English LCCC Newsbulletin For
Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For June 29/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
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Bible Quotations For today
Make My joy complete: be of the same mind, having
the same love, being in full accord and of one mind. Do nothing from selfish
ambition or conceit, but in humility regard others as better than yourselves
Letter to the Philippians 02/01-11:”If then there
is any encouragement in Christ, any consolation from love, any sharing in the
Spirit, any compassion and sympathy, make my joy complete: be of the same mind,
having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind. Do nothing from
selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility regard others as better than
yourselves. Let each of you look not to your own interests, but to the interests
of others. Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus, who, though he
was in the form of God, did not regard equality with God as something to be
exploited, but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, being born in human
likeness. And being found in human form, he humbled himself and became obedient
to the point of death even death on a cross. Therefore God also highly exalted
him and gave him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus
every knee should bend, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every
tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the
Father.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on June 28-282021
The Cancerous Lebanese Political Parties/Elias Bejjani/June 28/2021
Health Ministry: 66 new Corona cases, two deaths
Lebanon’s economic collapse bites hard in neglected north
Lebanon central bank starts giving credit for fuel imports at weaker rate
Lebanon banks to close in solidarity with Lebanese Swiss Bank after staff
assaulted
Lebanese troops deploy around Tripoli following protests amid economic crisis
Protests erupt in Lebanon ahead of fuel price hike, severe power shortages
Two journalists in Lebanon released after reportedly being detained by Hezbollah
Aoun Calls for Higher Defense Council Meeting
Aoun Asks Ministers, Administrations to Curb Fuel Crisis
Report: Idea to Resolve Christian Seats Hurdle Emerges, Bassil Still Adamant
Russian Team in Lebanon to Study Rebuilding Destroyed Silos
Diab Tackles Unofficial Exchange Rate Platforms, Slams Riots
Blast Rocks Lawyer's Office in Furn el-Chebbak
Hizbullah Strongly Condemns U.S. Strike on Iran-Backed Groups
Titles For The Latest English LCCC
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on June
28-282021
Two injured in stabbing in German city of Erfurt
4 killed in US airstrikes on Iran-backed militias in Iraq, Syria
Iran-backed PMU threatens revenge after fighters killed in US airstrikes
US must stop its interference in the region, Iran says after overnight
airstrikes
Iran will never get a nuclear weapon, US President Biden tells Israeli
counterpart
Lapid to Blinken: Disagreements about Iran deal can be worked out quietly
Iraq, Egypt, Jordan prioritise economics at Baghdad summit, leave questions
unanswered
Political solution only way to resolve Syrian crisis: Saudi FM
Oman contacts with Israel highlight normalisation prospects
Palestinian minister to resign as government faces mounting pressures
Ethiopia declares immediate, unilateral Tigray ceasefire after 8 months of
conflict
Libya talks seek to pave way for December elections
Poland Summons Israeli Envoy over WWII Claims Row
Ministerial Meeting of the Global Coalition to Defeat Daesh/ISIS
Joint statement on the ministerial meeting on Syria
Canada/Minister Garneau meets with Indonesian counterpart
Canada/Minister Garneau speaks with Italian counterpart
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC
English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on June
28-282021
Supreme Court Cheerleads for First Amendment/Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone
Institute/June 28/2021
Will US airstrikes be a gamechanger for Biden’s Mideast policy? - analysis/Seth
J. Frantzman/Jerusalem Post/June 28/2021
Beat, Raped, and Left for Dead: The Persecution of Christians, May 2021/Raymond
Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/June 28/201
A personality type that feels absolutely no guardrails': How Saudi Arabia's
leader charmed Washington while cracking down on opponents/Michael Isikoff/Yahoo/June
28/2021
In Ebrahim Raisi, Iran’s clerics have groomed and promoted their ruthless
enforcer/Reuel Marc Gerecht/Ray Takeyh/The Washington Post/June 28/2021
U.S. Targets Turkey-Based Money Laundering Schemes With Links to Senior Turkish
Officials/Aykan Erdemir/FDD/June 28/2021
Canadian Forensic Report Confirms Iran Bears Full Responsibility for Airliner
Downing/Dylan Gresik/FDD/June 28/2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News & Editorials published
on June 28-282021
The Cancerous Lebanese Political Parties
Elias Bejjani/June 28/2021
Quite frankly and with a peaceful conscience, we can say loudly that all the
political parties in occupied Lebanon are mere thugs, Trojans and puppets. They
serve their owners' hunger and greed for power and riches. The sole focus of all
these parties is on securing ways and means to their owners' individual
ambitions and agendas.
The parties hypocrite owners know nothing about honesty, patriotism, hope or
faith. They are extremely cancerous and actually accountable for all the
disasters and hardships that Lebanon and the Lebanese are facing and going
through from A to Z and foremost the Iranian occupation.
These parties handed over the country to Hezbollah, with shame succumbed to its
occupational Iranian anti-Lebanese scheme and betrayed the Lebanese people and
state.
These same parties are currently advocating for parliamentary elections under
the Hezbollah hegemony umbrella in an evil bid to legitimize its occupation
The first step in Lebanon's recovery and salvation must start with abandoning
all these parties and by stoning their mercenary and malevolent owners.
Health Ministry: 66 new Corona cases, two deaths
NNA/June 28/2021
In its daily report, the Ministry of Public Health announced on Monday the
registration of 66 new Coronavirus infections, thus raising the cumulative
number of confirmed cases to-date to 544,520.
It added that two deaths were also recorded during the past 24 hours.
Lebanon’s economic collapse bites hard in neglected
north
Reuters/28 June ,2021
Taha Riz has worked just three days in more than a month at his Tripoli bakery,
in Lebanon’s neglected north where economic meltdown has hit hardest and plunged
thousands like him into precarious poverty. The bakery, like Tripoli itself,
survived earlier hardship when sectarian tensions fuelled by the war in
neighboring Syria exploded into clashes on the street outside, but its ovens are
now cold and its shelves hold only two bags of flour. A victim of Lebanon’s
economic collapse, Riz says the bakery has slashed its workforce from 25 to two,
and he has worked only three days since a religious holiday in mid-May – most
recently baking two trays of sweets worth 50,000 Lebanese pounds, or just $3.30
on the informal market. “We used to work, now we borrow and spend,” says the
33-year-old father of two daughters, whose wife is expecting a third child soon.
The bakery which used to order flour by the ton now buys supplies like sugar and
ghee in small bags of a few kilos, after demand for its sweet pastries
evaporated and people cut their spending to the bare essentials. “Unfortunately
north Lebanon has been hit much more than the other parts of Lebanon. The
situation there is very dramatic,” said Bujar Hoxha, Lebanon director for the
relief organization Care International. He said large numbers of businesses had
shut and jobs had been wiped out. Even for those still in work, salaries in
dollar terms are worth only a tenth of their 2019 level, while food prices rise
relentlessly. The World Bank says Lebanon’s economic collapse is one of the
world’s sharpest implosions in modern history. The caretaker government says it
can no longer use foreign reserves to subsidize food and fuel. It hopes to offer
financial support to poorer families as it reduces subsidies, but may not have
the resources or political authority to deliver it.
Across the country, the proportion of people living in poverty and needing food
assistance may hit 70 percent this year, Hoxha said, forcing aid groups to
urgently refocus their operations. “When Care International entered Lebanon we
actually entered to support Syrian refugees,” he said.
After nearly a decade helping Syrians, the organization saw the Lebanese crisis
emerging two years ago. “We readjusted our strategies and reoriented our
resources,” he said.
Child labor
The spike in poverty has hit young and old alike. Shadi Lababidi, 16, left
school more than a year ago to work full-time repairing car components, saying
he wanted to help his parents through difficult times. “I’m happy at work but it
would be better if I was at school. I’m working to help my family,” he said at
the workshop where he fixes fiberglass car body parts. “Everything’s expensive
and a dollar is 15,000 pounds. Even a packet of crisps costs 2,000 pounds.” He
says he earns between 75,000 and 100,000 pounds a week – or less than $7. His
life revolves around work and sleep, but he dreams of getting out of Tripoli to
see his country, from the ancient city of Baalbek in the Bekaa valley to the
famed cedar trees in Lebanon’s mountains. “I want to have a permanent job which
is decent, to get some money to help my parents, to live like other people
instead of living this miserable life”. In a one-room ground floor apartment,
73-year-old Nuzha Hamza lives with her unemployed son and her daughter who has
Down’s Syndrome. A survivor of Lebanon’s 15-year civil war, she now tries to
make money sorting and packing bunches of vine leaves for grocers, earning 2,000
pounds (13 cents) per kilo. “If I have (money) I eat. If I don’t, I don’t eat,”
she says. Like others hit by the scale and speed of Lebanon’s breakdown, she
increasingly relies on aid to get by, receiving monthly cash support from Care
while Lebanon’s politicians fail to agree even the first step to help - forming
a new government to tackle the crisis.
“It’s like a kingdom of absence - absence of institutional support towards
citizens,” Hoxha said of the political paralysis which has prompted the relief
sector to step into the vacuum and provide emergency aid.
“This feels like a post-conflict situation, as if there had been a war two, four
or six weeks ago. There are no mechanisms, no institutions.”
Lebanon central bank starts giving credit for fuel
imports at weaker rate
Reuters/ 28 June ,2021
Lebanon’s central bank said on Monday it would open credit lines to import fuel
at 3,900 Lebanese pounds to the dollar, a weaker rate than previously offered
that effectively raises the costs for ordinary Lebanese amid a crippling
economic crisis. Under a subsidy program, the central bank had been using 1,500
pounds to the dollar, the official rate used for all transactions until the
crisis that erupted in late 2019 precipitated a currency collapse. The street
rate for the pound is now over 17,000 to the dollar.Lebanon’s caretaker prime
minister had on Friday approved a proposal to finance the imports at the new
rate amid worsening fuel shortages. Lebanon is in the throes of a deep financial
crisis dubbed by the World Bank as one of the worst depressions in modern times.
Basic goods such as medicine and fuel are running short as financing dries up.
Motorists in the past few weeks have had to queue for hours at gas stations to
get barely any fuel, leading to violence in which gunshots were fired in some
instances. The weaker exchange rate, which will effectively decrease the subsidy
on fuel, is expected to raise the price of gasoline for consumers but enable the
government to supply fuel for a longer period of time. The central bank had
asked the government to provide it with the correct legal permission to dip into
its mandatory reserves in order to provide financing for fuel, an indication
that the bank has all but run out of foreign reserves. Mandatory reserves - hard
currency deposits parked by local lenders at the central bank - represent a
percentage of customer deposits and are usually not drawn upon other than in
exceptional circumstances. Lebanon’s subsidy program, which covers wheat,
medicine and fuel, costs it around $6 billion a year, half of which goes to
fuel.
Lebanon banks to close in solidarity with Lebanese Swiss
Bank after staff assaulted
Reuters/28 June ,2021
Banks in Lebanon will close on Tuesday in solidarity with the Lebanese Swiss
Bank after it said staff at its headquarters had been assaulted by individuals
seeking access to closed accounts, the Banks’ Association said in a statement on
Monday.
The Lebanese Swiss Bank said in a statement it would close its branches and
offices for the day after about a hundred men barged into the headquarters and
assaulted its employees. It said the individuals who attacked the bank belonged
to an organization called Baneen, a charity in southern Lebanon, that had held
accounts with the bank but were closed on legal grounds. The bank statement said
the men forced bank employees to make money transfers to Turkey. Baneen
president Mohamed Baydoon denied use of any force and said the transfer of funds
was done amicably. It was not immediately clear why the accounts had been
closed. Lebanon is on the verge of political and economic collapse as the
country has been left adrift following months of deadlock in forming a new
government, said an expert recently. The outgoing government of Premier Hassan
Diab resigned in the wake of an August 4 explosion at Beirut’s port that killed
more than 200 people and ravaged swaths of the capital. On Sunday, nearly twenty
people were wounded in scuffles in northern Lebanon between security forces and
protesters angered by a spiraling economic crisis, a medical association said.
Lebanese troops deploy around Tripoli following protests
amid economic crisis
The Hill/June 28/2021
Lebanese troops were deployed to Tripoli on Sunday following protests over
Lebanon’s worsening economic conditions that left 10 soldiers and several
protesters injured the night before, The Associated Press reported.
Protests and riots in the cities of Sidon and Tripoli on Saturday stem from the
country’s economic crisis and political instability. The AP reports that the
country’s currency reached 18,000 pounds to the U.S. dollar on Saturday, a
record low. Additionally, since the beginning of the country’s 20-month economic
crisis, the currency has lost over 90 percent of its valuation. The World Bank
said earlier this month that the country’s “economic and financial crisis is
likely to rank in the top 10, possibly top 3, most severe crises episodes
globally since the mid-nineteenth century.”
Additionally, the World Bank said that it estimated that the country’s real GDP
in 2020 had contracted over 20 percent in addition to a GDP contraction of 6.7
percent in 2019. Over half of people in Lebanon live in poverty, according to
AP. Since late 2019, thousands of people have lost work.
The AP noted that the country has also experienced shortages in critical items
like medicine and fuel. Additionally, the formation of Lebanon’s government has
been delayed since October as Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri and President
Michel Aoun have failed to reach agreements. According to Reuters, former Prime
Minister Hassan Diab announced the government’s resignation in August following
an explosion at a port warehouse. The World Bank warned its report that there
may be no end in sight for the continued economic and political crisis happening
in the country.
"In the face of colossal challenges, continuous policy inaction and the absence
of a fully functioning executive authority threaten already dire socio-economic
conditions and a fragile social peace with no clear turning point in the
horizon," the World Bank said in its grim report.
Protests erupt in Lebanon ahead of fuel price hike,
severe power shortages
AFP/Published: 28 June ,2021
Protesters blocked roads across Lebanon on Monday over a deepening economic
downturn that has led to a fuel crisis and severe power shortages.
The demonstrations came ahead of hikes in the price of fuel that the energy
ministry said it would issue on Tuesday morning. They also came as power cuts
resulting from fuel shortages caused disruptions at a main Beirut hospital and
at a security force headquarters in the capital, according to local media
reports.
AFP correspondents said protesters blocked major roads and burned tires and
garbage bins in Beirut, while the official National News Agency said roadways
north and southeast of the capital were also blocked. Protesters in the south
Lebanon city of Nabatiyeh parked vehicles across a main artery to stop traffic,
the NNA said. The demonstrations took place after weekend scuffles between
security forces and protesters that left nearly 20 people wounded in the
northern city of Tripoli following a plunge in the value of the Lebanese pound.
Officially pegged to the dollar at 1,507 since 1997, the local currency now
sells for a record low of more than 17,000 to the greenback on the black market.
Two journalists in Lebanon released after reportedly
being detained by Hezbollah
Al Arabiya English/28 June ,2021
“The mere fact that those who did this feel free to do so without any concern …
[is] a strong indicator to the identity of the perpetrator,” the Samir Kassir
Foundation's executive director said. A British journalist was reportedly
detained Monday by Hezbollah members in Lebanon before being handed over to the
country’s authorities, the reporter’s employer said. “@NOW_leb journalist @MattKynaston
has been detained on the Airport Road by men who introduced as #Hezbollah agents
while trying to cover a story on the fuel crisis at one of the only petrol
stations open. They requested his phone and passport, press card was not
enough,” senior editor at NOW Lebanon Ana Maria Luca tweeted. In an article
published regarding the reported detention of two of its reporters, NOW said:
“NOW journalist Matthew Kynaston and German freelance reporter Stella Männer
were detained on Monday by men identifying themselves as agents of Hezbollah
while he was reporting on Lebanon’s fuel crisis. Kynaston, 33, and Männer were
reporting on the ongoing fuel crisis at the gas station on the Airport Road when
he was approached by the men who demanded to see his passport and his
phone.”Later Monday, UK Charge d’Affaires in Lebanon Martin Longden said he had
reached out to Lebanese authorities who said they had custody of Kynaston. “This
remains a serious and troubling incident: journalists should not be impeded from
carrying out their legitimate functions - a free press is critical to democracy
in Lebanon,” the British diplomat tweeted. The Samir Kassir Foundation, a
Lebanon-based press freedom group, blasted the detention by an “unofficial side
who isn’t legally permitted to detain journalists.” Ayman Mhanna, the
foundation’s Executive Director, told Al Arabiya English that Monday’s incident
was “yet another sign of a state failing its basic duties.”“There is one word
for this: abduction! And what is equally shameful: once their abductors handed
them to General Security, the latter interrogated the journalists instead of
interrogating those who abducted them,” Mhanna said. Mhanna added: “The mere
fact that those who did this feel free to do so without any concern … [is] a
strong indicator to the identity of the perpetrator.”Hezbollah, designated as a
terrorist organization by the United States, the Gulf and many European, South
American and Central American countries, has a history of detaining journalists.
