English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese, 
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials 
For February 16/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
 
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Bible Quotations For today
Whenever you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 06/16-21: "‘Whenever you fast, do not look dismal, like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces so as to show others that they are fasting. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward. But when you fast, put oil on your head and wash your face, so that your fasting may be seen not by others but by your Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you. ‘Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust consume and where thieves break in and steal; but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust consumes and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials 
published on February 15- 16/2021
Elias Bejjani/Visit My LCCC Web site/All That you need to 
know on Lebanese unfolding news and events in Arabic and English/http://eliasbejjaninews.com/
What Are The Religious Concepts Of The Ash Monday/Elias Bejjani/February 15/2021
MoPH: 1735 new coronavirus cases, 44 deaths
Abou Sharaf: No Side Effects among First Batch Given Covid Vaccine
Editors’ Syndicate: Vaccination of journalists, media professionals begins next 
week 
Wazni receives letter from Central Bank Governor on collaboration with Alvarez & 
Marsal
Amal Says Berri's Initiative Still Represents an Exit to Break Impasse
Report: Ain el-Tineh Says Lebanese Indifferent about Political Disputes
Mustaqbal Reacts after Jreissati Slams Hariri over 'Counting' Remarks
Sawwan Summons Fenianos, Hazimeh for Questioning over Port Blast
As Lebanon’s banks struggle to raise capital by 20 percent, a deadline looms
Lebanon's Hariri sees no way out of crisis without Arab support
Hariri on Lebanon Govt Crisis: No One Will Be Granted Blocking Power
Jumblatt Says Aoun is Irrational Ruler Who Wants to Commit Suicide
Jumblat Invited to Moscow, Discusses Govt with Bogdanov
President Aoun, it is time to step down/Mouafac Harb/The Daily Star/February 
15/2021
Titles For The 
Latest 
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published 
on  
February 15- 16/2021
WHO OKs AstraZeneca Jabs, Allowing Supply to Poor Nations
Attack on Arbil Airbase Kills Foreign Contractor, Wounds U.S. Soldier
Iran accused of plot to attack UAE embassy in Ethiopia
Iran Wants 'Urgent Steps' Before Withdrawing from Additional Protocol to NPT
Iran deems US move to seize oil shipment an ‘act of piracy’
Iranian arrested in Turkey not consulate employee, says Tehran
US-led Int’l Coalition to Establish New Military Base at Iraq-Syria-Turkey 
Triangle
Russian President Vladimir Putin with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin 
Turkey summons US ambassador over statement on Iraq killings: Ministry
Turkey Accuses US of Backing PKK after Turks Killed in Iraq
Turkish operation to rescue intelligence operatives in Iraq ends in catastrophic 
failure
Qatari FM in Iran as Doha Seeks Mediation on Nuclear Issue
Bogdanov Stresses Need for 'Mission-Driven Govt.' in Talks with Hariri
Canada launches bid to stop arbitrary detentions of foreign citizens by China
 
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on February 15- 16/2021
Iran on its way to ‘solving nuclear missile puzzle’/Thomas 
Harding/The National/February 15, 2021
Israel and Biden–Trouble on the Horizon/Yochanan Visser/Isreal Today/February 
15/2021
Human Rights Back on US Agenda under President Biden/Seth J. Frantzman/The 
Jerusalem Post/February 15/2021
The Person or the Constitution? Falsely Charging McConnell with 
Inconsistency/Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute/February 15/ 2021
Yes… We’re Grudging and Imagining/Hazem Saghieh/Asharq Al-Awsat/ February 
15/2021
Yemen, the Decision-Maker and the Proxy/Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al-Awsat/ 
February 15/2021
Hostility to the Trump administration is not policy/Khairallah Khairallah/The 
Arab Weekly/February 15/2021
Russia refuses to play Iran’s political games/Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab 
News/February 15/2021
 
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on February 15- 16/2021
Elias Bejjani/Visit My LCCC Web site/All That you need to know on Lebanese unfolding news and events in Arabic and English
What Are The Religious Concepts Of The Ash Monday
Elias Bejjani/February 15/2021
مفاهيم اثنين الرماد الإيمانية
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/72716/elias-bejjani-what-is-the-ash-monday/
Ash Monday is the first day of Lent and It is a moveable feast, 
falling on a different date each year because it is dependent on the date of 
Easter. It derives its name from the practice of placing ashes on the foreheads 
of adherents as a sign of mourning and repentance to God.
On The Ash Monday the priest ceremonially marks with wet ashes on the 
worshippers’ foreheads a visible cross while saying “Remember that you are dust, 
and to dust you shall return (genesis03/19)”.
Worshippers are reminded of their sinfulness and mortality and thus, implicitly, 
of their need to repent in time.
Ash Monday (Greek: Καθαρά Δευτέρα), is also known as Clean and Pure Monday.
The common term for this day, refers to the leaving behind of sinful attitudes 
and non-fasting foods.
Our Maronite Catholic Church is notable amongst the Eastern rites employing the 
use of ashes on this day.
(In the Western Catholic Churches this day falls on Wednesday and accordingly it 
is called the “Ash Wednesday”)
Ash Monday is a Christian holy day of prayer, fasting, contemplating of 
transgressions and repentance.
Ash Monday is a reminder that we should begin Lent with good intentions and a 
desire to clean our spiritual house. It is a day of strict fasting including 
abstinence not only from meat but from eggs and dairy products as well.
Liturgically, Ash Monday—and thus Lent itself—begins on the preceding (Sunday) 
night, at a special service called Forgiveness Vespers, which culminates with 
the Ceremony of Mutual Forgiveness, at which all present will bow down before 
one another and ask forgiveness. In this way, the faithful begin Lent with a 
clean conscience, with forgiveness, and with renewed Christian love.
The entire first week of Great Lent is often referred to as “Clean Week”, and it 
is customary to go to Confession during this week, and to clean the house 
thoroughly.
The Holy Bible stresses the conduct of humility and not bragging for not only 
during the fasting period, but every day and around the clock.
It is worth mentioning that Ashes were used in ancient times to express grief. 
When Tamar was raped by her half-brother, “she sprinkled ashes on her head, tore 
her robe, and with her face buried in her hands went away crying” (2 Samuel 
13:19).
Examples of the Ash practices among Jews are found in several other books of the 
Bible, including Numbers 19:9, 19:17, Jonah 3:6, Book of Esther 4:1, and Hebrews 
9:13.
Jesus is quoted as speaking of the Ash practice in Matthew 11:21 and Luke 10:13: 
“If the mighty works done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would 
have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes.”
MoPH: 1735 new coronavirus cases, 44 deaths
NNA/15 February 2021
1735 new coronavirus cases and 44 deaths have been recorded during the last 24 hours in Lebanon, as reported Monday by the Ministry of Public Health.
Abou Sharaf: No Side Effects among First Batch Given Covid Vaccine
Agence France Presse/15 February 2021
Head of Beirut's Order of Physicians Sharaf Abou Sharaf assured on Monday that 
no side effects were experienced by individuals who got the Covid-19 vaccine on 
the launch of Lebanon’s vaccination program on Sunday. Abou Sharaf said no 
complications or side effects experienced from the vaccine were recorded, 
stressing that the risk of infection is greater than the vaccine which has shown 
effectiveness in alleviating severe injuries and deaths. He urged the Lebanese 
to register their names at the platform set by the Health Ministry to get the 
vaccine, stressing the need for commitment to preventive measures against the 
virus. Lebanon launched its Covid-19 vaccination drive Sunday with jabs for 
healthcare workers and the elderly, in a bid to rein in the pandemic amid a 
deepening economic crisis. The country has been under lockdown since 
mid-January, after an unprecedented spike in cases blamed on holiday gatherings 
forced overwhelmed hospitals to turn away patients. Medical workers and those 
aged over 75 were the first to receive Pfizer/BioNTech shots at three major 
Beirut hospitals, a day after a shipment of 28,500 doses arrived at the 
capital's airport.
Editors’ Syndicate: Vaccination of journalists, media professionals begins next 
week 
NNA/15 February 202
The Lebanese Press Editors’ Syndicate on Monday issued a statement saying that 
in light of the continuous follow-up by Editors' Syndicate Head, Joseph Al-Qasifi, 
and members of the Syndicate Council, the Editors’ Syndicate has been informed 
by the Ministry of Public Health that journalists and media professionals, who 
have registered their names through the MOPHCOVAX online platform will start 
getting vaccinated against Covid-19 as of next week.  Registered 
journalists and media professionals will be receiving text messages specifying 
the appointment date and vaccination center as per the mechanism being 
officially used in the vaccination process against the Coronavirus. 
Wazni receives letter from Central Bank Governor on 
collaboration with Alvarez & Marsal
NNA/15 February 2021
Caretaker Finance Minister, Ghazi Wazni, received today a letter sent by 
Governor of the Central Bank, Riyad Salame, hereby confirming his abiding by the 
full provisions of law no. 200 dated 29/12/2020, as well as his positive 
collaboration with Alvarez & Marsal, as announced by Wazni's press office on 
Monday.
Amal Says Berri's Initiative Still Represents an 
Exit to Break Impasse
Naharnet/15 February 202 
The Amal Movement on Monday said that Speaker Nabih Berri’s initiative for 
resolving the governmental crisis remains on the table. “The political bureau of 
Amal Movement reiterates that Speaker Nabih Berri’s initiative still represents 
the exit for everyone in order to pull the cabinet formation process from the 
obstacles it has reached,” it said in a statement issued after an electronic 
meeting. It added that the Speaker’s initiative would allow “benefiting from the 
initiatives of friendly countries.”“The course of the cabinet formation process 
over the past days exposed the futility of the debate that puts private and 
partisan interests ahead of the higher national interest, at a time the people 
are living the worst stage socially and economically,” the politburo said. “Some 
are still seeking to boost their shares and capability to be in charge of 
decisions,” it lamented. Berri had in early February called for the formation of 
a government in which no camp would have the one-third-plus-one veto power and 
whose ministers are “specialists who do not belong to parties, movements or 
political figures.” The parties should name consensual figures who are “neither 
with them nor against them,” Berri suggested.
Report: Ain el-Tineh Says Lebanese Indifferent about 
Political Disputes
Naharnet/15 February 202 
Political circles in Ain el-Tineh said the Lebanese are least concerned with the 
disputes between political leaders who failed so far in forming a much-needed 
reform government capable of steering the country out of its multiple crises, 
al-Joumhouria daily reported Monday..“People are no longer interested in 
political debates, they only want one thing and that is the formation of a 
government” circles in Ain el-Tineh stated. Their remarks came after a speech 
made by PM-designate Saad Hariri on Sunday accusing President Michel Aoun of 
blocking the cabinet formation. It drew a prompt reply from the Presidency 
Information Office, accusing Hariri of making “false and incorrect statements,” 
and of “trying, through the formation of the government, to impose new norms 
that are outside the principles, the constitution and the charter,” the 
statement underlined.
Mustaqbal Reacts after Jreissati Slams Hariri over 
'Counting' Remarks
Naharnet/15 February 202 
A war of words erupted Monday between President Michel Aoun’s aide Salim 
Jreissati and PM-designate Saad Hariri’s al-Mustaqbal Movement. In a statement, 
Jreissati described Hariri’s remarks about “stopping the counting” of Christians 
and Muslims in the country as “very dangerous.” Hariri had on Sunday reminded of 
remarks voiced in the past by his slain father ex-PM Rafik Hariri. “We have 
stopped counting and Christians are half of the state, regardless of the 
numbers,” Hariri quoted his father as saying. “And until today, we have been 
repeating: we have stopped the counting. The accusation of infringing on the 
rights of Christians cannot be thrown at Saad Rafik Hariri,” the PM-designate 
added. Jreissati snapped back on Monday, telling Hariri: “To the PM-designate I 
say no and one thousand no’s. Neither you nor anyone else are the ones who 
stopped or are stopping the counting, seeing as such a guarantee comes from the 
National Pact and the constitution.”“This formula found its roots in 1920 when 
the State of Greater Lebanon was established and was later enshrined in the 1926 
constitution, after independence in 1943 and in the Taef Accord, which 
stipulated equal power-sharing,” the ex-minister added. “No one has the right to 
claim to Christians that he is their guarantee and the guarantee of their 
presence and role in Lebanon,” Jreissati went on to say.
He added that “the real guarantee for our coexistence lies in Article 95 of the 
Constitution, which is the abolition of sectarianism and not only political 
sectarianism,” in an apparent reference to civil marriage and other 
controversial issues related to personal status laws. “This pushes me to raise 
the obvious question: are you ready for it and capable of doing it?” Jreissati 
asked Hariri, suggesting that moving towards the secularization of personal 
status laws will draw a backlash from Muslim religious and political leaders and 
segments of the population.
