken to you are spirit
and life. But among you there are some who do not believe.’ For Jesus knew from
the first who were the ones that did not believe, and who was the one that would
betray him. And he said, ‘For this reason I have told you that no one can come
to me unless it is granted by the Father.’Because of this many of his disciples
turned back and no longer went about with him. So Jesus asked the twelve, ‘Do
you also wish to go away?’Simon Peter answered him, ‘Lord, to whom can we go?
You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe and know that you
are the Holy One of God.’ Jesus answered them, ‘Did I not choose you, the
twelve? Yet one of you is a devil.’He was speaking of Judas son of Simon
Iscariot, for he, though one of the twelve, was going to betray him.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on April 23-24/2021
Elias Bejjani/Visit My LCCC Web site/All That you need to know on Lebanese unfolding news and events in Arabic and English/http://eliasbejjaninews.com/
Ministry of Health: 1,504 new infections, 33 deaths
President Aoun receives Information Minister, Uruguayan Ambassador
Foreign Ministry notified about KSA’s decision to ban entry of Lebanese
vegetables, fruits
Saudi Arabia bans Lebanese vegetables and fruits from entering it or transit
through its territories as of next Sunday
Saudi Arabia announces ban on fruits, vegetables from Lebanon due to drug
smuggling
Judge Ghada Aoun to Probe Al-Qard al-Hasan, Iranian Medicines in Lebanon
Judge Ghada Aoun Appears before Head of Judicial Inspection Authority
Rahi meets ambassadors of Canada, Russia and Denmark
Iran still sends weapons to Lebanon’s Hezbollah, says top US general for Middle
East
Helicopters Battle Locust Attacks in Arsal Outskirts
Panic in Lebanon as desert locust swarms hit farmland/Najia Houssari/Arab
News/April 23/2021
Geagea Compares FPM and Its Supporters to '1931 Nazis'
Two Million COVID-19 Vaccines Expected between May-June
Titles For The
Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 23-24/2021
Iran rejects remarks by former official about military
support to Yemen’s Houthis
Israel will inform White House of opposition to possible US-Iran nuclear deal:
Report
Sudan says Ethiopia rejected invitation for PM-level summit on dam
Turkey to issue arrest warrant for missing crypto founder: Reports
US general concerned about Afghan security forces after troop withdrawal
Veteran diplomat Jeffrey Feltman tapped to be US special envoy for the Horn of
Africa
Ankara tense ahead of Biden’s expected recognition of Armenian Genocide
Biden puts Erdogan under high pressure
Baghdad base housing US troops is hit as Iran proxies apply pressure
Russia Begins Drawdown of Troops from Ukraine's Border
Bahrain, Israel to Recognize Each Other's Covid Vaccinations
Over 120 Wounded in East Jerusalem Clashes
Sudan warns of legal action against Ethiopia over dam
French police station stabbing: Woman killed in Rambouillet knife attack
Kremlin critic Navalny says ending hunger strike
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on April 23-24/2021
Question: "Will there be a second chance for salvation
after death?"/GotQuestions.org?/April 23/2021
Context crucial if Biden recognizes Armenian genocide/Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib/Arab
News/April 23/2021
Why Iran Negotiations Will Go Nowhere/The problem isn’t the details of the
nuclear deal but the dishonesty of the regime/Eli Lake/Bloomberg LP/April
23/2021
Pakistani Taliban claims suicide bombing in Quetta/Thomas Joscelyn/FDD's Long
War Journal/April 23/2021
OPCW Member States Hold Syria Accountable for Chemical Weapons Use/Anthony
Ruggiero and Andrea Stricker/FDD/April 23/2021
“Endless Wars” and the Danger of Ignoring History/Bradley Bowman and Clifford D.
May/FDD/April 23/2021
Does Israel Lie America Into Wars?/Tony Badran/The Tablet/April 23/2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on April 23-24/2021
Ministry of Health: 1,504 new infections, 33 deaths
NNA/23 April ,2021
The Ministry of Public Health announced 1,504 new coronavirus infection cases,
which raises the cumulative number of confirmed cases to 518104.33 deaths have
been recorded over the past 24 hours.
President Aoun receives Information Minister, Uruguayan
Ambassador
NNA/23 April ,2021
President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, met Minister of Information,
Mrs. Manal Abdel Samad, today at Baabda Palace.
The meeting addressed latest internal developments, in addition to the media
reality in Lebanon and the projects carried out by the ministry in the field of
developing media work and skills.
The media law was also discussed during the meeting, as Minister Abdel Samad
indicated that this law “Is today in its final stages before the Administration
and Justice Committee, to be presented soon to the General Assembly of
Parliament, and It would contribute to preserving the rights of media
professionals and provide many provisions that regulate the media sector”.
Statement:
After the meeting, Minister Abdel Samad made the following statement:
“The topics of the day have been discussed, especially the issue of media, which
plays a fundamental and essential role during the crises that the country is
going through. The media reflects the image of reality objectively, and its
pioneering role and it is a partner in facing the crisis. It is necessary to
prevent any transgressions that affect or harm journalists. We must protect
journalists, because we have seen how they are exposed to problems and
unfortunately harm, whether verbal or physical, as a result of a certain
situation or expression, and this is unacceptable.
We also stress the need for the media person to be objective and reflect the
realistic image, because we live in a crisis. We must know the choice of words
and adjust the language not to be inciting, because any expression can lead to
greater crises and aggravate problems.
The role of social media, which is for communication and dialogue at times, was
discussed during the meeting, and at other times it is for divergence and
dissonance that do not serve our country in the current situation, therefore it
is necessary for us to work on selecting our words and our style of
communication.
We tackled some projects of the Ministry of Information, most notably the grant
provided by INA FRANCE to archive and automate the archives of Lebanon TV, which
is a pioneering step indicating the confidence we have from friendly countries
through pioneering and serious projects. We also discussed the establishment of
a media observatory in the Ministry of Information to be a platform for
objective reports through which the media reality is analyzed and the topics
that must be highlighted and recommendations be made. Emphasis has been
placed on the role of the media law, noting that we have reached the final stage
in its development, and it is now before the Administration and Justice
Committee in the House of Representatives, and it will be presented to the
General Assembly soon. Moreover, we assert the importance of this law, which
includes electronic media within the general law, preserves the rights of media
professionals and journalists, and gives many provisions that regulate the media
sector. This helps us recover from the crisis in which we are witnessing.
Questions & Answers:
In response to a question about the pursuit of director Charbel Khalil and the
encirclement of a group of internal security forces at his home, and the role of
the Ministry of Information in this regard, she replied: “You notice that my
role was not limited only to speeches and denunciations or recording my verbal
position, but through coordination with the concerned authorities directly. I
made many calls to denounce some of the issues and abuses that occurred against
the media professionals, and my visit today to the President of the Republic
comes mainly in this context, especially as we notice that the media people are
subjected to a lot of physical or verbal harm and this is unacceptable, for they
are ultimately the bearers of a message, and the bearer of the message is not
guilty. It is imperative that we respect this journalist. We affirm that the
differences of opinion in Lebanon should be evidence of validity and not an
obstacle to solutions, and we must take them in a positive context and at the
same time protect the media. A series of contacts were made in this regard with
the Minister of Interior and the relevant ministries, and today the President of
the Republic was briefed about this issue. We hope that these matters would not
be repeated”.
President Aoun also received the Uruguayan ambassador to Lebanon, Mr. Ricardo
Nario, on a farewell visit on the occasion of the end of his diplomatic missions
in Lebanon.
The President thanked Nario for his work and the efforts he made in developing
relations between Lebanon and Uruguay, and wished him success in his new
responsibilities. ---Presidency Press Office
Foreign Ministry notified about KSA’s decision to ban entry
of Lebanese vegetables, fruits
NNA/23 April ,2021
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants on Friday has been informed by the
Saudi embassy about the KSA’s decision to ban the entry of vegetables and fruits
to its territories from Lebanon. For his part, Caretaker Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Charbel Wehbe, has relayed the aforementioned decision to the country’s
senior officials. The Ministry emphasized in a statement that "smuggling drugs
in containers or trucks loaded with fruits and vegetables from Lebanon to
foreign countries is an act that’s punishable by the Lebanese law; drug
smuggling harms the economy, the Lebanese farmers, and Lebanon’s
reputation.”Moreover, the ministry’s statement called on the Lebanese
authorities to exert their utmost efforts to control all smuggling operations by
intensifying the activities of the security services and customs at the border
crossings in line with the Lebanese laws that criminalize trafficking,
smuggling, and drug abuse, “in a bid to overcome this scourge and prevent harm
to innocent citizens, farmers, industrialists and the Lebanese economy.”
Saudi Arabia bans Lebanese vegetables and fruits from
entering it or transit through its territories as of next Sunday
NNA/23 April ,2021
The Saudi Ministry of Interior announced that consignments of Lebanese
vegetables and fruits will not be allowed to enter into the Kingdom or transit
through its territory, starting Sunday 25/4/2021, until the relevant Lebanese
authorities provide sufficient and reliable guarantees to take the necessary
measures to stop the systematic smuggling operations targeting the Kingdom. The
Ministry said that this decision was taken "based on Saudi Arabia's obligations
in accordance with the relevant local regulations and provisions of
international conventions related to combating all forms of drug smuggling, and
after the Saudi concerned authorities have noticed increased drug smuggling
activity targeting the Kingdom from Lebanon or passing through Lebanese
territories, using Lebanese products to smuggle drugs into the Kingdom's
territory, whether through incoming dispatches to the Kingdom's markets or with
the intent to cross over to the neighboring countries, especially in vegetables
and fruits consignments. The ministry added that the ban was also due to the
failure of taking practical measures to stop these practices towards the
Kingdom, despite the Kingdom’s numerous attempts to urge the concerned Lebanese
authorities to do so, and in order to protect the Kingdom's citizens and
residents from anything that might affect their safety and security. In
addition, the Ministry of Interior, in cooperation with the concerned
authorities, will continue to follow up and monitor other consignments coming
from Lebanon and will take decisions accordingly and as needed towards these
shipments. The Ministry affirms that it will continue monitoring everything that
would target the security of the Kingdom and the safety of its citizens and
residents from the scourge of drugs, whether from Lebanon or from other
countries, and will not hesitate to take necessary measures to address such
attempts.--SPA Saudi Press Agency
Saudi Arabia announces ban on fruits, vegetables from
Lebanon due to drug smuggling
Tala Michel Issa & Krishna Kumar, Al Arabiya English/23 April ,2021
Saudi Arabia will ban the import of Lebanese fruits and vegetables as of 9 a.m.
on April 25 after a reported increase in drug smuggling from Beirut, the Saudi
Press Agency (SPA) reported on Friday.
