English LCCC Newsbulletin For
Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For August 10/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
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Bible Quotations For today
I tell
you; but unless you repent, you will all perish as they did
Saint Luke 13/01-05/:”At that
very time there were some present who told him about the Galileans whose blood
Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. He asked them, ‘Do you think that
because these Galileans suffered in this way they were worse sinners than all
other Galileans? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all perish as
they did. Or those eighteen who were killed when the tower of Siloam fell on
them do you think that they were worse offenders than all the others living in
Jerusalem? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all perish just as
they did.’
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on August 09-10/2021
Lebanon’s Patriarch calls on army to confront Hezbollah
Lebanon's Maronite patriarch calls on army to confront Hezbollah/Tzvi
Joffre/Jerusalem Post/August 09/2021
IDF identifies Hezbollah militant who fired on Israel/Anna Ahronheim/Jerusalem
Post/August 09/2021
Health Ministry: 751 new Corona cases, 5 deaths
Guterres Urges 'Utmost Restraint' after Lebanon-Israel Flare-Up
Israel PM: Lebanon Responsible for Attacks, Hizbullah or Not
Port Blast Bereaved Hold Symbolic Funeral to Demand Justice
Army Chief meets with Qatari Defense Minister
Brawl over Scarce Fuel in Lebanon Turns Deadly
Raisi to Macron: Nuclear negotiations must preserve Iran's rights
Geagea: Manage your affairs, but do not allow citizens to die at gas stations
Jumblatt: What crime did Patriarch Al-Rahi commit?
Makhzoumi: We salute al-Rahi’s stances
Diab cancels all appointments, adheres to quarantine after being exposed to
positive Coronavirus case
Druze Sheikh Akl on Hijra New Year: Renouncing the foundations of the homeland
is a disregard for coexistence
Akar’s Press Office denies circulated news about a meeting on Tuesday to discuss
lifting of subsidies on gasoline, diesel
Moawad, Rochdi discuss frameworks of joint cooperation
Fadlallah: We are constantly striving to import gasoline & diesel from Iran
Berri meets with “Amal” delegation following Tehran visit
Security Forces: Thwarting of narcotic drugs smuggling operation through Beirut
airport, one network member arrested
One person killed in a clash at a gas station in Bakhoun - Al-Dinnieh
Two people killed in a shooting incident in Beddawi, Tripoli
Lebanese Journalist: Without A U.S.–Iranian Understanding, The Crisis There Will
Only Grow Worse/MEMRI/August 09, 2021
South Lebanon’s missiles carry an Iranian message/Khairallah Khairallah/The Arab
Weekly/August 09/2021
Titles For The Latest English LCCC
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on August 09-10/2021
Iran deal instigated violence, says senior Bahraini official in
Jerusalem/Lahav HarkovJerusalem Post/August 09/2021
Diving for peace: Top Bahraini, Israeli FM officials bond under the sea
Iran’s Raisi names VP, chief of staff who are under sanctions
Saudi Arabia sentences 69 Hamas members to prison
Jordan's king strives to project image of dynasty cohesion
Calls for help with fires spark Erdogan’s ire, more censorship
Houthis put conditions on meeting with new UN envoy
Canada imposes additional sanctions on first anniversary of Belarus’s fraudulent
presidential elections
Canada/Statement on International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples
France Extends Macron's Covid Pass despite Protests
Firefighters Try to Stop Greek Island Blaze from Reaching Forest
Fighting Rages in Afghan South after Taliban's Weekend Blitz
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC
English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on
August 09-10/2021
Making the Joint Cyber Defense
Collaborative Work/Rep. Jim Langevin/RADM (Ret) Mark Montgomery/Lawfare/August
09/2021
The Taliban Has a Military Solution for Afghanistan/Thomas Joscelyn/The
Dispatch/August 09/2021
From Maximum Pressure to Maximum Deference/Richard Goldberg/The Dispatch/August
09/2021
Biden Team Discovers Merit of Trump’s Iran Approach/Anthony Ruggiero/Real Clear
World/August 09/2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on August 09-10/2021
Lebanon’s Patriarch calls on army to confront
Hezbollah
The Arab Weekly/August 09/2021
BEIRUT –-Lebanon’s Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros al-Rai called Sunday on
the Lebanese army to prevent the launch of rockets from Lebanese territory
towards Israel, warning that escalation in southern Lebanon is aimed at
diverting attention from the ongoing investigation into the August 4 Beirut port
blast.“We call upon the Lebanese army, which is responsible with the
international forces for the security of the south, to take control of the
entire lands of the south, to strictly implement Resolution 1701, and to prevent
the launching of missiles from Lebanese territory, not for the sake of Israel’s
safety, but rather for the safety of Lebanon,” the Maronite Patriarch said
during Sunday Mass, according to Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA). He noted
that he could not “accept, by virtue of equality before the law, that a party
decides peace and war outside the decision of legality and the national decision
entrusted to two-thirds of the members of the government.”Rai’s statements came
a day after a televised speech by Hezbollah’s chief, in which he said his group
will retaliate against any future Israeli airstrikes on Lebanon, a day after his
supporters fired a barrage of rockets toward Israel.
Hassan Nasrallah said it would be wrong to assume Hezbollah would be constrained
by internal divisions in Lebanon, or the country’s harsh economic crisis. Over
several days last week, militants in Lebanon launched a barrage of rockets into
Israel, drawing rare Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon. On Friday, Hezbollah fired
additional rockets toward Israel, and Israel responded with heavy artillery
shelling. Israel and Hezbollah are enemies who fought to a stalemate in a
month-long war in 2006. Israel estimates Hezbollah possesses over 130,000
rockets and missiles capable of striking anywhere in the country. In recent
years, Israel also has expressed concerns that the group is trying to import or
develop an arsenal of precision-guided missiles.
Targeting lead judge
In his speech on Saturday, Nasrallah also took a swipe at the lead judge probing
the explosion, calling on him to provide proof to back up his decision to summon
current and former officials for questioning in the case. “Where is the
evidence?” he said, calling on Judge Tareq Bitar to share the results. Lebanese
political observers said they were surprised by Nasrallah’s criticism of the
judge, noting that the latter had not accused any political party of being
responsible for the incident, including Hezbollah. The observers added that
Nasrallah’s statements could put Hezbollah in a direct confrontation with the
judge, reinforcing suspicions about the group’s involvement in the Beirut port
blast. The judge is demanding that parliament lift the immunity of three former
ministers so he can proceed with investigations, but lawmakers have requested
more evidence before deciding on whether to waive immunity.
Bitar has rejected parliament’s request. The caretaker interior minister also
did not allow Bitar to question top intelligence official Abbas Ibrahim over the
blast. “The investigation is politicised,” Nasrallah said. “Either he must work…
in a clear manner or the judiciary must find another judge.”
In February, Bitar’s predecessor was removed by a court, which had questioned
his impartiality because his home had been damaged in the explosion. Nasrallah’s
televised speech on Saturday came after Lebanon marked one year since hundreds
of tonnes of ammonium nitrate fertiliser exploded at the Beirut port, killing at
least 214 people and wrecking swathes of the city. The Shia group’s detractors
have in recent weeks claimed it was involved in bringing the substance to the
port so it could travel on to neighbouring Syria for its ally the Damascus
government to use in barrel bombs during the Syrian civil war. But Nasrallah
dismissed these accusations as “fabricated” and “ridiculous.” He dismissed the
accusations as “political targeting paid for by America and Saudi Arabia in
service of Israel.”It emerged after the explosion that officials had known the
ammonium nitrate had been lingering at the port for years.
Obstructing the investigation
A local probe was launched into the disaster but has stalled, with families of
the victims and survivors growing increasingly angry and accusing politicians of
trying to hamper it at every turn. Earlier this month, Amnesty International
said Lebanese authorities have spent the past year “shamelessly obstructing
victims’ quest for truth and justice following the catastrophic port explosion
in Beirut.”The international non-governmental organisation also noted that “the
Lebanese authorities’ relentless efforts to shield officials from scrutiny have
repeatedly hampered the course of the investigation.
“Authorities dismissed the first judge appointed to the investigation after he
summoned political figures for questioning, and have so far rejected the new
investigative judge’s requests to lift MPs’ immunity and to question senior
members of the security forces in connection with the tragedy,” Amnesty said in
its statement released ahead of the one-year anniversary of the blast. “The
Beirut blast, one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history, inflicted
widespread devastation and caused immense suffering. Lebanese authorities
promised a swift investigation; instead they have brazenly blocked and stalled
justice at every turn, despite a tireless campaign for justice and criminal
accountability by survivors and families of victims,” said Lynn Maalouf, Deputy
Director for the Middle East and North Africa at Amnesty International.
Diverting attention
Some experts believe that Hezbollah’s threats to escalate tensions with Israel
aim at diverting attention from the judicial investigation into the Beirut port
blast. The Maronite Patriarch also seems to agree with this theory. The clashes
were meant to “divert attention from the sanctity and glow of the Mass of the
martyrs and victims of” the Beirut Port explosion, he said on Sunday. Rai
attacked the country’s leaders saying, “We ask officials and politicians: How
will you convince the people that you are qualified to lead them towards
salvation, and every day you plunge them into a new crisis? How will you
convince the world that you are worthy of help while you do not care about the
international conferences dedicated to the relief of the Lebanese and which are
ready to save Lebanon? How will you convince yourselves that you were up to the
level of responsibility and hopes? Is there any humanity in you to feel with
people in their misery? “We want to end the military logic and war and adopt the
logic of peace and the interest of Lebanon and all the Lebanese,” the patriarch
added. In August of last year, after the Beirut port blast, the Maronite
patriarch called for the state to take control over weapons in the country and
to confine decisions of war and peace to the state. Rai then called on all
parties not to involve Lebanon in any conflict and to take Lebanon’s interest
into consideration first. The patriarch has also repeatedly called for Lebanon
to focus on neutrality and not to enter international and regional wars which he
said have nothing to do with the country.
Lebanon's Maronite patriarch calls on army to confront
Hezbollah
Tzvi Joffre/Jerusalem Post/August 09/2021
"We call upon the Lebanese army to prevent the launching of missiles, not for
the sake of Israel, but for the sake of Lebanon."
Lebanon’s Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros al-Rahi called on Sunday for the
Lebanese army to take control of the southern part of the country, Hezbollah’s
stronghold, and strictly implement UN Security Council Resolution 1701, after
recent clashes between Israel and Hezbollah.
“We call upon the Lebanese army, which is responsible with the international
forces for the security of the South, to take control of the entire lands of the
South, to strictly implement Resolution 1701 and to prevent the launching of
missiles from Lebanese territory, not for the sake of Israel’s safety, but
rather for the safety of Lebanon,” said Rahi during Sunday Mass, according to
Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA).
The Maronite patriarch stressed that he could not “accept, by virtue of equality
before the law, that a party decides peace and war outside the decision of
legality and the national decision entrusted to two-thirds of the members of the
government.”
On Friday, 19 rockets were fired from southern Lebanon into northern Israel,
with the Iron Dome intercepting 10 rockets and six rockets falling in open areas
near Har Dov, along the Lebanese border. The others fell inside Lebanon. There
were no injuries or casualties.
It was the sixth such attack in recent months and the first in which Hezbollah
admitted responsibility.
Alongside the stance against Hezbollah’s actions, Rahi condemned what he called
“periodic Israeli violations against southern Lebanon, and the violation of
Security Council Resolution No. 1701, as well as the heated tension in the
border areas of residential villages and their surroundings,” according to NNA.
The patriarch stressed that “it is true that Lebanon has not signed peace with
Israel, but it is also true that Lebanon has not decided war with it, and is
officially committed to the 1949 truce,” adding that “we do not want to involve
Lebanon in military operations that provoke devastating Israeli reactions.”
Rahi also claimed that the clashes were meant to “divert attention from the
sanctity and glow of the Mass of the martyrs and victims of” the Beirut Port
explosion when the one-year anniversary of the blast was marked last week.
The Maronite patriarch would go on to attack the country’s leaders. “We ask
officials and politicians: How will you convince the people that you are
qualified to lead them towards salvation, and every day you plunge them into a
new crisis? How will you convince the world that you are worthy of help while
you do not care about the international conferences dedicated to the relief of
the Lebanese and which are ready to save Lebanon? How will you convince
yourselves that you were up to the level of responsibility and hopes? Is there
any humanity in you to feel with people in their misery?” he asked rhetorically.
“We want to end the military logic and war and adopt the logic of peace and the
interest of Lebanon and all the Lebanese,” stated the patriarch, according to
NNA.
