English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For May 18/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews21/english.may18.21.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
They have lost all sensitivity and have abandoned
themselves to licentiousness, greedy to practise every kind of impurity
Letter to the Ephesians 04/17-24: “Now this I affirm and insist on in the
Lord: you must no longer live as the Gentiles live, in the futility of their
minds. They are darkened in their understanding, alienated from the life of God
because of their ignorance and hardness of heart. They have lost all sensitivity
and have abandoned themselves to licentiousness, greedy to practise every kind
of impurity. That is not the way you learned Christ! For surely you have heard
about him and were taught in him, as truth is in Jesus. You were taught to put
away your former way of life, your old self, corrupt and deluded by its lusts,
and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to clothe yourselves with the
new self, created according to the likeness of God in true righteousness and
holiness.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News & Editorials published on May 17- 18/2021
Ministry of Health: 201 new infections, 11 deaths
President Aoun to Sereni: Formation of a new government which achieves reforms
is a priority in our political work
Presidency Press Office denies false information about the content of President
Aoun’s message to President Macron
Israel shells Lebanon after failed launches toward Israeli territory
Israel Fires Shells at South Lebanon after Rocket Fire
Italian Envoy Affirms ‘Conditional’ Support for Lebanon
Diab meets Italian Deputy Foreign Minister'
Report: Hariri Delays Return to Beirut for Talks on Govt Impasse
Report: Macron, el-Sisi to Discuss Problematic Lebanon File
I Want to Study': Lebanon Crisis Cancels School for Many
Catastrophe’ looms as Lebanon crisis cancels school for many
Machnouk picks up regional signals, prepares for the post-Hariri era
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous
Reports And News published on May 17- 18/2021
Once again, US blocks UN Security Council
statement on Palestine-Israel violence
US President Biden supports ceasefire in Gaza, tells Israel to protect civilians
Death toll of Israeli airstrikes on Gaza rises to 200; Dozens of children killed
Despite pressures at home and in region, US in no rush for Mideast truce
US, UAE top diplomats discuss efforts to end violence between Palestine, Israel
Biden administration meets Middle East eruption with muddled policies
Jordan under pressure with fighting next door
France hosts African leaders, announces $1.5 billion loan to Sudan
Erdogan Urges Pope to Help End Israel's 'Massacre'
U.S. President Biden to send 20 million more COVID-19 vaccine doses abroad -
Bloomberg
Statement by Canada Following UN Security Council Session on the devastating
violence in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza
Statement by Canada on International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and
Biphobia
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published on May 17- 18/2021
Audio From FDDForeign Podicy Biden’s Mission to Realign the Middle East/y
Clifford D. May/Tony Badran/Michael Doran/May 17/2021
Biden’s overtures to Iran undercut US bid to end Hamas-Israel conflict/Jonathan
Schanzer/New York Post/May 17/2021
Rescinding the IRGC’s Terror Designation Would Harm American Victims of
Terrorism/Matthew Zweig and Richard Goldberg/Insight-FDD/May 17/2021
When the US leaves Afghanistan, the world will become less safe/Bill Roggio/New
York Post/May 17/2021
Joe Biden’s Iran Policy Is One Giant Nuclear Mistake/The United States is at an
inflection point. Now is the time to reverse course./Anthony Ruggiero/ The
National Interest/May 17/2021
If it gets nukes, Iran could fire using cruise missiles - exclusive/Yonah Jeremy
Bob/Jerusalem Post/May 17/2021
Iranians to the Biden Administration: Do Not Lift Sanctions on Iran/Hayvi Bouzo
and Benjamin Weinthal/Newsweek/May 17/2021
Turkey media threatens Israel with 'Libya model' of water grab off Gaza/Seth J.
Frantzman/Jerusalem PostMay 17/2021
Senior PIJ commander killed in IAF airstrike Monday afternoon/Anna Ahronheim/Jerusalem
post/May 17/2021
Responsibility for the Latest Upsurge in Arab-Israeli Violence Goes to US
President Joe Biden/Con Coughlin/Gatestone Institute/May 17/2021
Time to end Iran’s nuclear blackmail/Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab News/May
17/2021
Israel-Gaza conflict only serves to benefit Hamas, Iran, Israeli far-right/Nadim
Shehadi/Al Arabiya/17 May ,2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News
& Editorials published on May 17- 18/2021
Ministry of Health: 201 new infections, 11 deaths
NNA/May 17/2021
The Ministry of Public Health announced 201 new coronavirus infection cases,
which raises the cumulative number of confirmed cases to 535954.
11 deaths have been recorded over the past 24 hours.
President Aoun to Sereni: Formation of a new government
which achieves reforms is a priority in our political work
NNA/May 17/2021
President of the republic, General Michel Aoun, received Italian Deputy Foreign
Affairs Minister, Mrs. Marina Sereni, today at the Presidential Palace.
President Aoun stressed that “The formation of a new government is currently a
priority in our political work, despite internal and external obstacles facing
this issue”. “However, we will spare no effort to reach this goal and form a
government which achieving required reforms will be among the first of its
tasks, in addition to completing the fight against corruption which Lebanon
suffers from and accomplishing forensic audit which constitutes the real point
of entry to these reforms” the President said.
In addition, President Aoun emphasized the “Need of support from countries
friendly to Lebanon, especially Italy, Lebanon’s quest to recover the funds
which were smuggled abroad, especially to European banks”, pointing out that
“Combatting corruption restores regularity to the state’s economic structure, in
all departments and institutions”.
The President also assured Mrs. Sereni that “Democratic practice in Lebanon is
safeguarded despite all difficult circumstances which the country passes
through, and this will be translated into the upcoming parliamentary and
municipal elections, which will be held on time in 2022”. Moreover, President
Aoun thanked Mrs. Sereni for the Italian support in all fields, especially after
the Beirut Port explosion, and the implementation of developmental projects, in
addition to the Italian participation in UNIFIL forces which Italy leads.
President Aoun noted the historical relations which link Lebanon and Italy and
asserted the need to activate these relations, considering Italy’s initiative to
restore Sursock Museum, which was damaged by the Beirut Port explosion, as an
“Additional confirmation of Italy’s cultural presence in Lebanon, which also
asserts the common belief between both countries in preserving heritage and
common values”. For her part, Mrs. Sereni briefed the President on Italy’s
position on recent Lebanese developments, and stressed the continuation of her
country’s support in current circumstances. Mrs. Sereni also emphasized the need
of strengthening cooperation between both countries, in multiple fields.
Statement:
After the meeting, Mrs. Sereni made the following statement:
“Long-term historical and cultural friendships, link Italy and Lebanon. We are
with the Lebanese people in these difficult times which have been exacerbated by
Corona pandemic. I affirmed Italian solidarity with Lebanon, and I assured the
President that it will remain as it is, through our work within the framework of
the international support group, at bilateral and international levels. Italy
had acted immediately in response to the emergency call, after the Beirut Port
explosion. We have sent teams of experts and provided financial and first aid
equipment, as well as field hospitals.
I also assured his Excellency, of Italy’s commitment to reconstruction. In this
context, an agreement was signed yesterday with the UNESCO Director, to
rehabilitate the Sursock Museum, where the Italian government contributes an
amount of one million Euros. We assert the importance of the framework agreement
which works in the name of reform, advancement and reconstruction, especially
regarding accompanying Lebanon in the process of advancement while actively
involving civil society and encouraging effective coordination between
international donors.
During the meeting, we also agreed with President Aoun that Lebanon finds itself
today in the face of many challenges, especially on financial, humanitarian and
economic levels. The answer to this multidimensional crisis is one: carrying out
reforms. Therefore, profound and structural reforms must be undertaken to
respond to the most urgent needs of the Lebanese. These reforms cannot be
postponed any longer, and require the formation of a government which assumes
full authorities.
Therefore, Italy reiterates its urgent call to Lebanese political parties, to
set aside their differences and prioritize the country’s supreme interest, and
cooperate in order to form a new government which would put Lebanon back on the
track of sustainable development and follow the paths of reform, while
relaunching IMF negotiations.
Italy also supports any initiative which would contribute to overcoming the
current stalemate, bearing in mind the need to protect the population and
improve all living conditions. The European Union, which studies all means at
its disposal, can take a balanced and effective step in this context. I also
consider that it is extremely important that democratic mechanisms continue to
operate regularly, and this is why I emphasized to the President the need to
work according to the electoral calendar, expected in 2022.
We also discussed bilateral relations and some regional topics. It was
emphasized that Italy portrays Lebanon as a key player for Middle Eastern peace
and stability. It was also assured that Italy is convicted to support UNIFIL.
The best proof of this is Italy’s long-term contribution in peacekeeping
missions, where more than 1000 Italian soldiers serve.
The UNIFIL, under the leadership of General Stefano Del Col, continues to play a
key role in maintaining stability and avoiding tensions along the Blue Line
borders, especially in light of the current situation with its tensions at this
stage.
We are very proud that Italian blue hats continue to be highly professional and
humane at serving the cause of peace in this sensitive region, daily, side by
side with local communities and the most vulnerable segments of the population”.
MP Abi Khalil:
The President also met MP, Cesar Abi Khalil, and deliberated with him the
current situation and governmental affairs, in addition to the needs of Aley
region. ---Presidency Press Office
Presidency Press Office denies false information about the
content of President Aoun’s message to President Macron
NNA/May 17/2021
The Presidency Press Office issued the following statement:
“Nidaa Al-Watan newspaper published, in today’s issue, false information about
the content of the message of the President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun,
to his French counterpart, President Emmanuel Macron. This false data was
presented in a way which suggests that it was extracted from the text of this
letter. The Presidency Press Office is concerned in emphasizing that what was
published is false and was never mentioned in the presidential letter. It is
rather a figment of imagination of the article’s author, who adopted an
unfounded reference, so clarification was required”.
Israel shells Lebanon after failed launches toward
Israeli territory
Arab News/May 17/2021
TEL AVIV/BEIRUT: Six shells were fired from Lebanon towards northern Israel on
Monday but fell short of crossing the border, the Israeli military said. It said
that in response, artillery was fired at "the sources of the launches" in
Lebanon. A Lebanese security source said shells were heard being fired from
south Lebanon and efforts were being made to identify the location. The source
said about 22 shells were fired by Israeli artillery on Lebanese territory.
There were no reports of casualties or damage, and the shelling did not appear
to signal the opening of a new front in Israel's fighting with militants in the
Gaza Strip.
The Lebanese shelling caused Israeli air raid sirens to blare near the kibbutz
of Misgav Am, along Israel's northern border with Lebanon. It was the second
incident of cross-border fire in the past week. On Thursday, three rockets were
launched from Lebanon toward northern Israel but landed in the Mediterranean
Sea, causing no damage or casualties. Israel fought a 2006 war against Hezbollah
guerrillas, who have sway in southern Lebanon and advanced rockets. The border
has been mostly quiet since then. Small Palestinian factions in Lebanon have
fired sporadically on Israel in the past.
Israel Fires Shells at South Lebanon after Rocket Fire
Agence France Presse/May 17/2021
The Israeli army launched artillery towards Lebanon on Monday in response to
rocket fire from the Lebanese side that failed to hit Israel.
"Six failed launch attempts were identified from Lebanon that did not cross into
Israeli territory," the Israeli army said in a statement. "Artillery forces
fired toward the sources of the launches," it added. Al-Manar TV reporter Ali
Shoaib meanwhile tweeted that four rockets were fired from the forests of al-Hibbariyeh's
heights -- three of which landed between Houla, Rob Tlateen, Adaisseh and al-Taybeh
while the fourth hit an unidentified area. He added that, in response, Israel
fired 15 155mm artillery shells, two tank shells and four flares at Lebanese
border areas, adding that "total calm" was engulfing the area after the Israeli
shelling.
Italian Envoy Affirms ‘Conditional’ Support for Lebanon
Naharnet/May 17/2021
Italian Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Marina
Sereni, said that Italy is willing to provide assistance for Lebanon whenever a
new government is formed, the National News Agency reported on Monday. President
Michel Aoun met Sereni who led an Italian delegation to Baabda Presidential
Palace. She affirmed that “Italy will always stand by Lebanon’s side, and is
constantly seeking to help it in all fields.”“Italy is committed to helping
Lebanon, especially in terms of reconstruction. It also supports any initiative
that would contribute to overcoming the current stalemate,” added Sereni.
Earlier, she met caretaker Foreign Minister Charbel Wehbe where discussions
focused on bilateral relations between Lebanon and Italy, and Italy’s “readiness
to provide further aid to Lebanon when a rescue government is formed.”Also,
conferees discussed the role of the UNIFIL especially amid the escalation in the
occupied territories. Accordingly, Sereni has indicated that Italy backs “an
immediate cease of violence in Palestine and the resort to dialogue to solve
problems.”
Diab meets Italian Deputy Foreign Minister
NNA/May 17/2021
Caretaker Prime Minister, Hassan Diab, received at the Grand Serail the Italian
Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Marina Sereni,
heading a delegation that included: Italian Ambassador to Lebanon, Nicoletta
Bombardiere, Deputy Director of Political Affairs at the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, Luca Gori, First Secretary at the Italian Embassy, Emmanuel D’Andrassi,
and Sereni’s Office Director, Giuseppe Cavagna, in the presence of Prime
Minister's Advisor for Diplomatic Affairs, Ambassador Gebran Soufane. The
interlocutors deliberated on the need to expedite Cabinet formation and
emphasized Italy's support and assistance to Lebanon in all fields. ----PCM
Press Office
Report: Hariri Delays Return to Beirut for Talks on Govt
Impasse
Naharnet/May 17/2021
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri, who is currently on a trip outside
Lebanon, could extend his stay abroad for another week for a series of
unannounced meetings to tackle the Lebanese file, al-Joumhouria daily reported
on Monday.
According to sources who were in contact with Hariri before his departure last
Wednesday, on the eve of Eid al-Fitr, they said "Hariri will stay abroad for two
weeks,” and that “he has a busy program of meetings within the framework of his
external contacts in preparation for the post-government formation.”
Lebanon desperately needs a new government to unlock billions of dollars in aid,
but bickering politicians have for nine months failed to agree on a line-up.The
government resigned after a huge explosion of ammonium nitrate fertilizer at
Beirut's port in August 2020 killed more than 200 people and ravaged half of the
capital.
Report: Macron, el-Sisi to Discuss Problematic Lebanon File
Naharnet/May 17/2021
The Lebanese problematic situation would be one of the important files discussed
by the French and Egyptian presidents in Paris on Monday, media reports said. A
senior French source told al-Joumhouria daily that French President Emmanuel
Macron will discuss the Lebanese file with Egyptian President Abdul Fattah el-Sisi
during the latter’s visit to France to participate in the Paris conference on
Sudan. “The French and Egyptian positions are identical regarding the necessity
to have a government formed in Lebanon,” stated the source who spoke on
condition of anonymity. El-Sisi is in Paris to partake in a conference intended
to support the transitional phase in Sudan, and the summit for financing African
economies. Through its Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukri, Egypt had earlier
affirmed “keenness on coordinating efforts with Prime Minister-designate Saad
Hariri and the Lebanese political leaders, in order to spare the Lebanese people
many problems shall efforts fail to form a capable government," Hariri's press
office quoted Shoukri. Hariri had held telephone talks with Shoukri on Saturday,
said the press office announced. The talks focused on the “crisis in Lebanon and
the efforts of Hariri to form a government capable of steering the country out
of its crisis,” the office added. Political leaders in the crisis-wracked
Lebanon has failed to agree on a government capable of steering the country out
of multiple crises.
