English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For January 16/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews21/english.january16.21.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
He has brought down the powerful from their thrones, and
lifted up the lowly; he has filled the hungry with good things, and sent the
rich away empty
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke
01/46-55/:”Mary said, ‘My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God
my Saviour, for he has looked with favour on the lowliness of his servant.
Surely, from now on all generations will call me blessed; for the Mighty One has
done great things for me, and holy is his name. His mercy is for those who fear
him from generation to generation. He has shown strength with his arm; he has
scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts. He has brought down the
powerful from their thrones, and lifted up the lowly; he has filled the hungry
with good things, and sent the rich away empty. He has helped his servant
Israel, in remembrance of his mercy, according to the promise he made to our
ancestors, to Abraham and to his descendants for ever.’”
Question: "How can I learn to trust that God is in control?"
GotQuestions.org?
Answer: Before we can learn to trust that God is in
control of all of life’s circumstances, we have to answer four questions: Is God
really in control? How much control does He have? If He is not in complete
control, then who/what is? How can I learn to trust that He is in control and
rest in that?
GotQuestions.org?
Is God really in control? The concept of the control of God over everything is
called the “sovereignty” of God. Nothing gives us strength and confidence like
an understanding of the sovereignty of God in our lives. God’s sovereignty is
defined as His complete and total independent control over every creature,
event, and circumstance at every moment in history. Subject to none, influenced
by none, absolutely independent, God does what He pleases, only as He pleases,
always as He pleases. God is in complete control of every molecule in the
universe at every moment, and everything that happens is either caused or
allowed by Him for His own perfect purposes. “The LORD of hosts has sworn,
saying, ‘Surely, as I have thought, so it shall come to pass, And as I have
purposed, so it shall stand’” (Isaiah 14:24). Nothing is random or comes by
chance, especially not in the lives of believers. He “purposed” it. That means
to deliberately resolve to do something. God has resolved to do what He will do,
and nothing and no one stands in His way. “I make known the end from the
beginning, from ancient times, what is still to come. I say: My purpose will
stand, and I will do all that I please” (Isaiah 46:10). This is our powerful,
purposeful God who is in control of everything. That should bring us great
comfort and help to alleviate our fears.
But exactly how much control does God have? God’s total sovereignty over all
creation directly contradicts the philosophy of open theism, which states that
God doesn’t know what’s going to happen in the future any more than we do, so He
has to constantly be changing His plans and reacting to what the sinful
creatures do as they exercise their free will. God isn’t finding out what’s
going to happen as events unfold. He is continuously, actively running
things—ALL things—here and now. But to think He needs our cooperation, our help,
or the exercise of our free will to bring His plans to pass puts us in control
over Him, which makes us God. Where have we heard that lie before? It’s a rehash
of Satan’s same old lie from the Garden—you shall be like God (Genesis 3:5). Our
wills are only free to the extent that God allows us that freedom and no
farther. “All the peoples of the earth are regarded as nothing. He does as he
pleases with the powers of heaven and the peoples of the earth. No one can hold
back his hand or say to him: ‘What have you done?’” (Daniel 4:35). No one’s free
will trumps the sovereignty of God.
Some people find it appealing to think that Satan has control over a certain
amount of life, that God is constantly revising His plans to accommodate Satan’s
tricks. The book of Job is a clear illustration of just who has the sovereign
power and who doesn’t. Satan came to God and, in effect, said, “Job only serves
you because you protect him.” So God gave Satan permission to do certain things
to Job but no more (Job 1:6–22). Could Satan do more than that? No. God is in
control over Satan and his demons who try to thwart God’s plans at every step.
Satan knew from the Old Testament that God’s plan was for Jesus to come to the
earth, be betrayed, crucified and resurrected, and provide salvation for
millions, and if there was any way to keep that from happening, Satan would have
done it. If just one of the hundreds of prophecies about the Messiah could have
been caused by Satan to fail to come to pass, the whole thing would have
collapsed. But the numbers of independent, “free will” decisions made by
thousands of people were designed by God to bring His plan to pass in exactly
the way He had planned it from the beginning, and Satan couldn’t do a thing
about it. Jesus was “delivered by the determined purpose and foreknowledge of
God” (Acts 2:23). No action by the Romans, the Pharisees, Judas, or anyone else
kept God’s plan from unfolding exactly the way He purposed it from before the
foundation of the world. Ephesians 1 says we were chosen in Him before the world
was even created. We were in the mind of God to be saved by faith in Christ.
That means God knit together Satan’s rebellion, Adam and Eve’s sin, the fall of
the human race, and the death and crucifixion of Christ—all seemingly terrible
events—to save us before He created us. Here is a perfect example of God working
all things together for good (Romans 8:28). Unlimited in power, unrivalled in
majesty, and not thwarted by anything outside Himself, our God is in complete
control of all circumstances, causing or allowing them for His own good purposes
and plans to be fulfilled exactly as He has foreordained. Finally, the only way
to trust in God’s sovereign control and rest in it is to know God. Know His
attributes, know what He has done in the past, and this builds confidence in
Him. Daniel 11:32b says, “The people who know their God shall be strong, and
carry out great exploits.” Imagine that kind of power in the hands of an evil,
unjust god. Or a god that really doesn’t care about us. But we can rejoice in
our God’s sovereignty, because it is overshadowed by His goodness, His love, His
mercy, His compassion, His faithfulness, and His holiness.
But we can’t trust someone we don’t know, and there is only one way to know
God—through His Word. There is no magic formula to make us spiritual giants
overnight, no mystical prayer to pray three times a day to mature us, build our
faith, and make us towers of strength and confidence. There is only the Bible,
the single source of power that will change our lives from the inside out. But
it takes effort, diligent, everyday effort, to know the God who controls
everything. If we drink deeply of His Word and let it fill our minds and hearts,
the sovereignty of God will become clear to us, and we will rejoice in it
because we will know intimately and trust completely the God who controls all
things for His perfect purpose.
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on January 15-16/2021
Ministry of Health: 6,154 new
coronavirus cases, 44 deaths
Probe suggests links between Assad regime, Beirut blast
In Beirut’s empty streets, the Lebanese largely welcome a stringent lockdown
Pompeo Tweets Photo of Bassil, Stresses Support for Lebanese People
Abiad Warns of ‘Tough’ Coming Weeks to Curb Virus
A glimpse of light for some businesses in Lebanon as they cope with coronavirus
Beirut Port Administration signs agreement with French company to prepare study
on recycling rubble at port premises
The Lost City… A Model of the Moments of Beirut Explosion
Hospital Says Hassan Doing Well as Lebanon Sees Record Virus Deaths
Parliament Approves Law Regulating Use of Covid Vaccines
Israel Frees Lebanese Shepherd after a Three-Day Captivity
First Syrian Plane since 2011 Lands in Beirut
Powerful Indonesia Quake Kills at Least 34, Topples Buildings
Armed Men Attack Residence of ex-Deputy in Hermel
French Judges Question Ziad Takieddine in Beirut
US dollar exchange rate: Buying price at LBP 3850, selling price at LBP 3900
How to Save Lebanon From Financial Ruin and Starvation/James Rickards/The
National Interest/January 15/2021
Lebanon Wants an End to Iranian Occupation/Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone
Institute/January 15/ 2021
Titles For The
Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on
January 15-16/2021
US will impose sanctions on Iran over
conventional arms, metals industry: Sources
US issues new sanctions on Iran organizations for arming military, IRGC
US troops in Afghanistan, Iraq cut to 2,500 each: Acting Defense Secretary
Turkey’s Erdogan hopes for positive steps on F-35 jet program during Biden’s
term
Iran fires ‘abundant’ missiles, drones in latest military drill exercise: State
TV
Turkish Leader Eyes Favorably Greek PM Meet amid Tensions
Russia Follows US in Withdrawal from Open Skies Treaty
Trump Receives Morocco's Highest Award for Middle East Work
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on January 15-16/2021
Iran’s missile programme and US-Israeli agendas/Khairallah
Khairallah/The Arab Weekly/January 15/2021
Trump’s Shadow Looms over Biden’s Presidency/Elias Harfoush/Asharq Al-Awsat/January
15/2021
Biden Must Avoid Obama's Mistake When Setting His Agenda/Noah Smith/Bloomberg/Asharq
Al-Awsat/January 15/2021
Washington Riot and ‘End of America’ Crowd/Amir Taheri /Asharq Al-Awsat/January
15/2021
Pompeo shining light on Iran’s nefarious activities/Luke Coffey/Arab
News/January 15/ 2021
Five steps to save the Republican Party/Dr. John C. Hulsman/Arab News/January
15/ 2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on January 15-16/2021
Ministry of Health: 6,154 new coronavirus cases, 44 deaths
NNAArab News/January 15/ 2021
The Ministry of Public Health announced 6,154 new
coronavirus infection cases, which raises the cumulative number to 243,286
confirmed cases.
44 deaths have been recorded over the past 24 hours.
Probe suggests links between Assad regime, Beirut blast
Arab News/January 15/ 2021
London-based company used to ship the ammonium nitrate that caused last August’s
devastating explosion in Beirut has been linked to three individuals known to
have ties to Syrian President Bashar Assad.
LONDON: The London-based company used to ship the ammonium nitrate that caused
last August’s devastating explosion in Beirut has been linked to three
individuals known to have ties to Syrian President Bashar Assad. An
investigation by Lebanese filmmaker Firas Hatoum uncovered connections between
London-based Savaro Ltd. and three figures who had been central to efforts to
bolster Assad since the earliest months of the Syrian war. Hatoum’s findings for
the first time raise the possibility that the 2,750 tons of nitrate that leveled
much of Beirut’s port and killed 200 people may have been a by-product of Syrian
officials’ attempts to procure nitrate to use in weapons. Joint Russian-Syrian
citizens George Haswani, Mudalal Khuri and his brother Imad Khuri have all been
previously sanctioned by the US for supporting Assad’s war effort. Companies
linked to Haswani and the Khuri brothers — Hesco Engineering and Construction,
and the now-defunct IK Petroleum, respectively — shared a London address with
Savaro, which purchased the nitrate in 2013.
Haswani was a go-to businessman for Assad, and was sanctioned by the US for his
role in purchasing oil produced by Daesh on behalf of the Syrian regime. Savaro
is a shelf company — meaning it has never traded, conducted business or held
assets — that was removed from the UK’s company lists on Tuesday, the same day
that Hatoum revealed its links to the blast. Mudalal was accused by the US of
attempting to source ammonium nitrate in the months leading up to when the
Russian freighter Rhosus docked in Beirut’s port and unloaded the chemical
compound. The ship’s opaque ownership and sudden diversion to Beirut, as well as
the mysterious origins of its cargo, had fueled suspicion from the outset that
the ammonium nitrate was always destined for Beirut rather than Mozambique, its
official endpoint. A number of other complicating factors have obscured the
truth behind the source of the ammonium nitrate and its intended destination.
The shadowy world of international shipping, the volume of shelf companies used
to move the nitrate, and the difficulty in tracking down and questioning
witnesses in such a global context, have slowed the local investigation into the
blast’s causes. Lebanon’s caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab, three former
ministers and more than 30 low-level officials have so far been charged in
relation to the explosion. But the connections between Haswani, the Khuri
brothers and the Assad regime have rippled through Lebanese society since they
were exposed on Tuesday. Hatoum said he is skeptical that Lebanon will ever
truly know how the blast was allowed to happen. “I doubt that (Lebanon can
resolve an investigation) for many reasons, looking at the way that things were
handled in previous months,” he added. “And I don’t trust any foreign or
international investigation either because we have had such a bad experience in
the past and politics always gets in the way.”