The move comes after Saudi Customs foiled an attempt to smuggle over 5 million
pills of Captagon stuffed inside fruit imported from Lebanon, the SPA reported.
Captagon is used by fighters at war because of the effects it can have to fight
tiredness. It is an amphetamine that has widely been made and exported illegally
from Lebanon. The ban will remain in effect until Lebanese authorities provide
sufficient and reliable guarantees that they will take the necessary steps to
halt systemic drug smuggling operations. Lebanon’s Foreign Ministry criticized
the drug smuggling operations and called on the country’s security authorities
to crack down “in order to prevent harm to innocent citizens, farmers,
industrialists and the Lebanese economy.” Mohammed bin Ali Al-Naim, the
undersecretary of the Customs Authority for Security Affairs, said the narcotics
were stuffed inside pomegrante imported from Lebanon. Amphetamine narcotics
tablets smuggled through pomegranate shipment coming In addition, the Ministry
of Interior, in cooperation with the concerned authorities, said it would
continue to follow up and monitor other shipments coming from Lebanon. The
spokesperson of the General Directorate of Narcotics Control (GDNC), Captain
Mohammed al-Nujaidi, said there were five culprits involved in the incident, one
foreigner and four Saudi citizens. The detainees are expected to first go
through legal procedures prior to undergoing public prosecution.
Judge Ghada Aoun to Probe Al-Qard al-Hasan, Iranian
Medicines in Lebanon
Naharnet/23 April ,2021
Mount Lebanon Public Prosecutor Judge Ghada Aoun requested a probe into
Hizbullah’s al-Qard Al-Hasan financial institution, and the import of Iranian
medicines to Lebanon contradicting the WHO standards, Nidaa al-Watan newspaper
reported on Friday. The complaints were submitted to Aoun by attorneys Majd Harb
and Elie Kerillos. The complaint accused the activities of Qard al-Hasan of
“violating the provisions of the Monetary and Credit Law, which stipulated in
Article 206 that its violators must be prosecuted before the criminal courts,
and Article 200 convicts a person who engages in credit activities without being
registered with the Banque du Liban, based on Article 655 of the Penal Code.”
The complaint indicates that al-Qard al-Hasan is classified as a non-profit
charitable association, the source of its funding is shareholder funds in
dollars in addition to annual subscriptions provided by borrowers. Regarding the
Iranian medicines, the complaint said they have been entered into Lebanon
“contrary to the principles and legal and administrative procedures adopted in
accredited laboratory, and in the absence of sufficient scientific information
about their quality, safety of their contents and correct use, which may cause
death of patients and put the national health system at risk.”Aoun received the
complaints and referred them to the head of the State Security office in Baabda
and tasked him to investigate and report the findings.
Judge Ghada Aoun Appears before Head of Judicial Inspection
Authority
Naharnet/23 April ,2021
Mount Lebanon Public Prosecutor Judge Ghada Aoun appeared before head of the
Judicial Inspection Authority Judge Borkan Saad on Friday over a number of
complaints, the latest was raiding the offices of Mecattaf money exchange
company. There are 23 complaints filed against Aoun before the Judicial
Inspection Authority. Media reports said Aoun had arrived at the Justice Palace
individually without any convoy or security presence. The controversial judge
carried out repeated raids recently on the Mecattaf company in Awkar, defying a
judicial order dismissing her from investigation into financial crimes. Aoun
managed Wednesday to enter the offices of Mecattaf, after bringing workers to
break open a metallic gate, as minor scuffles erupted outside between her
supporters and the Internal Security Forces. The Higher Judicial Council asked
the Judicial Inspection Board to look into Aoun’s controversial actions while
asking her to abide by the state prosecutor’s decisions.The Council said the
Inspection Board will question Aoun over “her breach of the obligation of
reticence, her failure to honor her repeated pledges before the Council, her
refrainment from appearing before the public prosecution, and her stances and
behavior after the state prosecutor issued a decision redistributing tasks at
the Mt. Lebanon prosecution.”
Rahi meets ambassadors of Canada, Russia and Denmark
NNA/23 April ,2021
Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Bechara Boutros Rahi, on Friday received in Bkirki
the Canadian Ambassador to Lebanon, Chantal Chastenay, with whom he discussed
the current situation on the local and regional arena. Patriarch Rahi later met
with the Russian Ambassador to Lebanon, Alexandre Rodakov, who said on emerging
that the visit comes within the framework of coordination with the patriarch, in
light of the circumstances that Lebanon is going through which require the
formation of a government as soon as possible.The Patriarch also met with
Denmark’s Ambassador to Lebanon, Merete Juhl, on her first visit to Bkirki since
assuming her diplomatic mission in the country. Ambassador Juhl said the visit
was important with talks touching on the major challenges facing Lebanon and the
means through which Denmark can assist Lebanon. She said that Denmark is
committed to helping Lebanon, through twinning projects between the Embassy and
the European Union.
Iran still sends weapons to Lebanon’s Hezbollah, says top
US general for Middle East
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/23 April ,2021
The United States will not be drawn into a military confrontation with Iran, and
Tehran’s nuclear program moves are “not irreversible,” the top US military
commander for the Middle East said Thursday. Asked about deterring Iran, Central
Command chief Gen. Kenneth McKenzie said nothing Tehran had done related to
enriching uranium needed for a nuclear weapon was final. “They’ve done nothing
that is irreversible,” the US general told reporters during a briefing at the
Pentagon. But McKenzie warned that Iran continued to threaten the stability of
the Middle East and voiced concerns over Iran's missile program. The US general
said Washington continued to provide Saudi Arabia “defensive support” because it
is under attack “typically at least every other day, sometimes more than once a
day … from Yemen.”“So, the principal thing I do with the Saudis is I give them
advance notice when I’m able to do that,” he said. Asked about Lebanon, McKenzie
commended the Lebanese army and expressed continued support for arming the
Lebanese Armed Forces.“It is a good relationship with the Lebanese Armed Forces,
and it’s a relatively inexpensive relationship … and we view them as one of the
few institutions in that country that really is a pillar of stability. So it’s
important to keep that relationship alive so we will continue to work that very
hard,” he said.But Lebanon’s Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed militia, is a constant
concern to the US, he said. “We know that, in fact, Iran does continue to ship
arms to Hezbollah in Lebanon with an aim to build capabilities that could strike
Israel to the south. All those things are very concerning to me,” McKenzie said.
Helicopters Battle Locust Attacks in Arsal Outskirts
Naharnet/23 April ,2021
Army helicopters and teams from the ministry of agriculture will start battling
swarms of desert locusts that appeared in the outskirts of the northeastern town
of Arsal and in neighboring areas, media reports said on Friday. Lebanon’s
agriculture ministry asked bee farmers to take needed measures to protect
beehives before helicopters start spraying insecticides. People on social media
shared videos of swarms of locusts invading large agricultural areas in Arsal.
LBCI said the insects were also seen in the outskirts of Ras Baalbek. Farmers
have been warned on Thursday of a wave of locusts reportedly reaching several
southern and eastern areas in neighboring Syria.
Panic in Lebanon as desert locust swarms hit farmland
Najia Houssari/Arab News/April 23/2021
BEIRUT: The arrival of locust swarms in Lebanon has caused panic among the
country’s farmers. Videos showing the insects flying over farmland in the towns
of Ersal and Ras Baalbek in Bekaa circulated on social media, with the hashtag
#locust trending in Lebanon on Friday as people made sarcastic comments about
the latest crisis to hit the beleaguered country. The Lebanese military said
that helicopters had begun spraying pesticides over Baalbek and Ras Baalbek to
“fight and eradicate” the desert locusts. Ersal Mayor Bassel Al-Hujairi
recounted seeing “millions” of locusts flying and attacking cherry trees and
crops.
“Locusts have invaded one-third of Ersal,” he told Arab News. “As we rushed to
find out the size of the disaster, locust swarms had already gone across the
town, which means that in the early hours of Friday locusts were able to cross
15 km, heading from barren areas toward Ersal. If these swarms multiply, they
can cover the sun.”Ersal was home to more than two million cherry, apple and
apricot trees that were located on the town’s southern and eastern sides, said
the mayor, and locusts were still on the northern side of the town.
“I hope wind will not take them to other directions,” he added. The swarms
arrived in Lebanon after invading Syria, Iraq and Jordan. The UN’s Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) said the appearance of desert locusts in Syria
and Jordan was an “unusual and rare” event caused by several days of strong
southerly winds and high temperatures that brought the adult groups to these
areas. It added that while the swarms did not represent a “large-scale invasion”
and could be controlled, it feared that some of the mature adults may lay eggs
and reproduce. The ministries of agriculture and defense have mobilized to
address the problem as Lebanon is a member of the FAO’s Commission for
Controlling the Desert Locust in the Central Region. Agriculture Minister Abbas
Mortada inspected Ersal and said that ministry teams had witnessed “locust
waves” and were able to define their approximate scope.
“But we still have fears that these locusts may reproduce and invade fields and
farms. People are filming the locust swarms, but they are still relatively far.”
Ras Baalbek Mayor Menhem Mhanna reported “huge numbers” of locusts over the
town’s barren areas and expressed his fears about these swarms reaching
inhabited areas. “Locusts will not find anything in Lebanon since the
politicians have devoured everything,” said one person on social media, while
another said: “Lebanon’s politicians are more dangerous than these swarms.”
