English LCCC Newsbulletin For
Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For July 07/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
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Bible Quotations For today
‘Whoever listens to you listens to
me, and whoever rejects you rejects me, and whoever rejects me rejects the one
who sent me.’”
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke
10/13-16:”‘Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the deeds of
power done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long
ago, sitting in sackcloth and ashes. But at the judgement it will be more
tolerable for Tyre and Sidon than for you. And you, Capernaum, will you be
exalted to heaven? No, you will be brought down to Hades.‘Whoever listens to you
listens to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me, and whoever rejects me
rejects the one who sent me.’”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on July 06-07/2021
Ministry of Health: 294 new infections, two deaths
President receives Qatari Foreign Minister, informs him of Lebanon’s welcoming
to Qatar’s permanent support
Hariri discusses with Qatari Foreign Minister latest political developments
Qatari Foreign Minister's Visit
Defense Minister Gantz sends proposal for humanitarian aid to Lebanon
Qatari Foreign Minister in Beirut for Talks with Top Officials
Berri Calls for Session to Mull Lifting MPs Immunity in Port Case
Berri Clings to Hariri, PM-Designate to Intensify Consultations
Bassil Shows Flexibility as Adib's Chances Surge Again
U.S. Central Command Envoy Visits Lebanon to Review Border Security
Installations
Lebanon caretaker premier pleads for aid, warns of social explosion
Diab Pleads for Aid as Crisis Worsens
How Hezbollah controls the economy in Lebanon/George Eid /Cyprus Mail/July 06/
2021
United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon-UNIFIL/Tony Badran/FDD/July 06/2021
Titles For The Latest English LCCC
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
July 06-07/2021
Pope Francis 'Had Breakfast and Walked' after Operation
Canada Names First Indigenous Governor General
Two attacks, less than 12 hours apart, target US forces in Iraq
Iran power outage crisis leads politicians to slam their own policy
Death to Khamenei’: Protests erupt in Iran over power outages
Iran informs IAEA of plans to produce enriched uranium up to 20 pct purity
US withdrawal from Afghanistan is more than 90 pct complete: Pentagon
Russian government hackers breached Republican National Committee last week
US Secretary calls for negotiated, indefinite ceasefire in call with Ethiopia's
Abiy
ISIS targets electricity lines in Iraq to spread mayhem
Israel PM Suffers Defeat over Arab Family Unification Ban
Eight Murders in a Month in Syria Camp
Iran sees ‘good progress’ in talks with Riyadh but admits to snags
Buoyed by Raisi’s election, Iraqi militia leader vows ‘open war’ on US
In change of strategy, Cairo sees Haftar as just one of its cards in Libya not
its main ally
Russia Again Posts Record Coronavirus Deaths
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC
English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on
July 06-07/2021
Iranian presidential selection paves new path for nuclear extortion/Behnam
Ben Taleblu/Andrea Stricker/Washington Examiner/July 06/2021
United Nations Relief and Works Agency/Richard Goldberg/FDD/International
Organizations Monograph/July 06/2021
What is China Buying in the Biden Administration?/Peter Schweizer/Gatestone
Institute/July 06/2021
Russia will benefit from the US-China economic Cold War/Rami Rayess/Al Arabiya/July
06/2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News & Editorials published
on July 06-07/2021
Ministry of Health: 294 new
infections, two deaths
NNA/July 06/2021
The Ministry of Public Health announced 294 new coronavirus infection cases,
which brings the cumulative number of confirmed cases to 545,965.
Two deaths have been recorded.
President receives Qatari Foreign Minister, informs him of Lebanon’s welcoming
to Qatar’s permanent support
NNA/July 06/2021
President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, told the Qatari Deputy Prime
Minister, and Foreign Affairs Minister, Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdul Rahman Al-Thani,
that Lebanon welcomes the permanent support which Qatar provides in all fields.
The President also thanked the interest shown by His Highness the Prince of
Qatar, Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al-Thani, and his helping to overcome the
difficult circumstances which Lebanon is passing through, and their
repercussions at all levels. President Aoun had met the Qatari Foreign Minister
accompanied by the Qatari Ambassador to Lebanon and a delegation, this afternoon
at the Presidential Palace.
In addition, the President stated the facts which aggravated the Lebanese
crisis, delaying government formation and said that Qatar has always stood by
Lebanon, and any step taken to help resolve the current crises is welcomed and
appreciated by the Lebanese. President Aoun also conveyed his greetings to
Sheikh Tamim, wishing continuous success and progress.
For his part, the Qatari Foreign Minister had conveyed the greetings of His
Highness the Qatari Prince, and Qatar’s readiness to help solve the crises which
Lebanon suffers from at different levels, reiterating his country’s stand next
to the Lebanese people in the difficult circumstances they pass through.
The delegation accompanying the Qatari Minister included: Head of the State
Security Service, Abdullah Muhammad Al-Khulaifi, Qatari Ambassador to Lebanon,
Muhammad Bin Hassan Jaber Al-Jaber, Director of the Minister’s Office,
Ambassador Saad bin Ali Al-Kharji, Ambassador Mishaal Al-Mazrouei, and Mr.
Abdullah Al-Sulaiti. -- Presidency Press Office
Hariri discusses with Qatari Foreign Minister latest political developments
NNA/July 06/2021
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri welcomed this Tuesday evening at the Center
House, Qatari Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sheikh
Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani, and his accompanying delegation. Discussions
touched on the general situation, the latest political developments, and means
to bolster bilateral relations.
Qatari Foreign Minister's Visit
LCCC/July 06/2021
Qatari Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sheikh Mohammed
bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani, and his accompanying delegation met wit president Aoun,
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri, House Speaker Nabih Berri, FM, Akar and
Lebabese Ary Chief Genera J. Aoun.
Defense Minister Gantz sends proposal for humanitarian aid to Lebanon
Anna Ahronhiem, Tzvi Joffre/Jerusalem Post/July
06/2021
Gantz sent the proposal through UNIFIL, but it's expected to be refused by
Lebanon. Defense Minister Benny Gantz has sent a proposal for humanitarian aid
to Lebanon through UNIFIL, his ministry announced on Tuesday.
The move comes after Gantz has repeated several times in recent weeks that
Israel is willing to offer assistance to its northeastern neighbor, which is
suffering from a worsening economic crisis, with the World Bank calling it one
of the world’s worst financial crises since the 1850s. Violence and protests
have been breaking out around the country as basic services collapse. According
to an assessment released by UNICEF on Monday, 77% of Lebanese households don’t
have enough money to buy food. The country’s medicine importers have warned they
have run out of hundreds of essential drugs. Electricity outages and gas
shortages are commonplace and the Lebanese Armed Forces announced it is offering
tourists helicopter rides for $150 to make money. Gantz tweeted on Sunday: “As
an Israeli, as a Jew and as a human being, my heart aches seeing the images of
people going hungry on the streets of Lebanon. Israel has offered assistance to
Lebanon in the past, and even today we are ready to act and to encourage other
countries to extend a helping hand to Lebanon so that it will once again
flourish and emerge from its state of crisis.”
In a speech on Sunday marking the opening of Israel’s first monument to the
Southern Lebanon Army, which fought alongside the IDF during Israel’s presence
in southern Lebanon from 1982 to 2000, Gantz offered assistance.
“Israel has offered to help Lebanon in the past, and today as well, we are
prepared to work to help it grow and get out of this crisis,” he said.
On Tuesday, Lebanon’s Prime Minister Hassan Diab said the country is a few days
away from a “social explosion,” and called on the international community to
save it. Diab, in a speech after a meeting with several ambassadors and
representatives of diplomatic missions in Beirut, also said his government could
not restart talks with the International Monetary Fund because only a new
cabinet could do that. “This government does not have the right to resume
negotiations with the IMF to implement the recovery plan set by the cabinet, for
this entails obligations on the next government that it may not endorse,” he
said.
Lebanon has not responded to Gantz’s offers or the proposal sent to UNIFIL, but
due to the long-standing enmity between the two sides, Beirut is expected to
refuse the help.
After a huge explosion devastated Beirut last August, killing dozens and
injuring thousands, former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu approved
humanitarian and medical assistance to Lebanon instructing the National Security
Council to contact former UN special envoy for the Middle East peace process
Nickolay Mladenov to find out how Israel could help. Gantz and other Israeli
officials reiterated Jerusalem’s offer for aid at the time, with hospitals in
Haifa and the North saying they were ready to provide assistance, but Lebanon
refused.
Reuters contributed to this report.
Qatari Foreign Minister in Beirut for Talks with Top
Officials
Naharnet/July 06/2021
Qatari Foreign Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani arrived in Lebanon
Tuesday on a one-day official visit. He was welcomed at the airport by caretaker
Deputy PM and Defense and Foreign Minister Zeina Akar and Qatari Ambassador to
Lebanon Mohammed Hassan al-Jaber. The minister is scheduled to hold separate
meetings with President Michel Aoun, Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, Prime
Minister-designate Saad Hariri and Army Commander General Joseph Aoun. The
Qatari government-funded Al-Jazeera TV had reported Monday that the visit is
“part of Qatar’s efforts to help resolve the political crisis in Lebanon.”Media
reports said Tuesday that Qatar intends to offer aid to the Lebanese Army.
Qatar’s ruling emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, had in February urged
Lebanon’s political parties to put the national interest first and speed up the
formation of a new government.
Berri Calls for Session to Mull Lifting MPs Immunity in Port Case
Naharnet/July 06/2021
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri called on Tuesday for a joint session of the
Parliament Bureau and the Administration and Justice Committee, to study a
request to lift the immunity of three MPs in the Beirut Port blast case. Judge
Tarek al-Bitar had asked parliament to lift the immunity of the MPs Ali Hassan
Khalil, Ghazi Zoaiter and Nouhad al-Mashnouq. The session will take place on
Friday at 1:15 p.m., at the headquarters of the Speakership in Ain el-Tineh.
Berri Clings to Hariri, PM-Designate to Intensify Consultations
Naharnet/July 06/2021
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri and Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri
discussed during their meeting on Monday the obstacles that are still delaying
the government’s formation, media reports said on Tuesday. “Berri stressed his
insistence on Hariri’s designation until the end,” the Nidaa al-Watan newspaper
reported, adding that the Speaker also wants Hariri to nominate a candidate for
the PM post should he insist on stepping down. “The PM-designate will intensify
his meetings and contacts in the coming hours and will hold a meeting with the
former premiers to put them in the picture of his choices, specifically his
roadmap for the coming period,” the daily said. Sources informed on the cabinet
formation efforts meanwhile told the newspaper that Hariri will not submit a
cabinet line-up that would be “subject to the moodiness” of President Michel
Aoun and Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil.
Bassil Shows Flexibility as Adib's Chances Surge Again
Naharnet/July 06/2021
Will the upcoming days be decisive regarding the long-awaited formation of the
new government, as Hizbullah chief, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, said in his
televised speech on Monday? Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil has
shown flexibility, but sources expect PM-designate Saad Hariri to apologize.