I Want to Study': Lebanon Crisis Cancels School for Many
Agence France Presse/May 17/2021
In a camp for Syrian refugees in east Lebanon, Mohammad and his three sisters
fear they will be out of school for a third consecutive year because remote
learning is out of reach. "Look at my phone. How do you expect my son to study
on it?" asked his father Abdel Nasser, sitting cross-legged inside the family's
tent in the Bekaa Valley. "The screen is cracked... and I have no internet."
Eleven-year-old Mohammad and his siblings are among tens of thousands of Syrian,
Lebanese and Palestinian children who have been left for months without
schooling due to coronavirus restrictions. An accelerating economic crisis means
they may never return to school in what rights groups are calling an "education
catastrophe", especially affecting refugees who already struggled to access
learning before the pandemic. "We can't afford to buy a cellphone for everyone.
We must first be able to feed our children," said their mother Shamaa. Mohammad
arrived in Lebanon from Syria in 2012 -- a year into an ongoing conflict that
has killed 388,000 people and displaced millions. But he wasn't enrolled in
school until 2019 because Lebanon's public school system didn't open its doors
to Syrian refugees until 2013, and even then only to a limited number.
Mohammad's first school year coincided with the Covid-19 pandemic, which brought
all classes to a halt by the second term.
"He doesn't even know how to multiply one by one," his father said.
'Hanging by a thread' -
Mohammad's older sisters Hind, Sarah and Amal -- aged 12 to 14 -- had already
been in school for four years when the education ministry in March 2020 said it
was shifting to online learning. "I was happy before," 14-year-old Amal said,
sobbing. "I was studying Arabic, English, science and geography.
"But now my parents can't afford to give me an online education." More than 1.2
million children in Lebanon have been out of school since the country's
coronavirus outbreak began last year, the UK-based charity Save the Children
says. It warned last month that a large number of children may never get back
into a classroom, either because they have already missed so much school or
because their families can't afford to enrol them. "Education for thousands of
children in Lebanon is hanging by a thread," it said.
Lebanon's economic crisis is at its worst since the 1975-1990 civil war, with
more than half the local population now living in poverty. Poverty rates are
even higher among Syrians, with 90 percent of families barely able to survive.
Lisa Abou Khaled of the United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) says this is
impacting education. "Some Syrian children have had to give up their studies to
work and help their families," she told AFP. Citing data from Lebanon's
education ministry, she said 25,000 Syrian students should have re-enrolled or
entered grade one in 2020-2021 but did not. "We think the real number is higher
than that," she added, estimating that more than half of Syrian school-aged
children were currently out of the classroom.
- 'Disgusted' -
The education catastrophe is also real for the tens of thousands of Lebanese who
have lost jobs or seen their income slashed since the economic crisis
accelerated in 2019. Inside a cramped apartment in the eastern Beirut suburb of
Burj Hammoud, 11-year-old Pamela points to a keyboard -- the only thing that
remains from a desktop computer destroyed during last summer's huge Beirut port
explosion. The August 4 blast, which killed more than 200 people and destroyed
swaths of the capital, hit Pamela's home and piled new misery on a family
already brought to its knees by the financial downturn. The family couldn't
afford to buy a replacement as it had become far too expensive due to the rapid
devaluation of the Lebanese pound. "So I started to follow lessons on my
cellphone," Pamela said. As she has impaired vision, a small screen was
already a nuisance. But then power outages lasting up to 18 hours a day also
left her struggling to keep her phone alive and connected to the internet. She
decided to drop out. "I was disgusted with online education, I couldn't take it
anymore," she said. Her father, an out-of-work taxi driver, said he had wanted
Pamela to drop out months ago. "I don't give a damn about education or this
country," he said. But Pamela hasn't entirely abandoned hopes of returning to
school. "I want to study so that I can get a decent job later and be able to
help my parents."
Catastrophe’ looms as Lebanon crisis cancels school for
many
The Arab Weekly/May 17/2021
BEKAA VALLEY, Lebanon – In a camp for Syrian refugees in east Lebanon, Mohammad
and his three sisters fear they will be out of school for a third consecutive
year because remote learning is out of reach. “Look at my phone. How do you
expect my son to study on it?” asked his father Abdel Nasser, sitting
cross-legged inside the family’s tent in the Bekaa Valley. “The screen is
cracked… and I have no internet.” Eleven-year-old Mohammad and his siblings are
among tens of thousands of Syrian, Lebanese and Palestinian children who have
been left for months without schooling due to coronavirus restrictions. An
accelerating economic crisis means they may never return to school in what
rights groups are calling an “education catastrophe,” especially affecting
refugees who already struggled to access learning before the pandemic. “We can’t
afford to buy a cellphone for everyone. We must first be able to feed our
children,” said their mother Shamaa. Mohammad arrived in Lebanon from Syria in
2012, a year into an ongoing conflict that has killed 388,000 people and
displaced millions. But he wasn’t enrolled in school until 2019 because
Lebanon’s public school system didn’t open its doors to Syrian refugees until
2013 and even then only to a limited number. Mohammad’s first school year
coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic, which brought all classes to a halt by the
second term.
“He doesn’t even know how to multiply one by one,” his father said.
Thousands out of school
Mohammad’s older sisters Hind, Sarah and Amal, aged 12 to 14, had already been
in school for four years when the education ministry in March 2020 said it was
shifting to online learning. “I was happy before,” 14-year-old Amal said,
sobbing. “I was studying Arabic, English, science and geography. “But now my
parents can’t afford to give me an online education.” More than 1.2 million
children in Lebanon have been out of school since the country’s coronavirus
outbreak began last year, says the UK-based charity Save the Children. It warned
last month that a large number of children may never get back into a classroom,
either because they have already missed so much school or because their families
can’t afford to enrol them. “Education for thousands of children in Lebanon is
hanging by a thread,” it said. Lebanon’s economic crisis is at its worst since
the 1975-1990 civil war, with more than half the local population now living in
poverty. Poverty rates are even higher among Syrians, with 90 percent of
families barely able to survive. Lisa Abou Khaled of the United Nations refugee
agency (UNHCR) says this is impacting education. “Some Syrian children have had
to give up their studies to work and help their families,” she said. Citing data
from Lebanon’s education ministry, she said 25,000 Syrian students should have
re-enrolled or entered grade one in 2020-2021 but did not in fact do so. “We
think the real number is higher than that,” she added, estimating that more than
half of Syrian school-aged children were currently out of the classroom.
Dashed hopes
The education catastrophe is also real for the tens of thousands of Lebanese who
have lost jobs or seen their income slashed since the economic crisis
accelerated in 2019. Inside a cramped apartment in the eastern Beirut suburb of
Burj Hammoud, 11-year-old Pamela points to a keyboard, the only thing that
remains from a desktop computer destroyed during last summer’s huge Beirut port
explosion.
The August 4 blast, which killed more than 200 people and destroyed swathes of
the capital, hit Pamela’s home and piled new misery on a family already brought
to its knees by the financial downturn. The family couldn’t afford to buy a
replacement as it had become far too expensive thanks to the rapid devaluation
of the Lebanese pound. “So I started to follow lessons on my cellphone,” Pamela
said. As she has impaired vision, a small screen was already a nuisance. But
then power outages lasting up to 18 hours a day also left her struggling to keep
her phone alive and connected to the internet.She decided to drop out. “I was
disgusted with online education, I couldn’t take it anymore,” she said. Her
father, an out-of-work taxi driver, said he had wanted Pamela to drop out months
ago. “I don’t give a damn about education or this country,” he said.
But Pamela hasn’t entirely abandoned hopes of returning to school. “I want to
study so that I can get a decent job later and be able to help my parents.”
Machnouk picks up regional signals, prepares for the
post-Hariri era
The Arab Weekly/May 17/2021
BEIRUT- Lebanese political sources believe that Saudi Arabia’s changed view of
Lebanese Prime Minister-designate Saad al-Hariri is behind former interior
minister Nohad el-Machnouk’s call for Hariri to apologise for not being able to
form a Lebanese government.
The sources revealed that Machnouk’s words are based on strong information that
Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman has now taken an unfavourable position
towards Hariri and that he made his view known to an Arab official he met about
a month ago in Riyadh. According to Lebanese political sources, Machnouk
believes that France and Russia are now withdrawing their support for Hariri’s
formation of a government of “specialists”.
In this regard, the sources indicated that Russia does not want to anger
Hezbollah, which is not about to break its alliance with the President of the
Republic, Michel Aoun and Gebran Bassil, as they provide the needed cover for
Hezbollah’s continued possession of weapons outside state control.
They add that the same applies, to some extent, to France, which, despite its
strong dissatisfaction with the Aoun-Bassil duo, cannot ignore the positions of
Hezbollah and its Iranian sponsors and does not want to cut communication
channels with them. The sources justified Machnouk’s call for Hariri to
relinquish his cabinet formation mandate by the realities on the ground. They
indicate that Lebanon is heading towards a complete collapse and that it is
better for Hariri not to put himself in a position where he is held responsible
for the disaster that has befallen Lebanon.
The sources concluded that the former interior minister, who still represents
Beirut in the Lebanese parliament, feels that the conditions are no longer
suitable for the formation of a new government headed by Hariri.
They added that the opinion of the former minister, who worked for a long time
with Rafik Hariri, is that Saad Hariri now faces a dead end that makes
apologising a serious option in light of the insistence of the president and his
son-in-law on impossible conditions that prevent him from forming a government.
Machnouk said in press statements that “if Hariri does not apologise, we will
suffer for a very long time from this matter, but if he apologises, the problem
will be even greater, because his apology at this stage would constitute a great
shock to a segment of Lebanese society, especially his father’s supporters.”
Machnouk considered that “the political Hariri trend is afflicted with major
flaws and failures after the mistake of electing Michel Aoun as president of the
republic,” differently from “the nationalist Hariri trend (…) for which Rafik
Hariri fought.”
Lebanese observers believe that the former interior minister picked up regional
signals, especially from Saudi Arabia, pointing to the end of the bet on Hariri
as a figure capable of confronting the growing influence of Hezbollah and behind
it, that of Iran. Hariri has long sought to present himself as an alternative
capable of playing this role. In strong statements he made in the past few years
always he depicted himself as being in the opposite camp of the Shia party.
They believe that Saudi Arabia’s dissatisfaction with Hariri will determine his
future position, whether on the Lebanese scene, especially within the Sunni
camp, or at the regional level. They note that the regional countries that
support Hariri do so within the limits of the Saudi position.
Besides the possible loss of endorsement from Saudi Arabia, although known for
its steady support for the Hariri faction, Saad Hariri is also no longer
France’s favourite even though Paris had in the past stood behind tasking him
anew with forming the government. This change of heart is no longer a secret,
especially after published reports regarding the cold atmosphere that
characterised his meeting with French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian.
Hariri complained that Le Drian went to visit President Michel Aoun, as well as
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, while he himself had to go to the French embassy
to meet the foreign minister.
It is clear that the parity established by Paris between the different Lebanese
parties has replaced its favourable treatment of Hariri. This could not have
happened if the French had not realised that Riyadh was not betting on Hariri
anymore. This position was reflected in Le Drian’s statements before and after
his last visit to Beirut. Machnouk has translated this change of mood in his new
political position.
Machnouk showed in his statements that he was not satisfied with the experience
of the previous governments led by Hariri and with the settlement that was
concluded with the president of the republic nor with how Hariri’s presence at
the head of the previous government turned into a cover serving the agendas of
others at the expense of the interests of the Sunnis whom Hariri was supposed to
defend.
Machnouk believes that Hariri went too far in his moves to appease Hezbollah and
considered his personal interests by staying in power rather than the regional
and international position towards the Shia party, which was one of the reasons
for the shift in the Saudi position towards him.
Machnouk said, “The political management of the settlement during the first
three years encouraged the ambitions of Aoun and Bassil and made them more eager
to go beyond Taif, bypass the constitution and bring the country to a dead end,
of course with major support form Hezbollah.”
He was keen to emphasise that his disagreement with Hariri is not personal, but
rather a political difference, which explains his talk about forming a political
front that will compete with the Future Movement.
He announced that “a group of comrades and friends, some of them old supporters
of Rafik Hariri, are working to create a new front with the name of the Third
Independence Movement, in order to liberate Lebanese decisions from the yoke of
Iranian political occupation.”
The establishment of this front, if it were to take place, would be at the
expense of the Future Movement, which is facing difficult conditions that have
led to its loss of influence within the Sunni constituency itself, as well as in
its national support base. The Future Movement turned into a party serving
Hariri’s person more than an influential party within the internal balances of
Lebanon.
The movement has also lost its ability to co-opt Sunni figures who worked in
previous governments and were close to the party during the period of Rafik
Hariri. Among these figures are former prime ministers who established their own
club.
Those familiar with the controversy within the Future Movement’s circle of
influence say that it was turned into a ruling party whose mission is to provide
a political constituency for Saad Hariri, especially in the period following the
conclusion of the settlement with the leader of the Free Patriotic Movement,
Gebran Bassil and leading to the election of Aoun as president of the republic.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on May 17- 18/2021
Once again, US blocks UN Security Council
statement on Palestine-Israel violence
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/17 May ,2021.
The draft statement obtained by Al Arabiya English urged an immediate cessation
of violence and respect for international humanitarian law, “including the
protection of civilians, especially children.”
As fighting between Palestinian factions and Israel entered a second week, the
UN Security Council had its hopes dashed by the United States on Monday to
release its first statement on the conflict that has seen an onslaught of
Israeli airstrikes on what Tel Aviv says are militant targets in response to
Hamas rocket attacks. Last week, the United States blocked multiple attempts by
the Security Council member states to hold a public meeting on the matter. US
officials hoped diplomatic efforts would lead to a ceasefire or de-escalation of
tensions, but as fighting raged, it finally agreed to the first public meeting
on Sunday. The latest draft statement by the Security Council, obtained by Al
Arabiya English, urged an immediate cessation of violence and respect for
international humanitarian law, “including the protection of civilians,
especially children.”No direct mention of Hamas was included, neither was there
a condemnation of rocket attacks on Israel. Sources familiar with the matter
expected the US to block the release of the statement as it did not
“unequivocally” condemn rocket attacks by Hamas, as Israel has demanded. “The
Members of the Security Council emphasized that civilian and humanitarian
facilities, including those of the UN, must be respected and protected, called
on all parties to act consistently with this principle and stressed the need for
immediate provision of humanitarian assistance to the Palestinian civilian
population in Gaza,” the draft statement read. Egypt and Qatar have been at the
center of outreach from Washington and other European capitals as they have
significant influence over Palestinian factions. Egypt reportedly tried to
broker a ceasefire but to no avail. The Biden administration dispatched an envoy
to the region last week with the hopes of pressing both sides to make
concessions and de-escalate. Hady Amr’s efforts so far have also failed to make
any headway. While the Security Council draft statement welcomed international
efforts, the member states expressed their concern about violence in East
Jerusalem and “urged the exercise of maximum restraint, for the respect of the
historic status quo at the holy sites and the right of Muslim worshippers to
pray in peace at Al Aqsa mosque.”The UNSC also condemned Israeli efforts to
evict Palestinian families “from homes they have lived in for generations in
Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan neighborhoods in East Jerusalem and voiced opposition
to unilateral actions.” Nevertheless, the Security Council called for a
two-state solution where Israel and Palestine live side by side “in peace within
secure and recognized borders, and urged for the intensification and
acceleration of diplomatic efforts and support towards this aim.”
