English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For March 18/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
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Bible Quotations For today
God did not give us a spirit of cowardice, but rather a
spirit of power and of love and of self-discipline. Do not be ashamed, then, of
the testimony about our Lord or of me his prisoner.
Second Letter to Timothy 01/06-14: “For this reason I remind you
to rekindle the gift of God that is within you through the laying on of my
hands; for God did not give us a spirit of cowardice, but rather a spirit of
power and of love and of self-discipline. Do not be ashamed, then, of the
testimony about our Lord or of me his prisoner, but join with me in suffering
for the gospel, relying on the power of God, who saved us and called us with a
holy calling, not according to our works but according to his own purpose and
grace. This grace was given to us in Christ Jesus before the ages began, but it
has now been revealed through the appearing of our Saviour Christ Jesus, who
abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel.
For this gospel I was appointed a herald and an apostle and a teacher, and for
this reason I suffer as I do. But I am not ashamed, for I know the one in whom I
have put my trust, and I am sure that he is able to guard until that day what I
have entrusted to him. Hold to the standard of sound teaching that you have
heard from me, in the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus. Guard the good
treasure entrusted to you, with the help of the Holy Spirit living in us.”.
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on March 17-18/2021
Elias Bejjani/Visit My LCCC Web site/All That you need to
know on Lebanese unfolding news and events in Arabic and English/http://eliasbejjaninews.com/
Ministry of Health: 3544 new infections, 62 deaths
President Aoun’s address to the nation
Hariri replies to Aoun: If you cannot sign the decrees forming a salvation
government, then allow early presidential elections
Berri meets Arslan and Japanese ambassador, chairs Amal Movement’s Presidency
Body meeting
Bassil, Russian Ambassador Discuss Govt. Formation 'Difficulties'
Injuries in Aisha Bakkar Clash Linked to Roadblocks
Salameh Suggests Ideas that Can 'Lower Dollar Exchange Rate'
Wazni Orders LBP 50 Billion Advance for Supporting Poor Families
Protesters Try to Storm Economy Ministry over Currency Crisis
Jumblat: Lebanon Facing Tough Times Ahead
Hassan: Lebanon Suspends Astrazeneca Vaccine Pending Intl Investigation
Lebanese Queue for Fuel across the Country
Israel Building Road off Adaisseh
Nuncio to Lebanon on the Pope and the 'existential crisis' of a message-nation/Fady
Noun/AsiaNews/March 17/2021
Karpowership: Arrest warrant against Ralph Faisal result of fabrications and
lies aimed at damaging our reputation and credibility
Titles For The
Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on
March 17-18/2021
Iran enriching uranium with new advanced machine type at
underground plant -IAEA
Syria claims Israeli airstrikes target weapon shipments near Damascus
UAE calls off Netanyahu trip, says won’t get involved in 'Israeli
electioneering’
US Intelligence: Russia, Iran tried to influence 2020 election
GCC backs Saudi measures to preserve its security
Sudan’s Burhan demands Ethiopian troops leave country'
Respond to Myanmar crisis: ASEAN politicians
Ghani to quit ‘only after polls’ as US mulls new government
Syria says Assad and wife are recovering from COVID-19
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on March 17-18/2021
Joe Biden Shouldn’t Return to the Iran Deal But he probably
will anyway/Reuel Marc Gerecht and Mark Dubowitz/FDD-National Review/March
17/2021
In war-torn Syria, uprising birthplace seethes 10 years on/Sarah El Deeb and
Bassam Mroue/AP/March 17/2021
Vaccines can help Biden rebuild US-EU ties/Melvyn B. Krauss/Arab News/March 17,
2021
UK foreign policy review highlights growing role of technology/Alistair
Burt/Arab News/March 17, 2021
Clash between unlikely allies Turkey and Russia is inevitable/Zaid M. Belbagi/Arab
News/March 17, 2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on
March 17-18/2021
Elias Bejjani/Visit My LCCC Web site/All That you need to know on Lebanese
unfolding news and events in Arabic and English/http://eliasbejjaninews.com/
Ministry of Health: 3544 new infections, 62
deaths
NNA/March 17, 2021
The Ministry of Public Health announced 3544 new coronavirus infection cases,
which raises the cumulative number of confirmed cases to 426,977.
62 deaths have been recorded over the past 24 hours.
President Aoun’s address to the nation
NNA/March 17, 2021
The following is President of the Republic General Michel Aoun's address to the
nation on Friday:
"My Fellow Lebanese ladies and gentlemen,
Everything seems trivial compared to your suffering, which has reached levels
that no people are capable of tolerating. Indeed, the pandemic is lurking, and
so are poverty, destitution, unemployment, migration, oppression and the slashed
purchasing power entailed by the rocketing value of the US dollar versus the
Lebanese Pound (Lira); along with the shortage of vital supplies, the decline of
subsidies which were for them,and the dilemma that are facing the various
constitutional authorities, and the administrations and institutions in charge
of securing the essentials of livelihood, while we have not yet got over the
tragedy of the Beirut Port explosion and its catastrophic repercussions. Trauma
after trauma, and every day brings along its own burdens and concerns,
aggravatinganxiety due to the incapacity to sustain the most basic means for a
decent life.
I chose to keep quiet in order to make room for solutions at various levels and
to avoid any incidententailed by the sharp polarizations and divisions in
political stances, as well as the collapse of the economic and financial system
due to decades-long wrong policies. Nevertheless, I have gone down the rough
road of accountability, in a system where authoritarian and institutional
corruption is deep-rooted, and all sorts of roadblocks were thrown before me;
and you know well that I am not used to yielding and giving up, in defending
your dignity and your decent free living.
Today, driven by my oath, and after Prime Minister designate Saad Hariri has
presented the headlines of a governmental draft that does not fulfill the
minimum of national balance and pact-adherence, which has dragged the country
into the tunnel of stalling, I herebyinvite him to the Baabda Palace to form a
cabinet at once, in agreement with me, according to the constitutional mechanism
and criteria adopted in the formation of governments, without any pretexts or
delay.
Nevertheless, if he finds himself incapable of forming and heading a national
rescue government that would stand up to the dangerous situation that the
country and the people are going through, then he must clear the way for any
person capable of formation.
This will be motivated by his constitutional responsibility and his national and
human conscience because such suffering shall have no mercy on those responsible
for stalling, exclusion and the eternalization of “caretaking”.
This is a determined and sincere call to the Prime Minister designate to take
the lead immediately and go for one of the two available options, whereas there
is no use after today to remain silent and stay in strongholds, hoping to save
Lebanon.All positions are vain and deflecting responsibilities onto each other
is pointless if the country falls apartand people become prisoners of despair
and frustration, indulging in inevitable anger."-- Presidency Press Office
Hariri replies to Aoun: If you cannot sign the
decrees forming a salvation government, then allow early presidential elections
NNA/March 17, 2021
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri issued the following statement:
Several weeks after I presented an integrated lineup for a government of
non-partisan specialists, capable of implementing the reforms required to stop
the collapse and begin rebuilding what was destroyed by the Beirut port
explosion, and while I was waiting for a phone call from His Excellency the
President to discuss with me the proposed lineup in order to issue the new
government’s decrees –knowing that these weeks increased the suffering of the
Lebanese that had started many months before I was chosen by the MPs to form the
government- I was surprised, as were all the Lebanese, by the President's
inviting me via a televised speech to the Presidential Palace, for an immediate
formation, in agreement with him in accordance with the customary constitutional
mechanism and standards, as His Excellency said. As I visited the President
sixteen times since my appointment for the same goal set by him, to agree on a
government of non-partisan specialists capable of implementing the agreed
reforms and stopping the collapse that the Lebanese are suffering from, I will
answer him in the same way: I will be honored to visit him for the seventeenth
time, immediately, if his schedule permits, to discuss with him the lineup that
has been in his hands for several weeks, and immediately announce the formation
of the government. However, if the President finds himself unable to sign the
decrees forming a government of non-partisan specialists capable of implementing
the reforms required to stop the collapse that the country and its people are
suffering from, then he will have to tell the Lebanese the real reason that
pushes him to try to disrupt the will of the Parliament that chose the
designated Prime Minister - and that has been preventing him for several months
from allowing the salvation of the citizens- and reduce their pain and their
suffering by allowing early presidential elections, which is the only
constitutional means capable of canceling the effects of his election by the MPs
to head the Republic five years ago, just as they chose me as a Prime
Minister-designate to form the government five months ago.--Hariri Press Office
Berri meets Arslan and Japanese ambassador, chairs Amal
Movement’s Presidency Body meeting
NNA/March 17, 2021
House Speaker, Nabih Berri, on Wednesday received at his Ain El-Tineh residence
Lebanese Democratic Party Head, MP Talal Arslan, in the presence of former
Minister Saleh Al-Ghareeb, and Speaker Berri’s Political Aide MP Ali Hassan
Khalil. Discussions reportedly touched on the general situation and most recent
political developments.Speaker Berri also met with Japanese Ambassador to
Lebanon, Takeshi Okubo, with whom he discussed the general situation in Lebanon
and the region, in addition to the bilateral relations between the two
countries. On the other hand, in his capacity as head of “Amal Movement”, Berri
chaired the meeting of the Movement’s Presidency Body, on the occasion of the
47th anniversary of the Movement's foundation, in the presence of all body
members. The meeting focused on the occasion’s national dimensions and the
Movement’s struggle landmarks since its start, far-reaching the current stage
that Lebanon is going through, and the Movement's stance vis-à-vis the various
political, economic, financial and daily living issues. In a statement issued in
the wake of the meeting, the Movement called on the Lebanese, in general, and
the various official leaderships, in particular, to immediately shoulder their
responsibilities and to take a historic stand to save Lebanon and prevent it
from slipping towards the abysses of the collapse. The statement underlined that
what is required is the formation of a government void of any veto power but
serving Lebanon’s interest as a whole.