In remarks to al-Akhbar newspaper published on Tuesday, informed sources linked
Nasrallah’s words about “decisive days” to a “new development”: the flexibility
that Bassil has shown regarding Hariri’s demand that his government obtain a
“prior vote of confidence” from the FPM, which would facilitate the government
formation. “Hariri will not form (a government) even if we accept that he
nominates the 24 ministers,” FPM sources assured. According to them this is
certain because “Saudi Arabia has said its word,” and the Prime
Minister-designate is now “closer than ever before to apologize, but he is
waiting for a replacement to be found and for a decent exit.”Al-Akhbar
anticipated in a report that Hariri might probably visit the Baabda Palace, next
Friday, with a government line-up that does not meet the conditions set by
President Michel Aoun, which will lead to its refusal, and thus the PM-designate
will “refuse to proceed with his mission, and step down with the least possible
losses, without appearing as a loser in front of Bassil.”Hariri’s resignation,
however, hinges on his agreement with Berri about the prime minister who will be
appointed after him. “The chances of the Lebanese ambassador in Germany, Mustafa
Adib, have (meanwhile) increased again,” al-Akhbar reported, adding that “Adib
assured everyone who communicated with him that he will not repeat his last
year’s mistake, and would not return to the Lebanese arena unless the formation
of the government was guaranteed prior to his designation.”
U.S. Central Command Envoy Visits Lebanon to Review Border Security
Installations
Naharnet/July 06/2021
A representative from the United States Central Command, in coordination with
the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, is conducting a visit to review security
upgrades to border security systems installed at Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF)
land and maritime border regiments, the U.S. Embassy said on Tuesday. The
two-week visit, which concludes on July 9, includes engagements with regimental
commanders and the head of the LAF Navy to ensure the communications and
surveillance systems integrate successfully into the operational framework at
LAF headquarters, the Embassy added in a statement. “This visit is part of
ongoing U.S. assistance to the LAF, which has totaled over $2 billion since
2010, and supplements LAF investments in training, equipment and resources for
its staff,” the statement said. In June 2021, the United States provided $59
million as a reimbursement to the LAF for security expenses incurred in 2018,
which is an addition to existing foreign military funding. The United States has
also committed to provide $120 million in foreign military financing in 2021 to
support LAF operations and capacities, an increase in $15 million over last
year’s support, demonstrating “the ongoing U.S. commitment to Lebanon’s security
and stability.”
Lebanon caretaker premier pleads for aid, warns of social explosion
The Arab Weekly/July 06/2021
BEIRUT – Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister appealed on Tuesday for the
international community to save his country from “death and demise” as multiple
crises push it dangerously close to total collapse. “Lebanon is a few days away
from the social explosion. The Lebanese are facing this dark fate alone,” Diab
said in a speech at a meeting with ambassadors and representatives of diplomatic
missions in Beirut. Diab has been serving in a caretaker capacity since
resigning in the wake of the catastrophic August 4 Beirut port explosion. Since
then, fractious sectarian politicians have been unable to agree on a new
government. Diab also said only a new cabinet could re-start talks with the
International Monetary Fund (IMF). “This government does not have the right to
resume negotiations with the IMF to implement the recovery plan set by the
cabinet, for this entails obligations on the next government that it may not
endorse,” he said. Diab urged friendly nations to extend assistance despite the
lack of a new government, saying that linking aid to reform of a deeply-corrupt
system has become a “threat to the lives of Lebanese” and to the country’s
stability. Lebanon’s economic and financial crisis has unfolded since late 2019,
spiralling out of control in this country of over six million, including more
than a million Syrian refugees. A foreign currency shortage has crippled the
import-dependent nation, leaving residents struggling to find fuel, medicines
and basic supplies. Daily power outages last for hours, threatening hospitals
and food stores and leaving entire neighbourhoods in darkness. The World Bank
called it one of the worst crises since 1850s and described Lebanon’s economic
contraction as brutal. The national currency lost nearly 95% of its value,
plunging the once middle-income country into poverty. Inflation and unemployment
soared and waves of professionals have migrated abroad, seeking a better life.
The political crisis is rooted in decades of corruption and mismanagement by a
post-civil war political class that has accumulated debt and done little to
encourage local industries. Banks, once the country’s booming sector, have
imposed informal capital controls and depositors are unable to freely access
their accounts. Lebanon has been promised billions in international assistance,
pending a reform plan to deal with corruption. But vying for power and trading
blame, the political elite never agreed. “What sin have the Lebanese committed
to pay a dear price? Are the Lebanese people supposed to die at hospital’s doors
on the way to holding the corrupt accountable?” Diab said. “I appeal through you
to the kings, princes, presidents and leaders of brotherly and friendly
countries and I call upon the United Nations and all international bodies, the
international community and the global public opinion to help save the Lebanese
from death and prevent the demise of Lebanon,” he told the diplomats. Last
month, the European Union’s foreign policy chief told Lebanon’s leaders they
were to blame for the political and economic crisis and some could face
sanctions if they continue to obstruct steps to form a new government and
implement reform. Diab noted repeated calls for assistance to be linked to
reform, but said “the siege imposed” on Lebanon was not affecting the corrupt,
an apparent reference to politicians. He said Lebanese were running out patience
and “linking Lebanon’s assistance to the formation of a new government has
become a threat to the lives of the Lebanese and to the Lebanese entity.”
Diab Pleads for Aid as Crisis Worsens
Associated Press/July 06/2021
Caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab appealed on Tuesday on the international
community to save Lebanon from "death and demise" as multiple crises push it
dangerously close to total collapse. Diab's plea came as he spoke to diplomats
in Lebanon, where politicians have failed to agree on forming a new government,
nearly a year after Diab's Cabinet resigned. His government has been acting in
caretaker capacity since August 2020, when he stepped down following a massive
explosion at the Beirut Port that only compounded the country's crises. Diab
urged friendly nations to extend assistance despite the lack of a new
government, saying that linking aid to reform of a deeply corrupt system has
become a "threat to the lives of Lebanese" and to the country's stability.
Lebanon's economic and financial crisis has unfolded since late 2019, spiraling
out of control in the country of over 6 million, including more than a million
Syrian refugees. A foreign currency shortage has crippled the import-dependent
nation, leaving residents struggling to find fuel, medicines and basic supplies.
Daily power outages last for hours, threatening hospitals and food stores, and
leaving entire neighborhoods in darkness.
The World Bank called it one of the worst crises since 1850s and described
Lebanon's economic contraction as brutal. The national currency lost nearly 95%
of its value, plunging the once middle-income country into poverty. Inflation
and unemployment soared and waves of professionals have migrated abroad, seeking
a better life. The political crisis is rooted in decades of corruption and
mismanagement by a post-civil war political class that has accumulated debt and
done little to encourage local industries. Banks, once the country's booming
sector, have imposed informal capital controls and depositors are unable to
freely access their accounts. Lebanon has been promised billions in
international assistance, pending a reform plan to deal with corruption. But
vying for power and trading blame, the political elite never agreed. "What sin
have the Lebanese committed to pay a dear price? Are the Lebanese people
supposed to die at hospital's doors on the way to holding the corrupt
accountable?" Diab said. "I appeal through you to the kings, princes, presidents
and leaders of brotherly and friendly countries, and I call upon the United
Nations and all international bodies, the international community, and the
global public opinion to help save the Lebanese from death and prevent the
demise of Lebanon," he told the diplomats. "Lebanon is a few days away from
social explosion," he added. "The Lebanese are facing this dark fate alone."
How Hezbollah controls the economy in
Lebanon
George Eid CM Correspondent/Cyprus Mail/July
06/ 2021
جورج عيد/ هكذا يسيطر حزب الله على الإقتصاد في لبنان
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/100383/george-eid-cyprus-mail-how-hezbollah-controls-the-economy-in-lebanon-%d8%ac%d9%88%d8%b1%d8%ac-%d8%b9%d9%8a%d8%af-%d9%87%d9%83%d8%b0%d8%a7-%d9%8a%d8%b3%d9%8a%d8%b7%d8%b1-%d8%ad%d8%b2%d8%a8-%d8%a7%d9%84/
The Iran-backed militia group Hezbollah has done everything it can do to create
a parallel state in Lebanon. A ‘state within a state,’ many call it.
The Lebanese political class has still failed to form a government after 10
months, and the ensuing political vacuum has given room to Hezbollah to
demonstrate its abilities in managing the country through its apparently
well-developed social network, says a report released in May from Global Risk
Insights.
“Hezbollah is today the strongest political party in Lebanon, it is the only
party with its own military force and it forms with its allies a parliamentary
and ministerial majority.
This position allows Hezbollah to control the economy in Lebanon as much as the
country’s politics,” explains Jessy Trad Kastoun, senior Economics expert and
head of Business News at Lebanon’s Murr television.
For almost every public institution in Lebanon, Hezbollah has another that
provides the same service to the party supporters: their own security forces,
their own banking system called “Al Kard al hassan,” their own social security
and their own hospitals. In that regard Hezbollah has been weighing on the
Lebanese economy.
The parallel banking system, for example, operates when the official banks
cannot, according to the report. When traditional banks shut their doors and
froze dollar accounts, Hezbollah was able to supply hard currency through its
parallel banking system. The Al-Qard al-Hasan Association, literally the
“benevolent loan,” is managed as a charity, but, in fact, it can be considered a
banking system for all intents and purposes.
Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s leader, has encouraged depositing the money at Al-Qard
al-Hasan claiming that the bank had already provided $3.7 billion in loans to
some 1.8 million people. He depicted the association as rock-solid, declaring
that the Party’s supporters, who deposited money at the al-Qard al-Hasan,
managed to keep their money when banks claimed that they were unable to pay
their depositors in dollars.
To access the loans of the Association, customers must be sponsored by a
depositor or must mortgage an amount of gold that exceeds the value of the
requested loan. At the end of October 2020, the Al-Qard al-Hasan Association
began providing three new services. It equipped its branches with ATMs for its
clients to withdraw dollars whenever they need, it started buying and selling
gold for dollars, and it began providing gold storage for a small fee.
Control of borders, airports, ports
Kastoun points out in an interview with the Cyprus Mail that “it is well- known
that Hezbollah has tightened its grip on strategic Lebanese infrastructure such
as the border controls, the port, the airport and the telecom sector making it
possible to have its own trading channels, and through which it is also engaging
in smuggling. This creates a personalised economy within the national economy,
causing billions of dollars in revenue losses for the government.”
Hezbollah is thus able to import goods through the airport and the ports free of
tax. The group uses the pretext that these materials are for “resistance
purposes.” Authorities turn a blind eye, Kastoun says.
Complaints from business people about competing products on the market that
appear at below-cost have become rampant. These products, says Kastoun, are
sourced by Hezbollah.
Toni, 54 years old has been importing flowers to Lebanon for 30 years. He is in
wholesale. Five years ago he found that he could not keep up with the
competition. “Things got aggressive,” he told Cyprus Mail, on condition of
anonymity.
“Hezbollah is looking after the interests of its own people at the expense of
Lebanese economy. I used to import roses for, say, the price of 20 cents. With
all taxes paid, it is almost impossible to go below that.
Five years ago, a person from Hezbollah started importing for 15 cents. I was
about to close down my business, but instead I decided to start buying from him.
He imports tax free. It is insane but is happening. How I do not know!” Tony
complains.