US President Biden supports ceasefire in Gaza, tells Israel to protect civilians
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/18 May ,2021
US President Joe Biden expressed his support for a ceasefire between Palestinian
factions and Israeli forces during a phone call with Israel’s prime minister,
the White House said Monday. Biden also called on Israel to “make every effort
to ensure the protection of innocent civilians,” a statement from the White
House read.Biden’s latest comments come after the US blocked, for a third time,
a statement from the United Nations Security Council that would have called for
an end to the violence. “The President expressed his support for a ceasefire and
discussed US engagement with Egypt and other partners towards that end. The two
leaders agreed that they and their teams would remain in close touch,” the White
House said. The US president and Netanyahu have had routine phone calls since
the outbreak of the violence, which entered its second week on Monday. While
Biden doubled down on US support for Israel’s “right to defend itself against
indiscriminate rocket attacks,” Biden also welcomed efforts to “address
intercommunal violence and to bring calm to Jerusalem.”“The two leaders
discussed progress in Israel’s military operations against Hamas and other
terrorist groups in Gaza,” the White House said. Also on Monday, it was revealed
that Biden approved the sale of $735 million worth of precision-guided weapons
to Tel Aviv.
Death toll of Israeli airstrikes on Gaza rises to 200; Dozens of children killed
Tamara Abueish, Al Arabiya English/17 May ,2021
The death toll of Israeli airstrikes on Gaza rose to 200, and includes 59
children, the Palestinian Ministry of Health said on Monday, adding that the
total number of injuries in the city has risen to 1,305. That number is expected
to keep rising as rescue teams continue to search for people trapped underneath
the rubble of destroyed buildings, according to the correspondent. Israel
launched at least 70 air raids on the Gaza Strip overnight on Monday, Al
Arabiya’s correspondent reported. Images and videos on social media showed fire
and smoke rising above buildings in the blockaded city. Unrest in the Gaza and
the West Bank entered its second week despite calls from international
organizations and world leaders for a ceasefire. However, during a televised
address after a security cabinet meeting on Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said his country’s campaign in Gaza was continuing at “full
force,” and that deterrence had to be achieved to prevent future conflict with
Hamas. “We are acting now, for as long as necessary, to restore calm and quiet
to you, Israel’s citizens. It will take time,” he said. Muslim countries urged
Israel to halt its violations of Palestinian rights, condemning the bombings in
Gaza and the West Bank and the forceful evictions of Palestinians from their
homes in East Jerusalem. “The Kingdom categorically rejects the Israeli
violations against the Palestinians ... and calls for an immediate end to the
Israeli escalation,” Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Prince Faisal
bin Farhan said during a virtual meeting for the Organization of Islamic
Cooperation on Sunday. Worldwide, pro-Palestinians held demonstrations
condemning the Israeli attacks on Gaza and the West Bank and called for
international interference to end the violence against Palestinian civilians.
Despite pressures at home and in region, US in no rush for Mideast truce
The Arab Weekly/May 17/2021
WASHINGTON / CAIRO - The US president said Sunday his administration is working
with Palestinians and Israelis for a “sustained calm”. But despite pressures at
home from US senators and from Arab allies in the region, President Joe Biden
gave no signs of stepping up public pressure on Israel to agree to an immediate
cease-fire. “We also believe Palestinians and Israelis equally deserve to live
in safety and security and enjoy equal measure of freedom, prosperity and
democracy,” he said in a pre-taped video aired at an event marking the Muslim
Eid holiday on Sunday.
“My administration is going to continue to engage Palestinians and Israelis and
other regional partners to work toward sustained calm.”But as battles between
Israel and Gaza’s militant Hamas rulers surged to their worst levels since 2014
and the international outcry grew, the Biden administration, determined to
wrench US foreign policy focus away from the Middle East and Afghanistan, has
declined so far to criticise Israel’s part in the fighting or send a top-level
envoy to the region. Appeals by other countries showed no sign of progress.
In Israel, Hady Amr, a deputy assistant dispatched by US Secretary of State
Antony Blinken to try to de-escalate the crisis, met Israeli Defence Minister
Benny Gantz, who thanked the US for its support. But Amr does not have the rank,
or the mandate, to push for a truce, analysts say.
Blinken himself headed out on an unrelated tour of Nordic countries, with no
announced plans to stop in the Middle East in response to the crisis. In
Copenhaguen, Blinken signaled Monday the US still was not joining calls for an
immediate cease-fire between Israel and Gaza’s Hamas rulers.
He ticked off U.S. outreach so far to try to de-escalate hostilities in the Gaza
Strip and Israel, and said he would be making more calls Monday.
“In all of these engagements we have made clear that we are prepared to lend our
support and good offices to the parties should they seek a cease-fire,” Blinken
said. He said he welcomed efforts by the UN— where the United States has so far
blocked a proposed Security Council statement on the fighting — and other
nations working for a cease-fire. “Any diplomatic initiative that advances that
prospect is something that we’ll support,” he said. “And we are again willing
and ready to do that. But ultimately it is up to the parties to make clear that
they want to pursue a cease-fire.”
Blinken made calls from the plane to Egypt and other nations working to broker a
cease-fire, telling Egypt that all parties “should de-escalate tensions and
bring a halt to the violence.”
Representative Adam Schiff, Democratic chairman of the House intelligence
committee, urged Biden on Sunday to step up pressure on both sides to end
current fighting and revive talks to resolve Israel’s conflicts and flashpoints
with the Palestinians.
“I think the administration needs to push harder on Israel and the Palestinian
Authority to stop the violence, bring about a cease-fire, end these hostilities,
and get back to a process of trying to resolve this long-standing conflict,”
Schiff, a California Democrat, told CBS’s “Face the Nation.”
Going through the motions
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken discussed the violence in Israel, the West
Bank and Gaza in phone calls with the Qatari, Egyptian and Saudi foreign
ministers, the State Department said on Sunday. Blinken and Qatar’s Sheikh
Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani discussed “efforts to restore calm in Israel
and the West Bank and Gaza in light of the tragic loss of civilian life”, the
State Department said. The Qatari Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the
two men discussed “the recent Israeli attacks on worshippers at the Al Aqsa
Compound and the attack on the besieged Gaza Strip.”
Al-Thani stressed the “need for urgent action by the international community to
stop the repeated brutal Israeli attacks against civilians in Gaza and the
blessed Al-Aqsa Mosque,” it added. Meanwhile, a growing group of US senators on
Sunday called for a ceasefire. Democratic Senator Chris Murphy and Republican
Todd Young, the senior members of a Foreign Relations panel, said in a
statement: “As a result of Hamas’ rocket attacks and Israel’s response, both
sides must recognise that too many lives have been lost and must not escalate
the conflict further.”
Twenty-five other Democratic US senators and two independents issued a separate,
similar statement urging an immediate ceasefire.
In his call with Egypt’s Sameh Shoukry, Blinken “reiterated his call on all
parties to de-escalate tensions and bring a halt to the violence, which has
claimed the lives of Israeli and Palestinian civilians, including children”, the
State Department said in another statement.
Saudi state news agency SPA reported on Sunday that Blinken also had a phone
call with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud to discuss the
latest developments “in Palestine and in the region.”The US State Department
said the two discussed “the ongoing efforts to calm tensions in Israel and the
West Bank and Gaza and bring the current violence to an end.”Qatar’s Al-Thani
also held a phone call on Sunday with Shoukry, in which they reviewed “bilateral
cooperation relations and developments in Palestine,” the Qatari Foreign
Ministry said in a separate statement.
The Egyptian Foreign Ministry said that the two ministers agreed on “the
importance of working to reach an immediate ceasefire between the two sides, and
they also agreed to continue coordination in the bilateral framework, as well as
in regional and international ones, regarding what is in the interest of the
Palestinian people and reaching a ceasefire,”The truce efforts by Egypt, Qatar
and the United Nations have so far shown no signs of progress.
Blocking the UNSC
UN Security Council diplomats met Sunday to demand a stop to civilian bloodshed
as Israeli warplanes carried out the deadliest single attacks in nearly a week
of Hamas rocket barrages and Israeli airstrikes. Eight foreign ministers spoke
at the Security Council session, reflecting the seriousness of the conflict,
with almost all urging an end to the fighting. Palestinian and Israeli leaders
both appealed for support at a UN Security Council session Sunday but little
action was in sight despite the soaring violence that has cost 200 lives, with
China accusing the United States of obstructionism.
The United States, Israel’s closest ally, blocked days of efforts by China,
Norway and Tunisia to get the Security Council to issue a statement, including a
call for the cessation of hostilities. Opening the virtual session,
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called the violence “utterly appalling” and
urged both Palestinian militants Hamas to stop firing rockets into Israel and
the Jewish state to stop its massive air campaign on the Gaza Strip. “Fighting
must stop. It must stop immediately,” Guterres said. “It has the potential to
unleash an uncontainable security and humanitarian crisis and to further foster
extremism, not only in the occupied Palestinian territory and Israel, but in the
region as a whole,” he said. China, which holds the rotating presidency of the
Security Council, said the United States had blocked its efforts for “strong
action” and invited Israelis and Palestinians to come and negotiate in China.
“Regrettably, simply because of the obstruction of one country, the Security
Council hasn’t been able to speak with one voice,” Foreign Minister Wang Yi
said. “We call upon the United States to shoulder its due responsibilities.”
The Biden administration has insisted that it is working behind the scenes,
including through a visit to the region by an envoy and that a UN statement
could backfire, according to diplomats. Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the US
ambassador to the United Nations, stopped short of insisting on an immediate
ceasefire and said the Biden administration was in touch with all sides
including Qatar, which has close ties with Hamas and with Egypt, which has a
peace deal with Israel and borders Gaza. “The United States has made clear that
we are prepared to lend our support and good offices should the parties seek a
ceasefire,” she said. One diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, called
the US stance “a little strange” seeing as Biden came to office vowing a return
to multilateral diplomacy. “We thought that they will be eager also to show that
the Council is relevant in situations like this,” the diplomat said.
US, UAE top diplomats discuss efforts to end violence
between Palestine, Israel
Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/17 May ,2021
The top US diplomat Monday discussed efforts to end the ongoing violence between
Palestine and Israel with his Emirati counterpart, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed.
“The Secretary and Foreign Minister discussed efforts to bring the current
violence in Israel and the West Bank and Gaza to an end and halt the tragic loss
of civilian life,” State Department Spokesman Ned Price said. Entering its
second week, the renewed violence between Palestinian factions and the Israeli
army has been at the center of diplomatic discussions worldwide. Washington has
been engaging in backdoor diplomacy as well as releasing public statements in
support of “Israel’s right to defend itself” while indirectly condemning
Israel’s targeting of innocent civilians in the West Bank and Gaza. “The
Secretary highlighted the importance of the UAE’s contributions towards
promoting a more peaceful Middle East,” Price said after the call between Sheikh
Abdullah and Blinken. UAE’s state-run Emirates News Agency reported that the two
reviewed strategic relations between the UAE and the US and “the prospects of
accelerating joint action between the two friendly nations to strengthen
security and stability in the region.”
Sheikh Abdullah voiced his support for the recent US efforts, including those by
US diplomat Hady Amr, to “reach calm, ease tension and stop the acts of violence
in both Israel and Palestine.The Emirati FM said the recent peace deals between
Arab and Gulf states with Israel, also known as the Abraham Accords, hold “hopes
for the region’s peoples to live in peace and stability in a way that ensures
sustainable development.”
Biden administration meets Middle East eruption with
muddled policies
The Arab Weekly/May 17/2021
Arab mediators have delivered an American message to Hamas: Rocket attacks must
stop.
WASHINGTON – During the short period since its arrival at the White House, the
new US administration has learned that it cannot leave matters on their own in
the Middle East and then expect them to sort themselves out. In terms of years
served in Washington as vice-president during the Obama administration, Biden is
a veteran. So are many officials in his administration who are seasoned foreign
policy experts. Nonetheless, the first few months of the Biden presidency have
betrayed dangerous naiveté in believing that inadequate US policies can somehow
work out in a very turbulent region. Biden’s team cannot evade the conclusion
that everyone has to go back to the drawing board. There is no dispute that
domestic issues in the age of the pandemic were legitimately bound to be on top
of the administration’s agenda. But experts believe there is probably a need now
to reexamine Washington’s foreign policy directions. The Biden administration
began its political moves in the Middle East by delving straight away into the
relationship with Saudi Arabia and devoting much attention to the war in Yemen.
But its main focus was on returning to the nuclear deal with Iran.
The Biden administration sought to give the impression that the Middle East was
not a priority, at least for now, and that the real challenge facing the United
States was that posed by its strategic competitor, China. But supposedly
marginal frictions in a Jerusalem neighbourhood were sufficient to spark a
rapidly-escalating war between the Palestinians and Israelis akin to the 2006
showdown between Hezbollah and Israel, with a conspicuous Iranian role. The US
administration finds itself in a confused situation where it cannot ignore the
escalation of the conflict between the Palestinians and the Israelis, as the
Israeli army seems determined to destroy what it can of the Palestinian
infrastructure in Gaza, especially the military infrastructure, including
Hamas’s arsenal of missiles and tunnels.
A call between US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken and his Qatari counterpart,
Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, showed that the United States is still
groping for a way to communicate and pressure Hamas, but has no clear strategy.
Some Western analysts believe the scope of the strikes by Hamas against Israel,
even if a large number of the rockets were blocked by the “Iron Dome”
anti-missile system, will ratchet up pressure from the Israeli public for the
army to carry out a large-scale operation that could include out a ground
offensive inside the Strip to prevent the reoccurrence of Hamas rocket barrages.
Political analyst Peter Beaumont wrote in The Guardian: “The relative success –
from Hamas’s point of view – of its recent tactics, which have the appearance of
having long been in preparation, are certain to challenge the Israeli political
and security establishment to deal with a threat made suddenly very real”.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made it clear that the military
operation in Gaza is still in its early stages, which puts the US administration
in a delicate position: Either to keep silent and let the Israelis “complete
their mission” or intervene to prevent the situation from spinning out of
control.
Although the Biden administration politically benefitted from the peace
agreements between Israel and non-frontline Arab countries, as part of what
became known as the “Abraham Accords”, these Arab countries have levelled
vehement criticism at Israeli reactions to rocket attacks even if they also
criticised the attitude of Hamas. .The developments have taken the US
administration by surprise. Washington was betting that the Arab-Israeli
conflict will stay dormant while it moved ahead on the Iran nuclear track and
readied its strategy to thwart the mounting Chinese threat.
Former Palestinian ambassador, Barakat Al-Farra, said that “the American
position regarding what is happening in the Palestinian territories is so far
quite ambiguous, even if Washington is the only party that can exert pressure on
Israel.”
Shifting posture
Talking to The Arab Weekly, Farra added, that “US contacts are continuing to
reach a ceasefire in Gaza, with the first objective to convince Tel Aviv that
the cease-fire is in its interest more than that of the Palestinians, in light
of the wariness about repercussions of a prolonged war on the Israeli internal
front.”
He pointed out that current events could help push the US two-state option
adopted by the Biden administration and reiterated recently, as Washington is
convinced that peace will not be achieved unless the Palestinians achieve their
rights. This is all-the-more true considering Israel’s heightened fears about
the stance of Arab Israelis who could be a ticking time bomb. Martin Indyk, the
former US envoy for Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, believes that “Under
Biden, the US is shifting from leading to supporting in the Middle East.” Indyk,
author of ” “Master of the Game: Henry Kissinger and the Art of Middle East
Diplomacy” said, ” Biden is not “leading from behind”, as Obama did in Libya.
