English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For January 23/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews21/english.january23.21.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
Everyone who acknowledges me before others, the Son of Man
also will acknowledge before the angels of God but whoever denies me before
others will be denied before the angels of God
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke 12/08-12/:”‘And I tell you,
everyone who acknowledges me before others, the Son of Man also will acknowledge
before the angels of God; but whoever denies me before others will be denied
before the angels of God. And everyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man
will be forgiven; but whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be
forgiven. When they bring you before the synagogues, the rulers, and the
authorities, do not worry about how you are to defend yourselves or what you are
to say; for the Holy Spirit will teach you at that very hour what you ought to “
Question: "How can I have assurance of my salvation?"
GotQuestions.org?/Friday 22 January 2021
Answer: Many followers of Jesus Christ look for the assurance of salvation in
the wrong places. We tend to seek assurance of salvation in the things God is
doing in our lives, in our spiritual growth, in the good works and obedience to
God’s Word that is evident in our Christian walk. While these things can be
evidence of salvation, they are not what we should base the assurance of our
salvation on. Rather, we should find the assurance of our salvation in the
objective truth of God’s Word. We should have confident trust that we are saved
based on the promises God has declared, not because of our subjective
experiences. How can you have assurance of salvation? Consider 1 John 5:11–13:
“And this is the testimony: God has given us eternal life, and this life is in
his Son. He who has the Son has life; he who does not have the Son of God does
not have life. I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of
God so that you may know that you have eternal life.” Who is it that has the
Son? It is those who have believed in Him (John 1:12). If you have Jesus, you
have life. Not temporary life, but eternal. God wants us to have assurance of
our salvation. We should not live our Christian lives wondering and worrying
each day whether or not we are truly saved. That is why the Bible makes the plan
of salvation so clear. Believe in Jesus Christ (John 3:16; Acts 16:31). “If you
declare with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God
raised him from the dead, you will be saved” (Romans 10:9). Have you repented?
Do you believe that Jesus died to pay the penalty for your sins and rose again
from the dead (Romans 5:8; 2 Corinthians 5:21)? Do you trust Him alone for
salvation? If your answer to these questions is “yes,” you are saved! Assurance
means freedom from doubt. By taking God’s Word to heart, you can have no doubt
about the reality of your eternal salvation. Jesus Himself assures those who
believe in Him: “I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one
can snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater
than all; no one can snatch them out of my Father’s hand” (John 10:28–29).
Eternal life is just that—eternal. There is no one, not even yourself, who can
take Christ’s God-given gift of salvation away from you. Take joy in what God’s
Word is saying to you: instead of doubting, we can live with confidence! We can
have the assurance from Christ’s own Word that our salvation will never be in
question. Our assurance of salvation is based on the perfect and complete
salvation God has provided for us through Jesus Christ.
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on January 22-23/2021
Ministry of Health: 3,220 new corona cases, 57 deaths
Aoun Signs Decree to Complete Distribution of Aid to Blast Victims
Dispute between Aoun and Hariri escalates in Lebanon
Report: Rahi Pursues Govt. Endeavors to Ease Formation
Hariri 'Sends' Letter to Aoun after Video Barb, Center House Denies
Israel shoots down drone in Israeli airspace from Lebanon: Army
Qabalan: Traitor is that Who Leaves the Country to Fatal Vacuum
Joumblatt says “compromise to form cabinet” a must
The American University of Beirut’s battle for survival/Abdullah Malaeb, Al
Arabiya English/Thursday 21 January 2021
Titles For The
Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on
January 22-23/2021
Israel Fires Missiles at Syria from
Lebanon Airspace, SANA Says
Four civilians, including two children, killed in Israeli-Syria strikes: State
media
ISIS claims attack inside Iraq’s capital of Baghdad, US says terrorist threat
remains
ISIS bombing kills police officer, wounds three others in Sinai: Egypt officials
Moscow Police Vow to Suppress Weekend Navalny Protests
Russia 'Welcomes' Biden Proposal to Extend New START Treaty
Iranian human rights lawyer moved back to notorious prison after surgery:
Husband
Twitter suspends account of Khamenei after threat to Trump
Iran's Zarif calls on Joe Biden to 'unconditionally' lift US sanctions
White House: Biden calls for assessment of US domestic terrorism threat
Austin wins Senate confirmation as first Black Pentagon chief
Turkey says Cyprus talks to be held in New York with UN, EU by early March
Does Qatar seek to exclude Bahrain from Gulf reconciliation?
International Muslim Brotherhood pins revival hopes on Biden
Missing Catholic priest found dead in Burkina Faso
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on January 22-23/2021
Full text of US President Joe Biden’s inaugural speech/Al
Arabiya English/Wednesday 20 January 2021
Biden Inherited Immense Leverage over Iran. Will He Use It?/Jonathan Spyer/The
Jewish Chronicle/January 22/2021
The Case Against the Iran Deal/Michael Oren and Yossi Klein Halevi/The
Atlantic/January 22/2021
Pentagon Decision on Israel Recognizes Reality and Presents Opportunity/Bradley
Bowman/Policy Brief-FDD/January 22/2021
What to Make of Pompeo’s Parting Moves Regarding China/Thomas Joscelyn/The
Dispatch/FDD/January 22/2021
Justice is elusive six years after the murder of Alberto Nisman/Toby Dershowitz/Jewish
News Syndicate/January 22/2021
Canada has a limited window to get concessions from Iran/Alireza Nader/ National
Post/January 22/2021
The Palestinian Plan to Dupe the Biden Administration/Bassam Tawil/Gatestone
Institute/January 22/2021
The Biden administration’s hasty desire for Iran talks/Maria Maalouf/Arab
News/January 22/ 2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on January 22-23/2021
Ministry of Health: 3,220 new corona cases, 57 deaths
NNA/Friday 22 January 2021
The Ministry of Public Health announced 3,220 new cases of coronavirus
infection, which raises the cumulative number of confirmed cases to 272,411.
57 deaths have been registered over the past 24 hours.
Aoun Signs Decree to Complete Distribution of Aid to Blast Victims
Naharnet/Friday 22 January 2021
President Michel Aoun on Friday signed a decree to advance 50 billion Lebanese
Liras to complete the payment of compensation to individuals affected by the
Beirut port blast that ripped through the capital on August 4.n Aoun asked the
Army chief, General Joseph Aoun to speed up the distribution to the
beneficiaries in accordance with the mechanism established by the leadership of
the army and the Directorate of Beirut.
Dispute between Aoun and Hariri escalates in Lebanon
Najia Houssari/Arab News/January 22/ 2021
Deadlock continues as country awaits formation of new government
BEIRUT: The rift between President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister-designate Saad
Hariri over the formation of Lebanon’s new government widened on Friday. Hariri
was instructed to form a new government on Oct. 22, but no progress has yet been
made, leaving the country in a political deadlock to add to its economic woes
and the challenges presented by the COVID-19 pandemic. Video footage was
broadcast on Jan. 11 of a meeting between Aoun and the caretaker prime minister,
Hassan Diab, in which Aoun accused Hariri of lying when he claimed that his
proposed government lineup had been approved. Commentators have claimed that, in
doing so, Aoun insulted the office of prime minister and head of government,
thus widening the gulf between the president and the prime minister-designate.
Over the past 10 days, several attempts to bridge that gap have failed.
On Friday, Aoun’s media office issued a statement in response to what it
described as “analyses and articles suggesting that the president is the one who
is putting obstacles in the face of the PM-designate to obstruct the government
formation process.” “The president did not ask for the obstructing third in the
government,” the statement said, adding that “the head of the Strong Lebanon
bloc, MP Gebran Bassil, did not obstruct the formation of the government, nor
was he involved in this process at all.” Bassil is the leader of the Free
Patriotic Movement and Aoun’s son-in-law. The media office also denied that
Hezbollah is “putting pressure on the president in the government formation
matter.”The statement said that “naming, nominating, and distributing the
ministers to ministerial portfolios is not an exclusive right for the prime
minister-designate, based on two articles in the Constitution,” adding that the
president “has a constitutional right to approve the entire government before
signing.” “The president does not have to repeat his call on the prime
minister-designate to go to the Baabda Palace, which is waiting for his arrival
with a government lineup that takes into account the standards of fair
representation in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution, especially
in light of the extremely pressing circumstances — on more than one level — to
form the government,” the statement continued.
Hariri’s media advisor, Hussein Al-Wajh, said he was “surprised” by the
statement issued by the presidency, and questioned whether it had been issued
“on behalf of Gebran Bassil and not the president.”Al-Wajh told Arab News: “No
one is arguing about the powers of the president, but this has to do with
issuing a decree to form the government in agreement with the prime
minister-designate and signing the formation decree after the prime minister
conducts parliamentary consultations to form the government.”He continued:
“Since the circumstances are extremely pressing, perhaps those concerned should
go with the prime minister-designate’s (suggested) government lineup, which
takes into account fair representation according to the constitution, not
according to political and partisan quotas.” Al-Wajh indicated that Hariri would
not be willing to change his proposed lineup. “His aim is to form a government
based on the standards of the constitution, the national interest, and the rules
laid down by the French initiative. The problem is not with Hariri, but with
Aoun, who objects and says he does not agree to this or that name, but gives no
reason for his objections.”
MP Sami Fatfat, a member of the Future parliamentary bloc, said: “We have
arrived at a deadlock between us and the president and we cannot overcome it.
The president has the right and duty to debate all the names proposed in the
formation process, but instead of debating, he has presented a proposal that is
not based on the constitution.” He went on to accuse the president of failing to
act in accordance with the protocols of his position. “President Aoun must know
that 65 MPs have assigned Hariri to head the government,” he said. “The
president today acts as a party and as a head of a political party, not as a
president entrusted with the constitution.”Elsewhere on Friday, the regional
director of the Mashreq department at the World Bank Group, Saroj Kumar Jha,
stressed that the bank remains committed to discussions with Lebanon’s leaders
about ways to strengthen the country’s economy and improve the lives of the many
people in Lebanon who are living below the poverty line. “The World Bank is
greatly concerned and feels a responsibility to help to form the government,”
Jha told Lebanon’s Central News Agency. “Things are getting worse every day.”
Report: Rahi Pursues Govt. Endeavors to Ease Formation
Naharnet/Friday 22 January 2021
Maronite Patriarch Beshara el-Rahi continues to put in efforts to ease
three-months-old obstacles hampering the formation of the government due to
differences between President Michel Aoun and PM-designate Saad Hariri, the
Saudi Asharq el-Awsat reported Friday. The two are divided over the number of
ministerial seats in the new cabinet, over the unity of standards, and over the
party entitled to name the future ministers. On Thursday, Rahi met with Adviser
to Aoun, ex-minister Salim Jreissati as part of his endeavors to accelerate the
line-up of a new government. But no progress mentioned was recorded, according
to the daily. The formation of a government is much-needed in Lebanon to
implement reforms in order to unlock foreign aid for the crisis-hit country
grappling with multiple crises including an unprecedented economic crisis. After
its weekly meeting, Hizbullah’s Loyalty to the Resistance parliamentary bloc
considered “the crisis in Lebanon requires the formation of a government as soon
as possible.”“The circumstances are pressing and the possibility is available to
form a government, especially if steps are taken to round the corners,” they
said. In light of the complications preventing the formation, member of the
Strong Republic bloc of the Lebanese Forces, MP Ziad Hawat, urged Hariri to
“display to the Lebanese people the format he had presented to the President,”
and also urged Aoun to explain to the public the reasons that made him reject
that format. “Since day one of his designation, we told Hariri they will not let
him form a government of experts,” said Hawwat. “Rotation in portfolios must
include all sects. The idea of forming a government of experts was broken when
the Shiite community refused the principle of rotation,” added Hawat.
Hariri 'Sends' Letter to Aoun after Video Barb, Center
House Denies
Naharnet/Friday 22 January 2021
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri reportedly “disregarded” the latest
“insulting” leaked video remarks against him by President Michel Aoun, al-Joumhouria
daily reported on Friday. The daily said that Hariri has sent a message to Aoun
on the matter, assuring him that he “overlooked the leaked video and the
personal offense it contained.”Later on Friday, sources of Hariri's Center House
said the report published in al-Joumhouria was unfounded, and that Hariri did
not send any letter to the President. The sources said the news was intended to
"only relay a message that Aoun is not going to invite Hariri for talks at
Baabda Palace," which only "reflects Baabda's adamant insistence to only adopt
the standards placed" by Aoun's son-in-law MP "Jebran Bassil, despite constant
denial."The two men have not met on the government formation since last week
when the video was leaked. But the newspaper added that Aoun “will not initiate
contact with Hariri, nor will he invite him to a meeting at Baabda Palace if he
does not see a change in Hariri’s his tough stances, and a tendency to form a
government according to criteria raised by Aoun during their earlier meetings.”
Israel shoots down drone in Israeli airspace from Lebanon:
Army
Reuters/Friday 22 January 2021
Israel’s military said on Friday it downed a drone that crossed from Lebanon and
would continue to protect its sovereignty. With frictions high between Israel
and Iranian-backed Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, drone activity is common
along the border. It is not infrequent for one side to report shooting down an
unmanned aircraft dispatched by the other.“The drone was monitored by the Israel
Defense Forces throughout the incident,” the military said in a statement,
without giving further details. There was no immediate comment from officials in
Lebanon. Israel has also carried out hundreds of air strikes in neighboring
Syria in recent years against suspected Iranian military deployments or arms
transfers to Hezbollah.