It has also detained international students doing research projects in areas
Hezbollah considers its strongholds.
Aoun Calls for Higher Defense Council Meeting
Naharnet/June 28/2021
President Michel Aoun on Monday scheduled a Higher Defense Council meeting for
Tuesday to “discuss the security situations in the country and the latest
developments,” the Presidency said. The development comes amid a severe fuel
shortage crisis in the country that has led to scuffles at gas stations and
road-blocking protests across the country. The cities of Tripoli and Sidon have
also witnessed clashes between protesters and security forces which resulted in
injuries. The Lebanese pound has meanwhile plumbed fresh lows on the black
market due to a financial crisis that the World Bank says is likely to rank
among the world's worst since the mid-19th century.The price of fuel is expected
to rise after the government said it would fund fuel imports at a rate of 3,900
Lebanese pounds to the dollar, instead of the official rate.
The move effectively reduces subsidies on fuel as the central bank tries to
shore up fast-diminishing foreign currency reserves. The financial collapse has
sparked outrage at Lebanon's political class, seen as woefully corrupt and
unable to tackle the country's many difficulties. Lebanon has been without a
fully functioning government since a massive blast in Beirut last summer that
killed more than 200 people and ravaged swathes of the capital. The government
stepped down after the disaster, but efforts to agree on a new cabinet have
repeatedly foundered.
Aoun Asks Ministers, Administrations to Curb Fuel Crisis
Naharnet/June 28/2021
President Michel Aoun has been following up since early morning on “the
developments of the fuel crisis in the country” and the “suffering of citizens
at gas stations,” the Presidency said on Monday. To that end, Aoun held a series
of calls with caretaker Energy Minister Raymond Ghajar and the relevant
administrations at the Ministry, calling for “swift and firm measures to
contribute to alleviating the fabricated crisis and ending the exploitation of
citizens,” the Presidency added in a statement. The President also called
caretaker Interior Minister Mohammed Fahmi and several security chiefs, asking
them to “help the competent administrative agencies in preventing the storing of
fuel, putting them at citizens’ disposal and being strict in enforcing the laws
against violators, pending the ease of the crisis during the next 48 hours.”
Report: Idea to Resolve Christian Seats Hurdle Emerges,
Bassil Still Adamant
Naharnet/June 28/2021
All proposals about a so-called “four sixes government” and the redistribution
of portfolios are “not serious” and the only serious endeavor is the one led by
Hizbullah based on Speaker Nabih Berri’ initiative, al-Jadeed TV reported on
Monday
“One of the serious proposals is for President (Michel) Aoun and PM-designate (Saad)
Hariri to lodge names of Christian candidates with Speaker Nabih Berri in order
to find two consensual nominees,” al-Jadeed said. In order to act, Berri has
demanded “a solution for the obstacle of the Free Patriotic Movement’s
participation and confidence votes, but (FPM chief Jebran) Bassil is still
refusing to take part or to grant confidence,” the TV network added. Al-Jadeed
also noted that Berri and Hariri are “showing flexibility” regarding the
solution that has been proposed for resolving the two Christian seats hurdle.
Russian Team in Lebanon to Study Rebuilding Destroyed Silos
Associated Press/June 28/2021
A Russian business delegation met Lebanese officials on Monday to discuss plans
to rebuild the grain silos destroyed last year in a massive explosion at
Beirut's port, a Lebanese Cabinet minister said. The visit by the Russian team
-- including officials from Russia's Hydro Engineering and Construction company
-- comes as Lebanon is going through the worst economic and financial crisis in
its modern history. Nearly 3,000 tons of ammonium nitrate -- a highly explosive
material used in fertilizers -- had been improperly stored in the port for
years. The nitrate ignited on Aug. 4, causing a catastrophic blast that killed
211 people and injured more than 6,000, devastating nearby neighborhoods. A
government-commissioned study in the wake of the explosion said the 50-year-old
silos could collapse at any moment and should be demolished. Several countries
are said to be interested in rebuilding the port and the surrounding areas,
including Turkey, Germany and China. Lebanon's caretaker Public Works and
Transportation Minister Michel Najjar told reporters after meeting with the
Russians that they expressed a desire to cooperate and would offer technical
support for the silos repair at the port of Beirut. Najjar said the Russians
were also interested in building silos in the port of the northern city of
Tripoli. The Russian team will spend three days at each facility "and they will
study the possibility of building new grain silos," he said. In April,
representatives of several German companies outlined a multi-billion-dollar plan
to rebuild the port of Beirut and surrounding neighborhoods. Germany's
consortium, led by Hamburg Port Consulting and Colliers, was the first to visit
Lebanon with a plan in hand that they presented to Lebanese officials. In 2019,
Lebanon signed a deal with Russia's largest oil company, Rosneft, to upgrade and
operate storage installations in Tripoli. The deal made Rosneft manage storage
operations.
Diab Tackles Unofficial Exchange Rate Platforms, Slams
Riots
Naharnet/June 28/2021
Caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab on Monday chaired a meeting dedicated to
tackling the electronic platforms that track the dollar exchange rate on the
black market. The meeting was attended by the caretaker ministers of finance,
interior, justice and telecommunications, Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh,
State Prosecutor Ghassan Oueidat, Cabinet Secretary-General Mahmoud Makkiyeh and
Diab’s advisor Khodor Taleb. “There is a major difference between the screams of
pain and objection and the acts of chaos, rioting, road-blocking and attacking
people’s properties and the army and security forces,” Diab said during the
meeting. Hailing the October 17 uprising as a “great example,” the premier
warned that “what’s happening today distorts people’s scream and wastes their
demands.”“What’s happening is against the people and not for them. Whose
interest is served from the smashing of people’s cars, the attacks on their
properties and the blocking of roads in their faces?” Diab added. He also
lamented that “chaos erupts on the streets” whenever “a chance looms to benefit
from a touristic season and from the money that can enter into the country due
to this season.” “The entire country -- the state and its institutions, the
central bank, 64 banks, companies, shops and six million people – are being
controlled by a platform or several platforms that set, hike and lower the
dollar exchange rate on the black market,” Diab decried. “How can we allow an
unknown platform whose operators and objectives are obscure to control the fate
of a state and its people? This is an absurd thing!” the premier added.
Blast Rocks Lawyer's Office in Furn el-Chebbak
Naharnet/June 28/2021
A blast rocked the office of the lawyer Sakhr al-Hashem in Furn el-Chebbak on
Monday afternoon, causing material damage. The lawyer, who was at the office at
the time of the incident, escaped unharmed along with his two sons who work with
him. TV footage showed several parts of the office largely destroyed. Speaking
to a-Jadeed TV, al-Hashem said it is unlikely that the explosion was caused by
gas or electricity. The lawyer is known for handling controversial cases and he
is the counsel of one of the detainees in the case of the Beirut port blast. In
his remarks to al-Jadeed, al-Hashem hoped the incident is not a “message,”
describing the explosion at his office as “very, very, very violent.”MTV
meanwhile reported that the blast was caused by an electric "water heater."
Hizbullah Strongly Condemns U.S. Strike on Iran-Backed
Groups
Associated Press/Agence France Presse/June 28/2021
Hizbullah on Monday strongly deplored an overnight U.S. airstrike against
Iran-backed armed groups which a monitor said killed at least seven fighters. In
a statement, Hizbullah said it "strongly condemns the treacherous American
aggression that targeted the Iraqi-Syrian border.""What the U.S. warplanes have
done is a blatant attack on sovereignty... the region will not enjoy
stability... until U.S. forces are expelled" from Iraq and Syria, it said. The
Pentagon said it had conducted retaliatory targeted airstrikes against
"facilities used by Iran-backed militia groups" on the Iraq-Syria border.
Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the targeted sites -- two in Syria, one in
Iraq -- had been used by "Iran-backed militias" involved in drone attacks
against U.S. interests in Iraq.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous
Reports And News published on June
28-29/2021
Two injured in stabbing in German city of Erfurt
Jerusalem Post/June 28/2021
Officials are currently searching for the suspect, and a police helicopter has
been deployed over the city.
Two people have been injured in a stabbing attack in the east German city of
Erfurt, according to German media. German news site Die Welt reported on Monday
morning that an unknown perpetrator attacked two members of the public, aged 45
and 68, with a knife before fleeing the scene.The victims have been transferred
to hospital where they are receiving medical treatment for non life-threatening
injuries, according to a police statement. The motive of the attack is unclear
at this time. Officials are currently searching for the suspect, and a police
helicopter has been deployed over the city. The attacker is being described by
German police officials as being in his twenties, having light hair, and a
scarred face. This attack comes shortly after a knife attack in the German town
of Wuerzburg last week, in which three people were killed and another five were
critically injured. The event is still under investigation as a possible attack
motivated by extremist ideology.
4 killed in US airstrikes on Iran-backed militias in Iraq, Syria
Reuters/June 28/2021
At least four members of Shi'ite militias were killed in “defensive precision
airstrikes” which US President Joe Biden ordered against facilities used by
Iran-backed militia groups in the Iraq-Syria border region on Sunday night.
According to Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby, the targets were selected
“because these facilities are utilized by Iran-backed militias that are engaged
in unmanned aerial vehicle attacks against US personnel and facilities in Iraq.
Specifically, the strikes targeted “operational and weapons storage facilities
at two locations in Syria and one location in Iraq, both of which lie close to
the border between those countries,” said Kirby. “Several Iran-backed militia
groups, including Kata'ib Hezbollah and Kata'ib Sayyid al-Shuhada, used these
facilities," he added. “As demonstrated by this evening's strikes, President
Biden has been clear that he will act to protect US personnel,” the Pentagon
statement reads. “Given the ongoing series of attacks by Iran-backed groups
targeting US interests in Iraq, the President directed further military action
to disrupt and deter such attacks.”The US’ presence in Iraq is at the invitation
of the Government of Iraq, he said, “for the sole purpose of assisting the Iraqi
Security Forces in their efforts to defeat ISIS.”“The United States took
necessary, appropriate, and deliberate action designed to limit the risk of
escalation - but also to send a clear and unambiguous deterrent message,” Kirby
added.
He noted that the United States “acted pursuant to its right of self-defense,”
and that the strikes “were both necessary to address the threat and
appropriately limited in scope.” At least four members of Popular Mobilization
Forces (PMF) were killed in the airstrikes, according to Iranian media.
According to Sky News Arabia, five PMF members were killed. The PMF vowed to
respond to the strikes, saying it was "fully prepared" to "take revenge."The
Syrian state news agency SANA claimed that the airstrikes targeted residential
homes, killing a child and injuring three civilians.
Kata'ib Sayyid al-Shuhada, a Shi'ite militant group which was targeted in the
airstrikes, warned that it would now be in "open war" against the United States,
threatening to target US aircraft in Iraqi airspace.
Iraqi Commander-in-Chief Yehia Rasool condemned the US airstrikes on Monday,
saying that the strikes represent "a blatant and unacceptable violation of Iraqi
sovereignty and Iraqi national security in accordance with all international
conventions.""Iraq renews its refusal to be an arena for settling accounts, and
clings to its right to sovereignty over its lands, and prevents it from being
used as an arena for reactions and attacks," added Rasool, calling for calm and
avoiding escalation in all forms. "The United States continues to take the wrong
path in the region. In the realm of regional behavior, it is a continuation of
the failed US policy and legacy in the region," said Saeed Khatibzadeh,
spokesperson for the Iranian Foreign Ministry, in response to the airstrikes on
Monday morning, according to Iranian media. Khatibzadeh advised the US to
"change its course, instead of creating a crisis and creating problems for the
people of the region." The spokesperson called for the people of the region to
"decide their own destiny without [US] intervention.
"What the United States is doing is disrupting regional security, and one of the
victims of this disruptive regional security is the United States," added
Khatibzadeh. Jonathan Schanzer, senior vice president at the Foundation for
Defense of Democracies think tank in Washington, told The Jerusalem Post: “It is
heartening to see the administration set the edge with Iran. Attacks by
terrorist groups against American troops should be a red line for any American
president. “Iran, through its proxy groups, has provoked the United States at a
time when the Biden administration appears determined to yield massive sanctions
relief to the regime as part of the anticipated return to the 2015 Iran nuclear
deal,” Schanzer said. “Unfortunately, I don’t see the administration reversing
course. Despite this aggression, the regime is likely to still receive
everything it wants out of the deal.”The strikes came even as Biden's
administration is looking to potentially revive a 2015 nuclear deal with Iran.
The strikes appear to show Biden's efforts to compartmentalize defensive strikes
to protect American personnel, while simultaneously engaging Tehran in
diplomacy.
The Jerusalem Post reported last week that the US is seeking to extend the time
between rounds of indirect nuclear talks with Iran, in order to talk to the new
Israeli government more about its position. Washington feels that the
negotiations to return to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal are worth delaying in order
to better cooperate with Israel, a source with knowledge of the US President Joe
Biden’s administration's side of the talks said on Wednesday. His critics say
Iran cannot be trusted and point to the drone attacks as further evidence that
Iran and its proxies will never accept a US military presence in Iraq or Syria.
US officials believe Iran is behind a ramp-up in drone attacks and periodic
rocket fire against US personnel and facilities in Iraq, where the US military
has been helping Baghdad combat the remnants of Islamic State. Two US officials,
speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said Iran-backed militias carried
out at least five drone attacks against facilities used by US and coalition
personnel in Iraq since April. One of the facilities targeted was used to launch
and recover the drones, a defense official said. The US military carried out
strikes with F-15 and F-16 aircraft, officials said, adding the pilots made it
back from the mission safely. "We assess each strike hit the intended targets,"
one of the officials told Reuters. Iraq's government is struggling to deal with
militias ideologically aligned with Iran which are accused of rocket fire
against US forces and of involvement in killing peaceful pro-democracy
activists. Earlier in June, Iraq released Iran-aligned militia commander Qasim
Muslih, who was arrested in May on terrorism-related charges, after authorities
found insufficient evidence against him. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi issued a
statement on Sunday night, saying that the airstrikes “appear to be a targeted
and proportional response to a serious and specific threat.” “Protecting the
military heroes who defend our freedoms is a sacred priority,” she said. “The
Iran-backed militias utilizing these facilities have been engaged in attacks
threatening US servicemembers, as well as our allies.”“Congress looks forward to
receiving and reviewing the formal notification of this operation under the War
Powers Act and to receiving additional briefings from the Administration,”
Pelosi added.
*Lahav Harkov contributed to this report.
Iran-backed PMU threatens revenge after fighters killed
in US airstrikes
Agencies/28 June ,2021
Iranian-backed Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) militias, known as Hashd al-Shaabi
in Arabic, said Monday that US airstrikes had “resulted in the martyrdom of a
group of heroic fighters” near the Syria border and threatened revenge. “We will
remain the shield defending our beloved nation, and we are fully ready... to
respond and take revenge” following the strikes announced Sunday by the
Pentagon, which a monitor said had killed at least five Iran-backed militia
fighters. The strikes targeted operational and weapons storage facilities at two
locations in Syria and one location in Iraq, the Pentagon said.
“As demonstrated by this evening’s strikes, President Biden has been clear that
he will act to protect US personnel,” the Pentagon said in a statement. The
strikes came even as Biden’s administration is looking to potentially revive a
2015 nuclear deal with Iran. The strikes appear to show Biden’s efforts to
compartmentalize defensive strikes to protect American personnel, while
simultaneously engaging Tehran in diplomacy. The Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights had reported that “at least five” Iraqi fighters
were killed and several wounded in strikes on the Syrian side of the frontier.
The war monitor, which relies on a network of sources inside Syria to collect
information, said that military positions were among the targets hit. Since the
start of the year there have been more than 40 attacks against US interests in
Iraq, where 2,500 American troops are deployed as part of an international
coalition to fight the extremist ISIS.