He’s supporting Israel, and leading elsewhere. And it’s the only way the US will
be able to maintain its pivot away from the region.” Indyk, in an overly
optimistic political reading, expressed his belief that Biden’s pivot appears to
have survived its first Middle Eastern test, adding that, “Hopefully by then,
his local partners will have come to understand their roles in an
America-supported, rather than American-led, regional order and that will make
it easier for Biden to avoid being sucked back into the Middle East morass”.
The White House said Biden spoke with both Netanyahu and Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas late on Saturday and briefed them on the US diplomatic efforts.
These are complicated by the absence of contacts between the United States along
with most Western powers with Hamas, as these parties consider the militant
Palestinian group a terrorist organisation. Furthermore, President Abbas, whose
power base is mainly in the West Bank, has no influence over Hamas in Gaza.
The United States sent a strongly-worded message to Hamas through Arab parties,
explaining that the rocket attacks must stop. “There is no negotiating game
here,” said a Western official familiar with the events.
Patrick Coburn, a British political analyst specialising in Middle East affairs,
pointed out that the grossly disproportionate military force being used to try
to solve political problems will only exacerbate them.
He said that “Holding back any such compromise between Israel and the
Palestinians is that the balance of power appears to be overwhelmingly in favour
of Israelis. They do not feel the need to compromise because they have total
military superiority and the support of the United States and other powerful
nations.” US leftist Jewish Senator Bernie Sanders (D-Vermont) exhorted the
administration to play a major role in helping Israelis and Palestinians build
the future, if it wanted to be a credible human rights voice on the world stage.
The head of the Palestinian and Israeli Studies Unit at the National Centre for
Middle East Studies in Cairo, Tariq Fahmy, said that the US administration deals
with the Palestinian situation as a regional issue, adding, “Its talk about the
two-state solution is still a theoretical idea that does not include clear and
specific foundations or frameworks considering the many Israeli reservations
about it”.
Talking to The Arab Weekly, Fahmy explained that, “the Biden administration is
moving towards a halt in the Israeli operations on Gaza, but it did not exert
real pressure on the ground that would enable it to reach a tangible result, as
Washington is dealing in accordance with Israel’s interests and its position
reflects a degree of complicity.” He added that the US administration dispatched
its envoy, Hadi Amr to the region where he held talks in Jerusalem and Ramallah.
US proposals seemed to reflect a desire to mitigate the crisis, not solve it.
While Washington asserts its commitment to partnership with the Palestinian
Authority it rejects escalation by militant Palestinian factions and it does not
want to stop the Israeli operations.
Jordan under pressure with fighting next door
The Arab Weekly/May 17/2021
AMMAN – With the escalation of the Israeli-Palestinian crisis Amman finds itself
in a difficult position at home and in the region. Mounting tensions prompted
Jordan’s King Abdullah to announce on Sunday that the kingdom was actively
involved in intensive diplomatic efforts aimed at reaching a cease-fire
agreement between Israel and Hamas. The king explained this intensive diplomacy
is intended to halt what he characterised as an Israeli military escalation in
the worst Israeli-Palestinian violence in years. The monarch, whose ruling
family has custodianship of Muslim and Christian sites in Jerusalem, did not
elaborate on the diplomatic efforts. Jordanian government officials have said
the kingdom is leading a diplomatic campaign with its European and US allies to
put pressure on Israel to end its air and artillery barrage on Gaza since
fighting erupted last Monday. “There are intensive contacts with international
parties to halt Israel’s escalation,” the monarch was quoted as saying. The
creation of a Palestinian state on territory Israel captured in 1967 from Jordan
that covers the West Bank and East Jerusalem was a pre-requisite for lasting
peace, he said. The Israeli military says that Islamist militant group Hamas and
other armed factions have fired more than 2,800 rockets from Gaza over the past
week.
Earlier on Sunday, Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said Israel’s actions
were pushing the region towards a wider conflict. “Israel carriesm as the
existing occupation forcem responsibility for the dangerous situation in
occupied Palestinian land and what it is causing in violence, killings,
destruction and suffering,” Safadi said. Thousands of Jordanians, most of them
of Palestinian origin, took to the streets of the capital Amman on Sunday,
calling on the kingdom to scrap its peace deal with Israel. “The government
should cut diplomatic ties and expel the Zionist ambassador from Amman,” said
Murad al Adaylah, head of Islamic Action Front, the country’s largest opposition
group. “Oh King Abdullah, open the borders,” protesters chanted. Around half of
Jordan’s ten million-strong population is of Palestinian origin, including some
2.2 million Palestinian refugees registered with the United Nations. Jordan
signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1994. Relations between the two
neighbouring countries have remained cold with demonstrators calling often for
the severing of ties with Israel.
In southern Lebanon, hundreds of demonstrators waving Palestinian flags gathered
on the Lebanese side of the border with Israel for a third day.
France hosts African leaders, announces $1.5 billion loan to Sudan
The Arab Weekly/May 17/2021
PARIS--France said Monday it will lend Sudan $1.5 billion to help the African
nation pay off its massive debt to the International Monetary Fund. “President
Macron will confirm later today that France will provide the $1.5 billion bridge
loan to clear Sudan’s arrears to the IMF,” Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said
Monday at the opening of an international conference aimed at helping Sudan in
its transition to democratic government. Sudan’s Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok
is attending the Paris conference, seeking help in paying off a $60 billion
foreign debt bill and also hoping to secure investment deals. Hamdok is pushing
to rebuild and reform a crippled economy and end Sudan’s international isolation
under former autocrat Omar al-Bashir, whose three decades of rule were marked by
economic hardship and international sanctions. “Re-building an attractive and
resilient market takes time, but today, I hope we will convince private
investors that the fundamentals for business are fully there,” Le Maire said.
French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday hosts African leaders, diplomats and
lenders at a summit aimed at helping Sudan after years of conflict-riven
authoritarian rule and assisting other African nations deal with economic
hardship and the effects of the pandemic. Several heads of state will gather in
Paris to discuss investment in Sudan and negotiate its debt to help the
government of Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok in the transition after the 2019
ouster of longtime strongman Omar al-Bashir. Tuesday, a summit on African
economies will try to fill a financing shortfall of almost $300 billion caused
by the Covid-19 pandemic. Both meetings, held in a temporary exhibition centre
near the Eiffel Tower in Paris, will be a chance for Macron to show himself as a
statesman on Africa whose influence goes beyond the continent’s Francophone
regions. The meetings will both mark a return to in-person top-level gatherings
after the Covid-19 pandemic made video conferences the norm. Among those
attending both meetings will be Rwandan President Paul Kagame in a rare visit to
France as Paris presses for reconciliation with Kigali after a historic report
made clear French failings over the 1994 genocide. Egyptian President
Abdelfattah al-Sisi is scheduled to attend the meetings making another journey
to key ally France after his state visit in late 2020 enraged rights activists.
Also expected is Tunisian President Kais Saied whose country faces a serious
economic crisis and needs to address a severe budget shortfall.
French signals
France wants the Sudan summit to send a signal of the help African countries can
receive if they embrace democracy and turn their backs on authoritarianism.
“The Sudanese transition is considered by us, but also by the entire
international community, as an example of democratic transition in Africa and as
such deserves special attention,” said a French presidential official who asked
not to be named. The official said the summit aims to unite the international
community around helping Sudan, in particular addressing its vast debt pile. IMF
chief Kristalina Georgieva will be present as well as top European diplomats,
including German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas and EU foreign policy chief Josep
Borrell. Hamdok told AFP ahead of the meeting that he hopes Sudan can help wipe
out a $60 billion foreign debt bill this year by securing relief and investment
deals at the Paris conference. Sudan’s debts to the Paris Club, which includes
major creditor countries, are estimated to make up around 38 percent of its
total $60 billion foreign debt. “We are going to the Paris conference to let
foreign investors explore the opportunities for investing in Sudan,” Hamdok
said. “We are not looking for grants or donations,” he added.
On debt, the conference aims to deal with arrears to international lenders
before moving on to bilateral creditors, a French presidency official said. Of
Sudan’s bilateral debt, about half is with Paris Club members. Some 10-14% of
its external debt is commercial debt, an unusually high proportion, an IMF
official said. China, a major creditor, has reduced and forgiven some debt and
will push for the international community to do the same, said Hua Chunying, a
foreign ministry spokeswoman. Saudi Arabia, another big creditor, has also said
it will press for a broad agreement on debt.
French-African summit
Sudan was taken off Washington’s blacklist of state sponsors of terrorism in
December, removing a major hurdle to foreign investment. But many challenges
still lie ahead. Also attending will be President Sahle-Work Zewde of Ethiopia,
whose country has been locked in a long dispute with Sudan over water resources
that has sometimes threatened to erupt into open conflict. Africa has so far
been less badly hit by the Covid-19 pandemic than other global regions, with a
total of 130,000 dead across the continent. But the economic cost is only too
apparent, and Tuesday’s France-Africa summit will focus on making up the
shortfall in the funds needed for future development, a financial gap estimated
by the IMF to amount to $290 billion up to 2023. Around two dozen African
leaders from across the continent will attend the meeting, including Mozambique
President Filipe Nyusi whose country is battling a bloody Islamist insurrection
in its north.
A French presidential official said Macron and Nyusi would hold a bilateral
meeting and the summit would also be a chance for the international community to
coordinate efforts to help Mozambique.
Erdogan Urges Pope to Help End Israel's 'Massacre'
Agence France Presse/May 17/2021
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Monday urged Pope Francis to help end
what he called Israel's "massacre" of Palestinians, which should be punished
with sanctions, his office said. Erdogan told the pope in a call that
"Palestinians will continue to be subjected to a massacre unless the
international community punishes Israel... with sanctions", adding that the
pope's messages were of "great importance to mobilise the Christian world and
the international community."
U.S. President Biden to send 20 million more COVID-19
vaccine doses abroad - Bloomberg
NNA/Reuters/May 17/2021
U.S. President Joe Biden plans to send an additional 20 million doses of
COVID-19 vaccines authorized in the country abroad by the end of June, Bloomberg
News reported, citing a senior administration official. Biden will export
vaccines from Pfizer Inc Moderna Inc or Johnson & Johnson, on top of 60 million
doses from AstraZeneca Plc's vaccine he had already planned to give to other
countries, Bloomberg said bloom.bg/3bA9VrP. The White House did not immediately
respond to a Reuters request for comment.
Statement by Canada Following UN Security Council Session
on the devastating violence in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza
May 16, 2021 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
Global Affairs Canada today issued the following statement:
“Canada is appalled by the ongoing violence, rising tensions, and the
devastating loss of life. The toll —particularly on civilians, including women
and children — has already been too great. Canada continues to express grave
concerns over the escalating violence in Israel, West Bank, and Gaza. Canada
joins its allies and friends in urging all parties to take steps to immediately
end all violence, prevent further loss of life, protect all civilians, and
de-escalate tensions. All parties must uphold international law.
“Canada reiterates the fundamental importance of protecting journalists and
press freedom. Journalists and media workers are the cornerstone of any fair,
strong and vibrant society and must be free to do their work without fear. Any
violence against journalists is completely unacceptable, especially in volatile
contexts where they are risking their lives to do their jobs. Further, it is
completely unacceptable to see humanitarian workers and facilities under fire.
Their safety and security must always be ensured.
“The continued indiscriminate barrage of rocket attacks fired by Hamas and
Palestinian Islamic Jihad into Israel against civilians is completely
unacceptable and must cease immediately. Those foreign entities which support
Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad must end their material and financial
support to these groups. Canada supports Israel's right to live in peace with
its neighbours within secure boundaries and fully supports Israel's right to
assure its own security. This right also comes with immense responsibility and
obligation to act in accordance with international law. The use of force has led
to significant civilian loss of life and we urge utmost restraint.
“Canada remains gravely concerned by the continued expansion of settlements,
demolitions, and evictions, including the ongoing cases in Sheikh Jarrah and
Silwan. These actions impact families and livelihoods, do not serve peace and
are a violation of international law. Unilateral actions that prejudge the
outcome of direct negotiations and further jeopardize the prospects for a
two-state solution must be avoided.
“Canada is alarmed by the clashes and violence among Arab and Jewish communities
in parts of Israel. We implore all authorities and citizens alike to help
maintain calm, reduce tensions, and help keep the peace while respecting human
rights. We stand firmly with the Israeli and Palestinian people in their right
to live in peace, security, with dignity, without fear, and with their human
rights respected.
“Canada has observed an increase of hatred, including antisemitism and
Islamophobia, at home and around the world. It is our collective responsibility
to fight hatred and condemn it in the strongest possible terms. Canada is
committed to standing against hatred and discrimination in all their forms and
is committed to working with our domestic and international partners to promote
and defend pluralism, inclusion and human rights at home and abroad.
“Canada is committed to the goal of a comprehensive, just and lasting peace in
the Middle East, including the creation of a Palestinian state living side by
side in peace and security with Israel. We will always stand ready to support
efforts for a two-state solution.
“The loss of life in this conflict is heartbreaking. For decades, this conflict
has caused much pain to both Palestinian and Israeli families and impacted the
social fabric in the region. This is all the more reason for the parties to
urgently find a sustainable resolution to the conflict. The spiral of violence
and hatred must immediately stop. Mutual recognition and respect are the
critical foundation for a lasting peace.
“Amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, and with Israeli and Palestinian youth and future
generations top of our mind, we urge all parties to renew their commitment to
peace and security and encourage the Security Council to remain engaged on
efforts to bring an end to the violence.”
Statement by Canada on International Day Against
Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia
May 17, 2021 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Honourable Marc Garneau, Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Honourable Karina
Gould, Minister of International Development, and the Honourable Mary Ng,
Minister of Small Business, Export Promotion and International Trade, today
issued the following statement:
“On this International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia, we call
for an end to all forms of discrimination, exclusion and violence against people
based on their sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, or sex
characteristics. Human rights are universal and indivisible, and the human
rights of LGBTQ2I individuals deserve the respect of all people everywhere. The
promotion and protection of human rights is a core element of Canada’s foreign
policy, and Canada is committed to ensuring that the rights of LGBTQ2I
individuals are protected and upheld in Canada and around the world.
“Today, same-sex conduct remains criminalized in 69 countries around the world.
At home and abroad, Canada is working hard to fight intolerance, foster
inclusion and ensure LGBTQ2I people have access to health care, livelihoods and
security. The COVID-19 pandemic is exacerbating difficulties for LGBTQ2I people,
many of whom face further deterioration of their dignity and human rights and
are more susceptible to violence and other abuses.
“In many countries, marginalized populations and those in vulnerable situations
are experiencing rising food and shelter insecurity, health care disruptions,
violence and mental health impacts, particularly in the context of the COVID-19
pandemic. Canada is firmly committed to supporting the international LGBTQ2I
community through its feminist approach to international assistance.
“Aligned with the Feminist International Assistance Policy, Canada is committed
to providing international assistance that is human rights-based and inclusive.
In 2019, Canada announced $30 million in dedicated international assistance
funding over 5 years and $10 million per year thereafter to advance human rights
and improve socio-economic outcomes for LGBTQ2I people in developing countries.
This commitment continues to support the efforts of partners and movements
working with LGBTQ2I communities in developing countries.
“Canada also seeks to ensure LGBTQ2I people share in the benefits of trade
through its Trade Diversification Strategy. Earlier this year, several Canadian
LGBTQ2I-owned companies took part in a virtual trade mission to Colombia. It was
the first-ever Canadian LGBTQ2I trade mission delivered completely virtually and
to an emerging market. Canada strives to ensure ongoing free trade agreement
negotiations with other countries contain progressive chapters on gender and are
non-discriminatory. We also cooperate and share best practices on ending
workplace discrimination through the new Global Trade and Gender Arrangement.