Qabalan: Traitor is that Who Leaves the Country to Fatal
Vacuum
Naharnet/Friday 22 January 2021
Grand Jaafarite Shiite Mufti Sheikh Ahmed Qabalan described as “traitor” the
officials who leave the country to its deadly governmental vacuum, while the
Lebanese drench down into poverty. “Traitor is that who leaves the country to
deadly vacuum, traitor is that who bargains on the hunger of Lebanese, traitor
is that who invests in foreign blockade suffocating the Lebanese, traitor is
that who uses the dollar exchange game and monopolizes the markets, traitor is
that who contributes to the country’s bankruptcy,” said Qabalan during the
Friday prayers. “Delusional are those who believe that starving the people grant
them power to turn the table. History shall hold them accountable,” added
Qabalan. The formation of a much-needed government has stalled in Lebanon since
the designation of PM-designate Saad Hariri in October. President Michel Aoun
and PM-designate still can not agree on a government format of experts to begin
a reform process of steering the country out of multiple crises, including a
crippling economic crisis. Addressing the political class, Qabalan stated that
“Lebanon has changed drastically. The country is now in another mold, we do not
want to be pushed into chaos, but it is unacceptable that you be satiated and
safe while the people starve and get baffled. Political change must be based on
national unity.”
Joumblatt says “compromise to form cabinet” a must
NNA/Friday 22 January 2021
Progressive Socialist Party leader, Walid Joumblatt, on Friday said that a
compromise to form the lengthy awaited cabinet was required. Interviewed
by the Voice of Lebanon radio station, Joumblatt said that he had advised Prime
Minister designate, Saad Hariri, to “let his opponents control power.” Moreover,
he acknowledged the state’s efforts in its fight against the coronavirus
pandemic; nonetheless, he underlined the need for more social awareness to help
curb the spread of the virus. He added that although the Minister of Health was
making great efforts, cooperation was required from all parties. He finally
advised in this context following the French example by imposing a permanent
curfew as of 6 p.m.
The American University of Beirut’s battle for survival
Abdullah Malaeb, Al Arabiya English/Thursday 21 January 2021
The American University of Beirut's motto: “That they may have life and have it
more abundantly.”Founded in 1866, The American University of Beirut today faces
a huge financial crisis. It fired over 800 employees, cut salaries, and raised
tuition fees. The crisis started in 2019 and the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated
the situation in 2020 making it harder for the university to receive funds from
international donors and alumni. Some attribute the financial crisis to poor
fiscal decisions made over the years, but prominent figures in Lebanon, and the
region claim a political agenda against the university is afoot. It's said the
aim is to demolish AUB’s significance, and end its historical role to promote
freedom of thought, diversity, and liberalism. There is talk that relocating the
university to Dubai, in the long run, is an option, with reports that President
Fadlo Khoury discussed this with employees in an internal meeting, in the first
week of December 2020. AUB was first established as the Syrian Protestant
College when Lebanon was still part of the Ottoman Empire. Founded by Christian
missionaries, the school played an important role to join efforts led by the
liberal youth, and demand independence from Turkey. It was a hub for thinkers,
and fighters that believed in Arab nationalism.b A few months after the
declaration of Greater Lebanon, which marks the early establishment of Lebanon
itself, the college’s name became AUB. This educational institution has survived
the many crises’ that Lebanon has seen. These include: the collapse of the
Ottoman Empire; the societal changes from the French mandate; the battle for
independence; the consequences of the Palestine occupation in 1948; the civil
war; Israeli attacks and occupation, and the assassinations of Lebanese
politicians.
Today, the obstacles facing AUB are tougher than ever. This university has over
640,000 alumni in 120 countries. Graduates include Lebanese and international
prime ministers, presidents and internationally recognized scientists and policy
makers. With a serious threat of shutting down according to its current
president, Fadlo Khoury he publicly confessed that the university cannot survive
if the current economic and political deadlock continues.
Political Perspective
Fouad Siniora, former Lebanese Prime Minister, AUB alumnus and part-time
lecturer believes that the financial crisis that AUB faces today, is like that
of the 1980s’. He stresses the collapsed political system is deepening the
crisis in a university that holds the biggest number of employees after the
public sector.
“Certain groups tend to ask questions and raise doubts about AUB’s agenda, role,
and even academic programs; these questions come from skeptic people that aim at
shaking the university’s credibility,” Seniora told me on Sunday. According to
Seniora, “The Iranian backed groups in Lebanon, mobilize the society against all
what is American, and the battle that AUB faces today is a continuation to that
of the 1980s’, against the same opponents that use different tactics ”.Seniora
points to AUB’s role in producing academic and intellectual elites in the Arab
world. He also calls the upper management of AUB administration to issue
policies and regulations that fit in the current changes and that are able to
rescue the university and save it from closing. “Mentioning that AUB might be
relocated to Dubai serves the rhetoric of the opponents that try to picture the
university as an American colony that should leave at a certain moment of
history, while AUB, in reality, is deeply rooted in the society,” Seniora
concludes.
Students’ Perspective
Jad Hani is the vice president of the student faculty committee, and the highest
position for a student representative. He believes student concerns focus on the
ability to continue pursuing their education at AUB. Hani explains that hundreds
of AUB students had to drop out of university in spring 2021 because of the
increase in the exchange rate tuition fees increased by 160%. “Losing AUB is
something very bad, but it is worth mentioning that we as students cannot share
the burden, parties that are known to be opponents of AUB’s values are the ones
that offered their people jobs at AUB in line with clientalism,” Hani said.
President’s Perspective
President Fadlo khoury makes it clear that he has spoken of an existential
crisis during town hall meetings in the spring semester of 2020. Although the
situation deteriorated AUB took the decision to secure the institution’s
continuity “I can now state with some confidence that we are in as stable and
sustainable condition as we can be under the circumstances and we shall continue
advancing our role as a leading institution of higher learning not just in
Lebanon but throughout the entire region,” Khoury said. Khoury clarified that
AUB is apolitical and not supported, or supporting any political bloc in
Lebanon. “AUB serves the peoples of the Middle East and beyond by sharing our
common values of freedom of thought and expression, tolerance, honesty, and
respect for diversity and dialogue, and by providing opportunities for all of
its community; There is no uniform intellectual or political direction at the
university, so if an “agenda” against AUB exists it is based on a woeful
misunderstanding of our role and mission,” Khoury said.Khoury concluded through
stressing upon the roots of AUB in Lebanon, and its historical ability to endure
through the storms. “Under my tenure as a president, there are no plans to
relocate AUB and it is unlikely in the longer run; AUB has deep roots in Beirut
and Lebanon formed over more than 154 years and we have endured many crises
here, nothing will change our commitment to serve this country and its people,”
Khoury said.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published
on January 22-23/2021
Israel Fires Missiles at Syria from Lebanon Airspace, SANA Says
Associated Press/Friday 22 January 2021
Israeli warplanes flew over Lebanon and fired several missiles into central
Syria early Friday, Syrian state media reported, without giving word on
casualties. State-news agency SANA quoted an unnamed military official as saying
the attack took place shortly before dawn when Israeli warplanes flew over
Lebanon. Israel has launched hundreds of strikes against Iran-linked military
targets in Syria over the years but rarely acknowledges or discusses such
operations.The Syrian military official said the attack was aimed at several
targets in and near the central province of Hama. It added that Syrian air
defense units shot down most of the missiles. It was Israel's first strike on
Syria since President Joe Biden took office. Tension has been high in the Middle
East over the past weeks as many had feared retaliation for the U.S. killing of
Iran's Revolutionary Guard commander Qassem Soleimani last year in Baghdad. On
Jan. 13, Israeli warplanes carried out intense airstrikes in eastern Syria
apparently targeting positions and arms depots of Iran-backed forces. At least
57 fighters were killed and dozens were wounded, according to a Syrian
opposition war monitoring group. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an
opposition war monitor that tracks Syria's war, said it recorded 39 Israeli
strikes inside Syria in 2020 that hit 135 targets, including military posts,
warehouses or vehicles. Israel views Iranian entrenchment on its northern
frontier as a red line, and it has repeatedly struck Iran-linked facilities and
weapons convoys destined for Lebanon's Hizbullah group.The strikes also come
amid intensifying low-altitude Israeli warplane missions in Lebanese skies that
have caused jitters among residents.
Four civilians, including two children, killed in
Israeli-Syria strikes: State media
AFP, Beirut/Friday 22 January 2021
Four civilians, including two children, were killed by Israeli strikes on the
Syrian province of Hama at dawn on Friday, the Syrian state news agency SANA
reported. SANA cited a Syrian military source as saying that the country’s air
defenses responded to Israeli missiles in the central province, “intercepting
most” of them. It later said, “the Israeli aggression resulted in the martyrdom
of a family, including a father, mother and two children”, adding another four
people were wounded and three houses destroyed on the western edges of Hama
city.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the Israeli raids targeted Syrian
military sites and resulted in the “destruction” of five of them in an area of
Hama where Iran-backed fighters are present. But the war monitor said the
civilians were killed by “debris from one of the Syrian anti-aircraft defense
missiles that fell on a house in a densely populated neighborhood”. The Israeli
army rarely acknowledges individual raids on Syria and refused to comment on the
latest reports when contacted by AFP on Friday. Israeli strikes on eastern Syria
killed 57 government and allied fighters on January 13, in the deadliest raids
since the Jewish state launched its air assault on targets in the war-torn
country, the Observatory said. The Observatory is a Britain-based monitor that
relies on sources on the ground in Syria for its reports. Israel rarely confirms
it has carried out strikes in Syria, but the army said it hit about 50 targets
in the war-torn country in 2020, without providing details. The Jewish state
routinely carries out raids in Syria, mostly against targets linked to Iran in
what it says is a bid to prevent its arch foe from consolidating a foothold on
its northern border.
ISIS claims attack inside Iraq’s capital of Baghdad, US
says terrorist threat remains
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya EnglishThursday 21 January 2021
ISIS has claimed responsibility for the twin suicide bombings that rocked the
Iraqi capital on Thursday and killed at least 32 people. A message on the
terrorist group’s Telegram channel said that two of its members blew themselves
up in Tayaran Square in the center of Baghdad. Reuters journalists arriving
after the blasts saw pools of blood and discarded shoes at the site, a clothing
market in Tayaran Square in the center of the city. Health authorities said at
least 110 people had been wounded. Thursday's attack took place in the same
market that was struck in the last big attack, in January 2018, when at least 27
people were killed. Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi held an urgent meeting
with top security commanders to discuss the attacks, after which he fired senior
officials, and security and police commanders. Kadhimi’s government said a
security breach allowed the bombing to take place. The acting US Secretary of
State quickly condemned the terrorist attack. “They were vicious acts of mass
murder and a sobering reminder of the terrorism that continues to threaten the
lives of innocent Iraqis,” acting Secretary of State Daniel Smith said. Smith is
in office until Anthony Blinken, President Joe Biden’s nominee for the top US
diplomat position, is confirmed by the Senate.
ISIS bombing kills police officer, wounds three others in
Sinai: Egypt officials
The Associated Press, El-Arish/Friday 22 January 2021
ISIS has blown up a roadside bomb in the restive northern Sinai Peninsula,
killing one member of Egypt’s security forces and wounding three others, medical
and security officials said late Thursday. The explosion at dawn Thursday was
triggered by a remote-controlled device that targeted an armored vehicle. It was
carrying forces on a patrol mission along the Mediterranean coast of the town of
Sheikh Zuweid, said the officials, who asked to remain anonymous because they
were not authorized to brief the media. ISIS has posted a statement on a
militant-affiliated website claiming responsibility for the attack. Egypt has
been battling ISIS-led insurgency in the Sinai that intensified after the
military overthrew an extremist president in 2013. The militants have carried
out scores of attacks, mainly targeting security forces and minority Christians.
The conflict in Sinai has largely taken place out of public view, with
journalists and outside observers barred from the area. The fighting has so far
not expanded into the southern end of the peninsula, where popular Red Sea
tourist resorts are located. In February 2018, the military launched a massive
operation in Sinai that also encompassed parts of the Nile Delta and deserts
along the country’s western border with Libya. Since then, the pace of ISIS
attacks in Sinai’s north has diminished.
Moscow Police Vow to Suppress Weekend Navalny Protests
Agence France Presse/Friday 22 January 2021
Russian police on Friday said they would crackdown on opposition protests in
support of the jailed opposition politician Alexei Navalny at the weekend.
"Attempts to hold unsanctioned public events, as well as any provocative actions
on the part of their participants, will be regarded as a threat to public order
and immediately suppressed," Moscow police said in a statement.
Russia 'Welcomes' Biden Proposal to Extend New START Treaty
Agence France Presse/Friday 22 January 2021
Russia said Friday it welcomed a proposal by US President Joe Biden to extend
New START, a landmark nuclear arms reduction agreement due to expire next
month."We can only welcome the political will to extend this document," Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, noting that any decision to extend the
pact will depend on "the details of this proposal".