Mustaqbal Web, the news portal of Hariri’s al-Mustaqbal Movement, later hit back 
at Jreissati, calling him “the constitutional mufti of General Michel Aoun’s 
tenure and the political provocateur since the days of Syrian tutelage.”
“He was annoyed because PM-designate Hariri emphasized the principle of equal 
power-sharing between Muslims and Christians and reiterated the slogan launched 
by his father,” the news portal said. “Jreissati’s dismay stands for President 
Michel Aoun’s dismay, Aoun’s dismay stands for Jebran Bassil’s dismay, and 
Bassil’s dismay stems from Hariri’s success in impeding his scheme to move the 
clash over the government from the political square to the arena of sectarian 
incitement,” Mustaqbal Web added. Jreissati later responded, accusing Mustaqbal 
of naturalizing scores of people for sectarian reasons and blocking a volitional 
civil marriage draft law approved by Cabinet.
Sawwan Summons Fenianos, Hazimeh for Questioning 
over Port Blast
Naharnet/15 February 202
The lead investigator into the Beirut port explosion Judge Fadi Sawwan summoned 
former minister of public works Youssef Fenianos for questioning on Thursday, 
the National News Agency reported on Monday. Fenianos will appear before Sawwan 
as a defendant in the August 4 blast, said the Agency. Sawwan has also summoned 
former customs chief at Beirut port, Moussa Hazmieh, for questioning, added NNA. 
Lebanon's former army chief Jean Qahwaji, who was army chief until 2017, 
testified before Sawwan last week. He said that he had recommended, years before 
the explosion, that tons of seized ammonium nitrate stored there be sold 
privately or sent back to importers. In December, Sawwan filed charges against 
caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab and three former ministers, accusing them 
of negligence leading to the deaths of hundreds of people. The charges sparked a 
backlash and the former ministers challenged the judge's authority in court, 
bringing the probe to a halt. But the country's highest court asked Sawwan to 
resume his work. The questioning of Kahwaji signaled the resumption of the 
probe, and is likely to ease public concerns that the investigation was 
derailed, given Lebanon’s decades-long culture of impunity and political 
interference in judicial matters. Nearly 30 people, most of them port and 
customs officials, have been arrested since the blast.
 
As Lebanon’s banks struggle to raise capital by 20 percent, a deadline looms
Reuters/15 February 2021
Paralyzed by financial crisis and riven with political risk, a number of 
Lebanon’s banks are struggling to meet a central bank target to raise their 
capital defenses by 20 percent by the end of this month.
Less than half of the country’s dozen or so large banks are expected to meet the 
requirement, which the central bank set in August to reinforce the sector, 
according to four banking sources with direct knowledge of the situation. Those 
that are on track to meet central bank targets have largely tapped existing 
shareholders or depositors, converting local dollar deposits into equity 
instruments or sold overseas businesses.
The situation underscores the scale of the problem facing Lebanon’s banks, 
heavily exposed to one of the world’s most indebted states and starved of 
funding. Their customers have largely been frozen out of their dollar deposits 
and blocked from transferring cash abroad since late 2019. Given the wall of 
losses facing the sector, some investors and economists say it’s too little too 
late anyway. The 20 percent target laid down by Riad Salameh, Lebanon’s veteran 
central bank governor, is equivalent to around $4 billion, he confirmed to 
Reuters. That is far short of the $83 billion hole in banks’ balance sheets 
estimated by the outgoing government last year as part of a financial rescue 
plan it had drawn up. “They are all insolvent,” said Mike Azar, a debt finance 
adviser and a former lecturer in international economics at John Hopkins School 
of Advanced International Studies.
“There’s no prospect for recovery as things stand, until there is a sector-wide 
bank resolution and restructuring and finally a fresh capital raise.”A central 
bank order for banks to request their largest depositors to repatriate up to 30% 
of their deposits also appears to have yielded little, the four banking sources 
say.
Salim Sfeir, the head of Lebanon’s association of banks and the chief executive 
of Bank of Beirut, said most banks would “abide by the central bank 
guidelines.”“If we believe that there is no prospect for recovery we would be 
out of business by now. The challenges are difficult but we have a history of 
resilience and creativity and we will adapt to the new situation,” Sfeir said in 
an statement to Reuters.
The central bank said it was premature to assess banks’ response to the capital 
hike target and to a separate request from it that they boost their liquidity by 
3 percent with their corresponding banks. “Nevertheless, almost all banks have 
applied for the increase in capital and serious work has been done for the 
increase in liquidity,” Salameh said in an emailed response to questions.
He acknowledged the banks could require more capital. “The Central Bank will 
work with the banks to tackle this issue individually,” Salameh said in emailed 
comments. With the end of February deadline approaching, speculation has bubbled 
on social media over which banks might be liquidated. The central bank issued a 
statement last week saying such discussions were “devoid of any truth” The 
governor has warned that those who cannot meet the target would have to exit the 
market but some bankers told Reuters they expect it will be extended because 
there is so little hope of attracting fresh investment.
The financial rescue plan devised by the outgoing government envisaged wiping 
out bank shareholders but opposition from bankers and politicians torpedoed it, 
contributing to the collapse of financing talks with the International Monetary 
Fund. “A 20 percent increase in their capital is useful but insufficient,” said 
Khaled Abdel Majeed, MENA fund manager at London-based SAM Capital Partners, an 
investment advisory firm. “I would not touch Lebanese bank stocks at any price. 
Things will get much worse in Lebanon, before they get better.”Salameh, whose 
use of what he has described as “financial engineering” to keep Lebanon’s public 
finances afloat has attracted criticism, is also facing fresh scrutiny, raising 
questions about his future, bankers say. Switzerland’s attorney general said 
last month it was probing possible embezzlement tied to the Lebanese central 
bank.
Salameh has denied any wrongdoing and did not respond to a request for comment 
about how the inquiry might impact his position and the wider banking sector. 
Bank Audi and Blom Bank, the country’s largest banks by assets, have sold 
foreign businesses to help bolster their finances.
“The proceeds from the sale of the foreign operations would allow us to meet 
said regulatory requirements while positioning Bank Audi amongst viable Lebanese 
banks with adequate capital and liquidity levels,” Bank Audi management said in 
a statement to Reuters.
Blom Bank did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on its 
progress in raising its capital buffers and liquidity levels. It said last month 
the sale of its Egypt unit would allow it to comply with the central bank 
target.
No consensus
For years, Lebanon’s banks were among the world’s more profitable lenders, 
funneling funds from a scattered diaspora to the government’s coffers in return 
for high interest rates. But exposure to the state has ultimately been the 
banks’ undoing since dollar remittances dried up and anticorruption protests 
erupted, starving the financial system of funding. Commercial banks have lost 
roughly 49 trillion Lebanese pounds in deposits in the past two years, 
equivalent to around 22 percent of current total assets and large depositors are 
likely to be in the firing line in any resolution of the banking crisis. The 
government’s default on a $1.2 billion eurobond in March left banks, with 
government paper accounting for most of their assets, as the biggest casualty. 
Much of the remainder of banks’ assets are in real estate, where valuations have 
slumped amid the economic downturn.
If those assets were to be marked to market, then combined with write-offs 
linked to government exposure, losses would overwhelm the sector’s capital base, 
said economist Nafez Zouk. The central bank told banks in August to provision 
for a 1.89 percent loss on their hard currency deposits with the central bank 
and a 45 percent loss on government Eurobond holdings, levels some economists 
have said underestimate the scale of the problem. The Lebanese pound has fallen 
80 percent since late 2019 and Moody’s rating agency has estimated that Eurobond 
losses are greater than 65 percent.
Privately, many bankers in Lebanon agree that the current banking sector, with 
at least 40 lenders and assets that swelled to as much as 167 percent of the 
country’s economic output at their recent peak of 2015, needs to drastically 
shrink. Some acknowledge that that will require shareholders, bondholders and 
customers to swallow losses. But there is no consensus on how many banks will 
need to be wound down and how big the losses should be. Without a new government 
– the current cabinet serves in a caretaker role since resigning in August amid 
public fury over a devastating port blast in Beirut – the bankers acknowledge a 
resolution appears unlikely anytime soon.
Lebanon's Hariri sees no way out of crisis without Arab 
support
Reuters|/Monday, 15 February, 2021
Premier says Lebanon cannot be staging point for Gulf attacks, blames President 
Aoun for delays to government as country seeks rescue from financial meltdown
Lebanese Prime Minister-designate Saad al-Hariri on Sunday said that his country 
could not be rescued from its current crisis without the support of Arab 
countries and the international community.
Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter. Gulf states have long channeled funds 
into Lebanon's fragile economy, but they are alarmed by the rising influence of 
Hezbollah, a powerful group backed by their arch-rival, Iran, and so far appear 
loath to ease Beirut's worst financial crisis in decades. "There is no way out 
of the crisis ... without a deep reconciliation with our Arab brothers and an 
end to using the country as a staging point for attacking Gulf countries and 
threatening their interests," Hariri said in a televised speech marking 16 years 
since the assassination of his father, ex-premier Rafik al-Hariri.
A UN-backed tribunal in December convicted a Hezbollah member of conspiring to 
kill Rafik al-Hariri in a 2005 bombing. Hezbollah has denied any links to the 
attack. Saad al-Hariri, a former prime minister himself, was given the task of 
forming a government in October but is struggling so far to cobble together a 
cabinet to share power with all Lebanese parties, including Hezbollah. After a 
meeting with President Michel Aoun on Friday, Hariri said there had been no 
progress on the formation of a government. Under a sectarian power-sharing 
system, Lebanon's president must be a Maronite Christian and the prime minister 
a Sunni Muslim. President Aoun is an ally of Hezbollah, listed as a terrorist 
group by the United States. On Sunday Hariri blamed Aoun for impeding progress, 
saying he had visited the president 16 times since his nomination as prime 
minister and proposed names to no avail.
France has been spearheading efforts to rescue Lebanon from its worst crisis 
since the 1975-1990 civil war. A new government is the first step on a French 
roadmap that envisages a cabinet that would take steps to tackle endemic 
corruption and implement reforms needed to trigger billions of dollars of 
international aid to fix the economy, which has been crushed by a mountain of 
debt.
 
Hariri on Lebanon Govt Crisis: No One Will Be Granted 
Blocking Power
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 15 February, 2021
Lebanese Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri revealed on Sunday the obstacles 
that are hindering is efforts to form a new government since his appointment in 
October. In a televised address marking the 16th anniversary of the 
assassination of his father and former PM Rafik Hariri, he declared that he will 
not grant any political bloc the power to block decisions in the new cabinet. He 
added that he had presented to President Michel Aoun a lineup of 18 ministers, 
which even included names suggested by the president, but he rejected them. He 
said that he offered to change some candidates if Aoun wanted to and proposed 
several candidates for the position of interior minister. Aoun’s answer was “not 
encouraging” and he was insisting on the blocking power, revealed Hariri. He 
remarked that 16 years since the assassination of his father, Lebanon has 
reached economic collapse and the series of assassinations that has plagued the 
country for decades has not stopped, with activist Lokman Slim the latest 
victim. Moreover, he stressed that the Arab and international countries are 
“ready and eager to help Lebanon end its collapse, but that hinges on the 
formation of a non-partisan government of experts that can achieve desired 
reforms.”The reforms, he added, have been outlined in the initiative proposed by 
French President Emmanuel Marcon. “Face with any other option, no one will help 
us and the collapse will continue until we reach a major implosion,” he warned.
Reform, he went on to say, starts with an independent judiciary, not political 
pressure on judges to politicize cases. He also slammed the “lies, slander and 
allegations” that have been thrown his way since his appointment. “The campaign 
against me is unbearable and I have been patient long enough. I have given 
chances and am still giving chances,” Hariri stated. He revealed that he has met 
with Aoun 16 times since his appointment, saying that he insists on refusing to 
grant a blocking power to any bloc. Such a power means that any decision that 
government would seek to pass is in the hands of this one bloc, he warned. The 
cabinet has many important decisions ahead of it and they should not be 
controlled by this bloc. “What is the purpose of this bloc? What is he (Aoun) 
afraid of?” asked Hariri. “No power will make me lose hope in my country and the 
ability of its people to stop the collapse,” he declared. “As we await a 
breakthrough, I am visiting Arab, regional and international countries to garner 
support for Lebanon and mend ties, especially with Arabs,” he stressed. “There 
can be no solution away from the Arabs and international community and without 
deep reconciliation with Arab brothers,” he added, saying Lebanon should no 
longer be used as a platform to attack Gulf states and threaten the interests of 
Lebanese people.
