LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS
BULLETIN
April 10/17
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The
Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/newselias/english.april10.17.htm
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Bible Quotations For Today
Whatever you
ask for in prayer with faith, you will receive
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 21/17-27/:"Jesus left
them, went out of the city to Bethany, and spent the night there. In the
morning, when he returned to the city, he was hungry. And seeing a fig tree by
the side of the road, he went to it and found nothing at all on it but leaves.
Then he said to it, ‘May no fruit ever come from you again!’ And the fig tree
withered at once. When the disciples saw it, they were amazed, saying, ‘How did
the fig tree wither at once?’ Jesus answered them, ‘Truly I tell you, if you
have faith and do not doubt, not only will you do what has been done to the fig
tree, but even if you say to this mountain, "Be lifted up and thrown into the
sea", it will be done. Whatever you ask for in prayer with faith, you will
receive.’ When he entered the temple, the chief priests and the elders of the
people came to him as he was teaching, and said, ‘By what authority are you
doing these things, and who gave you this authority?’ Jesus said to them, ‘I
will also ask you one question; if you tell me the answer, then I will also tell
you by what authority I do these things. Did the baptism of John come from
heaven, or was it of human origin?’ And they argued with one another, ‘If we
say, "From heaven", he will say to us, "Why then did you not believe him?" But
if we say, "Of human origin", we are afraid of the crowd; for all regard John as
a prophet.’ So they answered Jesus, ‘We do not know.’ And he said to them,
‘Neither will I tell you by what authority I am doing these things."
Those who have once been enlightened, and have tasted the
heavenly gift, and have shared in the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the goodness
of the word of God and the powers of the age to come, and then have fallen away,
since on their own they are crucifying again the Son of God and are holding him
up to contempt.
Letter to the Hebrews 06/01-09/:"Let us go on towards perfection, leaving behind
the basic teaching about Christ, and not laying again the foundation: repentance
from dead works and faith towards God, instruction about baptisms, laying on of
hands, resurrection of the dead, and eternal judgement. And we will do this, if
God permits.For it is impossible to restore again to repentance those who have
once been enlightened, and have tasted the heavenly gift, and have shared in the
Holy Spirit, and have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the powers of
the age to come, and then have fallen away, since on their own they are
crucifying again the Son of God and are holding him up to contempt. Ground that
drinks up the rain falling on it repeatedly, and that produces a crop useful to
those for whom it is cultivated, receives a blessing from God. But if it
produces thorns and thistles, it is worthless and on the verge of being cursed;
its end is to be burned over. Even though we speak in this way, beloved, we are
confident of better things in your case, things that belong to salvation."
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published on April 09-10/17
Once again Egyptian peaceful Christians are brutally targeted and
murdered inside their Churches/Elias Bejjani/April 09/17
Who are Egypt's Coptic Christians/Naharnet/Agence France Presse/April 09/17/
Why Does the West Keep Colluding with Terrorists/Douglas Murray/Gatestone
Institute/April 09/17
It’ll Take More Than a Missile Strike to Clean Up Obama’s Mess in Syria/Robert
Kagan/The Washington Post/April 09/17
Counter-Propaganda against US Strike on Syria/Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Al Sharq Al
Awsat/April 09/17
Shayrat Attack… Significant but Insufficient/Salman Al-dossary/Al Sharq Al Awsat/April
09/17
Continued bombing by Assad shows limits of single U.S. attack/David Nakamura/The
Washington Post/April 09/17
Titles For Latest Lebanese Related News published
on April 09-10/17
Once again Egyptian peaceful Christians are brutally targeted and
murdered inside their Churches
Church bombings in Egypt kill 37, wound dozens
43 Dead, 118 Hurt as IS Blasts Hit Two Egypt Churches
Al-Rahi Urges Politicians to 'Reconcile with People' with New Electoral Law
5 Dead, 32 Hurt as Heavy Ain el-Hilweh Clashes Continue for 3rd Day
Berri Warns of 'Plots to Bury Palestine Cause' after Ain el-Hilweh Clashes
Christian Parties to Boycott Any Session Aimed at Extending Parliament Term
Qaouq: Electoral Law Course from Bad to Worse, U.S. Tomahawks Overflew Lebanon
Lebanon Registered Ship Hijacked Off Somalia Freed
Aoun to Sisi: We condemn the bombings of the two churches and stand in
solidarity with you in face of terrorism
Riachy calls on Egyptians to ring bells, raise prayer calls against terrorism
Hezbollah denounces bombings in Egypt: Aim at Christian displacement from Sinai
and the region, open the door for sedition and sectarian division
Jumblatt cables Sisi, Twadros II offering condolences in wake of recent
terrorist bombings
Derian denounces Egypt deadly blasts
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 09-10/17
Who are Egypt's Coptic Christians?