“Locusts are the cherry on the top to be added to Lebanon’s economic collapse,
political gridlock and starvation,” read another comment. The crisis has brought
the Lebanese back to the beginning of the 20th century, when swarms stripped the
country of almost all its vegetation. At that time Lebanon was already grappling
with economic hardship and a double blockade by both the Ottoman Empire and the
Allied Forces, resulting in a famine that led to more than a third of the
population dying. In 2013, historians and researchers Dr. Christian Taoutel and
Father Pierre Wittouck released a book compiling the previously unpublished
French chronicles of Jesuit priests during the famine called “The Lebanese
people in the turmoil of the Great War of 1914-1918.”According to the book,
“famine started with a hungry swarm of locusts that devoured everything, where
the Lebanese called the year of 1915 ‘The Year of Locusts’ which were impossible
to control.”
Geagea Compares FPM and Its Supporters to '1931 Nazis'
Naharnet/23 April ,2021
Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea on Thursday lashed out at the Free Patriotic
Movement and its supporters in connection with the latest controversy sparked by
the actions of Mount Lebanon Prosecutor Judge Ghada Aoun. “The FPM has
introduced new concepts to the dictionary of politics in Lebanon, with the
protection of the rights of Christian lying in attacking and vandalizing private
companies in Awkar, and the fight against corruption being in concealing the
culprits as to electricity, telecommunications, customs, illegal border
crossings and clientelism in state administrations,” Geagea said in a written
statement. “The deposits of the people have meanwhile turned out to be at the
Mecattaf firm and not at the banks, which lent them to the state that wasted
them and is still wasting them on corruption, favoritism and commissions in
tenders and bids and general,” the LF leader added sarcastically. Moreover, he
lamented that the recent events in Lebanon “totally remind us of what the Nazis
were doing in Germany in the early 1930s, when they used to carry out
distraction operations, through attacking institutions or aggressing against
private properties and individuals under the excuse of fighting corruption --
all of that to deviate attention from the essential and real problems of the
country and to conceal the real criminals and their way of running things.”“But
Lebanon is not Germany and today we are in the year 2021 and not in the year
1931,” he added. “All these farces, plays and twisted methods will only deepen
the crisis in the country, whereas the only solution lies in the resignation of
your parliamentary majority to allow the Lebanese to express their opinion and
choose a new parliamentary majority that would pull them out of the hell that
you have plunged Lebanon into,” Geagea went on to say.
Two Million COVID-19 Vaccines Expected between May-June
Naharnet/23 April ,2021
Head of the Health Parliamentary Committee, Assem Araji stated on Friday that
Lebanon is expecting two million Pfizer and Astrazeneca COVID-19 vaccines
between May and June this year. He said around 750,000 doses will be allocated
for the private sector, out of which 320,000 have been reserved by the four
largest universities in Lebanon. On the number of people registered with the
health ministry's vaccination platform, he said the turnout is still low with
not more than one million and a half people registered. Many people still have
concerns about the feasibility of the vaccine after suspectedly causing blood
clots. He called on those concerned about any complications allegedly arising
after the administration of Astrazeneca vaccine to postpone their appointment
until getting notified of another vaccine. Araji brushed off concerns arising
about Astrazeneca, describing them as rumors. The small country of about 6
million is facing its worst economic and financial crisis to date, with tens of
thousands out of work, basic food prices soaring, and more than half the
population now living under the poverty line.
Lebanon has so far registered over 515,088 coronavirus cases and more than 7,027
deaths.
The Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 23-24/2021
Iran rejects remarks by former official about military
support to Yemen’s Houthis
Yaghoub Fazeli, Al Arabiya English/23 April ,2021
Iran’s foreign ministry rejected on Friday remarks made earlier this week by a
former Iranian official about Tehran’s support to the Houthi militia in Yemen.
The remarks by Rostam Ghasemi, former oil minister and Islamic Revolutionary
Guards Corps (IRGC) commander, “are contrary to reality and the policies of Iran
in Yemen,” Iran’s foreign ministry said in a short statement published on its
website. Iran’s “support for Yemen is [solely] political,” the statement said,
adding that Tehran supports efforts to find a political solution to the
conflict. Ghasemi had said in an interview with Russia Today on Wednesday that
the IRGC has provided weapons to the Houthi militia in Yemen and trained the
militia in manufacturing weapons. Ghasemi, a potential candidate for Iran’s
upcoming presidential elections in June, said there is currently a “small”
number of “advisors” from the IRGC on the ground in Yemen. Iran has long been
accused of providing financial and military support to the Houthis. “All the
weapons the [Houthis] possess is thanks to our aid,” Ghasemi said. He added: “We
helped them with weapons manufacturing technology, but the weapons production
takes place in Yemen, they make them themselves, the drones and missiles are
Yemeni-made.” Ghasemi claimed his country is currently unable to send any
weapons or even humanitarian aid to Yemen due to the “siege” imposed on the
country. “We have provided weapons in a very limited way. We have provided more
consultations compared to supplying weapons to Yemen.”Iranian admissions about
military support to the Houthis are rare, but not unprecedented. In 2018, Iran
for the first time acknowledged being involved in the Yemen conflict when then-IRGC
head Mohammad Ali Jafari said Iran provided “advisory assistance” to the Houthis.
In 2019, the chief of staff of Iran’s armed forces Mohammad Bagheri said the
IRGC is providing the Houthis with “advisory and intellectual assistance.” US
Special Envoy on Yemen Tim Lenderking said on Wednesday that “Iranian support
[for the Houthis] is quite significant, and it’s lethal.”Speaking during a
congressional hearing in Washington, Lenderking said that the Houthis’ behaviour
showed they were not devoted to the interests of the Yemeni people. The Houthis
have conducted 150 attacks against Saudi Arabia this year, according to
Lenderking.
Israel will inform White House of opposition to possible
US-Iran nuclear deal: Report
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/23 April ,2021
Israel’s stance on the Iran nuclear deal remains unchanged and officials from
Tel Aviv will voice their position during a trip to the US next week, according
to a report citing Israeli officials. Ties between Washington and Tel Aviv have
soured since the election of US President Joe Biden and his rushed attempts to
rejoin the JCPOA, an acronym for the 2015 nuclear deal. Gulf capitals and Israel
have said they should be included in any talks on a potential nuclear deal with
Iran. They were not invited to participate in the negotiations prior to the 2015
deal, which former President Barack Obama brokered. And after two rounds of
indirect talks in Vienna that started earlier this month, European countries,
Russia and China, are the only external participants. According to the US news
website Axio, Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu informed officials of Tel Aviv’s
position during a recent security meeting.
Israeli officials reportedly said that Netanyahu “instructed the delegation
traveling to Washington, DC next week for strategic talks on Iran to stress
their objection to a US return to the 2015 nuclear deal and to refuse to discuss
its contents.”Netanyahu also reportedly told the traveling delegation to make it
known that Israel was not a part of the JCPOA and that it would act in any way
needed to protect itself from Iranian threats. “The decision at the end of the
meeting was to stress that a return to the deal would put Israel in danger and
to otherwise decline to discuss the talks in Vienna,” Axios reported. National
Security Advisor Jake Sullivan extended an invite to his Israeli counterpart,
Meir Ben-Shabbat, to visit Washington to continue talks on “security issues of
vital importance,” the White House previously announced. Israeli officials have
voiced skepticism over any potential deal that fails to deal with Iran’s support
for terrorist groups, including Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthis, and its
ballistic missile program. On Wednesday, a senior State Department official told
reporters that there had been some progress during the second round of indirect
talks with Iran. “There are still disagreements, in some cases pretty important
ones,” the official said.Asked about complaints from Israel that the US was not
fully transparent about talks on a new deal, the official pushed back and said
this was not true.
Sudan says Ethiopia rejected invitation for PM-level summit
on dam
Reuters, Khartoum, Cairo/23 April ,2021
Sudan’s irrigation minister said in a statement on Friday that Ethiopia had
rejected a Sudanese invitation for a prime minister-level summit surrounding
negotiations over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.On April 13, Sudanese
Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok had invited his Ethiopian and Egyptian
counterparts to Khartoum after the latest round of negotiations had hit a dead
end.
Turkey to issue arrest warrant for missing crypto founder:
Reports
AFP, Istanbul/ 23 April ,2021
Turkish authorities on Friday started procedures to issue an international
warrant to arrest and extradite the missing founder of a cryptocurrency
exchange, state media reported.Thodex founder Faruk Fatih Ozer fled, officials
said, to the Albanian capital of Tirana with a reported $2 billion in investors’
assets.
US general concerned about Afghan security forces after
troop withdrawal
Reuters/Published: 22 April ,2021
The head of US forces in the Middle East said on Thursday that he was concerned
about the ability of the Afghan security forces to hold territory after the
withdrawal of all foreign troops from the country in the coming months.
President Joe Biden announced last week that the United States will withdraw its
remaining 2,500 troops from Afghanistan by Sept. 11, the 20th anniversary of the
al Qaeda attacks that triggered America’s longest war. “My concern is the
ability of the Afghan military to hold the ground that they’re on now without
the support that they’ve been used to for many years,” Marine General Kenneth
McKenzie, head of US Central Command, said during a Senate Armed Services
Committee hearing. “I am concerned about the ability of the Afghan military to
hold on after we leave, the ability of the Afghan Air Force to fly, in
particular, after we remove the support for those aircraft,” McKenzie added. The
Pentagon has said it is looking to fund key Afghan military capabilities,
including the air force, and seeking to continue paying the salaries of Afghan
security forces. But US officials have long been concerned about corruption in
the security forces and questioned how they would be able to hold back Taliban
insurgents, which McKenzie said number 50,000, without American air support and
intelligence capabilities.