US must stop its interference in the region, Iran says
after overnight airstrikes
Tamara Abueish, Al Arabiya English/28 June ,2021
The United States is “moving on the wrong path” and must stop its interference
in the region, Iran’s foreign ministry said on Monday following US military
airstrikes against pro-Iranian militias in Iraq and Syria. “Rising tension in
the region is not in the interest of the United States of America,” the foreign
ministry said in a statement. Iran called on the United States to avoid
“creating crisis” in the region. “Certainly what the United States is doing is
disrupting security in the region, and one of the victims of this disruption
will be the United States,” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh
said on Monday. The Pentagon announced early on Monday that it had carried out
airstrikes against the Iranian-backed Popular Mobilization Units (PMUs) militias
in Iraq and Syria in response to drone attacks by the group against US personnel
and facilities in Iraq. The PMUs, known as the Hashd al-Shaabi in Arabic, said
that the airstrikes had “resulted in the martyrdom of a group of heroic
fighters.” “We will remain the shield defending our beloved nation, and we are
fully ready... to respond and take revenge,” it added. In one raid in Iraq’s al-Anbar
province, four fighters were reportedly killed, PMUs sources told AFP. The
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights had reported that “at least
five” Iraqi fighters were killed and several wounded in strikes on the Syrian
side of the frontier. The war monitor, which relies on a network of sources
inside Syria to collect information, said that military positions were among the
targets hit.Since the start of the year there have been more than 40 attacks
against US interests in Iraq, where 2,500 American troops are deployed as part
of an international coalition to fight ISIS. (With AFP)
Iran will never get a nuclear weapon, US President Biden
tells Israeli counterpart
AFP/28 June ,2021
President Joe Biden on Monday reassured Israel’s president, ahead of a visit by
new Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, that the United States will not permit Iran
to develop nuclear weapons. “Iran will never get a nuclear weapon on my watch,”
Biden told President Reuven Rivlin in the White House. Biden also dismissed
congressional critics who have questioned his legal authority in ordering air
strikes against Iranian-backed militias accused of attacking US personnel in
Syria and Iraq. “I have that authority,” Biden said. The close US-Israeli
relationship hit a rocky patch when Biden replaced Donald Trump in January.
However, the formation of a new government under Bennett, following the downfall
of key Trump ally Benjamin Netanyahu, has opened the door to a reset -- and a
Bennett visit in the near future. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said the
Biden-Rivlin meeting would “highlight the strength of the relationship from our
shared interest in security and stability.” Psaki said there was no date yet for
Bennett’s White House trip but “the president looks forward to hosting the prime
minister and it’s soon.”
Lapid to Blinken: Disagreements about Iran deal can
be worked out quietly
Jerusalem Post/June 28/2021
“Israel has some serious reservations about the Iran nuclear deal being put
together in Vienna,” Israeli FM Yair Lapid said. Israel and the US should not
air their disagreements publicly but instead should discuss them directly,
Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said Sunday at the start of a meeting with US
Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Rome. “Israel has some serious reservations
about the Iran nuclear deal being put together in Vienna,” he said. “We believe
the way to discuss those disagreements is through direct and professional
conversations, not in press conferences.”
FM @YairLapid meets with US Secretary of State @SecBlinken:
"Secretary Blinken and I represent new administrations, his a few months old,
mine only a few weeks, but we also represent a very long and strong tradition of
close friendship and cooperation."
https://t.co/dJOgbGfSeM pic.twitter.com/4UoszHSRce
— Israel Foreign Ministry (@IsraelMFA) June 27, 2021
Jerusalem and Washington share the same goals, and disagreements between them
are about how to achieve them, Lapid said. “Mr. Secretary, I know we can count
on you,” he added. The US is Israel’s most important and most loyal ally, and
the new governments of both countries come from “a very long and strong
tradition of close friendship and cooperation,” the foreign minister said. Lapid
said he plans to work to rehabilitate Israel’s bipartisan support in the US,
adding that he spoke with leading Democrats and Republicans in recent days to
that end. “I reminded them all that Israel shares America’s most basic values –
freedom, democracy, free markets, the constant search for peace,” he said. “In
the struggle for those values, Secretary Blinken is a great friend and a great
partner.” Lapid also thanked Blinken for US support for normalization between
Israel and Arab states. “I look forward to working with you to widen the circle
of peace in our region,” he said. “That is the best way to bring stability and
prosperity to the Middle East.” Other issues Lapid said were on the agenda for
his meeting with Blinken were “strengthening our ability to defend ourselves,
working to minimize conflict between us and the Palestinians, while making life
better for Israelis and Palestinians alike.”In addition, Lapid sent prayers and
condolences to the victims of the building collapse in Surfside, Florida.
Blinken agreed with Lapid that the US-Israel relationship is “based... on a set
of shared values and shared interests.” US President Joe Biden “feels very, very
strongly about... a deep, enduring, abiding commitment on the part of the United
States to Israel’s security,” he said. Blinken put the reconstruction of Gaza at
the top of the agenda for his meeting with Lapid.“The work, I hope, can be done
to, as you say, offer a more hopeful future for everyone, Palestinians and
Israelis alike, with equal measures of opportunity and dignity,” he said,
repeating a phrase Biden administration officials used throughout Operation
Guardian of the Walls last month. Blinken used the phrase “the Abraham Accords”
– contrary to criticism of the Biden administration that it had refused to use
the Trump-era branding – and said they “strongly support this, and hopefully
there’ll be other participants.” At the same time, Blinken said: “I think we’ve
also discovered, or perhaps rediscovered, that as important as they are, as
vital as they are, they are not a substitute for engaging on the issues between
Israelis and Palestinians that need to be resolved.”Lapid met with Bahraini
Foreign Minister Abdullatif Al-Zayani in Rome after Blinken. “We spoke at length
about the normalization process in the Middle East and the need to expand it to
cooperate with additional countries,” Lapid said at the end of the meeting.
“Peace with Bahrain should be an example for the correct process that must occur
in our region.”Lapid said he and his Bahraini counterpart also discussed
regional challenges, foremost of which is Iran. Lapid plans to visit the United
Arab Emirates on Tuesday in the first state visit by an Israeli minister to the
Gulf state.
Iraq, Egypt, Jordan prioritise economics at Baghdad
summit, leave questions unanswered
The Arab Weekly/June 28/2021
BAGHDAD – The leaders of Iraq, Egypt and Jordan prioritised the economic aspects
at their tripartite summit Sunday in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, over the
political and security issues, which raises questions about what Egypt and
Jordan can offer to Iraq.
The summit, which started Sudnay, brought together Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa
al-Kadhimi, Iraqi President Barham Salih, Egyptian President Abdelfattah al-Sisi
and Jordanian King Abdullah II. While Egypt and Jordan see opportunities in
Iraq, which has just announced that it has overcome its budget deficit thanks to
the rise in oil prices, many Iraqis do not see any economic benefits from these
two countries. An Iraqi parliamentarian, who preferred not to be named, told The
Arab Weekly that “Egypt and Jordan have nothing to offer to Iraq.”Iraqi
political analyst Rahim al-Kaabi believes that “Iraq’s economic and living
conditions, which are increasingly difficult and which add to the country’s
tensions, call for partners who are capable of providing economic solutions to
the frustrations of the Iraqi street. But the government has apparently chosen
another option.”Talking to The Arab Weekly, Kaabi asked, “What has changed so
that the Arab Cooperation Council in its modified form becomes the solution for
a country deprived of sovereignty and burdened with crises, tensions and
divisions such as Iraq?” Iraqi president Saddam Hussein, Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak,
Yemen’s Ali Abdullah Saleh and King Hussein of Jordan established the Arab
Cooperation Council in February 1989. But the alliance quickly unravelled after
the Kuwait crisis of 1990. Iraqi political researcher Hamid al-Kafaei believes
that Egypt and Jordan are important Arab countries for Iraq and are also
important globally and rapprochement and coordination with them is beneficial
for Iraq and enhances its regional and international standing.
Talking to The Arab Weekly, Kafaei added, “Iraq’s rapprochement with any other
Arab country will not be at the expense of its Gulf relations, as it benefits
Iraq and strengthens its position, especially in light of Iranian threats to its
sovereignty and to its cultural and national existence.”
The Baghdad summit also represented an opportunity for Jordan to restore its
normal relations with Iraq in the wake of a period of estrangement and mistrust
after the US invasion. Jordan and Iraq had previously agreed on projects that
could represent a new basis for economic cooperation between the two
neighbouring countries, especially the Basra-Aqaba pipeline, the joint economic
zone and the electrical grid integration project. The trade balance has been in
favour of Jordan in recent years. But Amman expects to increase oil exports from
Iraq, from which Jordan imports no more than 10 percent of its oil needs. For
many years before 2003, Jordan imported most of its oil needs from Iraq for free
or at preferential prices. Some experts link the economic ambitions that
underlie the relationship between the three countries relate to a number of
considerations including the desire to invest in Egypt’s large consumer market
(110 million population) and to benefit from the huge oil wealth of Iraq and the
geographical location of the kingdom of Jordan, which links the other two
countries.
The head of the Arab Forum for Policy Analysis in Cairo, Mohamed Mohsen Abul-Nur,
said that the summit had “declared objectives , which included boosting the
economic and financial partnership between the three countries, and benefiting
from each country’s assets. But there are other undeclared objectives.” Abul-Nur
added, “there are implicit goals that can be deduced, such as confronting
hostile regional expansionism in Iraq,” and setting up plans between the three
countries to thwart “the expansion of Turkish and Iranian lobbies in Iraq
against Kadhimi and to strengthen the Iraqi state’s defences through economic,
political and security initiatives.” In some political circles, there has been
an increasing use of the new term “Al-Sham Al-Jadeed” (the new Levant) to refer
to the cooperation formula between the three countries. This is a hint to a
change in political geography linking the Levant to Syria and reassuring those
who may believe that the new bloc aims to pave the way for the assimilation of
Syria into its fold after the rapid developments signalling the rehabilitation
of President Bashar al-Assad’s regime. The use of this term lowers expectations
and speculation that linked it to security and political alliances and focuses
instead on its economic goals, at least at this stage. Such an interpretation is
likely to mitigate the expected criticism by some regional powers, who may see
in it as the nucleus of an alliance that goes beyond economic goals.
Kadhimi used the expression “the new Levant” for the first time during his visit
to the United States last August, pointing out that he intends to enter into an
economic project with Cairo and Amman to form a regional bloc capable of meeting
challenges.
The same term has been repeated to different degrees and at different times by
officials in the three countries which means that the “New Levant” project has
been under consideration for some time and has been waiting for the appropriate
conditions to be launched. The Baghdad summit may be a prelude to its general
official use.
Political solution only way to resolve Syrian crisis:
Saudi FM
Ismaeel Naar, Al Arabiya English/ 28 June ,2021
A political solution is the only way to resolve the Syrian crisis in accordance
with UN Security Resolution 2254 and other relevant international resolutions,
Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan said. Prince Faisal bin
Farhan on Monday participated in the ministerial meeting on Syria at the joint
invitation of the United States and Italy, in Rome. “The Saudi Arabian foreign
stressed on the importance of international consensus to stop the human
suffering of the Syrian people, and to reach a solution to the border crossings
crisis, and to ensure the flow of international aid to those who deserve it,”
the Saudi Press Agency reported on the Prince’s speech in Rome. “He also called
on others to not politicize the humanitarian issue in Syria, and to not neglect
the humanitarian needs of the Syrian people, and that neglecting this provides a
suitable environment for the growth and spread of terrorist organizations and
extremist ideology,” the SPA reported. “The absence of effective international
will to solve the Syrian crisis contributed to the opportunity for some parties
to implement expansionist, sectarian, and demographic projects aimed at changing
Syria's identity, and heralds the prolongation of the Syrian crisis and its
regional and international effects,” Prince Faisal said during his speech
Oman contacts with Israel highlight normalisation
prospects
The Arab Weekly/June 28/2021
MUSCAT - A phone call between Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi and his
Israeli counterpart Yair Lapid showed Muscat and Tel Aviv were maintaining
contact and good relations, despite a reluctance to officially declare a
normalisation of ties.
Busaidi expressed hope on Thursday that the new Israeli government will take
concrete steps towards creating an independent Palestinian state with occupied
East Jerusalem as its capital. He also stressed the constants of the Omani peace
policy in this regard.
The Omani minister spoke by phone to Israel’s top diplomat, according to ONA,
the state news agency of Oman, which has a long-standing policy of neutrality in
the turbulent region and often acts as a mediator. Thursday’s phone call marks
first contact of its kind after the departure of Binyamin Netanyahu from the
premiership of the Israeli government and the formation of a new government
headed by Naftali Bennett. Experts noted that Thursday’s call reflects the
strength of Omani-Israeli relations, which have not been affected by regional
developments and the change of officials on both sides. Busaidi replaced his
predecessor Yusuf bin Alawi as Oman’s top diplomat, when the latter was
dismissed in August 2020. Over the years he spent in office, bin Alawi had
contributed to the development of relations between Muscat and Tel Aviv. The
government of Netanyahu also played a key role in boosting these relations,
culminating in the former Israeli premier’s historic visit to the Sultanate in
2018. The good relations between Muscat and Tel Aviv have long raised questions
about the two countries’ plans when it comes to a full normalisation of ties.
These questions became more frequent during the past months after the UAE,
Bahrain and Morocco normalised ties with the Jewish state and Sudan took a
number of steps in the same direction. An Israeli diplomatic source said that
neither Oman nor Israel is facing obstacles when it comes to normalisation. He
added that Oman prefers to wait before taking such a step and that the Israeli
side has shown a great deal of understanding , especially since the two sides
are satisfied with the current level of bilateral relations.
The same source however noted, “This does not necessarily mean that the coming
period will not witness an official normalisation of Israeli-Omani relations,
especially that such a process enjoys the support of the United States, an ally
of both countries.”Earlier in June, the Associated Press reported that the
administration of US President Joe Biden is laying the groundwork for a renewed
push to encourage more Arab countries to sign accords with Israel. The US
administration is also working to strengthen existing deals after last month’s
devastating war in the Gaza Strip interrupted those diplomatic efforts. The
embrace of the so-called Abraham Accords is a rare carryover of a signature
Trump administration policy by Biden and other Democrats. The Trump
administration put US clout and incentives into landing the country-by-country
pacts by four Arab states last year, easing enmity and isolation for the Jewish
state in the Middle East that had dated back to Israel’s 1948 founding. The
Biden administration saw significant prospects of several other Arab governments
signing accords soothing and normalising relations with Israel. US officials
have declined to publicly identify the countries they regard as promising
prospects.
Sudan, which signed a general declaration of peaceful intent but has not yet
signed on to diplomatic relations with Israel, had been a prospect. Oman, which
has a policy of non-interference that allows it to be a broker across the Middle
East’s fault lines, long has been seen by Westerners as a likely contender.
But the 11-day war between Israel and Gaza’s Hamas militant rulers last month
has complicated US-backed diplomacy for new Abraham accords.
The fighting “has strengthened the conviction of opponents of normalisation”
with Israel, activist Doura Gambo said in Sudan. Israeli Alternate Prime
Minister and Foreign Sudanese were already divided over their government’s
agreement last year to become one of the four Arab states signing accords. In
Sudan’s case, the Trump administration offered financial relief from US
sanctions. Last month’s bloodshed, which killed 254 Palestinians, including 66
children and at least 22 members of one family, resonated deeply with the Arab
public, including in the other countries that had signed accords with Israel:
the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco. Thirteen people died in Israel,
including two children and one soldier. The Biden administration is considering
appointing a former US ambassador to Israel, Dan Shapiro, to a Mideast role that
would marshal and potentially expand the country-by-country accords between
Israel and Mideast governments. Two people familiar with the matter confirmed
Shapiro was being considered for the job, as first reported by The Washington
Post. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to
comment publicly.
US officials also are working to encourage more business, education and other
ties among the four Arab states and Israel. They hope visible success there will
also promote the bilateral accords in the region, at the same time the US works
to advance resolution of the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
Last year, the United Arab Emirates became the first Arab country in over two
decades to establish ties with Israel, after Egypt and Jordan in 1979 and 1994,
respectively. It was a move that bypassed the Palestinians, who saw it as
betrayal. The Abraham Accords include a general declaration of support for
peaceful relations in the Middle East among Jews, Muslims and Christians, all
followers of religions linked to the patriarch Abraham. The Trump administration
saw the accords partly as paving a path toward full ties with Israel, including
in security and intelligence cooperation to counter common rivals, such as Iran.