Funding from illegal activities abroad
“Donations to Hezbollah are a form of funding to the group that has now
dedicated schools, hospitals, bank and trading institutions better established
then the public national Lebanese institutions” Kastoun explains.
These donations are usually made by wealthy Shia businesspeople who operate
under the wing of Hezbollah in Latin America and Africa in various illegal
trades, including drugs, she adds.
The US Counter- Narcoterrorism Operations Center announced in January 2020 that
Hezbollah was one of 25 foreign terrorist organisations that are involved in the
drug trade.
Hezbollah is also one of the main parties involved in the Syrian civil war since
2011, and this has also had an impact on the Lebanese economy. The Iran-backed
militia has used Lebanon as platform to break the embargo on Syria, Kastoun
continues.
“At the borders with Syria and since the start of the war, Hezbollah has ensured
a secure route for gasoline, food, and dollars from Lebanon to Syria.
The ongoing smuggling of gasoline and diesel is estimated to total about $10
billion from 2011 until the end of 2019, and these funds have led to a larger
balance of payments deficit. This has aggravated the foreign exchange crisis in
Lebanon.
Kastoun believes that the current collapse does fall in the best interest of
Hezbollah as which is being funded by Iran in US dollars. “This means that the
Hezbollah community will not endure the economic hardship that many others are
going through in Lebanon. But then again, for militia like Hezbollah, a poorer
population is easier to control” she concludes.
https://cyprus-mail.com/2021/07/06/hezbollah-controls-economy-lebanon/
United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon-UNIFIL
Tony Badran/FDD/July 06/2021
طوني بدران/القوات الدولية “اليونيفل” في لبنان
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/100379/tony-badran-fdd-united-nations-interim-force-in-lebanon-unifil-%d8%b7%d9%88%d9%86%d9%8a-%d8%a8%d8%af%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%86-%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%82%d9%88%d8%a7%d8%aa-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%af%d9%88%d9%84%d9%8a%d8%a9/
CONTENTS
International Organizations Monograph
Introduction
UN Security Council Resolutions (UNSCRs) 425 and 426 established the UN Interim
Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) in 1978 following Israel’s Operation Litani in
southern Lebanon. UNIFIL was tasked with “confirming the withdrawal of Israeli
forces, restoring international peace and security and assisting the Government
of Lebanon in ensuring the return of its effective authority in the area.”
In 2006, after the war between Israel and Hezbollah, UNSCR 1701 increased
UNIFIL’s size and updated its mandate. The force ballooned to over 10,000
soldiers (with a troop ceiling of 15,000) and employed a civilian staff of
around 900 employees, both foreign and local. UNIFIL’s annual budget stands at
around $512 million, of which the United States contributes roughly 28 percent,
or about $145 million.
UNSCR 1701 mandates UNIFIL to “accompany and support the Lebanese armed forces [LAF]
as they deploy throughout the South, including along the Blue Line” with Israel,
and to assist the LAF in “the establishment between the Blue Line and the Litani
river of an area free of any armed personnel, assets and weapons other than
those of the Government of Lebanon and of UNIFIL deployed in this area.”
The references to armed personnel and weapons are understood to mean Hezbollah
and its arsenal. UNSCR 1701 also authorizes UNIFIL “to take all necessary action
in areas of deployment of its forces … to ensure that its area of operations is
not utilized for hostile activities of any kind,” and “to resist attempts by
forceful means to prevent it from discharging its duties.”
UNIFIL includes a naval component, the Maritime Task Force, consisting of five
ships, to support the Lebanese Navy in “preventing the unauthorized entry of
arms or related materiel by sea into Lebanon.”
Problems
Hezbollah’s infrastructure and capabilities have grown exponentially since 2006
under UNIFIL’s nose. The group actually uses UNIFIL’s area of operations for
cross-border attacks into Israel, including breaches of the border fence. In
addition, Hezbollah erects observation and intelligence-gathering posts along
the border through a front environmental group connected to Hezbollah.
At the same time, the LAF impedes UNIFIL’s monitoring of the Blue Line,
according to a former UNIFIL liaison officer, a fact also noted in the UN
secretary-general’s latest report on the implementation of UNSCR 1701.
Hezbollah also constrains UNIFIL’s freedom of operation with attacks on the
force’s patrols as well as with harassment and obstruction by what are commonly
referred to as “local civilians.”
Video of a 2018 attack showed Hezbollah operatives assaulting a UNIFIL vehicle
and disarming its soldiers.
In 2020, “local civilians” mobbed and obstructed a Finnish patrol in the village
of Blida.
Former officers note how these attacks impeded UNIFIL’s access to villages. The
officers have also observed inertia at the command level, which seeks to avoid
confronting Hezbollah.
The LAF also inhibits UNIFIL by demanding that UNIFIL seek prior authorization
before inspecting “private property” – a pretext to deny access to suspect
sites. The LAF, for example, has denied UNIFIL requests to inspect a series of
Hezbollah attack tunnels revealed by Israel in 2018. The LAF further restricts
UNIFIL’s movement by regularly objecting to patrol routes UNIFIL proposes, under
the pretext that they are “private roads.”
Lebanese officials claim that inspecting Hezbollah arms depots or removing its
weapons from the area south of the Litani, UNIFIL’s area of operations, is out
of the question. Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Kelly Craft
therefore described the Lebanese government as an accomplice of Hezbollah in
obstructing and denying UNIFIL access.
UNIFIL’s Maritime Task Force, which is supposed to ensure no illegal weapons are
smuggled to Hezbollah by sea, is limited by its mandate, which authorizes the
force merely to hail suspect vessels and then refer them to the LAF navy for
inspection.
In 2019, Israel briefed the Security Council that Iran was smuggling “dual-use
items” by sea, specifically through the Port of Beirut, “to advance Hezbollah’s
rocket and missile capabilities.”
This is likely a reference to Hezbollah’s lethal and growing precision-guided
munitions arsenal, provided by Iran in recent years. But none of the 15,000
ships referred to the Lebanese authorities for inspection have ever been
declared to be carrying materiel for Hezbollah. This suspicious behavior
continues. In the period between June and October 2020, UNIFIL referred 245
vessels to the LAF for inspection. According to the UN secretary-general’s
report on that period, six of those referrals “were not acted upon.” UNIFIL did
not receive clarification as to why.19
Recommendations
The Trump administration failed to amend UNIFIL’s mandate to allow for more
robust patrolling, unrestricted access, and increased freedom of operation. In
2020, the United States threatened to veto renewal of the force’s mandate unless
modest reforms were adopted. Under diplomatic pressure, the Trump administration
backed down and supported the mandate’s renewal with minor changes that did not
alter the longstanding status quo.
Given UNIFIL’s long record of failure, the Biden administration and Congress
should consider the following policy options:
Veto UNIFIL’s mandate. The Security Council and troop-contributing nations are
highly unlikely to agree to structural changes necessary for UNIFIL to bypass
the obstruction by Hezbollah and the Lebanese authorities. Consequently,
UNIFIL’s continued failure to enforce an area of operations “free of any armed
personnel, assets and weapons” that is “not utilized for hostile activities of
any kind” is a foregone conclusion. Therefore, the only meaningful way forward
is to veto the renewal of UNIFIL’s mandate at the Security Council in August
2021.
Transfer UNIFIL’s liaison function to the Office of the UN Special Coordinator
for Lebanon. UNIFIL’s liaison function, which consists of the Tripartite Forum
with the Israel Defense Forces and the LAF, is sometimes cited as a useful
mechanism worth keeping. However, retaining the forum does not require keeping a
bloated force with a half-billion-dollar budget. The liaison function requires a
staff of no more than a dozen people.
Withhold Funding. If the Biden administration extends the status quo and renews
UNIFIL’s mandate, which has failed to advance U.S. interests, Congress should
withhold U.S. assessed contributions to UNIFIL.
Notes
UN Security Council, Resolution 425, March 19, 1978. (http://unscr.com/en/resolutions/425);
UN Security Council, Resolution 426, March 19, 1978. (http://unscr.com/en/resolutions/426)
UN Security Council, Resolution 1701, August 11, 2006. (http://unscr.com/en/resolutions/1701)
UN Interim Force in Lebanon, “UNIFIL Maritime Task Force,” accessed May 27,
2021. (https://unifil.unmissions.org/unifil-maritime-task-force)
Tony Badran, “Hezbollah’s Environmental Warriors,” Tablet Magazine, June 27,
2017. (https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/israel-middle-east/articles/hezbollahs-environmental-warriors);
Dion Nissenbaum and Nazih Osseiran, “A Row Over Trees Could Spark the Next
Israel-Lebanon War,” The Wall Street Journal, June 28, 2020. (https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-row-over-trees-could-spark-the-next-israel-lebanon-war-11593345635)
Maxime Perez, “Le blues des Casques bleus au Liban,” Le Journal du Dimanche
(France), February 23, 2018. (https://www.lejdd.fr/International/Moyen-Orient/au-liban-le-blues-des-casques-bleus-3578882)
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous
Reports And News published on
July 06-07/2021
Pope Francis 'Had Breakfast and
Walked' after Operation
Agence France Presse/July 06/2021
Pope Francis, 84, on Tuesday had breakfast and got up to walk, two days after
undergoing surgery for an inflamed large colon, the Vatican announced. "His
Holiness Pope Francis rested well during the night," spokesman Matteo Bruni said
in an update following Sunday's operation. "This morning he had breakfast, he
read some newspapers and got up to walk." Bruni added that the results from
routine check-ups "are good". The Argentine pontiff underwent a planned
operation on Sunday for what the Vatican described as symptomatic diverticular
stenosis of the colon. Also known as diverticulitis, it is a potentially painful
inflammation of pockets that form in the colon. The three-hour operation was
conducted under general anesthetic and Francis underwent a left hemicolectomy,
in which the descending colon -- the part attached to the rectum -- is removed.
The remaining bit of the colon is then attached directly to the rectum.On
Monday, Bruni said the pope was "in good general condition, alert and breathing
spontaneously", adding that he would stay in Rome's Gemelli hospital for around
seven days unless there were complications.
Open surgery
According to Italian newspapers, the surgeons initially planned to carry out a
less invasive laparoscopy on the pope but in the end reverted to open surgery.
Also known as keyhole surgery, laparoscopy involves a thin tube being inserted
into the body, avoiding the need for large incisions in the skin. But the
presence of a scar from previous abdominal surgery required a laparotomy, a type
of open surgery, the reports said. Health experts say it is not unusual to
change method during an operation. The reports added that the pope did not
require a colostomy and there was no evidence of a fever afterwards. Francis is
in the same suite on the 10th floor of the Gemelli hospital used by Pope John
Paul II. The late pope underwent surgery there a number of times, including
after an attempt on his life in 1981, and for a tumor in the colon in 1992. He
was there so often that he dubbed it "Vatican 3", third in line after the tiny
city state and the papal summer palace at Castel Gandolfo outside Rome. Pope
Francis had been suffering pain from diverticulitis for several months, but
scheduled the surgery for the summer to allow time to convalesce, according to
Corriere della Sera newspaper. The pontiff had already put his Wednesday general
audience on hold for the summer, and has no other official appointments in his
calendar until Sunday, when he is due to lead the Angelus prayer. If, as
expected, he is still in hospital on Sunday, he could follow John Paul II's
example and lead the prayers from his hospital window.