Veteran diplomat Jeffrey Feltman tapped to be US special envoy
for the Horn of Africa
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/23 April ,2021
Veteran US diplomat Jeffrey Feltman will become Washington’s Special Envoy for
the Horn of Africa, the State Department said Friday. “This appointment
underscores the Administration’s commitment to lead an international diplomatic
effort to address the interlinked political, security, and humanitarian crises
in the Horn of Africa,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said. Feltman
previously served at the State Department and most recently at the United
Nations. Among the most pressing issues, Feltman will deal with are the
continuing conflict in Ethiopia’s Tigray region and escalating tensions between
Ethiopia and Sudan. The dispute between African nations over the Grand Ethiopian
Renaissance Dam is another conflict Feltman will be tasked with mediating,
Blinken said. “Special Envoy Feltman is uniquely suited to bring decades of
experience in Africa and the Middle East, in multilateral diplomacy, and in
negotiation and mediation to develop and execute an integrated US strategy to
address these complex regional issues,” Blinken said. The top US diplomat noted
that “high-level US engagement” in the Horn of Africa was vital to mitigating
the risks posed by the current conflicts in the area. Feltman served as the
under-secretary-general for political affairs at the UN after serving in the
State Department for 26 years. Previous posts included being assistant secretary
of state for Near Eastern affairs and US ambassador to Lebanon.
Ankara tense ahead of Biden’s expected recognition of
Armenian Genocide
Arab News/April 23/2021
ANKARA: Tensions between Washington and Ankara may be further strained on
Saturday when US President Joe Biden is expected to become the first US leader
to officially recognize the Armenian Genocide of 1915 onward. The massacre of
around 1.5 million Armenians in the early 20th century was formally recognized
as genocide by the US Senate in 2019, but then-President Donald Trump did not
follow suit. April 24 is Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, and ahead of
Saturday’s annual commemoration, this much-anticipated move is now a major
concern for Ankara, and likely to inflame an already tense relationship. Turkey
denies any historical connection with the atrocities, since they took place
during wartime in the Ottoman period. Biden, who put human rights at the center
of his presidential agenda, promised to recognize the Armenian Genocide during
his campaign. Vice-President Kamala Harris hails from California, where more
than 200,000 Armenians currently reside. Forty US lawmakers, led by Senate
Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Menendez, recently sent a letter to
Biden urging him to follow through on his promise. The fact that a
scheduled phone call between Biden and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
has been delayed until after Saturday has been taken by many as a sign that
Biden will recognize the genocide and trigger outrage in Ankara.
Biden puts Erdogan under high pressure
The Arab Weekly/April 23/2021
WASHINGTON/ ANKARA – The administration of President Joe Biden has dashed
Turkey’s hopes for calmer days with the US, putting it under high pressure by
officially removing it from a project to manufacture F-35 fighter planes, while
expectations grow that Biden will announce Saturday formal US recognition of the
historical responsibility of the Turks for the Armenian genocide. This step that
is likely to infuriate Turkey and exacerbate tensions between the two countries.
A US Defence Department official announced Washington has notified Turkey it is
officially excluded from the F-35 fighter jet production programme. The official
said the US and eight other countries had cancelled a 2006 memorandum of
understanding and signed a new one, but did not go into further details. Ankara
had ordered and manufactured parts of more than 100 F-35s. But it was removed
from the programme in 2019 after it purchased Russian S-400 ground-to-air
missile systems, which Washington says constitute a security threat for the F-35
fighters. Analysts say the Biden administration took a serious second look at
its relations with Turkey, which wants to be a member of NATO and at the same
time an ally of Russia. Washington is now telling Ankara that the new
administration is different from the previous one and that Turkey will be forced
to reassess its ambiguous policy of pursuing strategic military cooperation with
Moscow and Washington at the same time. Observers pointed out that the exclusion
of Ankara from the stealth fighter project and the recognition of the Armenian
genocide narrative are two steps that personally challenge the Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who finds himself besieged by crises and unable to push
his usual brinkmanship any further. Erdogan has pledged to continue defending
the case against those who, he maintains, for political reasons promote the
“slander and lies” of the “Armenian genocide”, in reference to the US
President’s decision to be announced on Saturday. Washington’s resolve to remove
Ankara from the F-35 project is likely to push Turkey closer to Russia and
further strain its relationship with NATO, especially considering the tensions
shaking its ties with member countries, over a number of issues, including gas
exploration in the eastern Mediterranean and the stance on Libya. Before his
confirmation as US secretary of state, Anthony Blinken described Ankara last
January as a ” so–called strategic partner”. And he indicated that more
sanctions could be imposed on Ankara for its purchase of Russian missile
systems. ” “The idea that a strategic – so-called strategic – partner of ours
would actually be in line with one of our biggest strategic competitors in
Russia is not acceptable,” he said.
The firm American stance towards Turkey’s acquisition of the S-400 system
coincides with a new escalation, that is unrelated the issue of military
alliances.
It has to do instead with Biden’s intention to recognise that the massacre of
Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Empire during the First World War was an
act of genocide. Three US sources familiar with the matter said that Biden is
likely to use the phrase “genocide” in a statement he will make on April 24 on
the occasion of annual events commemorating the victims of the massacres. “My
understanding is that he took the decision and will use the word genocide in his
statement on Saturday,” said a source familiar with the matter. However, the
sources cautioned that Biden may decide at the last minute not to use this term
in light of the importance of bilateral relations with Turkey. “I expect we will
have more to say about Remembrance Day on Saturday,” White House press secretary
Jen Psaki said Wednesday when asked about Biden’s commitment. “But I don’t have
anything to get ahead of that at this point in time.”
“The recognition by the United States will be a moral beacon for many
countries,” said Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazyan. “This is not about
Armenia and Turkey, this is about our commitment to recognise and condemn
genocide in the past, present and future,” he added. Turkish Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu said that any move by Biden to recognise the 1915 mass killings
of Armenians by the Ottomans as a genocide will further harm already strained
ties between the NATO allies. A year ago, when Biden was still a presidential
candidate, he commemorated the anniversary of the 1.5 million Armenian men,
women and children who lost their lives in the final days of the Ottoman Empire.
He pledged to support efforts to describe these killings as genocide.
The “New York Times” and “The Wall Street Journal” reported that Biden is
scheduled to declare the massacres classified as “genocide” on Saturday on the
occasion of the 106th anniversary of the mass killings that began in 1915 when
the Ottoman Empire was fighting Tsarist Russia during World War I in the region
known now as Armenia. More than 100 members of Congress, led by the Democratic
member Adam Schiff, the House Intelligence Committee chairman, have sent a
letter to Biden urging him to fulfil his pledge to recognise genocide during his
election campaign. “For decades, as leaders around the world recognised the
first genocide of the twentieth century, the president of the United States
maintained his silence,” the letter said. “Mr President, as you said last year
in your statement of the 24th of April, silence is complicity. And the shameful
silence of the United States Government on the historic fact of the Armenian
Genocide has gone on for too long, and it must end.” The massacres were already
officially recognised by the US Congress as an act of genocide in December 2019
in an essentially symbolic vote. Ian Bremmer, president and founder of the
Eurasia Group, said Biden’s expected move reflects the deteriorating
relationship between the two countries, but that Erdogan’s options will be
limited. “It is unlikely that Erdogan will provoke the United States with
actions that could further undermine Turkey’s weak economy,” he added.
Baghdad base housing US troops is hit as Iran proxies apply
pressure
The Arab Weekly/April 23/2021
BAGHDAD--Three rockets crashed into a base at the Iraqi capital’s
airport housing US troops Friday, security sources said, in the latest attack
coinciding with tensions between Tehran and Washington. One of the sources said
the projectiles hit the section of the airbase occupied by Iraqi troops, who
share the base with soldiers deployed by Washington as part of the US-led
anti-ISIS coalition. One Iraqi soldier was wounded, the source added. It is the
second attack on US interests in Iraq in less than a week. On Sunday, five
rockets targeted another airbase north of the capital, wounding three Iraqi
soldiers and two foreign contractors. There was no immediate claim of
responsibility for the strike, but Washington routinely blames Iran-linked Iraqi
factions for such attacks on its troops and diplomats. Tehran is also seen by
analysts as trying to exert pressure on the US to withdraw its troops from Iran
and force concessions in the ongoing talks in Vienna about the Iranian nuclear
programme. Friday’s is the 23rd bomb or rocket attack against American interests
in Iraq, including troops, the Baghdad embassy or Iraqi supply convoys to
foreign forces, since US President Joe Biden took office in January. Dozens of
other strikes were carried out from autumn 2019 under the administration of
former US president Donald Trump. In mid-April, an explosives-packed drone
slammed into Iraq’s Irbil airport in the first reported use of such a weapon
against a base used by US-led coalition troops in the country, officials said.
In February, more than a dozen rockets targeted the military complex inside the
same airport. In the past year, two foreign contractors, one Iraqi contractor
and eight Iraqi civilians have been killed in the attacks.
Proxy pressures
The operations are sometimes claimed by obscure groups that experts say are
smokescreens for Iranian-backed organisations long present in Iraq and often
acting as de facto proxies to Tehran. Qais al-Khazali, a senior pro-Iran figure
in the state-sponsored Hashed al-Shaabi (Poular Mobilisation Force) armed
militia, recently declared that the “resistance” was carrying out attacks and
would step them up “unless the US withdraws all its combat forces from across
Iraq”. Pro-Iran groups have been ratcheting up their rhetoric, vowing to ramp up
attacks to force out the “occupying” US forces, and there have been almost daily
attacks on coalition supply convoys across the mainly Shia south. The United
States in April committed to withdraw all remaining combat forces from Iraq,
although the two countries did not set a timeline for what would be a second US
withdrawal since the 2003 invasion which toppled Saddam Hussein.
The attack also comes amid heightened tensions over Iran’s nuclear programme.
The remaining partners to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal have been engaged in talks
aimed at returning the US to the accord it withdrew from under Trump and lifting
the sanctions it reimposed on Iran, as well as ensuring Tehran’s return to
nuclear commitments that it cut in retaliation. Sworn foes Tehran and Washington
have both had a presence since 2003 in Iraq, where 2,500 US troops are still
deployed and Iran sponsors the Hashed al-Shaabi. Tensions have spiked to the
edge of war, in particular after Trump ordered a drone strike near Baghdad’s
airport in January 2020 that killed top Iranian military commander Qassem
Soleimani.