In Beirut’s empty streets, the Lebanese largely welcome a
stringent lockdown
Sunniva Rose/The National/January 15/ 2021
The cash-strapped country is trying to control a recent spike in Covid-19 cases
Beirut’s usually jammed streets were much quieter than normal on Friday despite
a few traffic jams at roadblocks aimed at ensuring that a new 24-hour curfew is
enforced. “The lockdown is way better respected this time around because it’s a
full lockdown,” said a policeman at a roadblock near downtown Beirut who
withheld his name because he did not have the authorisation to speak to the
media. Set to last 12 days, the new lockdown measures are the most severe ever
applied in Lebanon. For the first time, supermarkets can only operate delivery
services. People must stay home except for a limited number of reasons, such as
going to the pharmacy or health emergencies, and have to fill in an online form.
Some professions, including healthcare and food transport, are exempt. The
Lebanese government is trying to curb the spike in Covid-19 cases after
Christmas and New Year festivities. Each day brings a record number of new cases
and deaths. In total, the virus has infected 237,132 people and killed 1,781
others in the small Mediterranean country. At the roadblock near downtown
Beirut, most cars were pulled over and fined because their drivers had not
filled in the online form.
“My employer gave me a letter certifying that I’m out for work, but that’s not
enough apparently,” said Abdelhakim Al Masri, a 67-year-old employee of an
electricity maintenance company who said he did not know about the form. The
exact amount that offenders must pay remains unclear because it is at the
discretion of a judge. “The fine is usually around 100,000 Lebanese pounds, and
I don’t think it goes over 300,000 Lebanese pounds,” said the police officer.
That’s between $66 and $200 at the official exchange rate, or between $11 and
$34 on the black-market rate. The Lebanese economy crashed months before the
country was hit by the coronavirus pandemic. The local currency lost about 80
per cent of its value in the past year. The lockdown complicates shopping for
the poor, which is more than half the population. In Sabra, just south of
Beirut, locals said that supermarkets do not deliver to them. “They’re worried
about problems,” shrugged a man carrying groceries in plastic bags. Vegetable
stalls were open on Friday at the popular Sabra market, one day after the
Lebanese police tweeted pictures of shops with their shutters down. “When the
police comes, everyone closes. As soon as they leave, people open again,” said
Khaled, 47, standing in front of a small shop selling boiled chickpeas or humus.
Its entrance had been closed off with large gas bottles. “They can’t really fine
us anyway. How are people going to pay? They can barely eat,” continued Khaled,
who said he was unemployed.
Children and women begged on the muddy streets, asking for as little as 500
Lebanese pounds, or $0,05. “We have to keep working because otherwise we would
have no other income,” said Baker, a young man in his 20s who sells salad, mint
and onions at Sabra’s market with his father.
Last August, Baker was laid off from his job as a receptionist at an upmarket
hotel in downtown Beirut after it was heavily damaged by the explosion of
thousands of tonnes of ammonium nitrate in capital’s port. The investigation
into the cause of the blast that killed more than 200 people is ongoing.
“Of course, people are afraid of the coronavirus. But they also have to live,”
said Baker as he served clients. Roughly half wore face masks. Despite some
activity at the market, most people stayed home on Friday. “This is less than 10
per cent of the usual crowd,” said a man stocking potatoes.
Shops selling anything other than food, such as shoe repair shops, remained
closed. In a country with a weak state and where laws are rarely enforced, the
fact that the lockdown was largely respected surprised Fariha Saeed, a
mother-of-one in her mid-thirties.
“I didn’t stock up in advance because I thought the market would remain open as
usual. But it’s empty,” she said. “I can’t even find fruit or olive oil. I have
no idea what I’m going to cook tonight.”
Pompeo Tweets Photo of Bassil, Stresses Support for
Lebanese People
Naharnet/January 15/2021
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo posted on his Twitter account, a picture of
Free Patriotic Movement MP Jebran Bassil bearing the phrase "punished", as part
of a series of tweets in which he addressed his country's "support" for the
Lebanese people. “Not just talk, @StateDept designated former FM Jebran Bassil
for his corrupt activities,” Pompeo’s caption read under the picture. Pompeo
re-posted a link to the US State Department's decision on sanctions against
Bassil. High-ranking diplomatic circles operating in Washington reportedly saw
Pompeo's tweet, "an official recognition that the sanctions against Bassil are
political par excellence,” according to al-Joumhouria daily. “The US sanctions
against Bassil aim to pressure him into changing his policy in general, and
refrain from demanding the return of the displaced, in addition to changing his
stance rejecting resettlement,” added the daily. In November 2020, the US
Treasury announced sanctions against high-ranking Christian ally of Hizbullah,
Bassil, accusing him of corruption involving billions of dollars that has left
the economy in a shambles.
(https://go.usa.gov/xA89e)
Abiad Warns of ‘Tough’ Coming Weeks to Curb Virus
Naharnet/January 15/2021
Dr. Firass Abiad, the Manager and CEO of state-run Rafik Hariri University
Hospital said in a tweet on Friday that Lebanon faces “tough” coming weeks as
the country observes a total lockdown due to an uncontrollable spike in cases.
In a series of tweets Abiad said: The new record number of Covid deaths reported
yesterday was sobering. The coming weeks will be tough. Yet, the compliance with
the lockdown was encouraging. He added that in order “to move out of our
predicament with minimal losses, our efforts should be concentrated on four
important topics: Reported shortages in Oxygen for home use mean more patients
will now be treated in hospitals. It will be very dangerous if hospitals, who
are already overwhelmed, should also run out of medical supplies. It is
important that distributors receive the promised subsidy. Authorities and people
in general should be commended on a high compliance with the lockdown. Staying
at home is not easy, and many, for sure, are under huge financial and mental
stress. We need to be there for each other and make this work. The lockdown can
not fail. Thinking ahead is also required. What comes after the lockdown? How
can we avoid another one? This will require much planning, and a wide and
relentless awareness campaign, to improve compliance. Clearly, easing the
measures should not be rushed. Lessons have to be learned. The Parliament will
pass the required law and herald the arrival of the vaccine in February. Vaccine
rollout will be challenging, as many countries have seen. It needs to be done
right. The presentation by the national committee was promising, but proper
execution will be key.With vaccines, there is light at the end of the tunnel.
Reaching it will not be easy. Sacrifices are required, and not only from
healthcare workers. Yet, it can be done. Let us look forward, and support each
other. Lebanon has seen darker times. This too shall pass.
A glimpse of light for some businesses in Lebanon as they
cope with coronavirus
Ghinwa Obeid, Al Arabiya English/Friday 15 January 2021
Lebanon's severe economic crisis, along with the coronavirus pandemic, has
provided challenging conditions for businesses to survive. Still, some have been
able to find light during these rough times after an outpour of community
support for local businesses and talents. As Lebanon rang in the New Year,
putting 2020 behind its back was not an easy task, given that the consequences
of the chaotic events that unfolded last year are still felt today. For more
coronavirus news, visit our dedicated page. Lebanon was hit by Covid-19 and by
an economic crisis that saw triple-digit inflation and the Lebanese pound
depreciating by almost 80 percent since the nationwide anti-government protests,
which broke out on Oct. 17, 2019. The currency had been pegged to the US dollar
since 1997, at 1,507.5, as Lebanon was and still is highly dependent on imported
goods. This was exacerbated by the devastating Port of Beirut explosion last
August and that destroyed half of the city, crushing many businesses that were
already struggling to keep their doors open. The World Bank estimated that the
massive blast caused between $3.8 billion and $4.6 billion in damages. In a
statement released this week, The World Bank estimated that around 1.7 million
people in the country are expected to fall under the poverty line. Of those,
approximately 840,000 people will be under the food poverty line.
An opportunity for local businesses
Despite the difficult situation, some local and home-based businesses saw
increased support for their work. Layal Khaled is one of those. “This [holiday
season] I received a lot of feedback from customers saying that they were buying
my products because they wanted to support local artists due to the situation,”
Khaled, who works with wires to create different art products, told Al Arabiya
English. The 29-year-old artist showcases her products on her Instagram page,
Smiles for Miles, which she started in 2017 as a source of extra income.
Initially, she did this in the summers, but during her maternity leave in
December 2019, she decided to take on working on her art. In comparison to when
she first started, Khaled said that she had seen an increase in purchases over
the past year. In addition to people’s willingness to support local products,
the coronavirus pandemic also contributed to the increased number of clientele
in Khaled's case. “Previously, people would have preferred to see items live
themselves before buying them, but with the coronavirus and the lockdown, they
were … forced to buy online.”Despite the ongoing crises and the risks that come
with it, others saw in the worsened economic situation a possibility to start
their own small business. For 29-year-old Ali Hammoud, the founder of Mounet Em
Jamal, the economic situation and the need for an extra source of income to
support his parents pushed him to embark on this journey last July. Hammond’s
business focuses on homemade jams, labneh, olives, pickles and olive oil, all of
which are prepared by his mother. “Since the Lebanese pound has depreciated,
this means that not everyone can afford to buy imported products,” Hammoud, who
has been living in France for 10 years, said. “Hence, the initiative was based
on the equation of benefitting ourselves and others [by] providing quality
products at affordable prices.”Hammoud said that they started slowly with
limited quantities until people were more encouraged to try their products. With
the help of social media, Mounet Em Jamal soon became popular. Although Hammoud
and his parents are relatively new to the business, he said he could “sense
support” from the community for his initiative given the country’s economic
situation. “The economic collapse encouraged people to try to find an
opportunity during these times to produce locally,” he said, noting that if the
collapse worsens, it will also affect the sustainability of these businesses.
Consumer and community support
Nour Hakim, 30, has been buying local products from small businesses for the
past year. As a consumer and a client, Hakim said that her purpose was to
support these businesses during tough times. “I am supporting them, and at the
same time, in return, I am getting very good quality products with good customer
service and delivery,” Hakim said. “I am going to continue [buying local
products] this year for sure.”The community support was also felt by former
banker Gisane Yamak, who, along with a group of friends, launched an initiative
ahead of the holidays to encourage people to buy from small businesses. The
initiative focused on donating gifts to children across Lebanon, and those
willing to contribute would make purchases from local businesses. Yamak, 45,
resorted to social media platforms to share posts about the products they
provide, something she was already doing since November as a personal
initiative. “The target was to reach 1,000 gifts. But, we exceeded that target
to reach 2,200 gifts, supporting between 20 and 25 businesses selling different
items,” she told Al Arabiya English. Yamak said she hoped that this
encouragement among business owners and clients would continue despite the
ongoing crises and the challenges facing businesses with no online presence to
promote their work. “Such initiatives are to tell people that these [crises]
will pass if we act together,” she said.
Beirut Port Administration signs agreement with French
company to prepare study on recycling rubble at port premises
NNA/Friday, 15 January, 2021
Beirut Port Administration on Friday signed an agreement with a French company
to prepare a study on recycling the rubble that has been left behind after the
massive explosion that shattered the port’s premises and whereabouts. The
agreement was signed between the port’s management and the French company in a
ceremony attended by Caretaker Minister of Public Works and Transportation, Dr.