Canada Names First Indigenous Governor General
Naharnet/July 06/2021
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday appointed Mary Simon as Canada's first
indigenous governor general, Queen Elizabeth's official representative. "We are
honored to have Ms. Simon as Canada's first Indigenous governor general,"
Trudeau told a news conference.
Two attacks, less than 12 hours apart, target US forces in
Iraq
Jerusalem Post/July 06/2021
Attacks on US forces in Iraq are rapidly increasing. This coincides with other
issues in the region.
A day after rumors of an attack on US forces in Syria by pro-Iran militias, they
made good on their threats with two rounds of attacks on the US in Iraq. During
the afternoon, rockets targeted Al-Asad base; by the evening, drones were
reported to have targeted an area near the US embassy.
The attack on Al-Asad base was carried out in a rare daylight attack. Pro-Iran
militias have attacked American facilities increasingly since 2019, killing a
contractor in December 2019 and several members of the US-led coalition in early
2020. Washington has retaliated with airstrikes. So far this year there have
been about 50 attacks on the US in Iraq, often targeting either Baghdad, Al-Asad
base or Erbil. The pro-Iran militias, most linked to Kataib Hezbollah, have
increasingly used drones. This is thought to be at least the 11th incident where
drones were used. The US has only a few facilities in Iraq where forces are
concentrated, including Al-Asad base, Union III near the embassy, a site at the
airport and a site at Erbil airport. In April, a drone used by pro-Iran militias
targeted a secret CIA hangar in Erbil. In late June, drones targeted an area
near the new US consulate.
In retaliation, US president Joe Biden ordered airstrikes against pro-Iran units
in Syria. The pro-Iran militias in Syria, linked to the IRGC and Iraq, then
targeted US forces at Omar oil field a week ago. On July 4, it was rumored that
the pro-Iran groups again targeted the Americans in Syria. The US-led coalition
denied the attack but pro-Iran media and channels linked to the IRGC said the
attack happened. Now, on July 5, two attacks have occurred in Iraq. The attack
on Al-Asad base initially was reported to involve rockets, perhaps the 107mm
that most Iran groups favor using. The coalition said “initial report: At
approx. 2:45 p.m. local time, Ain Al-Assad Air Base was attacked by three
rockets. The rockets landed on the base perimeter. There are no injuries, and
damage is being assessed.”
Then after midnight, but less than 12 hours after the first attack, sirens were
triggered at the US embassy area and Union III facility near the embassy. C-RAM,
which is a kind of munition used to down mortars, was used to try to stop the
drone threat. Reports today also showcased a drone that was used several days
ago and which set off alarms near the US embassy. It was a quadcopter. Kataib
Hezbollah also reportedly released an image showing underground missile silos.
Attacks on US forces in Iraq are rapidly increasing. This coincides with other
issues in the region, such as tensions in Syria, mysterious fires and electrical
outages in Iran, and discussions over a return to the Iran deal, as well as
Israel-Iran tensions.
Iran power outage crisis leads politicians to slam their
own policy
Jerusalem Post/July 06/2021
This unprecedented overt critique about the country’s problems apparently
reveals the depth of the problem and Iran is not alone.
Power outages are causing disruptions across Iran and protests are increasing.
Pro-government media have now admitted that outages are taking place and warn
that things could get worse. This is a major challenge for President-elect
Ebrahim Raisi. Mohammad Qalibaf, the speaker of parliament, appeared to
criticize the government’s policies this week with a post about how the
“frequent power outages throughout the country and disruption of people’s lives
and businesses require planning and management. If the increase in consumption
and excess demand is not compensated in the short term for any reason, at least
stick to the announced blackout schedule so that people can plan for problems.”
This unprecedented overt critique about the country’s problems apparently
reveals the depth of the problem and Iran is not alone. Iraq is also suffering
unprecedented electricity supply problems and this has been made worse by terror
attacks on power lines in Iraq. This means that a whole swathe of territory from
Jordan to Pakistan is suffering both extreme heat and power outages. Reports
indicate that demand far outweighs supply and the shortfall is said to be a
massive 11 gigawatts, an unprecedented daily gap. Things are so bad that a clock
in Iran that supposedly “counts down” to Israel’s destruction, has reportedly
stopped due to the outages. Iran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant even had to be
taken off-line several weeks ago for maintenance but it’s back on the grid now.
With the power outages come reports of protests and anger at the regime. Videos
of alleged protests are spreading on social media. Some posts said that Iranians
were chanting “death to the dictator” in response to the outages. Much of Iran’s
infrastructure is old and Iran has also wasted investments in exporting
electricity to Iraq to make Baghdad dependent on the Islamic Republic. It has
had to cut power to Iraq and has had rolling power outages that reached Tehran
this week. According to Iran International, a Persian media station located in
London, “large parts of the Iranian capital Tehran and Karaj, a city west of
Tehran, as well as other cities were plunged into darkness Saturday night to
early Sunday as a result of unannounced power cuts.” These were not expected and
the hot summer has angered many over lack of air conditioning. “Iran’s power
consumption this summer has topped 60 GW per day, a more than 10% increase
compared with last year, while electricity generation has remained unchanged at
50-56 GW.”By contrast in May, California, whose population is half the size of
Iran, was also concerned it might need an additional 11 GW transfer of power in
the afternoon due to reduced solar power output, according to a report.
California uses 63 GW in extreme heat conditions. Iran’s power grid and
abilities are far behind those of California and now the country may be in for
more blackouts and protests.
Death to Khamenei’: Protests erupt in Iran over power
outages
Yaghoub Fazeli, Al Arabiya English/06 July ,2021
Protests broke out in several cities in Iran this week over repeated power
outages, videos posted on social media showed, with some protests turning
political with chants against the country’s highest authority, Supreme Leader
Ali Khamenei.
One video from the city of Shiraz showed protesters chanting “death to the
dictator” and “death to Khamenei” in the dark on Monday. In another video,
protesters in a residential area in Tehran could be heard chanting “death to the
dictator” and “death to Khamenei” from darkened high-rises. Another video posted
on social media showed protesters gathered outside the local electricity office
in Shahr-e Rey, south of Tehran, demanding the resignation of the energy
minister, who they described as “incompetent,” in their chants. Iranian state
media, which rarely covers news of protests, reported on Monday on protests in
several cities in northern Iran. “Protesters said the frequent power outages had
caused many problems, including water cuts in apartments, spoilage of meat and
poultry and other items in refrigerators, and damage to household appliances,”
the semi-official ISNA news agency reported from the northeastern town of
Kordkuy. Officials have blamed the blackouts on surging demand for power, along
with low rainfall cutting hydroelectric output and illegal cryptocurrency mining
farms accessing subsidised electricity. President Hassan Rouhani apologised to
Iranians on Tuesday over the power outages. “I apologise to our dear people who
have faced problems and suffering in the past few days and I urge them to
cooperate (by curbing power use). People complain about power outages and they
are right,” Rouhani said during a cabinet meeting broadcast live on state
TV.“The Energy Ministry is not at fault ... but the minister should come and
explain to the people what the problem is, and we have to find a solution,” said
Rouhani.
- With Reuters
Iran informs IAEA of plans to produce enriched uranium up
to 20 pct purity
Reuters/06 July ,2021
Iran has given notice of concrete steps to produce uranium metal enriched to up
to 20 percent purity for reactor fuel, the U.N. atomic watchdog said on Tuesday,
describing a move that is likely to anger Western powers in talks to revive the
Iran nuclear deal. Iran has been in indirect talks with the United States since
April to revive the 2015 deal, which former US President Donald Trump abandoned.
The deal imposed curbs on Iran’s nuclear program in return for the lifting of
sanctions, and after Trump withdrew, Iran began violating many of its
restrictions. Tehran has already produced a small amount of uranium metal this
year that was not enriched. That is a breach of the deal, which bans all work on
uranium metal since it can be used to make the core of a nuclear bomb. Iran has
outlined plans to produce enriched uranium metal, saying it is developing fuel
for its Tehran Research Reactor, but Washington and its European allies dispute
Tehran’s intentions and have called on it to stop. “Today, Iran informed the
Agency that UO2 (uranium oxide) enriched up to 20 percent U–235 would be shipped
to the R&D laboratory at the Fuel Fabrication Plant in Esfahan, where it would
be converted to UF4 (uranium tetrafluoride) and then to uranium metal enriched
to 20 percent U–235, before using it to manufacture the fuel,” an International
Atomic Energy Agency statement said. Summarizing a report to its member states,
the IAEA described the plan as a “multi-stage process”, suggesting it will take
time before the enriched metal is produced. The report is likely to increase
tensions in the talks, which also include the other parties to the 2015 deal.
The talks adjourned on June 20 and a date for their resumption has not yet been
set.
US withdrawal from Afghanistan is more than 90 pct
complete: Pentagon
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/06 July ,2021
The United States military has completed more than 90 percent of its withdrawal
from Afghanistan, the Pentagon said in a statement released on Tuesday. Since
the President’s decision, the DoD has retrograded the equivalent of
approximately 984 C-17 loads of material out of Afghanistan and have turned
nearly 17,074 pieces of equipment to the Defense Logistics Agency for
disposition,” the statement read. The Pentagon added that the US had
“officially” handed over seven facilities to the Afghan Defense Ministry. “The
withdrawal process continues; US Central Command estimates that we have
completed more than 90 percent of the entire withdrawal process,” Tuesday’s
statement said.
Russian government hackers breached Republican National Committee last week
Bloomberg/06 July ,2021
Russian government hackers breached the computer systems of the Republican
National Committee last week, around the time a Russia-linked criminal group
unleashed a massive ransomware attack, according to two people familiar with the
matter.
The government hackers were part of a group known as APT 29 or Cozy Bear,
according to the people. That group has been tied to Russia’s foreign
intelligence service and has previously been accused of breaching the Democratic
National Committee in 2016, and of carrying out a supply-chain cyberattack
involving SolarWinds, which infiltrated nine U.S. government agencies and was
disclosed in December. It’s not known what data the hackers viewed or stole, if
anything. An RNC spokesman on Tuesday denied its systems were breached and
referred to an earlier statement.
“Microsoft informed us that one of our vendors, Synnex, systems may have been
exposed,” said Mike Reed, a spokesman for the RNC said on Saturday. “There is no
indication the RNC was hacked or any RNC information was stolen. We are
investigating the matter and have informed DHS and the FBI.”
A spokesperson for the Russian Embassy in Washington didn’t immediately respond
to a request for comment. The attack on the RNC, coupled with the recent
ransomware attack, is a major provocation to President Joe Biden, who warned
Russian President Vladimir Putin about cyberattacks at a June 16 summit. It’s
not clear if the attack on the RNC is connected in any way to the ransomware
attacks, which exploited multiple previously unknown vulnerabilities in software
from Miami-based Kaseya.The hackers are suspected to have attacked the RNC
though one of its IT providers, Synnex Corp., the people said. In a press
release, Synnex said “it is aware of a few instances where outside actors have
attempted to gain access, through Synnex, to customer applications within the
Microsoft cloud environment.”“As our review continues, we are unable to provide
any specific details,” said Michael Urban, president of worldwide technology
solutions distribution at Synnex in a statement to Bloomberg News. “As with any
security issue, a full review of all companies, systems, third-party
applications and related IT solutions must be completed before final
determinations can be made.”