Russia Begins Drawdown of Troops from Ukraine's Border
Agence France Presse/April 23/2021
Russia on Friday began withdrawing troops that had been running drills near the
borders of Ukraine, the defence ministry said, following weeks of heightened
tensions between Moscow and the West over the buildup.
"Military units and formations are currently marching to railway loading
stations and airfields, and loading onto landing ships, railway platforms and
military transport aircraft," the ministry said in a statement carried by
Russian news agencies.
Bahrain, Israel to Recognize Each Other's Covid
Vaccinations
Agence France Presse/April 23/2021
Bahrain and Israel have signed an agreement to recognise each other's Covid
vaccinations in a bid to smoothe travel between the two countries which
normalised ties last year. "The governments of the Kingdom of Bahrain and the
State of Israel today reached an agreement regarding mutual recognition of
vaccination and green passports," the official Bahrain News Agency reported late
Thursday.The Gulf kingdom and the Jewish state both have inoculation rates that
are among the highest in the world, according to German data agency Statista.
Under the agreement, people who have been inoculated in one country with
"vaccinations recognised in the other country will be exempt from quarantine and
be able to enter places that require a 'green passport'," BNA said. Israel
has eased many of its coronavirus restrictions but various measures remain in
place, including a "green passport" system that grants access to certain sites
only to those who have been vaccinated or have recovered from Covid-19. The
Bahraini report said arrangements would be made at a later stage for individuals
who have been inoculated with a vaccine other than those recognised by one of
the two countries, without providing start dates for the arrangements.
Israeli Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi tweeted that the deal would "increase
tourism and boost our economies and help our common fight against the
coronavirus". Last September, Bahrain signed a US-brokered agreement normalising
ties with Israel, in a break with decades of Arab consensus against doing so
without a comprehensive peace deal. Over five million Israelis, or more than
half of its nine million population, have received two doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech
vaccine, according to Israeli health ministry figures. More than half a million
people in Bahrain, or nearly half the population, have received both doses of
various vaccines, according to official figures.
Over 120 Wounded in East Jerusalem Clashes
Agence France Presse/23 April ,2021
Over 100 Palestinians and 20 Israeli police were wounded in overnight clashes in
annexed east Jerusalem, medics and police said Friday, as tensions mount over a
police ban on gatherings and videos of attacks on youths.The violence broke out
outside one of the entrances to the walled Old City where far-right Jews had
completed a march, during which participants harassed Palestinians and chanted
"death to Arabs". There have been nightly disturbances in the area since the
start of Ramadan on April 13 with Palestinians complaining that police were
blocking access to the promenade around the walls, a popular gathering place for
Palestinians after the end of the daytime Ramadan fast. The Palestinian Red
Crescent said it had treated at least 105 people, with some 20 of them
hospitalised. Israeli police said 20 officers were wounded, three of whom were
taken to hospital.They said "hundreds of rioters began disrupting the order
violently including throwing stones and objects at forces" stationed near the
Old City. Tensions were high in Jerusalem after a series of videos posted in
recent days showing young Arabs attacking ultra-Orthodox Jews, with Jewish
extremists taking to the street bullying Arabs in nightly confrontations. On
Thursday night, the Israeli extreme-right group Lehava organised a march ending
opposite the Old City attended by hundreds to protest the anti-Jewish violence.
Videos on social media also showed Palestinians attacking ultra-Orthodox Jews in
the early hours of Friday. Police said more than 50 people detained overnight
were taken for a remand hearing Friday morning.
Sudan warns of legal action against Ethiopia over dam
AFP/April 24, 2021
KHARTOUM: Sudan has warned it could take legal action against Ethiopia if it
goes ahead with plans to fill a mega-dam on the Blue Nile without a deal with
Khartoum and Cairo. Water Minister Yasser Abbas also said in a tweet that
Ethiopia has raised “objections” to an invitation by Sudan to attend three-way
talks to discuss the controversial dam.Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia have been
locked in inconclusive talks for nearly a decade over the filling and operation
of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) which broke ground in 2011. Cairo
has regarded the dam as an existential threat to its water supplies, while
Khartoum fears its own dams would be harmed if Ethiopia fills the reservoir
without a deal. Last week, Sudan’s Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok invited his
Egyptian and Ethiopian counterparts to a closed meeting after recent African
Union-sponsored negotiations failed to produce a deal.
“Ethiopia has objected to the invitation of Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla
Hamdok for a three-way summit and we see that there is no justification for
that,” Abbas tweeted. Addis Ababa announced last July that it had filled part of
the barrage with a second stage due to take place this coming July, even if no
agreement has been made with Cairo and Khartoum.
FASTFACT
Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia have been locked in inconclusive talks for nearly a
decade over the filling and operation of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam
which broke ground in 2011.If Ethiopia goes ahead with the filling, Sudan “would
file lawsuits against the Italian company constructing the dam and the Ethiopian
government,” Abbas warned. He said the lawsuits would highlight that the
“environmental and social impact as well as the dangers of the dam” have not
been taken into adequate consideration. The tensions over the dam come as
Sudan’s relations with Egypt warm while its relations with Ethiopia have been
hit by a dispute over the use of the Fashaga farmland near their common border.
In March, Sudan said it has accepted an offer by the United Arab Emirates to
mediate with Ethiopia over GERD and the contested border region.Abbas said the
UAE’s initiative included investment opportunities in the Fashaga region as well
as “unofficial bid to bridge the gap in views with regard to GERD.”
French police station stabbing: Woman killed in Rambouillet
knife attack
NNA/April 24, 2021
A female police employee has been fatally stabbed in a knife attack at a police
station in Rambouillet, south-west of Paris. The 36-year-old attacker, who
reportedly came to France from Tunisia several years ago, was shot and later
died in hospital. The stabbing took place in the entrance on Friday afternoon
and no motive has yet been given for the attack. The 48-year-old unarmed
administrative officer was stabbed in the neck. She was returning from her break
at 14:20 (12:20 GMT) when the man barged into the police station, according to
local reports.
He lunged at the officer and her colleagues then opened fire on him. Prime
Minister Jean Castex and Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin went straight to the
scene, in the large Yvelines area to the the west of the capital. "The republic
has lost one of its everyday heroes in a barbaric act of unlimited cowardice,"
Mr Castex tweeted. Police appealed to the public not to share rumours. Officials
said the man was unknown to intelligence service and the stabbing was not being
investigated at this stage by the anti-terror prosecutor. Witnesses said the man
had been seen walking around while on his mobile phone outside the police
station and seized his chance to go in as the woman went through the security
doors.—BBC
Kremlin critic Navalny says ending hunger strike
NNA/April 24, 2021
Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny said Friday he was ending a 24-day hunger strike
he launched to demand medical treatment behind bars, after allies said his life
was in danger. The announcement came after Navalny's personal doctors said
Thursday that he had received treatment at a civilian hospital and urged him to
put a stop to his protest. "Taking into account the progress and all the
circumstances, I am beginning to end my hunger strike," President Vladimir
Putin's best-known critic said in an Instagram post. He said that the process
would take him 24 days, writing: "They say it's even harder" than the hunger
strike. The 44-year-old trained lawyer announced the hunger strike in his penal
colony on March 31, demanding to see an independent doctor for pain in his back
and numbness in his arms and legs.--AFP
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on April 23-24/2021
Question: "Will there be a second chance for salvation
after death?"
GotQuestions.org?/April 23/2021
Answer: While the idea of a second chance for salvation is appealing, the Bible
is clear that death is the end of all chances. Hebrews 9:27 tells us that we
die, and then face judgment. So, as long as a person is alive, he has a second,
third, fourth, fifth, etc. chance to accept Christ and be saved (John 3:16;
Romans 10:9-10; Acts 16:31). Once a person dies, there are no more chances. The
idea of purgatory, a place where people go after death to pay for their sins,
has no biblical basis, but is rather a tradition of the Roman Catholic Church.
To understand what happens to nonbelievers after they die, we go to Revelation
20:11-15 which describes the Great White Throne judgment. Here takes place the
opening of the books and “the dead were judged out of those things which were
written in the books, according to their works.” The books contain all the
thoughts and deeds of those being judged, and we know from Romans 3:20 that “by
the works of the Law is no flesh justified.” Therefore, all who are judged by
their works and thoughts are condemned to hell. Believers in Christ, on the
other hand, are not judged by the books of works, but their names are found
written in another book—the “Lamb’s Book of Life” (Revelation 21:27). These are
the ones who have believed on the Lord Jesus, and they alone will be allowed to
enter heaven.
The key to understanding this is the Lamb’s Book of Life. Anyone whose name is
written in this book was “saved before the foundation of the world” (Ephesians
1:4) by God’s sovereign saving grace to be part of His Son’s bride, the church
of Jesus Christ. These people need no “second chance” at salvation because their
salvation has been secured by Christ. He chose us, He saved us, and He will keep
us saved. Nothing can separate us from Christ (Romans 8:39). Those for whom He
died will be saved because Jesus will see to it. He declared “all that the
Father has given me will come to me” (John 6:37), and “I give to them eternal
life, and they shall never ever perish, and not anyone shall pluck them out of
My hand” (John 10:28). For believers, there is no need for a second chance
because the first chance is sufficient.
What about those who do not believe? Wouldn’t they repent and believe if they
were given a second chance? The answer is no, they would not because their
hearts are not changed simply because they die. Their hearts and minds “are at
enmity” against God and won’t accept Him even when they see Him face to face.
This is evidenced clearly in the story of the rich man and Lazarus in Luke
16:19-31. If ever someone should have repented when given a second chance to see
clearly the truth, it was the rich man. But although he was in torment in hell,
he only asked that Abraham send Lazarus back to earth to warn his brothers so
they didn’t have to suffer the same fate. There was no repentance in his heart,
only regret for where he found himself. Abraham’s answer says it all: “And he
said to him, If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, they will not be
persuaded, even though one rose from the dead” (Luke 16:31). Here we see that
the witness of the Scriptures is sufficient for salvation for those who believe
it, and no other revelation will bring about salvation to those who do not. No
second, third, or fourth chances would be enough to turn the heart of stone into
a heart of flesh.