“Canada is committed to advancing human rights and socio-economic conditions for
LGBTQ2I people, at home and around the world. Together, let us resist
intolerance and discrimination and support one another in all our diversity.”
Contacts
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published on May 17- 18/2021
Audio From FDDForeign Podicy Biden’s Mission to Realign the
Middle East//May 17/2021
Clifford D. May/Founder & President
Tony Badran/Research Fellow
Michael Doran/Hudson Institute
https://www.fdd.org/podcasts/2021/05/14/bidens-mission-to-realign-the-middle-east/
About
President Biden has been eager to rejoin the deal that President Obama concluded
with Iran’s rulers in 2015 and from which President Trump withdrew three years
later.
The quarrel between advocates for, and critics of, the so-called Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) has been viewed as a disagreement over how
best to prevent the theocrats in Tehran from acquiring a nuclear weapons
capability.
Michael Doran, a Senior Fellow at the Hudson Institute, and Tony Badran, a
research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies dissent from that
view. In Tablet, they’ve written a comprehensive analysis arguing that Mr. Biden
intends to both enrich and empower Iran’s rulers – while simultaneously
downgrading relations with Saudi Arabia, the Gulf Arab states, Israel, and other
former friends.
In other words, President Biden is attempting to establish a “new Middle Eastern
order” — one that regards the Islamic Republic of Iran as America’s primary
strategic partner in the region. They conclude also that President Biden has
decided not to speak candidly about this dramatic change – which they call “The
Realignment.”
As for latest kinetic battle between Israel and Hamas, they see that as an
inevitable consequence of the Biden tilt toward Tehran. They discuss all this
and more with host Cliff May.
Biden’s overtures to Iran undercut US bid to end
Hamas-Israel conflict
Jonathan Schanzer/New York Post/May 17/2021
With rockets flying and violence escalating in the Gaza Strip, the Biden
administration announced Wednesday that it dispatched Deputy Assistant Secretary
of State Hady Amr to the region, in an effort to broker calm between Israel and
the terrorist group Hamas. The likelihood of a successful mission is low. But
that’s not Amr’s fault; it’s President Joe Biden’s. His Middle East foreign
policy is simply out of sync with this mission.
In past conflicts, senior American officials often found ways to steer both
sides to a ceasefire, even when Israel wasn’t quite satisfied with the results
on the battlefield. But Jerusalem always acquiesced to Washington in the end,
out of deference to the close ties between the two nations.
Given America’s foreign policy these days, it’s not clear how that will fly.
Israeli officials are not exactly eager to hear America’s view of Iranian-backed
terrorists like Hamas. Tensions are at a zenith, thanks to the Biden
administration’s stubborn insistence that now is the time to re-enter the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action — the flawed 2015 nuclear deal with Iran.
Israeli officials are unhappy not only because they see the deal as a path for
Iran to gain nuclear weapons down the road, but for another reason as well:
America’s role in whatever is agreed upon is very likely to include billions of
dollars in cash incentives to the Islamic Republic, in exchange for temporary
nuclear concessions.
The Iranian regime is one of Hamas’ top sponsors. Thus, the Biden administration
is on the cusp of indirectly providing funds to Hamas, using Iran as a
pass-through.
Of course, the Biden administration will deny that this is its intention. And to
be fair, it probably isn’t. But it will be a byproduct of a deeply flawed and
myopic policy.
Officials may attempt to explain how US money-laundering controls and
intelligence could stop this from happening. But there will be no hermetic
solution to prevent Iran from sending cash to Hamas. Nor is there a way to halt
the flow of weapons or weapons technology that Iran will invariably build with
the funds it is about to receive.
Iran is long known to have provided Hamas with entire rocket systems, rocket
parts, training in assembly, cash support and other means to enhance the
terrorist organization’s military capabilities over the years. In the context of
the current conflict, Iran is widely believed to have provided Palestinian
Islamic Jihad with a new rocket, the Badr 3.
Israeli military officials privately note that they have observed other signs of
Iranian involvement in the conflict, including possibly the Shihab drone that
was thought to hit the strategic Ashkelon pipeline, but they have yet to go on
the record to explain.
More important is the broader question of what exactly the Biden administration
wants in the Middle East. The president and his lieutenants have repeatedly
asserted that they seek to extricate America from the region. In other words,
Israel is about to find itself increasingly alone in an increasingly lawless
Middle East.To make matters worse, this administration has pushed all its chips
to the center of the table in its attempts to resurrect the JCPOA. This is a
deal that will once again empower Iran, while weakening Israel and the Gulf Arab
states. The Biden folks may not frame it this way, but this is tantamount to a
total realignment of the Middle East. Washington thus lacks credibility in its
efforts to broker an end to the current fighting between Israel and Hamas. And
judging by the decision to send Amr to represent the United States, that may not
even be its goal.
Diplomatic protocol dictates that Amr, who is a relatively low-ranking official,
would not be the right person to speak directly with Israel’s top diplomats,
military officials and politicians. Biden and his secretary of state, Tony
Blinken, almost certainly understood this when they dispatched Amr to the
region.
Admittedly, the Biden administration policy has had occasional bright spots. The
president elected to shut down condemnations of Israel at the United Nations,
providing top cover as Israel struggled to fend off salvo after salvo of Hamas
rockets with its Iron Dome air-defense system.
But just as Iron Dome can’t neutralize every threat, a diplomatic shield at the
UN may only help for so long. Israel is fighting a brutal war against Iran and
its proxies. And the White House appears to be casting its lot with the wrong
side for the long term.
*Jonathan Schanzer is senior vice president for research at Foundation for
Defense of Democracies. Follow him on Twitter @JSchanzer. FDD is a nonpartisan
think tank focused on foreign policy and national security issues.
Rescinding the IRGC’s Terror Designation Would Harm
American Victims of Terrorism
Matthew Zweig and Richard Goldberg/Insight-FDD/May 17/2021
As part of negotiations in Vienna, Iran’s clerical regime has reportedly
requested that the Biden administration rescind the U.S. government’s formal
designation of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a Foreign
Terrorist Organization (FTO). If President Joe Biden agrees, he would not only
relieve economic pressure on Iran’s primary terror-sponsoring organ, but would
also spurn American victims of Iran-sponsored terrorism, as well as their
families.
A rescission of the FTO designation would undermine U.S. national security. It
would deprive wounded American warfighters and the families of those murdered of
the chance to hold the IRGC accountable through civil litigation. Undermining
the deterrent of criminal prosecution and civil litigation could also encourage
future attacks on U.S. servicemembers.
In short, removing the IRGC from the FTO list – an ill-advised move the Biden
administration already took with the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen – should
provoke a bipartisan backlash on Capitol Hill and across the nation.
Background on FTO Designations and Civil Litigation
Under the Antiterrorism Act (ATA), the secretary of state has authority to
designate as FTOs foreign entities that “engage in or retain the capability and
intent to engage in terrorism” and that “threaten the security of United States
nationals” or the “national defense, foreign relations, or economic interests of
the United States.” Under the law, U.S. persons and persons subject to U.S.
jurisdiction can be charged criminally if they provide material support to a
terrorist or an FTO.
In 1992, Congress amended the ATA to allow victims of international terrorism to
file civil suits for their injuries. In 1996, Congress went further and
criminalized nearly all knowing support for FTOs, including commercial
activities and humanitarian assistance. This includes any person or entity that
knowingly provides “material support or resources” to a terrorist or an FTO – to
include property or services, including financial services.
Designating an entity as an FTO brings far greater criminal exposure under the
“material support” provision than a mere sanctions designation. Companies that
do business or interact in any way with an FTO immediately face increased legal,
financial, and reputational risk, pressuring them to rapidly sever those ties.
The day after the IRGC’s FTO designation, for example, Instagram blocked the
accounts of former IRGC Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani and several other
senior IRGC leaders. Soleimani had already been designated a
Specially-Designated Global Terrorist – an individual designation that did not
directly influence corporate behavior.
The civil litigation risk for companies and individuals working with the IRGC is
today substantial. Congress has repeatedly made it easier for American victims
of terrorism to sue aiders and abettors of terrorism. In 2016, Congress expanded
the ATA to provide an additional path for victims to sue – civil
aiding-and-abetting and civil conspiracy liability – alongside the existing
material-support threshold. In October 2018, Congress narrowed the “act of war”
exception in the ATA’s civil liability provision by making it inapplicable to
conflicts involving FTOs and SDGTs. Although the IRGC was responsible for the
deaths of hundreds of American service members in Iraq, some civil defendants
have continued to assert that the “act of war” exception applies to attacks
committed by the IRGC’s proxies. Going forward, if the IRGC continues to kill or
injure U.S. citizens in conflict zones such as Iraq and Syria, the IRGC’s FTO
designation would make it far more straightforward for the victims or their
families to bring civil actions against not only the IRGC but also anyone who
provided material support to the IRGC.
Impact of IRGC Designation for U.S. Victims of Terrorism
In the months before the IRGC’s FTO designation, a district court in New York
dismissed a civil action against several European banks alleged to have
criminally conspired with the IRGC’s agents to launder hundreds of billions of
dollars through the U.S. financial system. The court held that the connection
between the banks’ conduct and the acts of terrorism was too attenuated to
create liability, in part because the IRGC itself was not designated as a
terrorist organization at the time of the attacks and was not solely engaged in
terrorism.
With the FTO designation, that defense no longer applies, particularly given the
Supreme Court’s affirmation of Congress’ contention that “foreign organizations
that engage in terrorist activity are so tainted by their criminal conduct that
any contribution to such an organization facilitates that conduct.” Designation
of the IRGC and governmental scrutiny of its economic empire paves the way for
successful civil actions against banks or other companies that knowingly do
business with the IRGC’s expansive business network but often escape prosecution
thanks to willful blindness to the IRGC’s relationship with their business
partners.A recent Supreme Court decision affirmed that victims suing the IRGC
directly (thanks to an exemption to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act) may
obtain retroactive punitive damages from Iran for attacks that occurred prior to
the IRGC’s FTO designation. Now victims suing under the ATA may be able to
attach such assets to IRGC-connected economic activity. Since the IRGC mainly
operates in foreign jurisdictions beyond the reach of U.S. courts, the prime
targets of ATA civil actions are foreign companies and banks proven to have
knowingly transacted with the IRGC.
International shipping companies and banks that provide trade finance or
otherwise knowingly process financial transactions for the IRGC or its agents
may also be subject to potential civil suit in the United States, regardless of
where the transactions take place. Transactions with shipping terminals and port
authorities controlled by designated IRGC affiliates – such as Iranian port
operator Tidewater Middle East Company, which the United States designated as an
IRGC-controlled entity in 2011 – could result in exposure to civil liability.
A recission of the IRGC’s FTO designation may have far-reaching detrimental
consequences for the ability of U.S. victims of Iranian terrorism to pursue
their claims. Currently, there are well over $50 billion in default judgements
against Iran on behalf of U.S. victims of terrorism, as well as assets in the
United States identified as owned by the Government of Iran. These assets
include 650 5th Avenue in New York City and $1.67 billion in assets held by the
Luxembourg-based bank Clearstream SA. The Biden administration and Congress
should do everything possible to enable victims to execute judgements against
these assets – not undermine them.
The fact sheet accompanying the IRGC’s FTO designation confirmed that “Iran is
an outlaw regime that uses terrorism as a key tool of statecraft and that the
IRGC, part of Iran’s official military, has engaged in terrorist activity or
terrorism since its inception 40 years ago.” This finding, which remains
accurate and highly relevant, strongly supports the legal arguments of U.S.
citizens and service members pursuing civil actions. It establishes a framework
for supporting current civil litigants, by providing the official historical
record of the IRGC’s terrorism support. This framework should not be dismantled.
What’s Next?
In its ill-conceived drive to rejoin the Iran nuclear deal, the Biden
administration must not dishonor the American victims of Iran-sponsored
terrorism. That means leaving the IRGC’s FTO designation in place. If anything,
the administration should work with Congress on a bipartisan basis to further
strengthen and clarify secondary liability under the ATA.
There is a need to act quickly in light of an April decision by the Second
Circuit Court of Appeals that threatens to establish a much more restrictive
standard for liability. Specifically, the court held that aiders and abettors
cannot be held civilly liable, even for knowingly transferring tens of millions
of dollars to charitable front organizations of an FTO. According to the
decision, an aider and abettor of an FTO can be held liable only if the
defendant is specifically informed that particular funds will be used for
“terroristic purposes,” or if the plaintiffs can trace the particular funds sent
by the defendant to an FTO front organization and through that organization to
the particular attacks that injured them. Of course, companies that knowingly
transfer funds or provide services to front groups for organizations such as the
IRGC, the Islamic State, or Hamas rarely document the transactions with a
notation that such services “are meant for support of terrorist acts only.”
From a policy perspective, this decision has the potential to open the
floodgates for using the U.S. financial system to bankroll terrorist
organizations across the globe – from the IRGC to al-Qaeda and the Islamic State
– through front organizations. Now more than ever, Congress should clarify its
counterterrorism statutory framework to disrupt financial support for FTOs such
as the IRGC by denying them access to the U.S. financial system. Providing
terror victims and their families the ability to seek compensation is an
important component of this effort.
Regardless of differing views on the nuclear deal with Iran, supporting American
victims of Iran-sponsored terrorism is an issue on which Republicans and
Democrats should find common ground.
**Matthew Zweig is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies
(FDD), where Richard Goldberg is a senior advisor. They both contribute to FDD’s
Iran Program and Center on Economic and Financial Power (CEFP). For more
analysis from the authors, the Iran Program, and CEFP, please subscribe HERE.
Follow the authors on Twitter @MatthewZweig1 and @rich_goldberg. Follow FDD on
Twitter @FDD and @FDD_Iran and @FDD_CEFP. FDD is a Washington, DC-based,
nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.
When the US leaves Afghanistan, the world will become less
safe
Bill Roggio/New York Post/May 17/2021
Last weekend’s vicious school bombing in the Afghan capital killed more than 60
people and injured more than 150 others, most of them schoolgirls. Sadly, this
was no isolated incident.
Since President Biden announced the United States would leave Afghanistan by
Sept. 11, violence has soared. But it isn’t only Afghans who’ll suffer. With the
return of the Taliban, a rejuvenated and dangerous al Qaeda will enjoy the same
sanctuary it had over two decades ago.
The US withdrawal has emboldened the Taliban. The so-called “peace process,”
which is really a capitulation, has failed. The Taliban believes it has won and
is acting accordingly.
The jihadis can now say they have driven two superpowers, the Soviet Union and
the United States, from Afghanistan by force.
In 2013-14, the Islamic State scored a massive propaganda victory after it
seized control of large areas of Iraq and Syria. This victory sparked terror
attacks in the United States, Europe and elsewhere. Now al Qaeda is poised to
benefit in the same way.
The only peace Afghans can hope to see is the peace of submission to the
Taliban. The group plans to install its emir, Mullah Hibatullah Akhundzada, as
overall leader and impose its harsh version of Islamic law, replete with public
executions, stonings, amputations and other horrors, on all Afghans.
The Afghanistan of the future will look much like the country did on Sept. 10,
2001. As the Taliban retakes large areas of the country, it will settle old
scores with those who collaborated with the current Afghan government. Judges,
lawyers, reporters, women’s-rights activists, politicians and others who
advocated a free and democratic Afghanistan will be killed or forced to submit
to the Taliban or flee the country.
Millions of refugees are likely to flood Pakistan, Iran and other countries.
Those unable to leave will suffer under a brutal, repressive rule.