Iranian human rights lawyer moved back to notorious prison
after surgery: Husband
Yaghoub Fazeli, Al Arabiya English/Friday 22 January 2021
Prominent Iranian human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh was moved back to prison
this week after being temporarily released due to health concerns, her husband
has revealed. Sotoudeh, 57, returned to the notorious Qarchak prison just days
after she underwent an angiogram at a hospital in Tehran, her husband Reza
Khandan said. “Unfortunately, the conditions of prisoners in Iran are miserable,
and prisoners with physical problems and illnesses have it worse,” wrote on
Twitter. Sotoudeh, a winner of the European Parliament’s Sakharov prize, was
arrested in 2018 on espionage charges, spreading propaganda, and insulting
Iran’s supreme leader. She denies all charges. In 2019, Sotoudeh was sentenced
to 38 years in prison and 148 lashes. Last September, Sotoudeh ended a 46-day
hunger strike to protest the risk that political prisoners in Iran face amid the
coronavirus pandemic due to deteriorating health. Protests erupted in several
Iranian prisons in late March over concerns about the spread of coronavirus in
prisons.According to the rights group Amnesty International, around 36 prisoners
are believed to have been killed by security forces during the protests.
Twitter suspends account of Khamenei after threat to Trump
WASHINGTON - Twitter suspended an account linked to Iran’s supreme leader on
Friday, hours after it carried the image of a golfer resembling former US
President Donald Trump apparently being targeted by a drone alongside a vow to
avenge the killing of a top Iranian general in a US drone attack.
Iran’s supreme leader’s office posted a photo montage of Trump playing golf
under the shadow of a warplane alongside a pledge to avenge a deadly 2020 drone
strike he ordered. The post on Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s Twitter account late
Thursday warned there was no escape from payback for the US strike outside
Baghdad airport which killed Iran’s storied foreign operations chief General
Qassem Soleimani and his Iraqi lieutenant. “Revenge is inevitable. Soleimani’s
killer and the man who gave the orders must face vengeance,” it said.Trump left
office on Wednesday and flew straight to his Mar-a-Lago golf club in Florida,
without attending the inauguration of his successor, President Joe Biden.
Iranian officials have pledged repeatedly that Soleimani will be avenged.
Earlier this month, on the first anniversary of his killing, judiciary chief
Ebrahim Raisi warned that not even Trump was “immune from justice” and that
Soleimani’s killers would “not be safe anywhere in the world.”
Iran's Zarif calls on Joe Biden to 'unconditionally' lift
US sanctions
NNA/AFP/Friday 22 January 2021
Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif Friday called on the new US
administration to "unconditionally" lift sanctions imposed by Donald Trump on
the Islamic republic to salvage the 2015 nuclear deal. The administration of new
US President Joe Biden "should begin by unconditionally removing, with full
effect, all sanctions imposed, reimposed, or relabeled (on Iran) since Trump
took office", Zarif wrote in an op-ed published by Foreign Affairs magazine
Friday, warning against any attempt at "extracting concessions" from Tehran.
White House: Biden calls for assessment of US domestic
terrorism threat
Reuters/Friday 22 January 2021
US President Joe Biden has tasked his administration with completing a full
assessment of the risk of domestic terrorism in the wake of the attack on the US
Capitol by supporters of former President Donald Trump, the White House said on
Friday. The assessment will be completed by the Office of the Director of
National Intelligence in coordination with the FBI and Department of Homeland
Security, White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said. “We want fact-based analysis,
upon which we can shape policy,” she told reporters in a briefing. Psaki said
that, in addition to the threat assessment, the White House would build out
capability within its National Security Council to counter domestic violent
extremism, including a policy review on how the federal government can share
information about the threat better. The White House also will coordinate
relevant parts of the government to “enhance and accelerate efforts” to address
the issue, Psaki added. “The January 6th assault on the Capitol and the tragic
deaths and destruction that occurred underscored what we have long known: the
rise of domestic violent extremism is a serious and growing national security
threat. The Biden administration will confront this threat with the necessary
resources and resolve,” Psaki said. The US Senate on Wednesday confirmed Avril
Haines as the Director of National Intelligence, the nation’s top intelligence
job.
Austin wins Senate confirmation as first Black Pentagon
chief
Agencies/Arab News/January 22/2021
WASHINGTON DC: Lloyd J. Austin, a West Point graduate who rose to the Army's
elite ranks and marched through racial barriers in a 41-year career, won Senate
confirmation Friday to become the nation's first Black secretary of defense. The
93-2 vote gave President Joe Biden his second Cabinet member; Avril Haines was
confirmed on Wednesday as the first woman to serve as director of national
intelligence. Biden is expected to win approval for others on his national
security team in coming days, including Antony Blinken as secretary of state.
Biden is looking for Austin to restore stability atop the Pentagon, which went
through two Senate-confirmed secretaries of defense and four who held the post
on an interim basis during the Trump administration. Austin's confirmation was
complicated by his status as a recently retired general. He required a waiver of
a legal prohibition on a military officer serving as secretary of defense within
seven years of retirement. Austin retired in 2016 after serving as the first
Black general to head US Central Command. He was the first Black vice chief of
staff of the Army in 2012 and also served as director of the Joint Staff, a
behind-the-scenes job that gave him an intimate view of the Pentagon's inner
workings. The House and the Senate approved the waiver Thursday, clearing the
way for the Senate confirmation vote. Austin, a large man with a booming voice
and a tendency to shy from publicity, describes himself as the son of a postal
worker and a homemaker from Thomasville, Georgia. He has promised to speak his
mind to Congress and to Biden.At his confirmation hearing Tuesday, Austin said
he had not sought the nomination but was ready to lead the Pentagon without
clinging to his military status and with full awareness that being a political
appointee and Cabinet member requires “a different perspective and unique duties
from a career in uniform.” As vice president, Biden worked closely with Austin
in 2010-11 to wind down US military involvement in Iraq while Austin was the top
US commander in Baghdad. American forces withdrew entirely, only to return in
2014 after Daesh captured large swaths of Iraqi territory. At Central Command,
Austin was a key architect of the strategy to defeat Daesh in Iraq and Syria.
Biden said in December when he announced Austin as his nominee that he
considered him “the person we need at this moment,” and that he trusts Austin to
ensure civilian control of the military. Critics of the nomination have
questioned the wisdom of making an exception to the law against a recently
retired military officer serving as defense secretary, noting that the
prohibition was put in place to guard against undue military influence in
national security matters. Only twice before has Congress waived the prohibition
— in 1950 for George C. Marshall during the Korean War and in 2017 for Jim
Mattis, the retired Marine general who served as President Donald Trump's first
Pentagon chief. Austin has promised to surround himself with qualified
civilians. And he made clear at his confirmation hearing that he embraces
Biden's early focus on combatting the coronavirus pandemic.
"I will quickly review the department’s contributions to coronavirus relief
efforts, ensuring we are doing everything we can — and then some — to help
distribute vaccines across the country and to vaccinate our troops and preserve
readiness,” he told the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Under questioning by senators, Austin pledged to address white supremacy and
violent extremism in the ranks of the military — problems that received
relatively little public attention from his immediate predecessor, Mark Esper.
Austin promised to “rid our ranks of racists,” and said he takes the problem
personally. “The Defense Department’s job is to keep America safe from our
enemies,” he said. “But we can’t do that if some of those enemies lie within our
own ranks.”Austin said he will insist that the leaders of every military service
know that extremist behavior in their ranks is unacceptable.
“This is not something we can be passive on,” he said. “This is something I
think we have to be active on, and we have to lean into it and make sure that
we’re doing the right things to create the right climate.”He offered glimpses of
other policy priorities, indicating that he embraces the view among many in
Congress that China is the “pacing challenge,” or the leading national security
problem for the US. The Middle East was the main focus for Austin during much of
his Army career, particularly when he reached senior officer ranks.
Turkey says Cyprus talks to be held in New York with UN, EU
by early March
Reuters, Ankara/Friday 22 January 2021
Talks over the divided island of Cyprus will be held in New York in the next two
months with the participation of the United Nations, Turkey’s Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Friday. The United Nations has been trying
unsuccessfully for decades to reunite Cyprus, split in a Turkish invasion in
1974 after a brief Greek-inspired coup. The last attempt collapsed in disarray
in 2017 after negotiations attended by all parties. Only Ankara recognizes the
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) as an independent state. It does not
recognize the internationally recognized Greek Cypriot government to the south.
Cavusoglu said Turkey, Greece, Britain -- the island’s guarantor powers -- and
the United Nations would convene the talks with the two Cypriot sides in late
February or early March, with the European Union as an observer. Speaking in
Brussels after talks with senior EU officials, Cavusoglu said the bloc had so
far “disregarded the rights of the Turkish side.”“We conveyed to them that this
trust needs to be re-established,” he added. Cyprus’s division has long been a
source of friction between Turkey and EU member Greece, which will hold talks
next Monday on a separate dispute over maritime rights in the eastern
Mediterranean. Turkey faces the threat of EU economic sanctions over the
maritime rights dispute with Greece and Cyprus. However, the EU and Turkey have
both signaled this week that they want to improve relations, which have also
been strained by disagreements over migration and Ankara’s human rights record.
Does Qatar seek to exclude Bahrain from Gulf
reconciliation?
The Arab Weekly/January 22/2021
MANAMA - Bahraini Foreign Minister Abdullatif bin Rashid al-Zayani did not hide
his country's disappointment with Qatar's move to obstruct the decisions made at
the Al-Ula summit for reconciliation between the two countries. Observers of
Gulf affairs say his statements seem aimed at showing that Manama does not bear
any responsibility for the obstructionist efforts of Doha, which harbours plans
to exclude Bahrain from the reconciliation process. The Bahraini foreign
minister said in a parliamentary session Thursday that Qatari authorities have
not expressed any intent to resolve the outstanding issues with his country and
have shown no interest in directly negotiating such files since the end of the
summit. He revealed that his ministry sent a written letter to Qatari Foreign
Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani calling on Doha to dispatch an
official delegation to start talks on pending issues between the two sides, but
has not received a reply from Qatar. He added that his country "is looking
forward to a new process in relations with Qatar that takes into account the
rights and interests of each country, through clear mechanisms to ensure more
balanced relations." His criticism contrasted with the optimistic assessment of
Saudi Arabia's relationship with Qatar expressed by Saudi Foreign Minister
Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud, who told the Dubai-based Al Arabiya TV on Thursday
that the kingdom will reopen its embassy in Doha "within days."
Qatar has recently opted to pursue policies based on raising contentious issues
with Bahrain in a way that completely contradicts the reconciliation process
announced after the mediation drive undertaken by Kuwait, the United States and
Oman, with a green light from Saudi Arabia.
After raising the issue of Bahraini fishermen accused of crossing into Qatari
territorial waters, Doha resorted to the United Nations and the UN Security
Council and filed a complaint against Manama accusing Bahraini fighter planes of
violating Qatar's airspace.
Observers expected Doha to discuss the contentious issue on the bilateral or
Gulf levels, especially given that the Qataris had shown enthusiasm about
reconciliation and a return to the Gulf fold. But that kind of bilateral or
regional discussion did not happen, raising questions about Qatar's real
intentions.
The Qatari moves have raised doubts about Doha's understanding of reconciliation
with all the boycotting capitals, and led to questions over whether Doha wants
to reach a form of reconciliation that is limited to Riyadh. Qatar was
previously accused of seeking to play on differences between countries of the
Arab quartet, which had led the boycott movement against it. Observers of Gulf
affairs believe that Qatar plans to target Manama and exclude it from
reconciliation. They see Doha as sending a negative message according to which
Qatar has negotiated and reached a de-escalation agreement with Riyadh but is
not concerned with Bahrain. Saudi Arabia, on the other hand, is acting and
negotiating in agreement with the other three quartet partners. Analysts say
Manama is most provoked by Qatar's excessive talk about a reconciliation process
that includes Iran, as Bahrain considers Tehran to be intent on jeopardising
Bahrain's security, and that Manama's political position will not change
regardless of the initiatives taken by Gulf countries to achieve acceptable
understandings. The absence of Bahraini King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa from the
Al-Ula summit showed the limits of Bahrain’s optimism towards the reconciliation
process with Qatar, as Manama does not believe Doha is serious about resolving
all of Bahrain's concerns. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt agreed
during the Al-Ula summit to restore diplomatic, trade and travel ties that they
had severed with Qatar in 2017 over accusations Doha supported Islamic extremism
and held close ties with Iran. If the Bahraini foreign minister was keen on
displaying a calm and sober demeanor in calling on the Qataris to carry out
their pledges within the reconciliation process, observers believe that in view
of the ambiguity of Doha’s position, Manama may not wait much longer, and could
in fact react by announcing the end of any commitment to reconciliation,
especially as it considers itself the most affected by the repercussions of the
Qatari agenda in the region since the 2011 protests.
In 2017, Bahraini judicial investigations led to charges being levelled at
leaders of "the Bahraini opposition" who were accused of “communicating” with
Doha during the protests in order to “carry out hostile acts inside the Kingdom
of Bahrain, harm its military, political, economic and national interests, and
undermine its prestige and stature abroad.”Since 2011, the relationship between
the two countries has remained tense, especially after Bahrain accused Qatar of
urging Bahraini citizens to give up their nationality in exchange for Qatari
citizenship. This created a climate that made Manama most supportive of the
boycott option at the time.
International Muslim Brotherhood pins revival hopes on
Biden
The Arab Weekly/January 22/2021
Doha – For the international organisation of the Muslim Brotherhood, political
expediency has taken the upper hand over religious dogma, as the
globally-implanted militant organisation welcomed incoming US President Joe
Biden’s commitment to Christian virtues. On Thursday, the secretary-general of
the International Union of Muslim Scholars, Ali al-Qaradaghi, expressed
appreciation for what he called the “religious trait” in Biden’s personality.
“In America, President Biden begins his presidential term with a church mass and
swears on the Bible. The ceremony is interspersed with priestly words and
prayers. I saw the attendees with their heads bowed when hearing the priest’s
sermon with much respect and humility,” Qaradaghi wrote on Facebook.