Bassil, Russian Ambassador Discuss Govt. Formation
'Difficulties'
Naharnet/March 17, 2021
Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil held talks Wednesday at his Laqlouq
residence with Russian Ambassador to Lebanon Alexander Rudakov. An FPM statement
said Bassil and Rudakov held a “detailed discussion of Lebanon’s situations and
the changes in the region.”“The talks also tackled the difficulties that the
government formation process is facing and their reasons,” the statement added.
“The two sides also demonstrated all the aspects of the Russian-Lebanese ties
and the prospects of cooperation between the two countries, in addition to the
Syria crisis file and the need to secure the requirements of a political
solution in Syria and the return of the displaced to their land,” the statement
said. The meeting comes on the last day of a three-day visit to Moscow by a
Hizbullah delegation.
Injuries in Aisha Bakkar Clash Linked to Roadblocks
Naharnet/March 17, 2021
A clash erupted Wednesday afternoon in Beirut’s Aisha Bakkar area in connection
with roadblocking protests in the neighborhood, the National News Agency said.
The agency said the altercation, which escalated into gunfire, took place
between protesters and passersby who tried to cross the blocked road. It added
that several people were wounded, some critically. Al-Jadeed TV had earlier
described the dispute as “personal,” saying two people were injured, including
one who is in critical condition. It identified the critically injured man as
Samer Ammar. Al-Mustaqbal Movement later denied any links to the clash.
Describing the incident as a “personal dispute,” the Movement said it was
working along with the area’s residents, the parties concerned and security
agencies on pacifying the situation and containing any repercussions. Mustaqbal
also warned against “circulating fake news that stir tensions and discord,”
urging all parties to show restraint and cooperate with the army and security
forces. Media reports meanwhile said the critically wounded person, Samer Ammar,
is a supporter or a member of the Amal Movement.
Salameh Suggests Ideas that Can 'Lower Dollar Exchange
Rate'
Naharnet/March 17/2021
Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh on Wednesday said he raised with caretaker
Finance Minister Ghazi Wazni ideas that can lower the dollar exchange rate in
Lebanon after it reached record levels in recent days.
The National News Agency said the two men discussed all the pressing financial
and monetary issues. “I met with Minister Wazni and proposed to him some
proposals which will be studied by him and by the central bank’s central council
over the next 24 hours,” Salameh said after the talks.
“We believe that these suggestions will lead to a drop in the dollar exchange
rate in Lebanon,” he added.
Wazni Orders LBP 50 Billion Advance for Supporting Poor
Families
Naharnet/March 17/2021
Caretaker Finance Minister Ghazi Wazni on Wednesday ordered the payment of an
advance worth LBP 50 billion to the High Relief Council. The treasury loan is
aimed at completing the fourth phase of the social aid plan seeking to assist
vulnerable families suffering from economic hardship due to the coronavirus
lockdown.
Protesters Try to Storm Economy Ministry over Currency
Crisis
Agence France Presse/March 17/2021
Lebanese protesters briefly attempted to storm the economy ministry on Wednesday
to denounce exploding prices of basic goods as the local currency collapses.
Around 20 protesters had gathered outside the ministry's Beirut headquarters a
day after the Lebanese pound hit a new-low of 15,000 to the greenback, according
to an AFP correspondent. Some tried to enter the building, causing tension with
security forces, the official National News Agency reported. "We are killing
each other for a bag of diapers and a carton of milk," one protester told a
local TV station. The political class "have humiliated us," he said, denouncing
hikes in consumer prices which rose by almost 146 percent during 2020, according
to official statistics. Later in the afternoon, demonstrators tried to march
towards the presidential palace outside Beirut but they were stopped by security
forces. Others blocked several key roads across the country with burning tires
and torched garbage bins. Lebanon is in the grips of its worst economic crisis
since the 1975-1990 civil war. The pound, officially pegged at 1,507 to the
greenback since 1997, has lost almost 90 percent of its value on the black
market. It was changing hands for around 14,000 to the dollar on Wednesday. Also
on Wednesday, the head of the syndicate of fuel distributers, Fadi Abou Chacra,
announced a new increase in petrol prices, already rising on global price hikes,
NNA reported. With the latest increase, the price of petrol has climbed by
around 49 percent since July. Lebanon's crisis is also eating away at the
country's dwindling foreign currency reserves which have so far funded subsidies
on key goods such as fuel, flour and medicine. The diminishing funds are
cornering the government into cutting such support, which will push more of the
population into poverty.
Some 55 percent of Lebanese live below the global poverty line of 3.84 dollars a
day, the United Nations says. The country is also facing political deadlock,
with no new government agreed some seven months after premier Hassan Diab
resigned over an August 4 explosion that killed more than 200 people and
disfigured swathes of the capital.
Jumblat: Lebanon Facing Tough Times Ahead
Naharnet/March 17/2021
Progressive Socialist Party leader ex-MP Walid Jumblat on Wednesday said Lebanon
was facing very tough days ahead, stressing the need for political compromises
and government formation to steer the country out of its crisis. Jumblat said
that a new government was the basis for any solution, and warned against “any
other calculation,” he said in an interview with al-Anbaa website marking the
commemoration of his slain father Kamal Jumblat. Addressing politicians, Jumblat
advised them to resort to compromise and to waive conditions to ease the cabinet
formation. He stressed the need for a firm government capable of taking all the
necessary measures, especially with regard to the rationalization of subsidized
products. He also pushed for a cabinet that’s capable of holding successful
negotiations with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to help
remedy the situation in Lebanon before it’s too late.
Hassan: Lebanon Suspends Astrazeneca Vaccine Pending Intl
Investigation
Naharnet/March 17/2021
Caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hassan said on Wednesday that
Lebanon was currently suspending the usage of the AstraZeneca vaccine pending
the decision of the international health authorities.“The ministry does not take
any hasty decisions that might endanger the citizens’ health,“ Hassan told VDL
radio station. Hassan said that the first shipment of AstraZeneca vaccine was
scheduled to arrive in Lebanon in mid-March, yet the company had postponed the
delivery date, “which rules out any commercial intentions involving the
vaccine.”Stressing that the Ministry encourages the import of the vaccine by
private sector companies, he said: “The private sector sought to secure the
Russian and Chinese vaccines for private initiatives, the ministry had not
prevented but rather encouraged them to do so.”Hassan added that more than
thirty pharmaceutical companies and drug warehouses were given permission to
negotiate with vaccine companies abroad provided that the vaccine is provided to
citizens free of charge. On the stages of vaccination in Lebanon, he said that
next week the state’s vaccination campaign will begin to target age groups that
range between sixty-five and seventy-five years, as well as those suffering from
chronic diseases.
Lebanese Queue for Fuel across the Country
Naharnet/March 17/2021
Lebanese stood in queues in their vehicles on Wednesday as the
country witnessed a gradual increase in gasoline prices, one of Lebanon’s
multiple plights bringing the country to its knees amid total political failure
to address an almost two-year crisis. Frustrated Lebanese queued at petrol
stations across the country and lines of cars blocked traffic in several areas,
one day after caretaker Finance Minister, Ghazi Wazni, confirmed that Lebanon is
scaling back food subsidies and gradually raising gasoline prices to save
dwindling foreign reserves. Some petrol stations raised their fuel hoses, a sign
known well in Lebanon that the station is out of fuel stock and is not providing
any services. Representative of fuel distributors in Lebanon, Fadi Abu Shakra,
told MTV television station that “the rise in fuel prices is linked to the rise
in dollar, we cannot know if the gasoline prices will rise by an additional
5,000 next week.”He voiced hopes that a government is formed soon to stop the
economic collapse. Besides removing subsidies on basic food products, Wazni said
the government plans to gradually increase prices at fuel stations in the coming
months, reducing gasoline subsidies to 85% from 90%. Lebanon is battling its
worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war. The national currency is in
freefall, while poverty and unemployment are on the rise. The economic downturn
has pushed a battered population to the brink with no solution in sight as the
country's barons wrangle over forming a new government. In the absence of a
fully functioning executive that can spearhead reforms and provide the most
basic of services, no rescue seems on the horizon.
Israel Building Road off Adaisseh
Naharnet/March 17/2021
Two Israeli bulldozers began constructing a road off the southern border village
of Adaisseh, the National News Agency reported on Wednesday. Two bulldozers
could be seen clearing the land amid a heavy deployment of Israeli forces, said
NNA. United Nations Interim Forces stationed in southern Lebanon, and Lebanese
Army troops deployed to the area to monitor the Israeli action, it added.
Nuncio to Lebanon on the Pope and the
'existential crisis' of a message-nation
Fady Noun/AsiaNews/March 17/2021
The positions between Aoun and Hariri are irreconcilable. The legacy of the
civil war has never been remedied. The alliance with Hezbollah is a problem: a
confrontation between a democratic society and an incompatible totalitarian
project. The Pope's visit to Iraq carries great significance for the Lebanese.
Beirut (AsiaNews) – Lebanon is going through an existential crisis due to
unreconciled differences. This quick diagnosis by the head of the Catholic
Church after returning from his trip to Baghdad, on the flight back to Rome on 8
March, deserves a comment. It clearly shows that the Pope is closely following
developments in Lebanon’s crisis.
“Lebanon is a message [. . . ]. It has the weakness of differences, some of
which are still not reconciled [. . .] Lebanon is in crisis, but in crisis –
here I wish not to offend – in a crisis of life,” said quite correctly the
leader of 1.5 billion Catholics.
The Pope's words can be interpreted several ways, but the head of the Maronite
Church, who did everything to get the head of state, Michel Aoun, and the prime
minister designate, Saad Hariri, to agree on a government, summed it up very
well just recently. The head of state and the prime minister “are not in a
position to sit down together to address the points of contention that have
accumulated”, he said on Sunday, to justify his call for a special international
conference under the auspices of the United Nations. “They don't talk to each
other. They do not look each other in the eye,” he said several times in front
of visitors and in public.
Lebanon is poles apart from its “message”
The Patriarch’s words are serious because they give the impression that Lebanon
today is far apart from the Lebanon of Saint Pope John Paul II. In 1989, the
Pope had said that “Lebanon is more than a country: it is a message of freedom
and an example of pluralism for the East and for the West”.