Russian intelligence hackers are taking advantage of the chaos created by the
global ransomware campaign to attack valuable intelligence targets, one of the
people familiar with the matter said. The ransomware attack -- which
cybersecurity experts attributed to a Russia-linked group called REvil -- may
have hit more than 1,000 victims. Kaseya provides software for managed service
providers, who in turn offer IT services to small- and medium-sized businesses.
REvil has demanded $70 million in Bitcoin to unlock the victims’ computers,
according to cybersecurity experts who reviewed an announcement on the group’s
website. Kaseya said in a statement that fewer than 60 customers were
compromised by the attack, all of whom used its VSA on-premises product. “While
many of these customers provide IT services to multiple other companies, we
understand the total impact thus far has been to fewer than 1,500 downstream
businesses,” Kaseya said. Charles Carmakal, a senior vice president at Mandiant,
part of the cybersecurity company FireEye, said his firm has observed the
Russian government hackers carrying out breaches in recent days, though he
declined to identify the victims. Carmakal said he had no first-hand knowledge
of the RNC breach. “No question, the Russian government is absolutely benefiting
from security companies and intelligence organizations being so focused on
ransomware right now,” Carmakal said. “But the question is, is the Russian
government providing tacit approval for ransomware operators or are they
providing instructions? I don’t know.”“Is it just coincidental timing for the
Russian government to do some of the other things they’re doing right now?”
Carmakal said. “Is this coordinated and planned? I have no idea. I know that
both things are happening, that’s a fact, I just don’t know why.”
US Secretary calls for negotiated, indefinite ceasefire in
call with Ethiopia's Abiy
Reuters/Published: 06 July ,2021
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in a call with Ethiopian Prime Minister
Abiy Ahmed on Tuesday stressed the need for all parties to commit to an
immediate, indefinite, negotiated ceasefire, the State Department said. Blinken
also urged Abiy to commit to steps outlined by the United Nations Security
Council last week, including the withdrawal of both Eritrean and Amhara forces
from Ethiopia's Tigray region, State Department spokesman Ned Price said in a
statement. “The Secretary condemned the destruction of bridges into Tigray and
other impediments to access,” Price said. “In addition, the Secretary emphasized
the urgency of holding an inclusive political dialogue to begin the difficult
work of forging a lasting resolution to the country’s ethnic and political
divisions,” Price added.
ISIS targets electricity lines in Iraq to spread mayhem
Jerusalem Post/July 06/2021
“About 44 to 45 electricity towers in Iraq have been targeted by terrorists in
recent days, most of which have been repaired,” say local reports. Iraqi
security forces have a new problem to deal with, as ISIS terrorists have been
attacking electric power lines, usually the kind that travel long distances on
large pylons. The worldwide jihadist group has attacked dozens in recent weeks.
Now Iraq says that it ambushed some of the terrorists near the city of Hit. It
has succeeded in thwarting attacks in Diyala province. For Iraq, this is
only a minor respite in a hot summer where it appears that not enough
electricity is being generated. Blackouts are normal. Iran is also not
transferring electricity to Iraq because it has a crisis. ISIS has started
attacking this infrastructure as a way to send a message that it still controls
the countryside. Many Iraqis use generators or are forced to go without
electricity when this happens.
“About 44 to 45 electricity towers in Iraq have been targeted by terrorists in
recent days, most of which have been repaired,” say local reports.
Meanwhile, in other parts of Iraq, there have been increasing attacks on US
forces by pro-Iran militias. ISIS is also attacking Iraqi checkpoints in some
parts of the country. This means that Iraq faces numerous challenges to its
basic security. Iran is trying to grab parts of Iraq and pressure the US to
leave; ISIS is trying to grab another part. Stuck in the middle are ordinary
Iraqis, the autonomous Kurdistan region and areas where people want a respite
from decades of war and privation.
Israel PM Suffers Defeat over Arab Family Unification Ban
Agence France Presse/July 06/2021
Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett suffered defeat Tuesday as lawmakers
failed to extend a law that denies Israeli citizenship and residency rights to
Palestinian spouses from the West Bank and Gaza. The ban first enacted in 2003
during the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising, has been justified by
supporters on security grounds but critics derided it as a discriminatory
measure targeting Israel's Arab minority. Bennett, a hardline religious
nationalist, supports the measure that has highlighted cracks in his
ideologically disparate eight-party coalition, which has a wafer-thin majority
in Israel's 120-seat parliament, the Knesset. In talks that ran through the
night, the coalition sought a deal that would see nearly all of its members vote
for the measure, including Jewish left-wingers and two Arab lawmakers from the
conservative Islamic Raam party.
In exchange, the government would grant residency or citizenship rights to more
than 1,500 Palestinians with pending requests who have been living in Israel for
many years. But that compromise failed when a member of Bennett's hawkish Yamina
party, Amichai Chikli, voted with the opposition, tweeting Tuesday that the
fracas over the bill exposed "the problematics of a government" that relies on
the nominally anti-Zionist Raam party and the Jewish left. "Israel needs a
functioning Zionist government, and not a mismatched patchwork," said Chikli, a
vocal sceptic of the coalition crafted by his party leader Bennett last month.
His defection left parliament tied at 59 votes to 59, meaning the measure would
lapse later Tuesday. Bennett had called for members of the right-wing opposition
led by former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to support the measure in a plea
for unity on national security grounds. According to Israel's N12 website,
Netanyahu told members of his Likud party "the importance of toppling the
government is greater" than renewing the ban. "This isn't just a law. It's a law
that exposes the fault line in this government," added Netanyahu, who has made
no secret of his desire to oust Bennett and reclaim the premiership he held for
12 consecutive years. Raam leader Mansour Abbas, the first Arab party chief to
ever join an Israeli coalition, told army radio that the coalition needed to
"take stock" after the setback and would hold talks on the next steps. Interior
Minister Ayelet Shaked, also of Yamina, tweeted that the ban's expiry could
bring 15,000 Palestinian applications for Israeli citizenship.
'Partial victory'
The ban has caused endless complications for Palestinians living across Israel
and the territories it has occupied since 1967. A substantial number of those
affected live in annexed east Jerusalem and therefore have Israeli residency,
without necessarily being citizens of the Jewish state. In a protest against the
measure outside parliament on Monday, some recounted the hardships of seeking
permits to join their spouses, or the risks of entering Israeli territory
without permission. Ali Meteb told AFP that his wife not having Israeli
residency rights had confined his family to a "continuous prison." "I am asking
for rights that the state owes us... for my wife to have Israeli ID, residency
rights and freedom of movement," he said. Jessica Montell, the head of Hamoked,
an Israeli human rights group that provides legal services to Palestinians, said
"tens of thousands of families are harmed by this law."Jaafar Farah, the head of
the Mossawa Center that campaigns for the rights of Arab Israelis, said the
failure to renew the law marked "a partial victory" in an 18-year battle that is
"not over," condemning the family unification ban as "racist collective
punishment."
Eight Murders in a Month in Syria Camp
Agence France Presse/July 06/2021
A camp in northeast Syria housing Islamic State group relatives saw at least
eight murders last month, Kurdish forces said Tuesday, the latest of dozens of
such killings since January. Kurdish forces have struggled to maintain security
inside the sprawling tent city of Al-Hol, which is home to some 62,000 people,
mostly women and children. The United Nations has warned of radicalization
inside the camp, which houses Syrians, Iraqis and some 10,000 foreign women and
children linked to IS in a separate annex.
In June, IS cells inside Al-Hol "carried out more killings of residents
distancing themselves from the extremist ideas of the group", the Kurdish-led
Syrian Democratic Forces said. It said eight people of Syrian and Iraqi
nationality were shot dead, among them a 16-year-old Iraqi refugee and two
Syrian sisters aged 17 and 23. A Russian woman was wounded. The SDF also added
that 42 women and men and 43 children, of different nationalities, were caught
trying to smuggle themselves out of the camp in June. In early April, the SDF
said they had captured 125 suspected IS members in a security sweep in Al-Hol,
which is in Hasakeh province. At the time, the group said 47 killings had taken
place in the three months since the start of the year. Syria's Kurds hold
custody of thousands of suspected IS fighters in jails, and their relatives in
camps, after expelling the jihadists in 2019 from the last patch of territory
they controlled. The Kurdish authorities have repeatedly urged the international
community to repatriate their nationals, but most countries have so far taken
back only some of the children. Beyond the camps, the International Committee of
the Red Cross last week sounded the alarm over the Kurdish authorities holding
"hundreds of children" in adult prisons. The Kurds responded by urging
international help to set up more rehabilitation centers for minors linked to
the extremists. IS overran large parts of Syria and neighboring Iraq in 2014,
before several military offensives led to their territorial defeat in eastern
Syria in March 2019. However, jihadist sleeper cells continue to launch regular
attacks in both countries.
Iran sees ‘good progress’ in talks with Riyadh but
admits to snags
The Arab Weekly/July 06/202
TEHRAN – Iran reported “good progress” on Tuesday in talks with regional rival
Saudi Arabia but said some of their disputes are complex and may take time to
resolve. Saudi Arabia and Gulf allies continue to express objections to Iran’s
nuclear and ballistic missile programmes as well as its support for militant
proxies in pursuit of expansionist agendas. Iranian-Saudi tensions have festered
over Tehran’s support for the Houthis in the Yemen war and escalated following a
2019 attack on Saudi oil plants. Iran has criticised the Gulf Arab states’ close
ties with Washington and moves by some of them to normalise relations with
Israel. “Good progress has been achieved in these talks … In some cases,
disputes may have complexities that take time to resolve,” Iranian government
spokesman Ali Rabiei told a news conference carried by state media. In a bid to
contain tensions between them, Saudi Arabia and Iran began direct talks in
April. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz said at the time Riyadh
wanted good ties with Tehran, adopting a more conciliatory tone as he tries to
balance long-held animosity with economic considerations and bridge differences
with Washington over how to tackle Tehran’s regional behaviour. After the
election of Ebrahim Raisi as president, the kingdom’s foreign minister Prince
Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud said last month, Riyadh will judge Iran’s government
by “the reality on the ground,” while adding that Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei has the final say on foreign policy. Raisi said after his election in
June that he wanted to improve ties with Gulf Arab neighbours while calling on
regional rival Saudi Arabia to immediately halt its intervention in Yemen. The
Saudi foreign minister said he was “very concerned” about unanswered questions
on Iran’s nuclear programme, an apparent reference to the UN nuclear watchdog
seeking explanations on the origin of uranium particles found at undeclared
sites in Iran. Analysts said progress in Vienna could determine the momentum in
direct talks between Riyadh and Tehran.
Buoyed by Raisi’s election, Iraqi militia leader vows ‘open war’ on US
The Arab Weekly/July 06/2021
BAGHDAD - The leader of an Iran-aligned Iraqi militia has vowed to retaliate
against the United States for the deaths of four of his men in an airstrike
along the Iraq-Syria border last month, saying it will be a military operation
everyone will talk about.