He wondered, “Why do secularists in our Arab and Islamic countries imitate
manifestations of atheism, moral failure, and attacks on the Islamic faith and
its symbols, and do not respect the collective identity of their peoples and
their religious sanctities?”
The United States constitution does not compel presidents to swear the oath of
office over a religious book, but historical custom and tradition have turned
the Bible into part of inauguration ceremonies since the election of George
Washington in 1789.
Qaradaghi’s praise for Biden’s Christianity comes in the context of a particular
attention by activists and leaders affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood to the
inauguration of the new American president. Their focus is on the perceived
paradox between what they consider the politicisation of Christianity on an
important US event, and the opposition they face at home as they try to
politicise religion as a way to infiltrate and control power.
Analysts see the Brotherhood’s conspicuous welcome of the new president as a way
for the organisation to move closer to the Biden administration and consolidate
the ties it tried to build during the election campaign between the new
president’s representatives, backers and sympathisers on the one hand, and
Islamic associations close to the Brotherhood that helped push members of the
Muslim community to vote for Biden, on the other hand. The organisation did not
hide its “joy” over Biden’s arrival to the White House, believing his presidency
will give it another opportunity to revive its project in the Arab region, with
the support of Qatar and Turkey. Its leading figures also hope to receive
open-ended support from Democrats based on the Islamists’ interpretation of the
experience they had with former US President Barack Obama’s administration.
The Muslim Brotherhood believes Biden’s presidency could also give it a new
lease on life in Egypt, as former US President Donald Trump was a strong
supporter of the regime of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and did not
object to the Brotherhood being designated as a terrorist organisation in
countries such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. The Islamist group posted a
statement on its official website after Biden’s victory quoting its deputy
general guide, Ibrahim Mounir, as saying “the time has come to review the
policies of support for dictatorships, and the crimes and violations committed
by despotic regimes around the world.” But Kamal Habib, an expert on Islamist
movements, says it is unlikely the group will receive any US support for its
attempts to return to the fore of the political scene. He believes the Biden
administration might work to “improve the situation of human rights or the
treatment of political parties and civil society groups but not facilitate the
return of the Brotherhood.”Analysts say that the Biden administration cannot go
back to square one in betting on the Muslim Brotherhood, and that the previous
administration’s stance on the Brothrhood had nothing to do with Trump
personally, but was instead part of a US policy ending support for the group
that began during Obama’s presidency. The Obama administration had bet on the
Brotherhood in the early stages of of the “Arab spring,” but Islamists’
performance in power in Egypt and Tunisia, and their alliances in Syria and
Yemen, prompted the US administration to change its position and distance itself
from the controversial organisation. The Obama administration witnessed the fall
of the Egyptian Brotherhood in 2013, and the eruption of a mass uprising against
its rule. It also followed the tense security and political situation in Tunisia
and the wave of assassinations the same year. The attitude of Islamist militants
against the US Embassy embassy in Tunis and the US’s diplomatic representation
in Benghazi also left an indelible mark. The US did not issue any statement of
support for the group or its desire to stay in power, especially in light of a
wave of popular anger rejecting the Brotherhood’s rule.
Missing Catholic priest found dead in Burkina Faso
NNA/AFP/January 22/2021
A priest missing since Tuesday in Burkina Faso’s jihadist-plagued southwest has
been found dead, security and local sources said Thursday. “The priest’s
lifeless body was found in the Toumousseni Forest” in the Cascades region
bordering Ivory Coast and Mali, a security source said.
A local politician confirmed that the priest, Abbot Rodrigue Sanon from the
Notre Dame de Soubaganyedougou parish, had been found dead. While the priest’s
disappearance and death remain unexplained, Burkina Faso’s southeast harbours
jihadists and bandits — much like parts of neighbouring states in the Sahel
region. Sanon had left his parish on Tuesday heading for the regional capital
Banfora, but “never arrived”, bishop Lucas Kalfa Sanou said Wednesday in a
statement. His car was found empty on the main road and security forces launched
a search operation. “Everything looks like a kidnapping by armed terrorist
groups,” a security source in the capital Ouagadougou told AFP, using Sahel
governments’ preferred terminology for jihadists. “They must have executed their
hostage to slip by the military cordon,” the source added. Since 2015, jihadist
groups — some affiliated to al-Qaeda and others to the Islamic State militant
group — have launched increasing numbers of attacks in Burkina Faso, one of the
poorest countries in the world. Over that period, 1,100 people have been killed
and more than one million have fled. Last August, the grand imam of the northern
town of Djibo was found dead three days after gunmen stopped the car he was
travelling in and kidnapped him. In March 2019, a priest in Djibo was kidnapped,
and in February 2018, a Catholic missionary, Cesar Fernandez, was murdered in
the centre of the country. --
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on January 22-23/2021
Full text of US President Joe Biden’s inaugural speech
Al Arabiya English/Wednesday 20 January 2021
Joe Biden was sworn in as the 46th president of the United States of America on
Wednesday. Here is the full text of his inaugural address given on the steps of
the US Capitol:
Chief Justice Roberts, Vice President Harris, Speaker Pelosi, Leader Schumer,
Leader McConnell, Vice President Pence, distinguished guests, and my fellow
Americans.
This is America’s day.
This is democracy’s day.
A day of history and hope.
Of renewal and resolve.
Through a crucible for the ages America has been tested anew and America has
risen to the challenge.
Today, we celebrate the triumph not of a candidate, but of a cause, the cause of
democracy.
The will of the people has been heard and the will of the people has been
heeded.
We have learned again that democracy is precious.
Democracy is fragile.
And at this hour, my friends, democracy has prevailed.
So now, on this hallowed ground where just days ago violence sought to shake
this Capitol’s very foundation, we come together as one nation, under God,
indivisible, to carry out the peaceful transfer of power as we have for more
than two centuries.
We look ahead in our uniquely American way – restless, bold, optimistic – and
set our sights on the nation we know we can be and we must be.
I thank my predecessors of both parties for their presence here.
I thank them from the bottom of my heart.
You know the resilience of our Constitution and the strength of our nation.
As does President Carter, who I spoke to last night but who cannot be with us
today, but whom we salute for his lifetime of service.
I have just taken the sacred oath each of these patriots took — an oath first
sworn by George Washington.
But the American story depends not on any one of us, not on some of us, but on
all of us.
On “We the People” who seek a more perfect Union.
This is a great nation and we are a good people.
Over the centuries through storm and strife, in peace and in war, we have come
so far. But we still have far to go.
We will press forward with speed and urgency, for we have much to do in this
winter of peril and possibility.
Much to repair.
Much to restore.
Much to heal.
Much to build.
And much to gain.
Few periods in our nation’s history have been more challenging or difficult than
the one we’re in now.
A once-in-a-century virus silently stalks the country.
It’s taken as many lives in one year as America lost in all of World War II.
Millions of jobs have been lost.
Hundreds of thousands of businesses closed.
A cry for racial justice some 400 years in the making moves us. The dream of
justice for all will be deferred no longer.
A cry for survival comes from the planet itself. A cry that can’t be any more
desperate or any more clear.
And now, a rise in political extremism, white supremacy, domestic terrorism that
we must confront and we will defeat.
To overcome these challenges – to restore the soul and to secure the future of
America – requires more than words.
It requires that most elusive of things in a democracy:
Unity.
Unity.
In another January in Washington, on New Year’s Day 1863, Abraham Lincoln signed
the Emancipation Proclamation.
When he put pen to paper, the President said, “If my name ever goes down into
history it will be for this act and my whole soul is in it.”
My whole soul is in it.
Today, on this January day, my whole soul is in this:
Bringing America together.
Uniting our people.
And uniting our nation.
I ask every American to join me in this cause.
Uniting to fight the common foes we face:
Anger, resentment, hatred.
Extremism, lawlessness, violence.
Disease, joblessness, hopelessness.
With unity we can do great things. Important things.
We can right wrongs.
We can put people to work in good jobs.
We can teach our children in safe schools.
We can overcome this deadly virus.
We can reward work, rebuild the middle class, and make health care
secure for all.
We can deliver racial justice.
We can make America, once again, the leading force for good in the world.
I know speaking of unity can sound to some like a foolish fantasy.
I know the forces that divide us are deep and they are real.
But I also know they are not new.
Our history has been a constant struggle between the American ideal that we are
all created equal and the harsh, ugly reality that racism, nativism, fear, and
demonization have long torn us apart.
The battle is perennial.
Victory is never assured.
Through the Civil War, the Great Depression, World War, 9/11, through struggle,
sacrifice, and setbacks, our “better angels” have always prevailed.
In each of these moments, enough of us came together to carry all of us forward.
And, we can do so now.
History, faith, and reason show the way, the way of unity.
We can see each other not as adversaries but as neighbors.
We can treat each other with dignity and respect.
We can join forces, stop the shouting, and lower the temperature.
For without unity, there is no peace, only bitterness and fury.
No progress, only exhausting outrage.
No nation, only a state of chaos.
This is our historic moment of crisis and challenge, and unity is the path
forward.
And, we must meet this moment as the United States of America.
If we do that, I guarantee you, we will not fail.
We have never, ever, ever failed in America when we have acted together.
And so today, at this time and in this place, let us start afresh.
All of us.
Let us listen to one another.
Hear one another.
See one another.
Show respect to one another.
Politics need not be a raging fire destroying everything in its path.
Every disagreement doesn’t have to be a cause for total war.
And, we must reject a culture in which facts themselves are manipulated and even
manufactured.
My fellow Americans, we have to be different than this.
America has to be better than this.
And, I believe America is better than this.
Just look around.
Here we stand, in the shadow of a Capitol dome that was completed amid the Civil
War, when the Union itself hung in the balance.
Yet we endured and we prevailed.
Here we stand looking out to the great Mall where Dr. King spoke of his dream.
Here we stand, where 108 years ago at another inaugural, thousands of protestors
tried to block brave women from marching for the right to vote.
Today, we mark the swearing-in of the first woman in American history elected to
national office – Vice President Kamala Harris.
Don’t tell me things can’t change.
Here we stand across the Potomac from Arlington National Cemetery, where heroes
who gave the last full measure of devotion rest in eternal peace.
And here we stand, just days after a riotous mob thought they could use violence
to silence the will of the people, to stop the work of our democracy, and to
drive us from this sacred ground.
That did not happen.
It will never happen.
Not today.
Not tomorrow.
Not ever.
To all those who supported our campaign I am humbled by the faith you have
placed in us.
To all those who did not support us, let me say this: Hear me out as we move
forward. Take a measure of me and my heart.
And if you still disagree, so be it.
That’s democracy. That’s America. The right to dissent peaceably, within the
guardrails of our Republic, is perhaps our nation’s greatest strength.
Yet hear me clearly: Disagreement must not lead to disunion.
And I pledge this to you: I will be a President for all Americans.
I will fight as hard for those who did not support me as for those who did.
Many centuries ago, Saint Augustine, a saint of my church, wrote that a people
was a multitude defined by the common objects of their love.
What are the common objects we love that define us as Americans?
I think I know.
Opportunity.
Security.
Liberty.
Dignity.
Respect.
Honor.
And, yes, the truth.
Recent weeks and months have taught us a painful lesson.
There is truth and there are lies.
Lies told for power and for profit.
And each of us has a duty and responsibility, as citizens, as Americans, and
especially as leaders – leaders who have pledged to honor our Constitution and
protect our nation — to defend the truth and to defeat the lies.
I understand that many Americans view the future with some fear and trepidation.
I understand they worry about their jobs, about taking care of their families,
about what comes next.
I get it.
But the answer is not to turn inward, to retreat into competing factions,
distrusting those who don’t look like you do, or worship the way you do, or
don’t get their news from the same sources you do.
We must end this uncivil war that pits red against blue, rural versus urban,
conservative versus liberal.
We can do this if we open our souls instead of hardening our hearts.
If we show a little tolerance and humility.
If we’re willing to stand in the other person’s shoes just for a moment.
Because here is the thing about life: There is no accounting for what fate will
deal you.
There are some days when we need a hand.
There are other days when we’re called on to lend one.
That is how we must be with one another.
And, if we are this way, our country will be stronger, more prosperous, more
ready for the future.
My fellow Americans, in the work ahead of us, we will need each other.
We will need all our strength to persevere through this dark winter.
We are entering what may well be the toughest and deadliest period of the virus.
We must set aside the politics and finally face this pandemic as one nation.
I promise you this: as the Bible says weeping may endure for a night but joy
cometh in the morning.
We will get through this, together
The world is watching today.
So here is my message to those beyond our borders: America has been tested and
we have come out stronger for it.
We will repair our alliances and engage with the world once again.
Not to meet yesterday’s challenges, but today’s and tomorrow’s.
We will lead not merely by the example of our power but by the power of our
example.
We will be a strong and trusted partner for peace, progress, and security.
We have been through so much in this nation.
And, in my first act as President, I would like to ask you to join me in a
moment of silent prayer to remember all those we lost this past year to the
pandemic.
To those 400,000 fellow Americans – mothers and fathers, husbands and wives,
sons and daughters, friends, neighbors, and co-workers.
We will honor them by becoming the people and nation we know we can and should
be.
Let us say a silent prayer for those who lost their lives, for those they left
behind, and for our country.
Amen.
This is a time of testing.
We face an attack on democracy and on truth.
A raging virus.
Growing inequity.
The sting of systemic racism.
A climate in crisis.
America’s role in the world.
Any one of these would be enough to challenge us in profound ways.