Egypt’s Sisi declares three-month state of emergency
Coptic Christians rage at Tanta security chief over shortfalls
Pope on Palm Sunday decries suffering from war, terrorism
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman sends letter of condolence to Egypt’s Sisi
Muslim Egyptians donate blood to deadly church blast victims
Assad allies: US attack on Syria air base crosses 'red lines'
U.S. Envoy Says Assad Must Go after 'Chemical Attack'
Norway Police Destroy Suspect Device in Oslo
Iraq Forces Foil Double Car Bomb Attack at Syria Border
Election Campaigning Makes Muted Start in Algeria
First Palm Sunday since IS in Iraq's Main Christian Town
Iran: Remarks by Chair of Foreign Affairs Committee of NCRI, on Rouhani's
Position on Assad's Chemical Attack on the Syrian People
Iran: Raisi's Candidacy Intensifies Crisis Within the Regime
Iran: Ascending Trend of Population Living in City Outskirts
Bereaved Syrian father: US missile strike not enough
Al Shabaab car bomb outside Mogadishu army base kills at least 15
France expels Swiss Islamist grandson of Brotherhood founder
Joint naval maneuvers between Oman and Iran begin
Rex Tillerson on Syria: Our ‘first priority’ is to eliminate the ISIS threat
Iraq’s Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr urges Syria’s Assad to step down
Erdogan holds giant Istanbul rally week ahead of referendum
Links From
Jihad Watch Site for
April 09-10/17
Egypt: Second Palm Sunday church bombing, killing at least one at St. Mark’s
Cathedral in Alexandria
Islamic State claims responsibility for the two church bombings in Egypt
Video: Inside the church in Tanta, Egypt right after the jihad bombing
Egypt: Muslims bomb church north of Cairo on Palm Sunday, murdering at least 21
and injuring 38
Video: The moment a jihad-martyrdom suicide bomber blows himself up at
Alexandria’s St. Mark’s Cathedral
Tillerson: “The first priority is the defeat of ISIS”
Stockholm truck jihad attacker was known to have “extremist sympathies” and was
ordered deported, but wasn’t
Stockholm police: Truck jihad attack suspect was asylum-seeker whose application
was rejected
Sweden: Muslims throw stones at police officers arresting Stockholm jihad attack
suspects
Tunisia: British DJ sentenced to a year in jail for Muslim prayer remix
Links From
Christian Today Site
on April 09-10/17
ISIS claims responsibility for Egypt church bombings killing 36, injuring 100;
Church leaders condemn attacks
UK backs Trump missile strike on Syrian airbase, Russia condemns move against
'sovereign nation'
WATCH: Archbishop of Canterbury speaks to Christian Today about life, prayer and
the hope of the resurrection
North Korea calls US strikes on Syria 'unforgivable act of aggression'
Mike Pence pledges US support for Iraq's war on ISIS
World's Catholic population grows to 1.3 billion: Church surges in Africa amid
priest shortage in Europe
Latest Lebanese Related News published
on April 09-10/17
Once again Egyptian peaceful
Christians are brutally targeted and murdered inside their Churchesاغصان
الزيتون امتزجت بالدم في كنائس مصر
Elias Bejjani/April 09/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=54170
“I have told you this so that you might have peace in me. In the world you will
have trouble, but take courage, I have conquered the world.” (John 16-33)
The least ethical and human obligation that any peace loving person would do
today, is to strongly condemn the barbaric, savage and fundamentalist assault
that targeted two Coptic churches in Egypt, as the peaceful Egyptian Coptic
Christian parishioners were observing and celebrating Palm Sunday, one of the
most important days on the Christian Church calendar. The vicious attack killed
more than 36 innocent parishioners and injured at least sixty others, many of
them are in critical condition.The coward assailants attacked the Christian
civil and peaceful parishioners while they were worshiping and praying. This
vicious assault reaches the realm of a series of similar previous and ongoing
fanatic attacks against Egyptian Christians and their churches in several
Egyptian provinces and territories.