The deals former President Donald Trump struck were “an important achievement,
one that not only we support, but one we’d like to build on,” US Secretary of
State Antony Blinken told the House Foreign Affairs Committee earlier this
month. In addition, “we’re looking at countries that may want to join in, and
take part and begin to normalise their own relations with Israel. That, too, has
been very much part of conversations I’ve had with, with several of my
counterparts,” Blinken added. Before any new efforts on the accords move
forward, big political and pragmatic developments need to fall into place in the
region. Eyes are on Israel at the moment to see how a possible new coalition
government led by a new prime minister may affect Israeli-Palestinian relations,
especially in the aftermath of the Gaza war.
Palestinian minister to resign as government faces
mounting pressures
The Arab Weekly/June 28/2021
RAMALLAH, Palestinian Territories – The labour minister in the Palestinian
Authority will resign, a member of his party said Sunday, as protesters marched
for a fourth day demanding president Mahmud Abbas step down. The left-wing
Palestinian People’s Party has decided to withdraw from the Fatah-led PA
government due to “its lack of respect for laws and public freedoms,” central
committee member Issam Abu Bakr said. Nasri Abu Jaish, the labour minister and
the People’s Party representative in the government, will therefore resign on
Monday, Abu Bakr said. Demonstrations against the PA erupted Thursday following
the violent arrest and death in custody of activist Nizar Banat and continued
Sunday evening. Banat, a 43-year-old known for social media videos denouncing
alleged corruption within the PA, died on Thursday shortly after security forces
stormed his house, beat him and dragged him away, his family said. The PA has
announced the opening of an investigation into Banat’s death, but this has done
little to appease anger on the streets. On Sunday evening, protesters defied a
heavy deployment of security forces, holding up photographs of the activist as
they marched in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, in Banat’s home town of Hebron.
In Ramallah, the seat of the PA, protesters demanded those responsible for
Banat’s death be held accountable, while several supporters of the Fatah party
of Abbas gathered to shout slogans backing the president. The Palestinian
Journalists Syndicate called for the dismissal of the PA police chief “due to
the police’s failure to protect journalists who were attacked, prevented from
reporting and threatened” within view of police officers at the protests.
According to the autopsy, injuries indicated Banat had been beaten on the head,
chest, neck, legs and hands, with less than an hour elapsing between his arrest
and his death, doctor Samir Abu Zarzour said.
Polls postponed
On Saturday, protesters in Ramallah hurled rocks at Palestinian security forces,
who opened fire with a barrage of tear gas canisters, with reports of several
injured. Palestinian human rights group Al-Haq on Sunday accused security forces
of “attacking the participants with batons and rocks” while dragging others to
the ground and beating them, adding that some suffered head injuries. Protesters
called for 86-year-old Abbas to quit. Banat had registered as a candidate in
Palestinian parliamentary elections, which had been set for May until Abbas
postponed them indefinitely.
The president’s original mandate expired in 2009 and he has since governed by
decree. In April, Abbas declared that legislative and presidential polls set for
May and July respectively should not be held until Israel guaranteed voting
could take place in annexed east Jerusalem. Al-Haq warned there had been a
“serious regression on public rights and freedoms” since the decision to scrap
the elections. In addition to holding the presidency, Abbas is also head of
Fatah and president of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), recognised
internationally as representing the Palestinians. But Fatah faces a growing
challenge from its longtime rivals, the Islamist Hamas movement, which rules the
Palestinian coastal enclave of Gaza.The PA exercises limited powers over some 40
percent of the West Bank, occupied by Israel since the Six-Day War of 1967.
Israel, which controls all access to the territory and coordinates with
the PA, directly administers the remaining 60 percent.
Ethiopia declares immediate, unilateral Tigray ceasefire
after 8 months of conflict
The Associated Press/ 28 June ,2021
Ethiopia’s government on Monday declared an immediate, unilateral ceasefire in
its Tigray region after nearly eight months of deadly conflict and as hundreds
of thousands of people face the world’s worst famine crisis in a decade. The
statement carried by state media came shortly after the Tigray interim
administration, appointed by the federal government, fled the regional capital,
Mekele, and called for a cease-fire on humanitarian grounds so that desperately
needed aid can be delivered. Meanwhile, Mekele residents cheered the arrival of
Tigray forces. The cease-fire “will enable farmers to till their land, aid
groups to operate without any military movement around and engage with remnants
(of Tigray's former ruling party) who seek peace,” Ethiopia's statement said,
adding that efforts to bring Tigray's former leaders to justice
continue.Ethiopia said the cease-fire will last until the end of the crucial
planting season in Tigray. The season’s end comes in September. The government
ordered all federal and regional authorities to respect the cease-fire — crucial
as authorities and fighters from the neighboring Amhara region have been accused
of atrocities in western Tigray. “The government has the responsibility to find
a political solution to the problem,” the head of the interim administration,
Abraham Belay, said in calling for the cease-fire, adding that some elements
within Tigray’s former ruling party are willing to engage with the federal
government. There was no immediate comment from the Tigray fighters, with whom
Ethiopia had rejected talks. And there was no immediate comment from neighboring
Eritrea, whose soldiers have been accused by Tigray residents of some of the
worst atrocities in the war. Thousands of people have been killed in the
conflict as Ethiopian and allied forces pursue Tigray’s former leaders and their
supporters, and as humanitarian groups plead for more access to the region of 6
million people. The region in recent days has seen some of the fiercest fighting
of the conflict. International pressure on Ethiopia spiked again last week after
a military airstrike on a busy market in Tigray killed more than 60 people.
Libya talks seek to pave way for December elections
Reuters/28 June ,2021
Libyan delegates met in Switzerland on Monday at the start of four days of
UN-facilitated talks aimed at creating the legal conditions for elections in
December, which they hope will usher in a “new era” for the North African
country.
Around 75 delegates are participating in the discussions, being held near
Geneva, where they hope to agree on the constitutional basis for presidential
and parliamentary elections scheduled for Dec. 24. Several delegates expressed
optimism as the talks began.
“The intent is to reach a consensus that serves the country and takes us out of
the crisis and achieves stability and gets the economy rolling again to start a
new era where democracy, a civil state and justice prevails,” Majda Alfallah, a
senator at High Council of State delegation, told the forum. Warring factions
have stuck to a truce since October and have all agreed to a temporary unity
government and planned elections. However, there are private doubts about
everyone’s commitment and myriad armed groups continue to hold power on the
ground and might undermine the fairness of a vote.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said last week that elections were the only
way to ensure peace and stability in Libya.
Poland Summons Israeli Envoy over WWII Claims Row
Agence France Presse/28 June ,2021
Poland said Sunday it had summoned the Israeli envoy after Israel slammed as
"immoral" a new Polish law that experts say could block World War II restitution
claims. Deputy Foreign Minister Pawel Jablonski said Warsaw would like to set
the record straight about the legislation passed in parliament on Thursday. Tal
Ben-Ari Yaalon, the charge d'affaires, "has been summoned ... and we will
explain to her in a decisive and factual way what it's about", Jablonski told
state television TVP about the meeting due on Monday. "We believe that
unfortunately what we're dealing with here is a situation that certain Israeli
politicians are exploiting for internal political purposes," he added. The
Israeli embassy in Warsaw tweeted on Thursday that "this immoral law will
seriously impact relations between our countries". It "will in effect prevent
the restitution of Jewish property or compensation requests from Holocaust
survivors and their descendants as well as the Jewish community that called
Poland home for centuries. It's mind-boggling," the embassy said. The bill's
authors argue it is needed to bring the law into line with a 2015 Constitutional
Court ruling, which found that there must be a deadline after which
administrative decisions can no longer be contested. The legislation sets the
cut-off date at 10 to 30 years, depending on the case. Poland's foreign ministry
said Friday the introduction of time limits would "lead to the elimination of
fraud and irregularities, which occurred on a large scale." "The new regulations
do not in any way restrict the possibility of bringing civil suits to seek
damages, irrespective of the plaintiff's nationality or origin," it added.
"Poland is by no means responsible for the Holocaust, an atrocity committed by
the German occupant also on Polish citizens of Jewish origin." Six million
Poles, half of them Jewish, were killed during Nazi Germany's 1939-45 occupation
of Poland during World War II.
Ministerial Meeting of the Global Coalition to Defeat Daesh/ISIS
June 28, 2021 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Ministers of the Global Coalition to Defeat Daesh/ISIS, reconvening
in-person after two years, met today in Rome at the invitation of Italian
Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Luigi Di Maio and U.S.
Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken. The Ministers reaffirmed their shared
determination to continue the fight against Daesh/ISIS, and to create conditions
for the enduring defeat of the terrorist group, which remains the Coalition’s
sole purpose, through a comprehensive, coordinated and multifaceted effort. The
Ministers welcomed new members joining the Coalition - Central African Republic,
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mauritania, and Yemen. Together the Ministers
emphasized the protection of civilians as a priority and affirmed that
international law, including international humanitarian law and international
human rights law, as applicable, as well as relevant UN Security
Council resolutions, must be upheld under all circumstances.
The Ministers committed to strengthening cooperation across all Coalition lines
of effort in order to ensure that Daesh/ISIS Core in Iraq and Syria, and
its affiliates and networks around the world are unable to reconstitute any
territorial enclave or continue to threaten our homelands, people, and
interests. The Ministers remain firmly united in our outrage at atrocities
perpetrated by Daesh/ISIS and in our determination to eliminate this global
threat, and stand alongside survivors and families of victims of Daesh/ISIS
crimes working for accountability.
Daesh/ISIS no longer controls territory and nearly eight million people have
been freed from its control in Iraq and Syria, but the threat remains. The
resumption in Daesh/ISIS activities and its ability to rebuild its networks and
capabilities to target security forces and civilians in areas where the
Coalition is not active, requires strong vigilance and coordinated action. This
includes allocating adequate resources to sustain Coalition and legitimate
partner forces’ efforts against Daesh/ISIS, and significant stabilization
support, both to address the drivers that make communities vulnerable to
recruitment by Daesh/ISIS and related violent ideological groups, as well as to
provide support to liberated areas to safeguard our collective security
interests. In this regard, the Ministers noted the 2021 Pledge Drive for
Stabilization as an important means to help sustain the recovery of areas
liberated from Daesh/ISIS and prevent its resurgence. The Ministers reaffirm
that Daesh/ISIS will continue to be pressured by curbing its ability to raise
revenue, enhancing information sharing on terrorists through bilateral and/or
multilateral channels like INTERPOL, and fighting against Daesh/ISIS’ toxic
propaganda and denying the group space to exploit social media online.
The Ministers acknowledged Iraq’s efforts to counter Daesh/ISIS’ remnants
and prevent its resurgence, and commended the increased capacity of the Iraqi
forces to combat Daesh/ISIS. Appropriate measures to enhance the operational
efficiency and coordination of our collective efforts to maintain the necessary
pressure on Daesh/ISIS remain essential. The Coalition operates in Iraq at the
request of the Government of Iraq in
full respect of Iraq’s unity, sovereignty, and territorial integrity, and to the
benefit of the Iraqi people. The
Ministers firmly condemned the continuing attacks against Coalition personnel
and convoys, and diplomatic facilities, emphasizing the importance of the
Government of Iraq protecting Coalition assets. The
Ministers welcomed the incremental expansion of NATO’s non-combat advisory,
training and capacity building mission in Iraq based on the requirements and
consent of the Iraqi authorities and complementing the Coalition’s
efforts. The Ministers also welcomed the EU’s support to the Iraqi authorities
through the EUAM Iraq Mission.
In Syria, the Coalition stands with the Syrian people in support of a lasting
political settlement in accordance with UN Security Council Resolution 2254. The
Coalition must continue to be vigilant against the threat of terrorism, in all
its forms and manifestations, to build on the success it has
achieved and continue to act together against any threats to this
outcome and to avoid security vacuums that Daesh/ISIS may exploit. The Coalition
continues to support inclusive local recovery and stabilization in areas
liberated from Daesh/ISIS and reconciliation and reintegration efforts to foster
conditions conducive to a Syria-wide political resolution to the conflict under
the parameters of UN Security Council Resolution 2254.
In a session of the meeting focused on the security situation in other
continents and regions, particularly Africa, the Ministers noted
with grave concern that Daesh/ISIS affiliates and networks in sub-Saharan Africa
threaten security and stability, namely in the Sahel Region and in East
Africa/Mozambique. The Coalition is committed to working with affected countries
to address the threats posed by Daesh/ISIS in Africa to ensure the enduring
global defeat of the organization upon the request and prior consent of the
countries concerned, and in full respect of international law and
in close coordination with existing initiatives, notably the Coalition for the
Sahel and the Global Counter-Terrorism Forum. The Ministers welcomed the
presence of delegations from several African nations as observers to this
ministerial meeting. The Ministers discussed that reinforcing civilian state
institutions and consolidating the rule of law, including law enforcement
capacity, will be an essential component of combatting Daesh/ISIS, and that
the Global Coalition to Defeat Daesh/ISIS will seek to
have effective engagement on the African continent. The Ministers tasked the
Coalition Working Groups to assess ways in which they can contribute to counter
Daesh/ISIS efforts in the affected regions. The Ministers also welcomed
Afghanistan’s efforts to counter the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria-Khurasan
(ISIS-K).
Recognizing the challenge posed by foreign terrorist fighters who are in
custody, as well as their family members who remain in Syria and Iraq, the
Ministers committed to pursuing existing effective justice and accountability
mechanisms in close coordination with the countries of origin. This also
includes accountability for fighters who have used sexual violence as an
instrument of terror. The Coalition remains committed to promoting efforts to
ensure that accused terrorists, including those of foreign nationalities, are
treated appropriately and tried consistently with applicable international law
obligations, including fair trial guarantees, and urges the custodians of the
detained Daesh/ISIS terrorists to treat them humanely at all times, in
accordance with international law. The Ministers further recognized that the
situation for Daesh/ISIS detainees and family members in northeast Syria is of
grave concern and recognized the importance of finding a comprehensive and
long-term solution to this serious issue.
The Coalition reaffirmed its belief that a comprehensive and collective
effort remains necessary to achieve a full and enduring defeat of Daesh/ISIS
worldwide. The Global Coalition to Defeat Daesh/ISIS has proven that it is a
cohesive, responsive tool that has achieved notable successes through military,
political, stabilization, counter-messaging, financial, and law enforcement
lines of effort.
The Ministers also reaffirmed their intent to hold the next ministerial meeting
of the Global Coalition by June 2022 and to hold a Small Group Political
Directors Meeting in Brussels in the fall of 2021, circumstances pending.
Joint statement on the ministerial meeting on Syria
June 28, 2021 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs
Canada
The text of the following statement was released by the Governments of the
United States of America, Italy, Canada, Egypt, France, Germany, Greece, Iraq,
Ireland, Japan, Jordan, Lebanon, Netherlands, Norway, Qatar, Saudi Arabia,
Turkey, UAE, the United Kingdom, and representatives of the Arab League and
European Union, which met today to discuss the crisis in Syria.
“We, the ministers and representatives of the United States, Italy, Canada,
Egypt, France, Germany, Greece, Iraq, Ireland, Japan, Jordan, Lebanon,
Netherlands, Norway, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, UAE, the United Kingdom, and
representatives of the Arab League and European Union, met today on the margins
of the Defeat ISIS Coalition Ministerial to discuss the crisis in Syria. We
stressed the critical importance of meeting humanitarian needs, including
life-saving assistance and COVID-19 response for all Syrians in need, through
all modalities, including through the provision and expansion of the UN
cross-border mechanism to which there is no adequate alternative. We also
underlined the importance of continued support to Syrian refugees and host
countries until Syrians can voluntarily return home with safety and dignity, in
line with UNHCR standards.
“We welcomed UN Special Envoy Geir Pedersen’s briefing and reaffirmed strong
support for UN-led efforts to implement all aspects of UN Security Council
Resolution 2254, including continued support for an immediate nation-wide
ceasefire, the unimpeded and safe delivery of aid, and the Constitutional
Committee, as well as fighting against terrorism in all its forms and
manifestations.
“Reaffirming the unity and territorial integrity of Syria, we remain committed
to continue working actively to reach a credible, sustainable, and inclusive
political solution based on Resolution 2254. This is the only solution that will
bring an end to Syria’s decade long conflict and guarantee the security of the
Syrian people and fulfil their aspirations.”
Canada/Minister Garneau meets with Indonesian counterpart
June 27, 2021 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs
Canada
The Honourable Marc Garneau, Minister of Foreign Affairs, met today with his
Indonesian counterpart, Retno Marsudi, on the margins of the G20 Foreign
Ministers’ and Development Ministers’ Meeting in Italy.