As the Taliban’s fortunes grow, so will al Qaeda’s. To defend the withdrawal, US
officials have misled the public into believing that there has been a split
between the Taliban and al Qaeda. The truth is that they are as close as ever.
After the attacks of 9/11, the Taliban refused to turn over Osama bin Laden and
his cadre of terrorists, knowing full well the United States would invade and
destroy the Taliban’s original emirate. Mullah Omar, the Taliban’s founder,
predicted the group would ultimately prevail as the United States would tire of
the fight. It took two decades, but he was right. Now his successors are ready
to pick up where he left off.
Al Qaeda won’t need to return to Afghanistan because it is already there. Since
the fall of the Taliban’s first emirate, al Qaeda remained embedded with the
Taliban in Afghanistan and continues to fight alongside it. Al Qaeda and other
terror groups operate training camps inside Afghanistan to this day. Taliban
rule will allow al Qaeda to flourish.
It is understandable that Americans want out. Our political and military leaders
have been feckless, promising victory but never advocating the investments
necessary to achieve it.
They refused to understand the nature of the Taliban and its religious
motivations for fighting. They ignored or downplayed the deep and enduring ties
between the Taliban and al Qaeda. They pretended Pakistan was our ally when it
has always been our enemy. They pursued a phony peace process that was destined
to fail. They pretend that our adversaries — China, Russia, Iran and others —
are not taking note of the defeat. One can hardly blame voters for assuming that
more incompetence and deception would follow if our troops stayed on the ground.
If we leave, it should be with eyes open. We are not ending an endless war. We
are just returning to the way things were. The endless jihad will continue,
unchecked. The war will intensify, Afghans will suffer immensely, the Taliban
will make major gains, al Qaeda will be emboldened, and the world will become
less safe.Just three years after the last US troops left Iraq in 2011, our
troops had to go right back to deal with the new threat posed by the Islamic
State. American leaders have yet to learn the lesson of that failure.
*Bill Roggio is a senior fellow at Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Follow
him on Twitter @billroggio. FDD is a nonpartisan think tank focused on foreign
policy and national security issues.
Joe Biden’s Iran Policy Is One Giant Nuclear Mistake/The United States is at an
inflection point. Now is the time to reverse course.
Anthony Ruggiero/ The National Interest/May 17/2021
Iran’s Supreme Leader must be pleased another American president is desperate
for a nuclear deal. The United States has all the leverage, yet President Joe
Biden is rushing back to the flawed 2015 nuclear agreement, even though Iran
cheated from the outset. Instead, Biden should use America’s leverage to secure
a deal that puts a permanent end to Tehran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons by
dismantling its enrichment program.
National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan explained earlier this month that the
purpose of the ongoing negotiations in Vienna is to determine which “nuclear
restrictions Iran will accept on its program to ensure that they can never get a
nuclear weapon.” Therein lies the core problem with the accord: it will never
prevent an Iranian nuke because instead of prohibiting Iran from enriching
uranium and plutonium, it relies on a maze of unenforceable and eventually
expiring restrictions to prevent the regime from weaponizing its enrichment
program.
In light of the numerous concessions Tehran secured as part of the 2015
agreement, zero enrichment may seem like an extraordinary demand. Yet not long
ago, zero enrichment was the accepted policy. In 2006, the United Nations
Security Council passed Resolution 1696, demanding that the Islamic Republic
“suspend all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities, including research
and development.”
Despite abandoning that position, former President Barack Obama sold the 2015
nuclear deal as ensuring “that all pathways to a bomb are cut off.” Yet
enrichment itself is the pathway to a bomb. Obama touted the constraints the
deal imposed on Iran’s nuclear program, yet restrictions on the production of
enriched uranium end completely in 2031, less than ten years from now.
To ensure Iranian compliance, Obama said, the accord has “the most comprehensive
inspection and verification regime ever negotiated to monitor a nuclear
program.” He added, “The bottom line is, if Iran cheats, we can catch them—and
we will.” We now know that is not true. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)—the
nuclear watchdog responsible for inspections—did not know about Iran’s
undeclared nuclear activities until it examined the nuclear archive Israeli
agents smuggled out of Iran in 2018.
Last month, Tehran began enriching uranium to 60 percent purity, a significant
step toward the 90 percent+ level needed for an atomic bomb. There is no
legitimate, civilian use for this activity. Also, this level of purity is well
above the 3.67 percent envisioned in the 2015 deal.
The Vienna negotiations reportedly have not led to an agreement on how Tehran
will reverse these nuclear gains, especially whether the advanced centrifuges
integral to this level of enrichment will be destroyed, removed from the
country, or stored locally.
And there is another serious problem. The United States has a policy where it
asks its allies to forgo the development of enrichment and reprocessing
capabilities before they can receive any support for peaceful nuclear energy
programs. This is known as the gold standard and its rationale is simple: these
techniques can be used to produce fissile material for nuclear weapons.
America’s Gulf allies are starting to notice the hypocrisy of the United States
asking them to adopt the gold standard while Iran keeps its enrichment program.
Yousef Al Otaiba, the United Arab Emirates ambassador to the United States,
noted that the UAE agreed to the gold standard in 2008, hoping it would be a
model for when the U.S. negotiates with the Islamic Republic. Otaiba explained
that the “problem was [U.S.] partners became . . . committed and assured to a
gold standard that is safe and secure for nuclear power and [U.S.] adversaries
got a better deal.”
Mohammed bin Salman, crown prince and de facto leader of Saudi Arabia, said in
2018 that if Iran develops nuclear weapons the kingdom would “follow suit as
soon as possible.” The most likely path would require Riyadh to develop
enrichment or reprocessing technologies.
If the UAE and Saudi Arabia pursue uranium enrichment programs, then that could
set off an arms race in the Middle East.
It is not too late for Biden to reverse course. Tehran’s negotiators have pushed
a maximalist position requesting the removal of nearly all sanctions. The Biden
administration should walk away and use its significant leverage to push for the
“longer and stronger” deal Secretary of State Antony Blinken promised. The best
way to make a deal longer and stronger is for it to mandate the elimination of
Iran’s enrichment program. That accord could secure the bipartisan support
necessary to be ratified as a treaty by the U.S. Senate. That way, it would
remain intact during the next Republican administration.
Tehran will balk, of course. It will try to convince our European allies to
blame the United States for walking away. The Islamic Republic could also
respond with military strikes against U.S. troops or allies in the region, but
the U.S. has the upper hand militarily and can restore deterrence.
Another response would be for Tehran to ramp up its enrichment program. But
Iran’s nuclear extortion has an expiration date. The explosions at the Natanz
enrichment site show the fragility of the clerical regime’s prized, supposedly
secure, asset. The United Kingdom, and perhaps France and Germany, will join a
pressure campaign if Iran overplays its hand. A unified or U.S.-UK sanctions
campaign will send the Islamic Republic a strong message that it cannot divide
America and its allies. Iran will not be able to withstand another unified
pressure campaign.
Just because it will be difficult to return to a zero enrichment policy doesn’t
mean the United States should pursue a limited, flawed agreement instead.
The United States is at an inflection point. Now is the time to reverse course.
*Anthony Ruggiero is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies (FDD), he previously served in the U.S. government for more than
nineteen years, most recently as the National Security Council’s senior director
for counterproliferation and biodefense. Follow Anthony on Twitter @NatSecAnthony.
FDD is a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on
national security and foreign policy.
If it gets nukes, Iran could fire using cruise missiles - exclusive
Yonah Jeremy Bob/Jerusalem Post/May 17/2021
IAEA should focus on weaponization; stopping ballistic missiles is a lost cause.
If Iran gets nuclear weapons, it could potentially deliver them not only using
land-based ballistic missiles, but also by ship-fired cruise missiles, one of
the top Iran nuclear experts has told The Jerusalem Post.
In a new book, Iran’s Perilous Pursuit of Nuclear Weapons, obtained first
exclusively by the Post, Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS)
president David Albright and researcher Sarah Burkhard say that “the most
straightforward way to dramatically reduce Iran’s prospects of building nuclear
weapons is to focus on the nuclear explosive production and nuclear
weaponization pillars.”
Part of the reason that the focus should shift to IAEA inspections of
weaponization, notes the book, is because realistically, “the elimination of the
[nuclear] delivery system pillar is more difficult to thwart because Iran has so
many options for delivering nuclear weapons, ranging from ballistic missiles to
cruise missiles to ships.”
A ship-based cruise-missile nuclear-weapon option for Iran has not generally
been discussed much to date.
Further, Albright writes that: “Negotiations should aim to limit ballistic
missiles, but it should be recognized that eliminating this pillar in its
entirety is impossible,” given years of Western complacency and Iranian progress
on the issue.
Before even getting to some other powerful revelations, Albright’s book in some
ways upends the entire way that the nuclear issue is viewed by Iran hawks – of
which Albright is one of the more prominent in the camp.
Conventionally, the fight over US policy toward the Islamic Republic divides
into those who are pro or anti returning to the 2015 nuclear deal, including
lifting Trump administration-era sanctions for Tehran returning to the deal’s
nuclear limitations.
While Albright has pointed out holes in the 2015 deal for years, he is also a
realist.
Given the Biden administration’s posture, Albright explores how the US and other
interested countries could try to head off Iran from getting a nuclear weapon
even if some of its “nuclear pillars” are not blocked as much as he might hope.
Put simply, if the Biden team returns to the 2015 deal, how could Iran still be
contained?
ONE OF the punch-lists of Iran critics has been that the 2015 deal did not have
teeth for limiting Iran’s ballistic missile program.
Albright would have wanted this program limited years ago.
But given Iran’s progress since 2015 and Washington’s current posture, he is
saying that blocking Iran on this front might be a lost cause.
He explains that the Islamic Republic has too many different kinds of ballistic
missiles it can use.
Also, Albright says that Tehran could even use ship-based cruise missiles, such
that putting partial limits on some ballistic missiles would be ineffectual.
Rather, he suggests that a major benefit of the 2018 Mossad raid on Tehran’s
secret nuclear archive is that it gives the world powers much more insight into
how to supervise and block the Iranian weaponization-efforts side of the nuclear
program.
Of course, this would require a much more forceful approach by the IAEA and
world powers in terms of resolving where each element of weaponization revealed
by the archive is being stored, and then monitoring them all.
In some ways, this would, in and of itself, be a game-changer approach – but
Albright suggests that it could be palatable given the new information and the
idea that the elements being monitored have no justification to be used for
anything but weaponization.
There are at least three items he cites that the IAEA would need to explore and
monitor regarding Iran’s efforts.
One would be the Islamic Republic’s “maintaining the capability to use computer
codes to simulate a nuclear weapons explosion. Greater use of simulations would
make component testing less necessary.”
A second would be “retaining a mastery of the multipoint initiation system,
e.g., the shock wave generator, including possibly having conducted a successful
‘cold test’ of a nuclear explosive with a surrogate nuclear core.”
In a May 2019 ISIS report describing some of what was revealed in the Iranian
Nuclear Archive, he explained that a shock wave generator "has the purpose of
uniformly initiating a spherical shell of high explosives, or the 'main charge,'
which in turn compresses the nuclear core made from weapon-grade uranium to
achieve a supercritical mass for a nuclear explosion."
The third item would be “having the capability to make the neutron initiator.”
In another ISIS report that month, he said that "Iran planned on using a
relatively sophisticated neutron source, or initiator, to trigger a chain
reaction in the weapon-grade uranium core of its nuclear weapons."
All three of these elements, if not policed by the IAEA, could help Tehran move
much more swiftly to being able to explode the uranium it enriches for a nuclear
bomb.
IN CONTRAST, if the IAEA gains new inspection powers over these elements exposed
by the Mossad, Iran could be prevented from developing a nuclear weapon despite
other major holes in the 2015 nuclear deal.
In terms of how much time Iran would need to enrich uranium to weaponizable
levels, Albright explores scenarios where the currently discussed three to four
months could drop to two months or even just over one month by the end of 2020.
The idea is that as the Islamic Republic enriches more uranium up from the 5%
level to the 20% level and some even to the 60% level, the distance it has to
cross to get to the 90% level is significantly reduced.
Despite this warning, Albright told the Post that the volume of uranium which
Iran has enriched to the 60% level is quite small, and the bigger problems in
reducing its time to a nuclear weapon relate to the volume of 20% enriched
uranium and to advanced centrifuges like the IR-4 or IR-6.
Advanced centrifuges can enrich uranium at a much faster rate than the country’s
standard IR-1, which makes up most of its nuclear program.
Another solution Albright suggests is getting Iran to agree to nuclear limits
which would leave it two years from a nuclear weapon instead of one year.
This would require Tehran to roll back both its advanced centrifuge program and
possibly to cut in half the number of older IR-1 centrifuges it was allowed to
operate under the 2015 deal.
Though the book notes that the assassination of Iran military nuclear chief
Mohsen Fakhrizadeh in November 2020 as a significant setback in managing
weaponization efforts, it adds that he had prepared a whole new generation of
nuclear scientists to take his place.
This accounts for how Iran can continue to present such a nuclear threat despite
his loss.
The book also gives an impressive history of Iran’s nuclear program as well as
tremendous depth in discussing the findings of the secret nuclear archive.
Iranians to the Biden Administration: Do Not Lift Sanctions
on Iran
Hayvi Bouzo and Benjamin Weinthal/Newsweek/May 17/2021
The Biden administration is considering easing sanctions on the Iranian regime
before reaching a nuclear agreement, a move that would only jeopardize the
national security interests of the U.S and its Middle East allies. The Iranian
people also consider such a move to be dangerous.
The Biden administration must maintain and even increase sanctions related to
Iran’s support for terrorism, its ballistic missile program and ongoing human
rights violations.
Some in Washington are urging the Biden administration to lift U.S. sanctions on
the Islamic Republic, saying they are hurting the people in Iran. However, many
Iranians advocate taking the exact opposite course.
Recently, Ahmad Obali, a Chicago-based talk show host who broadcasts to the
Islamic Republic and is well-known in Iran, asked his viewers on live
television: Should the U.S. sanctions be lifted or remain in place? The response
was overwhelming, 48 out of 50 callers said they want the Biden administration
to maintain sanctions on Iran.
The vast majority of these calls came from inside Iran. Some Iranian callers
asked for the sanctions against the regime to be increased until “it’s choked.”
Others said that after the Obama administration lifted the sanctions, not a
single dollar went to the people.
According to a caller from Shabestar, near Tabriz, the regime used the billions
of dollars received from the Obama administration to “build palaces for
themselves and feed terrorists.”
Even under the “maximum pressure campaign” the U.S. continued to allow
humanitarian goods, including food and medicine, to enter Iran.
The Trump administration offered direct medical assistance to Iran, after the
regime’s failure in handling the global coronavirus pandemic. The Islamic
Republic’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei rejected the help, saying in a televised
speech on March 22, 2020, that the U.S., “Could be giving medicines to Iran that
spread the virus or cause it to remain permanently.”
The maximum pressure campaign imposed by the Trump administration succeeded in
bringing the regime to the verge of economic collapse. According to the
International Monetary Fund, Iran went from having $122.5 billion of accessible
monetary reserves in 2018 to $4 billion in 2020. This gave the Iranian people
hope that the regime was weakened and they would finally be able to realize
their aspirations for freedom.
On February 1, 2021, 38 activists sent a letter to President Joe Biden, asking
for his administration to maintain a maximum pressure campaign on the regime.
These activists, who live in Iran, put their lives on the line to send their
message. Most of the signatories have been arrested or imprisoned for peaceful
political and social activism.
In the letter, the activists explained that relieving the regime of sanctions
would bring nothing but an increase in its malign activities in the region.