Philippians 2:10-11 declares “that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow,
in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus
Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.” One day, everyone will bow
before Jesus and recognize that He is the Lord and Savior. At that point,
though, it will be too late for salvation. After death, all that remains for the
unbeliever is judgment (Revelation 20:14-15). That is why we must trust in Him
in this life.
Context crucial if Biden recognizes Armenian genocide
Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib/Arab News/April 23/2021
US President Joe Biden is this weekend expected to formally recognize the
massacres conducted against the Armenians by the Ottoman Empire during the First
World War as “genocide.” He is likely to make the announcement on Armenian
Genocide Remembrance Day, which falls on Saturday. This recognition was one of
his campaign promises. Biden already has a chilly relationship with Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and this move is likely to increase the tensions
between the two NATO allies. However, the recognition should not be looked at
from a political angle but rather a human one. It should not be used to score
points against Turkey, but as a framework to achieve a much-needed
Turkish-Armenian reconciliation. The Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs has
warned that the recognition would sour the already-tense US-Turkish ties. Biden
started his term on the wrong foot with Turkey. In an interview with the New
York Times that was published in January, he stated he was willing to support
the opposition to Erdogan, which the Turkish president did not take lightly.
Erdogan considered it to be interference in Turkish domestic affairs. To add to
that, Biden has appointed Brett McGurk as a key official when it comes to Middle
East policy. McGurk is seen very negatively by the Turks, who accuse him of
empowering Kurdish terrorism.The US needs Turkey to stabilize Syria and Iraq and
does not need another point of contention with its NATO ally. In light of the
competition between Russia and the US, the last thing America needs is for
Ankara to side with Moscow. If Turkey ever decides to leave NATO, it would be
the end of the alliance, which has been the backbone of Western military
integration for more than 70 years.
Despite also cozying up to Greece, the US needs Turkey to roll up its policies
across the region. However, their relations have been getting more complex and
more strained by the day. Biden’s recognition of the Armenian genocide might be
the trigger that pushes Turkey to switch camps. On the other hand, it is a
campaign promise to which Biden is bound. Other presidents have alluded to
Armenian suffering but refrained from mentioning the genocide. However, official
recognition has matured to become a public opinion issue in the US and more than
100 lawmakers have been pushing for it.
Biden should try to find a middle ground between fulfilling his promise,
catering to public demand and not turning off an essential ally. However, the
Biden administration places human rights at the heart of its policymaking agenda
and will have difficulty ignoring the demands for recognition of the genocide.
Such a move would be of great importance to Armenian people all over the world.
The 19th-century French historian Ernest Renan, when he tried to analyze the
construction of a nation, found that the memories of collective suffering shaped
the national identity. You will never find this to be more relevant than in the
case of the Armenian people. The suffering inflicted on them 100 years ago has
transcended generations and shaped their sense of peoplehood. Hence, it should
be addressed and cannot be ignored. However, it is important for the matter not
to be politicized.
It should not be used to score points against Turkey, but as a framework to
achieve a much-needed Turkish-Armenian reconciliation.
The Turkish government insists that the Armenians were killed during the war and
that there was no systematic elimination or ethnic cleansing that could amount
to genocide. The narrative of the government is the generally accepted view of
the Turkish people all across the political spectrum. It is difficult to
convince a Turkish citizen that their ancestors committed genocide. However, it
is important to reconcile with one’s past to have a better future. We don’t know
what Biden is going to say, but it is important that he frames this recognition
as part of a general framework for reconciliation. Before he tackles Ottoman
history, he should start with his own history and explain the crimes committed
by the European settlers against the Native Americans. It is important that he
explains how the US reconciled with its past, which is stained with genocide and
slavery, how it embraced it, how it accepted its faults and worked for a better
future. He should point out that recognition is not aimed at punishing the
Turks, because one cannot punish people for crimes committed by their ancestors
a century ago. However, the more a nation is self-confident, the more it has the
courage to admit its past mistakes. The US recognition should be coupled by a
call for Turkish-Armenian reconciliation, which is a much-needed process,
especially since Ankara last year sided with Azerbaijan in its war with Armenia.
Biden should point out that we cannot live in anger, hatred and insecurity
forever; that there comes a time when we need to reconcile. To do that, we
should accept each other, recognize our past mistakes and be willing to forgive
and move on. He should point out that the recognition is not politically
motivated and is not meant to punish Turkey, but is meant to bring Turkey and
Armenia together. He should mention that the recognition is not a trial but a
healing process.
If it is presented in this framework, it will benefit everyone. The Armenians
will get the moral and symbolic recognition they long for; Turkey will not feel
aggrieved or abused by its NATO ally; and the US will be fulfilling the role it
should play as an agent for peace, stability and conflict resolution.
*Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib is a specialist in US-Arab relations with a focus on
lobbying. She is co-founder of the Research Center for Cooperation and Peace
Building, a Lebanese NGO focused on Track II. She is also an affiliate scholar
with the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at
the American University of Beirut.
Why Iran Negotiations Will Go Nowhere/The
problem isn’t the details of the nuclear deal but the dishonesty of the regime.
Eli Lake/Bloomberg LP/April 23/2021,
Senator Marsha Blackburn has not devoted much of her time in office to Iran
policy. But this week the Tennessee Republican offered some clarity on the issue
when she introduced a bill aimed at preventing President Joe Biden from
returning the U.S. to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.
“It’s time for Biden to wake up and realize that the U.S. cannot negotiate an
honest agreement with Iran because they are a fanatical, anti-American regime,”
her statement reads. “No amount of negotiating or ‘indirect discussions’ can
change that.”
In a sense, Blackburn blundered. Democrats have long criticized former President
Donald Trump’s policy of sanctioning Iran. Trump said the sanctions were meant
to put pressure on Iran to agree to a better deal, but Democrats said they were
a thinly disguised way to force regime change.
Now Blackburn has let the mask slip: The problem with Iran, she says, is the
regime itself. It will never agree to stronger conditions for a nuclear
agreement — such as a ban on missile development, the abolition of sunsets on
uranium enrichment levels or an end to Iran’s support for regional aggression.
At the same time, Blackburn is on to something. If the Biden administration
succeeds in the ongoing nuclear negotiations in Vienna, one unavoidable
consequence will be a windfall for Iran’s war machine. Tens of billions of
dollars owed to Iran (mainly from the sale of oil and gas) remain locked in
overseas bank accounts because of U.S. sanctions. Iran will receive that money
when the sanctions are lifted.
So a deal that seeks to prevent the world’s leading sponsor of terrorism from
obtaining a nuclear weapon will provide Iran with money to sponsor more
terrorism. This is not a flaw with the deal so much as a flaw with the regime.
Unfortunately, Blackburn’s actual legislation does little to address the problem
she has identified. Her bill would prevent federal funds from being spent on
rejoining the 2015 Iran deal and require Biden and any future president to
submit any deal to the Senate as a treaty, requiring two-thirds approval. Those
are laudable goals. But while they make it harder to lift sanctions on Iran,
they don’t increase the chances of success for Iran’s democratic opposition.
To do that, Blackburn (and for that matter the Biden administration) should
consider a new approach. One idea would be not to release the billions now
frozen in overseas accounts until Iran agreed to hold a referendum — monitored
by the U.N. — to change its constitution and eliminate the unaccountable
position of supreme leader. That constitutional change has circulated among
Iranian reformers for nearly two decades, and in recent years has been endorsed
by a slew of dissidents and human rights activists, including Nobel Laureate
Shirin Ebadi.
Another idea would be to work directly with humanitarian organizations in Iran
to reduce the harm caused by sanctions to supplies of food and medicine. Give
those goods directly to Iranian organizations that are independent from the
regime. Biden could also lift some banking restrictions to make it easier for
Iranian diaspora groups to send money to labor unions and dissidents still in
Iran.
These proposals would signal that the U.S. does not intend to punish the Iranian
people for the proliferation and terrorism of the regime that oppresses them. It
would also provide a path to the full economic normalization that Iranians
themselves so desperately want.
America’s current approach offers only false hope in this regard. Even if all
the sanctions are lifted, Saudi Arabia, Israel and the United Arab Emirates will
pressure banks and oil companies to stay away from Iran’s economy as a condition
for doing business in their countries. Meanwhile, companies that choose to
invest in Iran will still have to weigh the risks that any Iranian dual
nationals that work for them are at risk of arbitrary arrest, as has happened
time and again in Iran since the 2015 nuclear deal. Biden’s policy also offers
false hope on nuclear security, as the best he can get will be an Iranian return
to enrichment limits that expire by the end of the decade.
Six years ago, there was a credible argument that the alternative to former
President Barack Obama’s flawed nuclear deal was a regional war. But Israel has
shown that sabotage can set back Iran’s nuclear program without the region
spiraling into open warfare. That sabotage has purchased precious time for Biden
to focus U.S. policy on the problem at the center of the Iranian nuclear crisis:
the Iranian regime.
*This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or
Bloomberg LP and its owners.
Pakistani Taliban claims suicide bombing in Quetta
Thomas Joscelyn/FDD's Long War Journal/April 23/2021
Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (the TTP, or Pakistani Taliban) has claimed
responsibility for a suicide bombing at a luxury hotel in Quetta, Pakistan. The
group has identified the terrorist responsible as Muhammad Abbas (a.k.a. “Farooq”),
saying he “targeted police officers and other higher-ups with a
martyrdom-seeking attack” on the “five-star Serena hotel.”
At least several people were killed and a dozen or more wounded in the blast
yesterday (Apr. 21). According to the Pakistani interior ministry, a Chinese
diplomatic delegation, including China’s ambassador, was staying at the same
hotel, but was not at the location at the time of the bombing. There is no
indication that the Chinese delegation was intentionally targeted.
Instead, the TTP claims that two Pakistani “assistant commissioners” perished,
while “scores of other security officers were either killed or injured” and many
vehicles “were burnt and destroyed in the attack.”