Michel Najjar, alongside senior Lebanese officials, as well as well as Head of
the French Embassy’s Economic Affairs department, François De Ricolf, and
representatives of the French company. The Minister of Public Works seized the
opportunity to thank French President, Emmanuel Macron, and the French people in
general, for their "affection for Lebanon, knowing that the French army has
played a major humanitarian role in Lebanon after the blast.”“The agreement
signed today is a donation from the French state to the French company so as to
prepare a study on recycling rubble and debris at Beirut port," added Najjar,
wishing the group "success in carrying out its tasks in the interest of the
port." For his part, De Ricolf affirmed the French state’s interest in assisting
Lebanon in the reconstruction of Beirut Port. In turn, the French company has
confirmed its keenness on drafting a recycling plan in an “optimal environmental
way.”
The Lost City… A Model of the Moments of Beirut Explosion
Beirut- Vivian Haddad/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 15 January, 2021
Few Lebanese have a clear idea of what constitutes a diorama. There are actually
only a few practitioners of this art, which is usually used to document
historical or military scenes. Dioramic pieces, which are popular abroad, are
normally utilized in theater and three-dimensional works. Such works are also
often featured in museums, with models that depict the details of a piece,
castle, or monument. In Lebanon, two artistic pioneers, Wissam Zaghloul and Imad
Abo Antoun, decided to pay tribute to Beirut by documenting the moment in which
the port exploded on the fourth of August. As for Vincent Awad, his mission was
to photograph the model in a short film, following the course of the events the
model depicts moment by moment. In an interview with Asharq Al-Awsat, Awad
explains: "This model's value is in its depiction of the moment of the explosion
in all its details, taking the port's obliteration as its main focus."He adds:
"To prevent this disaster from being forgotten and to keep it engraved in our
memory no matter how much time passes, we decided to erect this monument. We
expect to place it facing Saint George Hospital in Ashrafieh or one at a Civil
Defense center. Both are symbolic sites in the context of the Beirut bombing,
the first because it was severely damaged and the second because of the fallen
martyrs from its ranks."The model recreates the event with intricate detail,
including the damage to the massive concrete walls of silos that absorbed much
of the explosion's force. The color of the dirt covering the site of the
disaster, the murkiness of the sea's water, and other subtle details of this
surreal moment are conveyed with precision by Wissam Zaghloul and Imad Abu
Antoun. Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat, Zaghloul said he arrived at the site a few
minutes after the explosion. He went to the port because he worked as a
paramedic, and he saw the destruction it left behind. He continued: "The
difficulty in working on the model was more psychological than practical.
Depicting the catastrophic scene in all its details and reliving that moment
gives you great pain. It is true that diorama, The Lost City, is a work of art
par excellence, but it is also an indirect form of psychological treatment that
my colleague Imad Abu Antoun and I received."Zaghloul adds that the site is
shrunk 200 fold in "The Lost City." It is about 80 cm high, 1.5 meters wide, and
80 cm deep. He also explains that the materials were chosen to maximize
accuracy. They include plastic pipes, gypsum, foam, iron wires, and other
materials, which he says had to be imported, like "resin" and "resin acrylic."
Hospital Says Hassan Doing Well as Lebanon Sees Record
Virus Deaths
Naharnet/January 15/2021
Covid-infected caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hassan is in a good health
condition and is practicing his work from his hospital room, the St. Georges
Hadath Hospital said on Thursday. The Health Ministry’s press office meanwhile
announced that Hassan “looked into transactions and signed the ministry’s
mail.”Lebanon meanwhile reported a record high of 41 daily deaths in addition to
5,196 infections. Lebanese authorities began enforcing an 11-day nationwide
shutdown and round the clock curfew Thursday, hoping to limit the spread of
coronavirus infections spinning out of control after the holiday period. For the
first time, residents were required to request a one-hour permit to be allowed
to leave the house for "emergencies," including going to the bakery, pharmacist,
doctor, hospital or airport. Authorities came under pressure to take a tougher
approach after the country's hospitals ran out of beds with daily infections
reaching an all-time high of 5,440 cases last week in the country of nearly 6
million people. The dramatic surge in infections began in late December. As most
governments around the world tightened lockdowns, Lebanon relaxed health
measures over the holidays, allowing restaurants and nightclubs to reopen with
barely any restrictions in place. An estimated 80,000 expats flowed back into
the country to celebrate Christmas and New Years with loved ones, many of them
expats who skipped visiting in the summer due to the devastating Aug. 4
explosion at Beirut port.
Parliament Approves Law Regulating Use of Covid Vaccines
Naharnet/January 15/2021
Parliament on Friday approved a law regulating the novel use of medical products
to fight the Covid-19 pandemic, which aims to reassure international companies
that they will not be responsible in case of side effects for the anti-virus
vaccines. The law will allow for importing coronavirus vaccines from Pfizer and
BioNTech. Caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hassan had said the first batch of
vaccines is expected in February. During Friday’s session, Speaker Nabih Berri
lauded “the work and the members of the parliamentary health committee and the
mighty effort that was exerted to accomplish the law for regulating the novel
use of medical products for fighting the Covid-19 pandemic.”He said the law will
allow “all medical companies and the private sector to import anti-coronavirus
vaccines.”The head of the parliamentary finance committee, MP Ibrahim Kanaan,
meanwhile asked the government why “it has not begun negotiations and a call for
proposals with the various international companies,” saying Lebanon should not
limit its imports to only one or two companies. Prior to the session, he had
announced that the law will not give Pfizer an exclusive right to provide
Lebanon with vaccines, calling on the government to immediately launch the
necessary arrangements to obtain all vaccines that have been internationally
licensed. MP Simon Abi Ramia for his part said citizens “should not be prevented
from filing lawsuits against vaccination labs should they suffer side effects.”
Israel Frees Lebanese Shepherd after a Three-Day Captivity
Naharnet/January 15/2021
Israel on Friday said it freed the Lebanese shepherd, Hassan Zahra, after
kidnapping him on Tuesday in the outskirts of Kfarshouba. Israeli army spokesman
Avichay Adraee said in a tweet that the Lebanese shepherd, whom it abducted
after he “deliberately crossed the frontier into (Israeli-controlled territory)
Jabal al-Rus area, was returned to Lebanon."Adraee said the abductee was handed
to the Red Cross via the Ras el-Naqoura crossing. Adraee went on saying that
“Hizbullah exploits the shepherds on the Lebanese border to serve its own
goals,” adding that Israel "will not tolerate" any violation against its
sovereignty. The Lebanese Army said Zahra was detained while he was guarding
livestock.
First Syrian Plane since 2011 Lands in Beirut
Associated Press/January 15/2021
A Cham Wings plane flying from Aleppo in Syria, landed at one o’clock after
midnight at Beirut’s Rafik Hariri International Airport following the
restoration of air connectivity at Aleppo airport, the National News Agency
reported Friday.
The round-trip route was resumed after being halted since Syria’s conflict began
in 2011. Precautionary measures against the coronavirus were in place, with
passengers required to show PCR tests taken less than three days before the
flight, according to Syria’s state news agency SANA. The head of Syrian Air in
Lebanon, Rashed Attar, said the flight arrived in Beirut carrying 36 passengers
and returned to Aleppo with 44 passengers. Attar said a weekly flight between
Aleppo and Beirut will continue. The Director General of the Syrian Civil
Aviation, Basem Mansour, said in a statement to SANA that resumption of activity
at Aleppo International Airport comes in implementation of the Council of
Ministers decision after a temporary halt due to the virus. Director of the
Health Center at Aleppo International Airport, Salwa Ibrahim, said: “All
appropriate measures have been taken to prevent the virus, in accordance with
the protocol approved by the World Health Organization and the Civil Aviation
Organization.”Syrian Air currently conducts three flights a week between the
Syrian capital of Damascus and Beirut.
Aleppo, Syria’s largest city and its former commercial center, had its airport
closed for years because of the conflict. The city was divided until late 2016,
when government forces captured rebel-held eastern parts of Aleppo. Syria’s
conflict began in March 2011 and has killed nearly half a million people. The
fighting has displaced half the country’s population, including more than five
million who are refugees outside the country
Powerful Indonesia Quake Kills at Least 34, Topples
Buildings
Agence France Presse/Associated Press/January 15/2021
A powerful earthquake rocked Indonesia's Sulawesi island early Friday, killing
at least 34 people, levelling a hospital and severely damaging other buildings,
authorities said. Hundreds more were injured when the 6.2-magnitude quake struck
in the early hours, triggering panic among the terrified residents of the
island, which was hit by a huge quake and tsunami two and a half years ago that
killed thousands. "The latest information we have is that 26 people are dead...
in Mamuju city," said Ali Rahman, head of the local disaster mitigation agency,
adding "that number could grow". "Many of the dead are buried under rubble," he
said. Separately, the national disaster agency said at least eight people had
died in an area south of Mamuju, a city of some 110,000 in West Sulawesi
province, bringing the total death toll to 34. Rescuers were searching for more
than a dozen patients and staff trapped beneath the rubble of the levelled
Mamuju hospital. "The hospital is flattened -- it collapsed," said Arianto from
the rescue agency in Mamuju city, who like many Indonesians goes by one name.
"There are patients and hospital employees trapped under the rubble and we're
now trying to reach them," he added, without giving a specific figure. Rescuers
were also trying to reach a family of eight trapped under the rubble of their
destroyed home, he added. The country's search-and-rescue agency said at least
one hotel had partially collapsed after the quake struck at 2:18 am local time
Friday (1818 GMT Thursday), while the regional governor's office also suffered
extensive damage. A Mamuju resident said damage across the city was severe.
"Roads are cracked and many buildings collapsed," said 28-year-old Hendra, who
also goes by one name. "The quake was very strong... I woke up and ran away with
my wife."
Tsunami panic
Images from the scene showed residents fleeing the seaside city in cars and
motorbikes as they drove past corrugated metal roofs and other building debris
scattered on the roadside. The meteorological agency warned residents that the
area could be hit by strong aftershocks and to avoid the beachfront in case of a
tsunami. "The aftershocks could be as strong, or stronger, than this morning's
quake," said Dwikorita Karnawati, chief of the meteorological agency. "There is
potential for a tsunami from subsequent aftershocks... Don't wait for a tsunami
first because they can happen very quickly," she added. But the warning
threatened to spark more fear in the quake-jolted city. "(Everyone) is panicking
because authorities are saying there will be aftershocks that could cause a
tsunami," Mamuju resident Zulkifli Pagessa told AFP. The city's airport had also
been damaged, authorities said.
The quake's epicentre was 36 kilometres (22 miles) south of Mamuju and it had a
relatively shallow depth of 18 kilometres, the United States Geological Survey
said. Images supplied by the search-and-rescue agency showed rescue workers
checking on two sisters who were trapped under rubble. It was not clear where
they were trapped. Indonesia experiences frequent seismic and volcanic activity
due to its position on the Pacific "Ring of Fire", where tectonic plates
collide. In 2018, a 7.5-magnitude quake and a subsequent tsunami in Palu on
Sulawesi left more than 4,300 people dead or missing. On December 26, 2004, a
9.1-magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of Sumatra and triggered a tsunami
that killed 220,000 throughout the region, including around 170,000 in
Indonesia.