Jumblatt Says Aoun is Irrational Ruler Who Wants to Commit 
Suicide
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 15 February, 2021
Head of the Progressive Socialist Party (PSP) Walid Jumblatt described Lebanese 
President Michel Aoun as an "irrational ruler who wants to commit suicide.”"Let 
him commit suicide alone, along with his dear son-in-law,” Jumblatt said in a TV 
statement, in reference to former Minister and MP Gebran Bassil. His remarks 
came on the occasion of the 16th anniversary of the assassination of former 
Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. “Despite the severity of the circumstance, we must 
derive strength from the occasion. We have continued to some extent, and others 
must continue in the country of universities, diversity and civilized 
coexistence,” he noted. Jumblatt further underlined the need for “a new 
political formula, as we cannot continue with the old one.”“Today there is a 
destructive ruler and an absurd rule.”Touching on the obstacles hindering the 
formation of a new government, he told Future TV that Prime Minister-designate 
Saad Hariri devised a formula that suits all components but rejected to grant 
the “vetoing third” to the president. “Enough with this vetoing-third that 
impeded the country for 15 years!” Jumblatt added. The PSP leader emphasized the 
need for “a constitutional way to resolve the current impasse.”He reminded that 
French President Emmanuel Macron stressed the need to implement reforms in 
exchange for help from the international community. “We missed the opportunity,” 
Jumblatt said.
Jumblat Invited to Moscow, Discusses Govt with Bogdanov
Naharnet/Monday, 15 February, 2021 
Progressive Socialist Party leader ex-MP Walid Jumblat received an invitation to 
visit Moscow from Russian Deputy Foreign Minister and Presidential Special Envoy 
for the Middle East and Africa Mikhail Bogdanov, a statement released by the PSP 
press office said on Monday. The statement added that Jumblat received a phone 
call from Bogdanov and that the two men discussed the government formation in 
Lebanon. “Head of the Progressive Socialist Party Walid Jumblat, received a 
phone call from Russian Deputy Foreign Minister and Presidential Special Envoy 
for the Middle East and Africa Mikhail Bogdanov," the PSP's statement said: It 
added that “discussions highlighted the need to accelerate the formation of the 
Lebanese government, and the importance of Russia's initiative to help in this 
field and its communication with the influential parties to help overcome the 
artificial obstacles to the government's lineup.”
“Bogdanov invited Jumblat to visit Moscow who vowed to meet the invitation as 
soon as he gets the Covid-19 vaccine,” it added.
President Aoun, it is time to step down
Mouafac Harb/The Daily Star/February 15/2021
موفق حرب/ديلي ستار/ إلى الرئيس عون عون: لقد حان الوقت لتتنحى
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/96080/mouafac-harb-the-daily-star-president-aoun-it-is-time-to-step-down-%d9%85%d9%88%d9%81%d9%82-%d8%ad%d8%b1%d8%a8-%d8%af%d9%8a%d9%84%d9%8a-%d8%b3%d8%aa%d8%a7%d8%b1-%d9%84%d9%82%d8%af-%d8%ad%d8%a7/
When the only courageous decision a president can take to please his own people 
is to step down, you get an idea how bad his rule had been.
President Aoun’s tenure has witnessed the fragmentation of the Lebanese 
institutions and the degradation of government services, leaving many wondering 
about the viability of Lebanon as a viable state.
The lack of achievements and absence of any vision are an indication that the 
president had no prior plan other than becoming a president. And despite the 
current miserable condition of the economy, it seems the only plan he has for 
the country is to secure the political future of his son-in-law former Minister 
Gebran Bassil, who was placed under sanctions by the US for corruption 
allegations. It is difficult to comprehend the current procrastination in 
forming the Cabinet given the country’s status, other than serving narrow 
personal interests. It seems the only legacy the president is working to leave 
is to secure a leadership role or maybe the presidency for his son-in-law, 
Bassil. Maybe he sees in him a political continuity. However, talking about 
continuity raises an obvious question. Continuity of what? The governing model 
offered by the sitting president is disastrous at best.
Political ambition is legitimate even when unjustified given the track record, 
but Lebanon is on the verge of collapsing and losing its serious state status 
among nations after its economy collapsed and the country’s political clique is 
failing to face the challenges or offer any way out. In fact the political elite 
who ruled and mismanaged the country is the main obstacle and cannot be part of 
any solution.
Calls by the opposition, protesters and activists calling for early 
parliamentary elections were met by deaf ears. Instead, there are concerns that 
the current major blocs in Parliament may try to extend the term of the current 
chamber when it expires a year from now. It would not be the first time that 
Parliament failed to honor constitutional obligations. The only way to regain 
the minimum trust in the government is to return to the source of legitimacy, 
the people. The future of the country depends on the upcoming parliamentary 
elections. This maybe the only hope for the Lebanese to replace the current 
political clique they complain about.
A terrible pandemic, horrific explosion and the evaporation of savings in banks 
have broken the resolve of the individual Lebanese, leaving young people in 
despair and seeking opportunities outside the country.
A presidential tenure marred by corruption and the erosion of the state 
exacerbated by the collapse of the national currency doesn’t qualify the 
president and his allies to offer solutions and claim the role of protecting the 
Constitution. The fallback position of Lebanese leaders when they are 
politically bankrupt is to resort to the sectarian protectionism and appeal to 
tribal and sectarian instincts.
Under the banner of protecting the Christian role in Lebanon, the president is 
stalling in the forming the Cabinet. This argument should be exposed and 
undermined by the international community and the head of the church. Christians 
and the rest of the Lebanese are equally suffering and looking for a slight 
hope. Engulfing political ambitions with the slogan of protecting Christians in 
Lebanon to justify blocking the formation of a new Cabinet, is taking the 
country on the fast track of total collapse. There should be no national agenda 
other than remedying the economic conditions and restoring faith in the 
government. The world is watching and the remaining friends of Lebanon are 
poised to help but all are waiting for the president to put the interest of the 
country ahead of political considerations. Failing to do so, leaves Lebanese no 
choice other than calling and hoping for the president to step down.
Time is not on your side. At least be on the right side of history and step 
down.
*Mouafac Harb is a veteran American-Lebanese journalist based in Beirut. He 
contributes a weekly column for The Daily Star.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on February 15- 16/2021
WHO OKs AstraZeneca Jabs, Allowing Supply to Poor Nations
Agence France Presse/February 15/2021
The World Health Organization gave emergency use approval to AstraZeneca's 
Covid-19 vaccines on Monday, meaning distribution can start to poorer countries 
starved of doses to fight the pandemic. The AstraZeneca-Oxford jab forms the 
bulk of batches being lined up through Covax, the global program aimed at 
procuring and shipping out vaccines equitably around the world, regardless of 
wealth. It is only the second Covid-19 jab to have received WHO authorization, 
after the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. "The WHO today listed two versions of the 
AstraZeneca-Oxford Covid-19 vaccine for emergency use, giving the green light 
for these vaccines to be rolled out globally through Covax," the UN health 
agency said in a statement. The two versions given the seal of approval are 
being produced by the Serum Institute of India (SII), and by SKBio in South 
Korea. Separate reviews were needed for each production process, although the 
vaccine is the same. "Countries with no access to vaccines to date will finally 
be able to start vaccinating their health workers and populations at risk, 
contributing to the Covax facility's goal of equitable vaccine distribution," 
said WHO assistant director general Mariangela Simao."But we must keep up the 
pressure to meet the needs of priority populations everywhere and facilitate 
global access. To do that, we need two things -- a scale-up of manufacturing 
capacity, and developers' early submission of their vaccines for WHO review."
337.2 million doses
The organization's emergency use listing procedure assesses the quality, safety 
and efficacy of Covid-19 vaccines, and is a prerequisite for vaccines in the WHO 
co-led Covax facility. AstraZeneca vaccines from India and South Korea made up 
almost all of the initial 337.2 million doses lined up for Covax's first wave of 
distribution, which is set to get moving in late February. Some 145 
participating economies are set to receive enough doses to immunize 3.3 percent 
of their collective population by mid-2021. The first wave includes 240 million 
SII AstraZeneca doses; 96 million South Korean AstraZeneca doses; and 1.2 
million Pfizer doses. Both vaccines require two injected doses. "We now have all 
the pieces in place for the rapid distribution of vaccines," WHO 
director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a press conference. Simao 
added: "There's no need to panic and no need for countries to go buying in the 
market, because they're going to pay more."
OK for over-65s 
Last week in a separate process, the WHO's Strategic Advisory Group of Experts 
on Immunization issued its interim usage recommendations for the AstraZeneca 
vaccine. Soothing fears about the jab, SAGE concluded it could be used for 
people aged over 65, and also where coronavirus variants of concern are 
circulating. SAGE acknowledged the lack of data on the vaccine's efficacy for 
over-65s, which has prompted a number of countries to withhold it from by far 
the most vulnerable age group. But the experts decided that given its 
performance with younger adults, "it is likely that the vaccine will be found to 
be efficacious in older persons. The trial data indicate that the vaccine is 
safe for this age group." They said the vaccine proved more effective when the 
interval between doses was extended to between eight and 12 weeks. The number of 
reported Covid-19 cases globally has dropped for a fifth consecutive week, 
nearly halving from more than five million in the week of January 4, to 2.6 
million in the week starting February 8. "The fire is not out, but we have 
reduced its size. If we stop fighting it on any front, it will come roaring 
back," Tedros warned.
 
Attack on Arbil Airbase Kills Foreign Contractor, Wounds 
U.S. Soldier
Agence France Presse/February 15/2021
A rocket attack targeting an airbase in Iraq's Kurdistan region late on Monday 
killed a foreign civilian contractor and wounded five others and a U.S. soldier, 
the U.S.-led coalition said. At least three rockets targeted the Kurdish 
regional capital of Arbil, with one hitting a military complex at the Arbil 
airport where U.S.-led coalition troops are based. Coalition spokesman Colonel 
Wayne Marotto confirmed to AFP that the contractor was not Iraqi, but could not 
give immediate details on the victim's nationality. The attack represents the 
first time U.S. military or diplomatic installations have been targeted in Iraq 
in nearly two months. At around 9:30 pm (1830 GMT), an AFP reporter heard 
several loud explosions in the northwestern outskirts of Arbil, the capital of 
Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region. Western military and diplomatic sites have 
been targeted by dozens of rockets and roadside bomb attacks since the fall of 
2019, but most of the violence has taken place in Baghdad. Both American and 
Iraqi officials have blamed hardline armed groups, including the pro-Iran 
faction Kataeb Hezbollah and Asaib Ahl al-Haq. These groups are vehemently 
opposed to the U.S.-led coalition, which has been based in Iraq since 2014 to 
help local forces fight back the Islamic State group. With IS largely defeated, 
the coalition has drawn down to under 3,500 forces in total, 2,500 of which are 
U.S. troops. Most of those units are concentrated at the military complex at the 
Arbil airport, a coalition source told AFP. But most rocket attacks had 
concentrated on the coalition and U.S. diplomatic personnel based in Baghdad. In 
October, the U.S. threatened to close its embassy there if the rocket attacks 
did not stop, so hardline groups agreed to an indefinite truce.There have been 
several violations since then, the most recent of which, prior to Monday night, 
was a volley of rockets targeting the U.S. embassy on December 20.
Iran accused of plot to attack UAE embassy in Ethiopia
Arab News/February 15/2021
LONDON: Iran was behind a recent plot to attack the UAE embassy in Ethiopia, US 
and Israeli officials have revealed. Iranian intelligence services activated a 
sleeper cell in Addis Ababa late last year to also gather intelligence on the US 
and Israel embassies, the officials told the New York Times. The operation was 
part of a wider move to by Iran to seek out softer targets in Africa for revenge 
attacks after the killings of Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani by the US and 
Iran’s main nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, reportedly by Israel. Ethiopia 
said earlier this month it had arrested 15 people and seized weapons and 
explosives as part of the plot against the UAE embassy. “The group took the 
mission from a foreign terrorist group and was preparing to inflict significant 
damage on properties and human lives,” Ethiopian Press Agency (EPA) reported. A 
second group was planning to attack the UAE's mission in Sudan, EPA said. A key 
link to Iran came with the arrest of the ringleader Ahmed Ismail in Sweden. Rear 
Adm. Heidi K. Berg, director of intelligence at the Pentagon’s Africa command, 
told the New York Times that Iran was behind the plot. “Ethiopia and Sweden 
collaborated on the disruption to the plot,” she said. A senior US defense 
official said the arrests were linked to an Iranian plot to kill the US 
ambassador to South Africa reported in September. Iran denied in the New York 
Times report that it was involved in the Addis Ababa plot.