The TTP has executed a string of mostly small-scale attacks, including
assassinations, against Pakistani military and security personnel this year. The
group claims the latest bombing is evidence of its “strong military leadership”
and the “might” of its “intelligence” arm.
The jihadists’ claim of responsibility was posted by the TTP’s official
propaganda outlet, Umar Media, on social media and its website. The message is
attributed to the TTP’s spokesperson, a man identified as “Muhammad Khurasani .”
The author of the statement criticizes unnamed Pakistani journalists and
officials for supposedly covering up the success of the operation, saying these
people “childishly” hid “information on the type of attack and its target.”
Like other jihadist organizations, the TTP has suffered a string of setbacks
over the years. However, the group has been reconstituted under the leadership
of its current emir Noor Wali Mehsud.
Noor Wali was named the emir of the TTP in June 2018, shortly after his
predecessor, Mullah Fazlullah, was killed in Afghanistan. Fazlullah’s tenure was
rocky, as the TTP suffered defections to the Islamic State’s upstart Khorasan
branch, as well as other disruptions in its chain of command. Noor Wali has
sought to reunify the TTP’s ranks, formally welcoming breakaway factions back
into the fold and publicly accepting oaths of allegiance.
The TTP has been closely allied with al-Qaeda since its formation in late 2007,
a relationship that is highlighted in the group’s media. Some personnel are
dual-hatted, meaning they serve in both the TTP’s and al-Qaeda’s ranks.
The TTP maintains a significant presence in Afghanistan, where it is waging
jihad to restore the Afghan Taliban’s Islamic Emirate. As part of a Feb. 29,
2020, withdrawal deal with the U.S., the Afghan Taliban is supposed to prevent
terrorist organizations that threaten the U.S. from operating inside
Afghanistan. However, there is no evidence of a break between the Afghan Taliban
and the TTP. The TTP’s international aspirations have long been known. In
addition to conducting regular attacks inside Pakistan, the group is responsible
for the failed May 2010 Times Square bombing.
According to a United Nations monitoring team, thousands of Pakistani jihadists,
many of whom are affiliated with the TTP, continue to wage jihad in Afghanistan.
*Thomas Joscelyn is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies
and the Senior Editor for FDD’s Long War Journal. Follow Tom on Twitter @thomasjoscelyn.
FDD is a nonpartisan think tank focused on foreign policy and national security
issues.
OPCW Member States Hold Syria Accountable for Chemical Weapons Use
Anthony Ruggiero and Andrea Stricker/FDD/April 23/2021
Eighty-seven member states of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons (OPCW) voted yesterday to suspend Syria’s voting rights in the
organization. This was an appropriate, albeit overdue, response to the Assad
regime’s unconscionable use of chemical weapons against Syrian citizens.
The OPCW’s unprecedented action marks the first time that the multilateral
anti-chemical weapons body has suspended a country. In 2013, Syria joined the
1993 Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) and nominally surrendered its chemical
weapons arsenal. Yet the OPCW, UN Security Council, and independent
investigations have proven the Assad regime continued to use chemical weapons
against civilians on numerous occasions since 2013. The CWC requires parties to
disclose, destroy, and refrain from using chemical weapons, but Damascus has
refused to cooperate.
In July 2020, the OPCW’s 41-member Executive Council (EC) set a 90-day deadline
for Syria to declare its chemical weapons, its banned chemicals and precursors,
and its related production facilities and to demonstrate compliance with the CWC.
The EC recommended that the OPCW’s 193-member Conference of States Parties (CSP),
which makes final decisions on CWC compliance issues, take appropriate action if
Syria did not comply with the deadline.
Nine months later, the organization has finally acted to penalize Syria.
Unfortunately, only 87 countries in the CSP stood with the Syrian people, while
15 voted against the resolution and 34 countries abstained. Fifty-seven
countries did not vote at all. The “no” votes were not surprising and included
countries that habitually vote against strong action to uphold the CWC, such as
China, Iran, Russia, and Syria.
But a few countries that abstained should explain their failure to take a stance
on this critical issue. For example, Mexico and Cameroon voted for the July EC
decision but abstained in the suspension vote. The United Arab Emirates and
India, close Western partners, abstained in both votes. Jordan also abstained.
Still, the suspension of Syria’s voting rights is long overdue and represents a
first step toward restoring the global norm of zero chemical weapons use. The
OPCW’s next action must be holding Russia accountable for its continued use of
chemical weapons to silence regime opponents.
Fifty-nine countries issued a statement at the CSP on Tuesday condemning
Russia’s August 2020 use of a Novichok nerve agent to poison dissident Alexei
Navalny. Yet the statement did not go far enough. It asked that Russia provide
additional information about the incident, which is unlikely, rather than
demanding an OPCW investigation.
At the next OPCW EC meeting in July, the Biden administration should lead an
effort to adopt a decision demanding that Russia comply with its CWC obligations
within 90 days, modeled on the July 2020 EC resolution on Syria. Seventeen
current EC member states were among the 59 who condemned Russia on Tuesday, a
robust start toward gathering the 28 votes needed for an EC decision.
While some states may regard such an EC decision as hasty, Russia also used
Novichok in 2018 in the United Kingdom, inadvertently killing a mother of three
instead of the Russian defector targeted for assassination. President Vladimir
Putin evidently has yet to receive the message that it is unacceptable to use
chemical weapons.
In the lead-up to the July OPCW meeting, Washington should also issue additional
targeted sanctions on Russia and Syria and support the prosecution of officials
who have committed atrocities.
The OPCW decision marks an important first step toward restoring the global norm
of zero chemical weapons use. The fight will continue in the OPCW and elsewhere.
The Biden administration must prioritize efforts to hold violators accountable.
Anthony Ruggiero is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies
(FDD), where Andrea Stricker is a research fellow. They both contribute to FDD’s
Center on Military and Political Power (CMPP), Center on Economic and Financial
Power (CEFP), and International Organizations Program. For more analysis from
Anthony, Andrea, CMPP, CEFP, and the International Organizations Program, please
subscribe HERE. Follow the authors on Twitter @NatSecAnthony and @StrickerNonpro.
Follow FDD on Twitter @FDD and @FDD_CMPP and @FDD_CEFP. FDD is a Washington,
DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and
foreign policy.
“Endless Wars” and the Danger of Ignoring History
Bradley Bowman and Clifford D. May/FDD/April 23/2021
“Ending endless wars” is the goal and mantra of many of those calling for
Washington to withdraw troops from overseas deployments. It is an appealing
notion. It also demonstrates stunning ignorance. History offers little evidence
that protracted armed conflicts – so-called “endless” or “forever” wars – can be
brought to a satisfactory conclusion by leaving one’s enemies to plot in safety
and comfort. Should the U.S. government adopt such an approach, Americans must
expect to be insufficiently protected in the present and more dangerously
threatened in the future.
“The story of the human race is war,” Winston Churchill, a keen and lifelong
student of history who had fought in four wars by age 25, concluded.1
In 1968, historians Will and Ariel Durant proved Churchill correct
quantitatively. They calculated that there had been only 268 years free of war
in the previous 3,421.2
In 1995, the eminent historian Donald Kagan concurred. In On the Origins of War
and the Preservation of Peace, he wrote that “war has been a persistent part of
human experience since before the birth of civilization.”3
Consider a few examples: The Persian-Roman wars were fought from 54 BCE to 628 –
a span of 681 years. The Anglo-French wars began in 1066 and lasted for almost
750 years. The Iberian Religious Wars, fought in what is now Spain and Portugal
between Christian kingdoms and Muslim emirates and caliphates, started in 711
and ended in 1492 – a period of 781 years.4
In response to the horrors of World War I, world leaders in 1920 established the
League of Nations. Signatories to the League’s covenant explicitly committed
“not to resort to war.”5 The mission was the maintenance of peace.6 However, the
League failed, and we now refer to the Great War (1914–18) as World War I – the
precursor to World War II (1939–45).
In 1928, 15 nations signed the Kellogg-Briand Pact renouncing war “as an
instrument of national policy.”7 Notably, the signatories included the president
of the German Reich and the emperor of Japan. Within a few years, they and other
signatory nations would deploy troops to multiple battlefields.8
Still, such isolationist thinking remained fashionable. Between 1918 and 1939,
the prevailing view in the United Kingdom was that it would be wasteful and
unhelpful to build a powerful military. In 1933, the Oxford Union Society passed
a resolution declaring: “This House will under no circumstances fight for its
King and country.”9 Winston Churchill and Charles de Gaulle both argued
strenuously against this line of thinking, but to no avail.10
Meanwhile, Germans were finding pacificism less appealing. Among the
consequences, as noted by historian Andrew Roberts in his most recent book,
Leadership in War, over just six weeks in 1940, the French “lost 90,000 men
killed, 250,000 wounded, and 1.9 million captured.” At that point, Marshal
Philippe Pétain, a hero of World War I, surrendered to Hitler, while de Gaulle
fled to London.11
Following World War II, the two great powers – the Soviet Union and the United
States – were able to avoid direct military conflict with one another. The Cold
War was fought using diplomacy, economics, espionage, information,
disinformation, and proxies. The Cuban Missile Crisis was a close call. But hot
wars were not entirely avoidable; the United States did deploy tens of thousands
of troops to Korea and Vietnam. More to the point, even during periods without
kinetic actions, both sides prepared for the possibility of war. Israelis, who
have learned a thing or two about conflict over the past 72 years, now call such
periods “the wars between the wars.”12
With the 1989 collapse of the Berlin Wall, many in the West were eager to take a
“peace dividend.”13 This was to be America’s “unipolar moment,” when the United
States and its allies purportedly had no enemies worth worrying about. Surely,
the thinking went, leaders of most nation-states would develop some form of
representative governance with a decent respect for basic human rights.
James Woolsey, a former FDD chairman, saw a rather different scenario unfolding.
Testifying before Congress just after being nominated as President Bill
Clinton’s CIA director in 1993, he referred to the Soviet Union as a “large
dragon” America had slain. He predicted we would soon be threatened by a
“bewildering variety of poisonous snakes.”14 He was prescient; in 2001, a
particularly nasty serpent bit America.