But the fact is we face them all at once, presenting this nation with the
gravest of responsibilities.
Now we must step up.
All of us.
It is a time for boldness, for there is so much to do.
And, this is certain.
We will be judged, you and I, for how we resolve the cascading crises of our
era.
Will we rise to the occasion?
Will we master this rare and difficult hour?
Will we meet our obligations and pass along a new and better world for our
children?
I believe we must and I believe we will.
And when we do, we will write the next chapter in the American story.
It’s a story that might sound something like a song that means a lot to me.
It’s called “American Anthem” and there is one verse stands out for me:
“The work and prayers
of centuries have brought us to this day
What shall be our legacy?
What will our children say?…
Let me know in my heart
When my days are through
America
America
I gave my best to you.”
Let us add our own work and prayers to the unfolding story of our nation.
If we do this then when our days are through our children and our children’s
children will say of us they gave their best.
They did their duty.
They healed a broken land.
My fellow Americans, I close today where I began, with a sacred oath.
Before God and all of you I give you my word.
I will always level with you.
I will defend the Constitution.
I will defend our democracy.
I will defend America.
I will give my all in your service thinking not of power, but of possibilities.
Not of personal interest, but of the public good.
And together, we shall write an American story of hope, not fear.
Of unity, not division.
Of light, not darkness.
An American story of decency and dignity.
Of love and of healing.
Of greatness and of goodness.
May this be the story that guides us.
The story that inspires us.
The story that tells ages yet to come that we answered the call of history.
We met the moment.
That democracy and hope, truth and justice, did not die on our watch but
thrived.
That our America secured liberty at home and stood once again as a beacon to the
world.
That is what we owe our forebearers, one another, and generations to follow.
So, with purpose and resolve we turn to the tasks of our time.
Sustained by faith.
Driven by conviction.
And, devoted to one another and to this country we love with all our hearts.
May God bless America and may God protect our troops.
Thank you, America.
Biden Inherited Immense Leverage over Iran. Will He Use It?
Jonathan Spyer/The Jewish Chronicle/January 22/2021
Originally published under the title "Iran's Brutal Militias Are Standing By for
US Sanctions To Be Eased."
Iranian proxies such as (clockwise from top left) Hezbollah in Lebanon, Kata'ib
Hezbollah in Iraq, Ansar Allah in Yemen, and the Ja'afari Force in Syria are
praying for a relaxation of U.S. pressure.
I met Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis outside the oil town of Baiji, in Sunni northern
Iraq, five years before he was killed by an American drone. The war against ISIS
was at its height, and the Iranian military mastermind Qasem Soleimani — who met
his end alongside Muhandis in January 2020 — had taken command of Iraqi Shia
militias. There were already rumours about their murderous behaviour toward
Sunni civilians. That day, Muhandis was in good humour, calm and amused by the
western journalists seeking an audience, and the high-ranking Iraqi Army
officers who hung on his every word.
Now both Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis and Major General Qassem Soleimani lie in their
graves. The militia strength which they built together, however, remains very
much alive. It is part of an archipelago of client political-military
organisations which Iran seeded across the Middle East, from the Gulf of Aden to
the Mediterranean Coast. The creation of this network was Soleimani's life's
work. Al-Muhandis was his friend, protégé, and key lieutenant in Iraq.
The demise of the two men, combined with intense US sanctions, has brought the
Iranian militia structure in the Middle East to its knees. But whether the
incoming US administration will maintain that pressure is an open question — one
that keeps leaders up at night across the region.
Iran's proxy network was one of the main beneficiaries of the collapse of
governance across the region that began with the Arab Spring. In Yemen, Iraq,
Syria and Lebanon, the crumbling of the state allowed Soleimani to plant his
client groups, building covert Iranian strength.
Tehran seeks to transform regional states into weakened host bodies where
militias act with impunity.
In all of these countries, the goal was the same. Tehran did not seek to capture
official state power. Rather, it wanted to transform the state into a weakened
host body, allowing its parasitic militia to act with impunity. The long list of
its armed groups shows the scale of the threat: the Ansar Allah movement in
Yemen, Kata'ib Hezbollah — Muhandis' organisation — in Iraq, the Lebanese
Hezbollah, the Afghan Fatemiyoun group and the Pakistani Liwa Zainebiyoun — not
to mention the myriad of militia in Syria.
Over the last two years, however, their advance has been halted, if not
reversed. Largely, this has been achieved by the US, and is one of Donald
Trump's most notable foreign policy legacies.
Over the last two years, the advance of Iranian regional proxies has been
halted.
The deaths of Soleimani and Muhandis left the militia structure decapitated.
Assassination is an uncertain weapon, sometimes resulting in the emergence of a
leader more formidable than the one removed. This has not been the case. Esmail
Ghaani, who replaced Soleimani at the head of the Qods Force, and Abu Fadak al-Mohammadawi,
now heading the pro-Iran militia structure in Iraq, are proving far less capable
than the men who preceded them. The militia structure worked primarily on
informal relationships, created by Soleimani over a period of years. These
cannot simply be handed over to a replacement.
Alongside the drone strike that killed Soleimani and Muhandis came the US policy
of "maximum pressure". The sanctions imposed on the Iranian oil, financial and
banking sectors in 2018 starved the economy of funds. This meant the closing of
the tap for the militias. Hezbollah in Lebanon, for example, suffered a 40 per
cent reduction funding in 2020. Similarly, the four top pro-Iran militias in
Iraq saw their income fall from £3-4m per month to £1-2m.
The absent leadership and lack of money is having a dramatic affect. In Syria,
where there is no large Shia population, Iran has had to use cash to entice
recruits. This is no longer available. In Iraq, discipline and unity have begun
to break down. In their own right, the powerful militias control oil fields,
checkpoints, property and land. They are not prepared to mutely follow orders
from fresh commanders for whom they have little respect.
There is now a real possibility that the winds are about to change once again in
Iran's favour. President-elect Joe Biden has made clear his desire to
re-negotiate the 2015 nuclear accords with Iran. As a prerequisite, the
theocracy is insisting on the lifting of all sanctions. In an attempt to focus
American minds, it has threatened to expel international nuclear inspectors from
the country on 21 February unless the money starts to flow again.
Lifting U.S. sanctions would revitalise Iran's cashflow to the militias.
An early capitulation by the Biden administration would give away any leverage
that the US currently holds, reducing any chances of achieving the improved deal
the president-elect has said that he wants. Lifting sanctions would revitalise
the cashflow to the militias, threatening to revive their forward motion. Abu
Mahdi Al-Muhandis and Major General Qasem Soleimani are gone. Muhandis will stay
in Najaf, where they buried him, until further notice and Soleimani will not be
leaving the Kerman Martyrs Cemetery in southeast Iran any time soon. The
structures these men created, however have not been wrecked but are only low on
fuel. It is up to Mr Biden whether they stay that way.
*Jonathan Spyer is a Ginsburg/Milstein Writing Fellow at the Middle East Forum
and director of the Middle East Center for Reporting and Analysis.
The Case Against the Iran Deal
Michael Oren and Yossi Klein Halevi/The Atlantic/January 22/2021
Reviving the JCPOA will ensure either the emergence of a nuclear Iran or a
desperate war to stop it.
Proponents of the Iran nuclear agreement are sounding the alarm. In 2018, the
United States withdrew from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, and since
then, Iran has increased the quality and quantity of its uranium enrichment well
beyond what the deal allows. Recently, it has even begun enriching uranium to 20
percent, a short distance away from weapons-grade. Iran, JCPOA advocates say, is
closer today to producing a bomb than it was in 2015, when the deal was
concluded. Only the deal’s renewal, they insist, can prevent the nightmare of a
nuclear Iran.
“Five years ago, American-led diplomacy produced a deal that ensured it would
take Iran at least a year to produce enough fissile material for one bomb,” Joe
Biden wrote in September. “Now—because Trump let Iran off the hook from its
obligations under the nuclear deal—Tehran’s ‘breakout time’ is down to just a
few months.” More recently, he warned that if Iran gets the bomb, then Saudi
Arabia, Turkey, and Egypt will follow.
Why, then, aren’t Israelis and Arabs—those with the most to lose from Iranian
nuclearization—also demanding a return to the JCPOA? Why aren’t they panicking
over its dissolution? The answer is simple: The JCPOA didn’t diminish the
Iranian nuclear threat; it magnified it.
Dennis Ross: There’s a deal to be had between the U.S. and Iran
Iran needs to acquire three components in order to become a military nuclear
power: highly enriched uranium, a functional warhead, and a missile capable of
delivering it. The JCPOA addresses only the first of these efforts in any
detail, and even then, offers merely partial and temporary solutions. The deal
largely ignores the second effort, and actually advances the third.
The JCPOA did limit Iran’s immediate ability to enrich enough uranium for a
bomb. It reduced the regime’s uranium stockpile by 97 percent, mothballed
two-thirds of its centrifuges, and re-designated two of its major nuclear
facilities as civilian research centers. Uranium enrichment was capped at 3.7
percent, far short of weapons-grade. These concessions were intended to extend
the time Iran needed to enrich enough uranium for a single bomb from
approximately three months to a year. Should Iran attempt to break out and go
nuclear, advocates explained, the international community would have enough time
to intervene. The JCPOA, they asserted, blocked all of Iran’s paths to a bomb.
But the JCPOA allowed Iran to retain its massive nuclear infrastructure,
unnecessary for a civilian energy program but essential for a military nuclear
program. The agreement did not shut down a single nuclear facility or destroy a
single centrifuge. The ease and speed with which Iran has resumed producing
large amounts of more highly enriched uranium—doing so at a time of its own
choosing—illustrates the danger of leaving the regime with these capabilities.
In fact, the JCPOA blocks nothing.
If the restrictions on Iran’s nuclear enrichment were inadequate, they were also
designed to be short-lived, some sunsetting as early as 2024. Meanwhile, the
deal allowed the regime to develop advanced centrifuges capable of spinning out
more highly enriched uranium in far less time. Less than a decade from now, Iran
will be legally able to produce and stockpile enough fissile material for dozens
of bombs. The 97 percent reduction of Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile achieved
by the JCPOA would be swiftly undone. Breakout time would no longer be a year,
or even three months, but a matter of weeks.
This isn’t just the assessment of the deal’s opponents, but also that of its
principal architect. “If in year 13, 14, 15 [after making the deal], they have
advanced centrifuges that can enrich uranium fairly rapidly, the breakout time
would have shrunk almost down to zero,” President Barack Obama acknowledged in
an April 2015 interview with NPR.
Realizing that the JCPOA guaranteed Iran’s future ability to enrich uranium on
an industrial scale, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Turkey accelerated their search
for nuclear options as soon as the deal was signed. The JCPOA’s opponents never
feared that Iran would violate the deal, but rather, they feared that the regime
would keep it—waiting out the sunset clauses and emerging with the ability to
produce enough uranium for a nuclear arsenal.
The deal, then, allows Iran to eventually possess the first component for a
bomb: a stockpile of highly enriched uranium. Next it needs a warhead. Despite
Iran’s insistence that it has never tried to build a bomb, Western intelligence
officials have long determined that it did, but believed that the regime
suspended its efforts in 2003. The weapons program was directed by Mohsen
Fakhrizadeh, a nuclear scientist and general in the Islamic Revolutionary Guards
Corps, who was assassinated in November. In a recording obtained by Israel and
shared with the United States in 2008, Fakhrizadeh explained that the secret
efforts in fact continued and that Iran intended to initially produce five
nuclear warheads.
Michael Oren: The three myths of the Iran deal
The possibility that Iran might still be trying to build a bomb did not,
however, preoccupy the framers of the JCPOA. Of the deal’s 159 pages, only half
of one page addresses Iranian weaponization, and it contains no mandate for
international action. Although there are provisions for inspecting
enrichment-related facilities, none exist for inspecting potential bomb-making
sites or punishing Iran should any be discovered. Instead, there is merely an
Iranian declaration that it will not try to make a bomb—a promise that Iran,
which has systematically lied about its nuclear program for decades, has
repeatedly broken in the past.
The recklessness of this omission became even more glaring three years ago,
after Israel exposed Iran’s secret nuclear archive. Among its many thousands of
pages were documents detailing undeclared nuclear sites and radioactive
materials, as well as blueprints for a missile-borne bomb. More damning, the
archive confirmed that Iran’s nuclear-weapons program did not stop in 2003 but
was merely split into overt and covert channels, some of them embedded in
prestigious universities, and both aspects of the program were headed by
Fakhrizadeh. The goal, he states in the documents, was to maintain “special
activities … under the title of Scientific Development” that “leave no
identifiable traces.”
These revelations underlined the fatal flaws of the JCPOA. The very existence of
a secret archive was a flagrant violation of Iran’s obligation to come clean
about its previous weaponization work. And it was exposed not by international
inspectors, but by Israel’s Mossad. Advocates of the deal are hard-pressed to
explain why Iran would keep, conceal, and repeatedly relocate designs for a
nuclear weapon unless it wanted to preserve the option of someday making one.
With its nuclear infrastructure intact, its work on advanced centrifuges
proceeding, and restrictions on enrichment ending with the sunset clauses,
Iran’s future nuclear stockpile of enriched uranium is ensured. And with its
weaponization-related efforts unimpeded, the regime needs only a system for
delivering a bomb. The regime already possesses Shahab-3 missiles, based on the
North Korean No-dong, capable of hitting any country in the Middle East and even
nations as far away as Romania. The archive contains detailed plans for fitting
a nuclear warhead on the Shahab-3. Iran aims to expand its threat to Western
Europe and the United States by developing intercontinental ballistic missiles.