Iran Wants 'Urgent Steps' Before Withdrawing 
from Additional Protocol to NPT
London, Tehran - Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 15 February, 2021
Iran warned it was going to reduce its cooperation with the International Atomic 
Energy Agency (IAEA) by ending the implementation of the Additional Protocol 
unless the US and its European allies save the 2015 nuclear deal. Iranian MP 
Alireza Zakani said Sunday Tehran will terminate the Additional Protocol under 
the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) unless the US and European countries took 
urgent steps to lift sanctions. Iranian agencies quoted Zakani as saying that 
the nuclear agreement “will not remain if the sanctions are not lifted.” Iranian 
authorities are expected to breach a nuclear threshold that worries observers 
and the parties of the nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of 
Action (JCPOA). Under a law passed in December by Iran's parliament, dominated 
by hardliners, the government should curtail the activities of IAEA inspectors 
if sanctions are not lifted. Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has demanded 
that the US sanctions be eased by February 21. Intelligence Minister, Mahmoud 
Alawi, hinted that his country could change the course of its current program to 
produce nuclear weapons if Western pressure continued.
A number of lawmakers said Alawi should be questioned for his comments, warning 
that they have political implications that could create issues for the country. 
Zarif was supposed to hold a closed meeting with members of the parliament’s 
National Security and Foreign Policy Commission to discuss the required steps to 
return to the nuclear deal.
IRNA agency quoted the commission's spokesman, Fadl Amoudi, as saying that Zarif 
did not attend the meeting due to health reasons, without providing details. 
Meanwhile, US President Joe Biden is determined to salvage the nuclear 
agreement, which was abandoned by his predecessor Donald Trump, said a report 
published by the Agence-France Presse (AFP). Biden, however, will not be rushed 
into re-joining the deal, despite the series of deadlines coming up. The 
president is ready to rejoin the deal, thus lifting the strict sanctions imposed 
by Trump, if Tehran commits to the articles of the agreements.
Meanwhile, director for nonproliferation policy at the Arms Control Association 
in Washington, Kelsey Davenport, said that Iran can quickly undo most of its 
recent breaches, such as uranium enrichment.
"But the steps that are coming, I think, do pose a more significant risk and are 
more difficult to reverse," she said, warning that any loss of access would fuel 
speculation that Tehran is engaged in illicit activities. Iran will hold 
parliamentary elections in June that could bring to power the hardliners, which 
could complicate the situation. Last January, US envoy to Iran, Rob Malley, told 
the Italian newspaper "Corriere della Sera" that even if the hardliners won the 
elections, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has the final say in how to deal with 
Washington. In turn, a former EU diplomat warned that February 21 is fast 
approaching and “it is imperative” that diplomacy happens.
Another European source believes it is necessary to ensure the threshold is not 
crossed on that date, noting that Russia and China also view a further breach as 
a red line.Jon Wolfsthal, who advised Biden when he was Obama's vice president, 
told AFP that the US and Iran, along with other JCPOA nations, could issue a 
statement before February 21 “that would show their mutual intent to return to 
full compliance.”State Department spokesman Ned Price reiterated Friday that the 
United States is "not looking at any particular deadline" when asked about 
February 21. Officially, the Biden administration has been coordinating with 
European allies and other signatories of the agreement. A former adviser to 
Obama suspects that US officials have already engaged with Iranian officials in 
a number of ways. Thomas Countryman, who was a top aide in the Obama 
administration, indicated that Biden could immediately lift some sanctions to 
show “good faith.” "Because of the domestic political situation in both 
countries, I think they've got to find a way to say, we did not give in to 
pressure," notes Countryman. Last week, Zarif suggested that the EU play a role 
to “choreograph” between Tehran and Washington, however, Iran later rejected a 
French mediation proposal.
Iran deems US move to seize oil shipment an ‘act of piracy’
Reuters, Dubai/15 February 2021
Iran said on Monday that a US move this month to seize a cargo of oil on the 
grounds that it came from Tehran was an act of piracy, adding that the shipment 
did not belong to the Iranian government. Washington filed a lawsuit earlier 
this month to seize the cargo, alleging that Iran sought to mask the origin of 
the oil by transferring it to several vessels before it ended up aboard the 
Liberian-flagged Achilleas tanker destined for China. Washington said the cargo 
contravened US terrorism regulations. “This shipment does not belong to the 
Iranian government. It belongs to the private sector,” Foreign Ministry 
spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh told a weekly news conference. He did not elaborate 
on what he meant by the private sector. The Achilleas last reported its position 
on Sunday as anchored within the Galveston Offshore Lightering Area, which is 
outside the US Gulf port of Galveston, Refinitiv ship tracking data showed on 
Monday. A US official said last week that Washington had sold more than a 
million barrels of Iranian fuel seized under its sanctions program last year. 
Tensions have mounted between Washington and Tehran since 2018, when former US 
President Donald Trump abandoned Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with six major powers 
and reimposed sanctions on the country. US President Joe Biden has pledged to 
revive the nuclear deal if Tehran returns to full compliance with the accord. 
“It is very unfortunate that such an act of piracy is happening under the new US 
administration ... a solution should be found to stop such acts of piracy by 
anyone for any reason,” the spokesman Khatibzadeh added. 
Iranian arrested in Turkey not consulate employee, says 
Tehran
AFP/15 February 202
Iran said Monday a citizen had been arrested in Turkey, but denied Turkish media 
claims he was a consulate employee, amid reports he is linked to the murder of 
an Iranian dissident. According to Turkey’s Anadolu state news agency, the 
Iranian is suspected of providing forged travel documents to allow the alleged 
leader of the 2019 killing in Istanbul to return to Iran. “No consulate employee 
has been arrested,” foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh told reporters. 
“What has happened is the arrest of an Iranian national upon entry,” he added, 
noting that Iran was in contact with Turkey regarding the matter. He gave no 
further details. Turkey’s Andalou agency, which did not name the Iranian but 
said his initials were “M.R.N.” alleges he is linked to the November 14, 2019 
shooting in Istanbul of Masoud Molavi. Turkey’s pro-government daily Sabah last 
week claimed the arrested man was 43-year-old Mohammad Reza Naserzadeh, and the 
alleged man who used the forged travel documents to escape Turkey, Ali Esfanjani. 
Molavi was said to have helped run the “Black Box” channel on the Telegram 
messaging service, publishing corruption allegations against Iranian officials. 
Neighbors Iran and Turkey enjoy robust trade and diplomatic ties despite a 
series of regional disputes, including in Syria.
US-led Int’l Coalition to Establish New Military Base at 
Iraq-Syria-Turkey Triangle
London- Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 15 February, 2021
The US-led Coalition plans to establish a new military base at the 
Iraq-Syria-Turkey triangle in the Ain Dewar area in Hasakah countryside. 
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a military convoy 
of over 50 vehicles and trucks affiliated to the International Coalition were 
seen crossing into north-eastern Syria from the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. 
"Trucks, carrying armored vehicles, weapons, military, and logistical equipment, 
entered via Al-Walid border crossing with the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, heading 
towards Al-Qamishli area," the Observatory reported.
"This is the 11th Coalition convoy to enter Syria since the beginning of 2021," 
it added. On February 8, SOHR activists reported seeing a new International 
Coalition convoy, consisting of 45 military vehicles and trucks, entering Syrian 
territory via Al-Walid border crossing with the Kurdistan Region of Iraq.
The convoy included military and logistical equipment. It headed to al-Qamishli 
and then to the bases of the International Coalition in the countryside of 
Hasakah and Deir Ezzor. In the same context, SOHR activists reported seeing on 
February 6 another convoy entering Syrian territory via Al-Walid border crossing 
with the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. It consisted of 50 military vehicles and 
trucks, including military and logistical equipment. The convoy headed to the 
bases of the International Coalition in the countryside of Hasakah.
Russian President Vladimir Putin with Saudi Crown Prince 
Mohammed bin 
Reuters, Moscow/5 February ,2021
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman 
discussed the implementation of the OPEC+ oil output deal in a telephone call on 
Monday, the Kremlin said. The Kremlin said Putin backed continued close 
cooperation between Moscow and Riyadh to support the stability of the global 
energy market. articipate in the teleconference should dial 1-888-805-7923 or 
613-960-7518. The access code is 1674540#.
Turkey summons US ambassador over statement on Iraq 
killings: Ministry
Reuters, Ankara/5 February ,2021: 06:01 PM GST Updated: 15 
February 2021
Turkey’s foreign ministry summoned the US Ambassador to Ankara on Monday to 
convey “in the strongest terms” Turkey’s reaction to a US statement on the 
killing of 13 kidnapped Turks by Kurdish militants in northern Iraq, the 
ministry said. Turkey said on Sunday militants from the outlawed Kurdistan 
Workers Party (PKK) executed the captives during a military operation against 
the group. The US said that it condemned the killings if it was confirmed that 
responsibility lay with the PKK.
Turkey Accuses US of Backing PKK after Turks Killed in Iraq
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 15 February, 2021 
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan laid into the United States, accusing it 
of supporting Kurdish militants on Monday, days after Turkish troops found the 
bodies of 13 Turkish soldiers, police and civilians abducted by Kurdish 
insurgents in a cave complex in northern Iraq.
Erdogan also took aim at a US State Department statement that deplored the 
hostages' deaths, but added that the US would condemn the deaths “in the 
strongest possible terms” if it is confirmed that they died at the hands of the 
Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).
“You are with them and behind, them pure and simple,” Erdogan said, referring to 
Kurdish militant group as well as Syrian Kurdish groups linked to the PKK, which 
Turkey considers to be terrorists but which were allied with the United States 
in the fight against the ISIS.
“If we are together in NATO, and if we are to continue our (alliance) in NATO, 
you have to be sincere toward us,” Erdogan said. Foreign Minister Mevlut 
Cavusoglu expressed Turkey's “unease" over recent US statements during a 
telephone call with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, his ministry said. In 
their first conversation since US President Joe Biden's administration took 
office last month, the two also discussed other disagreements between the NATO 
allies and agreed to “develop an open and sincere dialogue based on mutual 
respect," the ministry said.
US State Department spokesman Ned Price said Blinken expressed condolences for 
the deaths of the hostages and “affirmed our view that PKK terrorists bear 
responsibility.” Blinken also emphasized their shared interest in countering 
terrorism. Earlier Monday, Turkey summoned US Ambassador David Satterfield to 
the Foreign Ministry over the previous statement. The victims were discovered in 
the Gara region, near the Turkish border, during an operation against the PKK 
that had aimed to free the hostages. Twelve of the victims were shot in the head 
and one died of a shoulder bullet wound. The 13 were kidnapped inside Turkey in 
2015 and 2016. Erdogan said 51 PKK fighters were killed during the latest 
offensive and vowed to press ahead with cross-border offensives. “We have the 
power, capability and determination to come down hard on the terrorists 
everywhere,” Erdogan said. In a statement carried by the PKK-linked Firat news 
agency, the PKK said “prisoners of war” consisting of members of the Turkish 
security forces and intelligence agency were killed as a result of Turkish air 
strikes. Three Turkish troops also died during the operation to free the 
hostages and three others were wounded, the defense ministry has said. Tens of 
thousands of people have been killed since the PKK, which is designated a 
terrorist organization by the US and the European Union, began an insurgency in 
Turkey’s majority Kurdish southeast region in 1984.
Turkish operation to rescue intelligence operatives in Iraq 
ends in catastrophic failure
The Arab Weekly/February 15/2021
ISTANBUL - A Turkish operation in northern Iraq ended in a bloodbath after 
special forces failed to rescue 13 elite intelligence and police officers who 
had been kidnapped by Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militants. Turkish Defence 
Minister Hulusi Akar said that soldiers carrying out an operation against PKK 
militants in northern Iraq found the bodies of 13 Turks who had been kidnapped 
and executed in a cave. Although Akar did not reveal the identity of the dead 
individuals, a high-ranking security source confirmed to Reuters that the 
identity of nine of the dead whose bodies were found in the cave had been 
ascertained. They include members of the Turkish intelligence, army and police. 
Later, the governor of Malatya (eastern Turkey), where the bodies were taken, 
said that 10 of the victims, most of whom were police officers, had been 
kidnapped by the PKK in 2015 and 2016
Turkey had announced that Operation Eagle Claw - 2 was aimed at attacking PKK 
militants, but the intelligence and police officers' deaths showed that it was 
intended as a rescue operation. The Turkish foreign minister declared in 2017 
that Ankara was working to bring home citizens kidnapped by the PKK. Turkish 
media had previously reported that Kurdish militants had captured two Turkish 
intelligence officers in Iraq. Turkey's confused reactions reflect the 
operation's failure. Senior officials, including presidential spokesman Ibrahim 
Kalin, first asserted that civilians had died, before it was revealed that those 
killed were Turkish intelligence and police elite forces, and that Operation 
Eagle Claw - 2 was designed to save them.