“The regime spent billions of dollars gained from the [2015] Iran nuclear deal
on exporting its totalitarian ideology by providing funds to terrorist networks,
developing missile technology as offensive leverage to dominate the Persian Gulf
and beyond, and causing chaos in the Middle East,” they wrote.
The signatories stressed their hope that the Biden administration would continue
the U.S. maximum pressure campaign, asking for “maintaining maximum political,
diplomatic and financial pressure on the regime,” and “advocacy for human rights
in Iran and release of all political prisoners and those imprisoned for their
personal views.”
Now the Biden administration is insisting on returning to the nuclear deal with
Iran before May 22, when a key monitoring deal expires. However, this shouldn’t
mean removing the sanctions on issues unrelated to Iran’s nuclear program.
Though it was never implemented, this was the declared position of both former
President Barack Obama and then-Vice President Joe Biden when they separately
stated in 2015 that a nuclear deal should in no way prohibit Washington from
enacting non-nuclear sanctions on Iran.
According to then-Vice President Biden, “Every sanction in place against any
entity or individual in Iran for the support and encouragement of terrorism
stays in place. Nothing changes.”
In a similar statement, Obama explained that sanctions against Iran on issues
related to supporting terrorism, ballistic missiles and human rights violations
should be maintained.
“[E]ven with this deal, we will continue to have profound differences with Iran
– its support for terrorism and its use of proxies to destabilize parts of the
Middle East. Therefore … the United States will maintain our own sanctions
related to Iran’s support for terrorism, its ballistic missile program, and its
human rights violations,” he said.
Iran continues to be one of the world’s biggest violators of human rights. It
carries out the most executions per capita in the world; it is the No. 1 state
sponsor of terrorism and it is continuously expanding its ballistic missile
program. Maintaining and adding sanctions in regards to these issues would serve
the national security interest of the U.S. and its allies, aid in negotiating a
stronger nuclear deal and be in line with the hopes and aspirations of the
Iranian people.
*Hayvi Bouzo is a Syrian-born American broadcast journalist and commentator. She
is the creator and host of the TV show Middle East Rise. Follow Hayvi on Twitter
@Hayvi Bouzo and on Facebook. Benjamin Weinthal is a fellow for the Foundation
for Defense of Democracies. Follow Benjamin on Twitter @BenWeinthal. FDD is a
Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national
security and foreign policy.
Turkey media threatens Israel with 'Libya model' of water
grab off Gaza
Seth J. Frantzman/Jerusalem PostMay 17/2021
The concept pushed by the Turkish media, likely with support from the
government, argues that Turkey can sign a deal with the Palestinians and
increase support for them by sea.
Turkey’s far-right Yeni Safak newspaper argued on Monday, with a frontpage
story, that Turkey might implement a “Libya model” for Israel by signing a deal
with Hamas-run Gaza to get access to water and energy rights off Israel’s coast.
The model is based on an agreement Turkey pushed on the embattled government of
Libya in 2019 which resulted in Turkey sending Syrian mercenaries and drones to
Libya in violation of an arms embargo.
The concept pushed by the Turkish media, likely with support from the
government, argues that Turkey can sign a deal with the Palestinians and
increase support for them by sea. This would put Israel and Turkey on a military
collision course. Turkey hosts Hamas leaders and supports Hamas. Its potential
plan to link Turkey and Gaza by sea would harm Israel’s gas pipeline plans with
Cyprus and Greece.
The goal for Turkey was to ignore Greek and Cyprus claims to exclusive economic
zones and blocks of undersea areas for energy exploration, to create a Turkish
“blue motherland” grabbing all the Mediterranean around Cyprus, Greek islands
and now near Israel. Turkey’s sea-grab has no precedent in international or
maritime laws and norms. Nevertheless that has not stopped Turkey, empowered by
the previous US administration, of sending its navy with “research vessels” to
conduct energy exploration in areas usually claimed by Greece.
To understand Turkey’s goal, it is that Turkey will draw a line from the Turkish
coastline directly to Gaza, ostensibly dividing the sea and creating a corridor.
This would cut off Israel from Greece and the East Med pipeline that Israel,
Greece and Cyprus want to build. Turkey argues that Cyprus does not exist and
that Greek islands have no maritime rights around them. Greece and Cyprus view
things differently, arguing much of the Mediterranean around Cyprus and Greek
islands is linked to them. Cyprus has deals with Egypt and Israel and Greece and
Egypt have deals and good relations.
Turkey illegally invaded Northern Cyprus in the 1970s and now wants a “two
state” solution for Cyprus, potentially trying to create a second country on the
island of Cyprus based around Northern Cyprus, which Turkey recognizes. This
would complicate the claims at sea. But Turkey’s novel approach to the
Palestinian issue takes this a step further, suggesting it could sign a deal
with Hamas or the Palestinian Authority and grab control of the water off
Israel, putting Turkey and Israel on a collision course. Turkey’s President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan is one of the world’s leading anti-Israel voices. He
compares Israel to the Nazis and has sought sanctions against Israel during the
recent conflict. His goal is to isolate Israel. He threatened the UAE against
signing a peace deal with Israel. He hosts Hamas leaders with a red carpet in
Istanbul and Ankara. He recently phoned Iran’s President and discussed joint
work against Israel.
The “Blue Homeland” idea at sea was published by a far-right paper as a trial
balloon. In Turkey all media is pro-government and critical journalists are
imprisoned or have to leave the country. So this article had the stamp of
approval of the ruling AKP party. It quotes Rear Admiral Cihat Yayci, the
“architect” of the current Turkish Mediterranean policy. The article argues that
an agreement like the one in Libya, but with the Palestinians would “increase
Palestine’s international recognition” and enable real support for the
Palestinians.
It would enable Turkey to contest Israel’s blockade of Gaza. Back in 2010 Turkey
sent far-right Islamist IHH activists aboard the Mavi Marmara to try to break
the blockade to Gaza. An Israeli command raid resulted in the deaths of ten
Turks aboard the ships. Turkey would like to send its navy to Gaza. Israel is
acquiring new Sa’ar 6 Corvettes to defend its Exclusive Economic Zone.
Meanwhile Hamas in Gaza has tried to build unmanned submarines and use rockets
to attack gas rigs at sea off the coast of Ashkelon. This is clearly an economic
war and one designed to challenge Israel’s energy goals. The article argues that
Turkey signed an agreement in 2011 with Northern Cyprus. It argues that Turkey
can sign deals with governments that are not recognized by the international
community. This likely means Hamas. The article specifies Gaza as an entity and
compares it to Taiwan.
“A position like in Libya can also be created. Here, the Israeli factor is not
an obstacle to the agreement. If Palestine can become a member of the Eastern
Mediterranean Gas Forum (East-Med), it can also sign an agreement with us.
East-Med membership is an indication that Palestine is an international unit in
its own right with a coast in the Eastern Mediterranean. Such an agreement could
turn the game….in our favor. It will be a strategic chess move for us.” Turkey
thus proposes using Palestinian membership in the gas forum to frustrate
Israel’s relations with Greece and Cyprus and achieve Turkey’s goal.
Senior PIJ commander killed in IAF airstrike Monday
afternoon
Anna Ahronheim/Jerusalem post/May 17/2021
The airstrikes on Hamas targets came as rocket sirens continued to blare
throughout the night in Ashkelon and Beersheba, with two separate barrages being
aimed at each city.
Senior Palestinian Islamic Jihad commander Hasam Abu Harbid was killed in an
Israeli airstrike in the northern Gaza Strip Monday afternoon as rockets fired
from the blockaded enclave continued to be fired towards southern Israel
communities.
The IDF said that Abu-Harbid, who was killed in a joint operation with the Shin
Bet intelligence services, commanded over the northern Gaza Strip division of
the terror organization since 2019 when his predecessor Baha abu el-Atta was
killed in a targeted assassination by the IDF
Abu-Harbid, who was a dominant operative in the group for the past 15 years, was
behind the shooting, launching of rockets and anti-tank guided missiles that
wounded Israeli civilians.
Following his killing, a salvo of rockets was launched towards Israeli
communities near the border as well as Ashdod, Ashkelon and Beersheba.
Later on Monday, Israeli aircraft neutralized a squad of five Hamas operatives
who were preparing to launch rockets into Israel, the IDF spokesperson reported
on Monday afternoon.
Play Video
The IDF attack of the home of Hamas head Yayha Sinwar, May 16, 2021. (Credit:
IDF Spokesperson"s Unit)
In addition, the spokesperson said IDF aircraft attacked another part of the
Hamas' tunnels in the northern Gaza Strip, struck six underground rocket
launching stations and 10 above-ground launching stations throughout the Gaza
Strip.
IDF Spokesperson Brig.-Gen. Hidai Zilberman told reporters that shortly after
the killing of Abu-Arbid, the military targeted a car near the Gazan beach in
the northern sector of the Strip with operatives as well as an autonomous
submersible naval vessel.
“We recognized preparations for a maritime attack,” Zilberman said, adding that
the maritime vessel had been brought down to the beach and on its way to carry
out “a terror attack in Israeli waters” when it was struck and totally
destroyed. Several operatives who had been in the car were killed.
The IAF also hit hundreds of kilometers of Hamas’s “Metro” underground tunnel
network for the third time overnight on Monday. Striking 15 kilometers of what
it called the “C” line, the attack “was part of a broad operation by the IDF to
significantly damage the underground system of terror organizations in Gaza,” it
said.
Striking 15 kilometers of what it called the “C” line, the attack “was part of a
broad operation by the IDF to significantly damage the underground system of
terror organizations in Gaza,” it said.
The attack included 54 fighter jets that dropped some 110 precision munitions on
35 targets in 20 minutes.
IAF jets also hit nine residences they claim belonged to high ranking Hamas
commanders that were used as terror infrastructure and to store weapons. The
homes that were hit belonged to the Beit Hanoun battalion commander and of
company commanders in Beit Hanoun, the Sabara battalion in Gaza City and the
Shati battalion.
The IAF also struck military infrastructure used for command and control in the
home of a Hamas operative responsible for military intelligence in Shejaiya.
The IDF also destroyed a tunnel in southern Gaza, the entrance to which was
built near a kindergarten.
"This once again proves how Hamas purposely builds its military assets in the
heart of civilian populations," the military said, adding that the "IDF has
taken precautions to ensure minimizing damage to civilian population."
As the rockets continued to be launched, the IAF also destroyed the homes of
Gaza Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar and his brother Muhammed, who is in charge of the
logistics and manpower of Hamas, which “serve as significant terror
infrastructure,” the IDF said in a statement.
The IAF also carried out airstrikes against several other homes, as well as the
offices of Hamas Political Bureau's Planning and Development head Samah Sarag,
the residence of the commander of the Hamas Zeitoun Battalion in Gaza City
Youssef Abel-Wahab, and the residence of senior Hamas Military Intelligence
official Ahmad Abd El Aal.
Dozens of weapon factories and storage sites in Tzabrah tel Aloha, Sheik Amodan
and Gaza City were struck as well. The military says that those sites were
located in the homes of Hamas naval and airborne operatives, anti-tank squads
and offensive cyber units.
According to the Palestinian Health Ministry in Gaza, 181 people have been
killed since the fighting began, including 52 children and 31 women. Another
1,200 have been injured.
ZILBERMAN ON SUNDAY deflected criticism of the military's actions in the Gaza
Strip, particularly the bombing of the Al Jala building with media offices on
Saturday.
“I want to see what would happen if one rocket was fired on Washington. They are
firing salvos toward civilian populations,” Zilberman said when asked about the
strike on the building that was home to the offices of the Associated Press and
Al Jazeera in Gaza. “We are in the middle of an operation. If Hamas and PIJ
think they can hide behind the media, their buildings are not something they can
hide behind.”
The IDF said the building held the offices of Hamas’s military intelligence as
well as other offices belonging to Palestinian Islamic Jihad. It has refused
requests to reveal the evidence upon which it determined that Hamas was using
the office building for terrorist activity, although it said that the US was
shown the evidence and reportedly accepted it.
Expecting the fighting to continue for several more days, Zilberman warned the
Israeli public to continue to seek shelter when rocket sirens are activated.
According to the spokesman, Hamas spent tens of millions of dollars on
constructing this strategic asset.
“Every meter of the tunnel cost around $500 [so] one kilometer cost half a
million dollars,” he said. “You can imagine what else they could have spent the
money on.”
Since the beginning of operation "Guardian of the Walls," approximately 3,150
rockets have been fired from the Gaza Strip at Israeli territory as of 7:00 a.m.
on Monday, of which about 460 failed launches fell in the Gaza Strip.
The Iron Dome Air Defense System has intercepted most of the rockets that would
have hit populated areas in Israel, with an intercept rate of approximately 90%.
Zilberman said that the military will continue to strike this system in the
coming days, as well as the multi-barreled rocket launchers that are being used
by the terror groups to launch salvos towards the Jewish state.
The IDF has hit 40-45 of these launchers, which have between four and nine
medium- long-range rockets that can be fired every second.
While the IAF has begun to take out these launchers over the past 36 hours, the
Israeli public won’t see its effect for some time, Zilberman said.
The Jerusalem Post Staff contributed to this report.
Responsibility for the Latest Upsurge in Arab-Israeli
Violence Goes to US President Joe Biden
Con Coughlin/Gatestone Institute/May 17/2021
Even Mr Trump's harshest critics had to concede that, when it came to the Middle
East, the Trump era had been a success.
Prior to the latest eruption of hostilities between Israel and Palestinian
militants, Mr Biden's only notable intervention in the Israeli-Palestinian issue
had been to restore hundreds of millions of dollars in American aid to the
Palestinians, thereby reversing the Trump administration's decision to cut aid
to the Palestinian Authority over its refusal to maintain a dialogue with
Washington.
Now, with Palestinian militants once more targeting Israeli civilian areas with
rockets and missiles, the folly of Mr Biden's ill-advised approach to the Middle
East has been exposed.... Indeed, the extent of Iran's military support for
Palestinian militants was revealed by an official with the Palestinian Islamic
Jihad terrorist organisation who boasted last week: "The rockets we use to pound
Tel Aviv, our weapons, and our food are provided by Iran."
Mr Biden's comment, made following a telephone discussion with Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week, that he expected the violence to end
"sooner rather than later" certainly seemed to be more an expression of wishful
thinking than a realistic assessment of events unfolding on the ground in Israel
and the Palestinian territories.
Full responsibility for the latest upsurge in Arab-Israeli violence goes to US
President Joe Biden as a result of the policies of appeasement and capitulation
he has pursued in the Middle East. (Photo by T.J. Kirkpatrick/Pool/Getty Images)
Full responsibility for the latest upsurge in Arab-Israeli violence goes to US
President Joe Biden as a result of the policies of appeasement and capitulation
he has pursued in the Middle East.
When Mr Biden took office in January, the Middle East was enjoying one of its
rare moments of optimism, mainly due to the successful approach adopted by his
predecessor, President Donald J. Trump.
The Trump administration achieved a number of undisputed policy successes in the
region, which included persuading several Arab and Muslim countries -- the
United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, Kosovo and Morocco -- to sign the Abraham
Accords with Israel, thereby bringing decades of hostility to an end. In
addition the Islamist supporters of ISIS were completely routed as a result of
the US-led military coalition's destruction of their so-called Caliphate, while
Iran's ability to undermine political stability in the Middle East had been
severely curbed by the Trump administration's punitive sanctions against the
regime. Even Mr Trump's harshest critics had to concede that, when it came to
the Middle East, the Trump era had been a success.