The head of Lebanon’s Kataeb Party and former MP, Samy Gemayel, expressed
support for the patriarch on Monday, saying that the party is “convinced” that
there are many Lebanese citizens who agree with the patriarch and the Kataeb
Party concerning sovereignty and removal of arms outside the military.
Hezbollah supporters expressed outrage at the patriarch’s comments on social
media, using the hashtags “Patron of bias” and “patron of surrender.”
Hezbollah-affiliated reporter Ali Shoeib addressed the patriarch in a tweet,
writing: “Just for once, ask the Lebanese army to prevent the Israeli attacks
instead of asking it to prevent the firing of rockets!!”Lebanese MP Ibrahim
Kanaan, a member of the Free Patriotic Movement, a Christian party allied with
Hezbollah, responded to the social media responses to Rahi’s statements, saying
that “insulting what [Rahi] represents and who he represents is rejected by all
standards,” according to NNA. Kanaan called for dialogue between Hezbollah and
Rahi and a “discussion of his concerns, which are national concerns, expressed
by a wide segment of the Lebanese people, with its various components and
colors, in terms of not keeping Lebanon an open arena for exchanging messages,
heating the borders and opening battles that harm the country and its economy,
especially since the Lebanese are going through the most difficult stage in
their 100 year history.”The MP stressed that the patriarch’s positions must be
discussed with respect, far from any abuse or anger. This isn’t the first time
that Rahi has issued statements against Hezbollah’s control of southern Lebanon
and existence as a paramilitary organization in the country.In August of last
year, after the Beirut Port blast, the Maronite patriarch called for the state
to take control over weapons in the country and to confine decisions of war and
peace to the state. Rahi called on all parties not to involve Lebanon in any
conflict and to take Lebanon’s interests into consideration first, according to
NNA. The patriarch has also repeatedly called for Lebanon to focus on neutrality
and not to enter international and regional wars which he said have nothing to
do with the country. In 2014, Rahi visited Israel during a visit by Pope
Francis. Hezbollah and other groups in Lebanon expressed outrage at the decision
at the time.
IDF identifies Hezbollah militant who fired on Israel
Anna Ahronheim/Jerusalem Post/August 09/2021
Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah condemned the Druze who stopped and
filmed the operatives loading rockets towards Israel.
The Hezbollah operative who fired a salvo of 20 rockets towards Israel on Friday
was identified by the IDF as Ali Kajak, and he had been documented near the
border in civilian clothing several times. Kayak “was near the Israeli border a
short while ago in civilian clothes-as is usual for Hezbollah terrorists,
wearing civilian clothes- in order to violate international resolutions that
bind the Lebanese state,” posed the IDF’s Arabic-language spokesperson Avichay
Adraee on Twitter. “Kajak fired rockets near the Druze village in order to
implicate it, like his border tours are aimed at implicating the Lebanese
state,” Adraee continued, adding this “this is more proof of the terror party’s
disregard for Lebanon’s sovereignty, Lebanese sects, and international
resolutions.”Hezbollah claimed responsibility for the rocket attacks on Friday
saying that “at 11.15AM the Islamic Resistance responded to the Israeli
aggression by targeting the vicinity of Israeli enemy posts in Shebaa Farms with
dozens of rockets fired from woodlands that are far from residential areas.”
The Iron Dome missile defense system intercepted 10 rockets, with 6 falling in
open areas near Har Dov on the Lebanese border. The others fell inside Lebanon.
The truck carrying the mobile multi-barreled rocket launcher as well as Kajak
and the other Hezbollah militants was later stopped by Druze residents of the
village of Shwayya. Kajak was seen being violently forced into the car and is
heard saying that he did not belong to the Lebanese Shi’ite terror group. Though
the Lebanese Armed Forces arrested the four militants involved in the rocket
fire, Kajak was later released.
Prime Minister Naftali Bennett on Sunday praised the Druze residents who stopped
the truck, saying that “There is a very important awakening of many citizens in
[Lebanon] against Hezbollah and the Iranian involvement in the country, which in
the midst of the severe economic and political crisis there are also embroiling
them on the front with Israel.”In a speech on Saturday evening, Hezbollah
Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah said that the rocket fire had been carried
out far from a residential area targeting the Shebaa Farms and that he condemned
those who had stopped and filmed the operatives.
“I tell the residents of the non-Shiite villages that we had to use that area in
order to target (a specific area of the Shebaa Farms),” he said. “What was worse
than the Shwayya incident was the filming of the incident and the distribution
of the footage, which inflamed sentiments, and I was personally dismayed.”
“What happened in Shwayya was very, very bad,” Nasrallah said.
Health Ministry: 751 new Corona cases, 5 deaths
NNA/August 09/2021
In its daily report on the COVID-19 developments, the Ministry of Public Health
announced on Monday the registration of 751 new Corona infections, which raised
the cumulative number of confirmed cases to-date to 572,401.
The report added that 5 deaths were recorded during the past 24 hours.
Guterres Urges 'Utmost Restraint' after Lebanon-Israel
Flare-Up
Naharnet/August 09/2021
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has expressed his "deep concern" about
the recent escalation between Hizbullah and Israel across the Blue Line,
"including rocket fire into Israel and return air strikes and artillery fire
into Lebanon," the U.N. said.
"The Secretary-General calls on all parties to exercise utmost restraint and to
actively engage with UNIFIL's liaison and coordination mechanisms," the U.N.
said in a statement."It is paramount that all actors involved avoid actions that
can further heighten tensions and lead to miscalculation," the statement added,
quoting Guterres.
Israel PM: Lebanon Responsible for Attacks, Hizbullah or
Not
Associated Press/August 09/2021
Israel's prime minister said Sunday he holds the Lebanese government responsible
for rocket fire launched from its territory, whether Hizbullah launched the
weapons or not. Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's comments came days after one of
the heaviest flareups in violence between Israel and Hizbullah in several years
and indicated Israel could expand its response if the rocket fire continues."The
country of Lebanon and the army of Lebanon have to take responsibility (for)
what happens in its backyard," Bennett told his Cabinet. Over several days last
week, militants in Lebanon launched a barrage of rockets into Israel, drawing
rare Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon. On Friday, Hizbullah fired additional
rockets toward Israel, and Israel responded with heavy artillery shelling. "It
is less important to us if it's a Palestinian organization that fired,
independent rebels, the state of Israel won't accept shooting on its land,"
Bennett said. He spoke a day after Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said
he'd retaliate against any future Israeli airstrikes on Lebanon and added it
would be wrong to assume Hizbullah would be constrained by internal divisions in
Lebanon or the country's harsh economic crisis. "Don't miscalculate by saying
that Hizbullah is busy with Lebanon's problems," Nasrallah said, adding that the
firing of rockets was a "clear message."Israel and Hizbullah are bitter enemies
who fought to a stalemate in a monthlong war in 2006. Lebanon is experiencing
its worst economic and financial crisis in its modern history, which the World
Bank describes as among the worst the world has witnessed since the mid 1800s.
Israel estimates Hizbullah possesses over 130,000 rockets and missiles capable
of striking anywhere in Israel. In recent years, Israel also has expressed
concerns that the group is trying to import or develop an arsenal of
precision-guided missiles.
Port Blast Bereaved Hold Symbolic Funeral to Demand Justice
Agence France Presse/August 09/2021
Lebanese protestors have carried imitation coffins in a symbolic funeral
procession from Beirut port to demand justice, days after the first anniversary
of a vast dockside explosion that killed more than 200 people. Families of the
victims were joined by dozens of supporters, some wearing black and carrying
burning torches, at an entrance to the port where a warehouse fire on August 4
last year ignited a vast stash of ammonium nitrate, causing one of the biggest
peacetime blasts in history. Wives, sisters and mothers of those killed held
portraits of their loved ones and marched ahead of three symbolic coffins
covered in flowers. "Ammonium nitrate did this," read one sign. Accompanied by
drumming from a marching band, the demonstrators marched through the nearby
districts of Gemmayzeh and Mar Mikhail, which were heavily damaged by the blast.
"These coffins are symbols to remind people that we carried the coffins of our
martyrs," said Ibrahim Hteit, spokesman for a bereaved families' association.
"We deserve the truth and we deserve justice for our loved ones. We're not going
to give up," he said. On Wednesday, thousands of people demonstrated in Beirut
to mark the anniversary of the blast, voicing outrage that nobody has been held
responsible for the disaster which left 214 people dead. The ammonium nitrate, a
highly explosive fertilizer, had been stored for years at the port with no
safety precautions, according to the government itself. The explosion wounded
6,500 people and caused billions of dollars-worth of damage. Yet a judicial
inquiry into the disaster has made little progress. Former ministers are
suspected of complicity in the negligence which culminated in the explosion.
Lebanon's deeply unpopular ruling class have been accused of making every effort
to torpedo the investigation and avoid prosecutions. "The crime goes on, lift
immunity!" read one placard at Sunday's rally. Helene Ata, a psychologist who
lost her twin brother Abdo, 38, called on Lebanese citizens to hit the streets
every day until justice is served. "The pain gets worse every day, under the
shadow of injustice around this affair, officials' inaction, their avoiding
justice," she said. "A year later, it's as if nothing happened," she said.
Army Chief meets with Qatari Defense Minister
NNA/August 09/2021
The Lebanese Army announced via Twitter today that “Army Commander, General
Joseph Aoun, met with the Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of State for Defense
Affairs, Sheikh Khalid bin Mohammad Al Attiyah, with discussions touching on
issues related to the military institution.”
Brawl over Scarce Fuel in Lebanon Turns Deadly
Associated Press/August 09/2021
A brawl at a gas station in northern Lebanon over scarce fuel supplies descended
into deadly violence on Monday, turning into a fight with knives and guns that
killed one man, the National News Agency said. Lebanon has faced months of
severe fuel shortages that have prompted long lines at gas stations and plunged
the small country, dependent on private generators for power, into long hours of
darkness.The shortages are blamed on smuggling, hoarding and the cash-strapped
government's inability to secure deliveries of imported fuel. The crisis
worsened when the government reduced subsidies on fuel amid a deepening
financial crisis unfolding since 2019. The Lebanese currency has plummeted and
now sells at 20,000 Lebanese pounds to the dollar on the black market while the
official rate is fixed at 1,500 pounds for $1. The price of a gallon of fuel has
increased by more than 220% in the last year, triggering panic and a thriving
black market. The fuel crisis has turned violent before, with motorists clashing
at gas stations after long waits and fuel running out. But Monday's brawl is a
rare incident of tensions turning deadly. The National News Agency said it
started with a fistfight at a gas station in Bakhoun, a village in the northern
Dinniyeh region. A man was shot in the melee; he was taken to a hospital in the
nearby town of Zgharta where he died of his wounds, the agency said. The shooter
handed himself in to authorities. "The situation is very hard, and we can't
handle it much longer," Fadi Abu Shakra, a spokesman for fuel distributors, told
al-Jadeed TV. Lebanon's national electricity company, dependent on imported
fuel, has expanded a rolling blackout system, delivering only around one hour of
electricity a day to homes and businesses.
This prompted private generator operators to turn off their engines to ration
the consumption of fuel, plunging entire areas into hours-long darkness.
Hospitals have warned that they have been unable to secure diesel, threatening
the already struggling health sector with shutdowns of medical facilities.
Raisi to Macron: Nuclear negotiations must preserve Iran's
rights
NNA/August 09/2021
Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi confirmed to his French counterpart Emmanuel
Macron today, the need for negotiations on the nuclear deal to preserve the
"rights" of the Islamic Republic, according to the Iranian presidency. The
presidency statement said that Raisi stressed, in a telephone conversation with
his French counterpart, that "in any negotiation, the rights of the Iranian
people and the interests of our nation must be preserved," as reported by AFP.
Geagea: Manage your affairs, but do not allow citizens to
die at gas stations
NNA/August 09/2021
“Is there a crime more heinous than the killing of three Lebanese citizens today
at gas stations in the north?" questioned Lebanese Forces Party Chief, Samir
Geagea, in an issued statement today. “The President of the Republic, the
caretaker Prime Minister and the caretaker government are responsible for what
the Lebanese have reached in their daily lives,” Geagea said. He added: “For the
past year and a half, and to-date, billions of dollars have been wasted before
their eyes under the subsidy pretext, either smuggled to Syria or channeled to
some of the major traders and importers, or wasted through blind subsidy, with
no action taken until we reached our current status.”“The billions that were
wasted would have sufficed the needy families in Lebanon for the next five years
at least,” Geagea went on, adding that “even after we have reached this point,
they are still reluctant to take any decision.” “They do not seek to obtain any
specific external aid, gift or loan to continue the rationalized subsidy on one
hand, nor do they want to work on lifting subsidies on the other hand, which
leads to emptying the Lebanese market of many of the raw materials that the
citizen needs daily, including medicine, gasoline and diesel, to other needs,”
the LF Chief maintained. Addressing the concerned officials, Geagea said: "By
God, either you find a way to manage your affairs, outside the mandatory reserve
that belongs to the people, or you lift the subsidy and spare the Lebanese
citizens from dying daily at gas stations, diesel depots and pharmacies!”