Armed Men Attack Residence of ex-Deputy in Hermel
Naharnet/January 15/2021
A number of gunmen attacked overnight the residence of Baath Party ex-MP Assem
Qanso in the Hermel district, MTV television station reported Friday. The former
deputy was nowhere inside the house, it added. Relatives of Qanso claimed the
gunmen planned to “assassinate” the MP. Security forces opened investigation
into the incident.
French Judges Question Ziad Takieddine in Beirut
Naharnet/January 15/2021
A French judicial team on Thursday questioned Lebanese-French businessman Ziad
Takieddine in Beirut in the case of the suspected Libyan financing of ex-French
president Nicolas Sarkozy's 2007 election campaign. Takieddine has been under
house arrest in Lebanon since early December. The 70-year-old businessman fled
to Beirut after a French court in June condemned him to five years in jail in a
separate case involving millions of euros in kickbacks from arms sales to
Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed in 1994. Lebanon’s National News Agency said
the French team interrogated Takieddine on Thursday over the Sarkozy case. The
session was held at the Court of Cassation at Beirut’s Justice Palace in the
presence of Attorney General Judge Imad Qabalan and Takieddine’s lawyer Sharif
al-Husseini. A French judicial source has recently said he was skeptical of the
possibility of extradition to France. "France and Lebanon have not concluded an
extradition agreement and Lebanon does not extradite its nationals. The
proceedings could very quickly end there," the source said. Takieddine was once
the main accuser in the inquiry into the Sarkozy case. He was investigated in
late 2016 after he told the media he had delivered millions of euros in cash
from Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi. Sarkozy caught a break in November when
Takieddine suddenly retracted his claim. A Lebanese legal source who asked to
remain anonymous has also said that Takieddine was being pursued in a number of
financial cases in Lebanon, including on charges of slander, fraud and forgery.
US dollar exchange rate: Buying price at LBP 3850, selling
price at LBP 3900
NNA/January 15/2021
The Money Changers Syndicate announced in a statement addressed to money
changing companies and institutions Friday’s USD exchange rate against the
Lebanese pound as follows:
Buying price at a minimum of LBP 3850
Selling price at a maximum of LBP 3900
How to Save Lebanon From Financial Ruin and Starvation
James Rickards/The National Interest/January 15/2021
جيمس ريكردز/ناشيونال انترست: كيف يمكن تخليص لبنان من الدمار الإقتصادي والجوع
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/94939/james-rickards-the-national-interest-how-to-save-lebanon-from-financial-ruin-and-starvation-%d8%ac%d9%8a%d9%85%d8%b3-%d8%b1%d9%8a%d9%83%d8%b1%d8%af%d8%b2-%d9%86%d8%a7%d8%b4%d9%8a%d9%88%d9%86%d8%a7/
A new, gold-backed bank coupled with reforms could save the
economy and prevent a new civil war.
Lebanon is in crisis. It is now home to 1.6 million Syrian and Palestinian
refugees and their descendants. The government is democratic but barely
functions as numerous political parties, mostly divided along religious and
sectarian lines, struggle to install a prime minister and cabinet. Hezbollah,
the Iran-backed terrorist group, is one of the largest parties in parliament,
and it maintains an army larger than the Lebanese Armed Forces. Beirut is still
reeling from an August 2020 explosion at its port that left over 200 dead.
To make matters worse, the country is now experiencing a deep and systemic
financial crisis. The banking system, central bank, and currency reserves have
all collapsed. Banks insist that dollar-denominated deposits are good money, but
they have no dollars to back those claims. The central bank continues to operate
but lacks dollars to meet promises to the country’s commercial banks. Lebanon
has defaulted on over $42 billion of principal and interest on
dollar-denominated eurobonds. Its currency, the lira, has crashed from an
official rate of about L1,500 to $1 to a black-market rate of L9,000. Central
bank currency reserves are near zero.
In a report I authored for the nonpartisan think tank Foundation for Defense of
Democracies earlier this year, I estimated the cost of a bailout of the Lebanese
financial system to be approximately $100 billion. That figure is academic,
since no bailout of that magnitude is possible in a world hard-pressed by the
coronavirus and economic distress. New money allocated to Lebanon for a bailout
or rescue would be gobbled up by corrupt politicians or siphoned off by elites.
Lebanon is beyond hope in terms of the tried-and-true rescue playbook used by
the International Monetary Fund (IMF). In short, Lebanon is broke.
This financial collapse will not be confined to the financial system,
unfortunately. Lebanon has few sources of direct foreign investment, negligible
exports, and a moribund tourism sector. When reserves are depleted, which could
happen soon, the country will be unable to pay for food. Indeed, Lebanon is
facing a humanitarian crisis potentially worse than the slaughter of civilians
in the Syrian civil war or the 1994 Rwandan genocide. Six million people are now
under the threat of starvation.
A global humanitarian rescue will be needed. But it will be fraught with
challenges. It will likely be conducted in a political power vacuum, which may
be filled by sectarian warlords, Iranian proxies, and perhaps even intervention
from Syrian, Russian, or Israeli forces. In a worst-case scenario, civilians
will be caught in the crossfire of a new Lebanese civil war.
Fortunately, there is a solution to Lebanon’s financial woes that can forestall
the humanitarian crisis. Lebanon has one remaining monetary asset: gold. Lebanon
has over 285 metric tonnes of gold bullion, worth $78 billion at current prices.
Lebanon could form a new bank under United Kingdom law, capitalized with $10
billion of its gold to be held in custody at the Bank of England to reassure
investors. An additional $10 billion could be raised as preferred stock, secured
by the gold. With a $20 billion capital base, up to $100 billion could be raised
through senior notes and deposits.
This new bank should displace the irredeemably corrupt Lebanese central bank.
Its board would include global financial elites and Lebanese professionals
untainted by the crisis. The lira would be devalued to L10,000 to $1 and fixed
at that rate using a currency board similar to that of Hong Kong. Existing banks
would convert dollar deposits to local currency deposits. Letters of credit
could support food and energy imports. The devalued currency would provide a
foundation for the growth of the export sector.
Given their woeful balance sheets, most of Lebanon’s local banks would need to
be liquidated. Their deposits and good assets would be transferred to a few
surviving banks that would serve Lebanon’s banking needs. Receipt of liquidity
from the new bank would be dependent on transparency, an end to terrorism
finance, and bank governance based on best practices.
If done right, the reform of the Lebanese financial system would open the door
to rescue funds from the IMF and a consortium of lenders. The financial crisis
would be mitigated, even as the existing financial sector closed its doors. The
winners would be the Lebanese people and regional stability. The losers would be
Hezbollah and corrupt elites.
The gold-backed bank is feasible. The alternative is humanitarian disaster,
civil war, and military intervention. The time to act is now.
*James Rickards is an advisor to the Center on Economic and Financial Power at
the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and is the author of the forthcoming
book The New Great Depression from Portfolio. Follow him on Twitter @JamesGRickards.
FDD is a nonpartisan think tank focused on foreign policy and national security
issues.
Lebanon Wants an End to Iranian Occupation
Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/January 15/ 2021
خالد أبو طعمة/معهد كايتستون: لبنان يريد نهاية للإحتلال الإيراني/15 كانون الثاني/2021
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/94944/khaled-abu-toameh-gatestone-institute-lebanon-wants-an-end-to-iranian-occupation-%d8%ae%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%af-%d8%a3%d8%a8%d9%88-%d8%b7%d8%b9%d9%85%d8%a9-%d9%85%d8%b9%d9%87%d8%af-%d9%83%d8%a7%d9%8a%d8%aa/
The Lebanese are worried that their country will meet the fate endured by Iraq,
Syria and Yemen, where the Iranians and their militia proxies are playing a
major role in the civil wars currently plaguing these countries.
The Lebanese are demanding an end to Iranian occupation of their country; they
are clearly hoping that the international community will intervene to assist
them in freeing Lebanon from Iran's control.
A policy of appeasement or engagement with the mullahs will yield only one
thing: blood running even more freely in the streets of Lebanon, Yemen, Syria
and Iraq -- as well as nuclear weapons.
A recent announcement by the chief of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps,
Brigadier General Amir-Ali Hajizadeh (pictured), that Iran intends to use
Lebanon as a "forefront" for waging war on Israel, has enraged many Lebanese,
who say that the time has come to end the Iranian occupation of their country.
Iran's recent announcement that it intends to use Lebanon as a "forefront" for
waging war on Israel has enraged many Lebanese, who say that the time has come
to end the Iranian occupation of their country.
The Lebanese are worried that their country will meet the fate endured by Iraq,
Syria and Yemen, where the Iranians and their militia proxies are playing a
major role in the civil wars currently plaguing these countries.
The Lebanese were reacting to statements by the chief of Iran's Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Brigadier General Amir-Ali Hajizadeh, who was
quoted as saying that Lebanon is at the forefront of Iran's battle against
Israel.
Referring to the missiles Iran has supplied to Hezbollah and Palestinian
terrorist groups in the Gaza Strip, Hajizadeh said: "Whatever you see in Gaza
and Lebanon is with our support; these days they use missiles instead of simple
rockets.
"Making Lebanon an extension of Iran violates the country's sovereignty and
independence," wrote Lebanese commentator Souad Lazkani.
"Iran can and will use its rockets to fire from Lebanon to Israel if need be and
whenever it wants, even if Lebanon does not agree to it. It will fall on the
Lebanese people to pay the price of the heavy consequences as its territory
becomes an arena for Iran's battle with Israel."
Hussein Wajeh, media adviser to Lebanese Prime Minister, Saad Hariri, warned
against turning Lebanon into an Iranian province:
"Some Iranian officials are trying to involve the Lebanese people in the Iranian
regime's open wars with the international community.
"Lebanon has not – and will not – be the front line on behalf of Iran in any
confrontation. The Lebanese will not pay the price for the Iranian regime.
Lebanon is an independent, free and sovereign country."
To express their rejection and fear of Iran's malign intentions, many Lebanese
have taken to social media to warn that they will not allow the mullahs of
Tehran and their Lebanon-based Hezbollah terrorist organization to drag their
country into another war with Israel.
A hashtag currently trending on Twitter under the slogan "Beirut is Free, Iran
Out," shows how eager the Lebanese are to end the Iranian occupation of their
country. The criticism, of course, is also directed toward Hezbollah, which has
long been using Lebanon as a launching pad for carrying out terrorist attacks
against Israel with Iranian-supplied weapons.
One of the posts on Twitter reads: "The defendant: The Iranian Hezbollah. The
charge: Participation in the wars in our region."
"No to terrorism, no to Hezbollah, no to Iran," wrote Aline Hatem, a Lebanese
woman. "Lebanon is always going to be independent."
George CK Wardini, a Lebanese citizen who describes himself as "center-left,
progressive and secular," remarked: "Lebanon is under Iranian occupation and it
needs to be freed from this oppressive dictatorship!"
Addressing Hezbollah and all Lebanese who support Iran, a Lebanese social media
user called Cactus Jack commented: "if you love Iran so bad, why don't you go
there and leave us the f*** alone? Lebanon is not for Iran or any rapist
terrorist or warlords. Lebanon is for us, always life will win over death."
Sara Abou Rjeily, a Lebanese artist and photographer, wrote that any Lebanese
politician who ignores the threat Hezbollah poses to Lebanon is acting against
the interests of his or her own country: "Every Lebanese politician who does not
publicly acknowledge that Hezbollah is an occupier and a terrorist and criminal
[organization] and an existential threat is the one who denies Lebanon's rights,
its identity and its independence."