It is worth mentioning that the Egyptian Christian human rights’ status is
extremely traumatizing and worrisome as well as their physical safety.
The same humiliating and persecutory status is inflicted on all minorities in
the majority of the Middle East countries in general and in particular in Egypt,
Iraq, Sudan, Algeria, Libya.
The persecution against Christians and other minorities in these counties is an
official and formal practice legitimized by biased laws and regulations.
At the same time, this phenomenon of anti-human rights practices is widely
encouraged, nurtured and cultivated through education of hatred, fundamentalism,
rejection of the other and ignorance.
What is unfortunate, pitiful and sad is that the governments of many middle east
countries adopt such practices while the free world keeps a blind eye or in the
best scenario limits its condemnation to mere rhetoric levels.
The horrible and barbaric crime of today is strongly denounced. The Free World
has an obligation to protect Egypt’s Christians & the Middle East minorities.
We, call on the free world countries, the United Nations, the Vatican and on all
the Human Rights organizations to be loud in their public stances of
condemnation and to develop a world wide plan and strategy to protect the Middle
East Christians as well as all other minorities.
Our deepest sympathies are extended to the families and friends of those killed
today, and all wishes for a speedy recovery to all the injured. May the souls of
all those innocent victims that were killed today rest in peace.
Background
Church bombings in Egypt kill 37, wound dozens
Associated Press/April 09/17/TANTA, Egypt — Bombs tore through two
Egyptian churches in different cities as worshippers were marking Palm Sunday,
killing at least 37 people and wounding around 100 in an assault claimed by the
Islamic State group.
In the first, attack, a bomb exploded at Saint George church in the Nile Delta
city of Tanta, killing at least 26 people and wounding over 70, officials said.
Later, an explosion hit Saint Mark's Cathedral in the coastal city of
Alexandria, the historic seat of Christendom in Egypt, killing at least 11
people and wounding 35 just after Pope Tawadros II finished services. His aides
later told local media that he had escaped unharmed.
IS claimed the attacks via its Aamaq news agency, after having recently warned
that it would step up attacks on Egypt's Christians.
The blasts came at the start of Holy Week leading up to Easter, and just weeks
before Pope Francis is due to visit the Arab world's most populous country.
CBC TV showed footage from inside the church in Tanta, where a large number of
people gathered around what appeared to be lifeless, bloody bodies covered with
papers. Regional Deputy Health Minister Mohammed Sharshar confirmed the toll.
Across the street, neighbour Susan Mikhail, whose apartment has a clear balcony
view of the church and its front yard, said the explosion violently shook her
building midmorning, at a time when the church was packed.
"Deacons were the first to run out of the church. Many of them had blood on
their white robes," she told The Associated Press. Later, the more seriously
wounded started to come out, carried in the arms of survivors and ferried to
hospitals in private cars, she said.
Pope Francis decried the bombings, expressing "deep condolences to my brother,
Pope Tawadros II, the Coptic church and all of the dear Egyptian nation." Word
of the attacks came as Francis himself was marking Palm Sunday in St. Peter's
Square.
Grand Sheikh Ahmed el-Tayeb, head of Egypt's Al-Azhar — the leading centre of
learning in Sunni Islam — likewise condemned the attacks, calling them a
"despicable terrorist bombing that targeted the lives of innocents."
Both Israel and the Islamic Hamas movement ruling neighbouring Gaza also
condemned the bombings.
The bombings add to fears that Islamic extremists who have long been battling
security forces in the Sinai Peninsula are shifting their focus to civilians.
An Islamic State affiliate claimed a suicide bombing at a Cairo church in
December that killed around 30 people, mostly women, as well as a string of
killings in the restive northern Sinai that caused hundreds of Christians to
flee to safer areas of the country.