Intelligence sources agree that the rockets Iran has already developed for its
space program can easily be converted to ICBMs. Iran’s missile development
violates a UN ban on its missile program—a prohibition the international
community has failed to enforce. In 2023, however, the JCPOA will lift that ban
entirely.
The JCPOA, then, has not substantially blocked any of Iran’s efforts. The
violations that Iran has committed since America’s withdrawal from the deal, and
more intensively in recent months, will pale compared with the industrial-scale
enrichment program the JCPOA ultimately permits. Combined with its weaponization-related
work and its missile development, this will position Iran to become a global
nuclear power.
In return for merely postponing that outcome, the deal rewards Iran
extravagantly. The JCPOA infused the Iranian economy with tens of billions of
dollars in immediate sanctions relief and trade deals and promised to provide
hundreds of billions more. Yet rather than invest in its decaying
infrastructure, the regime used portions of this windfall to expand its
international terror network, enhance the offensive capabilities of Hamas and
Hezbollah, and further assist the Syrian regime in massacring and uprooting its
own people. In addition to extending its dominance of Lebanon, Iran has
consolidated its influence in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, and Gaza. Rather than buying
Iran’s moderation, the JCPOA helped fund its quest for regional hegemony.
Exporting terror and instability, massacring and expelling Syrian Sunnis, and
trying to kill Israelis—all of these Iranian activities were blandly subsumed by
the JCPOA’s framers under the term malign activity. The deal was intended to
serve as a precedent for international cooperation in addressing these crimes,
but in practice, little has happened. Instead, desperate to preserve the
agreement, signatories have ignored the regime’s aggression. The failure to
address this “malign activity” reflects a near-total unwillingness to confront
Iran and signals that the regime generally has little to fear from international
interference.
The sermons and military processions accompanied by chants of “Death to Israel”;
Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, calling for the elimination of the Israeli
“cancer”; even a recent bill proposed in the Iranian parliament that would
commit the government to “eliminate” Israel by 2041—all of these outrages and
more are taken for granted by the international community. Yet no other country
today so publicly and repeatedly declares its intentions to annihilate a fellow
UN member state, linking its national purpose to that goal. At the same time,
Iran has committed enormous resources and paid a staggering economic and
diplomatic price to develop the means to fulfill its genocidal vision. The
weaknesses of the JCPOA only deepen Israel’s fear that the international
community is taking the inevitability of Iran’s nuclear-weapons capability for
granted, too.
Israel has vowed to prevent the regime from going nuclear, so the Iranians are
investing in massive deterrence. In the Middle Eastern countries under its
domination, Iran has deployed tens of thousands of missiles, a growing number of
them highly accurate and capable of hitting anywhere in Israel. Though some
observers now claim that Iran’s missiles, rather than its nuclear program, most
endanger the region, they have it backwards. The missiles are a tactical means
to a strategic nuclear end. They are intended to deter Israeli efforts to stop
Iran from moving toward breakout. Even so, Israel can handle the conventional
missile threat, however costly, but the nuclear threat could be existential.
The flaws with the JCPOA are painfully obvious to both Arab and Israeli leaders.
Why, then, did the international community ever agree to such a deal? For
Europe, in particular, financial interests were involved. For America, though,
the impetus was more complex. The Obama administration seemed to genuinely
believe that Iran was capable of change. If it were treated respectfully and
reintegrated into the international community, Obama maintained, Iran would lose
interest in a nuclear bomb long before the deal expired, choosing instead to
become “a successful regional power.” The regime would finally begin addressing
the needs of its restive citizens and cease supporting terror. From the very
beginning of his presidency, Obama pursued reconciliation with Iran, along with
Palestinian-Israeli peace, as the centerpiece of his Middle East policy.
The JCPOA was supposed to provide Iran with the time and the incentive to
moderate; instead, it gave Iran the means and the legitimacy to intensify its
aggression now, while enabling it to go nuclear later. Much of the American
public, meanwhile, exhausted by two Middle Eastern wars, feared becoming
embroiled in another overseas conflict. Many Americans believed Obama when he
insisted that “all options are on the table,” and that the only alternative to
the deal was war.
In fact, the alternative to the president’s approach was tougher diplomacy,
aimed at producing a better deal. But that would have required pressing Iran
with even harsher sanctions and posing a credible threat of military action,
neither of which the administration was willing to do. The “punishing sanctions”
for which the administration took credit, and which brought Iran to the
negotiating table, originated in Congress and were approved over the
administration’s objections.
Rather than forcing Iran’s hand, the administration made far-reaching
concessions at the very outset of the secret talks in 2012. American negotiators
effectively recognized the regime’s “right to enrich,” overriding UN resolutions
denying it that right, and even dropped their previous demand for a temporary
freeze of enrichment. This essentially reduced the rest of the negotiations to
wrangling over the details.
From the outset, the Obama administration was so wary of antagonizing Iran that
it consistently overlooked the regime’s outrages—including a 2011 plot to
assassinate the Saudi and Israeli ambassadors in Washington (the Israeli
ambassador at the time was Michael Oren, a co-author of this essay) and the
routine harassment of U.S. Navy ships in the Persian Gulf. No reckoning was
sought for Iran’s complicity in the Syrian civil war, which has left some
500,000 civilians dead and 11 million homeless. Obama’s refusal to uphold his
own red line regarding the use of chemical weapons by the Assad regime in 2013
was viewed by Israel and by Arab governments—and no doubt by Iran—as a further
sign of his determination to placate Tehran.
And yet, even if America had the will, denying nuclear weapons to Iran was
always fraught with risk. For religious and nationalist reasons, the regime sees
itself as the Middle East’s rightful ruler, as well as a global force. More than
anything else, though, Iran’s nuclear program is about the regime’s survival.
Its leaders saw how the Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and Libya’s Muammar
Qaddafi terminated their nuclear-weapons programs, and were later toppled and
executed. They see how North Korea’s deliverable bombs have won Kim Jong Un
power and immunity. They know which example to emulate.
Still, Iran can be stopped.
Although every new administration seeks to distinguish itself from its
predecessor—and this incoming administration all the more so—President Joe Biden
should not squander the leverage he has inherited. The reimposition and
intensification of American sanctions has placed enormous pressure on the
Iranian regime. After waiting out the old administration in the hope that 2021
would bring a new one, the regime is now trying to intimidate Biden into
renewing the JCPOA. It is hardly a coincidence that the regime waited two years
before approaching 20 percent enrichment—which it could have done at any
time—but is doing so only now, with the onset of the new administration. The
regime responds to pressure and acts defiantly when it senses hesitation. Biden
must not give in to this nuclear blackmail.
The JCPOA allowed Iran to both maintain its nuclear program and revitalize its
economy. Biden must make clear to Tehran that it can have one or the other, but
not both. Tragically, spokespeople for the new administration are proposing to
return to the JCPOA and lift sanctions, and only afterward negotiate a longer,
stronger deal. Such a course has no chance of success. Even a partial lifting of
sanctions would forfeit any leverage that could compel the regime to negotiate a
deal that genuinely removes the danger of a nuclear Iran. At best, the regime
will agree to cosmetic changes—for example, extending the sunset clauses—but not
to dismantling its nuclear infrastructure. A fatally flawed deal would remain
essentially intact.
The Biden administration must resist pressure from members of Congress and
others who are urging an unconditional return to the JCPOA. Even the deal’s
fervent supporters need to recognize that its fundamental assumptions—that Iran
had abandoned its quest for a military nuclear option and would moderate its
behavior—have been thoroughly disproved.
At the same time, America must consult its Middle East allies about what they
think a better deal would look like. Such a deal would verifiably and
permanently remove Iran’s ability to develop nuclear weapons. This means not
merely mothballing the nuclear infrastructure, but eliminating it. It means
empowering international inspectors with unlimited and immediate access to any
suspect enrichment or weaponization site. It means maintaining economic and
diplomatic pressure on the regime until it truly comes clean about its
undeclared nuclear activities and ceases to develop missiles capable of carrying
nuclear warheads. A better deal will deny Iran the ability to commit the
violations it is now committing with impunity.
Achieving these objectives will require close and candid cooperation among the
United States, Israel, and concerned Arab states. Such cooperation was not
possible in the negotiations leading up to the JCPOA, which America initially
conducted behind the backs of its Middle Eastern partners. In the final stages,
U.S. officials misled their Israeli and Arab counterparts about America’s
negotiating positions. This displayed not only bad faith, but a patronizing
presumption of knowing the vital security interests of the countries most
threatened by Iran better than they knew those interests themselves.
The incoming administration has declared its determination to restore the trust
of America’s allies, along with promoting peace and human rights. But those
objectives are incompatible with renewing a deal that betrayed America’s allies,
strengthened one of the world’s most repressive regimes, and empowered the
Middle Eastern state most opposed to peace.
The JCPOA is also incompatible with President Biden’s long-standing commitment
to Israel’s security. At a 2015 gathering celebrating Israel’s independence,
then–Vice President Biden said: “Israel is absolutely essential—absolutely
essential—[for the] security of Jews around the world … Imagine what it would
say about humanity and the future of the 21st century if Israel were not
sustained, vibrant and free.”
Reviving the JCPOA will endanger that vision, ensuring the emergence of a
nuclear Iran or a desperate war to stop it. Biden is a proven friend who has
shared Israel’s hopes and fears. He must prevent that nightmare.
**MICHAEL OREN was Israel’s ambassador to the United States from 2009 to 2013
and, from 2015 to 2019, a member of Knesset and deputy minister in the Prime
Minister’s Office.
**YOSSI KLEIN HALEVI is a senior fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute in
Jerusalem, where, together with Imam Abdullah Antepli and Maital Friedman, he
co-directs the Muslim Leadership Initiative. He is chairman of “Open House,” an
Arab-Jewish coexistence center in the Israeli town of Ramle. He is author of
Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor.
Pentagon Decision on Israel Recognizes Reality and Presents
Opportunity
Bradley Bowman/Policy Brief-FDD/January 22/2021
The Department of Defense announced Friday that it has moved Israel from the
U.S. European Command (EUCOM) area of responsibility (AOR) to that of U.S.
Central Command (CENTCOM), which includes the Middle East. This reassignment
reflects recent breakthroughs in Arab-Israeli relations and provides
opportunities to strengthen military cooperation to address the greatest threat
to regional security: the Islamic Republic of Iran.
The Pentagon divides the globe into AORs and allots responsibility for each to a
regional combatant command. EUCOM covers the European landmass and adjacent
maritime regions, focusing primarily on the NATO alliance and the threat from
Moscow.
CENTCOM is responsible for the wider Middle East and has focused on the threat
from Iran and Islamist terrorism as well as the associated conflicts in Iraq,
Afghanistan, and Syria.
Despite Israel’s location, when CENTCOM was created in 1983, responsibility for
the Jewish state was assigned to EUCOM.
Given the geography and respective priorities of the two combatant commands, the
decision may have seemed odd. Israel, after all, is located in the Middle East
and will remain so despite the efforts of Tehran and its terrorist proxies.
That decision, however, reflected Jerusalem’s isolation at the time, even after
its peace agreement with Egypt in 1979 somewhat mitigated the Arab-Israeli
conflict.
As the Pentagon noted last week with a bit of understatement, Israel’s regional
isolation would have “complicated” efforts by CENTCOM to coordinate multilateral
exercises and operations that included Israel.
But, over time, things have changed.
The Islamic Republic of Iran’s persistent efforts to pursue a nuclear weapons
capability, export terrorism, subvert its neighbors, and install itself as the
regional hegemon made Arab capitals progressively acknowledge, at least in
private, that Iran was the real threat to regional security.
Even after Jordan made peace with Israel in 1994, EUCOM continued to take the
lead for the Pentagon in coordinating military-to-military relations with
Israel. This included, for example, the long-running U.S.-Israel Juniper Cobra
missile defense exercise coordinated by EUCOM and conducted every two years.
Then, last year, in a major victory for American diplomacy, the United Arab
Emirates and Bahrain signed the Abraham Accords with Israel. Soon afterward,
Morocco and Sudan took steps toward normalization.
The “easing of tensions between Israel and its Arab neighbors subsequent to the
Abraham Accords has provided a strategic opportunity for the United States to
align key partners against shared threats in the Middle East,” the Pentagon said
in its statement.
In response to the Friday announcement, Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz
praised the move and made clear that the decision followed weeks of bilateral
dialogue.
CENTCOM, of course, maintained a relationship with Israel before this decision,
one that grew over time. CENTCOM commanders visited Israel recently, and U.S.
Air Forces Central Command conducted F-35 exercises with Israel last year
despite the pandemic.
But this latest move by the Pentagon can facilitate deeper cooperation between
the United States, Israel, and its Arab neighbors, including the expansion of
existing exercises and the addition of new ones. For example, CENTCOM should
seek to add Israel to the next iteration of the U.S.-UAE Iron Union exercise.
Regardless, while CENTCOM will play the lead role, it will be important to
sustain key elements of EUCOM’s coordination and connectivity with Israel. This
can help sustain vital existing cooperation, facilitate needed multilateral
exercises in the Eastern Mediterranean, and provide a hedge against any major
reversal in recent progress in Arab-Israeli relations.
If properly implemented, the transition of Israel to CENTCOM’s portfolio can
begin to foster a broader, more unified, and more capable regional military
coalition to protect shared interests and deter aggression from Tehran.