To make matters worse, it turned out the dragon did not stay dead.15 Vladimir
Putin, who came to power in the Kremlin in 1999, was not interested in
transforming Russia into a liberal, law-abiding member in good standing of the
international community. A self-styled czar/commissar, he has worked assiduously
to revive and expand Russian power. Regarding geopolitics as a zero-sum game, he
has undermined the United States and NATO in whatever ways he can. The people of
Georgia and Ukraine have paid the steepest price.
China’s rulers also did not agree that increasing prosperity and democratization
must go hand in hand. Instead of liberalizing and participating in the
post-World War II liberal rules-based order, Beijing has sought to recast the
international system in its own authoritarian image and impose its own rules.
To this end, the Communist Party of China has launched a multi-faceted campaign
that includes massive theft of intellectual property – America’s in particular.
It is worth recalling what Sun Tzu, the great Chinese military strategist, born
around 544 BCE, observed that “a victorious army wins its victories before
seeking battle.”16 Two and a half millennia later, in 1999, two officers of the
People’s Liberation Army (PLA) wrote a manual called Unrestricted Warfare, a
plan to wage war in such a surreptitious manner that the victim remains
oblivious.17
The primary goal is to build a PLA capable of defeating U.S. forces. In a report
earlier this year, the top U.S. commander in the Indo-Pacific warned that the
military balance of power vis-a-vis China was becoming increasingly
“unfavorable.”18 Recently, the PLA Air Force released a provocative video that
appears to show attacks on Guam, an American territory.19
Americans and other free peoples have been slow to wake up to this threat.
But the threats do not end there. For decades, American and other Western
diplomats have attempted to prevent the hostile and despotic rulers of North
Korea and the Islamic Republic of Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and the
means to deliver them to targets anywhere in the world. Nevertheless, North
Korea today has nuclear weapons and increasingly accurate intercontinental
ballistic missiles.20 The Islamic Republic of Iran continues to export terrorism
and likely could attain a nuclear weapons capability in relatively short
order.21
Unfortunately, there are other threats to consider, too. Since 9/11, despite the
elimination of Osama bin Laden and several other terrorist leaders, non-state
jihadi terrorist groups have been both mutating and proliferating. Though the
Islamic State has been deprived of the territory it conquered in Syria and Iraq,
the organization has not been conclusively defeated.22 Only military pressure
applied in the wider Middle East – and mainly from U.S. bases in the Middle East
– has deprived these groups of the breathing space they need to successfully
plan and carry out additional attacks against Americans.
So, now the United States is challenged and threatened by both “dragons” and
“snakes,” as David Kilcullen, an Australian-American soldier and scholar who
served as a top adviser to the U.S. military in Iraq and Afghanistan and is
currently on the Board of Advisors of FDD’s Center on Military and Political
Power, has observed.23 Kilcullen notes that the dragons (Moscow and Beijing) and
the snakes (Tehran, Pyongyang, and non-state jihadi groups) are learning from
each other and becoming more dangerous in the process.24
If democracies have any hope of defending themselves against this daunting array
of threats, free peoples must begin by at least acknowledging that these foes
exist – and that our enemies mean to do us harm. Leaving them alone and
declaring “mission accomplished” is not the answer.
No society in human history has permanently ended or escaped war by retreating
and declaring conflicts over. Those who theorize that the outcome will be
different in the 21st century declare themselves proponents of “responsible
statecraft.” But they have evidence to support neither their theory nor their
claim.
We all recognize the terrible costs war exacts on nations and individuals –
particularly the brave citizens who fight them and the family members who are
left behind. It is right and prudent to view war as a last resort. Our leaders
should do all they can to prevent wars, deter enemies, and utilize diplomacy,
economic sanctions, and other means to defend America’s vital interests. The
responsibility of leaders is to forestall conflicts that are avoidable and
shorten those that are not.
To be sure, not all deployments, interventions, conflicts, and wars are in
America’s strategic interest. Not all battles can be won. And not all battles
must be won in order to prevail in the larger wars. There can be strategic
retreats. However, history’s most successful leaders have understood that
prioritizing the avoidance of military conflict above all else invites
aggression. Understanding this leads to the conclusion that the United States
should maintain the most capable military forces possible, retain well-designed
defenses, and forward-deploy military forces alongside key allies and partners.
This approach will not end all wars, now or in the future. It will, however,
better protect Americans – while making conflicts fewer and farther between.
Does Israel Lie America Into Wars?
Tony Badran/The Tablet/April 23/2021
طوني بدران/مجلة التابلت: هل توريط إسرائيل أميركا في الحروب “مع إيران”
كولين كال مرشح بايدن لموقع مهم في ادارته يلمح إلى أن كشف نيتنياهو عام 2018 عن
ملفات البرنامج النووي الإيراني التي سرقتها الموساد من إيران لم يكن إلا مؤامرة.
في هذه الإثناء تم فضح تلميح كولين كال المخيف هذا الأسبوع الماضي. والسؤال هو
لماذا قال ما قاله مرشح لمنصب مهم اختارة بايدن؟
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/98175/tony-badran-the-tablet-does-israel-lie-america-into-wars-%d8%b7%d9%88%d9%86%d9%8a-%d8%a8%d8%af%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%86-%d9%85%d8%ac%d9%84%d8%a9-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%aa%d8%a7%d8%a8%d9%84%d8%aa-%d9%87%d9%84/
Colin Kahl’s creepy insinuation was debunked last week. The question is why
Biden’s Pentagon pick said it in the first place.
A top adviser to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has acknowledged the 2018
Israeli operation that seized Iran’s nuclear archive. “The country has been
widely exposed to security violations, and the example is that in less than a
year, three security incidents have occurred: two explosions and one
assassination,” Mohsen Rezaee, secretary of the Expediency Discernment Council,
told Iran’s Mehr News last Wednesday. “Before this, documents from our entire
nuclear [archive] have been stolen, and before that, a few suspicious drones
came and did some work.”
Rezaee’s statement marked the first time Iran has acknowledged that the nuclear
archive lifted by the Israelis was real—a fact that was obvious to any sentient
observer from the size, complexity, and interconnected nature of the materials,
which would have taken many years and a very technologically advanced team of
forgers to manufacture out of whole cloth. Yet the Iranians had previously been
loath to admit that the archive was authentic, presumably because both its
contents and its theft were embarrassing to the regime.
Which leaves President Joe Biden’s former national security adviser and current
nominee for undersecretary of defense for policy, Colin Kahl, in the ludicrous
position of being the only Iranian nuclear archive denialist still standing.
Of course, there was no shortage of Obama-era echo chamber operatives and
reporter types who broadcast their initial skepticism about aspects of Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s 2018 presentation of the stolen archive. The
materials presented by the Israelis showed that Iranian claims that had been
taken at face value by President Obama and his team for the purposes of securing
the nuclear deal were false. Why did it matter? As Jacob Nagel and Mark Dubowitz
of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies wrote in Newsweek recently, “What
is the point of ‘unprecedented’ monitoring of these sites if the IAEA never
established a baseline of Iran's weaponization efforts?”
Was Netanyahu hyping a minor find in 2018? What was actually in the so-called
“archive”? Were all the documents in fact real? As soon as Israel revealed its
operation, those with a professional interest in soft-pedaling the lies of
Tehran’s spokespeople suddenly became hardened skeptics, casting doubt on the
veracity of Iranian government documents that contradicted their claims.
And then there was Colin Kahl. Not content with dismissive suspicion or
scattershot attempts at debunking, Kahl opted to go one step further—or
three—and suggested that the evidence Israel obtained and intended to publicize
was part of some kind of Jewish plot to sucker America into war. Ahead of
Netanyahu’s presentation, Kahl tweeted: “Let’s see what this is. But this sure
has an eerie pre-2003 Iraq vibe to it.”
How can we understand that Kahl’s response to reported news of Israeli spies
uncovering a “huge amount of new and dramatic information on the Iranian nuclear
program” was to publicly retail a patently false anti-Semitic conspiracy theory?
The possibilities are finite, and they all come with the same appendix. Maybe
the top-secret U.S. government intelligence that Kahl was privy to before 2018
was in fact blind to Iran’s nuclear program, and really did make it seem
reasonable to assume that the Iranian documents were forgeries. If not, and U.S.
intelligence had long corroborated Israel’s eventual findings, then Kahl’s use
of an anti-Semitic canard to deflate the new revelations was viciously cynical.
Kahl is now Biden’s nominee for the No. 3 position at the Pentagon. To support
Kahl’s stalled confirmation, Obama’s former ambassador to Israel, Daniel
Shapiro, and his former special envoy for Middle East peace, Martin Indyk, have
spearheaded a letter in defense of the embattled nominee that attempts to
portray him as a friend of Israel based on his 13 visits there while carrying
out Obama’s policies. “Kahl has been unfairly and ludicrously smeared as
anti-Israel,” Shapiro insists.
Really? A hallmark of the Obama years was the corruption of language—sometimes
referred to as gaslighting—wherein people were asked to accept constantly
evolving word definitions while rejecting contradictory evidence that they might
have previously seen as clear-cut. In this case, the evidence suggests that
Colin Kahl is a nuclear archive truther who deflected against unwelcome news by
spreading anti-Semitic falsehoods. How friendly is that?
From an American national security standpoint, Kahl’s inability to tell the
difference between friends and foes would appear to be matched by his failure to
correctly analyze intelligence material, which might ordinarily seem like a
prohibitive defect for the guy in charge of policy at the Pentagon. But these
are not normal times. For Kahl’s brazen public supporters, the nominee’s empty
toolkit must come second to his allegiance to the party line—which now
apparently includes the idea that Israel lies America into wars.
*Picture Enclosed shows Former U.S. Deputy Assistant Defense Secretary for the
Middle East Colin Kahl participates in a panel discussion about Iran’s nuclear
program sponsored by the National Iranian American Council in Washington, D.C.,
on Feb. 21, 2012. Kahl said the Iranian supreme leader had not decided to start
a full-fledged program to build nuclear weapons.