Both Ministers highlighted the strong bilateral relationship and cooperation
between Canada and Indonesia in many areas, including support for the
international rules-based order, trade and investment.
The two Ministers discussed the importance of working together toward a greener
economy, the post-COVID recovery and expanding access to vaccines to lower
income countries. Both expressed grave concern at the ongoing situation in
Myanmar and agreed on the need for inclusive political dialogue as a critical
step in peacefully resolving this crisis. Minister Garneau thanked Indonesia’s
resolved efforts within ASEAN in responding to this crisis, and in advancing the
swift implementation of ASEAN’s 5-point consensus. He reiterated Canada’s
readiness to support ASEAN in these ongoing efforts.
The Ministers also welcomed the launch of negotiations between the two countries
toward a comprehensive economic partnership agreement, which will support
sustainable economic growth, help facilitate increased trade and investment, and
reinforce both countries’ shared commitment to open markets and rules-based
trade.
In closing, Minister Garneau congratulated Indonesia on taking on the next G20
presidency. Both Ministers look forward to working together in support of an
inclusive, sustainable and resilient global recovery.
Canada/Minister Garneau speaks with Italian
counterpart
June 27, 2021 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs
Canada
The Honourable Marc Garneau, Minister of Foreign Affairs, today spoke with his
counterpart, Luigi Di Maio, Minister of Foreign Affairs and International
Cooperation of Italy.
Minister Garneau congratulated Italy for its leadership as co-host of this
week’s Global Coalition Against Daesh ministerial meeting and host of the G20
ministerial meeting. The Minister reiterated Canada’s appreciation for Italy’s
commitment to international cooperation and multilateralism.
The ministers exchanged views on issues of global concern, including climate
change, peace building in the Middle East, the human rights situation in
Xinjiang, China, as well as Russia’s destabilizing actions in other states.
They agreed that these issues were best addressed through joint action with
allies and partners.
The ministers also raised key bilateral issues, such as trade that continues to
thrive and increase between our two countries.
Finally, the ministers acknowledged the important work being done by Canada and
Italy on the global scene, and they recognized how the two countries can
continue to work together to advance mutual interests.
The Latest The Latest LCCC English
analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on June
28-282021
Supreme Court Cheerleads for First Amendment
Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute/June 28/2021
[The decision] sends a powerful message that the Supreme Court is still in the
business of protecting offensive speech, even as big tech, universities and many
progressives have tried to justify pervasive censorship of speech with which
they disagree.
[T]he most dangerous form of contemporary censorship comes not from the
government, but rather from private parties who themselves have the First
Amendment right to censor speech with which they disagree. In other words, what
we are experiencing is an attack not on the First Amendment itself, but rather
on the culture of free speech that the First Amendment is designed to protect.
Today many such institutions punish students and applicants for social media
statements they may have posted when they were the same youthful age as the
cheerleader. Nor is the punishment always based on neutral or objective
standards. It tends to be imposed far more on conservative students who have
violated political correctness norms of the left. It is rarely, if ever, imposed
on left-wing students, especially students of color, who make statements that
are deeply offensive to conservatives and/or white heterosexual men. The
constitutional reach of the First Amendment permits such selective punishment by
private institutions, but the culture of freedom of expression does not.
In an 8-1 decision, the United States Supreme Court reminded a nation that seems
to have forgotten freedom of speech about the importance of the First Amendment.
Justice Stephen Breyer wrote a thoughtful decision denying public schools the
power to discipline high school students for talking the way high school
students tend to talk among themselves outside of school. A 14-year-old
cheerleader had made the mistake of sending a rant to a few friends, one of
whose mothers was a coach.
This was not a broad decision that gave students the right to say or do anything
outside of school. It was limited to cases in which students are disciplined for
making statements that would generally be protected by the First Amendment and
did not significantly affect the educational mission of the school. It would not
apply, for example, to bullying or other harmful speech that would impact other
students.
The significance of this decision goes well beyond the cheerleader and her
juvenile gestures and words. It sends a powerful message that the Supreme Court
is still in the business of protecting offensive speech, even as big tech,
universities and many progressives have tried to justify pervasive censorship of
speech with which they disagree. "Free speech for me, but not for thee" has
become a common mantra of the hard left, and of those institutions that kowtow
to the most radical elements of our society.
In a recent book, entitled, The Case Against the New Censorship: Protecting Free
Speech from Big Tech, Progressives and Universities, I argued that the most
dangerous form of contemporary censorship comes not from the government, but
rather from private parties who themselves have the First Amendment right to
censor speech with which they disagree. In other words, what we are experiencing
is an attack not on the First Amendment itself, but rather on the culture of
free speech that the First Amendment is designed to protect.
Although the cheerleader case involved a public school, its implications go
beyond government. Many private universities, for example — such as Harvard,
where I taught for 50 years — loudly proclaimed that although they are not
technically bound by the First Amendment, they follow it to the letter. It will
be interesting to see whether these private schools will now stop disciplining
and denying admission to students and applicants based on statements they made
on social media. Today many such institutions punish students and applicants for
social media statements they may have posted when they were the same youthful
age as the cheerleader. Nor is the punishment always based on neutral or
objective standards. It tends to be imposed far more on conservative students
who have violated political correctness norms of the left. It is rarely, if
ever, imposed on left-wing students, especially students of color, who make
statements that are deeply offensive to conservatives and/or white heterosexual
men. The constitutional reach of the First Amendment permits such selective
punishment by private institutions, but the culture of freedom of expression
does not.
Justice Louis Brandeis correctly pointed out a century ago: "The Government is
the potent, the omnipresent teacher...", to which may be added, "and the Supreme
Court is the dean." When the government suppresses speech, the lesson is learned
and often emulated by other institutions. This is especially true of our public
schools, which, as Justice Stephen Breyer pointed out, are the nurseries of our
Constitution.
Surprisingly, Justice Clarence Thomas was the sole dissenter. He usually can be
counted on to defend freedom of speech and other core constitutional values,
especially against partisan and selective attacks from the left. But Thomas is
an originalist who interprets the Constitution in accordance with what the
Framers intended, and he concluded — erroneously in my view — that the Framers
placed a higher value on school discipline than on freedom of speech for
students. The important point, however, is that eight justices — three liberals
and five conservatives — sided with the First Amendment over the claims of
school authorities.
Let us see, then, how these new censors respond to that new decision.
Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law, Emeritus at
Harvard Law School and author of the book, The Case Against the New Censorship:
Protecting Free Speech from Big Tech, Progressives and Universities, Hot Books,
April 20, 2021. His new podcast, "The Dershow," can be seen on Spotify, Apple
and YouTube. He is the Jack Roth Charitable Foundation Fellow at Gatestone
Institute.
Follow Alan M. Dershowitz on Twitter and Facebook
© 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.
Will US airstrikes be a gamechanger for Biden’s Mideast policy? - analysis
Seth J. Frantzman/Jerusalem Post/June 28/2021
If the US rate of response is only two retaliatory rounds of strikes to dozens
of attacks since January, the US is not deterring the pro-Iran groups.
For the second time this year, the Biden administration has responded to threats
to US forces in Iraq by carrying out airstrikes. The second round of strikes
took place early on Monday and targeted militia groups with ties to Iran.
The first airstrikes ordered by the Biden administration took place in late
February and also targeted Iran-backed militias in Syria.
“At President [Joe] Biden’s direction, US military forces earlier this evening
conducted defensive precision airstrikes against facilities used by Iran-backed
militia groups in the Iraq-Syria border region,” Pentagon press secretary John
Kirby said. “The targets were selected because these facilities are utilized by
Iran-backed militias that are engaged in unmanned aerial vehicle [UAV] attacks
against US personnel and facilities in Iraq.”
The reason the targeting of these groups is legitimate is because they are being
carried out in the border region that is not under Iraqi sovereignty.
Iraq hosts the Popular Mobilization Units, pro-Iranian militias that are
technically an official paramilitary force. This means airstrikes carried out on
them are actually on Iraqi territory. These militias have carried out dozens of
attacks on US forces.
US forces were invited to Iraq in 2014 to help fight ISIS, but since 2017, there
have been increasing calls by the militias for them to pull out. Since May 2019,
there have been increasing attacks, which culminated in the killing of a US
contractor in December 2019 and led to US retaliatory airstrikes.
The US has said it “targeted operational and weapons storage facilities at two
locations in Syria and one location in Iraq, both of which lie close to the
border between those countries. Several Iran-backed militia groups, including
Kata’ib Hezbollah (KH) and Kata’ib Sayyid al-Shuhada (KSS), used these
facilities.”
Biden is seeking to send a clear message that he will act to protect Americans
in Iraq.
The most recent attack took place on Saturday when armed drones, likely flown by
pro-Iran militias, targeted Erbil in the autonomous Kurdistan Region. The drones
struck areas close to the site of the new US Consulate. No Americans were
wounded.
It was not clear what the target was or if the attack was intended to be a
message that Iran and its proxies have the means to strike the consulate. Over
the past few months, some 45 attacks targeting US forces and facilities have
been recorded. These include logistics convoys linked to the US that the
militias assume resupply the US facilities.
There were also attacks on US contractors at Balad Air Base. Most importantly, a
drone struck a secret CIA hangar at Erbil’s airport in April. The usual modus
operandi of the militias is to use 107-mm.or 122-mm. rockets. But in recent
months the drone threat has rapidly increased.
“Given the ongoing series of attacks by Iran-backed groups targeting US
interests in Iraq, the President directed further military action to disrupt and
deter such attacks,” the US said in a statement. “We are in Iraq at the
invitation of the Government of Iraq for the sole purpose of assisting the Iraqi
Security Forces in their efforts to defeat ISIS. The United States took
necessary, appropriate, and deliberate action designed to limit the risk of
escalation – but also to send a clear and unambiguous deterrent message.”
The US also said it has a right to self-defense and that the president took this
action pursuant to his Article II authority to protect US personnel in Iraq.
Washington is currently in the middle of a military withdrawal from Afghanistan,
and Iran wants to pressure the US in Iraq. In addition, Turkey and other players
may want to pressure the US’s role in Syria as well.
These “defensive airstrikes conducted today by the Department of Defense on
operational and weapons storage facilities in the Iraq-Syria border region
appear to be a targeted and proportional response to a serious and specific
threat,” US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi said.
It was important to protect America’s military, she said in a statement, adding:
“The Iran-backed militias utilizing these facilities have been engaged in
attacks threatening US service members, as well as our allies. Congress looks
forward to receiving and reviewing the formal notification of this operation
under the War Powers Act and to receiving additional briefings from the
Administration.”
According to Michael Knights, who specializes in Iraqi military security, the
airstrikes that hit near the border town of Albukamal between Syria and Iraq
“[do] appear to have the space and facilities to be the hub for militia drone
development. This is why it was struck. We can expect the Biden team to have
gone non/less-lethal again, trading strictly proportionally. Not sure that will
cut it.”
He tweeted that he was “not convinced that hitting drone facilities themselves
is very fruitful. These are cheap drones using many dual-use and low-cost
systems, Iran is close enough [by land so that] resupply is easy and assemblers
are replaceable. Only leadership strikes deter.”
The larger point Knights is making is that drone and rocket attacks have
increased this year, and the new threat includes at least 10 attacks with
several types of drones. If the US rate of response is only two retaliatory
rounds of strikes in response to dozens of attacks since January, then the US is
not deterring the pro-Iran groups.
Along with Crispin Smith, Knights wrote an article at the Washington Institute
for Near East Policy regarding the drone threat.
This leaves a major question mark over whether Biden will go further and whether
more strikes will occur. It is clear the Biden administration is attempting to
justify the strikes to Congress. However, Iran appears to feel it has the
impunity to attack the US, striking secret sites and targeting air defenses and
other sensitive areas.
While some pro-Iran claims of attacks may be disinformation, the reality is that
they appear to have the upper hand. The US is not prepared to do what the Trump
administration did, which was to target Qasem Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis,
key leadership figures of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and Popular
Mobilization Forces, respectively.
This means the strikes may be more of an example of doing something just so that
the US can say it did something. That would not be a game changer, and Iran will
likely know that.
This then puts the Pentagon and White House in a bind: They know what needs to
be done to deter Iran, but they may not want to increase tensions.
Instead, the US is withdrawing air-defense systems from the region, officials
have told The Wall Street Journal. That is not a good message to an Iran that
increasingly wants to push the US out of the way.
In addition, during the 11-day conflict between Israel and Hamas in May, a drone
was launched from Iraq or Syria and flew into Israeli airspace before being shot
down. This means the threats in Iraq to US forces also run parallel to emerging
threats to Israel in the region.
Beat, Raped, and Left for Dead: The Persecution of
Christians, May 2021
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/June 28/201
ريموند إبراهيم/جيتستون: جدول بقائمة اضطهاد المسيحيين في العالم لشهر أيار 2021/ضرب
واغتصاب وترك الضحايا يواجهون الموت
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/100131/100131/
The boy eventually met up with his mother, and they went searching for Pastor
Thomas. According to the wife, “As we continued doing the search, we found my
husband in a pool of blood, beheaded and his tongue removed.” His tongue was
likely cut out as punishment for “speaking against Islam.”
Although Azerbaijan claims to be repairing the damage it caused the cathedral,
subsequent pictures and video footage suggest that they are defacing it more….
In the same area of Shushi where the cathedral is being profaned, Azerbaijan is
preparing to build a “victory” mosque…. Finally, Azerbaijan is using gravestones
from Armenian Christian cemeteries as building material.
Muslim men raped a Christian child and molested another. On May 2, Muhammad
Awais, “beat, raped, and left for dead” Anum Bibi, an 8-year-old Christian girl,
after he caught her trying to retrieve water with her 9-year-old brother. —
Pakistan.
A group of Muslims attacked a Christian family and destroyed their home in an
effort to seize their farmstead. “Muslims destroyed our mud house,” the mother
explained. “They stole our tin roof, took the rice, food, everything of value.
They also beat me and my husband with a stick, even my children.”… As a result,
police failed to respond or make any arrests and instead asked for money from
the victims. — Bangladesh.
Although Azerbaijan claims to be repairing the damage it caused to the
Ghazanchetsots Cathedral (pictured), subsequent photographs and video footage
suggest that they are defacing it more…. In the same area of Shushi where the
cathedral is being profaned, Azerbaijan is preparing to build a “victory”
mosque…. Finally, Azerbaijan is using gravestones from Armenian Christian
cemeteries as building material.
The following are among the abuses inflicted on Christians by Muslims throughout
the month of May 2021:
The Slaughter of Christians
Uganda: On May 3, hours after Pastor Thomas Chikooma engaged in a public debate
about Islam and Christianity, Muslims severed his tongue and beheaded him. The
well-known pastor, father of 11, had planted 50 churches in eastern Uganda.
During the open-air event, to which Muslims had invited him, he used the Bible
and Koran to make his points. He won over several people — including six
Muslims, who went on to convert to Christianity — prompting angry Muslims in the
crowd to cry “Allahu Akbar,” prompted the pastor and his young son to rush away
from the event.
Picture Enclosed/lAlthough Azerbaijan claims to be repairing the damage it
caused to the Ghazanchetsots Cathedral (pictured), subsequent photographs and
video footage suggest that they are defacing it more…. In the same area of
Shushi where the cathedral is being profaned, Azerbaijan is preparing to build a
“victory” mosque…. Finally, Azerbaijan is using gravestones from Armenian
Christian cemeteries as building material.
“Two motorcycles carrying two Muslims each and dressed in Islamic attire
speedily bypassed us,” his son, a minor, later explained. “When we were 200
meters to reach our house, the two motorcycles stopped at the junction opposite
Nalufenya primary school and the road near our house.” The pastor told his son
to wait while he went to confront the four men. “Immediately some commotion
began as the men started talking about the open-air debate, and soon one of them
slapped my father,” said his son. “I got scared and fled … and arrived at home.”
The boy eventually met up with his mother, and they went searching for Pastor
Thomas.
According to the wife, “As we continued doing the search, we found my husband in
a pool of blood, beheaded and his tongue removed.” His tongue was likely cut out
as punishment for “speaking against Islam.”
Separately, Muslims poisoned and killed a Christian pastor over his land:
whether a church or mosque would be built over it. Initially, Muslims in the
area urged Pastor Yolonim Oduchu to sell them his land, so they could construct
a mosque on it. According to the pastor’s brother, Francis:
“Aliasa Opeduru and a number of [other] Muslims had approached my brother to
sell them the piece of land several times, but my brother declined because their
offer was small, and he also wanted to have part of the land set aside for
constructing a church structure. Later my brother received a threatening message
from Opeduru saying he would not negotiate with him again.”