Adding insult to injury, last week, Iran's allies in Lebanon unveiled in Beirut
a statue of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani, who was assassinated in a US drone
attack in Iraq a year ago. In the past few weeks, several images of Soleimani
have appeared on boards in the Hezbollah-controlled districts of Beirut and
southern Lebanon, sparking a wave of online criticism from many Lebanese.
"Hezbollah seems pretty damn desperate to make late Iranian General Qassem
Soleimani a local hero, despite knowing that for a majority of the people in
Lebanon he simply represents a foreign power," said Lebanese researcher Nizar
Hassan.
The Lebanese Social Democratic Party, Kataeb, urged the Lebanese government to
summon the Iranian ambassador to Beirut for clarification regarding Tehran's
ongoing military support for Hezbollah. The party accused Iran of holding
Lebanon hostage and violating its sovereignty. "Hezbollah's illegal weapons did
not protect Lebanon in the past and will not protect it today," according to a
statement by Kataeb. "Instead, these weapons subject Lebanon to all forms of
isolation, boycotts and sanctions."
The Lebanese, like a growing number of Arabs in the Gulf states, are saying that
they prefer peace, stability and prosperity over weapons, statues and wars with
Israel. The Lebanese are making it clear that they have suffered more than
enough from Iran's endless meddling in their internal affairs. The Lebanese are
demanding an end to Iranian occupation of their country; they are clearly hoping
that the international community will intervene to assist them in freeing
Lebanon from Iran's control.
The message the Lebanese people are sending to the international community is
encouraging: Lebanon does not want war with Israel; Lebanon wants to get rid of
Hezbollah and Iran. We Lebanese ask you to support this goal by applying
unyielding pressure on the mullahs in Tehran. A policy of appeasement or
engagement with the mullahs will yield only one thing: blood running even more
freely in the streets of Lebanon, Yemen, Syria and Iraq -- as well as nuclear
weapons.
*Khaled Abu Toameh, an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem, is a
Shillman Journalism 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.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on January 15-16/2021
US will impose sanctions on Iran over conventional arms,
metals industry: Sources
Reuters, Washington/ Friday 15 January 2021
The United States plans to announce additional Iran sanctions on Friday related
to conventional arms and to the metals industry, sources familiar with the
matter said. The sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, did not provide
details on the sanctions, the latest in a series that US President Donald Trump
has imposed on the Iranian economy to try to force Tehran into a new negotiation
on curbing its nuclear program as well as its missile and regional
activities.Trump in 2018 abandoned the Iran nuclear agreement that Tehran struck
with six major powers in 2015 to rein in its nuclear program in return for
relief from US and international sanctions that had crippled its economy. When
he walked away from the deal, Trump said he was open to negotiating a much wider
pact that would seek more extensive constraints on Iran’s nuclear program as
well as limits on its development of ballistic missiles and its sponsorship of
militias in regional nations such as Iraq, Lebanon and Syria. The Republican
president’s administration plans to unveil the new sanctions five days before
Trump is to hand over the White House to Democratic President-elect Joe Biden.
Biden has said he will return to the 2015 pact if Iran resumes strict compliance
with it. The State and Treasury Departments did not immediately respond to
requests for comment on the announcement.
US issues new sanctions on Iran organizations for arming
military, IRGC
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/Friday 15 January 2021
The US announced new sanctions Friday on Iran’s Marine, Aerospace and Aviation
Industries organizations for their role in manufacturing lethal military
equipment for Iran’s military and the IRGC. “Today, we are announcing the
designation of Iran’s Marine Industries Organization (MIO), Aerospace Industries
Organization (AIO), and the Iran Aviation Industries Organization (IAIO) for
engaging in activities that materially contribute to the supply, sale, or
transfer, directly or indirectly, to or from Iran, or for the use in or benefit
of Iran, of arms or related materiel, including spare parts,” Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo said. He said each of the entities was manufacturing lethal military
equipment for Iran’s military, including the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps
(IRGC). This includes attack boats, missiles, and combat drones, Pompeo said.
“Iranian conventional arms proliferation poses a persistent threat to regional
and international security, as evidenced by Iran’s continued military support
and confirmed arms transfers that fuel ongoing conflict in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq,
Yemen, and elsewhere,” Pompeo also said Friday. The outgoing top US diplomat
called upon all states to prohibit the sale, supply, or transfer of arms to or
from Iran. “The United States will continue working with its partners in the
international community to pressure the Iranian regime to fundamentally change
its behavior,” Pompeo said.
US troops in Afghanistan, Iraq cut to 2,500 each: Acting
Defense Secretary
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/Friday 15 January 2021
The Pentagon announced Friday that it had cut the number of US troops in
Afghanistan and Iraq to 2,500 each, days before President-elect Joe Biden is set
to take office. “Today, US force levels in Afghanistan have reached 2,500.
Directed by President [Donald] Trump, and as I announced on Nov. 17, this
drawdown brings US forces in the country to their lowest levels since 2001,”
Acting Defense Secretary Christopher Miller said in a statement. “Today, the
United States is closer than ever to ending nearly two decades of war and
welcoming in an Afghan-owned, Afghan-led peace process to achieve a political
settlement and a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire,” Miller said. The
reduction could complicate matters for the incoming Biden administration, which
must determine how to handle a Trump administration commitment to the Taliban to
remove all US military, intelligence and contractor personnel from Afghanistan
by May as a move to spur peace negotiations. Those talks are at an early stage.
Senior US commanders are skeptical of the Taliban’s stated commitment to peace,
although they have said they can accomplish their mission in Afghanistan with
2,500 troops. When Trump took office four years ago, there were about 8,500
troops in the country, and he raised it to about 13,000 that summer. Under the
National Defense Authorization Act passed by Congress two weeks ago, the
Pentagon was explicitly forbidden to use money from this year’s or last year’s
budget on reducing the number of troops below 4,000 — or below the number that
was in the country the day the bill was finalized, which was Jan. 1. Trump
vetoed the measure, but both the House and Senate voted to override his veto.
The defense legislation provided two conditions under which the Pentagon could
get around the prohibition -- a presidential waiver or a report to Congress
assessing the effect of a further drawdown on the US counterterrorism mission in
Afghanistan and the risk to US troops there.
Iraq
Separately, Miller also revealed that the number of US troops in Iraq was now at
2,500. “The drawdown of US force levels in Iraq is reflective of the increased
capabilities of the Iraqi Security Forces,” Miller said, adding that the ability
to reduce force levels was “evidence of real progress” in the fight against
ISIS. But the US official said the move did “not equate to a change in US
policy. “US and Coalition forces remain in Iraq to ensure the enduring defeat of
ISIS,” Miller said.There had been just over 5,000 US troops in Iraq before the
initial decisions to reduce the troop level at the end of 2019.
Turkey’s Erdogan hopes for positive steps on F-35 jet
program during Biden’s term
Reuters, Ankara/Friday 15 January 2021
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Friday he hoped positive steps will be
taken on Turkey’s role in the F-35 jet program once US President-elect Joe Biden
takes office, describing Ankara’s exclusion for purchasing Russian defenses as a
“serious wrong”. Last month, Washington imposed long-anticipated sanctions on
Turkey’s defense industry over its acquisition of S-400 missile defense systems
from Moscow, in a move Turkey called a “grave mistake”. The United States has
also removed fellow NATO member Turkey from the F-35 program over the move.
Washington says the S-400s pose a threat to its F-35 fighter jets and to NATO’s
broader defense systems. Turkey rejects this, saying S-400s will not be
integrated into NATO and purchasing them was a necessity as it was unable to
procure air defense systems from any NATO ally on satisfactory terms. First
parts of a Russian S-400 missile defense system are seen after unloaded from a
Russian plane at Murted Airport, known as Akinci Air Base, near Ankara, Turkey.
First parts of a Russian S-400 missile defense system are seen after unloaded
from a Russian plane at Murted Airport, known as Akinci Air Base, near Ankara,
Turkey. “No country can determine the steps we will take toward the defense
industry, that fully depends on the decisions we make,” Erdogan told reporters
in Istanbul, adding Ankara was in talks to procure a second shipment of S-400s
from Russia and would hold talks on the issue later this month. “We don’t know
what the Biden administration will say at this stage (on the S-400s),” he added.
“Despite having paid a serious fee on the F-35s, the F-35s still have not been
given to us. This is a serious wrong the United States did against us as a NATO
ally,” he said.
Iran fires ‘abundant’ missiles, drones in latest military
drill exercise: State TV
Reuters, Dubai Friday 15 January 2021
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards fired “abundant” surface-to-surface ballistic
missiles and tested locally manufactured new drones in a military exercise on
Friday, state television reported. The drill, which it said was overseen by
Guards commander Major General Hossein Salami in the central desert region, came
in the waning days of high tensions with US President Donald Trump’s
administration. It followed short-range naval missile tests on Wednesday, as
well as exercises earlier this month that featured a wide array of domestically
produced drones. “The bomber drones struck the hypothetical enemy missile shield
from all directions, completely destroying the targets,” the state TV broadcast
said of Friday’s drill. “Also, an abundant number of a new generation of
ballistic missiles were fired at selected targets, inflicting deadly blows to
the hypothetical enemy bases.”Iran, which routinely boasts of technological
advances in its armed forces, has one of the biggest missile programs in the
Middle East, regarding them as a deterrent and retaliatory force against US and
other adversaries in the event of war. There have been periodic confrontations
between Iran’s military and US forces in the Gulf since 2018, when Trump
abandoned Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers and reinstated harsh
sanctions against Tehran. US President-elect Joe Biden, who takes office on Jan.
20, has said Washington will rejoin the deal “if Iran resumes strict compliance”
with the agreement that imposed strict curbs on its nuclear activities in return
for the lifting of sanctions.
Turkish Leader Eyes Favorably Greek PM Meet amid Tensions
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 15 January, 2021
Turkey’s president indicated on Friday that he would be open to easing tensions
with neighboring Greece by floating the possibility of a face-to-face meeting
with the Greek prime minister following months of saber-rattling over energy
resources in the Eastern Mediterranean. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
told reporters after prayers in Istanbul that he would “positively” consider a
meeting that he said Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis had requested.
Erdogan said the two countries’ foreign ministers had met and bilateral talks
were ongoing. “So we said we can take the steps for talks between our special
representatives and then between the Prime Minister and myself could happen.”
Relations between the neighbors and nominal NATO allies hit new lows over the
summer due to a dispute over maritime borders and energy rights, bringing them
to the brink of war.Turkey dispatched a research vessel, escorted by warships,
to search for hydrocarbon resources in disputed waters. Greece answered by
sending its own frigates, claiming Turkey had violated its sovereign rights.
Earlier this week, both countries announced the resumption of exploratory talks
on Jan. 25. The talks would be the latest in a long-running process of
negotiations between Greece and Turkey that aim to improve their often testy
relations. A Greek government official said the Greek side viewed the
possibility of a meeting between the two leaders as positive, if the current
positive climate in relations continued. The official spoke on condition of
anonymity as they were not authorized to speak publicly on the issue. The
official said the prime minister has repeatedly stated his desire for open
channels of communication with Turkey at the highest level. In December, the
European Union gave the green light for the expansion of sanctions against
Turkey over its exploration of gas reserves in waters claimed by EU members
Greece and Cyprus. Though Ankara has repeatedly said sanctions would not deter
Turkey from defending its energy rights, Erdogan has expressed a readiness to
put frayed relations with the EU “back on track” and called on them display the
same determination. Erdogan spoke with Italian Prime Minister Guiseppe Conte
Friday, thanking him for his support within the EU. “I believe Italy will direct
the European Union to a prudent and just attitude in the Eastern Mediterranean,”
the Turkish president said.