Jumblatt: What crime did Patriarch Al-Rahi commit?
NNA/August 09/2021
Progressive Socialist Party Chief, Walid Jumblatt, tweeted today on the recent
stance by Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Bechara Boutros al-Rahi, saying: “I was
wondering about the crime committed by Patriarch al-Rahi when he reminded of the
armistice agreement, so that insults came pouring down on him from all sides...?
I recall the defense strategy that we discussed with President Michel Sleiman,
and then it was aborted. It seems that it is forbidden to discuss anything
outside the literature of the opposition group…A democratic atmosphere par
excellence!”
Makhzoumi: We salute al-Rahi’s stances
NNA/August 09/2021
"We salute the positions of Patriarch Bechara Al-Rahi and affirm that any
targeting act against him is unacceptable, and this is proof that his positions
in calling for neutrality and not being drawn into what is troubling our
country's atmosphere are right and required to preserve Lebanon's security and
stability,” tweeted MP Fouad Makhzoumi on Monday
Diab cancels all appointments, adheres to quarantine after
being exposed to positive Coronavirus case
NNA/August 09/2021
The Press Office of the Presidency of the Council of Ministers issued the
following statement on Monday: Caretaker Prime Minister, Hassan Diab, canceled
all his appointments for the coming days and adhered to quarantine measures
after getting in contact with a positive coronavirus case.Premier Diab will
resume his duties after conducting a PCR test on Friday morning and making sure
he is not infected with the virus.
Druze Sheikh Akl on Hijra New Year: Renouncing the
foundations of the homeland is a disregard for coexistence
NNA/August 09/2021
Sheikh Akl of the Druze Unitarian Community, Sheikh Naim Hassan, addressed a
speech on Monday marking the Islamic New Year, in which he regretted the present
dire conditions and calamities that have befallen the Lebanese in their country,
considering that “denying the basics of the homeland is a disregard for
coexistence.”“There is no need to emphasize, given the prevailing Lebanese
situation, that denial of the foundations of the nation’s existence enshrined in
the constitution is an indication of complete disregard for the will of what was
called ‘coexistence’, and this means complete political absurdity in the absence
of dialogue and the spirit of participation and the desire to cooperate and
ratify partnership with the Lebanese other,” he said. “Here lies the major
problem,” Sheikh Hassan continued, “which is the inability to breathe essential
life into state institutions, and this is most evident in the fatal stagnation
reflected in the severe failure to form a government over months while sectors
of the country collapse one after the other, as if the screams of the afflicted
people are resounding in a barren wilderness,” he added remorsefully. “The first
of Muharram is a blessed day. A day for insight into the meaning of faith, and
it is a belief that we cling to in our hearts, with its treasures of immortal
human values, motivating us to realize the treasures of virtues by which a
person rises through its meaning according to the divine will,” he said. The
Druze Sheikh Akl concluded by renewing prayers on this day, saying: “We ask God
Almighty that this celebrated day returns to our nation in all goodness,
inspiring us towards the paths of truth, honesty and altruism, for He is the
Most Generous, the Forbearing!”
Akar’s Press Office denies circulated news about a meeting
on Tuesday to discuss lifting of subsidies on gasoline, diesel
NNA/August 09/2021
The press office of Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Defense and Acting
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates in the caretaker government, Zeina
Akar, denied in an issued statement today, the recent circulated news about
lifting subsidies on gasoline and diesel fuel. The statement referred to what
was reported by MTV Channel about a meeting that will be held tomorrow, Tuesday,
between Akar and caretaker Ministers Raymond Ghajar and Raoul Nehme, and the
Central Bank Governor, to discuss this issue as “groundless”. It clarified that
tomorrow’s meeting will be devoted tackling the ration card, calling on
respected media outlets to maintain accuracy in reporting news.
Moawad, Rochdi discuss frameworks of joint cooperation
NNA/August 09/2021
Chief Executive Officer of the René Moawad Foundation, resigned MP Michel Moawad,
received today at his Baabda residence the United Nations Deputy Special
Coordinator for Lebanon, Humanitarian Coordinator Najat Rochdi, at the head of a
delegation, in the presence of the Foundation’s Director General Nabil Moawad.
Discussions touched on the latest developments in Lebanon and the prospects for
change in the country. The visit comes within the framework of developing
cooperation between the Foundation and the United Nations programs, with the aim
of confronting the collapse in Lebanon at the economic and social levels.
Fadlallah: We are constantly striving to import gasoline &
diesel from Iran
NNA/August 09/2021
MP Hassan Fadlallah criticized, in a statement on Monday, “the insistence of the
Central Bank on controlling the decision to legalize subsidies for oil
derivatives and medicine, and the insistence of ‘darkness dealers’ from the
public and private sectors, during the sacred month, on illicit profit by
monopolizing fuel oil to be smuggled or sold on the black market, keeping people
without electricity.”“All our follow-ups with the concerned official authorities
are being met with evading responsibility and blaming others, without any
convincing answers about the reason for the presence of large quantities of
diesel on the black market, and the leakage of quantities sent to the
municipalities, especially in the south, to mafias to trade it at the expense of
the patient people, without being deterred by any human or religious concern or
national conscience,” he said. "Despite the general weariness in state
institutions, the security and judicial apparatuses bear the full responsibility
for identifying those involved, including employees, companies and individuals,
and prosecuting and holding them accountable regardless of their sectarian and
political identity,” Fadlallah went on, stressing that “there is no way to
combat monopolists and smugglers except through the state." “To our good people
who are calling for the speedy import of gasoline and diesel from the Islamic
Republic, we assure them that the quest continues to reach the desired result,
and Hezbollah is making every possible effort to alleviate the suffering of the
people,” the MP concluded.
Berri meets with “Amal” delegation following Tehran visit
NNA/August 09/2021
House Speaker Nabih Berri received today at Ain El-Tineh the "Amal Movement”
delegation returning from Tehran, where they represented the Speaker at the
swearing-in ceremony of Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi. The delegation
included: MP Ayoub Hmayid, Caretaker Culture and Agriculture Minister Abbas
Mortada, Presidency Council Member Khalil Hamdan, and Amal Political Bureau
Member Talal Hatoum. They briefed Speaker Berri on content of the official
meetings they held in Tehran with a number of officials in the Iranian Islamic
Republic, particularly with the Speaker of the Iranian Shura Council, Mohammad
Baqer Qalibaf, and the Chairman of the Defense and National Security Committee,
Vahid Jalalzadeh. The delegation also presented the Speaker with the gift that
was extended to him by the Secretariat of the Shrine of Razavi in the holy
city of Mashhad, which is the banner of Imam Ali al-Ridha.
Security Forces: Thwarting of narcotic drugs smuggling
operation through Beirut airport, one network member arrested
NNA/August 09/2021
In an issued statement by the General Directorate of the Internal Security
Forces - Public Relations Department on Monday, it indicated that within the
framework of combating drug smuggling and through continuous surveillance by the
Central Anti-Narcotics Office in the Judicial Police Unit, information was made
available about several people preparing for the smuggling of a quantity of
drugs through a shipping company. Accordingly, a Judicial Police force managed
on 26-7-2021 to seize about 1.6 Kg. of the "Crystal Meth" anesthetic drug,
professionally hidden inside water filters.
The statement added that as a result of intensive investigations and through
ongoing follow-up and tracing, the police force succeeded in identifying the
network members and arrested one of them (Syrian national, born 1996) on
27-7-2021, noting that investigations are held under the supervision of the
concerned judiciary and work is continuing to arrest the remaining culprits.
One person killed in a clash at a gas station in Bakhoun - Al-Dinnieh
NNA/August 09/2021
A person was killed in a dispute in front of a gas station in the town of
Bakhoun - Dinnieh, which developed into a clash of hands and knives and shooting
from a military weapon due to quarreling over filling fuel. The victim was
transferred to a medical center in Zgharta, were he died of his injuries.
Meanwhile, members of the security forces immediately arrived at the scene and
worked to contain the situation, and it was later reported that the shooter
turned himself in to the Army Intelligence.
Two people killed in a shooting incident in Beddawi,
Tripoli
NNA/August 09/2021
Two people were killed during a clash that occurred in al-Baddawi, which later
spread to the Bab al-Tabbaneh locality in Tripoli, where a single weapon was
fired and a bomb was thrown in wake of a dispute over the sale and purchase of
gasoline.
The ambulance teams of the emergency and relief service of the Islamic Medical
Association rushed to the scene and transferred both victims to the Islamic
Hospital in Tripoli, where the surrounding area is currently witnessing a heavy
deployment of army units.
Lebanese Journalist: Without A U.S.–Iranian Understanding, The Crisis There Will
Only Grow Worse
MEMRI/August 09, 2021
In an article in the Al-Quds Al-Arabi daily, Gilbert Achcar, a Lebanese
journalist and a professor of international relations at SOAS University of
London, wrote that, while the Olympics are happening in Tokyo, Lebanon is
scoring up negative records in terms of its economic situation. Lebanon, he
said, is just another theatre of the struggle between the U.S. and Iran, and as
long as these two countries do not reach an understanding, the crisis there will
only grow deeper. He added that the wealthy businessmen of Lebanon's ruling
elite earn their capital outside the country, and therefore are hardly
interested in extricating it from the economic crisis it is experiencing.
Gilbert Achcar (Source: Hafryat.com)
The following are translated excerpts from his article:[1]
"As the Olympic games take place in Tokyo, Lebanon has unfortunately won the
gold and the bronze in two categories that nobody wants his country to [even]
compete in. It won the gold for the explosion that occurred in it exactly one
year ago, which is the greatest non-nuclear explosion of the 21st century… and
the sixth greatest non-nuclear explosion in history. It won bronze for
experiencing the third worst economic crisis to occur in the world since the
advent of the capitalist economic model in the mid-19th century. This is
according to the latest report of the World Bank's 'Lebanon Economic
Monitor.'[2]
"These two records are actually closely linked to another achievement, which is
difficult to measure, but Lebanon is [surely] a serious contender for the gold
in this category as well, [namely] the indifference of the 'officials' to the
suffering of the people. History has seldom seen a ruling elite like the one
that controls Lebanon's fate, which insists on wasting time in Sisyphean efforts
while the country is sinking and its people are groaning. This is closely
related to the socio-economic status of Lebanon's ruling elite, for there is
hardly a single key figure among them who relies on the local economy and is
therefore truly interested in extricating the country from its crisis. This is
true not only of the political forces that are officially funded from abroad,
such as Hizbullah, but also of [various] 'businesspeople' – for a unique feature
of Lebanon is that its greatest tycoons do not regard it as an [ordinary]
economic arena, but, at best, as an economic hub which, thanks to the jungle
laws that control it, allow [them] to avoid tax restrictions that could be
imposed on them in other [economic] hubs.
"Looking at the wealthiest tycoons in Lebanese politics, we find that the
richest of them is the designated prime minister, Najib Mikati. He is a senior
partner in the Arabian Construction Company, one of the biggest contractors in
the Arab world, which operates globally…Another wealthy businessman in Lebanese
politics is of course Sa'd Al-Hariri. He entered politics following the death of
his father on behalf of his family, which appointed him to this task while
ensuring his share in the family fortune.
"Lebanon's current ruling elite is bereft of roots in the homeland, and is
permanently sponsored by foreign [forces] which share their influence over it.
The latest of these sponsors are the U.S. and Iran. The American sponsorship was
behind the Saudi sponsorship [of Lebanon] after the Taif Agreement (of 1989,
which put an end to the civil war in the country), until three years ago, when
Saudi Arabia decided to renounce any responsibility for what is happening in
Lebanon. The Iranian sponsorship was behind the Syrian sponsorship [of Lebanon]
until [Iran] replaced Syria, after the latter itself fell under the sponsorship
of Tehran due to the war and uprising that broke out in it a decade ago.