Abu Alaa al-Walae, commander of Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada, said in an exclusive
interview with The Associated Press in Baghdad that the electoral victory of
Iran’s hardline judiciary chief Ebrahim Raisi as president will strengthen
Iran-aligned groups throughout the Middle East for the next four years. Walae,
who rarely gives interviews to foreign media organisations, spoke to the AP on
Monday in an office in a Baghdad neighbourhood along the Tigris River. On June
27, US Air Force planes carried out airstrikes near the Iraq-Syria border
against what the Pentagon said were facilities used by Iran-backed militia
groups to support drone strikes inside Iraq. Four militiamen were killed. The
Popular Mobilisation Forces, an Iraqi state-sanctioned umbrella of mostly Shia
militias, including those targeted by the US strikes, said their men were on
missions to prevent infiltration by the Islamic State group and denied the
presence of weapons warehouses. US troops in eastern Syria came under rocket
fire the day after the airstrikes, with no reported casualties.
Tensions with US
The US has blamed Iran-backed militias for attacks, most of them rocket strikes,
that have targeted the American presence in Baghdad and military bases across
Iraq. Recently, the attacks have become more sophisticated, with militants using
drones.
US military officials have grown increasingly alarmed over drone strikes
targeting US military bases in Iraq, more common since a US drone killed Iranian
General Qassem Soleimani near the Baghdad airport last year. Iraqi militia
leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis was also killed in the attack. The strike drew the
ire of mostly Shia Iraqi lawmakers and prompted parliament to pass a non-binding
resolution to pressure the Iraqi government to oust foreign troops from the
country. In mid-April, an explosives-laden drone targeted the military section
of the international airport in Irbil, in Iraq’s northern Kurdish-run region,
causing no casualties nor damage. The base also hosts American troops.US
officials said Iran-backed militias have conducted at least five drone attacks
since April. After midnight Monday, a drone was shot down near the US Embassy
compound in Baghdad. There were no casualties. Two US military officials said
the drone was launched by Iranian proxies, adding that it was weaponised with
explosives and was loitering over the US-led coalition base in Baghdad. The
officials said it was too early to identify the type of the drone. The US
Embassy said defence systems at the compound “engaged and eliminated an airborne
threat.” The statement added that “we are working with our Iraqi partners to
investigate” the attack. Walae, wearing a black shirt and trousers and an
olive-green baseball cap, hinted that his militiamen might use drones in future
attacks. He did not go into details. When asked if they used drones in the past
against American troops in Iraq, he gave no straight answer and moved to other
subjects.“We want an operation that befits those martyrs,” he said referring to
the four fighters killed in late June. “Even if it comes late, time is not
important.”“We want it to be an operation in which everyone says they have taken
revenge on the Americans,” Walae said. “It will be a qualitative operation (that
could come) from the air, the sea, along Iraq’s border, in the region or
anywhere. It’s an open war.”
Pinning hopes on Raisi
Walae spoke in an office decorated with a poster of Soleimani. On a table next
to him, a framed photo shows Walae standing next to Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, the
leader of Lebanon’s Hezbollah group. Walae praised Iran’s new president, Raisi,
who is scheduled to take office next month, saying Iran-backed militant groups
“will have their best times.”Days after he was elected last month, Raisi said in
his first remarks after the vote that he rejects the possibility of meeting
President Joe Biden or negotiating Tehran’s ballistic missile program and
support of regional militias. Walae, who was once held prisoner by US troops in
Iraq, boasted that his men were among the first to go to neighbouring Syria to
fight alongside President Bashar Assad’s forces in 2012, a year after the civil
war there broke out. He said their first mission was to protect a Shiite holy
shrine south of the capital, Damascus. They later fought in different parts of
Syria. Iran-backed fighters from throughout the region have joined Syria’s
conflict, helping tip the balance of power in Assad’s favour. Thousands of
Iran-backed fighters remain in Syria, many of them deployed close to the Iraqi
border in the towns of Boukamal and Mayadeen. Walae also said he does not expect
Iraq’s parliamentary elections to take place on time in October, saying they
might be postponed until April next year. He attributed the delay to the deep
crisis the country is experiencing, including severe electricity cuts during the
scorching summer.
In change of strategy, Cairo sees Haftar as just one of its
cards in Libya not its main ally
The Arab Weekly/July 06/2021
CAIRO – Egypt’s openness to the interim authorities in Tripoli has reduced its
reliance on Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar, commander of the Libyan National Army
(LNA).
Some analysts cite his absence a few days ago, from the opening ceremony of the
” July 3″ naval base close to the border with Libya as proof of the relative
fraying of the relationship between the two sides. By comparison, the LNA chief
was present at the opening of the near-by Mohammed Najib base four years
ago.Observers believe that the presence of the President of the Libyan
Presidency Council, Muhammad al-Menfi and the absence of Haftar were further
evidence that Egypt has begun to adjust its approach, focusing its attention on
the Tripoli-based and internationally-backed authorities. Haftar may still wield
military influence and play a role combating terrorism, in a way that has helped
Egypt secure a part of its border with Libya. However, in the final analysis,
the LNA leader does not enjoy political legitimacy and if any forces deal with
him either secretly or publicly it is only because he is part of the reality on
the ground. The main turning point in Egypt’s relationship with Haftar was his
military advance towards Tripoli in April 2019 under the pretext of liberating
it from the grip of militias and other armed groups. These forces controlled at
least part of the political decision-making process and supported the interests
of their benefactors in doing so. Egyptian political sources told The Arab
Weekly that Cairo was wary at the time that the LNA’s movement towards Tripoli
could be a “trap” for Haftar, considering the great distance between Benghazi
and Tripoli, the difficulty of moving troops and equipment and the complexity of
war in a city that has turned into a hub for armed militias. Haftar was
determined to carry out his plan under the pretext that he had received a green
light from major powers. But he pulled back about a year later after his
offensive failed. He has since tried to preserve what remains of his forces in
the eastern region. Egypt’s reservations about Haftar’s unprofessional military
behaviour increased when his inflated ego became an immediate burden for Cairo.
Every time he flexed his muscles, attention turned to Egypt as his main backer,
which made the government of Abdel Fattah al-Sisi lose any claim to impartiality
and limited its margin of manoeuvre vis- a-vis international powers involved in
the Libyan political settlement process.
The same Egyptian sources told The Arab Weekly, “Haftar’s role has become
problematic. Egypt does not want to abandon him completely and search for an
alternative to him. But it does not want to mortgage its interests with him
after the rapid changes that occurred since he withdrew from Tripoli last year.
The aloofness of Saudi Arabia and the UAE towards the Libyan National Army
commander has encouraged Cairo to adjust its position towards him.”Cairo took
advantage of the transformations to try to demonstrate that its relationship
with Libya was not limited to the east. It opened up to many players in the west
and south so as to perform a more effective role and contain Turkey’s growing
influence which benefits greatly from Egypt’s absence from Tripoli. Cairo has
reset its relationship with the Libyan House of Representatives, the Tobruk
branch and its president, Ageela Saleh. At the same time, it has reached out to
the Tripoli branch of parliament, which encouraged Saleh to expand his circle of
relations and enter into talks with the Libyan State Council and its
Brotherhood-affiliated leader Khaled al-Meshri. Saleh’s approach was interpreted
by Cairo as a form of political pragmatism.
Egypt has nonetheless endeavoured to maintain the cohesion of the eastern front
(Haftar-Ageela), even as its calculations changed.
Observers describe the relationship between Egypt and Haftar as very complex,
which makes it seem to be wavering. But the field marshal is still a card among
others for Egypt in the Libyan crisis, for war or for peace. Egypt is distancing
itself from the Libyan National Army in the east without actually severing its
ties with the force. It sees that its only alternative now is to work for the
unification of the armed forces as a key factor in the security and stability of
Libya, including the border with Egypt. Should this step fail, Egypt will fall
back on ensuring the cohesion of east-based forces under Haftar and other
reliable commanders, especially since most senior officers affiliated with the
LNA have been trained in Egypt. Observers also believe that the resilience of
this card, that of Haftar and the LNA, is important for Egypt for other reasons.
The ambiguity surrounding the political process and the lack of determination on
the part of the international community to deal with foreign interventions and
mercenaries, may mean that war could erupt again with the same intensity as
before. Egypt still fears the spectre of partition and sees the need for a
military force that can keep Libya’s eastern region together, as it is an area
of prime importance for Egypt. It considers the region as part of Egypt’s vital
space alongside its oil riches that should not fall in the hands of Cairo’s
rivals. These considerations are likely to determine the direction of Egypt’s
wavering stance over Haftar and its policies in Libya in the foreseeable future.
Russia Again Posts Record Coronavirus Deaths
Agence France Presse/July 06/2021
Russia reported 737 coronavirus deaths on Tuesday, a national record of
pandemic-related fatalities over a 24-period, as the country battles a new surge
in cases. It marks the first time Russia, the fifth worst-hit country in the
world for the number of infections, has crossed the 700-mark for daily virus
deaths. Russia has set six new pandemic highs for Covid-19 deaths in the last
eight days as it fights a surging outbreak driven by the highly transmissible
Delta variant. In Moscow, the epicenter of Russia's outbreak, the Delta variant
first identified in India now accounts for 90 percent of new cases, the city's
mayor Sergei Sobyanin has said. He has ordered offices to send home a third of
their unvaccinated employees and restaurants to allow inside only patrons who
have been vaccinated or infected in the past sixth months. He has also mandated
that 60 percent of service industry workers must be fully inoculated by
mid-August.
As of Tuesday, just 1.8 million of Moscow's population of 12 million had been
fully vaccinated, according to the Gogov website, which tallies Covid data from
the regions. Nationwide the total stood at just 18.2 million of Russia's some
146 million people.
Authorities have faced a vaccine-sceptic population, with an independent poll
this week showing that 54 percent of Russians do not plan on getting a Covid
jab. The Kremlin had set a goal of fully inoculating 60 percent of Russia's
population by September, but conceded last week that it would not be able to
meet that target even though free jabs have been available since early December.
With 139,316 deaths from the virus, Russia has the highest official Covid toll
in Europe -- even as authorities have been accused of downplaying the severity
of the country's outbreak.
The Latest The Latest LCCC English
analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on
July 06-07/2021
Iranian presidential selection paves new
path for nuclear extortion
Behnam Ben Taleblu/Andrea Stricker/Washington Examiner/July 06/2021
Following a performative election on June 18, Iran will have a new president:
the hard-line Ebrahim Raisi. Raisi’s rise will likely mean a different nuclear
negotiating team after August in Vienna, where Iran and six world powers,
including the United States, are working to revive the 2015 nuclear deal known
as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.
Despite the new leader’s rhetorical support for nuclear diplomacy, the Raisi
presidency offers Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei the option to increase his demands
and further extort the West. Washington should not let Tehran use the time
between the new president’s inauguration as a mechanism to wrest more appealing
terms.
Raisi has a long history of service to Iran’s brutal legal system. In 1988,
Raisi and several other clerics oversaw mass executions of political prisoners
in one of the worst acts of violence in the country’s 42-year history. Raisi
also supported Tehran’s crackdown on protesters during the 2009 Green Movement.