Statements by Turkey's Chief of General Staff Yasar Guler did not lessen the 
impact of the operation's failure. Guler argued that Operation Eagle Claw - 2 
was based on "very good evidence" on where the Turkish prisoners were being 
held. According to Guler, Turkish forces reached the cave in question on the 
third day of the operation. Turkish reporter Fehim Isik expressed doubt about 
the defence minister's account that prisoners were executed by the PKK.
Isik tweeted, "The prisoners were held for years by the PKK which did not kill 
them. Why did they kill them now?"
He added, "Hasn't Turkey in the past managed to get back members of its forces 
following negotiations with the Workers' Party? Why did it prefer that the 
prisoners die this time? Who benefits from their death? Turkish-supported 
Islamist groups previously claimed that civilians had died, before news spread 
that the dead were Turkish intelligence and police officers. Akar said that 
Turkey launched a military operation against the PKK in the Kara region in 
northern Iraq on February 10 to secure its borders and find two kidnapped 
nationals. A statement published by a website linked to the PKK said that some 
of the prisoners it was holding, including members of Turkish intelligence, 
police and army, died when Turkey bombed the the area, and denied harming any 
prisoners. The statement added, "Among the prisoners were two directors with the 
Turkish intelligence agency, and nine police officers and soldiers."
In a previously posted video, one of the captured soldiers questioned whether 
the Turkish army was really working to save the prisoners, saying "I do not know 
if anyone is working for our liberation."
The PKK, which is designated as a terrorist organisation by Turkey, the United 
States and the European Union, began an armed insurrection in the 
majority-Kurdish south-east region of Turkey in 1984. The conflict has claimed 
more than 40,000 lives. Over the past two years, Turkey's campaign against the 
party has increasingly focused on northern Iraq, where the group maintains a 
stronghold in the Qandil Mountains on the border with Iran. Turkish operations 
have fueled tensions with the Iraqi government, as Turkish President Recep 
Tayyip Erdogan asserts that his country intends to solve the issue of the PKK in 
northern Iraq if Baghdad is "unable to." Iraqi intelligence sources previously 
revealed that the Turkish forces deployed to a number of locations in northern 
Iraq have expanded the scope of their reconnaissance missions in preparation for 
Operation Eagle Claw - 2.
The sources told The Arab Weekly that the Turkish air force carried out a large 
number of reconnaissance operations over northern Iraqi cities.
Erdogan had vowed that his country's forces would "suddenly launch an operation 
one night in northern Iraq." Erdogan made his statement just days after Defence 
Minister Akar was dispatched to both Baghdad and Erbil to convey messages that 
were not completely friendly, according to well-informed political sources. The 
sources said that the Turkish defence minister threatened Iraqi Kurdistan that 
Ankara would follow through with building a Turkish border crossing with Mosul 
that would deprive Iraqi Kurdistan of revenue if the region did not cooperate 
with it in the fight against the PKK.
Ankara's failure to rescue the intelligence and army personnel showed that 
Turkish pledges on this issue, including Erdogan’s threat that “we will come one 
night," have turned into a disaster for the Turkish army. Erdogan's phrase was 
repeated before Turkish military operations in the battles between Azerbaijan 
and Armenia. This time, the outcome was catastrophic for Ankara.
Qatari FM in Iran as Doha Seeks Mediation on Nuclear Issue
Agence France Presse/15 February 2021
Qatar's foreign minister met his Iranian counterpart Monday, after Doha signaled 
its intention to mediate between Tehran and Washington over a landmark nuclear 
deal, an AFP journalist said. The meeting comes as the 2015 deal between Iran 
and world powers limiting Tehran's nuclear program in exchange for international 
sanctions relief is hanging by a thread. Doha, a close U.S. ally, also has good 
relations with Tehran. Qatar's Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani met in 
Tehran with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. Iran's presidency 
said the minister also met with President Hassan Rouhani, to whom he delivered a 
message from the Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani. Former U.S. 
president Donald Trump withdrew from the accord in 2018 and reimposed sanctions 
on Tehran, with Iran a year later gradually suspending its compliance with most 
key nuclear commitments in response. The new administration of President Joe 
Biden has expressed willingness to return to the deal, but insisted that Iran 
first resume full compliance, while Tehran has called for the immediate lifting 
of sanctions. Iran has said it will restrict nuclear inspections later in 
February if U.S. sanctions are not lifted, or other key parties to the deal do 
not help Tehran bypass them, according to a law passed by the 
conservative-dominated parliament in December. On Monday, Iran's ambassador to 
the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Kazem Gharibabadi, 
wrote on Twitter that the law "will be executed on time," giving February 23 as 
the date. "The IAEA has been informed today to ensure the smooth transition to a 
new course in due time," he added.
 
Bogdanov Stresses Need for 'Mission-Driven Govt.' in Talks 
with Hariri
Naharnet/15 February 2021 
The Russian Foreign Ministry announced in a statement Monday that a telephone 
conversation took place between Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri and the 
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister and Presidential Special Envoy for the Middle 
East and Africa Mikhail Bogdanov.
“They discussed the social and political crisis that Lebanon is facing, and 
stressed the need to form rapidly a mission-driven government headed by Saad 
Hariri, who won the majority of votes in Parliament, and was designated by 
President Michel Aoun,” the Ministry’s statement said, according to an 
English-language translation distributed by Hariri’s press office.Hariri and 
Bogdanov also discussed Russian assistance to Lebanon in combating the 
coronavirus pandemic including sending a batch of vaccines to Beirut.Bogdanov 
also held phone talks Monday with Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid 
Jumblat.
Canada launches bid to stop arbitrary detentions of foreign 
citizens by China
Reuters, Ottawa/15 February 2021
Canada on Monday launched a 58-nation initiative to stop countries from 
detaining foreign citizens for diplomatic leverage, a practice that Ottawa and 
Washington say China and others are using. Foreign ministers signed a 
non-binding declaration to denounce what Canadian Foreign Minister Marc Garneau 
called unacceptable behavior. “Taking people from their families and using them 
as bargaining chips is both illegal and immoral,” he said by phone, calling the 
effort the first of its kind. Other signatories include Japan, Britain, 
Australia and virtually all members of the 27-nation European Union. The 
declaration does not target any nation. Garneau said it was designed to increase 
diplomatic pressure on countries that detain foreigners as well as others who 
might want to do so. But a Canadian official said the initiative had been 
sparked by concern over arrests of foreigners by China, Iran, Russia and North 
Korea.
Even before the declaration was formally released, the Global Times, a Chinese 
state-backed newspaper, cited unnamed experts as saying the initiative was “an 
aggressive and ill-considered attack designed to provoke China”. Ottawa is 
locked in a dispute with Beijing, which detained two Canadians in 2018 after 
Vancouver police picked up a senior Huawei Technologies Co Ltd executive on a US 
warrant. Canada denounces what it calls “hostage diplomacy” while China insists 
the two cases are not linked. Among the signatories is the United States. Last 
week the StateDepartment called for the release of the two Canadians and 
rejected China’s “use of coercion as a political tool”. The Canadian official 
said the declaration could help put pressure on Beijing. “We want to make them 
feel a little uncomfortable. We want them to know that a lot of countries think 
this practice is unacceptable and hopefully over time it does contribute to a 
change in behavior,” said the official, who requested anonymity given the 
sensitivity of the situation. Last December the British parliament’s foreign 
affairs committee called on the government to declare Iran’s “arbitrary 
detention of foreign nationals” as hostage-taking. British-Iranian aid worker 
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe was arrested in 2016 and sentenced to five years after 
being convicted of plotting to overthrow Iran’s clerical establishment. The 
Canadian initiative was started last year by Francois-Philippe Champagne, 
Garneau’s predecessor. Champagne, now innovation minister, said by working 
together nations could better focus attention on the detainees. “Their liberty 
may have been stolen but their voices won’t be silenced,” he said by phone.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources 
published  on February 15- 16/2021
Iran on its way to ‘solving nuclear missile puzzle’
Thomas Harding/The National/February 15, 2021
Ease with which rocket booster can be converted into weapon draws mounting fear 
of Tehran’s military capabilities
Iran’s scientists have “solved one half of the ballistic missile puzzle” by 
developing a workable third-stage rocket booster, leading defence analysts said.
The stakes for a nuclear stand-off were raised after Tehran launched a satellite 
rocket that could easily be converted into a nuclear missile with a range of 
about 5,000 kilometres, bringing cities such as London within reach.
Missile experts believe it is now clear Iran is opting for “range over accuracy” 
in seeking to develop nuclear-tipped intermediate-range ballistic missiles, a 
strategy that has also been followed by Iran’s ally North Korea.
The worrying Iranian advances are likely to feature in negotiations over its 
nuclear programme with US President Joe Biden’s administration.
While Iran can claim it is sending civilian communications into space 
legitimately using its Zuljanah satellite delivery vehicles, security experts 
said the rocket’s motors could be used to test IRBMs. In theory, they could take 
those motors and use them to build a missile rather than a satellite launch 
vehicle, at which point it would be their most important solid-fuel propellant 
ballistic missile,” Jeremy Binnie, Middle East editor of Jane’s Defence Weekly, 
told The National.
The Zuljanah’s launch into the high atmosphere marks a crucial new stage in 
Tehran’s ballistic development, said Justin Bronk, an airpower expert at the 
Royal United Services Institute, a think tank.
“The Iranians seem to have got to a stage where they have solved one half of the 
IRBM puzzle, which is the boost phase in effect.”
This didn’t mean Iran had a missile capable of “high-velocity re-entry” through 
the Earth’s atmosphere, he said. But the use of space launch rockets and 
long-range ballistic missiles have been “relatively interchangeable for 
decades”, Mr Bronk said, with the 1960s and 1970s British Blue Streak project 
used as the basis for the European Space Agency’s Ariane space rocket.
Iran announced it had test-launched its first Zuljanah vehicle in late January 
after a defence ministry spokesman said the regime had achieved “its most 
powerful rocket engine”. The Zuljanah is a 25-metre, three-stage rocket with a 
solid-fuel engine that can send a 220kg payload up to a height of 500km to 
launch a satellite. But experts believe that if the scientists lowered its 
trajectory they could send a one-tonne warhead about 5,000km.
While the Iranians might be on course to launch a nuclear weapon on a 
sub-orbital trajectory, they still lack the capability to land the bomb with 
reasonable accuracy on a target such as London, 4,400km away.
But highly skilled Iranian scientists will now be seeking to overcome the 
technical obstacles of atmosphere re-entry at high speed.
“This requires a large amount of money as you need to test repeatedly both the 
missile telemetry and, crucially, the re-entry vehicle performance,” Mr Bronk 
said. “That’s why the many tests are very valuable for the North Koreans and 
highly disturbing to the Americans.”
It is understood that North Korea has provided significant technical assistance 
to Iran.
Dough Barrie, of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, believes 
that Iran previously focused on developing accurate cruise and medium-range 
missiles but has now opted for “range over accuracy”.
“One of the things we’ve seen them doing is to really push extending the ranges 
of their ballistic arsenal significantly,” he said. In the past year, Iran has 
developed the Salman rocket motor, used for satellite launches, which is capable 
of moving its nozzle to vector its thruster, making it much more accurate.
“The Salman thrust vectoring engine produces improved accuracy in the final 
stage,” Mr Binnie said. “This is all part of investing heavily in ballistic 
missile technology and steadily improving what they’ve got.”
Another important aspect of the solid fuel propellant is that it allows missiles 
to be fuelled and stored in silos for long periods. Liquid fuel is less stable, 
so rockets require fuelling shortly before launch, delaying their use and giving 
spy satellites the opportunity to detect hostile intent.
“These missiles would be ready to go and a lot easier to bring into action,” Mr 
Binnie said. “It helps in terms of having a more credible deterrence to have 
missiles that are ready to launch when they need them.”
But Iran’s missile arsenal is having a destabilising impact on the region, with 
Gulf states buying increasingly sophisticated jets to maintain a technological 
edge.
“The Iranians have their missiles to counter that,” Mr Binnie said. “They cannot 
get state-of-the-art jets because of sanctions so they’ve invested in missiles 
to counter the air superiority arrayed against them.
“But now the ever-growing arsenal and improvements in the Iranian missiles does 
look incredibly threatening. There’s an arms race going on in the region and 
that is destabilising.”
The arms build-up is something that could be addressed in any future deal 
between Iran and the West, which is more likely with Mr Biden in power.'
In an interview with The National last week, Lt Gen John Lorimer, Britain’s most 
senior commander in the Middle East, said Iran was building up its forces to 
strengthen its position in negotiations with America on the nuclear agreement.