"A distinguishing feature of Lebanon's ruling elite is that [its members]
receive a 'fresh' [supply of] dollars from abroad, whether from the countries
with which they are affiliated, as [in the case of] Hizbullah and Iran, or
through close business ties with the Gulf states. This explains the extreme
indifference of this ruling elite to the immense tragedy that the Lebanese
people are experiencing. As for the French plan to settle the disputes between
the components of this elite, so that France can regain a large part of its
[former] sponsorship of Lebanon, [this plan] is doomed to failure as long as
[Lebanon's] sponsors – the U.S. and Iran – cannot reach an understanding between
them…
"The bottom line is that things have become more complicated than they once
were, even though [Joe] Biden has replaced [Donald] Trump as U.S. president. For
the ascent of Ebrahim Raisi to the presidency in Iran, instead of [Hassan]
Rohani, reflects a shift towards a more hardline stance in Iran, which makes the
change in America meaningless. In the absence of understandings between the two
sponsor states [the U.S. and Iran], any measures taken in the Lebanese arena
will bring no more than a temporary respite, like morphine drops given to a
dying patient."
[1] Al-Quds Al-Arabi (London), August 3, 2021.
[2] This report , issued in spring 2021, states that " The Lebanon financial and
economic crisis is likely to rank in the top 10, possibly top three, most severe
crises episodes globally since the mid-nineteenth century." See
https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/394741622469174252/pdf/Lebanon-Economic-Monitor-Lebanon-Sinking-to-the-Top-3.pdf.
South Lebanon’s missiles carry an Iranian message
Khairallah Khairallah/The Arab Weekly/August 09/2021
If the firing of rockets from southern Lebanon towards the settlement of Kiryat
Shmona and Shebaa Farms means anything, it means that there is only one
authority that controls Lebanon. It is Hezbollah. Hezbollah is nothing but a
brigade in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, with Lebanese elements. All in
the matter, if we want to simplify matters, is that Aoun’s “Era of Strength”
that has been in place since October 31, 2016 is nothing but a “Hezbollah
era.”In the ten years, between the signing of the Mar Mikhael Agreement in
February 2006… and the election of Michel Aoun as president, the latter proved
that he is ready to provide any Christian cover that Hezbollah needs. This
included the 2006 summer war that the Shia group triggered and the assassination
of Samer Hanna, a pilot officer in the Lebanese army, under the pretext that he
was flying in southern Lebanon in an area prohibited to the army. In any case,
Aoun’s era carries regional implications and puts the fate of all Lebanon at
risk. This explains the launch of rockets from southern Lebanon at this
particular time. The missiles are an Iranian message. The message is that
Lebanon is an integral part of the battle that the Iranian regime is waging in
order to ensure that its expansionist project is not dead. South Lebanon is not
different from the Gaza Strip, from which Hamas rockets are launched as soon as
Tehran presses the button. This is happening at a time when there is no Lebanese
government and no president of the republic who can emphasise to all that
Lebanon is not “Hezbollah.”In order for Gibran Bassil to reach the presidency of
the republic, the Aoun era seems ready for all concessions, including complete
surrender to Hezbollah. This is opposed by most Lebanese, who have proven once
again that many of them are ready to confront Hezbollah. This is what was shown
by the population of the Druze town of Chouya in the Hasbaya district whenthey
intercepted a Hezbollah rocket launcher and its crew. The incident revealed that
the true spirit of resistance has not yet died in Lebanon. The country may be
dead, but among its people there are those who still defend the culture of life.
In the end, there is no political authority in Lebanon that understands where
Lebanon’s interest lies. There is only a political authority that is ready to
acquiesce to all of Hezbollah’s demands.
The least that can be said is that surrendering to Hezbollah does not protect
Lebanon as much as it pushes it to wither and decay. In the final analysis,
Lebanon has acquiesced to becoming another Gaza Strip. This strip, which has
been ruled by “Hamas” since 2007, has turned into a Taliban-style Islamist
emirate. What is the function of the Gaza Strip? Its only role is to show that
Iran has missiles which have the range to target Tel Aviv. This function may
have changed now with the revival of the Egyptian role in the strip.
Lebanon has only one option, that the Aoun era-ruling class will not dare take.
This option is that the president of the republic, if there is a republic left,
declares that Lebanon is not an Iranian base for missile attacks. To put it more
clearly, Lebanon needs to assert that it is not the Gaza Strip nor the Houthi-controlled
Yemen, from where missiles and drones are directed at civilian targets in Saudi
Arabia. On what did the Aoun era bet by not lifting a finger to prevent the
Beirut port blast a year ago? It bet on diluting the investigation into the
bombing, so as not to reveal the truth about who brought ammonium nitrate to the
port of Beirut, who stored it in hangar No. 12, and who took out the quantities
that needed to be removed. It is betting on a mirage, the mirage of Iran’s
victory in the battle it is waging on the international community, on the one
hand, and towards reaching a deal with the US administration, on the other. It
is a losing bet from A to Z. A bet that will cost Lebanon a lot, after Hezbollah
became the one and only authority in town.
The Latest English LCCC
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on August 09-10/2021
Iran deal instigated violence, says senior Bahraini
official in Jerusalem
Lahav HarkovJerusalem Post/August 09/2021
“The JCPOA [nuclear deal] has caused more instigation and extremism in many
different regions across the Middle East.”The 2015 nuclear agreement between
world powers and Iran led to greater violence and extremism in the Middle East,
Bahrain Undersecretary for International Relations at the Foreign Ministry Dr.
Shaikh Abdulla bin Ahmed Al Khalifa said in Jerusalem on Sunday, the first day
of a four-day trip aimed at deepening relations between Bahrain and Israel.“The
JCPOA [nuclear deal] has caused more instigation and extremism in many different
regions across the Middle East,” Al Khalifa warned. “Was there any good result
that we have come out with? On the contrary. The JCPOA fueled crises across the
Middle East.”The Bahraini official spoke at the signing of a cooperation
agreement between the Bahrain Center for Strategic, International and Energy
Studies (Derasat), which Al Khalifa heads, and the Jerusalem Center for Public
Affairs. JCPA president Dore Gold said the goal of this partnership and his
think tank’s work with a research institute in the United Arab Emirates is “to
create an array of cooperation agreements with the countries of the Abraham
Accords and to convey a message to the US, Europe and other countries, of a
realistic understanding of the challenges that we share – the danger of Iran’s
policies in the region and the world.”The 2015 nuclear agreement between world
powers and Iran led to greater violence and extremism in the Middle East,
Bahrain Undersecretary for International Relations at the Foreign Ministry Dr.
Shaikh Abdulla bin Ahmed Al Khalifa said in Jerusalem on Sunday, the first day
of a four-day trip aimed at deepening relations between Bahrain and Israel. “The
JCPOA [nuclear deal] has caused more instigation and extremism in many different
regions across the Middle East,” Al Khalifa warned. “Was there any good result
that we have come out with? On the contrary. The JCPOA fueled crises across the
Middle East.”The Bahraini official spoke at the signing of a cooperation
agreement between the Bahrain Center for Strategic, International and Energy
Studies (Derasat), which Al Khalifa heads, and the Jerusalem Center for Public
Affairs. JCPA president Dore Gold said the goal of this partnership and his
think tank’s work with a research institute in the United Arab Emirates is “to
create an array of cooperation agreements with the countries of the Abraham
Accords and to convey a message to the US, Europe and other countries, of a
realistic understanding of the challenges that we share – the danger of Iran’s
policies in the region and the world.”
Diving for peace: Top Bahraini, Israeli FM officials bond under the sea
Jerusalem Post/August 09/2021
"One knows it is a true friendship when your partner in peace is your diving
buddy."Bahrain’s undersecretary for international relations at the Foreign
Ministry, Dr. Shaikh Abdulla bin Ahmed Al Khalifa, took a dive in the
Mediterranean Sea with Foreign Ministry Director-General Alon Ushpiz on Monday.
The two senior officials went diving at Rosh Hanikra, or Ras al-Naquora in
Arabic, as Al Khalifa called it. Ushpiz tweeted a video of himself and Al
Khalifa waving their countries' flags underwater. One knows it is a true
friendship when your partner in peace is your diving buddy
“We took advantage of a rare chance for underwater diplomatic etiquette. One
knows it is a true friendship when your partner in peace is your diving buddy,”
Ushpiz wrote. Al Khalifa, an avid diver, said the site had been on his “to-dive
list.” He is a licensed scuba instructor who often goes deep-sea diving off
Bahrain’s coast. “We took advantage of a rare chance for underwater diplomatic
etiquette. One knows it is a true friendship when your partner in peace is your
diving buddy,” Ushpiz wrote. Al Khalifa, an avid diver, said the site had been
on his “to-dive list.” He is a licensed scuba instructor who often goes deep-sea
diving off Bahrain’s coast.
Iran’s Raisi names VP, chief of staff who are under
sanctions
The Arab Weekly/August 09/2021
TEHRAN – Iran’s new ultraconservative President Ebrahim Raisi on Sunday named
the chairman of a powerful state-owned foundation sanctioned by the United
States as his first vice-president, the president’s official website said.
Mohammad Mokhber, long rumoured by local media to be top pick for the position,
has for years headed the foundation known as Setad, or the Execution of Imam
Khomeini’s order, in reference to the Islamic republic’s founder Ruhollah
Khomeini. Mokhber was appointed to the position by the supreme leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei in 2007, following a string of official positions at the
southwestern province of Khuzestan. The Setad was originally founded in the late
1980s to manage confiscated properties following the 1979 Islamic Revolution. It
has since turned into a sprawling conglomerate with stakes in various
industries, including health, and its Barekat Foundation produced out Iran’s
first local Covid-19 vaccine project. The vaccine received emergency approval in
June from health authorities in the Middle East’s worst-hit country. The Setad
and Mokhber were blacklisted by the US Treasury in January. Washington had said
that Setad “has a stake in nearly every sector of the Iranian economy, including
energy, telecommunications, and financial services.” Raisi, who won a June 18
election marked by record abstention, takes over from moderate Hassan Rouhani.
On Thursday, Raisi took the oath of office before parliament, to which he must
present a list of ministers within two weeks.
A former judiciary chief, Raisi has been criticised by the West for his human
rights record and sanctioned by the US since 2019. Raisi also picked
Gholamhossein Esmaili, the judiciary’s spokesman during his tenure, as his chief
of staff. A former prosecutor, Esmaili is under sanctions by the European Union.
He was first blacklisted in 2011 as Iran’s prisons’ organisation chief over
“serious human rights violations”. Raisi’s presidency is due to consolidate
power in the hands of conservatives following their 2020 parliamentary election
victory, which was marked by the disqualification of thousands of reformist or
moderate candidates. Also on Sunday, ultraconservative MP and 2021 presidential
candidate Alireza Zakani was elected as mayor of Tehran, state news agency IRNA
reported. He won the majority of conservative-dominated city council votes, but
he cannot take over before resigning from the parliament, it said.
He succeeds Pirouz Hanachi, a veteran public servant with a background in urban
development seen as close to the reformist camp. Zakani has served in parliament
between 2004 and 2016, and won a seat again last year. A doctor in nuclear
medicine, aged 55, he dropped out of the June presidential race in favour of
Raisi.
Saudi Arabia sentences 69 Hamas members to prison
The Arab Weekly/August 09/2021
RIYADH --Saudi Arabia dealt a severe blow to the Palestinian Hamas Movement on
Sunday after a Saudi criminal court sentenced former Hamas representative
Mohammed al-Khudari to 15 years in prison on charges of illegally collecting and
circulating money to support the Palestinian group. According to Hamas, 69 of
its Palestinian and Jordanian members and supporters were sentenced by the Saudi
court to prison terms ranging from three to 21 years. Riyadh has declined to
comment on the issue, only saying that the detainees are enjoying their rights
enshrined in law.
The men were arrested three years ago and accused of affiliation with a
terrorist organisation and raising funds on its behalf. Hamas is an offshoot of
the Muslim Brotherhood, which has been designated by Saudi Arabia and other Arab
Gulf states as a terrorist organisation. Mediation efforts and appeals launched
by Hamas to dissuade the Saudi authorities from prosecuting the 69 members and
supporters of the group failed. Ismail Haniyeh, head of Hamas political bureau,
said Wednesday that he is looking forward to a Saudi “judicial decision and
royal will” to close the file of Palestinian detainees in the kingdom.