“Can we continue to talk about Lebanon-as-a-message if for the Lebanese living
together is beginning to be their main difficulty?” said the apostolic nuncio,
Archbishop Joseph Spiteri, commenting on the current situation. After more than
thirty years, a new phase in the political life of Lebanon seems to have
started. Today, the head of state, Michel Aoun, as well as the head of the Free
Patriotic Movement, Gebran Bassil, claim to act in order to “reclaim the rights
of Christians”, which they believe were taken away or seized by the Sunni
establishment under the governance of the assassinated head of government Rafic
Hariri.
“Popes John Paul II (1997) and Benedict XVI (2012) have already visited
Lebanon,” noted the nuncio, while Pope Francis let it be known in late December
2020 that he intended to come to Lebanon “as soon as possible “. However,
“historical contexts have changed. The message that Francis will address to the
Lebanese, when he will have the opportunity to keep his promise to visit them,
will undoubtedly not be that of John Paul II,” added the nuncio.
For Professor Antoine Messarra, who holds the UNESCO Chair of Comparative Study
of Religions at the Université Saint Joseph, “living together is a break with
current changes in the world: hyper-individualism, emergence of deadly
identities, fanaticism of ideologised religions, populism at the expense of
watchful citizenship and cross-community public affairs, extension of proxy wars
in fragile or weakened states, regression of state authority, terrorism by
trans-national organisations supported and fuelled by rogue states that practice
the diplomacy of blackmail.”
The Free Patriotic Movement has unfortunately seized some of the issues specific
to the political doctrine of the alliance of minorities, and the Lebanese have
entered into this new age without any self-examination after a war (1975-1990)
that some still refuse to admit was a civil war. The Lebanese whitewashed the
atrocities they committed without cleansing their memories and consciences nor
fully assumed responsibility for the suffering inflicted and received. They have
not asked or received the forgiveness that comes with a confession, nor sought
to repair the broken bonds, as real social life demands, or as other countries
have done, like South Africa, the Rainbow Nation.
The ways of dialogue are blocked and “in crisis” for other reasons as well. The
Free Patriotic Movement has decided to defend the “rights of Christians” by
allying itself with ... Hezbollah, without really knowing what Hezbollah is.
With the latter, we don’t have only a political party, but a societal project,
indeed plans for an Islamic State, even if its leaders said at one time that
Lebanon’s communitarian structure is incompatible with the establishment of an
Islamic republic, as they envision it.
It is obvious however that with Hezbollah, there is a problem of existential,
cultural, anthropological adjustment. We are also in the presence of
“unreconciled differences”, to cite the Pope. But if these differences remain
cultural, their reconciliation in the extraordinary melting pot of living
together that is Lebanon is still possible. Only if these differences are
political do they become problematic, insofar as they lead to a confrontation
between a democratic society and a totalitarian project incompatible with
pluralism and freedom of expression, a totalitarian project that must adapt to
Lebanon’s reality; otherwise, Lebanon will pay the price in terms of its
freedoms, affiliations and alliances, as it is doing today.
A visit that comes too late?
“Pope Francis presented himself as a pilgrim and a penitent,” said the apostolic
nuncio. He asked forgiveness in the name of humanity, to both Christians and
Yazidis, for the suffering, the theft of property, the exodus, human cruelty and
ideological intolerance they endured.”
However, feelings of bitterness, even resentment, were still expressed on the
occasion of the Pope's visit. Some believe that his visit to Iraq “came too
late” and that the damage has already been done. In fact, Iraqi Christians have
gone from 6 per cent of the population to 1 per cent in 20 years. What is more,
some say out loud that after the Pope left, nothing has changed.
Responding to the latter, the nuncio cites the episode of the Gospel in which
Jesus chases the merchants out of the Temple. Speaking about this spectacular
account, Archbishop Spiteri said: “You cannot force people to change their
mindset overnight. A few hours or a few days after the holy wrath of Jesus, the
livestock traders and the overturned tables of the money changers were probably
back in business. Yet Christ's prophetic gesture took on once and for all its
permanent and definitive meaning: one must not exploit religion for business or
political purposes and turn God's house into a cave of thieves.” “Jesus changes
hearts, but structures take much longer to evolve,” said the nuncio.
The same is true for Lebanon, Archbishop Spiteri explained. “One has to give
time to time, as they say. Between staying and leaving, the hearts of young
people hesitate. The Pope's visit to Iraq and his appeals are prophetic words
and gestures that establish a pattern of conduct that can instil new hope in
young people, encouraging them to remain in their homeland, even if they are not
accompanied by immediately visible effects. They touch hearts. Changes take
time, but they will eventually come.”
The pledge to visit Lebanon
Finally, with respect to the Pope’s pledge to make a pastoral visit to Lebanon,
the nuncio said that he will certainly do it. “But what the Pope wishes is one
thing, organising a trip is quite another,” he said. “A pastoral visit by the
Pope is known months in advance. Its preparation is thorough and it depends,
like it or not, on the internal situation of the country.”The nuncio is outraged
by what was done in Lebanon to the French initiative and the “personal
commitment” of President Emmanuel Macron, after the explosion of August 2020 at
the port of Beirut. “The pope knows what Lebanon means in itself and to the
Christians of the Middle East; he will do everything to strengthen it so that it
may have, as he said, the strength of cedar trees, that of a great, reconciled
people.”
|
Karpowership: Arrest warrant against Ralph Faisal
result of fabrications and lies aimed at damaging our reputation and credibility
NNA/March 17/2021
Regarding news on Financial Prosecutor Judge Ali Ibrahim issuing a warrant
against Mr. Ralph Faisal, and referring him to Beirut First Investigative Judge
Charbel Bou Samra, Karpowership regrets the issuance of this warrant, which has
resulted from a series of slanders and lies aimed at damaging its reputation and
credibility in the media.While the company firmly objects to such attempt that
involves it in a case that it has nothing to do with at all, it affirms its full
confidence in Mr. Ralph Faisal, whom it has been working with for many years.
The company requests the Lebanese judiciary to highlight this case once and for
all, in order to put an end to the series of extortion and defamation. It also
reserves itself to take all measures to ensure the protection of its
rights.Moreover, Karpowership regrets being slandered in that way, while it has
made a lot of sacrifices for Lebanon, the most important of which being not
receiving yet its dues for fifteen months now. The company is still continuing,
in spite of it all, to provide Lebanon with power and to stand by the Lebanese
people while enduring the hardships and being subject to baseless attacks in the
media. Finally, Karpowership reminds that it has come to Lebanon under a
contract with the Government of Lebanon approved by all its members at all
times. The company carries out all its contractual duties with the government of
Lebanon and contributes to the energy project in accordance with its contract.
Karpowership is providing a capacity that exceeds 370 megawatts (i.e. between 4
to 5 power supply hours per day) through its two Powerships, ‘Fatmagül Sultan’
and ‘Orhan Bey’, moored off the Zouk and Jiyyeh power plants respectively, at
costs far cheaper than alternative sources for Lebanon such as private
generators, imports, and expensive old units of EDL, and continues to provide
savings and help alleviate sourcing hard currency challenges of Lebanon through
those savings. -
The
Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on
March 17-18/2021
Iran enriching uranium with new advanced machine type at
underground plant -IAEA
Francois Murphy/VIENNA (Reuters)/March 17/2021
Iran has started enriching uranium at its underground Natanz plant with a second
type of advanced centrifuge, the IR-4, the U.N. nuclear watchdog said in a
report reviewed by Reuters on Tuesday, in a further breach of Tehran’s deal with
major powers. Iran has recently accelerated its breaches of the deal’s
restrictions on its nuclear activities in an apparent bid to pressure U.S.
President Joe Biden as both sides are locked in a standoff over who should move
first to save the deal. Tehran’s breaches began in 2019 in response to the U.S.
withdrawal from the deal and the reimposition of U.S. economic sanctions against
Iran under Biden’s predecessor Donald Trump, who opposed the agreement and
sought to wreck it. Last year Iran started moving three cascades, or clusters,
of different advanced models of centrifuge from an above-ground plant at Natanz
to its below-ground Fuel Enrichment Plant (FEP). It is already enriching
underground with IR-2m centrifuges. The deal only lets it enrich there with
first-generation IR-1 machines. “On 15 March 2021, the Agency verified that Iran
began feeding the cascade of 174 IR-4 centrifuges already installed at FEP with
natural UF6,” the International Atomic Energy Agency said in the report to
member states dated Monday, referring to uranium hexafluoride, the form in which
uranium is fed into centrifuges for enrichment. Iran has indicated that it now
plans to install a second cascade of IR-4 centrifuges at the FEP but
installation of that cascade has yet to begin, the report said. Iran has already
increased the number of IR-2m machines, which are far more efficient than the
IR-1, installed at the underground plant. “In summary, as of 15 March 2021, Iran
was using 5,060 IR-1 centrifuges installed in 30 cascades, 522 IR-2m centrifuges
installed in three cascades and 174 IR-4 centrifuges installed in one cascade,
to enrich natural UF6 up to 5% U-235 at FEP,” the IAEA report said, referring to
the fissile purity of uranium. Iran is enriching up to 20% purity at another
plant, Fordow.
Syria claims Israeli airstrikes target weapon shipments near Damascus
The Jerusalem Post/March 17/2021
The last alleged Israeli attack was reported in Syria on February 28, with
strikes against Iranian targets near the Syrian capital. Syrian air defenses
responded to an alleged Israeli airstrike near Damascus on Tuesday night, after
a number of cargo flights between Iran and Syria were reported earlier in the
day, according to Syrian media. A Syrian military source claimed that the
alleged Israeli strike targeted sites near Damascus and that most of the
incoming missiles were intercepted and only material damage was caused,
according to SANA. The Syrian Capital Voice site reported that the strikes
targeted a weapons shipment that arrived at the Damascus International Airport
earlier in the day. Explosions were reported after the strikes as well,
according to the news source, which stated that they were likely caused by
stored ammunition exploding. The news source added that the 1st Division of the
Syrian military in Al-Kiswah also went on alert after the airstrikes.