“I agree entirely with Gen Lorimer in the sense that Iran is playing up to the 
potential of the Zuljanah test and it’s very much about strengthening Iran’s 
hand,” Mr Bronk said.
But he believes the deal is likely to concentrate solely on Iran’s nuclear 
programme rather that its missiles, which is why Tehran is talking up its 
uranium enrichment levels.
“If they overplay the nuclear missile capability it risks seriously blowing back 
on them,” he said.
“Frankly, most of the countries with whom they’re really interested in getting a 
deal have well-proven nuclear deterrence capabilities themselves. And it’s 
hardly a stretch that if the British were concerned about a threat to London 
then Iran would know that they would obviously get flattened by Trident 
missiles. Iran understands its strength is to operate below the threshold of 
explicit conflict.”
Experts believe there is a long way to go before Iran could have a 
nuclear-capable missile. The Iranians could speed up development by increasing 
missile test firing to make a viable re-entry vehicle, but this would send a 
clear signal of intent and likely lead to an armed response by America and its 
allies.
Instead, they are expected to test satellite rockets once every six months, 
perfecting them without drawing undue attention, potentially leading to Iran 
becoming a nuclear-capable nation.
 Israel and Biden–Trouble on the Horizon
Yochanan Visser/Isreal Today/February 15/2021
The atmosphere between Israel and the US is changing, and it doesn’t appear for 
the better
Israel has reason to be deeply concerned about the policy that US President Joe 
Biden’s new administration will pursue vis-à-vis the Jewish state. As we will 
see below, those concerns are justified and relate to diplomatic measures 
already taken by the Biden White House.
The appointments of several ex-Obama officials to positions which are related to 
the Middle East are another reason for concern.
“Shots fired”
While Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is still waiting for a call from the new 
US President, there appears to be a first clash between Israel and the United 
States under this new administration.
On Sunday it was announced that the White House is demanding that Israel again 
allow flights from US airlines to Tel Aviv.
Those flights were canceled on January 26, when Ben Gurion Airport was closed to 
all passenger flights due to the out-of-control Corona crisis. Only El Al is 
allowed to fly stranded Israelis into Israel.
According to Israel’s Channel 12 News, the White House sent the following 
message to the Israeli government: “Why do you need a crisis with the new 
government? Allow our planes to fly to Israel!”
The tone of the message indicates that the atmosphere between Israel and the US 
is changing, and this is also reflected in comments Biden officials already made 
about the Jewish state. For example, the Trump Administration’s recognition that 
the Golan Heights is Israeli territory was effectively withdrawn.
New US Secretary of State Antony Blinken acknowledged that Israeli control over 
the Golan Heights is important as long as Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad rules, 
but said there are “legal questions.” He was referring to Israeli sovereignty 
over the Golan, which Trump recognized.
The position on Israeli settlement politics also appears to be back where the 
Obama Administration left it, and the same is true for the status of Jerusalem.
The Biden Administration says Jerusalem’s status should be determined in 
negotiations with the Palestinian leadership. Despite this, Biden recognizes 
that Jerusalem is the capital of Israel.
Lifeline to a corrupt Palestinian regime
Another sign that things have changed since Donald J. Trump left the White House 
is certain developments vis-à-vis the Palestinian Arabs.
The Biden Administration has announced that financial aid to the Palestinian 
Arabs, which Trump canceled, will resume. The same goes for aid to UNRWA, the 
organization that provides aid to Palestinian refugees and all their 
descendants.
Biden, furthermore, will allow the Palestinian Authority to reopen the PLO 
diplomatic mission that Trump closed in Washington DC.
The elephant in the room
One important issue viewed by Jerusalem as a threat to Israel is the opinion of 
certain key figures in the Biden administration regarding Iran.
They say the US should return to dialogue with Iran and rejoin the 2015 nuclear 
deal (JCPOA). More recently, Biden has linked such a move to Iran’s willingness 
to stop enriching uranium.
Troublesome appointments
Another reason Israel worries about the policies the Biden Administration will 
pursue towards the Jewish state and the Middle East are the appointments of a 
number of ex-Obama officials to key positions.
Blinken, for example, is an appeaser when it comes to Iran. He was against 
including Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in the list of recognized 
terrorist organizations. Blinken was also the one who questioned the legality of 
Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights last week.
Biden’s Director for National Security, Avril Haines, signed a J-Street letter 
calling upon the US government to be more critical of Israel. In the same 
letter, Israel was condemned for “violence, terrorism, and incitement.” J-Street 
is an American Jewish organization that is, in fact, anti-Israeli.
Then there’s Wendy Sherman, the female chief negotiator in the talks with Iran 
over the JCPOA. Sherman is now the Deputy Secretary of State, which is a 
position in which she also deals with Israel. She was a strong supporter of 
negotiations with and concessions toward Iran. At the time, she also refused to 
condemn Palestinian suicide attacks on Israelis.
The appointment of Robert Malley as Biden’s special envoy to Iran is another 
problem point. Malley, the son of an Egyptian Jew, is a left-wing extremist who 
was a member of the Obama Administration and worked for Hillary Clinton when she 
was Secretary of State. He is in favor of negotiations with Iran and a return to 
the JCPOA, but also wants dialogue with Hamas and Syrian dictator Assad. He is 
also known for his aversion to Israel.
Jen Psaki, another former Obama official, is now the White House press 
secretary. She questioned Israel’s commitment to peace, but remained silent 
about the Palestinian refusal to return to the negotiating table.
Another anti-Israel official in the Biden government is Maher Bitar, who is the 
new head of the US Intelligence and National Security Council. This is a 
position in which he also advises Biden on issues related to Israel. Bitar is a 
Palestinian American who once wrote in a paper the following:
“Israel’s political existence as a state is a cause for Palestinian 
dispossession and statelessness…. Israel’s rejection of their right to return 
remains the main obstacle to finding a durable solution.”
Another appointment of a Palestinian American to a key position when it comes to 
Israel is Hady Amr, who was appointed as special envoy for the 
Palestinian-Israeli peace process. Amr is known for his radical anti-Israeli 
views and has strong ties to the Palestinian leadership. He was born in Lebanon. 
Not surprisingly, the Palestinian leadership applauded Biden for the 
appointment.
Other officials of Arab origin in the Biden Administration are Dana Shubat and 
Reema Dodin, also an American of Palestinian origin.
Shubat’s parents are immigrants from Jordan. She has always been concerned with 
matters related to the Middle East and has not-so-neutral views on the 
Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Dodin now serves in the White House after working 
for Senator Jin Durbin for years. She took part in rallies against Israel 
calling for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS). In 2002, Dodin said suicide 
bombings by Palestinian Arabs were “the last resort of a desperate 
people.”President Biden defended his decision to include a fair number of Arab 
Americans in his administration. He said in a speech in which he stood up for 
American Arabs that he always wanted a government “that looks like America.” It 
should be noted that there are a few Jewish Americans in Biden’s government, as 
well.
Human Rights Back on US Agenda under President Biden
Seth J. Frantzman/The Jerusalem Post/February 15/2021
The US called on Turkey to release human rights activist Osman Kavala, who has 
been in prison for three years without being convicted of any crime. The reports 
come as the new US administration of President Joe Biden has been coming down 
hard on human rights abuses and taking up high profile cases, from Russia's 
Alexei Navalny to praising Saudi Arabia's release of Loujain al-Hathloul.
Under the last US administration, authoritarian regimes around the world were 
rarely critiqued on their human rights record. Although the US Secretary of 
State Mike Pompeo did slam China for "genocide" just prior to leaving office, 
there was no meaningful US approach to supporting human rights during the Trump 
administration. Because of the fragmented nature of the administration, some 
officials did push various agendas that dovetailed with human rights issues, but 
the White House rarely paid notice. For instance, Richard Grenell, ambassador to 
Germany and then acting director of national intelligence, pushed for 
decriminalizing homosexuality in 68 countries, but articles notice the US 
achieved little on this issue.
Biden made it clear human rights is part of the "America is back" approach, 
which is very different from the "America first" approach of his predecessor. He 
made it clear in comments to the US State Department on February 4: "We'll 
confront China's economic abuses; counter its aggressive, coercive action; to 
push back on China's attack on human rights, intellectual property, and global 
governance," he said. Now the US is also going after coup leaders in Myanmar. 
Under the former US administration, there was little interest in abuses in 
places like Myanmar. Biden also spoke to Chinese leader Xi Jinping this week, 
and reports note he mentioned the clampdown on rights in Hong Kong.
Egypt has released a journalist from Al Jazeera named Mahmoud Hussein after four 
years in detention. This appears linked to concerns over US pressure on human 
rights. It does not look like it was a coincidence he was held for the four 
years of the last administration and suddenly released.
The administration of former US president Donald Trump, now facing his second 
impeachment even though he is out of office, appeared to ask foreign 
authoritarian leaders to compete for US support. The competition was not 
predicated on human rights, but a transactional foreign policy that often 
revolved around things like arms sales and praise for Trump personally. Trump 
even seemed to mock the Egyptian leader, calling him his "favorite dictator."
Under Trump, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had a direct line to the 
White House, often calling Trump and demanding US concessions, threatening US 
troops, kidnapping a US pastor and berating the US for training anti-ISIS 
fighters. Erdogan even sent presidential security to attack US protesters in 
Washington, DC, an unprecedented attack on peaceful protesters on US soil.
At the behest of the White House, little was done to stop the attack or bring 
charges. Later, Turkey pushed extremist Syrian rebel groups it had armed and 
recruited to hunt down unarmed Kurdish female activists in Syria. Turkey's press 
celebrated the murder of Hevrin Khalaf, an activist in Syria, and it appears 
Turkish-backed Syrian groups had direct support from Ankara to "neutralize" her. 
Turkish-backed groups have kidnapped dozens of women in Turkish-occupied Afrin, 
which Ankara ethnically cleansed of 160,000 Kurds in 2018. None of this faced 
pushback from the White House, which appeared to support Erdogan's actions. 
Former US national security adviser John Bolton and others were shocked by how 
close the US president was to Turkey's regime and its abuses. Former US Syria 
envoy James Jeffrey and others appeared silent on the abuses as well.
Now the tone may be changing. The release of Loujain al-Hathloul is timed well 
with the incoming administration. The US speaking out about Kavala is only the 
tip of the iceberg of abuses in Turkey. Turkey's regime has been bashing 
homosexuals recently and attacking student protesters, calling them 
"terrorists." Turkey continues to threaten to bomb Yazidi minorities in Iraq and 
has imprisoned people for tweets and forced many journalists into exile. 
However, the mention of Kavala is symbolic. At the end of the day, the US can't 
reverse all the human rights abuses in the Middle East or other countries, but 
it has taken up several symbolic cases.
The difference in tone means countries know they are at least being watched in 
terms of their behavior. The former US administration presided over a period of 
unprecedented rise of authoritarian regimes, from Turkey to Iran, Russia, China 
and other countries. It was a period in which any hopes of democratization in 
parts of the world were reversed. Consider the difference to the era of the 
1990s, widely seen as a kind of Pax Americana or "new world order," as George 
H.W. Bush termed it. That was a period when the US used force for humanitarian 
intervention. Critiqued for being overzealous and thinking bombs could bring 
rights, George Bush shifted strategy to "pre-emption." It is important to note 
that despite many failures of the 1990s policies, the US did help make Kosovo 
independent and put wind in the sails of movements by South Sudan and East Timor 
to become countries. Other places, like Somaliland, or Palestinian demands for 
statehood, were less successful.
When George W. Bush's attempt at democratization in the Middle East and 
Afghanistan had mixed success, there was a denouement during the Obama years. 
Although Obama spoke about key issues in his Cairo speech, the result of the 
Arab Spring was more extremism, not more democracy. Exceptions exist. While the 
Palestinians don't have elections these days, Iraq does have elections and 
Afghanistan has a more consultative system than under the Taliban. Tunisia is a 
success story, so far, of the Arab Spring. In general countries in the Gulf have 
moved to push tolerance and coexistence and the threat of extremism has been 
reduced in the heart of the Middle East. This is a mixed legacy, but what is 
clear is that the US retreat into isolationism and the trend from Obama to Trump 
of withdrawal from the region, did not lead to human rights taking center stage.
While the Trump administration did take action on Iran's abuses in the region, 
it rarely did so systematically with an eye to actually improve human rights. 
For instance, bans on people entering the US from Iran, and bans on refugees 
impacted Iranian dissidents. Although it appeared the US was talking tough on 
Iran and also pushing for support for minorities, like Christians in the Middle 
East, the US did little for Iranian exiles and dissidents under the Trump 
administration. The US officials, because the State Department had appointed 
pro-Erdogan regime officials, also ignored human rights in Syria, enabling 
Ankara-backed extremists to abuse human rights, target women, and disappear 
activists. Furthermore, the US did little to stop attacks on Christian and 
Yazidi minorities by Turkish-backed extremists from Tel Abyad to Afrin. When it 
came to wars, like between Azerbaijan and Armenian fighters, the US was absent 
and didn't appear to publicly even bother to put out statements, ignoring 
complaints of locals about shelling of civilians.