The news about the sentences emerged two days after Haniyeh visited Iran and
congratulated the new Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi, in a clear provocation to
Saudi Arabia, which views Iran as an existential threat. Hamas — and to some
extent Hezbollah — had in the past enjoyed freedom to operate and move in Arab
Gulf states, where they collected and circulated funds. The situation later
changed when Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman bin Abdulaziz rose to power. The
Saudi crown prince sees the role of Hamas as detrimental when it comes to the
national security of the kingdom. He also considers Hamas as hostile to Riyadh
directly or through its alliance with Tehran. The last visit by a senior Hamas
official to Saudi Arabia took place in July 2015, when Saudi King Salman bin
Abdulaziz Al Saud received the movement’s former leader, Khaled Meshaal. The
recent sentences dash the Islamist movement’s hopes of restoring relations with
Saudi Arabia. Over the past months, Hamas has shown a desire to restore warmth
to relations with Riyadh, with letters sent to King Salman and to Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman on the success of 41st Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) summit
organised in the Saudi city of al-Ula. Three and a half years after the crisis
that struck the core of the Gulf Cooperation Council, the 41st GCC summit, held
in al-Ula, brought a blockade on Qatar to an end. In the letter sent to King
Salman, Haniyeh welcomed the Al-Ula Declaration, which put an end “disputes
among brothers, healed the division and enhanced unity and rapprochement between
them, as well as boosted the joint Arab work in order to reinforce development
and cooperation in all fields.” Haniyeh expressed his movement’s appreciation
for the efforts exerted by Saudi Arabia in this regard, which is a “continuation
of its historic role of embracing and defending the issues of the Arab world.”In
a separate letter, Haniyeh hailed Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for
this role in making the 41st GCC’s summit succeed and accomplishing Gulf
reconciliation. “Hamas views this reconciliation as an important step to
reinforce the joint action in favour of the Palestinian cause, amid the
challenges facing it, including the occupation, siege, Judaisation and the
attempts to liquidate and abolish it,” Haniyeh said. Some observers also
trumpeted the appearance of Khaled Meshaal last July on the Saudi TV channel Al
Arabiya as an indication of an imminent return of relations between Hamas and
Saudi Arabia. The recent sentences, however, show otherwise. “These brothers did
not commit what necessitated these harsh and unjustified sentences, as well as
trial,” Hamas said in a statement. “All they did was support their cause and the
people to whom they belong, without any offense to the Kingdom and its people.”
Jordan's king strives to project image of dynasty cohesion
The Arab Weekly/August 09/2021
"My dearest uncle and my beloved son, may God bless you in the service of our
nation," tweeted King Abdullah II.
Comments by Jordan's King Abdullah II on his official Twitter account reflected
his continued efforts towards underlining the unity of the Hashemite dynasty and
its support for his rule. The comments were posted next to two photos, showing
the king's uncle, former Crown Prince, Prince Al Hassan bin Talal,
affectionately hugging and walking with the current Crown Prince, Prince Al
Hussein bin Abdullah. The Jordanian monarch commented on the two pictures,
saying, "My dearest uncle and my beloved son, may God bless you in the service
of our nation."
The comments seemed aimed at sending a clear message according to which
reconciliation between Abdullah II and Prince Hassan is based on strong
principles, especially after the king’s uncle played an important role in ending
the crisis which erupted a few months ago over the “sedition” case involving
former Crown Prince Hamzah bin Al Hussein, who is the king's half-brother. The
prosecutor of Jordan’s state security court had filed sedition and incitement
charges against two confidants of King Abdullah II’s half-brother Hamzah, a few
months ago, in a palace drama that has rattled the kingdom. Both were tried by
Jordan’s State Security Court and sentenced to jail. Hamzah was not charged with
any wrongdoing. Political sources said that King Abdullah II's awareness of the
role played by Queen Noor, mother of Prince Hamzah, in removing Hassan from the
line of succession in favour of her son, and the extent of Prince Hassan's
sensitivity to this issue made King Abdullah II edge closer to his uncle Hassan.
Last May, the Jordanian monarch entrusted his uncle, Prince Hassan, with
resolving the issue of former Crown Prince Hamzah and the "sedition" case.
The same sources say Jordan's crown prince wants to show that his uncle is on
his side, not on Prince Hamzah and Queen Noor's side. The so-called sedition
case revealed sharp divisions within the royal family with two wings battling
for power: that of Mona, the mother of King Abdullah along with Rania, his wife,
and that of Queen Noor.
The divisions further fueled popular anger, as a large number of Jordanians,
whose living conditions have deteriorated in recent years, see the royal family
as being more preoccupied with struggle for power rather than finding solutions
to their social problems, as about one million Jordanians live in poverty.
The country's closure for several months due to the pandemic has made the
situation worse, as ordinary residents could no longer find work and provide for
their essential needs. The announcement of the “sedition” case came at a time
when criticism mounted against King Abdullah II, with allegations that he is
leading the kingdom to the brink of catastrophe because of the spread of
corruption under his watch. At the beginning of last April, the authorities
announced the discovery of a plot led by Prince Hamzah with the purpose of
overthrowing King Abdullah. The prince later pledged allegiance to King Abdullah
and his Crown Prince, Prince Hassan, while Bassem Awadallah, former head of the
Jordanian royal court, and Sharif Hassan were sentenced each to 15 years in
jail. Observers believed that the ruling was aimed at closing the case and
paving the way for a royal pardon to be issued, especially after the visit by
Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan to Amman and his meeting with
the Jordanian monarch. But appeals by defence lawyers for Basem Awadallah and
Sharif Hassan of the ruling showed these expectations to be unwarranted. These
observers believe that raising the "sedition" case has made Prince Hamzah more
popular among Jordanians. Most of the population still wants the Hashemite
family to remain, but has been angered for years by mismanagement and corrupt
practices of King Abdullah and his wife, Queen Rania. This makes Prince Hamzah
look like a better alternative, especially considering his ties to the tribes
and his affinity with Jordanians and their concerns. While Queen Rania is
criticised for her "profligate spending" over appearance, Jordanian media close
to the palace are working full throttle to highlight the important role being
played by the king. The Amman Group for Future Dialogues held at the Royal
Cultural Centre on Saturday its second dialogue symposium as part of an
initiative aimed at boosting the symbolism of King Abdullah II. The initiative
includes several tracks that extol the king's efforts to enhance Jordanian
security and serve Jordanians, and highlight the monarch's achievements.
The group's head, Bilal Hassan al-Tal, said at the opening of the symposium that
"the group is carrying its obligation of commitment to the homeland and its
leader so as to build a cohesive internal Jordanian front." He added, "His
Majesty the King is a symbol of our state and a cornerstone of its stability. It
is our duty to be of assistance to him and to rise to the level of his strategic
thinking."
Calls for help with fires spark Erdogan’s ire, more
censorship
The Arab Weekly/August 09/2021
As Turkey burned, ravaged by its deadliest and most destructive wildfires in
living memory, #HelpTurkey began trending on Twitter, supported by sympathetic
celebrities and traumatised Turks.
But in a deeply divided country where even minor events spark culture wars
between President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s supporters and opponents, the hashtag
turned into a scandal, leading to a prosecutors’ probe.
The powerful Turkish leader, unexpectedly facing one of the most serious
challenges of his 18-year rule, sounded scandalised by the idea that his country
needed help, even as the government revealed it no longer had functioning
firefighting planes. “In response to this, there’s only one thing we can say:
Strong Turkey,” Erdogan said after Friday prayers, mentioning a hashtag being
circulated by his voters.“A terror of lies is being spread from America, Europe
and certain other places,” he said about the #HelpTurkey campaign. Acting on
Erdogan’s anger, the prosecutors’ office said it would investigate whether the
posts were designed “to create anxiety, fear and panic in the public, and to
humiliate the Turkish government”. Around the same time, the media regulator
threatened to fine TV channels that continued airing live footage of the fires
or running stories “that provoke fear and worries in the public”. Most stations
complied, minimising their coverage of a disaster that has killed eight people,
destroyed forests across vast swathes of the Mediterranean and Aegean coasts,
and upturned the lives of a generation of farmers.
Impact of purges
The uproar stemmed in part from Erdogan’s proud nationalism, and in part from a
perception among his opponents that cronyism and corruption were taking root.
Erdogan’s fiercest critics charge that he sacked capable leaders from top
positions in the purges that followed a failed coup attempt in 2016, replacing
them with friends and allies who were not up to the job. An energetic, hands-on
leader who rose to power on a popular anti-graft campaign, Erdogan’s own actions
suddenly seemed out of touch. Twitter exploded in outrage when he went on tour
of the damaged region under heavy police escort, tossing bags of tea to locals
out of a moving bus in the middle of the night while a megaphone announced his
presence. “Help us!!!!!” Turkish comedian Enis Arikan tweeted hours after
Erdogan’s visit in a typical #HelpTurkey post. “We need planes urgently. We only
have one world.” Gareth Jenkins, a veteran Turkey analyst, said the criticism of
the calls for help cuts both ways. Erdogan’s government “oversees thousands of
fake accounts, which they use to troll and try to intimidate into silence anyone
who questions its narratives,” Jenkins told AFP. “But I think a much greater
problem is that a large number of Turks, including many of those around Erdogan,
actually believe the regime’s propaganda.”
Tightening the screws
The battle over #HelpTurkey comes with the screws tightening on social media,
which had remained an area of spirited debate in a country dominated by
pro-government media and newspapers. After initial resistance, Twitter, Facebook
and others have complied with a new law requiring platforms to appoint local
envoys who can handle court orders to take down contentious posts. Erdogan says
his government will submit another bill to parliament in October to further
regulate social media, although he has not explained how. Yaman Akdeniz, a
digital rights expert who questions the strength of Jones’s “sock puppet”
analysis, said Turks’ pleas for outside assistance were “real and not a hoax”.
“While the hashtag wars continue on the social media platforms, the fires
continue in real life,” Akdeniz said. “In reality, we have a seriously
malfunctioning government machinery which in turn will undoubtedly introduce a
new crime and law on disinformation to further silence critical voices on social
media platforms,” he said.
Houthis put conditions on meeting with new UN envoy
The Arab Weekly/August 09/2021
ADEN--The chief negotiator for Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi movement said on
Sunday his militias’ conditions must be met before accepting to meet with the
United Nations new special envoy for Yemen. The appointment of Swedish diplomat
Hans Grundberg on Friday as the new UN envoy comes as the United Nations and
United States struggle to secure a breakthrough to end more than six years of
war between the Houthis and the Saudi-led coalition that backs Yemen’s
recognised government. A UN-led initiative for a ceasefire and the lifting of
sea and air restrictions imposed by the coalition on Houthi-held areas has
stalled, with the coalition seeking a simultaneous deal and the Houthis trying
to impose a agreement on specific aspects such as lifting the blockade before
any truce. Their stance has extended the conflict and its related humanitarian
tragedy. “There is no use in having any dialogue before airports and ports are
opened,” Houthi negotiator Mohammed Abdulsalam, who is based in Oman, tweeted in
response to Grundberg’s appointment. When contacted by Reuters, Abdulsalam said
in a text message a meeting would be pointless as Grundberg “has nothing in his
hands” and that there was no progress following last month’s visit to Riyadh by
the US envoy for Yemen, Tim Lenderking. Lenderking’s latest trip to the region
came as ground battles spread beyond Yemen’s gas-rich Marib, the government’s
last northern stronghold that the Houthis are trying to seize. The conflict,
widely seen in the region as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran, has
killed tens of thousands of people and pushed Yemen to the brink of famine. The
coalition intervened in Yemen in March 2015 after the Houthis ousted the
Saudi-backed government from the capital Sana’a, but the war has been in
military stalemate for years with the group controlling most big urban centres.
The Houthis say they are fighting a corrupt system and foreign aggression.
Canada imposes additional sanctions on first anniversary of
Belarus’s fraudulent presidential elections
August 9, 2021 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Honourable Marc Garneau, Minister of Foreign Affairs, today announced new
sanctions under the Special Economic Measures Act in response to the ongoing,
gross and systematic violations of human rights in Belarus. These new measures
impose restrictions on key sectors of the Belarusian economy and minimize
Belarusian state actors’ access to international finance. The targeted sectors
include transferrable securities and money market instruments, debt financing,
insurance and reinsurance, petroleum products and potassium chloride products.
These measures are being taken in solidarity with those of international
partners.