Eventually the Muslims “found a sponsor in Turkey to fund the construction of
the mosque.” Now the problem became that the Muslims did not want a church near
their mosque, but Pastor Yolonim began clearing his parcel of land in
preparation of construction. Then, one day, after eating at a hotel owned by a
Muslim, “my husband,” said his wife Mary, “took a motorcycle and arrived at home
complaining of severe stomach pains, diarrhea and started vomiting. We rushed
him to a nearby clinic, and he succumbed to poisoning.” Soon after his burial,
his brother saw blood sprinkled atop the pastor’s grave with papers with Arabic
writing.
“We then sought assistance from police, who came with a sniffing dog that
directed the mourners up to Opeduru’s home, where we found the suspect inside
the house sleeping. When police asked him about the blood, he admitted to
pouring the animal blood there because the pastor didn’t respect him.”
After being interrogated by angry residents, the hotel owner confessed that
“Muslims had given him poison and instructed him to put it in Pastor Oduchu’s
food.” The pastor is survived by his wife and eight children, ages 2 to 16.
Pakistan: A group of Muslims abducted, beat, and poisoned a Christian man,
before leaving him for dead in the middle of a street. Thirty-two-year-old Arif
Masih’s crime was that he had tried to defend his younger sister from sexual
harassment. According to the report, on May 20,
“Rehana Bibi, 18, had gone to the bazaar to buy some milk. Returning home, two
young men, Muhammad Tariq and Muhammad Majid, began to harass her. The girl
tried to escape and took refuge in the house. The two broke into the house and
got into a fight with Arif [her brother]. The two young men also took the girl
and dragged her to the bazaar, tore off her clothes and mocked her.”
Although the family registered a complaint with police, the police failed to
act. Instead, Masih began to receive threats from the two accused men to drop
the complaint, or else. Then, on May 23:
“both perpetrators went to Arif’s home and attacked him. They loaded him onto
their motorcycle and then beat and poisoned him, throwing him on the street.
Local people informed the family that their son was lifeless in the middle of
the road.”
He was rushed to two different hospitals but, “due to his injuries and the
poison, he died.” Because they could not get justice, Masih’s family took his
body and exhibited it in the middle of a road, stopping vehicles and begging for
justice (picture here).
Germany: During court proceedings, it was learned that a Muslim migrant from
Syria murdered his sister’s boyfriend for being Christian. According to the May
18 report,
“[H]e had killed his sister’s boyfriend because, as a Muslim, he would not
tolerate his sister’s relationship with her Christian boyfriend. According to
the verdict, the man waited more than an hour in the backyard for the victim in
January 2019. When the 25-year-old got out of the car, the defendant fired shots
from close range. The man died in the hospital from his gunshot wounds.”
Democratic Republic of Congo: The Allied Democratic Forces, designated by the
U.S. as an Islamic terror group, massacred between 50 and 57 people in the
Christian majority nation, and torched 25 homes between May 29 and 30. The group
is committed to creating an Islamic Caliphate in Central Africa.
Burkina Faso: On May 18, Islamic terrorists attacked a Christian baptismal
ceremony, where they massacred 15 Christians. “People are shocked and many are
running,” a native in contact with town residents reported at the time. It is
the fourth such attack in the nation’s Sahel region. According to the report:
“Violence linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State extremists has left thousands
dead in the West African nation over the last several years. In recent weeks,
attacks have spiked in Burkina Faso’s Sahel region and in the country’s east.
Two Spanish journalists and an Irish conservationist were among more than 50
people killed during one week in April. The violence has displaced more than 1
million people, and aid groups say it’s also brought tens of thousands to the
brink of starvation by disrupting aid operations to those in need.”
South Sudan: On Sunday, May 19, a group of Muslims attacked and killed more than
a dozen Christians. The attack and other forms of “senseless violence” have been
taking place in the most northern part of the nation, particularly in Abyei, “an
area that experiences Islamic encroachments followed by harassment, intimidation
and frequent attacks carried out by Arab Islamic militias,” said the Episcopal
Church of South Sudan in a statement. Of the most recent attack, the Bishop of
Abyei, Michael Deng Bol, said that the village of Dungob-Alei, had been
“barbarically attacked by militiamen of Sudan since around 5.30 am on Sunday 16
May, killing 13 people and wounding eight others. “
“The fighting is still continuing up to now [late Monday night]… This is not the
first attack of its kind. In 2020 Kolom village, 12km away from Abyei town, and
Mabok Diil village, 18km east of Abyei town, were also attacked in the same way
with 38 killed and 22 wounded, together with the abduction of 17 children and
burning down of 77 houses including our prayer centres and medical facilities.”
Nigeria: Some of the massacres of Christians at the hands of Fulani Muslim
herdsmen reported throughout the month of May:
May 23: “Fourteen Christians were butchered to death, including children,” a
survivor from a raided village wrote in a communique. “Eight members of one
family have all been killed. This is beside an additional six other Christians
killed by the herdsmen in the village.” More Christians were killed in another
village on or around that same day, for a total of 37 dead. Survivors heard the
attackers shouting the jihadist war-cry, “Allahu Akbar.” Discussing the fate of
her brother, one woman said,
“The armed Fulani herdsmen spotted him and shot him dead. I feel very sad about
the way my brother was killed in cold blood. Why must we live in fear every day,
not knowing the evil that awaits us as Christians in this country?”
May 21: Fulani herdsmen killed two Christian men — both of whom left behind
young families. The same day, a young Catholic priest’s body was found thrown in
the bush. “Sokoto Diocese has been struck again by another set of blood-sucking
demons,” church member Emmanuel Albert wrote in a text. “The Rev. Fr. Alphonsus
is gone but will never be forgotten. He died because of his Christian faith, and
as he has gone to meet his Maker, may eternal rest be granted to his soul.”
Another church member said, “My aging mother’s wailing when I broke the news to
her over the phone is jaggedly ringing in my soul… We pray for other priests and
good people in captivity that God will bring them back home.”
May 20: Muslim herdsmen killed two Christians, 21-year-old Ladi Jeffrey, mother
to a 16-month-old child, and her nephew, during a nighttime raid on the family’s
home.
May 19: Fulani herdsmen murdered eight Christians and burned down a church.
Finally, according to another report published on May 12, between January and
April of this year alone, 1,470 Christians were hacked to death by Muslim
Fulani. On average this comes out to about 368 Christians killed every month for
four months straight.
Attacks on Apostates, Blasphemers, and Evangelists
Pakistan: Another Christian nurse was falsely accused of blasphemy. Sometime in
early May, Sakina Mehtab was shocked to see videos of her Muslim colleagues
marching on hospital premises while shouting Islamic slogans and accusing her of
blasphemy. Soon thereafter she began to receive anonymous threatening messages
to “maim and kill” her — which prompted the Christian nurse to go into hiding.
Her “crime” was to have shared a video on WhatsApp of a Pakistani Muslim in
France criticizing the response of Pakistan to an EU resolution. “There was no
religious element in it, but a group of nurses spread lies that the video was
anti-Islamic and accused me of blasphemy,” said Sakina, who was set to retire
from the Punjab Institute of Mental Health in Lahore in two years. “My life has
been put at serious risk with this false allegation, and I don’t know how I’ll
be able to resume work at the hospital with the fear that someone might attack
me from nowhere. My fear is not unfounded.” According to the report:
“Hours after she shared the video, a large group of Muslim nurses and
paramedical staff, some armed with clubs and sticks, staged a protest rally.
Witnesses said the protestors intimidated Christian workers in hospital wards
and repeatedly tried to provoke them into fights. There are about 345 Christians
in the 600-strong workforce.”
The Muslim mob then stormed into a hospital auditorium that Christian staff
members and patients used as a church for worship and prayer. They “desecrated
Bibles and other property and asserted that there would be no more Christian
prayer gatherings there”; furthermore, they “took over the church and threatened
their Christian colleagues with blasphemy cases if they failed to raze the
church and convert to Islam.”
Speaking on condition of anonymity, another Christian nurse said that such false
blasphemy charges are part of a systematic plan to “replace them [Christians]
with Muslims…. The administration’s bias towards Christians is evident, because
no action has been taken against the persons who brought the false charge
against Sakina and put her life at risk.” This is the third instance this year
in Pakistan of Christian nurses being falsely accused of blasphemy. Earlier:
“On April 9, two Christian nurses complying with a supervisor’s orders to remove
stickers at a government hospital were arrested in Faisalabad after a Muslim
employee attacked one of them with a knife over the removal of a sticker bearing
Koranic verses.
“Nurse Mariam Lal and student nurse Navish Arooj were charged under Section
295-B of Pakistan’s blasphemy statutes against ‘defiling the Koran’ after an
Islamist mob demanded ‘death to blasphemers’ inside Civil Hospital… Conviction
under Section 295-B is punishable by up to 10 years imprisonment and/or a fine.
“The two Roman Catholic nurses are in judicial custody while their families have
gone into hiding out of fear of Islamist mobs.
“On Jan. 28, Tabeeta Gill, a nurse at a Karachi hospital and a gospel singer,
was slapped, beaten and locked in a room by a violent mob after a Muslim
co-worker baselessly accused her of blaspheming Islam. Police initially cleared
her of denigrating Muhammad but later succumbed to pressure of an Islamist mob
and charged her with insulting Islam’s prophet, punishable by death under
Section 295-C. Gill has reportedly fled the country to avoid arrest.”
Uganda: After beheading Kanifa Namulondo’s husband some years back, some Muslims
burned down her and her children’s recently reconstructed home on May 2.
Earlier, when the Muslim family had converted to Christianity, local Muslims
responded by beheading her father in 2015, prompting Kanifa and her children to
flee. On April 25, though, with the help of friends, the apostate family had
moved back into the same home.. On May 2, Kanifa noticed that the Muslim calls
to prayer were unusually early. Then, “around 4 o’clock [in the morning] I heard
people talking near the door,” she later recounted. “The husband betrayed our
religion,” One of the voices said. “We should do away with the entire family.”
She responded by hurriedly waking up her children, escaping through the
backdoor, and breaking into her neighbor’s home, where she and the children
locked themselves in the bathroom. She soon saw flames through the window and
realized that her home had been set on fire by the would-be murderers. As last
reported, she and her children were “living in great fear in temporary quarters
… and must relocate far away, again.”
In a separate incident, a Muslim motorcyclist intentionally targeted and struck
Hassan Muwanguzi, a former Muslim who converted to Christianity and was long
known for helping other persecuted converts from Islam. After he was struck and
suffered a leg injury, passersby surrounded both men and prevented the attacker
from fleeing the scene. “The mob wanted to beat him,” the victim explained, “but
he shouted, saying, ‘This man has been a trouble-maker to our Islamic religion,’
Soon the police arrived and arrested him.” The Muslim was later released on
bail. Before that, Hassan had been receiving threatening messages from Muslims.
A recent one said:
“You have been converting Muslims to Christianity. We have been warning you
about this several times. But you have refused to heed to our directive, so be
ready with whatever action we are going to take.”
Attacks on Churches
USA: Ali Alaheri, a 29-year-old Muslim man, went on an anti-Christian and
anti-Jewish crime spree in Brooklyn, NY, until he was finally arrested and
charged with hate crimes. During his rampage he knocked down and destroyed a
large crucifix that had stood for eleven years outside of St. Athanasius Church
in Bensonhurst, and burned the American flag on the premises. The damage was
discovered on May 14. “It was a terrible morning,” said Monsignor David Cassato.
“It was probably the saddest day in my life, to see this desecration of a cross
of Jesus and the desecration of the flag.” Alaheri also deliberately set fire to
a yeshiva and synagogue on 36th Street in Brooklyn. Surveillance video shows him
piling and lighting garbage bags alongside the building. Firefighters responded
in time to extinguish the flames. He also “allegedly attacked a man wearing
traditional Hasidic garb.”
Turkey: In the same village where Christians were earlier persecuted, the Marta
Shimoni Church in eastern Turkey was desecrated and vandalized on May 11. A year
earlier, the elderly parents of a Chaldean priest were kidnapped. The wife was
later found dead; the husband remains missing. According to the report,
“Marta Shimoni is a cave church built into the mountains, and thus cannot be
destroyed in the same way as other churches. Video footage … shows that the
destruction was primarily against the Christian items and relics inside the
church. Crosses, pictures of Jesus, and rosaries were strewn across the path
leading away from the mountain church’s entrance.”
Armenia/Azerbaijan: Azerbaijan continued to abuse the Christian heritage of the
ancient Armenian territory of Artsakh, which was recently appropriated by its
Muslim neighbor. In October 2020, for example, Azerbaijan shelled and damaged
Ghazanchetsots Cathedral in Shushi. Although Azerbaijan claims to be repairing
the damage it caused the cathedral, subsequent pictures and video footage
suggest that they are defacing it more. Angles that sat atop the pillars of the
main entrance are now gone, as are its domes. According to Nagorno-Karabakh
Ombudsman Gegham Stepanyan, Azerbaijan is seeking to alter the cathedral’s
appearance: “We have seen many times how Azerbaijan actually treats Armenian
cultural values, and it is already clear what is hidden under the ‘restoration
work.’ The goal is to eliminate traces of the Armenian presence.” In a
statement, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said that “Azerbaijan carries out
actions related to the church without consulting the Armenian Apostolic Church,
which clearly violates the right of Armenian believers to freedom of religion.”
UNESCO experts have also been denied access to Armenian cultural heritage sites.
In the same area of Shushi where the cathedral is being profaned, Azerbaijan is
preparing to build a “victory” mosque. On May 12, the same day Azerbaijani
troops entered Armenian territory, President Ilham Aliyev laid the foundation
for the new mosque on ancient Armenian land. Further underscoring that it is
meant to be a “victory” mosque, the new structure was commissioned to resemble
the figure 8, because Shushi was conquered on November 8, while its two minarets
will represent 11, for the month of its conquest.
Finally, Azerbaijan is using gravestones from Armenian Christian cemeteries as
building material. During a May 10 interview, Foreign Minister of Artsakh, David
Babayan, said,
“There is evidence showing that the Azerbaijani are demolishing the Hadrut
cemetery…. This is another manifestation of cultural genocide and barbarism with
a political purpose. They are not only completely destroying the Armenian trace,
but are also using it for economic purposes.”
The gravestones, he said, are being used for the construction of the
Hadrut-Shushi road, thereby allowing Azerbaijan to save money on construction
material.
Indonesia: On May 31, police arrested 11 Islamic militants accused of plotting
the bombings of several churches in the Christian-majority Papua province. The
accused are members of a terror group affiliated with Islamic State and that has
previously carried out several suicide bombings in Indonesia. Among the items
confiscated during police raids were jihadi literature and bomb-making manuals,
chemicals for explosives, and modified air guns capable of firing real bullets.
General Attacks on Christians
Pakistan: Muslim men raped a Christian child and molested another. On May 2,
Muhammad Awais, “beat, raped, and left for dead” Anum Bibi, an 8-year-old
Christian girl, after he caught her trying to retrieve water with her 9-year-old
brother. She was later found unconscious in the field and taken to a hospital.
Two days later, on May 4, Christians protested on learning that an 8-year-old
Christian girl was sexually harassed by her teacher’s brother. According to the
girl’s mother, “Muhammad Amir, the Muslim culprit, attempted several rounds of
wrestling with my daughter to fulfill his sexual desire; however, he did not
succeed. Jemima started shouting and crying very loudly. Finally, she managed to
escape from Amir’s arms and ran into the street.” “The assaults,” the report
adds, “are only the most recent examples of the vulnerability of Christian women
and girls who are targeted by sexual predators in Pakistan…”
Separately in Pakistan, after a petty dispute between some Christian youths who
were cleaning their church, and their Muslim landlord — who accused them of
throwing dust on them — a Muslim mob consisting of some 200 persons, on May 15,
formed and terrorized the eighty Christian families living in the same village.
Eight Christians were seriously injured and 15 Christian households ransacked.
“They were armed with glass bottles, stones, axes, batons and bricks,” recalled
one Christian, who lost a thumb in the attack. “Others used stairs to climb to
our roofs and started breaking our furniture. We pleaded to spare the women, but
the attack continued for half an hour.”
“They broke the locks, grabbed our hair and pulled us out one by one,” another
female survivor said. “Young girls were assaulted and left with torn clothes.”