Independent flight tracking sites reported earlier on Tuesday that a number of
Iranian and Syrian flights from Qeshm Air, Mahan Air and the Syrian Air Force,
which have all reportedly been used to smuggle Iranian weapons to Syria and
Lebanon, traveled between Damascus and Tehran today. The last alleged Israeli
airstrike reported in Syria was reported on February 28, with strikes against
Iranian targets near Damascus. The strikes in February came just days after an
Israeli-owned commercial vessel was attacked by mines in the Gulf of Oman. While
Israeli media reported that the strikes were an Israeli response to the attack
on the ship, no official government or military statement has been made on the
matter. In the past, the IDF has often confirmed when it responded to specific
attacks. The strikes on Tuesday come as Iran places blame on Israel for a series
of alleged attacks against Iranian vessels they claim occurred from 2019 until
recent weeks. The airstrikes are the eighth since January, with strikes
attributed to Israel reported in eastern, southern and Western Syria in January
and February. Israel has struck a wider range of targets than usual since the
beginning of the year, including a major attack against Iranian-linked
strongholds further east near the Iraqi border. Israeli Defense Minister Benny
Gantz in February said Israel was taking action "almost weekly" to prevent
Iranian entrenchment in Syria. Tensions remain high in the region in the
aftermath of the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh
just east of Tehran, which Iran blames on Israel, and the first anniversary of
the US assassination of former IRGC Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani in
January. Israel's northern border remains tense as well due to continued threats
by the Lebanese Hezbollah terrorist organization to carry out a revenge attack
against Israel in response to the death of a Hezbollah militant in Damascus in
July in an airstrike blamed on the Jewish state. Concerns surrounding the Biden
administration's intent to return to the nuclear deal with Iran have also been
raised in recent months, with Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi stating that he had ordered
operational plans to strike Iran’s nuclear program to be ready if necessary.
Reuters contributed to this report.
UAE calls off Netanyahu trip, says won’t get involved in
'Israeli electioneering’
The Jerusalem Post/March 17/2021
Netanyahu had been working on an Abu Dhabi visit and meeting with Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan for Thursday.
The United Arab Emirates rejected attempts by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
to squeeze in his first trip to the Gulf state before Tuesday’s election.
Netanyahu had been working on visiting Abu Dhabi on Thursday – including a
meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan – a week after a planned
trip was postponed for the first time. “From the UAE’s perspective, the purpose
of the Abrahamic Accords is to provide a robust strategic foundation to foster
peace and prosperity with the State of Israel and in the wider region,” former
UAE minister of state for foreign affairs Anwar Gargash tweeted on Wednesday.
“The UAE will not be a part in any internal electioneering in Israel, now or
ever.” The statement by Gargash, who left his position last month, was unusually
candid for someone close to the decision-making in Abu Dhabi.
Netanyahu denied that a trip had been planned for this week, telling Radio Galey
Israel: “I’m not going to Abu Dhabi before the election. It’s spin. I don’t know
who spread it.” However, Emirati sources told The Jerusalem Post otherwise on
Tuesday, and Netanyahu’s schedule had been cleared of political events on
Thursday. The Prime Minister’s Office and the Likud campaign did not deny
reports the prime minister was planning such a trip, though neither did they
confirm it. Netanyahu has previously postponed four planned visits to the UAE
since the Gulf state announced peace with Israel in August. Two postponements
were because of COVID-19 lockdowns, and one was because bin Zayed had a
scheduling conflict. Last week’s planned UAE trip was canceled after Jordan
blocked Netanyahu’s flight in retaliation for an incident in which Jordanian
Crown Prince Hussein canceled a visit to the Temple Mount, after attempting to
go with a cadre of armed guards, contrary to prior agreements with Israel.
Netanyahu then ordered that Jordanian flights not be allowed into Israeli
airspace. Within several hours, before any Jordanian flights were actually
blocked, Jordan agreed to allow Netanyahu’s flyover, but by then, Netanyahu had
postponed his trip. UAE’s Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology Sultan Al
Jaber also distanced himself from Netanyahu’s political messaging. After
Netanyahu’s UAE trip was canceled last week, Abu Dhabi announced that it would
establish a $10 billion fund from the government and private sector to invest in
Israeli “energy, manufacturing, water, space, healthcare and agri-tech...[and]
development initiatives to promote regional economic cooperation between the two
countries.” Netanyahu has repeatedly referred to the investment in recent days,
saying that it is an expression of bin Zayed’s confidence in the prime
minister’s economic policies. In response to questions about the planned
investment, Jaber told the UAE news site The National that the fund is
“commercially driven and not politically associated.” Jaber added that “these
are very early days,” and that his ministry is studying Israeli laws with regard
to investments. Netanyahu said on Tuesday that he expects Israel to make peace
with four more countries in the region. “I brought four peace agreements,”
Netanyahu said in an interview with Ynet. “There are another four on the way. I
talked about one of them yesterday.”Netanyahu said he received a call from “one
of the leaders in the region” on Monday night, and they spoke for 45 minutes.
US Intelligence: Russia, Iran tried to influence 2020
election
The report assesses “with high confidence” that Iran carried out
an influence campaign during the 2020 presidential election.
Reuters/The Jerusalem Post/March 17/2021
Russia’s government tried to seed the 2020 US presidential campaign with
“misleading or unsubstantiated allegations” against candidate Joe Biden through
allies of president Donald Trump and his administration, US intelligence
officials said Tuesday. The assessment was made in a 15-page report into
election interference published by the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence. It underscores allegations that Trump’s allies were playing into
Moscow’s hands by amplifying claims made against Biden by Russian-linked
Ukrainian figures in the run-up to the November 3 election. Biden defeated Trump
and took office on January 20. US intelligence agencies found other attempts to
sway voters, including a “multi-pronged covert influence campaign” by Iran
intended to undercut Trump’s support. The report assesses “with high confidence”
that Iran carried out an influence campaign during the 2020 presidential
election. These efforts “intended to undercut the reelection prospects of former
President Trump and further its longstanding objectives of exacerbating
divisions in the US, creating confusion and undermining the legitimacy of US
elections and institutions.”“There are no indications that any foreign actor
attempted to alter any technical aspect of the voting process in the 2020
elections, including voter registration, casting ballots, voter tabulation, or
reporting results,” the report said.“We did not identify Iran engaging in any
election interference activities as defined in this assessment,” it said. Iran’s
election influence included “creating or amplifying social media content that
criticized former president Trump – probably because they believed that this
would advance Iran’s longstanding objectives and undercut the prospects for the
former president’s reelection without provoking retaliation,” the report said.
The assessment also mentioned Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. He “probably”
authorized the influence campaign, it said, adding that “it was a whole of
government effort.” “Iran focused its social media and propaganda on perceived
vulnerabilities in the United States, including the response to the COVID-19
pandemic, economic recession, and civil unrest,” the report said. Beijing “did
not deploy interference efforts,” it said. “China sought stability in its
relationship with the United States and did not view either election outcome as
being advantageous enough for China to risk blowback if caught,” the report
said.US officials said they also saw efforts by Cuba, Venezuela and the Lebanese
terrorist group Hezbollah to influence the election, although “in general, we
assess that they were smaller in scale than those conducted by Russia and Iran.”
US intelligence agencies and former special counsel Robert Mueller previously
concluded that Russia interfered in the 2016 US election to boost Trump’s
candidacy with a campaign of propaganda aimed at harming his Democratic
opponent, Hillary Clinton.
GCC backs Saudi measures to preserve its security
Arab News/March 17, 2021
The GCC condemn the Iran-backed Houthi militia’s attacks on civilians in Saudi
Arabia
The Bahraini FM stressed that current regional issue require a united front
The Secretary General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Nayef Al-Hajraf,
said on Wednesday that the organization supports all measures taken by Saudi
Arabia to preserve its security. Bahrain’s foreign minister Abdullatif Al-Zayani,
who was the former GCC secretary general, echoed Hajraf’s statement and
expressed the Gulf countries’ support for Saudi Arabia. “The GCC stands united
with Saudi Arabia in the face of the ongoing threats it faces,” Zayani said,
during a meeting held with his counterparts of member states. “We have witnessed
widespread international solidarity with Saudi Arabia against the Houthi
terrorist attacks,” he added. The minister went on to condemn the Iran-backed
Houthi militia’s attacks on civilians in Saudi Arabia. He stressed that the
AlUla Declaration and current regional issue require a united front. Hajraf
confirmed that the Ministerial Council will discuss the follow-up to the
implementation of the decisions of the "Al-Ula summit", and issues related to
the strategic dialogues between the countries of the GCC and global blocs. On
the Cooperation Council, Al-Zayani explained that "the decisions of the Al-Ula
statement stressed the need for the unity of the GCC countries." Meanwhile,
Hajraf addressed future negotiations with Iran, state that they must include
discussions on the regime’s ballistic missiles and nuclear program. Iran
continues to support militias and destabilize the region, Hajraf said. Hajraf
added that the Cooperation Council rejects the Iranian occupation of the three
Emirati islands, adding that any actions that Iran undertakes in the three
islands are null and void. Iranian military forces seized the three islands on
Nov. 30, 1971, just two days before the establishment of the UAE, after British
forces withdrew from the islands. The Secretary General went on to condemn the
Houthi militia's use of civilians as human shields in the ongoing battles in
Yemen's Marib. He also condemned the fire at a migrant detention center in Sanaa,
which lead to the death of dozens of African migrants.