It has been 1 year since the fraudulent August 2020 Belarusian presidential
election, which followed a campaign marred by systematic voter repression,
including state-sponsored violence against protestors, activists and
journalists. Since then, the grave injustices carried out by the Belarusian
government against its own people have not stopped. The regime, led by Aleksandr
Lukashenko, continues to muzzle political opposition, and crackdowns on
independent media have only escalated. The reckless forced diversion of Ryanair
Flight 4978 to arrest Belarusian journalist Roman Protasevich and his companion,
Sofia Sapega, was a particularly brazen attack on the independent media, but far
from the only one.
The regime has refused to engage in meaningful dialogue, and there has been no
sign that it is willing to seek a peaceful and democratic resolution to the
crisis. This is why Canada has today taken steps to impose these additional
sanctions.
These measures will apply further pressure on Belarus’s leadership and send a
clear signal to the Belarusian people that Canada continues to stand with them
in their ongoing efforts to live peaceably and without fear of persecution in an
open and democratic society.
Canada/Statement on International Day of the World’s
Indigenous Peoples
August 9, 2021 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Honourable Marc Garneau, Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Honourable Karina
Gould, Minister of International Development, and the Honourable Mary Ng,
Minister of Small Business, Export Promotion and International Trade, today
issued the following statement on the International Day of the World’s
Indigenous Peoples:
“Today we renew our pledge to listen to, learn from and work together with
Indigenous Peoples in Canada and around the world. It’s important to recognize
that Indigenous Peoples have always been here and that we all have a role to
play in achieving reconciliation.”
“Canada took an important step in this direction when the UN Declaration on the
Rights of Indigenous Peoples became the law of the land, on June 21 this year.
This legislation demands that Canadian laws, policies and practices respect the
internationally recognized human rights of Indigenous Peoples. It is a key step
forward on the path to reconciliation—but it is only a step. Much-needed and
urgent work remains to be done to address past and present injustices.
“At Global Affairs Canada [GAC], we are pursuing the goal of advancing
reconciliation in Canada in everything we do. In this regard, the department has
developed a 2021-to-2025 action plan in close collaboration with members of
GAC’s Indigenous Peoples Network, as well as with other self-identified First
Nations, Inuit and Métis employees. We are also continuously partnering with
Indigenous Peoples, at home and abroad, in support of Indigenous rights and
economic development, and to promote the contributions of Indigenous Peoples and
cultures around the world. This vision defines our work in diplomacy, trade and
investment, security, international assistance and consular affairs.
“Indigenous Peoples—including women, youth, children, persons with disabilities
and 2SLGBTQQIA people—are a focus of Canada’s inclusive, human rights-based
Feminist International Assistance Policy, as well as key partners in achieving
the UN’s 2030 Sustainable Development Goals. GAC supports many projects that
support Indigenous Peoples in the Global South, including in Latin America and
the Caribbean. Since 2017, the International Aboriginal Youth Internships
Initiative has enabled 202 Indigenous young persons to gain professional
experience in international development, including through virtual internships
since the outbreak of COVID-19.
“While many initiatives over the past year and a half were cancelled or
postponed because of the pandemic, we have continued to support Indigenous
professionals, and education and reconciliation globally. We have helped
showcase Indigenous artists and culture in Australia, Brazil, Germany, Norway,
Peru and the United Kingdom. Some 70% to 80% of the world’s Indigenous people
live in the Asia-Pacific region, and we understand the need for dialogue with
these populations.
“GAC strives to be inclusive when it comes to trade and investment. Whenever
possible, Canada seeks dedicated chapters on trade and Indigenous Peoples in its
free trade negotiations. As a first for Canada, the Canada-United States-Mexico
Agreement featured a general exception which ensures that nothing in the
agreement prevents the government from fulfilling its legal obligations to
Indigenous Peoples. Building on this, the same general exception is now a part
of Canada’s 2021 Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement Model. In
these and other efforts, GAC is guided by advice from, and dialogue with, the
department’s Indigenous Working Group on Trade Policy.
“GAC played a role in this country’s colonial past. We acknowledge that we must
commit to working as partners with First Nations, Inuit and Métis toward a
better future here in Canada, as well as with other Indigenous Peoples
worldwide.”
France Extends Macron's Covid Pass despite Protests
Agence France Presse/August 09/2021
France on Monday began enforcing a Covid pass championed by President Emmanuel
Macron in cafes, restaurants and trains, a tightening of rules the government
hopes will boost vaccinations but which has prompted weeks of angry protests.
The pass, already needed for the last three weeks to go to a cinema, attend a
concert or visit a museum, will be needed to partake in usually routine aspects
of life in France such as sipping a coffee in a cafe or travelling on an
inter-city train. Almost a quarter of a million rallied nationwide on Saturday
against the extension of the pass, the biggest in four consecutive weekends of
protests, but Macron has shown little patience with the demonstrators' concerns
over vaccination or alleged erosion of civil liberties. The health pass is
generated in a QR code either by a full course of vaccinations, a recent
negative virus test or a recovery from Covid-19. The government expects a
one-week grace period for consumers and businesses to get used to the new rules.
As cafes opened for business on Monday morning, there were early signs of
frustration in cafes who have had to survive long months of closure during
pandemic lockdowns. "They don't have the health pass and there is nothing I can
do," said Mirela Mihalca, waiting on a table at cafe in central Paris, pointing
to two customers who sat down but who she had refused to serve. "Some understand
it quickly, others not. It is going to be difficult, we are not the police!" she
added.
- 'Utter mess' -
At a cafe in the center of the southwestern city of Bordeaux, manager David
Fourton described the new rules as a "pain" that would require the hiring of an
extra person to carry out the checks. "And if we turn clients away what is there
reaction going to be? It will slow things down for sure and risks being an utter
mess at busy times."Macron hopes the plan will further accelerate the
vaccination drive in France where over 55 percent are now double-jabbed. Aides
have noted that almost seven million new bookings were made for first jabs since
the plans were outlined. The president, who faces re-election next year, has in
recent days repeatedly taken to the social media platform TikTok, popular among
young people, to get his message across. "Get vaccinated. Get vaccinated. Get
vaccinated," Macron said in the latest video Friday. "It's a question of being a
good citizen... our freedom is worth nothing if we infect our friends, neighbors
or grandparents. To be free is to be responsible." About 237,000 people
protested across France on Saturday, including 17,000 in Paris, the interior
ministry said, exceeding the 204,000 recorded last weekend -- numbers that are
extremely unusual for protests at the height of the summer break.
- 'Lost their senses' -
In remarks to the Paris Match weekly, Macron made no secret of his frustration
with the protesters, who he described as "a few tens of thousands of citizens
who have lost their senses to such an extent that they say they live in a
dictatorship.""I will not give into their radical violence," he added. The Le
Monde daily noted Macron's defiance, saying: "Just a few months before the
presidential elections the president is not hesitating to be divisive", while
appearing to keep the support of his core electorate. The numbers in hospital
with Covid-19 in France are still way off previous highs but the government
admits the country is battling a fourth wave of the virus. Cases have been
rising fastest in Corsica and the Mediterranean coast, which are seeing a summer
influx of holidaymakers. But the biggest concern is over France's overseas
territories in the Indian Ocean and Caribbean, notably Martinique and
Guadeloupe, where new lockdowns have been ordered amid a slow vaccine uptake.
Recent polls though have shown that a clear majority of French back the pass,
even including the extension to cafes and restaurants. The pass has already been
required since July 21 to visit cultural venues such as cinemas, theatres and
museums. Its extension was approved by France's Constitutional Council on
Thursday.It will be needed both in the indoor and outdoor areas of restaurants
but will not be required on metro systems and suburban transport.
Firefighters Try to Stop Greek Island Blaze from Reaching
Forest
Agence France Presse/August 09/2021
Firefighters tried Monday to prevent fires from reaching key communities and a
thick forest that could fuel an inferno that one official said has destroyed
hundreds of homes in seven days on the Greek island of Evia. If most of nearly
two weeks of fires had stabilized or receded in other parts of Greece, the ones
on rugged and forested Evia were the most worrying and created apocalyptic
scenes.Firefighters were putting the priority on saving the villages of
Kamatriades and Galatsades on Monday because "if the fire passes through there,
it will end up in a thick forest that will be difficult to extinguish,"
firefighters told the Greek news agency ANA. After the fire laid siege to one
village after another on the north of the island, firefighters also toiled until
dawn to quench flames at Monokarya in order to protect the town of Istiaia, all
without the help of water-dousing aircraft, ANA reported. Thick and suffocating
smoke on Monday also enveloped the coastal region of Pefki, where hundreds of
villagers had been evacuated by sea, while others regrouped, an AFP reporting
team said.
Climate change reality
Greece and neighboring Turkey have been battling the devastating fires for
nearly two weeks as the region suffers its worst heatwave in decades. Two people
have been confirmed dead in Greece and eight in Turkey, while dozens have been
hospitalized. While rain brought some respite from the blazes in Turkey over the
weekend, Greece continued to suffer from an intense heatwave that Greek Prime
Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said should show even doubters the hard reality of
climate change. On Sunday Civil protection deputy minister Nikos Hardalias
warned of "another difficult night" ahead, saying that strong winds were pushing
a fire front towards beach villages on Evia, northeast of Athens. Among 650
firefighters deployed on the island, Greece's second biggest after Crete, were
250 from Serbia and Romania, supported by 11 planes and helicopters dousing
flames with water during the day, according to the Greek firefighting services.
But the air support faced "serious difficulties" because of turbulence, thick
smoke and limited visibility, Hardalias said. Giorgos Kelaitzidis, Evia's deputy
governor, echoed many when he blasted the "insufficient forces" to fight the
fires while "the situation is critical" on the island. He said at least 35,000
hectares of land and hundreds of homes have been burned.
'In the hands of God'
Hundreds of people have already fled the island and another 349 were taken to
safety early on Sunday, the coast guard said. In Pefki village, young people
carried older people over the sand on to a ferry. Elsewhere, villagers joined in
the battle against the flames, helping firefighters. "We are in the hands of
God," 26-year-old Evia resident Yannis Selimis told AFP. "The state is absent.
If people leave, the villages will burn for sure."The situation looked better
elsewhere, with officials saying that fires in the southwestern Peloponnese
region and in a suburb north of Athens had abated. A fire on Crete was brought
under control. But Hardalias warned the risk of fires resurging was heightened.
Some 300 firefighters remained mobilized on the Peleponnese and rescue teams on
Monday still fought flames at the foot of Mount Parnes, 30 kilometers (17 miles)
north of Athens. These included units from Israel as well as Cyprus and France.
From July 29 to August 7, 56,655 hectares (140,000 acres) were burnt in Greece,
according to the European Forest Fire Information System. The average area burnt
over the same period between 2008 and 2020 was 1,700 hectares.
Fighting Rages in Afghan South after Taliban's Weekend
Blitz
Agence France Presse/August 09/2021
Afghan government forces were fighting the Taliban for a string of southern
cities Monday, after the insurgents took control of five provincial capitals in
a 72-hour weekend blitz. The ministry of defense said hundreds of insurgent
fighters had been killed or injured in the last 24 hours, with clashes reported
in Kandahar and Helmand provinces -- traditional Taliban strongholds. Interior
ministry spokesman Mirwais Stanekzai said the Taliban had suffered "heavy
losses", and the security situation was improving. "Afghan security forces are
patrolling the cities," he said.
Fighting in Afghanistan's long-running conflict has escalated dramatically since
May, when the US-led military coalition began the final stage of a withdrawal
set to be completed before the end of the month. While the Taliban's weekend
gains were mostly sparsely populated cities with less strategic value, the loss
of any major southern city would represent a significant shift in the balance of
power. The insurgents have for weeks been trying to take Kandahar and Lashkar
Gah -- both with Pashtun majorities from where the Taliban draw their strength
-- but the government says they have so far managed only to reach the outskirts,
or pockets of neighborhoods. "We're clearing houses, roads, and buildings that
the Taliban occupy," General Sami Sadat, commander of the Afghan army's 215
Corps, told AFP from Lashkar Gah.
Northern prize
The Taliban said Monday they had turned their sights on the north's largest
city, Mazar-i-Sharif. The insurgent's spokesman announced on social media that
they had launched a four-pronged attack on the city, after the weekend capture
of Sheberghan to its west and Kunduz and Taloqan in the east. Residents and
officials in city, however, said the Taliban were exaggerating and fighting was
confined to surrounding districts. "The enemy is trying to distort public
opinion and create anxiety for the civilian population by their propaganda,"
said a statement from the provincial police force in Balkh, where Mazar-i-Sharif
is the capital. Steeped in history and long an economic hub, Mazar-i-Sharif is
the largest city in the north and considered a linchpin to the government’s
control over the area. Mazar's longtime strongman Atta Mohammad Noor vowed
Monday to fight for the city, saying there would be "resistance until the last
drop of my blood.""I prefer dying in dignity than dying in despair," he tweeted.