It is unclear if all this will change. While some in Syria have hopes that the 
US, EU and NATO will stop empowering Turkey's attacks on civilians in places 
like Afrin, others are concerned about a potential Turkish attack on the Yazidi 
minority of Sinjar. The Yazidis were victims of ISIS genocide and have now been 
under attack by Ankara. There are so many different human rights concerns in the 
Middle East, such as the assassination of Lokman Slim in Lebanon, that it is 
difficult for the US administration to deal with all of them. However, initial 
statements and moves appear to be centering US policies on human rights. Even 
before the US has made key phone calls to the region, human rights have come up.
*Seth J. Frantzman is a Ginsburg-Milstein Writing Fellow at the Middle East 
Forum and senior Middle East correspondent at The Jerusalem Post.
 
The Person or the Constitution? Falsely Charging McConnell 
with Inconsistency
Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute/February 15/ 2021
[I]t is CNN and the other media that failed to understand the distinction 
between defending the Constitution and defending the person.
To have voted to convict citizen Trump would have given Congress a roving 
commission to seek out and disqualify any potential candidate who ever held 
federal public office or who might run for office in the future. McConnell 
correctly rejected that open-ended power grab.
One does not have to agree with the substance with what President Trump did or 
said on January 6, in order to correctly conclude that the Senate had no 
jurisdiction over him once he left office, and that the statements he made -- 
whatever one might think of them -- are fully protected by the Constitution.
Back in the bad old days of McCarthyism, anyone who supported the constitutional 
rights of accused communists was deemed to support communism. That was wrong 
then, just as it is wrong today to believe that everyone who defends Trump 
against an unconstitutional impeachment necessarily supports his views or 
actions.
Senator Mitch McConnell taught the American people a civics lesson by explaining 
that the Senate had no constitutional authority to place a former president on 
trial, even one who had been impeached while still serving in office. Pictured: 
McConnell speaks at Donald Trump's second impeachment trial on February 12, 2021 
at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC. (Photo by congress.gov via Getty Images)
CNN and other left-wing media went on a rampage after Senator Mitch McConnell 
delivered his speech explaining why he voted to acquit Donald Trump, despite his 
belief that Trump had engaged in improper behavior. They accused McConnell of 
hypocrisy and inconsistency -- arguing that if he believed Trump had done wrong, 
he was obligated to vote for conviction. But it is CNN and the other media that 
failed to understand the distinction between defending the Constitution and 
defending the person.
McConnell taught the American people a civics lesson by explaining that the 
Senate had no constitutional authority to place a former president on trial, 
even one who had been impeached while still serving in office. In doing so, he 
echoed a constitutional argument I have been making from the very beginning of 
this unconstitutional power grab by the Democrat-controlled Congress. The 
language of the constitution is clear:
"The President ... shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and 
Conviction of, Treason, Bribery or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors."
The constitutional power to impeach and remove does not extend beyond federal 
civil officials who are still in office and can be removed. As James Madison, 
the father of our Constitution wrote in Federalist 39: "The president of the 
United States is impeachable at any time during his continuation in office." It 
is true that once removed, presidents can also be disqualified, but they cannot 
be disqualified unless they are first removed. The Senators voted by a majority 
that they had power that the Constitution denied them, but McConnell dissented 
from that vote along with numerous other Senators, and they acted on their 
dissenting views in voting to acquit. They were right to do so. That is 
precisely what happened in the Belknap case, which was cited by the House 
Managers as a precedent.
The House Managers argued in their brief that the power to impeach is not 
limited to officials who remain in office, but can extend back to any person who 
held federal office despite how many years ago that person left the office. To 
have voted to convict citizen Trump would have given Congress a roving 
commission to seek out and disqualify any potential candidate who ever held 
federal public office or who might hold office in the future. McConnell 
correctly rejected that open-ended power grab.
The most important lesson taught by McConnell is that the Constitution protects 
both the good and the bad, the agreeable and the disagreeable, Republicans and 
Democrats. One does not have to agree with the substance with what President 
Trump did or said on January 6, in order to correctly conclude that the Senate 
had no jurisdiction over him once he left office, and that the statements he 
made -- whatever one might think of them -- are fully protected by the 
Constitution.
Back in the bad old days of McCarthyism, anyone who supported the constitutional 
rights of accused communists was deemed to support communism. That was wrong 
then, just as it is wrong today to believe that everyone who defends Trump 
against an unconstitutional impeachment necessarily supports his views or 
actions. I for one have been quite critical of Trump's actions on January 6 but 
strongly defend his right to have made his speech even though I think he was 
wrong to do so. I also defend his right not to be placed on trial as a private 
citizen by the Senate.
So, three cheers for Mitch McConnell for trying to educate the American public 
about this important distinction. No cheers for CNN and other left-wing media 
for returning us to the days of McCarthyism, when these distinctions were 
deliberately blurred.
*Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law, Emeritus at 
Harvard Law School and author of the book, Guilt by Accusation: The Challenge of 
Proving Innocence in the Age of #MeToo, Skyhorse Publishing, 2019. His new 
podcast, "The Dershow," can be seen on Spotify, Apple and YouTube. He is the 
Jack Roth Charitable Foundation Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 2021 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do 
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No 
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied 
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Yes… We’re Grudging and Imagining
Hazem Saghieh/Asharq Al-Awsat/ February 15/2021
In 1968, the Warsaw Pact’s tanks crushed what was known as the “Prague Spring.” 
Czech intellectuals bore the lion’s share of the repression overseen by 
Secretary-General Gustav Husak and the bigger Secretary-General behind him, 
Leonid Brezhnev. Imprisonment, surveillance, lay-offs from work, emigration, 
despair, and cases of suicide and divorce… The plight Czech intellectuals faced 
at the time, which went on for many years, nourished countless literary and 
cinematic works. It has also become among our contemporary world’s most 
prominent classic historical plights endured by intellectuals and elites.
The prominent role that education, the media, and publishing play in Lebanon- 
all of which are freedom’s graces to us- has granted the country’s cultural 
scene distinct standing. This standing did not merely turn into one of the 
sources of the county’s economic growth; rather, it became equated with it, a 
second meaning for it or another indication of its life: without the ability to 
doubt, criticize and disagree on everything, i.e., without freedom, this country 
would no longer have a justification for its existence. This applies whether it 
is divided or united, liberated or occupied. These become, in the Lebanese case, 
mere details and additions.
Today, Lebanon’s cultural milieu is suffering from a besiegement of the Czech 
variety. Just as the plight emerged in Prague after its revolution was trampled, 
a Lebanese plight is emerging after the two successive counter-revolutions in 
Syria and Lebanon, the only consequences of which have been more killing, 
poverty, and futility. And who knows, the siege on Lebanese intellectuals and 
creatives could exacerbate and become even worse. Indeed, the disciplined empire 
that was the Soviet Union and its bloc may have been more merciful than the 
emerging chaotic empire with its Iranian center. There, weapons were chief among 
the many sources of power and tyranny. Here, all power is derived from weaponry, 
with only the void by its side: in this empire’s shadows, all the Lebanese are 
undergoing an economic collapse, political impasse, and disassociation from the 
world, in addition to the crime of nearly nuclear proportions that struck their 
port in Beirut. All of this is being experienced as if it were without a reason 
or source. But mind you: we still have one thing; it’s called resistance, and it 
is supposed to compensate for losing all those other things!
Going back to the cultural milieu in particular, we can notice that, not far 
from Haret Hriek (a neighborhood in Beirut’s southern suburbs), Lokman Slim’s 
resting place, universities, research centers, media outlets, and publishing 
houses are being killed, each in their own way, but all of them breathe under 
this empire’s shadow, which has had a divergently decisive role in each 
assassination, either direct or indirect.
Amid this plight, and in the midst of the total absence of law and 
accountability, demands for “international protection” have begun to reverberate 
in Lebanon, with little confidence in the potential for its materialization, 
multiplying the pain and adding bitterness to it.
Lokman Slim’s assassination stirred up this demand that is being circulated 
among intellectuals, journalists, and writers, adding it to demands that had 
been determined and circulated before it, like the adoption of neutrality and 
the internationalization of Lebanon, and before them, the International 
Tribunal. The dominant sentiment is that everything local does not protect: the 
state, its laws, and its judicial apparatus have done everything needed to 
entrench this conviction. The precedents are too many to count.
Many have become sure that the source of the solution, if it is a solution, can 
only come from the world outside. And if it doesn’t come now, then it may come 
tomorrow.
As they waited for that tomorrow, the Czech intellectuals “betrayed” “the 
socialist homeland” defending a free homeland that became equated with free 
culture. This “betrayal” came through emigrating, as those who could emigrate 
did, or with intentions to do so, as those who couldn’t did. Those who were 
thrown into a prison, a sanatorium, or unemployment, went about masterfully 
imagining another country, one where freedom pervades and the decisions that 
shape their lives are made by Czechs, not the patriarchal center in Moscow. 
Twenty years later, this center fell, and those “traitors” regained their 
homeland and their freedom. Many of Lebanon’s intellectuals are “betraying” this 
senseless, criminal patriotism, either by immigrating or wishing to do so, but 
also by mastering the art of imaging a country that is a homeland, where the 
empire of the silencer and accusations of treachery collapses.
Today, the cultural milieu is saying it is not among the worshipers of the 
nation when it becomes a sanctuary for obedience that punishes freedom, and that 
it is not among the worshipers of liberation when it becomes a shortcut for a 
choice between being enslaved and being murdered. In the meantime, imaginations 
run far and wide, unbounded by bogus sacred limits or a border that splits the 
inside from the outside. Here, a battle is being fought for the homeland, 
freedom, and culture simultaneously.
Yemen, the Decision-Maker and the Proxy
Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al-Awsat/ February 15/2021
Years ago in Paris, Abdel Halim Khaddam was defending the image of al-Assad the 
father as if he was defending his life and experience. His words caught my 
attention. He said that Hafez al-Assad used to make accurate calculations before 
getting involved in relationships… that he thought carefully about their outcome 
on Syria’s role and interests and was obsessed with preventing any regional or 
international party from taking control over his country’s decision-making.
I asked him about the relations with the Soviet Union, and he said that the 
latter provided arms to the Syrian army, as part of an alliance based on the 
balance between the interests of the two parties.
He stressed that the ally could express and defend his opinion and reject what 
violates his interests; whereas, the agent is just a tool, who is obliged to 
play roles that are not always for the best of his country. He gave the example 
of Mengistu’s role in Ethiopia.
Khaddam said that the Syrian regime did not fall in the wake of the collapse of 
the Soviet Union for many reasons, including that it was neither an agent nor a 
follower of the Soviet policy. He noticed that Assad was deliberately sending 
messages to the West through some Lebanese and regional channels, stating that 
talking to Damascus via Moscow was not the most feasible way, because the Syrian 
capital has its own voice and can be addressed directly.
Khaddam delved into the discussion about the decision-maker and the agent. He 
pointed out that the latter loses the last say, whether in determining his 
country’s fate or in making decisions of war and peace.
The story of the decision-maker and the proxy reminds us of several examples in 
our region. But the first thing that comes to mind is the developments in Yemen. 
Despite the Joe Biden administration’s clear interest in stopping the war in 
Yemen, and taking some steps that it deems useful in this direction, the current 
round of escalation launched by the Houthis raises the abovementioned issue.
Calls are mounting for a peaceful solution to end the war in Yemen, based on a 
settlement that suits all parties. The concerned countries, led by Saudi Arabia, 
are showing a desire to support an adequate solution. However, the Houthis’ 
response does not change, which is an attempt to use the arsenal placed at their 
disposal to target civilian facilities in Saudi Arabia, such as Abha 
International Airport. It is as if the Houthis are reminding us that their role 
is limited to escalation, and that the parties seeking a solution must resort to 
another address, meaning Tehran.
More than ever, the situation in Yemen is crystallizing. The behavior of the 
Houthi leadership and the use of missiles and car bombs, explain in part why the 
Yemen war initially broke out. It erupted because a minority carried out a coup 
that overthrew the legitimacy, with the aim of turning Yemen into a focal point 
for Iran’s project aimed at surrounding the influential countries in the region, 
especially Saudi Arabia.