Russia Follows US in Withdrawal from Open Skies Treaty
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 15 January, 2021
Russia said on Friday that it will withdraw from an international treaty
allowing surveillance flights over military facilities after the US exit from
the pact, compounding the challenges faced by the incoming administration of
president-elect Joe Biden. Russia’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement that
the US withdrawal from the Open Skies Treaty last year “significantly upended
the balance of interests of signatory states,” adding that Moscow’s proposals to
keep the treaty alive after the US exit have been cold-shouldered by
Washington’s allies. The ministry said that Russia is now launching the relevant
procedures to withdraw from the pact "due to the lack of progress in removing
the obstacles for the treaty's functioning in the new conditions.” The Russian
parliament, which ratified the treaty in 2001, will now have to vote to leave
it. The treaty was intended to build trust between Russia and the West by
allowing the accord’s more than three dozen signatories to conduct
reconnaissance flights over each other’s territories to collect information
about military forces and activities. More than 1,500 flights have been
conducted under the treaty, aimed at fostering transparency about military
activity and helping monitor arms control and other agreements.US President
Donald Trump pulled out of the Open Skies Treaty, arguing that Russian
violations made it untenable for the United States to remain a party. The US
completed its withdrawal from the pact in November.
Russia denied breaching the treaty, which came into force in 2002. The European
Union has urged the US to reconsider and called on Russia to stay in the pact
and lift flight restrictions, notably over its westernmost Kaliningrad region,
which lies between NATO allies Lithuania and Poland.
Russia has argued that the limits on flights over Kaliningrad, which hosts
sizable military forces, are permissible under the treaty’s terms, noting that
the US has imposed more sweeping restrictions on observation flights over
Alaska.
As a condition for staying in the pact after the US pullout, Moscow
unsuccessfully sought guarantees from NATO allies that they wouldn't transfer
the data collected during their observation flights over Russia to the US.
Leonid Slutsky, head of the foreign affairs committee in the lower house of the
Russian parliament, said in televised remarks Friday that Russia could review
its decision to withdraw if the US decides to return to the pact, but
acknowledged that the prospect looks “utopian.”
Moscow has warned that the US withdrawal will erode global security by making it
more difficult for governments to interpret the intentions of other nations,
particularly amid Russia-West tensions after the Russian annexation of Ukraine’s
Crimea in 2014. The demise of the Open Skies Treaty follows the US and Russian
withdrawal in 2019 from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty. The INF
Treaty, which was signed in 1987 by US President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev, banned land-based cruise and ballistic missiles with a range
of 500 to 5,500 kilometers (310 to 3,410 miles), weapons seen as particularly
destabilizing because of the shorter time they take to reach targets compared
with intercontinental ballistic missiles. The only US-Russian arms control pact
still standing is the New START treaty that expires in three weeks. Moscow and
Washington have discussed the possibility of its extension, but have so far
failed to overcome their differences. Biden has spoken for the preservation of
the New START treaty and Russia has said it's open for its quick and
unconditional extension. But negotiating the deal before the pact expires on
Feb. 5 appears extremely challenging.
New START was signed in 2010 by US President Barack Obama and Russian President
Dmitry Medvedev. It limits each country to no more than 1,550 deployed nuclear
warheads and 700 deployed missiles and bombers, and envisages sweeping on-site
inspections to verify compliance.
Arms control advocates have warned that its expiration would remove any checks
on US and Russian nuclear forces, striking a blow to global stability.
Trump Receives Morocco's Highest Award for Middle East Work
Asharq Al-Awsat/January 15/2021
US President Donald Trump on Friday received Morocco's highest award for his
work in advancing a normalization deal between Israel and Morocco, a senior
administration official told Reuters. In a private Oval Office ceremony,
Princess Lalla Joumala Alaoui, who is Morocco's ambassador to the United States,
gave Trump the Order of Muhammad, an award given only to heads of state. It was
a gift from Morocco's King Mohammed VI. White House senior adviser Jared Kushner
and Middle East envoy Avi Berkowitz received other awards for their work on the
Israel-Morocco deal, which was reached in December. The United States in the
last five months helped broker deals between Israel, the United Arab Emirates,
Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco. The agreements are aimed at normalizing relations
and opening economic ties. Trump leaves office on Wednesday.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published on January 15-16/2021
Iran’s missile programme and US-Israeli agendas
Khairallah Khairallah/The Arab Weekly/January 15/2021
It has become obvious that Israel, which launches strikes almost every day on
sites in Syria and monitors Lebanese territory from the air and sea at day and
night, has succeeded in making Iran’s ballistic missiles what may be the only
common denominator between the administrations of US President Donald Trump and
President-elect Joe Biden.
In the end, Biden’s administration made the right call days before its term was
to begin.
It linked reviving the Iran nuclear agreement, signed in the summer of 2015
under then President Barack Obama, to the conditions the agreement ignored and
which led Obama’s successor, President Donald Trump, to tear it apart in 2018
and describe it as “the worst agreement of its kind.”
At the forefront of these conditions is the link between the Iranian nuclear
deal and Iran’s ballistic missiles programme and aggressive behaviour in the
region.
From this standpoint, the words of Biden’s national security adviser Jake
Sullivan represent a very significant turning point.
A few days ago, Sullivan said that the Biden administration is not against
returning to the nuclear agreement that Iran signed with the Group of Five plus
one (the five permanent members of the Security Council and Germany), “but the
missiles should be on the table.”
Such talk is significant because it indicates that the prospect of war with Iran
no longer hinges on the Trump administration alone.
It is possible that nothing will change under Biden, who has aligned himself
with Trump in this regard. The war option will hence remain on the table because
of the ballistic missiles programme, which will perhaps draw now more attention
than Iran’s nuclear programme.
The Biden administration certainly cannot publicly acknowledge that the Trump
administration was right on Iran.
In fact, there was a working group around Trump which knows Iran and its modern
history well, starting with its capture of US Embassy diplomats in Tehran for
444 days that began in November 1979.
This team was able to build a coherent policy against Iran that led to the Iran
nuclear agreement being torn up and more sanctions being imposed on the Tehran
regime
These sanctions have had a major impact on the country. This is what the
regime’s leaders refuse to acknowledge, just as they refuse to admit that they
will not be able to negotiate with the new US administration from a position of
strength, regardless of what they pretend and whatever they do to confirm that
they are in Lebanon and Gaza and that the missiles in those places that are
aimed at Israel came from Iran and nowhere else.
Whatever Iran does, it will not be able to keep hold of Iraq, which it considers
the biggest prize.
No matter how much it resorts to armed parades by the Popular Mobilisation
Forces (PMF), the sectarian militia group loyal to Tehran, Iraq will remain Iraq
and Iran will remain Iran.
Whatever Iran does in Lebanon to show that the latter is in its orbit and that
Qassem Soleimani, the late leader of the Quds Force, is present in every Shia
neighborhood, it remains that Iran is rejected by most Lebanese people, who know
that Tehran can destroy, but cannot build.
There was some reason for the new US administration to reconsider its
calculations and rein in its Iranian enthusiasm for an unconditional return to
the nuclear agreement.
This includes Sullivan, a key figure who is known to favour a return to the Iran
nuclear deal.
In this context, we must consider two very important developments in this
direction.
The first was the launch of missiles and rockets via drones at Saudi Aramco oil
installations in Abqaiq in September 2019.
Iran’s hits were accurate and revealed the new advanced features of its
ballistic missiles that managed to disrupt a significant part of Saudi oil
production for a few days. This occurred again about two weeks ago. The Houthis,
who are nothing but an Iranian tool, targeted Aden airport.
The shells fell a few metres away from a civilian plane that was transporting
members of the new Yemeni government to the capital of southern Yemen.
Twenty-six people were killed and dozens wounded in a deliberate missile strike
originating from an area near Taiz, the capital of the central Yemeni region,
part of which is under Houthis control.
These missiles covered a distance of about 150km and fell a few metres away from
their target. No American administration can help but take into account the fact
that Iran’s missiles have become dangerously accurate.
It cannot ignore that Israel’s security is at stake, which is a real American
concern.
The Iranian missiles fired at Saudi Arabia’s eastern region could have been
launched from Iraq and not Iran. But it is now a fact that some deep changes
have occurred and the Biden administration cannot just stand by and watch.
It is not possible for the United States to let Iran play the role of the
dominant power in the Gulf and the Middle East, relying on missiles and on the
sectarian militias that it finances. The policy pursued by the Trump
administration was widely supported by both Republicans and Democrats in both
houses of Congress.
What will Israel do? That is the big question. What it has succeeded in doing so
far is making Iran’s missiles a common denominator or a bridge between two
administrations that are not united on much else.
Moreover, if the Trump administration underestimated Iran’s missiles fired by
the Houthis from Yemen towards Saudi territory, it is likely that this issue
will be of interest to Washington in the next few months. It will view the
development of Iranian missiles as an issue that is just as, if not more,
important than Iran’s nuclear programme. More than that, talk has surfaced about
the prospect of Yemeni territories being used to launch rockets towards Israel
and that these missiles could reach the port of Eilat on the Red Sea.
Trump’s Shadow Looms over Biden’s Presidency
Elias Harfoush/Asharq Al-Awsat/January 15/2021
Normally, US presidents become history once their terms have expired. They
retire on their farm and keep themselves busy writing memoirs and remembering
the leaders they met, the deals they made, the laws they signed and the capitals
they visited. They become outside the world of politics and decision-making. The
US doesn’t have room for two presidents. Mid-day on January 20 separates this
term from that.
On Mid-day next Wednesday, things will be different. True, Joe Biden will enter
the White House, unless something even more exceptional occurs and prevents this
from happening. Donald Trump will leave. But… will Trump really go? The
forty-fifth president won’t have his hands on the steering wheel or his finger
on the nuclear button. He won’t get Air Force One or the armored presidential
limo. But the shadow of his stay at the capital of global decision making will
not disappear. He has 74 million American votes in pocket, 11 million more than
those allowed him to arrive at the White House in 2017. These millions aren’t
going anywhere. They are staying in US cities and rural areas for the next four
years of Biden’s term. They don’t accept the legitimacy of any president who
isn’t Trump.
Trump’s shadow will loom over Washington during his successor’s inauguration
ceremony. The fact that he will break with the US custom of attending the
ceremony and the presence of over 20,000 armed forces to protect the capital
from another “insurrection” affirms that apprehensions about the absent
president who is leaving office and the impact of his future steps control the
coming administration.
It will not be easy to get rid of this man’s legacy or his shadow. He came from
outside the establishment and the party. His presidency became a milestone, and,
like his character, it was different. The man doesn’t respect traditions or
taboos; he has his personal constitution and laws. It is on this foundation that
Trump built his broad popular base, a sample of which we saw at the
“insurrection at the Capitol” on January 6. Under the slogan “you’re all
traitors,” these protesters raised the gallows and guillotines in the face of
Biden’s victory, bringing to mind the revolution that ended with the
decapitations of Louis XVI and poor Mary Antoinette. Even Vice President Mike
Pence’s name was on the gallows erected facing Congress, alongside the names of
the other “traitors:”: House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, several
Democratic state governors, and the daughter of former Vice President Dick
Cheney, Liz Cheney, who is the most prominent member of the Republican Party to
have voted against Trump, who said, “We got to get rid” the likes of her.