The loss of the city would signal the complete collapse of Kabul's control over
the north and likely raise major questions about the future of the government.
Lightning offensive
The insurgents have snatched up five provincial capitals in Afghanistan since
Friday in a lightning offensive that appears to have overwhelmed government
forces. On Sunday alone, Kunduz, Sar-e-Pul and Taloqan in the north fell within
hours of each other, raising fears that the government grip over the north was
slipping rapidly. Northern Afghanistan has long been considered an anti-Taliban
stronghold that saw some of the stiffest resistance to militant rule in the
1990s. The region remains home to several militias and is also a fertile
recruiting ground for the country's armed forces. In another northern provincial
capital, Aibak in Samangan, residents were also bracing for the worst. "We don't
hear any fighting in the city, but we have reports the Taliban are massing at
the gates," Mohammad Hashim Sarwary, deputy head of the provincial council, told
AFP. "People in the city started to panic after a former senator and his men
joined the Taliban this morning."The withdrawal of foreign forces is due to
finish at the end of this month ahead of the 20th anniversary of the September
11 attacks. The U.S.-led invasion sparked by 9/11 toppled the first Taliban
regime in 2001.
The Latest LCCC English analysis &
editorials published on August 09-10/2021
Making the Joint Cyber Defense Collaborative Work
Rep. Jim Langevin/RADM (Ret) Mark Montgomery/Lawfare/August 09/2021
On Aug. 5, Jen Easterly, the Director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure
Security Agency (CISA), announced the creation of the Joint Cyber Defense
Collaborative (JCDC) to unify public and private national cyber defense efforts
under one entity. This is welcome news—when discussing federal cybersecurity
efforts, an emphasis on this kind of public-private collaboration is critical to
embracing a “whole-of-nation” approach and strengthening overall U.S.
cybersecurity.
Easterly, as the second person confirmed by the Senate to head CISA, chose an
auspicious location for her first speech: Black Hat, one of the largest and most
influential cybersecurity conferences in the world. Each year, Black Hat and its
companion conference, DEF CON, attract tens of thousands of cybersecurity
professionals to the Las Vegas desert. These are exactly the people that the
JCDC will need to bring into the fold to be successful, and Easterly’s early
roster of private-sector participants is impressive.
The JCDC represents a further evolution of the government’s drive to
operationalize collaboration with the private sector, one of the six pillars of
the Cyberspace Solarium Commission report we helped craft. The creation of this
collaborative is also a crucial step in fulfilling the mandates in the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (NDAA) for the creation of a
Joint Cyber Planning Office (JCPO) and the design of an Integrated Cybersecurity
Center.
However, we commend Easterly for going beyond the framework in the commission
report and laying out a vision for integrating these elements within CISA.
Strengthening CISA is vital to our strategic vision for securing the U.S. in
cyberspace, and the JCDC announcement has the potential to be hugely
consequential for CISA’s future. As we track the stand-up of the JCDC, there are
three parts fundamental to its success: planning, operations and information
fusion.
First, the JCDC should develop and maintain cyber planning and exercising
capabilities. This must be an integral part of the collaborative—successfully
defending the United States against malicious cyber incidents will require the
federal government to be able to mount its own coordinated defensive campaigns
that includes integration between the public and private sectors. Effective
cyber planning and exercising ensures that the government can utilize the full
range of tools it has available for cyber defensive purposes. Status quo
measures have been more “reactive” to individual incidents, rather than being
more “proactive” and forward looking. Section 1715 of the NDAA created the JCPO,
which will develop plans for cyber defense operations between the public and
private sectors. Per the statute, these plans should include coordination
actions that would help the federal government protect against, detect, respond
to, and recover from significant cybersecurity incidents. As part of a broader
national strategic approach, the JCDC should house the JCPO to strengthen the
United States’ capacity to conduct meaningful planning across government and
between the public and private sectors.
Second, the JCDC should have the ability to integrate public- and private-sector
cyber defense operations as well as operations within the federal government.
Without effective, meaningful cooperation between federal government entities,
defensive cybersecurity measures will continue to lag the threat and the federal
government will fall short of being a mature operational partner for the private
sector. CISA is currently a key component in coordinating cyber defense
operations between the federal government and the private sector, but the
ability to conduct fully integrated cybersecurity operations with federal and
nonfederal partners remains immature. In particular, while there have been ad
hoc working groups that have conducted public-private operations, these efforts
have not been institutionalized.
Section 1731 of the NDAA requires the secretary of homeland security, in
coordination with other key federal actors, to submit a plan to Congress to
better improve the coordination of federal cybersecurity efforts within an
integrated cybersecurity center. This report is due in January 2022. Based on
Easterly’s vision, we believe the JCDC should serve as a venue for integrated
operations within the federal government and as the lead federal cyber center
for cybersecurity operations.
Finally, the federal government must improve its combined situational awareness
of the cyber threats that are affecting the United States—particularly through
sound analytics that encompass and fuse key threat information, insight, and
other relevant data from the federal government and other critical public- and
private-sector entities. The Cyberspace Solarium Commission’s report from March
2020 proposed the creation of a Joint Collaborative Environment (JCE)—an
information-sharing environment with a common toolset that would integrate the
federal government’s unclassified and classified cyber threat information,
malware forensics, and data related to cybersecurity risks, and would enable
real-time public-private collaborative analysis. The JCE will ensure that the
most informed analysts in the public and private sectors can come together to
look at common data streams, share notes and make life more difficult for U.S.
adversaries.
The JCDC is the perfect venue to house the JCE and chair its governance board.
If the collaborative is to be successful, it must emphasize the importance of
having a steady stream of analytics to inform public and private actions to
defend critical infrastructure.
The Path Forward for the JCDC
As the JCDC gets off the ground, CISA and Congress will need to take key steps
to consolidate its functions and powers and work with ongoing initiatives within
the federal government.
First, the JCDC should take responsibility, in coordination with CISA’s National
Risk Management Center and the Office of the National Cyber Director, for the
Continuity of Economy planning required by the NDAA. Section 9603 of the NDAA
requires the president to develop and submit a plan to Congress in the next year
and a half for ensuring the reliable functioning of key economic assets and
sectors in the event of a significant incident that might debilitate the United
States, including a cyber incident. The JCDC, in scoping its mission, should
take on the task for planning (the National Risk Management Center should focus
on risk assessment) and ensure that consistent and coherent leadership exists
for this crucial national endeavor. The Office of the National Cyber Director
will be a key partner for the JCDC in developing, socializing and implementing
the plan.
Second, the JCDC should contribute to the report required by the NDAA on the
need for an Integrated Cyber Center. The Department of Homeland Security—and
potentially Congress—should then task the JCDC with fulfilling the function of
an Integrated Cyber Center within CISA. Complementing this assessment, the force
structure assessment of CISA (to include personnel, programs and infrastructure)
required by the NDAA should be informed by the JCDC’s plans to support the
efforts of other federal departments and agencies and the gaps that the
collaborative can fill in national defense measures.
Third, Congress must work to establish the JCE in law, empowering it to serve a
critical function fusing the cyber information picture. CISA can get a head
start by helping to unify federal civilian government efforts to fuse cyber
threat information both within the federal government and between the public and
private sectors.
At the end of the day, the JCDC is set to provide the essential superstructure
to tie together the JCE, the Integrated Cybersecurity Center, and the JCPO.
Wrapping together the planning, defensive operations, and information fusing
functions under one roof has the potential to significantly benefit the United
States’ overall cybersecurity and resilience. As CISA moves forward with its
plans, it should ensure that the visions for joint cyber planning, integrated
operations, and public-private cyber threat analysis can be realized. The JCDC
should take responsibility for ongoing lines of effort to provide leadership and
direction and begin the work of bolstering the nation’s cyber defenses. Congress
must also take action to ensure that CISA is authorized to perform this work and
that appropriations support authorizations accordingly. The welcome step to
establish the JCDC is only the beginning. The hard work of implementing the
vision starts now.
*Congressman Jim Langevin is a senior member of the House Armed Services
Committee, on which he chairs the Cyber, Innovative Technologies, and
Information Systems Subcommittee and serves on the Subcommittees on Seapower and
Projection Forces and Strategic Forces. Mark Montgomery is the senior director
for the Center on Cyber and Technology Innovation at the Foundation for Defense
of Democracies and senior adviser to the Co-Chairmen of the Cyberspace Solarium
Commission. Follow Mark on Twitter @MarkCMontgomery. FDD is a Washington,
DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and
foreign policy.
The Taliban Has a Military Solution for Afghanistan
Thomas Joscelyn/The Dispatch/August 09/2021
As the Taliban and its al-Qaeda allies wage jihad to conquer Afghanistan, the
Biden administration clings to the fanciful idea that a negotiated settlement to
the war is possible. On Tuesday, State Department spokesperson Ned Price
produced a short summary of Secretary of State Anthony Blinken’s most recent
conversation with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani.
As Ghani’s forces fight for their lives, this is what the U.S. government
decided to say:
The Secretary and President Ghani emphasized the need to accelerate peace
negotiations and achieve a political settlement that is inclusive, respects the
rights of all Afghans, including women and minorities, allows the Afghan people
to have a say in choosing their leaders, and prevents Afghan soil from being
used to threaten the United States and its allies and partners.
In reality, there are no “peace negotiations.” The Taliban has no interest in a
“political settlement,” other than one in which Kabul surrenders and the
jihadists’ totalitarian Islamic emirate is resurrected. The Taliban certainly
isn’t going to respect “the rights of all Afghans, including women and
minorities.” There is nothing in the group’s history or current behavior to
indicate that is even remotely possible. Instead, the Taliban is waging a
violent campaign against Afghanistan’s civil society, attempting to roll back
the “rights” ordinary Afghans have enjoyed since the end of the Taliban’s
authoritarian rule in late 2001. Nor is the Taliban going to allow the “Afghan
people to have a say in choosing their leaders.” The jihadists reject any form
of democracy, because it is anathema to them. And the Taliban remains closely
allied with al-Qaeda, which continues to threaten the U.S.
Price’s summary did condemn “the ongoing Taliban attacks, which show little
regard for human life and human rights,” noting that the group’s offensive had
led to “the loss of innocent Afghan lives and displacement of the civilian
population.” And, as reported by CNN, Price did acknowledge that the Taliban’s
behavior is at odds with the idea that a settlement is in the cards. But Price
also said this:
“It is self-evident that the Taliban seek a durable solution. It is not in their
interest to attempt to wrest power by force and only to be displaced down the
road after some period of conflict.”
Self-evident?
Delusional is more like it.
Here are some basic facts about the current state of the war.
The U.S. and Afghan government have repeatedly begged the Taliban for a
ceasefire. The State Department’s hashtag campaign—#CeasefireNow—is part of a
desperate attempt to persuade the Taliban to halt its violence. Unsurprisingly,
it hasn’t worked. The Taliban has never agreed to a meaningful ceasefire. This
fact, alone, should give pause to anyone holding out for a broader political
settlement.
Around May 1, the Taliban launched a massive offensive throughout the country.
The insurgents seized about half of Afghanistan’s territory. This is mostly
rural, sparsely-populated terrain. But the insurgents’ objective was to surround
a number of provincial capitals and capture some other strategic points,
including several lucrative border crossings. They then began laying siege to a
number of more densely populated provincial capitals.
Zaranj, the small capital of the remote Nimruz province, which sits on the
Iranian border, has just fallen to the insurgents. Zaranj is the first
provincial capital seized by the Taliban since the current offensive began. It
likely won’t be the last. While Afghan security forces—buttressed by unannounced
American airstrikes—have prevented any larger provincial capitals from falling,
the cracks in Kabul’s defense are noticeable. The Afghan government is relying
heavily on special forces to contain the jihadists’ advances, but those
commandos are stretched thin.
Defying America’s hashtag and in-person diplomacy, the Taliban’s jihad has taken
a heavy toll since the beginning of the year. The United Nations Assistance
Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) documented 5,183 civilian casualties (1,659
killed and 3,524 injured) during the first six months of 2021. This is a 47
percent increase over the same timeframe for 2020. According to UNAMA, the main
culprit has been the Taliban, which has caused approximately 39 percent of the
civilian casualties. Other anti-government actors have tried to take advantage
of the chaos as well. In sum, actions taken by the Taliban and other
anti-government “elements” have accounted for 64 percent of the civilian
casualties.