Sudan’s Burhan demands Ethiopian troops leave country'
Arab News/March 17, 2021
“We will continue to demand that Ethiopian forces withdraw from all Sudanese
lands,” Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan said
Tensions are high between the two countries over Ethiopian farmers cultivating
land claimed by Sudan
LONDON: The head of Sudan’s ruling interim military council called on Ethiopia
to withdraw its troops from all Sudanese territory on Wednesday. “We will
continue to demand that Ethiopian forces withdraw from all Sudanese lands,”
Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan said during a visit to units in the Omdurman military
zone. He added the country’s armed forces have reopened Sudanese territory on
the eastern border and that no negotiations with Ethiopia would take place until
Addis Ababa recognized Sudanese sovereignty over the area. “Unless there is an
acknowledgment by the Ethiopian side that these lands are Sudanese and signs
have been placed, we will not negotiate with anyone,” Burhan said. Tensions are
high between the two countries over Ethiopian farmers cultivating land claimed
by Sudan. Al-Fashaqa is an agricultural area where Ethiopia’s northern Amhara
and Tigray regions meet Sudan’s eastern Gedaref state. The area is claimed by
both Sudan and Ethiopia.
Respond to Myanmar crisis: ASEAN politicians
AP/March 18, 2021
JAKARTA: Lawmakers from six Southeast Asian nations on Wednesday urged ASEAN
member states to scrap the regional bloc’s long-standing principle of
noninterference and respond to the political crisis in Myanmar. Nearly 150
protesters have been killed across the country since the military’s coup on Feb.
1. Indonesia’s former deputy House speaker, Fadli Zon, one of the regional
lawmakers to issue the statement, urged all parties in the region to keep
fighting for the principles and goals of the ASEAN charter, which is the
regional bloc’s constitution. “Respect for human rights and the rule of law, and
the most important thing is political will to pressure the Myanmar military to
go with these principles,” Zon said during the online conference on Wednesday.
In a statement read by Sam Rainsy — Cambodia’s opposition leader who is now in
exile in Paris — the lawmakers said that the 10-nation bloc, which includes
Myanmar, had been “handicapped by the self-imposed doctrine,” which may have
been a necessity in the past but had become a “barrier for democracy and human
rights enforcement” in ASEAN. “We demand our respective ASEAN governments
abandon the old doctrine of non-interference and pursue a new approach of
constructive and critical engagement, with the option of imposing trade and
economic sanctions on the Myanmar military junta,” Rainsy said on behalf of
politicians from Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines
who are also signatories to the statement.
Rainsy further accused ASEAN governments of “lacking political will and
unity.”“While the brave pro-democracy protesters of Myanmar are being killed by
the military junta, all other ASEAN governments are demonstrating a lack of
political will and unity to pressure the military junta to end the killings,” he
said.
However, former Thai foreign minister, Kasit Piromya, one of the signatories of
the statement, said that the sanctions should not be imposed nationwide as it
would only “add to the suffering of the people in Myanmar.”“But there should be
a targeted sanction against all the military personnel and civilian personnel
that have rendered support to the military takeover,” Piromya said. During the
online press conference, moderated by Malaysian lawmaker, Wong Chen, the
politicians said that the events unfolding in Myanmar since the military
overthrew the civilian government led by Myanmar’s Aung San Suu Kyi in early
February showed ASEAN governments’ “impotence” in dealing with a regional
crisis. Nearly 150 people have died in peaceful rallies in major cities across
Myanmar, according to media reports. Brunei Darussalam, which holds this year’s
ASEAN rotating chair, said that the bloc has called on all parties in Myanmar to
refrain from inciting more violence. In a statement issued on March 2 after the
ASEAN foreign ministers’ meeting, the bloc also “called on all parties concerned
to seek a peaceful solution, through constructive dialogue, and practical
reconciliation in the interests of the people and their livelihood.”Indonesia’s
Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi told journalists after the foreign ministers’
meeting on March 2 that the talks were to discuss the situation in Myanmar,
following her shuttle diplomacy to neighboring countries to meet regional
counterparts and address the crisis. “Respecting the principle of
non-interference is a must,” she said. “In this regard, I conveyed my confidence
that no single ASEAN country has intentions to violate this principle, while at
the same time upholding and implementing values of democracy, respect of human
rights, good governance, the rule of law and constitutional government are
equally important,” Marsudi said.
Ghani to quit ‘only after polls’ as US mulls new
government
Reuters/March 18, 2021
Remarks a departure from his pledge to oppose an interim setup at any cost
KABUL: President Ashraf Ghani has vowed to step down from power, but only after
elections are held in Kabul — even as pressure mounts on the Afghan head of
state to form an interim government that includes the Taliban.
“If the Taliban are ready for elections tomorrow, we are also ready . . . But I
am not ready to transfer the power to my successor without elections,” he said
during an official event late on Tuesday.
“Forty-two years of war is enough; we also have the right to live in peace like
other civilized nations of the world,” Ghani said. His remarks came a day after
talks with US special envoy for Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, who earlier this
month had shared a proposal with key Afghan leaders, including Ghani, for the
formation of a participatory government — which would include Taliban members —
as part of efforts to end Washington’s engagement in Afghanistan, the longest
war in American history.
Khalilzad’s proposal was circulated ahead of a May 1 deadline for the complete
withdrawal of US-led foreign troops from Afghanistan, based on a controversial
accord signed between former American President Donald Trump’s administration
and the Taliban more than a year ago.
Government and Taliban delegates are set to attend Russia-sponsored talks on
Thursday — to expedite the peace process — and another international UN-led
conference in Turkey, in April, as part of the proposed US plan for an interim
setup before elections are held.
Besides Taliban and Afghan government emissaries, Thursday’s meeting in Russia
will host delegates from the Afghanistan High Council for National
Reconciliation (HCNR), factional and influential leaders, and representatives
from the US, China and Pakistan.
Ghani, who assumed his second, five-year-term in office more than a year ago
amid allegations of poll fraud, said on Tuesday that he would move forward based
on “realities instead of sentiments” for a “lasting and fair peace.”His remarks
came a day after talks with the US special envoy for Afghanistan, who earlier
this month proposed the formation of a participatory government which would
include Taliban members.
This is despite the 71-year-old leader repeatedly vowing to oppose an interim
setup “at the cost of my life.”
Ghani’s comments on Tuesday are his first since a letter addressed to him by US
Secretary of State Antony Blinken was leaked to the public nearly two weeks ago.
Blinken’s letter to Ghani — a copy of which was published by several media
houses — urged the Afghan president to “develop constructive positions” on
Khalilzad’s proposals to “jump-start the flailing peace process.”The letter
pressed upon the urgency for a new government in Afghanistan to break a
stalemate in the intra-Afghan talks, which began in Doha, Qatar, between the
Taliban and Kabul government representatives in September, and have been riddled
with disputes.The letter said that even with the continuation of US financial
assistance to Afghan forces after an American withdrawal, there was concern
“that the security situation will worsen and that the Taliban could make rapid
territorial gains” and that he was sharing this so that Ghani “understands the
urgency of my tone regarding the collective work outlined in this letter.”The
letter and Khalilzad’s proposal has caught many confidants of Ghani by surprise
because Kabul long expected that the new government in Washington would
reconsider the deal the former administration made with the Taliban and would
keep its troops in Afghanistan for some years to come. Ghani’s government has
come under fire at home and abroad over its perceived inefficiency, poor
management of affairs, rampant corruption and an inability to curb crime and
advances by Taliban insurgents.
Ahmad Shah Katawazi, a writer and former diplomat, said that Kabul and
Washington needed to exercise caution and “compromise” on some issues as the
country went through a critical phase.
“Flexibility and compromise from both sides will be a rational approach given
the current uncertain scenario the country is facing,” he told Arab News. Tabish
Forugh, a US-based Afghan analyst, said that Ghani would not be able to “stand
against US policy” but was “trying his luck to remain relevant” in the case of
an interim set-up. “Perhaps more than anyone else in his administration, Ghani
knows that he cannot stand in the way of the US proposed political settlement
with the Taliban,” he told Arab News. Forugh added that while Ghani “lacks what
it takes to block the proposal both at the national and international level,” he
was pushing to secure a deal for the “survival of state institutions.”“Ghani
will ultimately, under US pressure, compromise on peace if Washington forces the
Taliban to accept Ghani’s leadership of the transitional government, a period he
considers crucial to the safeguarding of certain democratic gains and his future
in Afghanistan’s politics,” Forugh said. Toreq Farhadi, an adviser to the former
government, agreed but added that holding polls in Afghanistan “was out of the
question” under the current circumstances. “The president of Afghanistan asking
for elections now might be an indication that he is totally unaware of the
citizens’ security situation in the country,” he said.
Syria says Assad and wife are recovering from COVID-19
Reuters/March 17/2021
Syrian President Bashar al Assad and his wife Asma are recovering from COVID-19
and will soon resume their full duties after ending a period of isolation at
home, the president’s office said on Wednesday.
The office had said on March 8 that Assad, 55, and his 45-year-old wife, who
announced her recovery from breast cancer in 2019, had tested positive for
COVID-19 after showing minor symptoms and that they would work in isolation at
home. “The laboratory and X-ray indications related to their health condition
are returning gradually to normal,” the office said in a statement, the first
public update on the couple’s condition since they fell ill.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published
on March 17-18/2021
Joe Biden Shouldn’t Return to the Iran Deal But he probably
will anyway.
Reuel Marc Gerecht and Mark Dubowitz/FDD-National Review/March 17/2021
Although President Biden has demanded that Iran reenter the Joint Comprehensive
Plan of Action before it receives economic relief, he will probably soon start
green-lighting billions of dollars in assistance and lifting sanctions. Tehran
will undoubtedly remain in violation of the atomic accord and the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), to which Iran is a signatory. Biden will do so
for the same reason that Barack Obama repeatedly gave ground in negotiations
with the Islamic Republic: fear of risking war or publicly conceding a nuke to
the clerical regime. Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, who has an autarkist
streak and despises the United States, has been ratcheting up the pressure.
Tehran has increased the quantity and quality of its enriched uranium and
started to construct and deploy advanced centrifuges faster than what the JCPOA
allowed. The clerical regime is also preventing the United Nations’
International Atomic Energy Agency from accessing Iran’s nuclear facilities,
which is in violation of the NPT. And for the fourth time under the Biden
administration, an Iran-guided Shiite militia has rocketed an American base in
Iraq. The president responded to one of the attacks with a limited strike in
Syria.