Those protesting against the “steal” of the elections and Trump being denied the
presidency wanted their message to reach those who want to hear. It is a
revolution against everything that American institutions represent: the
headquarters of the executive authority at the White House, the center of
legislation at the two chambers of Congress, the judiciary’s highest body, the
Supreme Court. All of these institutions are accused of committing extraordinary
fraudulent actions to prevent Donald Trump from realizing his historic right to
remain in the White House: Trump is our president, and we do not recognize any
president but him.
The slogan of Trump supporters’ revolution against American institutions was
raised alongside slogans of the extremist and fascist movements of the American
right and white-supremacist groups. The movements that had no luck in the ballot
box and found their new calling in supporting a president in whom they see a
genuine reflection of themselves, whose unconventional rhetoric allows him to
defend them, even when they plan on attacking federal government headquarters.
This was apparent in his call for them to march towards the Capitol to pressure
the men and women of Congress to refrain from confirming Joe Biden’s victory.
Trump’s shadow will not leave Washington. It will be hard to ignore him while
Congress votes to confirm Biden’s cabinet picks as he begins his term. The House
vote in favor of impeaching Trump for violating the constitution and instigating
an insurrection will make matters harder for Joe Biden, whose term was supposed
to signal a new page being turned after the past four years, a new page that
would allow for the reunification of the US as he had promised. Instead, his
term will begin with Trump’s impeachment trial in the Senate, before the vote on
the resolution that deems him ineligible to assume the presidency. It will set a
historic precedent, as Trump will be relaxing on the beach in his Florida resort
while lawmakers in Congress are busy determining his illegibility for office.
Many would prefer for Trump’s legacy and the disputes that emerged during his
term to be forgotten. If only this page could be turned. His opponents in the
Democratic Party obviously prefer this, as do the Republican members of both
houses of Congress who have been applauding him over the past four years,
knowing that his support ensured that they would win their legislative seats.
These Republicans know that Trump will continue to be an obstacle, whether they
hope to run for the presidency in 2024 or obtain the votes they need from the
electorate to retain their seat in Congress.
However, there is little to indicate that most Republican members of Congress
are ready to relinquish their support for Trump or stop defending him. Despite
the hurdles facing his political future and the fact that he had been impeached
from the House of Representatives for abuse of power twice, the Republicans did
save him from conviction the first time, and they could perhaps save him a
second time.
Numbers don’t lie, and they affirm the Republicans’ reluctance to abandon Trump.
Despite the siege of the Capitol on January 6 and the confirmation of his defeat
by state councils and the courts, the fact remains that 147 members of Congress
(139 House representatives and 8 Senators) voted against confirming Biden's
victory.
Joe Biden’s ability to stitch America’s torn social fabric back together will
hinge on the Republican Party leadership’s readiness to take part in this
process and leave Trump’s legacy behind, a legacy that harmed the party’s image
to the same extent that it drew votes. In other words, it depends on the extent
to which Republicans are prepared to reclaim their party from the “Trumpists”,
whom Donald Trump Jr. called the real Republicans on the day of the assault on
the Capitol.
Biden Must Avoid Obama's Mistake When Setting His Agenda
Noah Smith/Bloomberg/Asharq Al-Awsat/January 15/2021
The universe of possibilities for the Biden administration radically expanded
after the Democrats clinched the Senate majority, but the increase in political
capital isn’t infinite. When deciding which problems to tackle first, President
Joe Biden should prioritize initiatives that address the pandemic while moving
the nation toward long-term goals for public health and green-energy stimulus.
Biden can learn from the experience of Barack Obama, whose focus on
health-insurance reform provoked a midterm backlash and probably forfeited a
chance to boost the country out of the Great Recession sooner.
He should heed the words of Winston Churchill who urged, “never let a good
crisis go to waste.” Because crises are times when the public understands that
change is necessary, it’s possible to make deep and lasting reforms. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt understood this when he focused parts of his New Deal on
long-term alterations to America’s economic structure, such as Social Security
and the National Labor Relations Board. These policies not only contributed to
the recovery from the Great Depression — the reason for Roosevelt's election —
but created a more equal and stable economy in which workers had more bargaining
power and old people didn’t have to live in penury.
The US was in the depths of the Great Recession when Obama took office in 2009.
With the benefit of unified Democratic control of Congress, he passed a fairly
substantial stimulus. But it was still too small to make more than a modest dent
in the recession. It was too weighted toward tax cuts and it didn’t include much
of a bailout for underwater homeowners. Instead, Obama spent much of his
political capital on passing the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as
Obamacare.
Now, it’s true that health insurance was, and is, one of the country’s biggest
problems. And it’s also true that Obamacare substantially reduced the ranks of
the uninsured, which was a big, important victory. But the system Obama crafted
was a compromise, which left the problem of ruinously high costs mostly
unaddressed. The legislation failed to satisfy many on the left, with a few now
even labeling it as mass murder for not making deeper reforms. Meanwhile,
Obamacare remained unpopular throughout Obama’s term in office and may have
substantially contributed to the Democrats’ catastrophic midterm election losses
in 2010.
Alternate histories are difficult to imagine, but it seems likely that had Obama
spent his 2009 political capital on things more directly related to the
recession — such as more infrastructure spending, a bigger bailout for
underwater homeowners and a stronger welfare state — he'd have realized a higher
return on that political capital. In other words, a crisis does present an
opportunity for long-term reforms, but it’s best to use that opportunity for
reforms that address the immediate crisis.
The Democratic victories in the Georgia Senate runoffs have given Biden an
unexpected opportunity to pass major legislation in the first year of his
presidency, instead of relying on executive action and the faint hope of
bipartisan compromise. The left will be clamoring for major action on health
care and a variety of other momumental issues, but Biden needs to spend his
political capital on reforms that are also tied to the COVID-19 pandemic and the
resulting recession.
The first priority is public health. COVID-19 exposed deep and catastrophic
weaknesses in the US public health institutions. Right now, vaccination is
proceeding at a glacial pace due to an uncoordinated rollout that dumped
vaccines in the lap of state public health agencies utterly unequipped to
rapidly inoculate the entire populace. Biden needs to come right out of the gate
with a coordinated, well-funded vaccination plan that reaches maximum
vaccination rates as fast as possible. In doing so, he also needs to bolster
public health agencies and revitalize and reform both the Centers for Disease
Control and the Food and Drug Administration after years of neglect.
This will be a bigger challenge than is popularly realized because of the
possibility that vaccine-resistant virus strains will emerge. Biden will need to
reorient much of the US economy toward vaccine production and distribution until
COVID-19 has been decisively beaten all around the world. It will take a lot of
money and a lot of will. After the virus is beaten, the US economy will still
linger in recession unless the government acts decisively to boost demand. The
best tool for doing this, as usual, is infrastructure investment. And the rapid
progress in solar power and batteries means that Biden has a unique opportunity
to address the climate crisis at the same time. A huge build-out of solar power
and electric-car charging stations, including subsidies to rapidly replace
fossil fuel plants and gasoline vehicles, will ensure that the US economy comes
roaring back while making huge steps toward decarbonization.
Public health and green infrastructure should be the top priorities for Biden in
2021 and 2022. Yes, there are lots of other things in America that need reform,
including health care. But the realities of the political system mean these will
have to wait. Reforms must fit the crisis of the day; Biden can’t afford to get
sidetracked on a quixotic quest to fix everything that’s wrong with the American
economy.
Washington Riot and ‘End of America’ Crowd
Amir Taheri /Asharq Al-Awsat/January 15/2021
Last week’s mob assault on the Capitol in Washington DC has injected new vigor
in the “end of America” crowd across the globe. In China and Russia the talk is
centered on the claim that American democracy is no longer a model for nations
seeking a global profile. For Khomeinists in the Islamic Republic in Iran and
Chavista in Venezuela, the event marked “the beginning of the end” for the
“Great Satan”. Some chattering circles in Europe relaunched speculation about
the end of America as leader in the international arena.
In the US itself, too, some commentators presented the incident as an historic
turning point. Richard Haas of the Council on Foreign Relations, hailed by the
Tehran daily Kayhan as “America’s greatest strategist”, saw the riot as the
starting point of the “post-America” world order.
The idea that America is somehow “ending” or losing its leadership position is
not new. The retired American linguist Noam Chomsky and Dr. Hassan Abbasi, known
as “Dr. Kissinger of Islam” have been peddling that yarn for years. The
Indian-American TV star Fareed Zakaria even wrote a book about the “American
dream” being on its death-bed.
But, what if all the talk about “end of America and “death of the American
dream” is based on partial or even total misreading and mis-description of the
mini-riot in Washington?
The BBC headlined a remark by President-elect Joe Biden saying the Washington
riot was “the darkest day in our history”. However, when you read the actual
news item you find out that Biden said “one of the darkest days”. London
newspapers headlined Biden “condemning” the difference in treatment of the
Washington riots and that of Black Life Matters protestors. Several papers
quoted un-named BLM activists saying that “had it been us, we would have all
been dead.” The fact that in 2020 they had numerous riots in more than 20
American cities and they are still in good health was ignored. However, Biden
described the difference in police treatment of pro-Trump and BLM rioters only
as “unacceptable”, the weakest term in the lexicon of sulking.
The European Union foreign policy spokesman, Josep Borrel, described the riot as
“unprecedented in a democracy” and, presumably, a sign of American decline. He
may have to refresh his knowledge of European history to remember President
Charles De Gaulle having to flee Paris to seek refuge with French troops in West
Germany in 1968, not to mention the seizure of the Spanish parliament in Madrid
by Lt. Colonel Antonio Tejero’s armed gang in 1981.
Some commentators compared the Washington blip with Mussolini’s 1922 march on
Rome and spoke of an attempted putsch if not a full-blown coup d’etat. However,
if only because America is America, seeing Donald J Trump Jr. as a new Mussolini
is as hilarious as branding Joseph B. Biden as a new Stalin.
What happened, however, seems to have been less dramatic than what the
hate-America had wished.
Capitol Police chief Steven Sund says that two days before Congress was set to
finalize Biden’s victory he felt concerned about “the size of the pro-Trump
crowd” expected to gather in protest. However, for reasons not yet known spelled
out, the 1,900 members of the capitol police force, along with staff of
Congressmen and senators, were told to stay home for the day.
Thus, when the riot broke out Capitol Police had only 400 or so officers on
hand. Was that a conspiracy by the Trump machine? As the DC police is controlled
by the Mayor, an ardent opponent of Trump, and with Democrats holding majority
in the House of Representatives, it is hard to see how Trump could have plotted
the “stay home” scenario for security officers and congressional personnel.
Even then, the pro-Trump crowd, estimated by the DC police at around 8,000 in
its first phases, was rather smaller than Mussolini’s “One Million Man March”.