Rather than building on the promising legacy he inherited from his predecessor,
however, Mr Biden has instead sought to distance himself from the achievements
of the Trump administration.
Prior to the latest eruption of hostilities between Israel and Palestinian
militants, Mr Biden's only notable intervention in the Israeli-Palestinian issue
had been to restore hundreds of millions of dollars in American aid to the
Palestinians, thereby reversing the Trump administration's decision to cut aid
to the Palestinian Authority over its refusal to maintain a dialogue with
Washington.
Mr Biden's primary preoccupation in the Middle East has instead been to revive
the flawed nuclear deal with Iran, a move which has resulted in the resumption
of talks with Iranian officials in Vienna.
The renewed diplomatic negotiations over Iran's nuclear programme have taken
place despite the fact the Iranian regime remains in violation of the terms of
the nuclear deal agreed by President Barack Obama.
In particular Iran has continued to enrich uranium to a level well beyond that
agreed in the nuclear deal to the level just below the threshold required for
producing weapons-grade material, prompting fears that Tehran has resumed work
on its clandestine nuclear weapons programme.
There are also mounting concerns that the Biden administration's decision to
ease financial constraints on both the Palestinians and Tehran has enabled Iran
to increase its military support for Hamas militants in Gaza.
Security sources, who asked not to be named, believe that Iran has been
providing Hamas with military assistance for at least five years. The
cooperation includes training in weapons production and operation, with Hamas
militants travelling to Iran frequently to undertake specialist training, as
well as visiting Iranian missile production facilities.
Iran's relations with Hamas are overseen by the elite Quds Force of the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps, who share knowledge on Iranian missile production
with their Hamas counterparts. Israeli military officials believe the close
cooperation between Iran and Hamas has helped the Palestinian terrorist
organisation to increase the range and effectiveness of the missiles and rockets
that have been fired at Israeli towns and cities in recent days.
In such circumstances it is hardly surprising, therefore, that critics of Mr
Biden's approach have led to accusations that he is appeasing Tehran in his
desperation to revive the nuclear agreement.
Now, with Palestinian militants once more targeting Israeli civilian areas with
rockets and missiles, the folly of Mr Biden's ill-advised approach to the Middle
East has been exposed.
Many of the hundreds of missiles being fired at targets in Israel are based on
the design of Iranian missiles. Indeed, the extent of Iran's military support
for Palestinian militants was revealed by an official with the Palestinian
Islamic Jihad terrorist organisation who boasted last week: "The rockets we use
to pound Tel Aviv, our weapons, and our food are provided by Iran."
Consequently, at the same time as the Biden administration has been trying to
revive negotiations with Iran over its nuclear programme, it now transpires that
Tehran has been actively supporting Palestinian terror groups as they prepared
to launch their devastating assault on Israel.
The resulting violence between Israel and Palestinian militants is certainly
deeply embarrassing for Mr Biden who, having sought to distance himself from the
Israeli-Palestinian issue, now finds himself forced to intervene to prevent
further bloodshed.
Indeed, it is now claimed that, in recent months, several pro-Western Arab
governments tried to warn the Biden administration over growing tensions in
Jerusalem, but they received no response from Biden officials because of their
reluctance to engage on the issue.
The result is that Mr Biden now finds himself desperately looking for ways to
end the violence, although his response to date has been less than convincing.
Mr Biden's comment, made following a telephone discussion with Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week, that he expected the violence to end
"sooner rather than later" certainly seemed to be more an expression of wishful
thinking than a realistic assessment of events unfolding on the ground in Israel
and the Palestinian territories.
Certainly, if Mr Biden is really serious about ending the violence, then his
time would be better spent consolidating Mr Trump's impressive Middle East
legacy than wasting his energy on trying to appease the ayatollahs in Tehran.
*Con Coughlin is the Telegraph's Defence and Foreign Affairs Editor and a
Distinguished Senior Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 2021 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Time to end Iran’s nuclear blackmail
Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab News/May 17/2021
Iran’s recent decision to further violate the Joint Comprehensive Plan of
Action’s (JCPOA) uranium enrichment limit coincided with its plan to limit its
nuclear inspection obligations to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
Since January, Iran has produced about 65 kg of 20 percent highly enriched
uranium (HEU), which can be turned into weapons-grade quality within a few
weeks. Iran is way past its pre-JCPOA enrichment stockpiles in qualitative
terms, while quickly amassing further quantities. With the country capable of
producing nine grams of HEU per hour, President Hassan Rouhani has boasted that
Iran is capable of enriching up to 90 percent purity.
Why should the world worry that Tehran is taking all these steps in a blatant
manner? Iran has significantly reduced its breakout time and is dashing toward
developing a nuclear bomb.
It is telling how Iran claims that it is invincible amid multifaceted threats
and crises. It recently announced its alleged ability to not only reactivate the
Natanz uranium enrichment facilities soon, but also produce HEU up to 60 percent
purity through two cascades of more advanced centrifuges. This morale-raising
announcement reflects Iran’s national pride and the importance of its nuclear
program. More than a sign of capability, the announcement is an expression of a
strategic objective.
The Iranian regime’s narrative of safeguarding national sovereignty and national
pride does not take into account the pain inflicted by layers of sanctions
imposed on the country by the US and the UN alike. Instead of being subdued, the
religious establishment doubles down by adopting an aggressive posture of
defiance: The more Iran is attacked and cornered, the more resilient, reactive
and aggressive it will become. The US withdrawal from the JCPOA has exposed
Iran’s strategic ambitions, confirming earlier assessments about its
aspirations.
In its 50-year-long history, the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) has not
proven to be a thumping success. The IAEA safeguards failed to uncover nuclear
weapon programs in Iraq, Libya and South Africa. Taiwan repeatedly dodged the
world with its covert nuclear program until it was eventually caught and signed
the NPT. The additional safeguard system of the IAEA was put in place to inspect
and verify a range of sites and employ new sets of sampling methods, but the
protocol is not mandatory. As feared in the case of Iran, an aspiring nuclear
country can reach a level of threat while satisfying the IAEA’s safeguard
merits. Some states, like Iran, question the preferential treatment given to
certain other countries in relation to enriching and managing radioactive
uranium without considering their own transparency and political commitment to
non-proliferation. Tehran has admitted to having a covert nuclear program before
dismantling it. Despite their technological advancements due to their vast
industrial base, Japan and Sweden, for instance, have acted firmly against the
pursuit of nuclear weapons.
The swift decision to raise uranium enrichment up to 60 percent is evidently
similar to the track followed by North Korea while being an NPT signatory. It is
a separate debate if Pyongyang acquired nuclear weapons while being an NPT
signatory or after exiting the treaty. Unlike Iran, North Korea does not have an
expansionist and disruptive ideology.
The other question at hand is no less important: What can Iran achieve with HEU
if it does not pursue a nuclear program? The NPT does not prohibit the use of
nuclear energy (through smaller reactors) in submarines and ships. Hence, Tehran
can remain a member of the NPT but continue to develop sophisticated nuclear
reactors and amass HEU to power its submarines and, at some stage, large
battleships. The IAEA forbids any use of nuclear propulsion or energy in weapon
systems beyond the realm of peaceful use, so none of Iran’s missiles can be
powered by small nuclear reactors, even if Tehran is able to overcome the
mammoth technological challenges that even the US, Russia and China are
attempting to get the better of.
The decision to raise the bar for HEU during the Vienna talks perfectly sums up
Iran’s nuclear desperation. Instead of choosing to take the moral high ground at
the negotiation table, it opted to justify its “victimhood” with another massive
breach of the nuclear deal — the deal the meetings are intended to amend.
It is noteworthy that US policy over the last four years, coupled with Iran’s
ongoing belligerency, has created a complex quagmire for global nuclear
diplomacy. Since the signing of the nuclear deal in 2015, Iran’s nuclear
enrichment and development activities have continued, while the deal’s sunset
provision dates are fast approaching. The US returning to the JCPOA and Iran’s
full compliance will not roll back the gains Tehran has made. Hence, a tense and
complicated negotiation process will ensue. In the case of Washington and Tehran
sticking firmly to their respective positions, the nuclear deal will be destined
for the dustbin of history. In such an eventuality, not only would Iran be
capable of enriching weapons-grade uranium, but it might be just a few weeks
away from actually doing so.
While there appears to be much hype among the Khomeinists for defiant policies,
some people are defecting due to the regime’s high-handed oppression and
irrational policies. The low-profile community of defectors continues to leak
vital information, while having the courage to carry out high-risk operations,
ranging from smuggling the Stuxnet virus into Natanz to stealing a tranche of
secret documents and smuggling them out of the country. It is also believed that
these defectors informed a foreign agency about the late Quds Force commander
Qassem Soleimani’s whereabouts, helped to plant a sophisticated bomb to
assassinate Iran’s key nuclear scientist, and transported explosives into Natanz,
the highly secure uranium enrichment facility. The most recent explosion inside
Natanz was not a quick sabotage act, but was meticulously timed for the day
after Iran activated its more advanced centrifuges. It does not seem far-fetched
to believe that some defectors might be willing to provide enriched uranium to
terrorist groups in Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon or elsewhere. After all, the
history of smuggling radioactive material is closely tied to Iran. When the
motive is not money, it is revenge.
The decision to raise the bar for highly enriched uranium during the Vienna
talks perfectly sums up Iran’s nuclear desperation.
The Vienna talks must not appease Iran for its belligerent behavior. The forum
must rightfully address the elephant in the room: Iran’s destabilizing and rogue
behavior in the Middle East and beyond. US President Joe Biden might be keen to
shift his administration’s geopolitical focus to China, but this must not happen
by acting irresponsibly in one of the world’s most strategic and economically
important regions. The White House must consider the risks of a covert Iranian
nuclear program; its stockpiling of HEU under the NPT umbrella; increasing
Iranian knowhow in designing and developing newer centrifuges; the prospect of
Tehran creating smaller reactors; and, last but not least, its long-range,
high-speed and heavy payload-carrying ballistic and cruise missiles. The US
returning to the JCPOA against the backdrop of such Iranian aggression would
further undermine the spirit of the flawed nuclear deal, which Iran’s neighbors
have not found comforting.
*Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami is President of the International Institute for Iranian
Studies (Rasanah). Twitter: @mohalsulami
Israel-Gaza conflict only serves to benefit Hamas, Iran,
Israeli far-right
Nadim Shehadi/Al Arabiya/17 May ,2021
The current war between Israel and Hamas is a victory for both Iran’s “Axis of
Resistance” and benefits Israel’s far-right. It cannot end well for Israel, and
comes at the expense of Palestinian lives, and regional peace processes.
Hamas has won this war even before it ends. It is a victory against Hamas’
Palestinian and Arab rivals, who sought peace through negotiations. Israel
gifted this to Hamas by giving it the opportunity to take the moral high ground,
Israel lost because it has no options itself for a good outcome.
As it stands Israel cannot stop bombing Gaza, that would be capitulation. It
also cannot continue bombing Gaza, there is a limit to how many people Israel
can kill with no clear objective. Killing for the sake of killing is not a
strategy. Israel’s friends in the region are humiliated, its enemies triumphant.
Someone needs to save Israel from itself.
Wars can result in moral and political victories even when accompanied by
military defeats. The 1956 Suez War is a prime example. Gamal Abdel Nasser
emerged much stronger after losing the war, and regimes dominated by colonels
emulating his model of Arab nationalism sprang up throughout the region.
This is also reminiscent of the summer of 2006, when a war in Gaza was provoked
by Hamas abducting an Israeli soldier and resembles the 2006 Lebanon war –
triggered by Hezbollah crossing the border and the associated killing of eight
Israeli soldiers and abduction of a further two. Both were accompanied by rocket
attacks that caused panic in Israel, shutting down the airport and sending
terrorized Israeli citizens to underground shelters amid the sound of sirens.
Israel fell into the trap on both occasions and reacted with what is
euphemistically described as disproportionate violence. Both Gaza and Lebanon
suffered huge destruction and civilian casualties. Hamas and Hezbollah, however,
proved that armed resistance can achieve what years of negotiations could not:
Israel was later forced to release hundreds of prisoners and the paralysis
caused by the rocket attacks was seen as a deterrent.
Today, the optics could not have been worse for Israel. Refugees are being
publicly evicted and replaced by Jewish settlers in East Jerusalem. At the
center of this conflict is the Arab neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, where most of
the city’s foreign consulates are located.
It is also difficult to imagine worse timing. On one of the holiest evenings of
the month of Ramadan, the Israeli army stormed the al-Aqsa mosque and shot at
people during prayers. Palestinians had been protesting a ban against gathering
in public places, such as the Damascus Gate of the old city, during the festive
evenings.The backdrop also includes an annual hate march by Israelis chanting
anti-Arab slogans. This was Israel at its worse, resuscitating memories of the
1948 Nakba, a few days before its anniversary. It triggered an unprecedented
wave of protests by Palestinian citizens of Israel in major cities from Lydda to
Jaffa and Acre.
This was too good an opportunity to miss. Hamas gave Israel an ultimatum that
Israel was obviously going to disregard and attacked with more sophisticated
missiles than ever before. For the Israelis it was like a recurring nightmare,
with sirens, shelters, and civilian casualties. Worst of all, Israel reacted
predictably with brute force, with air raids and bombings causing heavy civilian
casualties.
At the same time Hamas proceeded to declare itself the protector of the al-Aqsa
mosque, the savior of refugees, and called for their right of return, all while
riding the spreading wave of protests by Palestinian citizens across Israel.
This was all eloquently articulated by Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, who
reiterated that armed resistance is the only path to protection, and shamed both
the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), and the Palestinian authority for
achieving nothing through years of negotiations. He also discredited the recent
Abraham Accords of normalization of relations between Arab countries and Israel,
and went on a fundraising tour of Qatar and Kuwait.
For Hamas this was a win-win scenario, using the same logic as that of
Iran-backed Hezbollah: That the arms of the resistance are the only protection
against Israeli aggression. Its message was further legitimized by a flood of
dramatic videos circulating all over the media. One showed a woman calmly
pleading with a settler to give her back her home in Sheikh Jarrah. Others had
apocalyptic scenes of trees catching fire around the al-Aqsa Mosque, and of
soldiers attacking protestors and overturning food carts.
While Hamas may have achieved all its objectives even while the battle is still
raging, it is difficult to imagine what Israel’s options are to end the war with
tangible results. Israel cannot stop its operations, nor can it continue without
defining achievable goals. This is the same situation if found itself in the
Lebanon war of 2006 with only lose-lose scenarios.
This is also a war that affects elections on both sides. It may benefit both
Hamas and Prime Minister Netanyahu. It is a perfect illustration of how radicals
feed on each other and their actions mutually validate and legitimize their
positions. For the far-right in Israel, it is in their interest to portray
Palestinians as all being Hamas terrorists with whom negotiations are
impossible. Similarly for Hamas, a figure like Netanyahu confirms that armed
struggle is the only option, and that the PLO’s agenda of peace is unachievable
and does not provide any protection against Israeli aggression. War ultimately
benefits the warmongers and gets them votes by discrediting their internal
opponents.
This could have broader regional repercussions, embarrassing the signatories of
the Abraham Accords. It is a setback to any possible peace in the region. Iran
and the Axis of Resistance win again, and it is a boost for Iran-backed militias
in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Yemen and of course Palestine. Israel with its actions
may have given them all a new lease of life.
There is, however, a major difference with the summer wars of 2006. Those with
the highest stakes in this game are now from a new generation, and their
aspirations are for that of a better future. They are protesting across the
region against the establishment that has kept them in a state of war for over
70 years. Palestinian protests are part of that, they deserve better leadership.