According to UNAMA, the Afghan government has unintentionally killed and wounded
innocents, too, causing 23 percent of the civilian casualties. But the
government’s actions are part of a desperate attempt to stymie the advancing
jihadis. If it were up to Kabul, the two sides would be engaged in meaningful
talks under a ceasefire. The Taliban isn’t having it.
Targeted killings are among the three deadliest tactics documented by UNAMA. The
Taliban and other jihadists have been hollowing Afghanistan’s civil society,
deliberately assassinating human rights activists, civilian and humanitarian
workers, tribal elders opposed to the jihadi project, as well as media
personalities and employees. Of course, none of this is consistent with Price’s
claim that the Taliban’s interest in a “durable solution” is “self-evident.” The
Taliban isn’t preparing for a diplomatic reckoning with the people who support
the Afghan government. It is attempting to conquer them.
Just this week, the Taliban’s campaign of targeted killings expanded into the
Afghan capital of Kabul. The acting defense minister, Bismillah Mohammadi,
narrowly escaped a suicide assault mission by one of the Taliban’s “martyrdom”
units on the evening of August 3. Dawa Khan Menapal, the director of the Afghan
government’s information and media center, wasn’t so lucky. The Taliban gunned
him down in a car traveling through Kabul earlier this morning. Menapal wasn’t a
military man—he was a media spokesman whose main task in recent months has been
to combat the Taliban’s propaganda.
The Taliban has made it clear that it will continue to hunt down Afghan
officials in the weeks and months to come. This is yet another indication, as if
it were needed, that the group isn’t preparing for a negotiated settlement with
Afghan officials. It is actively trying to kill them.
President Ashraf Ghani and the members of his government cannot afford to
entertain America’s servile diplomacy with the Taliban. Nearly all American and
NATO forces have been withdrawn. The Afghans must now lead the fight against the
jihadis. If they fail, subjugation awaits.
American diplomats and military leaders alike are fond of saying there is no
“military solution” for the war in Afghanistan. That’s because the U.S. gave up
on any possibility of victory years ago.
The same cannot be said for the Taliban.
*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.
From Maximum Pressure to Maximum Deference
Richard Goldberg/The Dispatch/August 09/2021
Biden’s appeasement of Iran has let the regime become more brazen.
Secretary of State Anthony Blinken this week vowed a “collective response” to
Iran’s drone attack against an Israeli-operated tanker off the coast of Oman
that left one British and one Romanian citizen dead. But President Joe Biden and
his administration would do better to pause for a moment of collective
self-examination. After more than six months in office, Biden’s strategy of
maximum deference toward Iran is failing miserably.
At the outset of his presidency, Biden’s top national security officials
asserted that by abandoning the Trump administration’s policy of maximum
economic pressure, the United States could put Iran’s nuclear program “in a
box.” They hoped to persuade Tehran to negotiate a “longer and stronger
agreement” to replace the 2015 nuclear deal, formally known as the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). But the JCPOA was never much of a box:
narrow, temporary accord that began expiring in late 2020 failed to account for
the Islamic Republic’s undeclared nuclear activities, rein in its hostage-taking
of American citizens, cease its sponsorship of terrorism or even curb its
development of nuclear-capable missiles. As for the longer, stronger deal, it’s
nowhere to be seen. Six months into Biden’s term, the results of his Iran
strategy are already in.
When the Trump administration left office on January 20, 2021, the Islamic
Republic was closer to financial collapse than most people realized. According
to the International Monetary Fund, the regime’s accessible foreign exchange
reserves had declined from $122 billion in 2018 to just $4 billion by the end of
2020. Had U.S. sanctions been enforced and increased during the first quarter of
2021, the mullahs might have run out of hard currency.
But that’s not what happened. Instead, the Biden administration stopped
enforcing many of the most important U.S. economic sanctions on Iran—allowing
Iran to drastically scale up its crude exports to China while also issuing a
presidential waiver to allow Tehran to use billions of dollars in once-frozen
accounts to pay debts to creditors.
If rescuing the clerical regime from a balance of payments crisis was not
enough, Biden sent diplomats on a seemingly endless mission to offer Tehran a
complete economic bailout—lifting all U.S. sanctions, even those imposed on
banks and companies tied to terrorism and Iran’s Revolutionary Guard—in exchange
for a return to the flawed JCPOA. Even more embarrassing for Biden, the Iranians
refused direct talks. U.S. Special Envoy for Iran Rob Malley makes offers to
European diplomats who then relay messages to the Islamic Republic in another
room.
During the presidential transition, when Iran knew that Donald Trump’s hands
were politically tied, the regime began producing high-enriched uranium at 20
percent purity—that has long been a red line for the international community
because it dramatically shortens Iran’s breakout time to a bomb. At the same
time, Iran refused to cooperate with an investigation by the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) into undeclared nuclear sites and activities within
the country.
At the March 2021 IAEA board meeting, U.S. allies were preparing to censure Iran
for its misconduct—a path that could ultimately lead the IAEA to refer Iran’s
nuclear file back to the U.N. Security Council. The Biden administration
objected to anything that could provoke Tehran and pulled its allies back. Since
then, the clerical regime has increased its enrichment to 60 percent, announced
it would produce uranium metal (another move toward potentially developing
nuclear weapons) and began extorting the IAEA by withholding and threatening to
destroy inspection tapes from key facilities.
The president must face this unpleasant truth: Iran has vastly expanded its
illicit nuclear activities on his watch. His policies of maximum deference, not
Trump’s policies of maximum pressure, have allowed this.
The same is true of Iran’s terror activities in the Middle East and around the
world. Whatever level of military deterrence that the United States restored by
killing Qassem Suleimani—the theocracy’s overlord of terrorism and paramilitary
activities– in early 2020 has disappeared. In Iraq it’s been open season on U.S.
forces for militias taking orders from Tehran.
Biden did nothing in response to a March attack on a U.S. base that resulted in
the death of a U.S. contractor—encouraging Iran to escalate by ordering drone
strikes on American positions for months. Instead of ordering a military strike
against key Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) commanders in Iraq to
restore deterrence, Biden ordered two pinprick retaliations against militia
installations along the Syrian-Iraqi border.
Attacks against Saudi Arabia by Iran-backed Houthis and against Israel by
Iran-backed Hamas and Islamic Jihad did nothing to change Biden’s offering Iran
a bailout. Nor did last week’s tanker attack or this week’s attempted tanker
hijacking.
But Biden’s most devastating decision thus far was to keep the offer of cash on
the table for Tehran after the Department of Justice indicted four Iranians in a
plot to kidnap an American citizen from New York City. This was an attempted
terrorist attack on the U.S. homeland—a brazen scheme to snatch an American off
American soil. If anything the Iranians have done over six months merited a
final break from maximum deference, this was it. And yet, the response from the
Biden administration was to reaffirm its commitment to rejoining the nuclear
deal and lifting sanctions on Iran.
In an interview last week with MSNBC’s Mehdi Hasan, Malley said, “America is
less safe because Iran has a more expansive nuclear program and because it
accelerated and intensified its regional activities,” due to the Trump
administration’s maximum pressure campaign and the killing of Soleimani.
Malley may be the most ideological of Biden’s senior advisors. But for those
inside the administration who may be more clear-eyed—and certainly for
Washington policy analysts and pundits—now should be a moment of reckoning for
the precious time lost over the last six months.
Iran’s nuclear program is more dangerous today than it was six months ago.
Iran’s terror activities are more aggressive and target Americans more
frequently than they did six months ago. Iran’s terror proxies are more
emboldened to attack American allies today than they were six months ago. These
are facts—and they are the direct result of six months of maximum deference.
*Richard Goldberg is a senior adviser at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies. He served on Capitol Hill, on the U.S. National Security Council,
as the governor of Illinois’s chief of staff, and as a U.S. Navy Reserve
intelligence officer. Twitter: @rich_goldberg. FDD is a nonpartisan think tank
focused on foreign policy and national security issues.
Biden Team Discovers Merit of Trump’s Iran Approach
Anthony Ruggiero/Real Clear World/August 09/2021
The Biden administration and its advocates have never hidden their contempt for
Trump’s policy of maximum pressure on Iran. According to Robert Malley, the lead
U.S. negotiator at nuclear talks in Vienna, “we’ve seen the result of the
maximum pressure campaign. It has failed.” A few days later the New York Times
editorial board declared “‘Maximum Pressure’ on Iran Has Failed.” The
administration’s plan was to revive Barack Obama’s 2015 nuclear deal by
demonstrating its good will and flexibility. Yet with little progress to show
after six rounds of negotiations, Biden’s team appears to be discovering that
leverage is an indispensable part of diplomacy.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Thursday questioned whether Tehran really
wants to return to the nuclear deal, stating, “this can’t be an indefinite
process.” One day earlier, the administration appeared to lay the groundwork for
a potential pivot back to pressuring Iran. An unnamed senior U.S. official said
Biden may consider an alternative policy especially as Tehran continues its
nuclear advancement. If Iran makes it impossible to go back to the nuclear deal,
the administration will return to “the dual track strategy of the past—sanctions
pressure, other forms of pressure, and a persistent offer of negotiations.”
The unnamed official also warned Iranian negotiators that they “may believe they
have taken the best punch the Americans can give, and that now they will be ok.”
But that would be a mistake. The official noted that if Biden increased the
pressure on the Islamic Republic he would benefit from an “international
consensus…that there is no deal because of Iran, they will face the situation of
2012, not 2019.” In other words, Washington’s tougher stance would have European
support, as it did during the pre-nuclear deal phase of Obama’s Iran policy.
But it will take a lot more than warnings from unnamed officials to persuade
Tehran that Biden is less eager for a deal. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei on Wednesday criticized outgoing Iranian President Hasan Rouhani,
saying: “In this government, it was shown up that trust in the West does not
work.” Khamenei’s remarks were broadcast on state television and come a week
before Ebrahim Raisi ascends to the presidency. Raisi is Khamenei’s hand-picked
hardliner. His likely foreign minister believes that intransigence extracts
concessions from U.S. negotiators. The first six months of Biden’s tenure showed
that to be true, so his first challenge, if he is serious about changing course,
will to be undo the mistakes already made.
First, the International Atomic Energy Agency’s monitoring of the Islamic
Republic’s nuclear program has been significantly degraded. Despite growing
evidence of illicit nuclear activity, Tehran knew it would face few consequences
for stonewalling inspectors.
Biden can take the first step toward fixing this error by building a coalition
with the E3 (France, Germany, and the United Kingdom) and other likeminded
countries to increase diplomatic pressure on Tehran at the agency’s Board of
Governors meeting in September. The U.S. should lead an effort to pass a
resolution that supports the agency’s director general and urges the Islamic
Republic to comply. If it does not, Biden should push the issue to the United
Nations Security Council.
The odds of both Russia and China supporting punitive action are lower than low,
so the Biden administration should be ready to pivot to a new maximum pressure
campaign in coordination with the E3. The good news is many of the Obama
officials who devised the original pressure campaign are in the Biden
administration. They can build on the Trump administration’s maximum pressure
initiatives, most of which the new administration has not yet dismantled. This
reversal would have strong bipartisan support among former Republican officials
and in Congress.
Reportedly the administration is considering tougher enforcement of sanctions on
China’s imports of Iranian oil, a major source of revenue for Tehran. This is a
good start, but Biden must go further, including signaling a willingness to
target Chinese individuals, companies, and banks. One-time advocates of
engagement both inside and outside the administration may be unwilling to go
this far, but that’s what it may take. We need to return to the mantra of “you
can do business with the United States or Iran, but you cannot do business with
both.”
Iran’s nuclear activities have expanded, including the production of uranium
metal, which is a crucial step in the development of nuclear weapons. And Tehran
has already increased uranium enrichment to 60 percent purity, a level close to
what is needed for making nuclear weapons. And there is no known civilian use in
the country for such material.
Israeli officials are reportedly visiting Washington this week to prepare for
Biden’s first meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, possibly in
late August. This is an opportunity for Biden to signal publicly that his
administration is embarking on a new course designed to prevent the clerical
regime from developing a nuclear weapon. And Biden should mean it.
*Anthony Ruggiero is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies (FDD). He previously served in the U.S. government for more than 19
years, most recently as senior director for counterproliferation and biodefense
on the U.S. National Security Council. Follow Anthony on Twitter @NatSecAnthony.
FDD is a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on
national security and foreign policy. The views expressed are the author’s own.