**Bradley Bowman is senior director of the Center on Military and Political
Power (CMPP) at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD). For more
analysis from Bradley and CMPP, please subscribe HERE. Follow Bradley on Twitter
@Brad_L_Bowman. Follow FDD on Twitter @FDD and @FDD_CMPP. FDD is a Washington,
DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and
foreign policy.
What to Make of Pompeo’s Parting Moves Regarding China
Thomas Joscelyn/The Dispatch/FDD/January 22/2021
The State Department lifted restrictions on some interactions with Taiwan. How
will the Biden administration proceed?
During times like these it may be difficult to think about foreign affairs. But
America’s rivals and enemies certainly won’t pause their agendas simply because
we are embroiled in domestic political discord. The Trump administration didn’t
stop making foreign policy moves in its final days either, even after the
president and his supporters incited a riot at the Capitol on January 6.
The State Department, under Secretary Mike Pompeo, has been especially busy.
Pompeo has positioned himself as an unwavering Trump loyalist. He likely hopes
to inherit Trump’s political base for the 2024 presidential election, assuming
Trump himself doesn’t run again. So, Pompeo’s actions these past few weeks are
about both policy and political jockeying.
Some of his big-ticket items have involved China. Pompeo has been among the most
vocal champions of the idea that the U.S. has entered a period of “great power
competition” (GPC) with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and Russia. He isn’t
the only official to spearhead the U.S. government’s repositioning. Some within
the national security bureaucracy had been pushing this concept even before the
Trump administration. But Pompeo has often been out in front as the face of GPC.
On January 9, Pompeo announced that the State Department was lifting a set of
“complex internal restrictions” that were devised to limit “our diplomats,
servicemembers, and other officials’ interactions with their Taiwanese
counterparts.” These self-imposed rules were intended to allay Beijing’s
concerns that the U.S. would recognize Taiwan as an independent state.
The U.S. has performed a diplomatic dance on this issue for decades, officially
recognizing only “One China,” under Beijing’s rule, while merely acknowledging
that the Chinese government considers Taiwan to be a part of that single
sovereign state. The U.S. has maintained unofficial diplomatic and military
relations with Taiwan. But this has always involved some sleight of hand. For
instance, Trump administration officials boast that the U.S. has sold more arms
to Taiwan in recent years than ever before—$15 billion worth of arms in four
years, as compared to $14 billion worth in the previous eight years.
Naturally, the CCP bristled at Pompeo’s announcement. “China rejects and
condemns the U.S. move,” Zhao Lijian, a CCP foreign ministry spokesperson, said
on Jan. 11. “We advise Mr. Pompeo and his likes to recognize the historical
trend, stop manipulating Taiwan-related issues, stop retrogressive acts and stop
going further down the wrong and dangerous path, otherwise they will be harshly
punished by history,” Zhao added.
Pompeo’s last-minute decision to break with longstanding diplomatic practice may
make some sense. But if it was so urgent to lift the State Department’s rules of
diplomatic engagement with Taiwan, then why wasn’t it done sooner? The timing of
his announcement—less than two weeks before a new administration was set to take
power—could be perceived as a political move intended to put the Biden team in a
bind. However, Biden’s nominee for secretary of state, Anthony Blinken, seems to
be open to the diplomatic course change, explaining at his Senate confirmation
hearing that he is open to greater engagement with Taiwan.
America’s relationship with Taiwan wasn’t the only GPC-related issue on the
State Department’s agenda in the closing days of the Trump administration.
Despite institutional resistance in Washington, some senior officials continued
to press the theory that the virus causing COVID-19 escaped from the Wuhan
Institute of Virology (WIV). On January 15, the State Department released a
“fact sheet” that is intended to highlight this hypothesis once again. It is, I
must stress, a hypothesis. The “fact sheet” itself notes that the U.S.
government “does not know exactly where, when, or how the COVID-19 virus—known
as SARS-CoV-2—was transmitted initially to humans.”
The “fact sheet” draws attention to reports that “several researchers inside the
WIV became sick in autumn 2019 … with symptoms consistent with both COVID-19 and
common seasonal illnesses.” While this is a somewhat ambiguous allegation, it
draws into question Chinese denials regarding possible early infections at the
Wuhan lab. The State Department also pointed to suspicious experiments, “secret
military activity” at the lab and the CCP’s actions prohibiting any independent
inquiry into COVID-19’s origin.
As I’ve written previously, the origin of COVID-19 has both scientific and
political ramifications. While we must admit our ignorance, the Biden team would
be foolish to drop the matter altogether. The CCP clearly sees it as an ongoing
liability in its attempt to transform the world order, as some of its
prospective partners may doubt China’s reliability in the wake of a worldwide
pandemic that started on its soil and for which we still have so many unanswered
questions.
Again, the Chinese foreign ministry’s reaction to the “fact sheet” was telling.
During a press conference on January 18, Hua Chunying, another CCP spokesperson,
claimed it is “filled with conspiracy theor[ies] and lies.” She alleged it was
merely an attempt to deflect attention from the failures of “certain American
politicians” who “have been fumbling through their pandemic responses.” Hua
claimed the fact sheet was an example of “Last-day Madness”—a reference to the
last days of the Trump administration—and dismissed Pompeo as “Mr. Liar.”
All that said, Hua couldn’t provide any answers on the origin of the virus that
caused COVID-19. She could only deflect.
Finally, on January 19, Pompeo formally accused the CCP of committing “genocide”
against ethnic minorities in the Xinjiang region of Western China. The CCP’s
campaign of oppression against the Uighurs, as well as ethnic Kazakhs and
Kyrgyz, has been amply documented. Pompeo pointed to the CCP’s totalitarian
policies, including torture, forced sterilizations and abortions, reeducation
camps and the like.
Despite the last-minute nature of Pompeo’s accusation, the Biden team will
likely continue to press the case. “That would be my judgment as well,” Blinken
responded Tuesday when asked during his confirmation hearing if he thought
Pompeo was right. “Forcing men, women, and children into concentration camps,
trying to in effect reeducate them to be adherents to the Chinese Communist
Party all of that speaks to an effort to commit genocide.”
Politics aside, the challenges posed by the CCP remain formidable. And the ball
is now in the Biden team’s hands.
*Thomas Joscelyn is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies
and the Senior Editor for FDD’s Long War Journal. Follow Tom on Twitter @thomasjoscelyn.
FDD is a nonpartisan think tank focused on foreign policy and national security
issues.
Justice is elusive six years after the murder of Alberto
Nisman
Toby Dershowitz/Jewish News Syndicate/January 22/2021
This week marks six years since Argentine Special Prosecutor Alberto Nisman was
found lifeless in his apartment. He was found dead the day before he was to
provide evidence to the Argentine Congress he said proved that then-president
Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, in a massive coverup, sought to absolve Iran of
its role in the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish community center in Buenos
Aires. The terrorist attack killed 85 people and wounded hundreds more. Nisman
spent a decade undertaking granular research of how Iran planned the attack,
used its embassies to coordinate it and recruited Hezbollah operatives to carry
it out. But justice has proven elusive for victims of the AMIA bombing and for
Nisman. On Dec. 23, victims’ hopes of at least one conviction in the AMIA
bombing were dashed as an Argentine federal court announced the acquittal of
Carlos Telleldin, who allegedly purchased the Renault van. It was the van—fitted
with 606 pounds of ammonium nitrate explosives and driven into the AMIA—that
detonated and brought down the five-story community center.
Telleldin was the one remaining Argentine facing accountability for the attack.
The AMIA quickly said it would appeal the court’s decision, stating, “The
evidence collected is more than enough to achieve the degree of certainty and to
convict the accused.”
Kirchner had at one time supported the positions taken by the AMIA leadership
about the bombing. She had used speeches before U.N. General Assemblies in 2008
and 2009 to demand that Iran turn over individuals Nisman had named in the plot
to bomb the AMIA and for whom Interpol had issued red notices, which call on
countries to apprehend suspects.
The tide turned in 2013 when her government signed a Memorandum of Understanding
(MOU) with Iran to jointly investigate the terrorist attack. Nisman believed the
MOU was not an effort to find the true culprits, whom he had already identified.
He believed it was signed to send Interpol the message that the two countries
were supposedly cooperating, and thus would lead the international police
organization to remove the red notices for the remaining five senior Iran
officials and one Lebanese man Nisman found had planned the bombing. The MOU,
Nisman believed, was akin to asking an arsonist to help investigate a fire.
In 2015, an Argentine court ruled the MOU was unconstitutional. Kirchner’s
successor as president, Mauricio Macri, proceeded to abrogate the MOU, but
Interpol has disregarded Macri’s actions and considers the MOU valid. This has
further led to suspicion by victims’ families that Interpol may be in cahoots
with Kirchner and her cronies to weaken, if not lift, the red notices.
In 2017, Argentina’s Gendarmerie security forces determined Nisman’s death was a
homicide. This finding was endorsed by Judge Julian Ercolini and prosecutor
Eduard Taiano, who concluded there was a “criminal plan to end the life of
Alberto Nisman.” They said, “The death of prosecutor Nisman was not due to
suicide.” It matters because if Nisman committed suicide, there would be no
murder to investigate, and therefore, no one to hold accountable for his
suspicious death on the evening before he was due to present his evidence
against Kirchner.
The investigation into his death continues. This week, Taiano announced that he
is seeking 89 current and former intelligence agents to testify as witnesses to
explain the unusual “explosion of phone calls” they made in the vicinity of
Nisman’s apartment in the days leading up to and following the murder.
Should Sabina Frederic, Argentina’s minister of security, issue her own report
on Nisman’s death, it will likely be influenced by recent comments made by the
president. In a Dec. 31 interview with Radio 10, President Alberto Fernandez
(not related to Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner) said he “had been thinking
about” Nisman and now believes that he committed suicide, citing no basis for
the reversal of his position.
His comments are troubling given that in 2015, four years before Kirchner became
his vice president in 2019, he had penned an op-ed saying he had “no doubt”
Nisman was murdered. Only after Kirchner became his vice president did he
reverse his views, awkwardly stating in a January 2020 interview with Netflix,
“I doubt Nisman committed suicide,” then added, “but there’s no proof of
murder.”
His comments on Radio 10 coincide with the government’s uptick in disparaging
statements by government leaders about Nisman in the run up to the sixth
anniversary of his murder.
While Nisman is no longer alive, the case he sought to bring against Kirchner
remains. After Nisman’s death, a judge used the allegations that Nisman planned
to present to Congress as the basis for a new investigation. That case against
Kirchner and her associates is due to go to trial, though the court has yet to
set a date. One of those who stands charged along with Kirchner is Carlos
Zannini, who today is Argentina’s attorney general of the Treasury. Many are
skeptical that either Kirchner or her alleged collaborators will be brought to
justice.
Kirchner’s actions seems to signal that she wants anything associated with the
AMIA bombing—the case against Telleldin, the search for Nisman’s assassins and
allegations that he was murdered, and the cover-up allegations against
herself—to go away.
But Kirchner may have a plan B, should her plans to unravel the cases in which
she or her associates are implicated do not succeed. The Argentine press has
speculated that she may either arrange for amnesty in these cases, a move that
would require approval by the Argentine Senate, or she may arrange for President
Fernandez to pardon her.
Argentina’s justice system has long been plagued by rampant corruption. It would
be concerning if Argentina were to allow Kirchner or others to be unjustly
absolved of accountability in cases associated with the coverup of the AMIA
bombing and Nisman’s murder. While that decision is up to the government, it
would no doubt be factored into assessments by international institutions who
weigh corruption, stability and risk.
But one of the biggest opportunities for justice is ensuring that the Interpol
red notices remain in force. The international community should ensure that
whatever ploys Kirchner may use to evade accountability for herself and her
associates are not allowed to be used to let Iran off the hook for its role in
the AMIA bombing. Nisman’s investigation into the bombing provided the world
with the necessary information to hold Iran accountable, for which he ultimately
paid with his life. His death should not be in vain.
*Toby Dershowitz is senior vice president for government relations and strategy
at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a nonpartisan think tank based in
Washington, D.C., that focuses on foreign policy and national security. Follow
her on Twitter @tobydersh.
Canada has a limited window to get concessions from Iran
Alireza Nader/ National Post/January 22/2021
Canada’s relations with the Islamic Republic in Iran appear to be getting more
difficult by the day, after a Canadian government report on Ukraine Airline
Flight 752, which was shot down by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC)
in January 2020, criticized the Islamist regime for denying responsibility for
the plane’s destruction.
The report alleges that Tehran has refused to conduct its investigation in “a
truly independent, objective and transparent manner.” Canadian officials, the
report further states, are particularly frustrated that the regime “is
investigating itself, largely in secret. That does not inspire confidence or
trust.”
Meanwhile, Ottawa has rejected Tehran’s offer to pay the families of the
victims. According to Ralph Goodale, Canada’s special adviser on Flight 752,
Ottawa believes the final amount should be subject to negotiations between Iran
and Canada and the four other countries whose citizens died on the plane.
Tehran, however, made its offer without any consultations with the relevant
parties.
Ottawa is at a clear impasse with Tehran and is unlikely to get any answers
unless it fundamentally changes its policy toward the country. Ottawa’s present
approach should not inspire optimism, but there are indications, including the
appointment of a new foreign minister, that Canada’s policy toward the regime is
at a dead end — and that Canadian officials will have to reconsider their
strategy.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s policy toward Iran has entailed engaging the
regime and even maintaining overtly cordial relations with its officials. In
February 2020, just weeks after the plane’s downing, media outlets photographed
Trudeau warmly shaking hands with Iranian Foreign Minister Muhammad Javad Zarif,
which angered the families of the 88 Iranian-Canadian citizens and permanent
residents who died on the flight.