The boys accused of dirtying their Muslim landlord were especially sought out
and punished. “The weakness on the part of the administration encourages such
attacks on religious minorities,” said a local clergyman. “The culprits are
usually let off scot-free. Religion is used to settle personal scores. The
locals fear another attack.”
Bangladesh: A group of Muslims attacked a Christian family and destroyed their
home in an effort to seize their farmstead.
“Muslims destroyed our mud house,” the mother explained. “They stole our tin
roof, took the rice, food, everything of value. They also beat me and my husband
with a stick, even my children.” The attackers are from the same village, which
contains only two Christian families; everyone else is Muslim. As a result,
police failed to respond or make any arrests and instead asked for money from
the victims. “Being Christian and a minority is a problem,” the mother
continued. “If Muslims want to, they can take over our land, occupy it quickly
and easily. But let us not lose hope. We shall fight to keep our land.” Although
her family has been living on land that has long belonged to her ancestors, the
Muslim attackers acquired land adjacent to the Christians’ and want to absorb
it.
A regional clergyman confirmed that the Christians “have valid property
documents,” but “those Muslims want to seize their land illegally. It’s an
injustice.”
Picture Enclosed/lAlthough Azerbaijan claims to be repairing the damage it
caused to the Ghazanchetsots Cathedral (pictured), subsequent photographs and
video footage suggest that they are defacing it more…. In the same area of
Shushi where the cathedral is being profaned, Azerbaijan is preparing to build a
“victory” mosque…. Finally, Azerbaijan is using gravestones from Armenian
Christian cemeteries as building material. (Photo by Aris Messinis/AFP via Getty
Images).
**Raymond Ibrahim, author of Crucified Again and Sword and Scimitar, is a
Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Gatestone Institute, a Shillman Fellow at the
David Horowitz Freedom Center, and a Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the Middle
East Forum.
About this Series
While not all, or even most, Muslims are involved, persecution of Christians by
extremists is growing. The report posits that such persecution is not random but
rather systematic, and takes place irrespective of language, ethnicity, or
location. It includes incidents that take place during, or are reported on, any
given month.
© 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.
A personality type that feels absolutely no guardrails': How Saudi Arabia's
leader charmed Washington while cracking down on opponents
Michael Isikoff/Yahoo/June 28/2021
Joseph Westphal was wowed from the start. As President Barack Obama’s ambassador
to Saudi Arabia in 2015, Westphal started paying regular visits to the rising
new power in the royal court: the country’s new defense minister, Mohammed bin
Salman, favored son of King Salman.
“First of all, we shared a really nice sense of humor,” said Westphal. “I mean
we, we laughed, we joked around. ... It was just laughing about life, and
talking about things that maybe happened to me or happened to him.”
More important, Prince Mohammed, who is known as MBS, was pledging to start to
rein in the country’s religious police and grant greater rights to Saudi women —
steps that U.S. officials had long been calling for. “Yes, absolutely,” Westphal
replied when asked if he viewed MBS at the time as an agent of change. “From the
very beginning. Absolutely.”
Saudi Arabia's newly appointed King Salman, left, shakes hands with the U.S
ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Joseph Westphal, at a meeting with then-President
Barack Obama, right, in Riyadh in 2015.
Westphal’s relationship with the young Saudi prince is one glimpse into a much
broader and, from today’s perspective, unsettling phenomenon: the strange and
successful courtship by MBS of America’s foreign policy and corporate elite,
presenting himself as a cultured reformer who was positioned to revolutionize
his rigidly conservative country.
The story of that courtship — and its embarrassing aftermath, as MBS’s ruthless
crackdowns on dissent and his bloody military adventure in Yemen became ever
more apparent — is the subject of “The Rise of the Bullet Guy,” Episode 5 in
Yahoo News’ "Conspiracyland" podcast: “The Secret Lives and Brutal Death of
Jamal Khashoggi.”
It is a courtship that came to a final, crashing and ignominious end when, in
October 2018, a so-called Tiger Team of Saudi assassins brutally murdered the
Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi — drugging him with illicit narcotics brought
from Cairo, suffocating him and then carving up his body with a bone saw and
depositing his body parts in plastic bags.
It was a crime that the CIA soon concluded had been authorized by the crown
prince himself, noting — among other factors — that MBS’s right-hand man had met
with the team before they left to kill Khashoggi in Istanbul, and that seven
members of the hit squad were part of MBS’s personal security detail, answerable
only to him.
And yet the shocking nature of Khashoggi’s murder has tended to obscure the
preceding years, when at first top Obama administration officials, and then
President Donald Trump and his influential son-in-law, Jared Kushner, embraced
MBS with few reservations and extolled his supposed virtues.
“He’s the only person I’ve met in 30 years of my involvement or more with Saudi
Arabia who has put that kind of a vision on the table for the transformation of
the country,” said John Kerry, Obama’s secretary of state, in an interview for
“Conspiracyland” about his assessment of MBS at the time.
Kerry’s Georgetown home was the setting for perhaps the most iconic moment in
MBS’s courtship of the U.S. government. It was in June 2016, and the new Saudi
defense minister, during a trip to the United States, was invited to a Ramadan
dinner at Kerry’s house. As he entered, MBS spotted the grand piano in the
living room, promptly sat down and started to play Beethoven's “Moonlight
Sonata.”
John Kerry, then U.S. secretary of state, left, greets Saudi Deputy Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman outside Kerry's Washington, D.C., residence, before a
meeting with him in June 2016.
“I mean, we were all surprised,” recalled Kerry. “Somebody had trained him
well.”
But even as he impressed the guests in Kerry’s living room, others saw the dark
impulses of a would-be tyrant. Ben Rhodes, then Obama’s deputy national security
adviser, recalls a summit in Riyadh the previous April, when Obama raised U.S.
concerns about Saudi Arabia’s worsening human rights record, including a mass
execution of 47 prisoners and the case of a Saudi blogger who had just been
sentenced to 10 years in prison — and 1,000 lashes with a whip.
“Obama’s like, ‘What are you guys doing? I’m not gonna defend this,’” said
Rhodes in an interview for “Conspiracyland.”
But suddenly, “MBS stands up in the middle of the room, and, and begins to
lecture Obama: ‘You don’t understand the Saudi justice system. And if we didn’t
do this, our people would demand vengeance.’ And then he offers to get Obama a
briefing on the Saudi justice system. I mean, dripping condescension. You know?
And I just remember sitting there and thinking, like, ‘What is going on here?’”
“It spoke to a personality type that feels absolutely no guardrails, you know?”
Rhodes added. “I mean, if you’re comfortable standing up in a room full of
people and lecturing the president of the United States … because he’s raising
concerns about mass executions in your country, you are not the guy people [are]
reading about … in the New York Times and the Washington Post, who’s [described
as] a reformer. I mean, it just laid bare the utter bullshit of the narrative
around MBS to me. And I’m, I’m sitting there thinking, you know, ‘How are people
calling this guy a modernizer?’"
But there was an issue of far more concern to U.S. officials than the young
prince’s condescending lecture to Obama. With virtually no warning to
Washington, MBS had launched a merciless war in Yemen, targeting the Houthis — a
religious minority group loosely aligned with the Iranians who had seized
control of the country’s capital. Saudi warplanes, using American weapons, had
unleashed a relentless wave of bombings that were slaughtering civilians by the
thousands, sparking outrage from human rights groups.
There was “countless documentation of U.S.-manufactured bombs being used on
markets, on schools, on people’s homes, on hospitals, on clinics throughout the
country,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, then the director of Human Rights Watch’s
Mideast Division and now the executive director of Democracy for the Arab World
Now.
Officials in the Obama administration were well aware of the compromising
position this put them in. The State Department’s legal office even launched an
inquiry into whether the United States was complicit in war crimes. (The lawyers
never reached a firm conclusion.) But the White House was torn about what to do.
At the White House, officials were “repelled by what we were seeing,” said Rob
Malley, who was then on the National Security Council and charged with
coordinating U.S. policy in the region. “But the first instinct was, ‘Well,
let’s see if we could give them advice on how to make sure that they don’t kill
civilians again.’ But it turns out time and again, whether it’s a mosque,
whether it’s a market, whether it’s whatever it is, that they would not only hit
it once, they hit it twice, sometimes more.”
Girls demonstrate against the Saudi-led coalition outside the offices of the
United Nations in Yemen's capital, Sanaa, in August 2015.
Still, said Malley, Obama was reluctant to provoke a confrontation with the
Saudis. At the time, relations were tense over the Iranian nuclear deal, which
Riyadh opposed, and he wanted the Saudis' help in the war against the Islamic
State group.
“There was a meeting [about the war in Yemen] of the Principals Committee,
chaired by President Obama,” said Malley. “There were voices expressing a lot of
concern.” But Obama “felt he could not, given everything else that was happening
in the region, afford a crisis with one of the few countries with which we still
retained ... strong relations and cooperation on a whole host of issues,
counterterrorism first and foremost.
“I was extremely — how could I put it? — troubled by the whole decision, because
we should not have been complicit in this war,” added Malley, who has rejoined
the National Security Council under President Biden. “And, you know, the U.S.
makes enormous — mistakes is probably too, too kind a word, to describe many,
many of its actions.”
There was no doubt in the minds of Malley and other U.S. officials that it was
MBS who was driving the train. “He seemed to be already oblivious to the
consequences of the actions that he took,” said Malley. “And this was his war …
because he was the one who appeared to order it.”
It was a harbinger of even more disturbing moves to come.
Next on "Conspiracyland": Influence Operations
MBS deposes his chief rival, Mohammed bin Nayef, as crown prince, while the
Saudis launch covert influence operations on U.S. soil, including a campaign to
curry favor with President Donald Trump with mass bookings at the new Trump
International Hotel in Washington, D.C., and a plot to plant spies inside
Twitter to steal personal data from critics of the Saudi regime.
In case you missed it:
Episode 1: “Exclusive: Saudi assassins picked up illicit drugs in Cairo to kill
Khashoggi”
Episode 2: “Arms, harems and a Trump-owned yacht: How a Khashoggi family member
helped mold the U.S.-Saudi relationship”
Episode 3: “‘I just fell apart crying heartbreak to you’: A murdered
journalist's years-long relationship with Osama bin Laden”
Episode 4: "From royal insider to target: How the Arab Spring propelled Jamal
Khashoggi into the Saudi leadership's crosshairs"
In Ebrahim Raisi, Iran’s clerics have groomed and promoted
their ruthless enforcer
Reuel Marc Gerecht/Ray Takeyh/The Washington Post/June 28/2021
This month, Iran held the most boring — and most consequential — presidential
election in its history. Boring because the election was rigged virtually from
the start. What made it consequential is not because the winner, Ebrahim Raisi,
is a gruesome and unapologetic killer who has spent his entire career inside the
regime’s coercive institutions. Nor is it because Raisi is the first Iranian
president to fit that description. Both former president Ali Akbar Hashemi
Rafsanjani and Hassan Rouhani, the current president, were instrumental in
building and using the Iranian police state. Unlike Raisi, who has had little
involvement in foreign affairs, these two supposedly “pragmatic” clerics
advanced operations abroad that killed Americans, Israelis and Jews around the
world.
What is instead most striking about Raisi is that he has been groomed for this
moment — a moment when the regime teeters on the brink of illegitimacy and needs
a brutal enforcer. Raisi isn’t a clever, well-read mullah, as were so many of
the Islamic republic’s founding fathers. But he is the quintessence of a mature
Islamic Republic of Iran: He’s all about compulsion sustaining a creed that
ever-smaller numbers of Iranians embrace. The mullahs’ hope is that Raisi is
ruthless enough to overcome rising resistance to their rule.
This election, if you can even call it that, was really all about who will
succeed the 82-year-old Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as the rahbar, the overlord of
Iran’s theocracy. Khamenei has long eyed Raisi as his successor, and his
promotion to the presidency presages his ultimate ascension. The theocracy’s
stage-managed presidential election — now utterly stripped of any democratic
pretense — has deepened the legitimacy crisis that has plagued the regime since
1999, when it crushed the “Islamic left,” first-generation revolutionaries who
wanted to believe that the state could reform itself. With Khamenei and Raisi at
the helm, or with Raisi as the supreme leader, it’s not hard to envision the
police state pushing a disgruntled, angry society to the breaking point.
The Rise of Raisi
The story of Ebrahim Raisi tracks that of modern Iran itself. He was born in
1960 to a clerical family in Mashhad, in northeast Iran, now home to 3 million
people. He began his theological training in the shrine city of Qom at age 15.
Qom’s seminary was then the hotbed of anti-shah agitation, and many aspiring
mullahs looked to the exiled Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini for guidance and
inspiration. Raisi was a member of the Haqqani Circle, a radical school of
thought that produced many disciples who would go on to work in key sectors of
the Islamic republic, particularly its repressive institutions.
After the improbable success of Iran’s 1979 revolution, the coalition of
secularists, liberals, Marxist Muslims and clerically led Islamists that
displaced the Pahlavi monarchy soon collapsed, with competing factions fighting
on the streets. Amid this power struggle, Khomeini (by now, returned to Iran)
needed enforcers — men who had little compunction about ordering death sentences
in religious tribunals. While still in his early 20s, Raisi was appointed
prosecutor of Karaj, near Tehran, which saw its share of opposition activity
and, after his arrival, executions by firing squad. Thus began his career on the
republic’s dark side.
Khomeini would often summon Raisi when he needed special missions completed with
efficiency and cruelty. This led to his service on the so-called death
commission in 1988, which still defines his legacy. As Khomeini approached the
end of his life, he grew apprehensive about the vitality of his revolution. He
feared the Islamic republic would become less religiously driven in his absence
and decided to test the mettle of his disciples. In 1988, shortly after the
cease-fire with Iraq, the rahbar ordered one more bloodletting. In a span of few
months, thousands of leftist prisoners were executed; the exact number is
unknown, but most experts say a minimum of 5,000 were killed. Raisi was one of
the commission judges overseeing the slaughter. Apostasy and the denigration of
Islam were the usual charges hurled at the victims in hearings that often lasted
minutes.
The 1988 executions sparked a debate within the regime, just as Khomeini had
intended. The supreme leader wanted to separate the true believers from the
skeptics. His heir-apparent, Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, objected to the
killings, and in a secret recording released in 2016, he can be heard chastising
Raisi and his fellow executioners. “In my view, the biggest atrocity in the
Islamic republic, for which the history will condemn us, has been committed at
your hands, and in future your names will go down in history as criminals.”
Montazeri fell from grace and ultimately died in 2009 under house arrest. Raisi
publicly defended the killings as “one of the proud achievements of the system.”
Khomeini died in 1989, but his successor, Khamenei, also found Raisi a useful
agent. In a succession of promotions, Raisi became the head of the General
Inspection Office as well as a member of the Special Court of the Clergy, which
is perhaps the most important institution in the republic: It is responsible for
prosecuting troublesome mullahs.
Then came a series of harder tests: In the 1990s, the political elite fragmented
over the reform movement led by President Muhammad Khatami, who called for
greater harmony between religious convictions and democratic principles.
Lower-level government officials and intellectuals aligned with Khatami were
bolder and more explicit in their ambitions. But Raisi displayed a steady hand
in battling the reformers. The judiciary and the intelligence services jailed
dissidents, shuttered reformist newspapers and conducted targeted
assassinations.
In 2009, the Islamic republic faced a popular insurrection. The fraudulent
presidential election that returned populist, conservative firebrand Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad to power sparked the pro-democracy Green Movement, which, in turn,
shook the foundations of the theocracy. Once more, many stalwarts of the
revolution proved unsteady, including former president Rafsanjani, who was
essentially purged. Not so Raisi, who as chief deputy of the judiciary remained
a reliable critic of those who showed the protesters any quarter, to say nothing
of the protesters themselves. “Those who have proposed the elections were
fraudulent,” ruled Raisi, “and created doubt in the public’s mind have
undoubtedly committed a grave crime and naturally will have to answer for the
crime they have committed.” As late as 2014, Raisi scolded his fellow
conservatives for going soft on Green Movement leaders, who had remained under
house arrest. “The system of the Islamic Republic has treated the leaders of
sedition with kindness. …Those who sympathize with the leaders of sedition
should know that the Iranian nation will never go through this kind of
oppression.”
The regime learned lessons from the Green Movement. Stuffing ballot boxes
provoked million-man marches on the streets of Tehran; henceforth, the theocracy
would manipulate elections by narrowing the choice of candidates.