In the final phase of the demonstration around 2,500 people joined the assault
on the Capitol and around 150 actually penetrated the heart of the building. Of
those 53 were taken into custody and, at the time of this writing 13 had been
charged with “trespassing”. In other words, the DC police do not see the riot as
a major attempt at seizing power by force, thus challenge claims that the United
States has become a “banana republic” in which armed men seize government
buildings and establish themselves in power with a pronunciamento.
The term “Trump supporters” is sued as a short hand to describe the rioters.
However, if we go by electoral measures, Trump supporters number around 74
million people who voted for him. There is no evidence that many, let alone a
majority, of them approve of the tactics used by rioters in DC just as it would
be unfair to claim that anti-Trump crowds who pillaged shops and burned
neighborhoods last year represent the majority of Democrat voters.
The attack on Capitol was not a March on Rome. Nor was it a Tiananmen style
popular uprising that ended the massacre of over 15,000. Nor was it an
anti-despot insurrection as we have seen in Tehran and Caracas, among other
places, that left thousands dead in streets, in the past few years.
The whole episode disrupted the democratic process of formalizing Biden’s
victory for just a few hours after which the nation’s legislative body resumed
its work with full serenity.
Sadly, the incident caused claimed five lives. One policeman was shot and died
of injuries. One woman demonstrator was killed apparently by a ricocheting
bullet while three protesters were crushed in what may have been a stampede.
The key question is whether or not Trump was responsible for “incitement to
violence”, a serious charge against anyone let alone the President of the United
States. The best way to probe that is for the Capitol Police to demand that the
District Attorney in DC opens an inquest, collects evidence, hears witnesses
and, if possible, bring a case against the outgoing president. In other words,
American democracy is alive and well with robust institutions capable of dealing
with any political crisis within a constitutional framework.
To write America off, either as a democracy or as a world leader, is an
obsession better left to Chomsky and Abbasi.
Pompeo shining light on Iran’s nefarious activities
Luke Coffey/Arab News/January 15/ 2021
America’s top diplomat, Mike Pompeo, is ending his time as secretary of state
with a bang. In the past couple of weeks, he has delivered a number of major
speeches and fired off a salvo of tweets highlighting the accomplishments from
his time at the State Department.
He has also been announcing some robust, albeit at times controversial, policy
decisions. For example, he revealed that the US was changing a more than
four-decades-old set of guidelines regarding how American officials engaged with
Taiwan. No doubt this decision had Beijing in mind.
He also announced that the US was redesignating Cuba as a state sponsor of
terrorism (former American President Barack Obama’s administration removed
Havana from the list in 2015) and designating the Houthis as a terrorist
organization.
With the finish line fast approaching for US President Donald Trump’s
administration, Pompeo has seemingly announced several months’ worth of major
policy changes in only a few days. His sharpest focus in recent weeks has been
on Iran — and rightfully so.
The world is barely through the first weeks of 2021, and already Iran has wasted
no time setting a terrible tone for the rest of the year.
Earlier this month the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy seized a South
Korean-flagged tanker sailing near the Strait of Hormuz. Iran justified this
blatant act of piracy on dubious claims of maritime pollution violations by the
South Korean ship. The tanker and its crew are currently being held in Iran. The
real reason for Tehran’s actions was more likely linked to the almost $7 billion
in Iranian assets that are frozen in South Korea because of US sanctions.
In addition to acts of piracy, Iran also started enriching uranium to 20 percent
concentration of Uranium-235. This violates the restrictions laid out in the
Obama-era 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (commonly known as the Iran
nuclear deal), which capped uranium enrichment at 3.67 percent.
While this might seem complicated, or even confusing to some, in simple terms
the move places Iran dangerously close to having a nuclear weapon. This is
because enriching uranium to 20 percent represents approximately 90 percent of
the effort in producing the weapons-grade fissile material required for a bomb.
Last week, Pompeo also took the opportunity to place the spotlight on Iran’s
dangerous relationship with Al-Qaeda. During a speech, he said: “For Al-Qaeda,
Iran is the new home base. Tehran gives sanctuary to the terror group’s senior
leaders as they plan attacks against America and our allies.”
Although Pompeo announced publicly for the first time that Al-Qaeda’s
second-in-command, Abu Mohammed Al-Masri, was killed on Aug. 7 in Iran, there
was very little new in his speech. Some might question why a country of Shiite
extremists would back a Sunni terror organization, but the reason is simple:
They both have a common enemy in the US and its allies.
For years there has been mounting evidence linking those two unlikely
bedfellows. The evidence dates back to America’s 9/11 Commission in the wake of
the 2001 terrorist attacks on the US. During the daring raid to kill Osama bin
Laden in Abbottabad, Pakistan, in 2011, correspondence was found linking
Al-Qaeda with Iranian intelligence.
Pompeo’s actions in recent days will have implications for the incoming
administration of US President-elect Joe Biden. On the campaign trail, Biden
criticized the Trump administration’s withdrawal from the Iran deal, along with
the killing of the head of Iran’s Quds Force, Qassem Soleimani, and the “maximum
pressure campaign” against Tehran.
Many in Iran were hoping that Trump would lose the election to see if a Biden
administration would change tactics. There is no doubt that in the coming months
many of America’s friends in the Gulf and in Israel will be watching events
closely and nervously.
The spotlight that Pompeo is shining on Iran’s nefarious activities is a
reminder for Biden and his national security team that there is no easy answer
to dealing with Tehran.
The American public, and indeed the world, was sold the Iran deal in 2015 with
the bold claim that the agreement would moderate Tehran’s behavior and that it
would become a more responsible actor in the region. However, nothing since the
deal was inked has shown this to be the case.
Iran has funded, and continues to fund, proxy groups in Yemen, Syria and Iraq.
It continues to back elements of the Taliban in Afghanistan. The Iranians
launched a strike against an oil refinery in Saudi Arabia and have illegally
commandeered several oil tankers in international waters. These are not the acts
of a responsible country.
The world is barely through the first weeks of 2021, and already Iran has wasted
no time setting a terrible tone for the rest of the year.
Many who are expected to serve in the next US administration in national
security roles have a personal stake in ensuring that the Iran deal is brought
back to life, mainly because they were involved in the drafting of the accord to
begin with. However, the world has changed since 2015. The incoming Biden
administration needs to deal with, and confront, the Iran that it has and not
the Iran it wants.
Some are questioning Pompeo’s approach during his final days in office. After
all, announcing such important policy decisions with only days left in the
administration is certainly unconventional. But for better or for worse, the
Trump administration has been unconventional from Day 1.
Pompeo’s critics also argue that his recent actions are first about shoring up
his political legacy at the State Department with an eye on the next
presidential race in 2024. Others might suspect he is creating a distraction
from the domestic crisis in America. Perhaps there is some truth to both these
arguments. Even so, there is never a bad time to remind the American public and
the world about Iran’s nefarious activities.
The next US administration should not let the messenger distract from the truth
of the message.
*Luke Coffey is director of the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign
Policy at the Heritage Foundation. Twitter: @LukeDCoffey
Five steps to save the Republican Party
Dr. John C. Hulsman/Arab News/January 15/ 2021
As Washington insider Jim Papa puts it: “If the Republican Party had its own
Mount Rushmore, that mountain would have three faces: Abraham Lincoln, Teddy
Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. The goal of every Republican candidate should be to
become the fourth face on that mountain.” After the unimaginable, sickening
events of last week, suffice it to say that outgoing President Donald Trump will
not be joining the pantheon.
Instead, for any good that he has done, Trump’s name will historically be
forever linked with the US Capitol violence. But what of the party of Lincoln,
Roosevelt and Reagan, how can it reconstitute itself from the ashes of Trump’s
reign? Here are five steps that can save the Grand Old Party.
First, the real-world facts of the 2020 election must be accepted. Republicans
are surely entitled to different feelings than the Democrats have about
objective reality — but what they are not entitled to are different facts.
Trump’s self-serving theories of voter fraud have led the GOP along the
disastrous path of unreason, with the party increasingly serving as a refuge for
conspiracy theorists. To be taken seriously, it must now act seriously. The 2020
election is what it is: The Republicans lost and it is well past time to get
over it.
Second, Trump himself, and his immediate minions, must be anathema. Incitement
to sedition must never be excused, condoned or explained away if the Republicans
are to truly put this behind them. The traditional Party of Union (think
Lincoln), the working man (think Roosevelt), and personal decency and
responsibility (think Reagan) must not eschew these values precisely when they
are needed. Trump must be forthrightly censured (through impeachment and
conviction) and his enabling minions — such as feckless Sens. Josh Hawley and
Ted Cruz — must be marginalized within the party. Patriotic love of country is
at the base of Republicanism; it must once again serve as the party’s central
organizing principle.
Third, while Trump is anathema, moving ahead, the party must adhere to the
portions of Trumpism that have served the country well. In terms of domestic
issues, a belief in deregulation, tax cuts, nominating originalist judges, and
giving the working class a fair shake are all policies the party ought to
forthrightly champion and retain.
In terms of foreign affairs, a laser-like focus on China as America’s new
superpower rival, supporting the gains made in the Middle East signified by the
Abraham Accords, and the US’ tilt toward the Gulf Arab states and Israel to
balance against an expansionistic Iran that they symbolize, must also be
retained. More than this, the party’s general shift back to its traditional
realist foreign policy stance — where American national interests are paramount
— must be seen as the present and the vital future for the party’s overall
foreign policy orientation, eschewing its disastrous earlier flirtation with
neoconservatism.
Patriotic love of country is at the base of Republicanism — it must once again
serve as the party’s central organizing principle.
Fourth, the best way to come back is to serve as a loyal opposition to the new
Biden administration, supporting him when his policies coincide with Republican
ideals and respectfully opposing him when they do not. When the Biden White
House governs from the center, Republicans must support his policies, in the
name of serving the country. For example, a significant further coronavirus
stimulus and a desperately necessary infrastructure program deserve GOP support
when they are sent to the Hill.
On the other hand, Democratic Party efforts regarding court packing, ending the
Senate filibuster, and advocating a ruinously expensive Green New Deal must be
vigorously — if respectfully — fought tooth and nail as contrary to basic
Republican beliefs and as not in the interests of the country as a whole. But,
moving on from the discord Trump came to epitomize, disagreements must be
centered on policies and not the people espousing them, who must be respectfully
treated as the patriots they are, even if Republicans believe they are
misguided.
Fifth, winning back the party on these terms will be an uphill battle. An
NBC/Wall Street Journal poll of Oct. 31, 2020 — taken just before the election —
found 54 percent of GOP voters saying they were supporters of Trump primarily,
while only 38 percent said they were Republicans first. Incredibly, 139 of 211
Republicans in the outgoing House, even after the insurrection, voted to contest
the 2020 election results, defying the clear will of the people. Trump’s
December 2020 Gallup poll approval rating with GOP voters was 87 percent and
throughout his term this has been regularly over 80 percent — consistently the
highest in Republican polling history, greater than Dwight Eisenhower’s
popularity or even Reagan’s. There will have to be an uphill climb to redeem the
party’s soul.
Winning back the party from the detour of Trump will take years of patiently
pushing this five-point agenda. But, to put it mildly, this is what Lincoln,
Roosevelt and Reagan would have us do. For those of us who are heartsick
Republicans, it is the challenge of our time.
*Dr. John C. Hulsman is the president and managing partner of John C. Hulsman
Enterprises, a prominent global political risk consulting firm. He is also
senior columnist for City AM, the newspaper of the City of London. He can be
contacted via chartwellspeakers.com.