Khamenei has been point-blank — more so than he often is when he wants to give
himself wiggle room: “We have no sense of urgency, we are in no rush to see the
United States return to the JCPOA; this has never been a concern for us. . . .
What is our entirely reasonable demand is the lifting of sanctions; this is the
usurped right of the Iranian nation.”
Although senior officials in the administration are loath to say this publicly,
they need the credible threat of U.S. military power and the pain of sanctions
to drive the supreme leader back into negotiations. As punishing as sanctions
had been for two and a half years under Donald Trump’s maximum-pressure
campaign, they did not crack the fortitude and faith of Iran’s ruling elite.
For Khamenei and his security forces, the decisive moment came in the winter of
2019 when they crushed nationwide, anti-regime protests, initially provoked by a
rapid increase in fuel prices. By 2020, after using machine-gun fire against the
poor, the supreme leader had overcome three years of increasingly severe
demonstrations. In his mind, he’d overcome American provocations.
Addicted to arms control, with a uranium clock ticking, dreading the thought of
another conflict or Iranian-orchestrated violence against U.S. forces, President
Biden is probably meditating most on this: How can his administration
choreograph nuclear extortion as a mutual de-escalation that makes it seem
Tehran has given something substantial for the billions of dollars that the
White House will release? The Europeans, especially the French, have been
similarly focused, serving as a middleman in an effort to resuscitate what they
regard as a diplomatic triumph.
Philosophically, the president is in a worse position than his former boss.
President Obama was averse to the use of military and economic coercion, seeing
“engagement,” especially Western commerce, as a catalyst for the clerical
regime’s moderation. He certainly appeared to believe that if Washington were
nicer, Tehran would reciprocate. The United States could make concession after
concession in negotiations — about sunset clauses, the destruction of existing
centrifuges, the development of more-powerful and easier-to-hide centrifuges,
intrusive inspections, undisclosed nuclear activities, ballistic missiles, and
regional aggression — and evolution could well prevent the worst-case scenarios,
which Obama probably wasn’t in any case prepared to stop militarily. President
Biden doesn’t appear that naïve.
Since Obama’s nuclear outreach to Khamenei in 2012, we have seen the Islamic
Republic’s official emissaries take the lead in the slaughter of hundreds of
thousands of Sunni Syrians; undertake an assassination campaign against
expatriate dissidents and try to bomb an opposition conference outside Paris,
which many Americans attended; and savagely crush ordinary Iranians protesting.
Some of Obama’s people who are now Biden’s people could wince when Iran’s
depredations in Syria were paired with sanctions relief for the theocracy.
Liberal internationalists, and the Biden administration may be the last gasp of
this species, have a conscience. They are not blind to the problematic nature of
the theory that the Islamic Republic would be on the cusp of Thermidor if it
were not for “hardliners” in the United States.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken has conceded that the JCPOA was far from what
former secretary of state John Kerry maintained it was, an agreement that
forever shut down all pathways to a bomb. If a follow-on agreement needs to be
“longer, stronger, and broader,” then the JCPOA was, at best, a stepping-stone.
If the administration is successful in selling a JCPOA 2.0 in Washington, the
president will gain the support of congressional Democrats who opposed the deal
in 2015, and he might even crack the Republican consensus, which, so far, has
remained solidly against any U.S. return to the nuclear accord. Some
Republicans, as in 2015, may want to find a diplomatic way to escape the
American–Iranian confrontation, to see hope on the desert horizon even if it’s a
mirage.
But how President Biden takes another step with Tehran isn’t clear — unless the
administration just intends to give way to Iranian demands, including lifting
sanctions linked to terrorism, missile proliferation, and the depredations of
the Islamic Revolutionary Guards, while using tough rhetoric to camouflage its
retreat. To wit: Obama’s policy with a Senator Tom Cotton voiceover.
Iran’s supreme leader certainly isn’t going to accept more restrictions on his
industrial-size atomic aspirations after the United States lifts sanctions.
Iranian Shiite imperialism and the nuclear-weapons program aren’t exercises that
financially have made any sense; they do give satisfaction and security to
religious revolutionaries who still have a cause. Blinken, who doesn’t have the
kumbaya instincts and hubris of Kerry, may know this.
President Trump never really tried to effect a containment policy against the
Islamic Republic, where Washington doggedly tries to roll back the clerical
regime’s influence throughout the Middle East, patiently aggravating the
theocracy’s internal weaknesses. And he unwisely premised his sanctions regime
on obtaining a new, more comprehensive, A-bomb-foreclosing agreement — a fantasy
while Iran remains the Islamic Republic. But containment would draw redlines.
Billions of dollars wouldn’t be transferred for a short, weak, and narrow
nuclear deal. Mass slaughter and terrorism wouldn’t be rewarded.
And the president of the United States could reply to the supreme leader: “I
don’t need to return to the JCPOA, either.” In the Middle East’s endless
hard-power contests, that would be a momentous next step.
*Reuel Marc Gerecht, a former Iranian-targets officer in the Central
Intelligence Agency, is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies.
*Mark Dubowitz, sanctioned by Iran in 2019, is the CEO. Follow them on Twitter @ReuelMGerecht
and @mdubowitz. FDD is a nonpartisan think tank focused on foreign policy and
national security issues.
In war-torn Syria, uprising birthplace seethes 10 years on
Sarah El Deeb and Bassam Mroue/AP/March 17/2021
https://apnews.com/article/syria-war-10-years-427f9094fa560dd8ce3cc8708990fa7a
BEIRUT (AP) — Daraa was an impoverished, neglected provincial city in the
farmlands of Syria’s south, an overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim backwater far from
the more cosmopolitan cities of the country’s heartland.
But in March 2011 it became the first to explode against the rule of President
Bashar Assad. Assad’s decision to crush the initially peaceful protests
propelled Syria into a civil war that has killed more than a half million
people, driven half the population from their homes and sucked in foreign
military interventions that have carved up the country.
On the 10th anniversary of the protests, The Associated Press spoke to activists
from Daraa who set aside their lives to join the marches in the streets, then
paid the price in torture and exile. Unable to return home, they continue from
abroad to support a cause that they hope can still prevail, despite Assad’s
military victories.
After a decade of bloodshed, Daraa is back under Assad’s rule, but only
tenuously.
Boiling with resentments, battered by an economic crisis and rife with armed
groups caught between Russia, Iran and the government, the uprising’s birthplace
still feels perched on the rim of an active volcano.
MARCH 18
Assad’s security agencies were clearly nervous in early 2011 as Arab Spring
uprisings felled leaders in Tunisia and Egypt.
In Daraa, officers summoned known activists and warned them not to try anything.
Small initial protests were quickly pushed back by security.
Then graffiti appeared around the city. One caught everyone’s attention: “Your
Turn Has Come, Doctor,” a reference to Assad, who was an ophthalmologist before
inheriting rule from his father Hafez. When the boys who wrote the graffiti were
arrested and tortured, Daraa’s population erupted in anger.
On March 18, protesters marched from mosques, met by charging security vehicles.
Outside the city’s main Omari Mosque, security forces opened fire with live
ammunition, killing two protesters and wounding at least 20 others.
They were the first to die in what would become a decade of death.
EDS NOTE: GRAPHIC CONTENT - Doctors treat a wounded man who was injured during
clashes between Syrian security forces and anti-government protesters in the
southern city of Daraa, Syria. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
Ahmed al-Masalmeh, then 35 and the owner of an electronics shop, was at the
Omari Mosque that bloody day. He was helping organize protests, bringing in
people from neighboring villages. He kept at it as rallies spread and more
“martyrs” fell. When security forces fired on protesters toppling the statue of
Hafez Assad in Daraa’s main square, he helped carry away the wounded. Eight died
that day.
Al-Masalmeh had thought troops would just use tear gas and rubber bullets
against the protests. In this age, he thought, Syria’s rulers couldn’t get away
with what Hafez Assad had in 1982, killing thousands to crush a revolt in the
city of Hama.
“We thought the world has become a small village, with social media and
satellite stations,” he told the AP. “We never expected the level of killing and
brutality and hatred for the people to reach these levels.”
From Damascus, university student Nedal al-Amari watched the March 18 mayhem in
his home city on TV.
Al-Amari, who had just turned 18, was the son of a parliament member from Daraa;
it was his father’s connections that had got him a spot at the university in the
capital, studying acting.
Full Coverage: Syria
Al-Amari jumped in a car, headed down the highway and arrived home to join in.
His father was not happy.
“If you think this this regime will fall because of a scream or millions of
screams, then you know nothing about this regime,” his father told him. “It is
ready to turn over every stone in this country to remain in power.”
The teen dismissed his father’s warning. It was the talk, he felt, of an older
generation paralyzed by fear ever since Hafez Assad’s ruthlessness in 1982.
The young would not be cowed.
CRACKDOWN
Al-Amari, who spoke some English, picked up a camera, set up two computers and
together with friends created a media center. It was one of the first of many
that sprang up around Syria, communicating the conflict to the world. He filmed
the marches and the deadly assaults against them by security forces. For the
first time, he saw dead bodies. It changed him, he said, creating a sense of
fearlessness bolstered by the camaraderie with his fellow activists.
That bravado would turn into trauma.
On April 25, 2011, the army stormed Daraa city. Assad’s inner circle had
abandoned any possible conciliation.
Within days, al-Amari and his colleagues were rounded up.
A man uses a fire extinguisher in a burned out courtroom that was set on fire by
anti-government protesters, March 21, 2011, in the southern city of Daraa,
Syria. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
In detention, the first thing al-Amari was forced to do was kneel on the floor
and kiss a picture of Assad. Then the daily routine of torture set in. Beatings
and electrocutions from guards — but also, prisoners were forced to torture each
other, to beat each other or ram metal objects into the anus.
“You’d be tortured while (they force you into) torturing others,” al-Amari said.