By 2016, there were unmistakable public signs that Khamenei was grooming Raisi
to succeed him. When it comes to personnel, Khamenei has always displayed a keen
eye for talent and loyalty. And Raisi’s promotions all required the personal
approval of the supreme leader.
But to rise in the Islamic republic’s theocracy, Raisi needed to move beyond the
regime’s courts and dungeons and burnish his managerial skills. Khamenei
appointed him as the head of one of Iran’s largest charitable organizations, the
Astan-e Qods Foundation in Mashhad, which runs the Imam Reza Shrine. The shrine
is visited by millions of pilgrims a year and has an estimated $15 billion in
assets. Through the foundation, the supreme leader has access to vast
discretionary funds. This job gave Raisi a more benign public profile as well as
the power of patronage. He also became an important player in the regime’s
shadowy financial empire.
Nonetheless, his public image remained flat: Raisi managed to win only 38.5
percent of the vote in his first run for office in 2017, getting trounced by the
incumbent, Rouhani. As a consolation prize, he became the head of the judiciary,
where he brandished his credentials as a corruption fighter, which in the
Islamic republic means he became responsible for harassing those who’ve fallen
out of favor.
In the 2021 election, Khamenei sacrificed popular legitimacy to ensure that a
reliable disciple won. After the protest movements of 2017-2020, when even the
poor started taking to the streets to express their anger, an elderly supreme
leader likely wanted to see a version of himself in the presidency — a cleric
with a proven capacity to repress and liquidate those willing to challenge the
theocracy. An Iranian president doesn’t have much power — the rahbar has such a
large shadow government that it has shrunk the influence and perks of the
presidency. Nonetheless, in troubled times, if the supreme leader were to die,
having an ideologically sound and bureaucratically accomplished cleric as
president would guarantee continuity.
Which helps explain why, this year, the Guardian Council disqualified a high
number of presidential candidates — not only did “moderates” get axed, but even
the hard-line former speaker of the parliament, Ali Larijani, was removed from
the ballot. As a result, Raisi ran nearly uncontested, with no real competitors.
He ran an uninspiring campaign, talking mostly about corruption and the need for
sound management. Crisscrossing the country, he often visited prisons. The
presidential debates, which sometimes spark public curiosity and social media
buzz, were insipid. The handpicked candidates united in attacking Rouhani, who
has become unpopular, especially within official circles where mocking him has
become routine. In the end, with half the electorate staying home and
approximately 3.7 million Iranians turning in blank or protest ballots, Raisi
was declared the winner.
Amnesty International Secretary General Agnes Callamard called Raisi’s victory
“a grim reminder that impunity reigns supreme in Iran” and called for
investigation of “his involvement in past and ongoing crimes under international
law.”
A dilemma for Biden
The Islamic republic was never a typical authoritarian state: Embedded in its
structure are a series of elected institutions. If in previous presidential
races the Guardian Council may have pruned the choice of candidates, the public
got some diversity and occasionally a provocative candidate who rattled the
establishment such as Ahmadinejad, or historic men of the revolution, like
Rafsanjani, who outshone Khamenei. The elections may not have altered the
essential demarcations of power, but they offered the Iranian people an
acceptable and orderly means of expressing their grievances. The regime even
tolerated some critical press.
Thus, the genius of the Islamic republic was that it offered the masses an
opportunity to participate in national affairs — while being cleverly hemmed in
on all sides by clerical fiat. An Iranian could cast a ballot that might
actually have a small impact on his life. (Khatami’s victory in 1997 for a year
or two softened the surveillance of the morals police; Ahmadinejad’s first
triumph gave lower-class Iranians a fillip of pride and increased welfare
payments.) The elected institutions of Iran may not have governed the theocracy,
but they did provide an important safety valve.
Raisi’s win in a fully rigged election strips the system of its off-ramps. The
once-popular reformist notion that the theocracy could liberalize itself through
its own constitutional provisions has died — except perhaps abroad among Western
leftists. The Republic of Virtue is drowning in corruption and class divisions
that are as pronounced as those in the last days of the shah. The government and
the crony-capitalist class have never generated sufficient jobs. Khamenei’s idea
of a “resistance economy,” in which Iran somehow weans itself off oil, relies on
internal markets and trades heavily with China, has proved insufficient and
impractical. A mismanaged pandemic has aggravated all of these problems.
The clerical oligarchs have no answers to Iran’s most convulsive dilemmas. They
intend to rule by brute force, in part because they have minimal hold on a
public that no longer can be counted on to choose the divine path over all
others. As we learned from leaked conversations of Revolutionary Guard
commanders, after the pro-democracy Green Movement was crushed, the regime came
to see itself as unattractive to ever larger swaths of the population. The gap
between state and society has never been wider. In Raisi, a political cleric
recently promoted to “ayatollah,” the state has groomed, promoted and found its
enforcer.
The Iranian people are hardly docile subjects. A nation that saw massive
protests once a decade now sees them more frequently. In the latest nationwide
revolts of 2019 and 2020, sparked by a drop in fuel subsidies, even the working
classes joined the protests. Iran’s ethnic minorities, who probably make up 50
percent of the country’s population, have also become increasingly vocal in
expressing their grievances. And the demonstrators, both Persian and
non-Persian, have become explicit in their opposition to the very nature of the
clerical regime. Given the violence unleashed by the security forces in 2019,
Khamenei and his men obviously view these demonstrations as potential
rebellions.
Raisi is an awkward, perhaps paralyzing, problem for the Biden administration’s
diplomatic strategy. First, there is the issue of human rights, which the White
House says is a new priority for the United States. A revived Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action, which would release tens of billions of dollars in
sanctions relief, will perforce be transacted with a new president who was
sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department in no uncertain terms in 2019:
“Previously, as deputy prosecutor general of Tehran. Raisi participated in the
so-called ‘death commission’ that ordered the extrajudicial executions of
thousands of political prisoners in 1988.”
And then there is the substance of the nuclear deal. The talks in Vienna will
likely succeed and both parties will resume their compliance with an accord
whose key provisions are rapidly expiring. The White House insists that once the
agreement is revived, it will seek to remedy its deficiencies with additional
discussions that will extend the deal’s timelines and even address Iran’s malign
regional activities and its ever-improving ballistic missiles. Raisi has made it
clear, however, that he won’t concede to any additional agreements. And Raisi
isn’t clever: He isn’t going to argue with Khamenei about the wisdom of
short-term nuclear concessions for long-term economic power. Raisi, like
Khamenei, thinks first and foremost about culture and nefarious, debilitating
foreign influences.
These two clerics, who will likely reinforce each other’s hardest impulses, both
understand what Washington appears to have missed: The era of arms-control
diplomacy has ended. The Islamic republic’s nuclear trajectory will not be
impacted by further negotiated restraints.
In the coming months, many in Washington will assure themselves that at least
this nuclear accord imposes some limits on the clerical regime’s ambitions. The
program, we will be assured, is back in the box even as Iran’s atomic
infrastructure grows in sophistication and size. The arms-controllers and
proponents of accommodation will surely dust off their old talking points. The
opening to China will be invoked. Strategic breakthroughs, we will be reminded,
require compacts with unsavory actors. Some may even go further and argue that
only a hard-liner with close ties to Khamenei can negotiate an accord.
Such postulations, however, miss the reason Raisi was elevated to the
presidency. He is there to seal the system, not open it. Repression at home and
imperialism abroad remain the regime’s essential priorities. Such ambitions
require Shiite proxy forces across the region, missile deployments and the
ultimate strategic weapon. The notion of trading carrots and sticks is abhorrent
to a man who abjures compromise with enemies both near and abroad.
Khamenei’s and Raisi’s designs will, however, make the Islamist system more
vulnerable to internal unrest. Sanctions relief will provide some respite to the
regime’s internal problems. American arms control will pave a bit longer path to
the Iranian bomb while allowing the clerical regime a much-needed financial
cushion against its own imperialism and incompetence.
But whatever the Biden administration does, it won’t change an irrefragable
truth that bedevils the Iranian theocracy: A regime that does not address the
grievances and expectations of its citizens will confront, if the past is
future, increasing opposition. In the past few years, Iran has been rocked by
demonstrations driven by all the social classes. The big dilemma for the Biden
administration may not be the potential for arms control in the 21st century but
how to deal with a mass murderer facing a mass uprising.
*Reuel Marc Gerecht, an Iranian-targets officer in the Central Intelligence
Agency from 1985 to 1994, is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies.
*Ray Takeyh is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and the
author of “The Last Shah: America, Iran and the Fall of the Pahlavi Dynasty.”
Follow Reuel on Twitter @ReuelMGerecht. FDD is a nonpartisan think tank focused
on foreign policy and national security issues.
U.S. Targets Turkey-Based Money Laundering Schemes With
Links to Senior Turkish Officials
Aykan Erdemir/FDD/June 28/2021
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) said on Monday that it will seek to
extradite Sezgin Baran Korkmaz, a Turkish businessman Austrian authorities
arrested on June 19 for his alleged role in money laundering schemes that
attempted to defraud the U.S. Treasury of over $1 billion. The suspect’s close
links to senior Turkish officials could further strain U.S.-Turkish relations if
he turns state’s witness in a U.S. court and exposes the role Ankara has played
in facilitating and covering up various illicit financial schemes.
Korkmaz and his investment company, SBK Holding, have ties to Jacob and Isaiah
Kingston, who pleaded guilty in July 2019 to defrauding the United States of
$512 million in renewable-fuel tax credits through their company Washakie
Renewable Energy LLC in Plymouth, Utah. As part of DOJ’s efforts to recover the
Kingston brothers’ assets, U.S. prosecutors submitted to a Utah federal court a
list of Turkish properties owned by the Kingstons and managed by Korkmaz and SBK
Holding. Relatedly, in March 2020, a federal jury in Salt Lake City convicted
California businessman Lev Aslan Dermen — a co-conspirator with the Kingstons
and business partner of Korkmaz — of fraud and money laundering.
Korkmaz’s connections to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his inner
circle make his potential extradition and testimony regarding money laundering
and wire fraud charges a sensitive matter for Ankara. In September 2017, Erdogan
met with Korkmaz and Jacob Kingston to discuss their investments in Turkey.
Erdogan has since been trying to purge a photo of the meeting from the media by
Turkish court orders. Korkmaz was also involved in Erdogan’s early outreach
efforts to the Trump administration through unregistered lobbyists.
The role Korkmaz played in Ankara’s outreach has grabbed the attention of
investigative journalists and U.S. authorities, including Special Counsel Robert
Mueller. In September 2017, Korkmaz received a subpoena from Mueller to testify
before a grand jury in Washington for “possible violations of federal criminal
laws involving the Foreign Agents Registration Act.”
Moreover, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project exposed last
March that Korkmaz played a central role in Erdogan’s September 2018 backchannel
diplomacy with the Trump administration to free North Carolina pastor Andrew
Brunson from a Turkish prison.
The Erdogan government may have shielded Korkmaz and his associates from U.S.
and Turkish legal action until recently, according to video confessions that
Turkish mobster Sedat Peker started posting on YouTube on May 2 regarding
illicit affairs involving Erdogan’s inner circle. Although both Dermen’s guilty
verdict and the Kingston brothers’ plea agreements refer to the role played by
Turkey-based individuals and entities in their tax fraud scheme, U.S.
prosecutors thanked law enforcement partners in only Luxembourg and Malta “for
their assistance in the case,” raising suspicions that Ankara was uncooperative
in the process.
In a superseding indictment U.S. prosecutors filed against Korkmaz on April 28
and unsealed on June 21, they allege that Korkmaz offered to provide the
Kingstons with “protection from a federal grand jury investigation, as well as
civil lawsuits” against their company, “through unnamed government officials
code-named the ‘grandfather’ and ‘grandpa.’”
As Korkmaz’s legal troubles have mounted, the Turkish government has pursued a
strategy of obstruction guised as cooperation. Last December, Istanbul
prosecutors issued a detention warrant against Korkmaz, and Ankara attempted to
extradite him from Austria right after his arrest on June 19 to prevent his
extradition to the United States. In Turkey, the government could easily
manipulate judicial proceedings to prevent embarrassing revelations. Given that
Korkmaz’s testimony potentially could shed light on a wide range of illicit
financial activities in Turkey and implicate a long list of Turkish entities and
individuals, including senior officials, U.S. authorities should take swift
action to prevent yet another cover-up attempt by the Erdogan government.
*Aykan Erdemir is a former member of the Turkish parliament and senior director
of the Turkey Program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), where
he also contributes to FDD’s Center on Economic and Financial Power (CEFP). For
more analysis from Aykan, the Turkey Program, and CEFP, please subscribe HERE.
Follow Aykan on Twitter @aykan_erdemir. Follow FDD on Twitter @FDD and @FDD_CEFP.
FDD is a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on
national security and foreign policy.
Canadian Forensic Report Confirms Iran Bears Full
Responsibility for Airliner Downing
Dylan Gresik/FDD/June 28/2021
Canada published on Thursday a long-awaited report confirming that Tehran’s
“decisions, actions and omissions, by civil and military officials at the
highest levels,” directly led to the downing of Ukraine International Airlines
Flight PS752 last year. The report states that the Islamic Republic has “fallen
well short of providing a credible explanation” for the missile strikes on
PS752, underscoring Iran’s continued resistance to pursuing a transparent
investigation, in violation of international law.
On January 8, 2020, a missile battery belonging to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps (IRGC) and positioned near Tehran’s Imam Khomeini International
Airport targeted and shot down PS752 with two surface-to-air missiles. One
hundred and seventy-six people, including 85 Canadian citizens and permanent
residents, were killed.
Canada’s forensic team, the report said, “analyzed the information at its
disposal” but affirmed that “only Iran has full access to the evidence, crash
site, and witnesses.” The report lists three key findings: Iran “failed to
ensure the safety of its airspace,” by keeping the airspace open and declining
to notify airlines of risks; the IRGC unit that downed the plane committed a
“series of extremely flawed decisions” that were avoidable; and Iran’s flawed
“command and control” structure broadly “played a major role in the downing.”
Last week, Omar Alghabra, Canada’s minister of transport, publicly condemned
Iran in an address to the Council of the International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO), the UN specialized agency for aviation. Alghabra questioned
the safety of Iranian airspace absent verifiable reforms and said the
international civil aviation community must demand answers from Iran.
ICAO requires an investigation process following the downing of an aircraft,
pursuant to Annex 13 of the Convention on International Civil Aviation. The
convention requires the country of occurrence to lead the investigation, meaning
Iran bore the responsibility to investigate itself in the case of PS752.
However, according to Canada’s forensic team, Iran’s final investigation report,
which alleges “human error” was the primary cause of the downing and blames a
handful of low-level personnel, is “evasive,” “presents a highly selective
explanation of events,” and propagates “claims [that] are not substantiated with
evidence.”
While the Canadian team could not conclude from available evidence that the
downing was “premeditated,” the publication of its report represents the latest
development in the months-long effort to secure accountability in the PS752
case.
On June 3, Canada, Sweden, Ukraine, and the United Kingdom — all countries that
lost nationals on PS752 — delivered a joint “notice of claim” against the
Islamic Republic. The notice demanded “a full accounting of events that led to
the downing,” as well as “transparency in the criminal prosecutions” in Tehran.
The Islamic Republic has yet to respond to the notice.
This process of international negotiation, arbitration, and dispute resolution
is long and will require continuous multilateral pressure on Iran to achieve
meaningful results.
Indeed, in the report, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stated that if
negotiations with Iran do not arrive at “an acceptable outcome,” Canada “will
pursue all available options, including recourse to the International Court of
Justice.”
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, and UK
Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab all expressed support for Canada.
Now it is imperative that world leaders back up their firm rhetoric with strong
and concrete action. Ottawa must not allow Iran to continue stonewalling and
should not accept ICAO’s tepid response to Iranian violations of the UN body’s
founding convention.
As the Canadian forensic report again confirms, the Islamic Republic has avoided
answering critical questions related to the PS752 downing, subsequent
investigation, and ongoing prosecutions. Should Iran delay in responding to the
notice of claim, Canada should not hesitate to demand accountability by quickly
elevating the case to the ICAO Council for review and a decision.
*Dylan Gresik is a government relations analyst at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies (FDD), where he contributes to FDD’s Iran Program and International
Organizations Program. For more analysis from Dylan, the Iran Program, and the
International Organizations Program, please subscribe HERE. Follow Dylan on
Twitter @DylanGresik. Follow FDD on Twitter @FDD and @FDD_Iran. FDD is a
Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national
security and foreign policy.