The infiltration that took place in Yemen appeared to be an Iranian attempt to 
compensate for the failure of its attempt to surround Saudi Arabia through 
Bahrain. Observers of the course of military and political developments over the 
past six years realize that the Houthi proxy is pushing Yemen into a project 
that is beyond its ability to bear. The picture is really bleak. Yemen has an 
arsenal of missiles that exceeds the number of its universities, hospitals and 
clinics. It has ranks of young people who are led by poverty or misinformation 
into engaging in a war that only deepens the impasse in their country. The 
Houthi leadership has a handful of slogans that it raises and chants, without 
being aware of its lack of relevance to reality.
It is indeed a tragedy for the organization to chant “Death to America”, and 
forget that it does not inflict death on anyone but its own people. We recall 
here that Castro’s Cuba, which consolidated decades of hatred towards the 
“American enemy” and collected billions of dollars for assuming the role of the 
Soviet proxy, is now looking forward to better relations with the “enemy of the 
people” and demanding the removal of obstacles to better exchange and 
interaction. Another example worth paying attention to. No one fought the 
Americans the way the Vietnamese people did. They achieved victory and forced 
the US forces to leave. And here they are the heirs of General Giab, waiting for 
opportunities to improve relations with the “Great Satan” and dreaming of 
investors and tourists. They also long for some military cooperation with 
America, so that they do not remain an easy prey, threatened to be swallowed up 
if the lust for control strikes the Chinese giant.
This is a different world. A world of interests, numbers, opportunities and 
improving people’s lives, not a world of hiding behind hollow slogans. Yemen, 
which is under the grip of the Houthi coup, does not in any way resemble 
Castro’s Cuba. It is not at all similar to the country of Ho Chi Minh. We will 
not detail all the differences. Castro was the leader of a revolution that made 
Cubans hopeful. His national legitimacy preceded any other characteristic. The 
role of agent came due to the necessities of the confrontation with America. The 
same can be said of the Vietnamese regime, which reunified the country.
The Houthis’ Yemen is something else. The primary reason for the current 
situation in the group’s assumption of the role of proxy in the Iranian agenda, 
which expanded its attack in the region, especially after the American army 
toppled Saddam Hussein’s regime.
Yemen deserves a chance to catch a breath and ease the pain of war. This country 
needs to compensate for lost decades, and to overcome the disastrous effects of 
the Houthi adventure.
But the observers of the recent developments feel that the US special envoy to 
Yemen, Timothy Lenderking, will discover what his UN predecessor, Martin 
Griffiths, knew for certain: the purpose of the Houthi missiles is to speed up 
the lifting of economic sanctions on Iran, and Washington’s return to the 
nuclear agreement. Trying to discuss a solution with the proxy is a problem, but 
accepting a solution - the conditions of which were set by the decision-maker - 
is a tragedy.
Hostility to the Trump administration is not policy
Khairallah Khairallah/The Arab Weekly/February 15/2021
It is not possible to imagine US foreign policy in light of the current 
administration’s desire to settle scores with the previous administration.
here is no point for US President Joe Biden’s administration’s policies to 
remain solely focused on exacting revenge against the former administration of 
Donald Trump. In clear terms, policy will not be effective when it is based on 
hostility to everything that the previous administration did. That 
administration was already held accountable by the American people for the 
mistakes it made on election day. November 3 was the day the majority of voters 
decided to punish Trump for his behaviour at home.
As long as the Biden administration’s policies continue to be driven by a Trump 
administration complex, matters at home and abroad are likely to remain in 
limbo. On the external front, it will be particularly difficult to build a 
coherent policy without acknowledging that the Trump team, headed by US 
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, has contributed to shedding many complexes and 
breaking past a few red lines that were previously thought to be impervious to 
transgression. It is true that the Trump administration was bad for the 
Palestinians, but it is also true that the Palestinian leadership shot itself in 
the foot by believing that boycotting America was an option and that it had what 
it takes to influence the Trump administration.
In the end, Israel’s permanent goal is to sever the relationship between the 
Palestinian leadership and Washington. It was possible, despite all that Trump 
and those around him did, to preserve a thin connecting line between Washington 
and Ramallah. One must recognise that there was a need to break the mould 
considering the new facts born from direct Iranian threats to the countries of 
the region, whether in the Gulf or the rest of the Middle East.
Iran boasted, starting in September 2014, after the Houthis (a.k.a Ansar Allah) 
laid their hands on Sana’a, that it was in control of four Arab capitals — 
namely Sana’a, Baghdad, Damascus and Beirut. The spokesmen for the “Islamic 
Republic” went so far as to brag that Iran had become a world power, given that 
it also controlled two strategic straits — Hormuz and Bab al-Mandeb.
Fortunately, it found an Arab force capable of keeping it away from Bab 
al-Mandeb in Yemen. Whoever controls Bab al-Mandeb and the Yemeni port of Mokha 
controls navigation in the Red Sea, as well as shipping lanes leading to the 
Suez Canal. Peace agreements signed by the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain with 
Israel did not come out of a vacuum. Oman preceded them by receiving Israeli 
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu in Muscat in the days of Sultan Qaboos bin 
Said.
Likewise, Sudan could not wait too long as it worked to return to the 
international community and shed the inhibitions stemming from international 
sanctions imposed on the regime of former leader Omar al-Bashir.
The Trump administration played an active role in facilitating everything that 
would create a new situation in the region after Tehran crossed all red lines in 
dealing with the countries of the Middle East and the Gulf, especially after 
turning part of Yemen’s north into an Iranian missile base.
On top of all of that, the Trump administration acted in a civilised manner in 
dealing with the contrived problem imposed on the Moroccan Sahara. It recognised 
Moroccan sovereignty over Moroccan land, nothing more, nothing less. How is the 
United States to blame if there is an Algerian regime that suffers from a 
Moroccan complex, a regime that believes that escaping its borders guarantees 
its continued rule considering its inability to reconcile itself with its own 
people first? There is an artificial problem between Algeria and Morocco that 
has been around since 1975. There is a practical solution on the table, which is 
the autonomy formula proposed by Morocco within the framework of expanded de-centralisation.
The Algerian regime wants the problem to remain unresolved indefinitely so that 
it can continue to oppress its people and deprive them of the country’s riches 
under the pretext of endeavouring to enable a particular people to exercise 
their right to self-determination? One cannot ignore that the Trump 
administration has accomplished a number of achievements by breaking free of 
closed circles… even if it made mistakes that led to its resounding defeat to 
Biden. But it is not true that tearing up the Iran nuclear deal in 2018 was a 
bad thing after all.
The Biden administration should admit that what the Trump team, not Trump 
himself, did was a gigantic move against Iran’s expansionist project in the 
entire region, a project that threatens anything Arab there.
This is made clear by the impact of the Iranian project in Iraq, Syria and 
Lebanon, which aims to destroy state institutions through armed sectarian 
militias affiliated with Tehran. Once again, there are good qualities to the 
Trump administration and there are grave mistakes it committed, too. In fact, 
Trump himself is not to be credited for the good qualities in question, 
especially those inherent to his foreign policy. The former US president did not 
know much about what was going on in the Middle East, the Gulf and North Africa.
There was a working group whose skills cannot be underestimated, even if it is 
possible to criticise its bias towards Israel and its right-wing slant, 
especially with regard to the issues of settlements and Jerusalem.
However, the question that arises in the end is: Can a policy be based simply on 
objecting to everything the Trump administration stood for? Can this be called 
politics? Reactions cannot constitute a policy. There is no doubt that Trump was 
a temperamental person in many cases who was difficult to deal with or work 
with, but the decisions his administration made on certain issues and in certain 
parts of the world were bold steps that required an out of the ordinary 
personality. There is nothing wrong with keeping the good and dispensing with 
the bad parts of the Trump administration’s legacy.
In any case, one will need to wait a little longer before finding out whether 
the new US administration will remain captive to the previous administration or 
fashion a creative policy based on the fact that Biden knows the world much 
better than his predecessor.
 
Russia refuses to play Iran’s political games
Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab News/February 15/2021
The first foreign trip made by Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher 
Ghalibaf last week turned out to be both a PR disaster and an embarrassment, 
sparking massive controversy across Iran and a barrage of public criticism and 
mockery targeting Ghalibaf and the Tehran regime.
This was because Russian President Vladimir Putin refused to meet with Ghalibaf 
at the Kremlin, where the speaker had planned to hand over a letter to Putin 
from Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. The primary objective of the letter was 
reportedly to emphasize the strategic nature of relations between Iran and 
Russia and the need to ensure that these relations continue on solid, long-term 
foundations for the coming 20 or 50 years, covering the political, economic and 
military spheres and all other vital areas of cooperation.
In addition to the declared objective of Ghalibaf’s visit, it also apparently 
had other, more covert goals, such as reassuring the Russian leadership that 
Iran will take the Kremlin’s interests into account during any negotiations 
regarding the 2015 nuclear agreement with the new US administration, as well as 
seeking to allay Russian concerns about any potential Iranian-Western 
rapprochement in the future.
Ghalibaf first expressed his desire to visit Moscow and meet with President 
Putin more than two months ago. However, the Kremlin did not include this visit 
in its schedule, citing health reasons following the outbreak of coronavirus 
disease (COVID-19) cases among several Iranian lawmakers. Ghalibaf’s visit to 
Russia was conditioned on him undergoing two COVID-19 tests before he would be 
allowed to meet with Putin. The first would be conducted in Tehran and the 
second on his arrival in Moscow.
The Iranian side did not make any official comment on Putin’s refusal to meet 
with Ghalibaf. However, Tehran attempted to mitigate the intense embarrassment 
it suffered by shifting the focus away from this humiliation. It raised another 
issue instead, namely lodging an official message of complaint to Moscow in 
protest at the Russian Foreign Ministry’s use of the term “Arabian Gulf” rather 
than “Persian Gulf” on its website.
This Iranian reaction proves that the regime lacks the capability to 
diplomatically express any concern it has or diplomatically embrace Moscow’s 
shifting positions, to say the least. Maybe this is because Tehran is well aware 
that the objective and timing of Ghalibaf’s visit were thoroughly ill-conceived 
and completely wrong.
The Iranian leadership’s choice of Ghalibaf for this visit was so puzzling that 
local media outlets raised multiple questions about why he, rather than Foreign 
Minister Javad Zarif or one of the country’s senior diplomats, was selected for 
such a sensitive diplomatic task. A seasoned diplomat could have handled the 
situation much better and allowed the Iranian regime to save face.
Some have suggested that the principal reason for the Iranian leadership’s 
insistence on entrusting Ghalibaf with the visit was his standing as one of 
Khamenei’s closest confidants and one of the primary candidates for the coming 
presidential election, which is scheduled to be held in June. If so, this 
indicates that Khamenei has once again proven to the world that he has little 
interest in diplomatic protocols or upholding his country’s international 
repute. His primary interest is to ensure the implementation of his policies.
The supreme leader apparently deliberately shunned the customary diplomatic 
channels for delivering official letters in order to polish Ghalibaf’s image and 
begin his preparations for the presidential election through sending him on a 
prestigious foreign visit. The plan was to bolster his reputation and encourage 
greater public support among Iranian voters.
After it became clear that Ghalibaf had been given the cold shoulder by Putin, 
his advisers attempted to salvage the situation by claiming that the speaker had 
not agreed to the health procedures stipulated by the Kremlin and was simply 
traveling to Moscow to deliver Khamenei’s letter to Putin’s representative. 
However, it seems that this claim is dishonest, since the health procedures did 
not prevent Putin from meeting with several other foreign officials during the 
same period. Indeed, it was clear from the beginning that Putin would decline to 
meet Ghalibaf despite the diplomatic crisis it would cause.
It is possible that Putin believed Ghalibaf wished to use his visit to promote 
his potential presidential campaign, with Russia wishing to avoid accusations of 
interfering in Iranian affairs by polishing his image and elevating his 
credentials.
Iran has experienced such behavior from Russia in the past. Putin has not met 
with Zarif during any of his 30 visits to Moscow, even though he met with a 
number of European foreign ministers, as well as his counterparts from the US, 
Saudi Arabia and Turkey during their visits to the Russian capital.
Putin refused to meet with Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf 
at the Kremlin.
This cold Russian attitude toward Iran — a country that is among Russia’s 
closest allies — seems to spring from Putin’s awareness of the Iranian regime’s 
weakened state, which has left it mired in political and economic crises and 
compelled it to uphold relations with Moscow and coordinate with it on several 
issues. This situation has been brought about by Tehran’s radical policies, 
which have contributed to making it one of the most isolated regimes in the 
world. Given these circumstances, Putin is aware that he has the upper hand and 
sees no reason to play along with Khamenei’s political games and fulfill 
Ghalibaf’s political and diplomatic wishes and aspirations.
*Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami is President of the International Institute for Iranian 
Studies (Rasanah). Twitter: @mohalsulami