In 2019, he was sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department for his promotion to
the position of chief justice.
Raisi’s stance on nuclear diplomacy notwithstanding, Khamenei has the final say
on all of Iran’s foreign and security policy matters. This point was underscored
recently by U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan, who acknowledged the
regime’s actual leader “was the same person before this election as he is after
the election.”
It would behoove Washington, then, not to rush to resurrect the nuclear deal
before Raisi’s team enters office, since Iranian negotiators will almost
certainly try to use the inauguration to their advantage. Iranian Foreign
Affairs Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif is no stranger to the good cop-bad cop
routine, and he successfully began employing this stratagem against America and
Europe more than a decade ago. Paradoxically, Raisi’s reputation as someone who
will inevitably toughen demands on Washington means Iran’s greatest extortion
could happen well before August. What’s more, the outgoing negotiating team is
already briefing Raisi on the status of the talks.
Iran has taken its tough-guy act to the International Atomic Energy Agency,
which wants answers from Tehran about suspect nuclear activities. The IAEA also
needs to know if Iran will hand over agency data and video surveillance tapes,
which may or may not still record information at the regime’s nuclear sites.
Iran limited its nuclear monitoring agreements back in February, and now Iran’s
ambassador to the IAEA has announced that Tehran is “not required to comply”
with requests for clarity from the agency’s beleaguered director general until
it gets sanctions relief.
This IAEA spat foreshadows Iran’s evolving approach and demands ahead.
In his first speech after winning the presidency, Raisi demanded that Washington
lift all sanctions before the regime comes back into compliance with the JCPOA.
Raisi also ruled out broader negotiations over Tehran’s regional activities and
missile program, early targets for talks by then-President-elect Joe Biden,
whose administration has since made vague pledges to reach a “longer and
stronger” follow-on nuclear accord.
Now, Tehran is repeating demands that America lift all sanctions imposed after
Washington’s 2018 withdrawal from the JCPOA. These sanctions, which target
Iran’s regional networks, illicit trade, and missile and military programs, aim
to impede Tehran’s security policy and drive down revenues. Reportedly, Iranian
negotiators are even demanding broader delistings to enable financial flow and
foreign investment in Iran. The regime may frame these as reparations for U.S.
withdrawal from the JCPOA and, until they are provided, refuse to reverse
advancements in Iran’s uranium enrichment program. Tehran is certain to continue
denying cooperation with the IAEA.
Iran is sure to back its stipulations through Tehran’s time-tested mechanism of
using regional attacks and nuclear advances to obtain concessions. Through proxy
militias, for example, Tehran may augment assaults against U.S interests in
Iraq, create mayhem for Persian Gulf shipping, or strike additional Saudi
targets. In the nuclear arena, Khamenei and his Supreme National Security
Council could instruct the new hard-line Parliament to pass a law requiring
fresh nuclear advances. The Parliament passed a similar law late last year to
increase Iran’s leverage against the Biden administration.
Iranian atomic officials followed through on implementing the law, installing
numerous advanced centrifuges, producing a sensitive nuclear weapon material
called uranium metal, and enriching uranium to a level of 20% purity (later
jumping to 60%, which was not stipulated in the law). In February, Iran also
stopped implementing the Additional Protocol to its IAEA safeguards agreement
and reduced JCPOA monitoring provisions, which limited IAEA oversight of
sensitive nuclear sites and activities.
If major Western concessions are not forthcoming, a new nuclear law might even
“require” Tehran to notify the United Nations Security Council of its intent to
begin a three-month withdrawal process from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
under the treaty’s Article X. Iran could also move to produce 90% enriched
uranium, which is suitable for nuclear weapons.
Ideally, U.S. and European delegations would not return to Vienna for a seventh
round of JCPOA talks and would instead cancel the flawed and expiring JCPOA and
re-initiate a multilateral sanctions regime against Iran. Since the West seems
intent to push forward, negotiators should anticipate the worst and swiftly
counter Iranian attempts to extract more concessions.
The Raisi presidency could represent Iran’s biggest test for the West as an
aging and unpopular regime tightens the reins. The international community
should remember that a regime comfortable with extortion will never be satisfied
— nor should it be appeased. Three years after the Trump administration’s
maximum pressure sanctions, the Iranian economy desperately requires relief.
Biden and his European counterparts should recognize the immense leverage they
possess and not allow Iran to dictate nuclear terms through extortion, be it
under the Rouhani or Raisi presidencies.
*Behnam Ben Taleblu is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies, where Andrea Stricker (@StrickerNonpro) is a research fellow. FDD
is a nonpartisan think tank focused on foreign policy and national security
issues.
United Nations Relief and Works Agency
Richard Goldberg/FDD/International Organizations Monograph/July 06/2021
CONTENTS
Introduction
In 1947, the UN General Assembly voted to partition the British Mandate of
Palestine into two states, one Jewish and one Arab. After Israel declared
independence within the boundaries of the Jewish state, Arab armies declared war
and attempted to destroy it. The conflict lasted from May 1948 to March 1949 and
ended in an armistice agreement but not a formal peace.
The war produced both Arab and Jewish refugees. Israel absorbed roughly 800,000
Jewish refugees exiled from Arab states during and after the war. Arab
governments, however, refused to absorb a similar number of Arab refugees. The
UN General Assembly established the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) in 1949
to care for Palestinian Arabs displaced by the 1948–1949 Israeli War of
Independence.
Today, even though most of the original refugees are no longer alive, UNRWA
provides health care, education, and other basic government-like services in the
West Bank, Gaza, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon. Not accounting for inflation, from
1950 to 2018, American taxpayers contributed more than $6 billion to UNRWA. The
United States suspended funding for UNRWA in 2018.1 The Biden administration
announced on April 7, 2021, that it would resume funding to UNRWA without any
concrete plans for reform.2
Problems
In 1950, the UN General Assembly established the position of UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to assist refugee populations around the
world. UNRWA, having a separate mandate, was not included – and today remains
the only nominally refugee-focused agency independent of UNHCR. Unlike UNHCR’s
mandate to provide “durable solutions” to refugees, including voluntary
repatriation, local integration, and third-country resettlement, UNRWA has no
such mandate.3 The agency openly declares that it “has no authority to seek
lasting durable solutions for refugees, including resettlement in third
countries.”4 This creates a dynamic whereby refugee status endures across
multiple generations, leading UNRWA to claim today that more than 5 million
people are registered as Palestinian refugees.
Unlike many UN agencies to which the United States provides large sums of
funding, UNRWA has no board of directors to conduct oversight and steer the
organization. The agency’s inefficiency and bloated bureaucracy is readily
apparent. UNRWA serves a population of more than 5 million people with a staff
of roughly 30,000, while UNHCR serves more than 20 million people worldwide with
a staff of only 10,000.
In recent years, Congress has raised concerns about an UNRWA school headmaster
moonlighting as a terrorist, UNRWA schools storing weapons and launching rockets
against Israel, and issues related to waste, fraud, and abuse.5 In January 2021,
UNRWA’s secretary-general acknowledged that the agency’s educational curricula
refer to Israel as the “enemy,” teach math by counting “martyred” terrorists,
and include the phrase “Jihad is one of the doors to Paradise” in grammar
lessons.6
While UNRWA asserts there are 5 million Palestinian refugees, then-U.S.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced in January 2021 that less than 5
percent of people registered with UNRWA meet the internationally recognized
criteria for refugee status.7 Most are citizens of Jordan or residents of the
West Bank or Gaza – that is, they are currently living in the territory they
seek for a future state of Palestine.
UNRWA’s mandate and inaccurate labeling of people as refugees perpetuates
conditions conducive to instability and violence in the Middle East. UNRWA
raises generation after generation of Palestinian children to believe that they
are entitled to occupy homes that do not belong to their families but that
Palestinians claim should be part of a Palestinian state. Israel, of course,
would never open its doors to several million individuals who see it as an
enemy.
Achieving an overhaul of UNRWA’s operations and mandate will face several
hurdles. Changing UNRWA’s mandate requires a vote by the UN General Assembly.
For internal political reasons, the Kingdom of Jordan has opposed the idea of
transitioning UNRWA’s operations in Jordan to bilateral U.S. assistance. Amman
fears that either the millions of Palestinians living in Jordan or Muslim
Brotherhood instigators could respond by protesting the kingdom’s abandonment of
the Palestinian “right of return,” thus fomenting instability. Hezbollah control
of Lebanon, Hamas control of Gaza, and the Palestinian Authority’s refusal to
acknowledge fewer numbers of legitimate refugees further complicate moving away
from UNRWA to bilateral assistance channels.
At the same time, however, the Abraham Accords open new opportunities for
dialogue with Arab partners on this issue. UNRWA’s institutionalization of the
Arab world’s war on Israel is now outdated – and perhaps threatens the
advancement of normalization agreements between Arab states and Israel. Indeed,
the agency perpetuates the myth of a Palestinian “right of return” and generates
Palestinian resentment toward Arab governments choosing to normalize. The United
Arab Emirates notably suspended funding for UNRWA earlier this year until “steps
are taken to manage funds more efficiently.”8
Recommendations
The Biden administration and Congress must recognize that with less than 5
percent of the people served by UNRWA meeting the internationally recognized
criteria for refugee status under the 1951 Refugee Convention, UNRWA is not a
refugee agency. Rather, it is a politicized welfare agency riddled with
oversight deficiencies and operating on an outdated mandate intended to block
Arab-Israeli peace. UNRWA not only stands in the way of Arab-Israeli
normalization and Palestinian-Israeli reconciliation; it also prevents millions
from building better lives.
Congress is taking incremental steps to address concerns over UNRWA’s
educational curricula, while a group of senators are demanding that more
comprehensive conditions be placed on U.S. assistance.9 As Congress considers
the Biden administration’s decision to resume funding, members of both parties
should consider imposing conditions on U.S. assistance. These conditions should
require UNRWA to:
Allow annual U.S.-led expenditure and beneficiary verification audits.
Establish a board of governors for oversight.
Change UNRWA’s mandate to integrate populations wherever they live and terminate
the organization within five years.
Transition responsibility for populations served by UNRWA to host governments by
the end of the five-year period, including steps to transition U.S. assistance
from multilateral assistance to bilateral assistance in all geographic areas of
transition wherever allowed under U.S. law.
Transition responsibility for at-risk displaced Palestinians, such as those in
Syria, to UNHCR, which is already operating in the area.
During the proposed five-year transition period, technical teams from the U.S.
Agency for International Development and other agencies should design programs,
projects, and budgets to help Palestinians achieve economic independence and
long-term opportunities.
The Biden administration and Congress should encourage Arab states normalizing
with Israel that are donors to UNRWA, starting with the United Arab Emirates, to
support UNRWA reforms and increase their financial support to Palestinians
during this transition period. This process can be a win-win for Arab
governments – removing a future impediment to normalization, while increasing
support for the Palestinian people.