For four months, his parents didn’t know where he was, until al-Amari was beaten
so badly he nearly lost his eyesight. He was taken to a military hospital and a
cousin who worked there happened to see him. Soon after, he was released and
dumped on the street.
Anti-government protesters pass burning tires set alight by the protesters
following clashes with Syrian security forces, March 23, 2011, in the southern
city of Daraa, Syria. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
Over the course of the war, more than 120,000 people have similarly disappeared
into government detention. Under relentless torture, thousands are known to have
died. Tens of thousands remain missing.
Al-Amari emerged a broken and tormented soul. He spent a month recovering at his
family’s half-bombed home, his mother sleeping beside him to keep him company.
Meanwhile, armed opposition groups were arising to fight back against the
crackdown. Al-Amari’s brother joined one.
Al-Amari picked his camera back up and covered the battles. He threw away
caution, no longer hiding his name. Across the country, as the viciousness grew,
so too did the sectarian fever between a largely Sunni Muslim rebellion and
Assad’s state centered on his Alawite minority.
“My fear turned into spite and hatred. I hated Shiites, I hated Alawites,” al-Amari
said.
When four of al-Amari’s cousins in Damascus were detained, it became clear the
family would pay the price for his activities. His father slapped him, angry and
afraid, and told him it was time for him to go. The cousins have not been heard
from since.
On Dec. 22, 2011, al-Amari left Syria. After several years in Lebanon, he
reached Turkey. From there, he joined the massive wave of Syrians and other
refugees and migrants who in 2015 by the hundreds of thousands crossed in small
boats on dangerous sea trips from Turkey to Greece.
FULL CIRCLE
At its height in 2013 and 2014, the rebellion controlled most of Syria east of
the Euphrates, parts of Daraa province and much of the north. It battled for all
the major cities and even threatened Damascus from the surrounding countryside.
Assad’s forces unleashed airstrikes, devastating barrel bombs and chemical
attacks. The tide turned when his allies, Moscow and Tehran, stepped in
directly, first Iran with military experts and allied Shiite militias, then
Russia with its warplanes.
Sieges and military campaigns against opposition-held cities and towns flattened
neighborhoods and starved populations into submission. When the government
retook the northern city of Aleppo in 2016 — destroying nearly half of it — it
spelled the end of the rebellion’s military threat to Assad’s rule. In the
northwest, the opposition became confined to a shrinking enclave centered on
Idlib province, dominated by Islamic militants and surviving only because of
Turkish protection.
In the south, government forces backed by Russia overwhelmed Daraa province in
August 2018.
While recaptured, Daraa was far from controlled.
It has come under a unique arrangement mediated by Russia, partially because of
pressure from Israel, which does not want Iranian militias on its doorstep, and
from Jordan, which wants to keep its border crossings open.
Syrian soldiers check an ambulance in which a doctor and two paramedics were
killed in an attack, according to the official Syrian television,March 23, 2011,
in the southern city of Daraa, Syria. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
In parts of Daraa province, rebel fighters who agreed to “reconcile” remained in
charge of security. Some joined the 5th Corps, which is technically part of the
Syrian Army but overseen by Russia. In these areas, state and municipal
institutions have returned, but government forces stayed out. Elsewhere, Russian
and government troops are in charge together in a watered-down government
authority. In the rest, the government is in outright control, and the Syrian
army and Iranian-backed militias have deployed.
The organized opposition presence gives a margin for protests and open
anti-government sentiment hard to find elsewhere. Some rebels rejected the deal
with Russia and are waging a low-level insurgency.
A string of killings, mainly by insurgents, has left more than 600 dead since
June 2019, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The dead
include government troops, pro-Iranian militiamen, rebels who signed onto the
Russia deals, and mayors and municipal workers considered loyal to the
government.
The volatile mix paints a possible scenario for Syria’s near future: A war that
Assad can dominate but not outright win, foreign powers trying to patch together
arrangements, and a population still boiling with dissent and drowning in an
economic crisis.
To give a veneer of normalcy and placate foreign backers, Assad plans
presidential elections this summer — in which he is the only candidate.
Assad’s forces are too exhausted to deal with another revolution, said Hassan
Alaswad, a prominent activist lawyer from Daraa who fled the country. Now in
Germany, he remains involved in opposition activity in Syria.
Among Daraa’s population, “there’s no such thing as fear anymore,” Alaswad said.
In the town of Tafas, a Russian general met local notables and asked them if
they will vote for Assad in the upcoming election. All of them said no, calling
him a war criminal.
Daraa has seen frequent mass protests against the government and Iran,
reflecting a growing concern over Tehran’s expanding influence. Iranian-backed
militias recruit young men attracted by a stable salary. Families loyal to the
government or Iranian-backed fighters are reportedly settling in villages in the
south. Traders linked to Assad and Iran have exploited the destitution in Daraa
to buy up land, said al-Amari. Pro-Iranian militias are said to be encouraging
local Sunni Muslims to convert to Shiism.
Still, the public is also exhausted by the economy’s collapse across Syria.
Inflation is spiraling, and there are few jobs. Trade and agriculture are broken
down, and infrastructure wrecked.
“The young men still inside Syria are living in despair,” said al-Masalmeh, who
fled to Jordan in 2018 but remains involved with activists at home. “We will
invest in the despair ... to relaunch the revolution again.”
IN EXILE
Al-Amari now lives in Germany, learning the language and hoping to go to
university. He gives talks on the Syria conflict and his experience with torture
and works documenting crimes against civilians.
He’s enjoying his freedom in Germany — he has more freedom as a refugee than
most living under the Arab world’s authoritarian regimes, he points out.
He still wrestles with his trauma. “Sometimes the memories are so hard, when I
remember how I was tortured, I hate everything that is Alawite on the face of
the earth,” he says — even as he also tells himself not every Alawite backed
Assad. He worries about “shabiha,” or regime loyalists, living among refugees in
Europe, who dissidents fear are targeting them.
And he is inextricably tangled with home. Al-Amari has not seen his family for
10 years. He still breaks down in tears when he talks about home. Tattooed on
his forearm is the date of the first protests, March 18.
“We are living and not living,” he said.
Vaccines can help Biden rebuild US-EU ties
Melvyn B. Krauss/Arab News/March 17, 2021
Strange as it may sound, vaccines are now the key to reviving the transatlantic
relationship. Former President Donald Trump’s “America First” administration
left ties between the US and its European allies badly frayed. So, in his
address to the Munich Security Conference in February, President Joe Biden
thought it best to reaffirm America’s support for Article 5 of the North
Atlantic Treaty: An attack on one NATO member would be considered an attack on
all.
That is all to the good. Yet a speech is still a speech, and some wonder what
Article 5 and the alliance is worth when Europe’s shortage of coronavirus
disease vaccine supplies is putting European lives and livelihoods in danger,
while the US is swimming in doses. The Biden administration has not even pressed
for Food and Drug Administration approval of the UK’s Oxford-AstraZeneca
vaccine, despite having an estimated 60 million doses on hand.
There is no doubt about Biden’s desire to revitalize ties with Europe, which is
why his administration must address this egregious vaccine imbalance and help
the Europeans in their moment of need. The fastest way to do this — and to
strengthen the transatlantic relationship — is US-European joint production of
vaccines in Europe. Here, the Biden team should follow the model of the highly
successful deal it brokered in the US, where Merck is manufacturing millions of
doses of Johnson & Johnson’s (J&J) vaccine under license.
Cooperation in production and distribution across borders, and even oceans, is a
more effective way to promote diplomatic objectives than simply selling vaccine
supplies to the Europeans (though that is better than nothing at a time when
Europe lags far behind the US in terms of vaccine delivery). Russia, not famous
for sharing anything, understands this and has just signed a deal to produce its
Sputnik V vaccine in Italy, with similar arrangements reportedly in the works in
France, Germany and Spain.
By cutting such deals, the Kremlin has succeeded in leveraging a critical area,
public health, while seeking to divide and hollow out the EU. Given this, the
obvious question is why hasn’t the US government done more to push US
pharmaceutical firms to agree to joint production agreements with European
pharmaceutical firms?
True, Pfizer/BioNTech (the latter being a German firm) have a deal with Novartis
to produce their vaccines in Marburg — 60 million doses per month at full
capacity. And J&J’s vaccine is being produced in the Dutch city of Leiden, with
the company having in February also signed a deal with Sanofi to produce 12
million doses per month in Marcy-l’Étoile, France. Moderna has now contracted
with the Lonza Group to manufacture its vaccine in Switzerland.
But all of these moves came late, after it became clear that the EU was far
behind in delivering vaccines to its citizens. And that inability to deliver
vaccines gave both Russia and China a window of opportunity to position
themselves as Europe’s health saviors, which they are now seeking to exploit.
By pushing joint vaccine ventures, US national security would be enhanced
without an additional dime of defense spending. Just as the US cemented its ties
with Europe after the Second World War with Marshall Plan aid, it should
encourage as many cooperative vaccine production agreements as the Europeans
require to meet their needs. The Marshall Plan helped keep the Soviets out of
Western Europe; joint production of vaccines in Europe would limit the malign
(and costly) influence that Russia and China seek to exercise. Hungary, for
example, is paying many times more for its Chinese vaccines than it would for
the UK or US versions.
But jabs are only part of the story. The Biden administration has already made
solid progress in mending US relations with Europe, particularly by ending a
long-standing, and poisonous, dispute over aircraft production subsidies. Biden
and Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, agreed in early
March to suspend all tariffs imposed in the subsidies dispute for an initial
period of four months.
This agreement’s commercial significance is matched by its symbolic importance
as a signal of a revitalized transatlantic partnership. The aircraft dispute
started almost two decades ago and the EU had imposed tariffs on US products
worth roughly $4 billion, while the US levied tariffs on $7.5 billion of
European goods. “Finally, we are emerging from the trade war between the US and
the EU, which created only losers,” Bruno Le Maire, the French finance minister,
said on Twitter.