Canadian officials are unlikely to achieve justice for the victims of Flight 572
through friendly engagement and diplomacy alone. The Islamic Republic does
respond to pressure, though. Ottawa can exact a price on Tehran by designating
the IRGC as a terrorist organization, as a 2018 motion passed by the House of
Commons called on the government to do.
That should be followed by an extensive investigation of the regime’s assets and
its network of agents in Canada. Tehran’s network is involved in illicit
activities, such as money laundering and sanctions evasion. According to a
recent Global News report, Iranian currency traders may be “transferring
incalculable sums between Iran and Canada via Dubai, a banking zone used by the
Iranian regime to evade sanctions.”
Canadian law enforcement has cracked down on some of the regime’s misconduct by
investigating money laundering cases, but there is a lot more of the regime’s
network to uncover. Iranian-Canadians who advocate for democracy describe living
in fear of the regime’s agents, who have even intimidated the families of the
victims of Flight 752. Ottawa cannot ignore the regime’s malign activity on
Canadian soil while trying to achieve justice for the victims of the downed
airliner.
Canadian officials are mistaken in thinking that men like Zarif are “moderates”
whom Ottawa can woo with diplomatic entreaties. Zarif, in fact, is just another
face of the IRGC. He has admitted to co-ordinating Iran’s foreign policies with
IRGC leaders, including IRGC Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani, whom the
United States killed only days before Flight 572 was shot down.
To achieve progress with Zarif, the IRGC must feel greater pressure and
scrutiny. Yet Ottawa has failed to act. The regime is as intransigent as ever
and is likely to become even more so if the IRGC, which is fielding several
presidential candidates in the upcoming election, captures the presidency in
June 2021. Trudeau and his government may soon be negotiating directly with IRGC
officers. Will they smile and shake hands with them?
*Alireza Nader is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies,
where he also contributes to FDD’s Iran Program and Center on Military and
Political Power. Follow him on Twitter @AlirezaNader. FDD is a nonpartisan think
tank focused on foreign policy and national security issues.
The Palestinian Plan to Dupe the Biden Administration
Bassam Tawil/Gatestone Institute/January 22/2021
The proposed Palestinian elections are part of a scheme designed to deceive the
international community, specifically the US and EU, into believing that the
Palestinians are serious about implementing major reforms, ending financial and
administrative corruption, and engaging in another peace process with Israel.
Not only does Abbas have no plans to depart from the political scene anytime in
the near future, he is even said to be considering running in the presidential
election.
There is one reason, and one reason only, why Abbas is now talking about holding
general elections: to continue milking the cash cow he has in the form of
American and European governments. Abbas wants the money to ensure his continued
dictatorial rule over the Palestinians.
Abbas is hoping that such an international conference, under the auspices of the
United Nations, European Union, Russia and China, would impose a solution on
Israel. Abbas has only one solution in mind: one that would see Israel fully
withdraw to the pre-1967 lines, including east Jerusalem, and the establishment
of a Palestinian state that would undoubtedly be used in the future as a
launching pad to wage war on Israel.
The Palestinians live under two dictatorships: one in the West Bank and one in
the Gaza Strip. Elections, even if they are held, will not produce new leaders.
They will produce Fatah flunkies and Hamas henchmen who bow obediently to their
corrupt bosses.
Palestinian elections proposed by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas
are part of a scheme designed to deceive the international community,
specifically the US and EU, into believing that the Palestinians are serious
about implementing major reforms, ending financial and administrative
corruption, and engaging in another peace process with Israel. Pictured: Abbas
speaks in Ramallah on September 3, 2020.
One week after he entered the 17th year of his four-year term in office,
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas finally announced new
parliamentary and presidential elections, scheduled to take place in May and
July 2021.
His announcement was carefully timed to coincide with the inauguration week of
President Joe Biden and in response to immense pressure from the European Union.
Abbas's announcement, which many Palestinians take as seriously as they would
take the alleged sighting of a UFO, is part of an attempt to curry favor with
the Biden administration and the EU.
There is only one word to describe Abbas's announcement: deception.
The proposed Palestinian elections are part of a scheme designed to deceive the
international community, specifically the US and EU, into believing that the
Palestinians are serious about implementing major reforms, ending financial and
administrative corruption, and engaging in another peace process with Israel.
Abbas, who boycotted President Donald Trump's administration since December
2017, is hoping that the Biden administration will, among other things, resume
financial aid to the Palestinians and the United Nations Relief and Work Agency
for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA); reopen the PLO diplomatic mission in Washington,
DC., and cancel the US recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Abbas
did not call for elections because he suddenly believes in democracy and
pluralism or because he wants to pave the way for new and young leaders to rise
to power. Abbas did not call for elections because he wants to give the
Palestinians the opportunity to elect new leaders through a free and fair
electoral process. Perhaps the 85-year-old Abbas called for elections because he
wants to retire and spend his time playing with his grandchildren. Better not
count on that.
Not only does Abbas have no plans to depart from the political scene anytime in
the near future, he is even said to be considering running in the presidential
election, if and when it takes place on July 31.
There is one reason, and one reason only, why Abbas is now talking about holding
general elections: to continue milking the cash cow he has in the form of
American and European governments. Abbas wants the money to ensure his continued
dictatorial rule over the Palestinians.
He knows that without money from the US and EU, his regime would not survive for
one day. Abbas also knows that without Israel's security presence in the West
Bank, Hamas and his political enemies would easily remove him from power.
Abbas is trying to show the Biden administration and the Europeans that he is
not an autocrat or an illegitimate leader whose tenure ended in January 2009.
In addition to money, Abbas is apparently hoping that his election farce would
persuade the Americans and Europeans to support his plan to hold an
international conference for "peace" in the Middle East.
Abbas does not want to return to direct negotiations with Israel: he knows that
Israel cannot comply with 100% of his demands (a full withdrawal to the pre-1967
lines and the "right of return" for "millions" of Palestinian refugees and their
descendants to Israel).
Abbas is hoping that such an international conference, under the auspices of the
United Nations, European Union, Russia and China, would impose a solution on
Israel. Abbas has only one solution in mind: one that would see Israel fully
withdraw to the pre-1967 lines, including east Jerusalem, and the establishment
of a Palestinian state that would undoubtedly be used in the future as a
launching pad to wage war on Israel. If Abbas's rivals in Hamas win the
parliamentary and presidential elections, the future Palestinian state that
Abbas is aspiring to establish will be an Iran-backed Islamist terror entity,
similar to the mini-state that already exists in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.
In 2006, Hamas defeated Abbas's Fatah faction in the parliamentary election,
triggering a bitter and bloody power struggle between the two rival parties. At
the peak of the conflict in the summer of 2007, Hamas militiamen threw Fatah
activists from the rooftops of tall buildings and killed hundreds of others.
Since then, the Palestinians have had two independent and sovereign mini-states:
one to the east of Israel, on the "West Bank" of the Jordan River; and one to
the west of Israel, on the Gaza Strip. The Gaza Strip, controlled by Hamas,
Palestinian Islamic Jihad and other Palestinian terrorist groups, is being used
as a launching pad for carrying out various forms of terrorist attacks against
Israel, including firing thousands of rockets into Israel over the past 15
years.
Hamas leaders have welcomed Abbas's announcement They say they intend to
participate in the general elections. Hamas is now hoping to repeat the victory
it scored in the 2006 parliamentary election.
Public opinion polls have shown that more than 60% of the Palestinians would
like to see Abbas quit. This means that a vast majority of Palestinians do not
believe in Abbas and his Fatah lieutenants. In 2006, many Palestinians voted for
Hamas because they were fed up with Fatah's corruption and incompetence.
The polls now show that the views of many Palestinians toward Abbas and Fatah
have not changed, which means Hamas has a good chance of winning another victory
in the upcoming elections. Another Hamas victory means that the West Bank would
become another terrorist entity ruled by Iran's Palestinian allies and proxies.
Thanks to the presence of Israel in the West Bank, there is less terrorism
there. If Israel pulls out, the West Bank will fall into the hands of Hamas and
Palestinian Islamic Jihad, who will start firing rockets at Israeli in the same
way they have been doing from the Gaza Strip for years.
A reminder of Hamas's dangerous ambitions was provided on January 18, 2021, by
none other than its leader, Ismail Haniyeh.
Addressing a conference in Tehran, Haniyeh said that the "resistance" against
Israel remains an "ideal choice" and the "strategic option" of his group.
"Resistance" is a euphemism for continuing the war of terrorism against Israel
by using rockets, suicide bombings, car-rammings, stabbings and shootings, as
well as throwing rocks and firebombs at Israeli soldiers and civilians.
In early February, leaders of Fatah and Hamas are expected to meet in Egypt's
capital, Cairo, to discuss preparations for the elections. The two sides are
saying they want to reach agreement not only on the issue of elections, but
"real partnership." Fatah and Hamas are ready temporarily to lay aside their
differences to form a unified front against Israel.
Abbas wants money, while Hamas wants legitimacy and recognition from the
international community. Hamas, of course, also wants to extend its control to
the West Bank, overthrow Abbas and proceed with its plan to destroy Israel.
For Abbas and Fatah, the talk about elections is important because they want to
dupe the US and EU into giving them more money. Hamas, for its part, is hoping
that the elections will legitimize it in the international community it and turn
it into an acceptable player in the Palestinian arena.
If Fatah and Hamas really cared about elections and the interests of their
people, they would have held elections a long time ago. The two parties,
however, have spent the past 15 years torturing and arresting each other,
denying their people both free elections and basic public freedoms.
The Palestinians live under two dictatorships: one in the West Bank and one in
the Gaza Strip. Elections, even if they are held, will not produce new leaders.
They will produce Fatah flunkies and Hamas henchmen who bow obediently to their
corrupt bosses.
*Bassam Tawil, a Muslim Arab, is based in the Middle East.
© 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 Biden administration’s hasty desire for Iran talks
Maria Maalouf/Arab News/January 22/ 2021
ماريا معلوف: رغبة إدارة بايدن المتسرعة لإجراء محادثات مع إيران
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/95199/maria-maalouf-the-biden-administrations-hasty-desire-for-iran-talks-%d9%85%d8%a7%d8%b1%d9%8a%d8%a7-%d9%85%d8%b9%d9%84%d9%88%d9%81-%d8%b1%d8%ba%d8%a8%d8%a9-%d8%a5%d8%af%d8%a7%d8%b1%d8%a9/
As the Biden administration takes charge in America, it is clear that it is
making adjustments to the country’s foreign policy. One change is attempting to
restore relations with Iran after the Trump administration withdrew from the
nuclear deal and began its “maximum pressure” strategy against Tehran.
The Biden White House has the conviction to criticize its predecessor’s policy
toward Iran. But there is much speculation as to how its main foreign policy
officials — such as former Secretary of State John Kerry, who is now in charge
of climate change negotiations, Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, and
National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan — stand with regard to Iran. They appear
to have an initial strategy of renegotiating with Iran in an effort to remove
its menace as a lonely, isolated and renegade state that would be more of a risk
if it had nuclear weapons.
Coupled with Biden’s formation of a new US diplomatic approach to Iran is the
worsening of the human rights situation inside that country. One example is the
recent arrest of Iranian-American businessman Emad Sharghi, who had been
sentenced to 10 years in prison on espionage charges. He joins a long list of
Iranians who have been sent to jail on spying indictments, with some of them
having American or British citizenship.
The Biden administration is taking precautions in an effort to avoid provoking
Iran’s anger on human rights questions. For example, it will not make the
release of a number of Iranian-American prisoners a precondition for its
potential resumption of negotiations with Iran over its nuclear capabilities.
The Biden administration is throwing itself into a very premature foreign policy
conclusion. It is making an arbitration of Iran’s nuclear ambitions that is not
wise. As a result, the US’ fortunes in the Middle East will decline.
One should not expect anything substantial or purposeful out of this new
American plan to have discussions with Iran over its nuclear buildup. The desire
of Biden and his top officials to engage Iran will be outperformed by a
theocracy that is firm in making it impossible for the international community
to properly measure or evaluate its nuclear force. In addition, the renewed
American take on Iran concerning its nuclear program will considerably outweigh
the balance needed to ensure respect for human rights in Iran, as well as the
duty of the US and the community of nations to monitor Iran’s adherence to their
standards.
Kerry, Sherman and Sullivan, in particular, are giving the impression that they
are acting in haste in reaching out to Iran. This is in contrast to the typical
slow and methodical procedures that are the regular diplomatic norms in how
countries start negotiating with one another. In this case, they are getting
confused between what is urgent and what is practical. Their inclination to set
up immediate talks is an appeal — if not an appeasement — to Iran to not be too
threatening to regional and global stability. In negotiating with any partner,
there is always the desire to change its behavior. There is little hope that
America negotiating with Iran will alter the latter’s behavior.
A major problem in negotiating with Iran is that it does not want to give proof
that its nuclear program is not for military purposes. Hence, any countries
negotiating with it are making bets as to what the ultimate outcome of Iran’s
nuclear activity is. The more you negotiate with Iran, the less clear its
intentions are.
The Biden administration is throwing itself into a very premature foreign policy
conclusion. It is making an arbitration of Iran’s nuclear ambitions that is not
wise. As a result, the US’ fortunes in the Middle East will decline.
• Maria Maalouf is a Lebanese journalist, broadcaster, publisher, and writer.
She holds an MA in Political Sociology from the University of Lyon. Twitter:
@bilarakib