Notes
“U.S. Foreign Aid to the Palestinians,” Congressional Research Service, December
12, 2018. (https://fas.org/sgp/crs/mideast/RS22967.pdf)
Matt Spetalnick and Stephen Farrell, “U.S. restores assistance for Palestinians,
to provide $235 million in aid,” Reuters, April 7, 2021. (https://www.reuters.com/article/us-palestinians-usa-blinken/u-s-restores-assistance-for-palestinians-to-provide-235-million-in-aid-idUSKBN2BU2XT)
UN High Commissioner for Refugees, “UNHCR Global Appeal 2004,” December 31,
2003. (https://www.unhcr.org/3fc754593.pdf)
UN Relief and Works Agency, “Frequently Asked Questions,” accessed May 26, 2021.
(https://www.unrwa.org/who-we-are/frequently-asked-questions)
Adam Entous, “Gaza headmaster was Islamic Jihad ‘rocket-maker,’” Reuters, May 5,
2008. (https://www.reuters.com/article/idINIndia-33413620080505); Ilan Ben Zion,
“Rockets found in UNRWA School, for third time,” The Times of Israel (Israel),
July 30, 2014. (https://www.timesofisrael.com/rockets-found-in-unrwa-school-for-third-time);
“UN admits Palestinians fired rockets from UNRWA schools,” UN Watch, April 7,
2015. (https://unwatch.org/un-admits-palestinians-fired-rockets-unrwa-schools);
“Report: UNRWA violations regulations,” The Jerusalem Post (Israel), September
28, 2006. (https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/report-unrwa-violating-regulations)
READ MORE
What is China Buying in the Biden Administration?
Peter Schweizer/Gatestone Institute/July 06/2021
The simple fact is that there are large, powerful donors to the Biden campaign
that have big financial stakes in these green energy companies. It is a wealth
transfer to Biden's biggest bundlers, and that is a huge and massive problem.
For those companies with inside connections to the Biden campaign, it is
American taxpayer money that is truly "shovel-ready."
Former congressmen and senators, and former US ambassadors are being paid large
sums of money by governments such as China, or by firms directly linked to those
governments, which do not have America's best interest at heart. They are
lobbying in Washington to get their paymasters' voices heard.
If you invest a couple of million dollars, let us say, in lobbying, or you
invest a couple of million dollars in campaign contributions, often you can get
benefits that are worth ten times that. For Wall Street and Silicon Valley, the
prospect of doing deals in China is mesmerizing. To do those deals in China, as
they have learned, you must play nice with the regime, speak well of them,
feather their nests.... It is no less tempting for American politicians.... Of
greatest concern are the deals that actually advance Chinese state interests.
There is no other way to state this. The only way we can correct this situation
is by exposing these people and showing U.S. citizens exactly what they are
doing in our society. [J]ust before the 2020 election, the [New York Times ran a
piece by its "media reporter" bragging about their role as gatekeepers that
would not pursue the Hunter Biden story. For Wall Street and Silicon Valley, the
prospect of doing deals in China is mesmerizing. To do those deals in China, as
they have learned, you must play nice with the regime, speak well of them,
feather their nests.... It is no less tempting for American politicians.... Of
greatest concern are the deals that actually advance Chinese state interests.
Pictured: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (second from right) speaks while
facing Yang Jiechi (second from left), director of the Central Foreign Affairs
Commission Office, and Wang Yi (left), China's Foreign Minister at the opening
session of US-China talks in Anchorage, Alaska on March 18, 2021.
What is China buying in the Biden Administration? A look to the recent past may
provide some answers. If you go back to 2009-10 and look at the "shovel-ready"
stimulus package that President Barack Obama pushed through, as most people now
know, there were huge amounts of money in the form of direct grants and loan
guarantees that went to Solyndra and other "green energy" companies that failed.
Yet, the question remained: Where did all that taxpayer money go for green
energy?
If you trace it, you will find that 80 percent of that money went to green
energy companies that were owned by individuals who sat on Barack Obama's
Finance Committee for his 2008 campaign.
Now that Obama's former VP is president, another infrastructure package will
include plenty of expenditures for more green schemes. Whether they work or
whether they will simply raise our energy prices, the simple fact is that there
are large, powerful donors to the Biden campaign that have big financial stakes
in these green energy companies. It is a wealth transfer to Biden's biggest
bundlers, and that is a huge and massive problem. For those companies with
inside connections to the Biden campaign, it is American taxpayer money that is
truly "shovel-ready."
The present circumstances compounds one problem -- crony capitalism is extremely
profitable – which brings a second problem -- the flushness of foreign cash.
Former congressmen and senators, and former US ambassadors are being paid large
sums of money by governments such as China, or by firms directly linked to those
governments, which do not have America's best interest at heart. They are
lobbying in Washington to get their paymasters' voices heard. If you invest a
couple of million dollars, let us say, in lobbying, or you invest a couple of
million dollars in campaign contributions, often you can get benefits that are
worth ten times that.
The second problem is related to the source of funds. We see an increasing
influx of foreign money into Washington, DC. Some of it comes from these foreign
companies; they will set up a US affiliate, and then that US affiliate will make
campaign contributions. For many years we all believed that closer commercial
ties with China would liberalize their political system. Free-traders and
internationalists alike agreed on this. The reverse happened. When you look at
what China's leader, President Xi Jinping, has done in the last seven years,
China has become more repressive internally, more aggressive internationally,
and more dangerous militarily. But there was one nugget of truth -- economic
bonds with China seem to have caused a convergence of interests with many
American elites.
For Wall Street and Silicon Valley, the prospect of doing deals in China is
mesmerizing. To do those deals in China, as they have learned, you must play
nice with the regime, speak well of them, feather their nests. All of this makes
you implicitly more pro-Beijing. Just ask LeBron James. It is no less tempting
for American politicians.
Of greatest concern are the deals that actually advance Chinese state interests.
Deals involving part of a mine in the Congo, Africa, with another Chinese
company that was going to help fight the minerals war and help China get access
to strategic minerals. Or China General Nuclear Power Group, that was later
implicated by the FBI for stealing nuclear secrets in the United States. Or a
deal with Cosco, the Chinese overseas shipping company, to buy the national
railway system of Greece. Greece was privatizing assets, and China wanted to buy
it. They already owned a port.
This was part of China's One Belt One Road initiative, which the Obama
administration itself had said was an effort by China to counteract and overcome
the United States around the world. This is not a simply a case of, "Oh, gosh,
corruption is terrible."
This is actually a case of aiding Chinese state-backed companies that are
engaging in transactions that are advancing the strategic interest in Chinese
government -- not just payola but something far more troubling. China seems to
have a lot of influence in the current White House, and that this puts the Biden
administration in a bit of a bind. Public opinion in the U.S. has shifted
against China, chiefly because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but also because
Americans are finally realizing how vulnerable and dependent on China we have
become.
The time-honored ruse by politicians in such a bind is to reverse Theodore
Roosevelt's advice by speaking loudly and carrying a small stick. Biden's
administration, whatever its rhetoric, does not seem prepared to do the real
work. The evidence of foreign entanglements by its principal actors suggests
that China continues to have the administration's ear.
If the Biden administration truly wants to counteract some of this dependence,
it runs contrary to statements that Biden has made in the past, and contrary to
some of the, let us say, entangling relationships that his most senior
administration officials have relating to China. It would have to take on those
entanglements, and those of some major campaign donors from both Wall Street and
Silicon Valley.
There is no other way to state this. The only way we can correct this situation
is by exposing these people and showing U.S. citizens exactly what they are
doing in our society. This is the job of responsible voices in the press, yet
there is little evidence they are up to the challenge. Six years ago, the New
York Times ran a 4,000-word front page story that confirmed the main assertions
of the book, Clinton Cash. Yet, just before the 2020 election, the Times ran a
piece by its "media reporter" bragging about their role as gatekeepers that
would not pursue the Hunter Biden story. My goal and hope is that the next book
will be the beginning of a broader effort to hold the press, as well as our
political, business, and technology leaders accountable.
*Peter Schweizer, President of the Governmental Accountability Institute, is a
Gatestone Institute Distinguished Senior Fellow and author of the best-selling
books Profiles in Corruption, Secret Empires and Clinton Cash, among others.
© 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.
Russia will benefit from the US-China economic Cold War
Rami Rayess/Al Arabiya/July 06/2021
With a new Cold War on the horizon between China and the United States, Russia
will step in as the major beneficial actor, after the two superpowers are
mutually exhausted. Both Washington and Beijing have been courting Moscow, each
from its own perspective, to tilt the balance in the ongoing confrontation with
the other. Putin will watch happily attempting to exploit his country’s leverage
to manipulate developments to his advantage.
In the past century, the traditional Cold War between Washington and Moscow
meant deep polarization across the globe. Countries were to choose on which side
they stood. Bi-polar tension dominated international relations for decades.
This new Cold War is different: its objectives, tools and players are not the
same anymore. Trade and the economy rather than nuclear weapons are the
determinant factors of power in this era.
China and Russia are still ideologically similar, both standing against the
West, but not as Communist comrades. Communism has been left behind as the
embrace of market economics is firm. Their relations are very much affected by
each country’s relations with Washington. For example, when the US paved the way
for China to join the WTO back in 2001, and Obama and Medvedev developed a
positive relationship it was China that was left on the back seat.
Further back in time, China was ready to give up on its Soviet ally when
President Richard Nixon paid his historical visit to China in 1972. During
Trump's Presidency, mild steps of rapprochement were witnessed before relations
deteriorated again.
Both China and Russia will break this “marriage of convenience” when one gets
closer to Washington. Of course, contemplating total political and economic
divorce between each other is unimaginable but toying with Washington’s
affection is fun for both.
There’s a plus for Moscow when the US and China are at loggerheads. Russia can
focus more attention and resources to maintain a high threat level to the
European Union which still considers the country a primary security problem.
Moscow’s hard power policies in Georgia in 2008 and annexing Crimea in 2014 are
two examples that conflict with China’s soft power strategies. Beijing is
silently and gradually building its influence through mega economic plans
similar to the Belt and Road Initiative.
Chinese Foreign Direct Investment in Africa in 2019 totaled $110 billion, almost
double that of American investments on the continent which reached almost $42
billion in the same year. The EU’s priority is substantially different from that
of the US. This is again where Moscow can benefit to advance its standing in the
new Cold War. What is the unquestionable priority for Washington, is less so for
its strongest allies in Europe.
China can manipulate Russia too. By meddling in Central Asia, which Moscow
considers its own backyard, mutual accusations of espionage are examples of the
two powers combat for their own interests.
In international relations, there is no such thing as full harmony between two
states, regardless of how close they are and no matter how they confront a
common enemy together. China and Russia are not an exception.
A more manipulative Russian approach in the new Cold War will also send signals
to China that Moscow is not simply a follower, it has power to do more than
that.
Moscow can advance as Washington and Beijing are stuck within the framework of a
Thucydides trap where a dangerous dynamic occurs when a rising power threatens
to displace the ruling order.
Despite the fact that Russia lags behind economically in comparison to China and
the US, it is powerful enough to reserve its place at the big table.
The constantly changing relations that exist between the three states reminds of
George Orwell's novel, “1984.” Three superpowers manipulating the status quo to
conspire to allow two at war and one always at peace. We are now witnessing the
giant powers morph their position on the global stage depending on the moment.