But aircraft subsidies were not the only trade issue separating Europe from
America. The tariffs Trump imposed on steel and aluminum from Europe on national
security grounds remain in place. Gina Raimondo, the US commerce secretary,
recently called the steel and aluminum tariffs “effective” — an indication the
Biden administration will not soon repeal all of Trump’s protectionist measures.
And there also remains the thorny dispute over US sanctions on German and other
EU firms building the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to deliver Russian natural gas
directly to Germany, bypassing Ukraine and Poland.
By pushing joint vaccine ventures, US national security would be enhanced
without an additional dime of defense spending.
How can Europeans not be skeptical of Biden’s promise that “America is back”
when he refuses to stand up to the steel protectionists? For Biden, there is a
fear that tariffs are popular with the working-class white voters the Democrats
want to win back. Moreover, Republicans and the steel industry and its unions
remain behind them.
Biden’s preservation of steel tariffs represents a victory of domestic politics
over sound foreign policy. But Biden also recognizes that an America estranged
from its allies is a weaker America. By helping Europe produce vaccines within
the EU, he will demonstrate not only that America is back, but that it is the
far-sighted America of the Marshall Plan, not the sneering “America First” of
Trump, that has returned.
*Melvyn B. Krauss is Professor Emeritus of Economics at New York University.
Copyright: Project Syndicate
UK foreign policy review highlights growing role of technology
Alistair Burt/Arab News/March 17, 2021
The review of the UK’s foreign, defense, development and security policy was
published this week after a year of consideration. It was the most apt time to
do so. The combination of a fresh administration after the election of 2019, the
UK’s exit from the EU and coping with a pandemic is surely a unique collection
of circumstances in which to consider where a state may be going
internationally.
The review is certainly bold and, to a degree, unconventional. If readers are
searching for an index, in which to look up chapters devoted to familiar regions
and geopolitical issues, they will look in vain. The whole point of integration
is to engage both the population of the UK and those friendly and less friendly
to us overseas in awareness that old boundaries are breaking down and that the
speed of technological and scientific change has consequences for the old order.
Friends, as in those in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), need to absorb
all the messages to appreciate that the UK will still be reaching out to them in
old and new ways.
Conventional issues are covered, but not in endless pages. The UK government
says that it “will build on existing partnerships across the MENA region,
strengthening them and taking them to new places through deeper engagement on
science, technology, health, climate and biodiversity.” Do not miss the personal
intent behind these examples. As at the UN Security Council during the UK’s
presidency last month, Prime Minister Boris Johnson clearly sees his legacy as
depending on engaging multilateral efforts to combat climate change and the
threat to biodiversity loss, which he describes as the UK’s “No. 1 international
priority.” This is some claim. He has led the review and it was he, not the
foreign secretary, who launched it in Parliament. This is important to note.
These examples matter deeply to him, and the country.
The review is alive to regular policy messages, mentioning the need to work with
partners in relation to Iran, the importance of the UK’s historic partners in
the Gulf on maritime security, threats to Europe and the need for NATO, and
combating terror.
I think the overall message should be reassuring. Despite the recognition of the
growing importance of the East and the “tilt to the Indo-Pacific,” in which, of
course, the UK is far from alone, familiar alliances get a boost. A US back in
the international arena, the E3 of the UK,
Despite the recognition of the growing importance of the East and the ‘tilt to
the Indo-Pacific,’ familiar alliances get a boost.
France and Germany, and the UK’s many friends in the MENA region remain as
foundations of global security but, as part of this new collective relationship,
that security is increasingly to be built around smart technology and science.
The hub of the paper and policy is in four overarching principles. The first of
these is not, as would have been expected a generation ago, the UK’s commitment
to NATO and increased defense spending, but rather “sustaining strategic
advantage through science and technology.” The second is to ensure that “open
societies and open economies can flourish.” Importantly, these key objectives
are not focused on any triumphal “Make Britain Great Again” claim of
world-leading exceptionalism. Instead they are rooted in a paragraph recognizing
that the UK cannot achieve its objectives alone — it must rely on collective
action and co-creation with others, leading by example where it can but
identifying “where we are better placed to support others.” It is a big country
that recognizes the need to work with others.
If the policy is influenced by a fast-changing technological world, where there
are many threats from those who would make use of cyber and advanced scientific
innovation for illicit purposes, it is also influenced by the recognition that
security abroad is now intimately linked to domestic security. The targeting of
states in cyberattacks are not victimless crimes because the perpetrators are
truly aiming at our citizens accessing services or being protected by their
critical infrastructure, from Abu Dhabi to Aberdeen. Just as in a pandemic, no
one is safe unless all are safe.
There will be challenges, and questions to be asked. Modernizing a nuclear
arsenal is one thing, but increasing the number of warheads while maintaining
the mutual disarmament element of the Non-Proliferation Treaty will take some
explaining. And the effort to square the circle on the UK’s exceptional
development contribution in recent years by being reassuring about a return to
the high standard of 0.7 percent of gross national income “when the fiscal
situation allows,” while currently reducing it to 0.5 percent because of the
pandemic, will not convince all in Parliament.
However, no set of foreign policy principles will be universally accepted, least
of all in a free society that is open to questions. I doubt if this one will
gather much dust, as it is set to be a topic of discussion in many capitals for
quite some time.
• Alistair Burt is a former UK Member of Parliament who has twice held
ministerial positions in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office — as Parliamentary
Under Secretary of State from 2010 to 2013 and as Minister of State for the
Middle East from 2017 to 2019.
Twitter: @AlistairBurtUK
Clash between unlikely allies Turkey and Russia is
inevitable
Zaid M. Belbagi/Arab News/March 17, 2021
Having gone to war at least 12 times over the centuries, Turkey and Russia are
unlikely allies. In 2015, when Turkey shot down a Russian warplane, any accord
between the two seemed unlikelier still. And the gunning down of Russian
Ambassador Andrei Karlov in Ankara a year later was a cause for war if ever
there was one. Startlingly, however, the reality since that low point in
relations between the countries is that they have grown closer together. As
Russian President Vladimir Putin tries to drive a wedge between Turkey and its
NATO allies, how this relationship between historical adversaries continues
remains to be seen.As a 17 million square km landmass to its north, Russia is an
immovable reality for Turkey. For the Kremlin, the aspirations of 80 million
Muslims to once again extend their writ beyond their borders are a threat to
Russia’s traditional sphere of influence. It is in the Caucasus that the
ambitions of these two regional juggernauts have always and will continue to rub
cheek by jowl. Where Turkey sees in Georgia a potential NATO ally, Russia has
long seen the Caucasus only as a host to client states it keeps on a short
leash. Not since the early 20th century has Turkey considered taking up arms
against Russia to reconnect itself with its Turkic brethren to its east. The
events of the last year, however, have shown its willingness to engage in a
conflict that has actually brought the two sides closer together.
For decades, the conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh province of Azerbaijan
remained in a state of stagnation, with Baku lacking the will to act
independently without aggravating Russia, which concurrently backed its Armenian
rival to the hilt. The intervention of Turkey in 2020, however, rather than
antagonize the situation, actually led to a peace treaty and a territorial
realignment.
Putin summarized his tolerance of Turkey’s military adventures when he stated in
November: “Today, they (France and Germany) are jointly performing their NATO
defense and security duties the way they think fit. Why can’t we (Russia and
Turkey) do the same?” This statement highlights exactly why this marriage of
convenience means so much to the Kremlin: In an increasingly multipolar world,
it is only through exploring relationships with other powers that Russia is able
to project itself. An alliance of sorts with Turkey not only limits the
opportunities for other powers to involve themselves in Russia’s sphere of
influence, but also has the added value of undermining NATO.
If the fighter jet crisis was a turning point in how Turkey dealt with Russia,
it also highlighted how Syria would act as a blueprint for how the two could
work together at the expense of other powers. In providing an all-important
lifeline to sustain the Assad regime, Russia acted in opposition to
international opinion, while extending its presence in a part of the world that
had, in many respects, been an exclusively American concern. And by providing an
opportunity for Turkey to pummel its Kurdish enemies across the border, the
Kremlin was able to show itself as a practical ally.
Where Ankara’s relationship with Washington is governed by personality,
elections, institutions and public opinion, its ties with Russia are entirely
personal. It was Putin that reportedly forewarned Recep Tayyip Erdogan of the
2016 attempted coup and it was also he who congratulated the Turkish president
on his survival. The two have had the most regular face-to-face sit-downs of any
world leaders since.
Despite having done all that was necessary to align itself with the European
economies for six decades, the chances of Turkey joining the EU are now more
remote than ever. However, instead of integrating itself with China’s Belt and
Road Initiative and simultaneously reinvigorating ties with the Central Asian
Turkic peoples, Russia is now of increasing importance to Turkey. This trend was
highlighted spectacularly by the decision to buy the Russian S-400 air defense
system. Not only did this exclude Turkey from purchasing fifth-generation US
fighter aircraft, but more importantly it was the first time since Bolshevik
Russia supported the modern Turkish state against Greece in the 1920s that
Ankara had so boldly stepped out of the Western orbit in favor of Russia. Faced
with mounting security challenges, Europe can ill afford to lose the
second-largest military within NATO, while Turkey would similarly do well to
recall Putin’s expediency — Russia will only work with Turkey while its
interests are served.
Ankara would do well to recall Putin’s expediency — Russia will only work with
Turkey while its interests are served.
Despite the ability of Russia to sustain a relationship that is not rules-based,
it does not provide the economic allure of the West — trade revenue that Turkey
can ill afford to lose. Though Turkey and Russia have sought common ground where
possible, Ankara will be hesitant to incur further international sanctions given
how acute its economic problems currently are. Both sides now know the other has
the power and, importantly, the daring to implement the decisions they reach.
Before long, a clash is inevitable. Leaders on both sides only need to look at
history to pinpoint where this may take place: Around the Black Sea, in the
Caucasus or in Central Asia, where Turkish policies increasingly threaten
Russia.
*Zaid M. Belbagi is a political commentator, and an adviser to private clients
between London and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Twitter: @Moulay_Zaid