The group recently released a video vowing to step up attacks against
Christians, who it describes as "infidels" empowering the West against Muslims.
Egypt has struggled to combat a wave of Islamic militancy since the 2013
military overthrow of an elected Islamist president.
The Sinai-based IS affiliate has mainly attacked police and soldiers, but has
also claimed bombings that killed civilians, including the downing of a Russian
passenger plane over the Sinai in 2015, which killed all 224 people on board and
devastated Egypt's tourism industry.
Egypt's Copts are one of the oldest Christian communities in the Middle East.
They have long complained of discrimination and that the government does not do
enough to protect them.
Egyptian media had previously reported that the church in Tanta had been
targeted in the past, with a bomb defused there in late March.
The Copts were largely supportive of the military overthrow of Islamist
President Mohammed Morsi, and incurred the wrath of many Islamists, who attacked
churches and other Christian institutions after his ouster.
**Associated Press writers Maamoun Youssef and Maggie Michael in Cairo and
Bassem Mroue in Beirut contributed to this report.
Hamza Hendawi, The Associated Press
43 Dead, 118 Hurt as IS
Blasts Hit Two Egypt Churches
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/April 09/17/The Islamic State group claimed
responsibility for bombing two Egyptian churches as worshipers gathered to mark
Palm Sunday, killing at least 43 people in the deadliest attacks on the Coptic
Christian minority in recent memory. The attacks followed a Cairo church bombing
in December and came weeks before a planned visit by Catholic Pope Francis
intended to show support for Egypt's Christian minority. The first bombing at
the Mar Girgis church in Tanta city north of Cairo killed 27 people, the health
ministry said. "I just felt fire grabbing my face. I pushed my brother who was
sitting next to me and then I heard people saying: 'explosion'," a wounded
witness in hospital told state television. Emergency services had scrambled to
the scene when another blast rocked Saint Mark's church in Alexandria where
Coptic Pope Tawadros II had been leading a Palm Sunday service. Sixteen people
including three police officers were killed in that attack, which the interior
ministry said was caused by a suicide bomber who blew himself up when prevented
from entering the church. The ministry said Tawadros was unharmed, and a church
official said he left before the explosion. The private CBC Extra channel aired
footage of the Alexandria blast, with CCTV showing what appeared to be the
church entrance engulfed in a ball of flame and flying concrete moments after a
security guard turned away a man.
Eyewitnesses said a police officer detected the bomber before he blew himself
up.
At least 78 people were wounded in Tanta and 40 in Alexandria, the health
ministry said.
Officials denounced the violence as an attempt to sow divisions in Egypt, and
Francis sent his "deep condolences" to Tawadros. IS claimed its "squads" carried
out both attacks, in a statement by its self-styled Amaq news agency published
on social media. After the bombings, President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi ordered
military deployments to guard "vital and important infrastructure", his office
said. State television reported that the interior minister sacked the provincial
head of security and replaced him after the attack. There were bloodstains on
the floor of the church in Tanta, next to shredded wooden benches. On March 29,
the Mar Girgis church's Facebook page said a "suspicious" device had been found
outside the building that security services removed. "I heard the blast and came
running. I found people torn up... some people, only half of their bodies
remained," said Nabil Nader, who lives in front of the Tanta church. Worshipers
had been celebrating Palm Sunday, one of the holiest days in the Christian
calendar, marking Jesus' triumphant entrance to Jerusalem.
Pope prays for victims
Francis, who is due to visit Cairo on April 28-29, offered prayers for the
victims.
"Let us pray for the victims of the attack unfortunately carried out today," he
said in an Angelus prayer. "May the Lord convert the heart of those who sow
terror, violence and death and also the heart of those who make weapons and
trade in them."
Copts, who make up about one tenth of Egypt's population of more than 92 million
and who celebrate Easter next weekend, have been targeted by several attacks in
recent months. Jihadists and Islamists accuse Copts of supporting the military
overthrow of Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in 2013, which ushered in a deadly
crackdown on his supporters. In December, a suicide bombing claimed by IS killed
29 worshipers in a Cairo church adjacent to the papal seat. The group
later released a video threatening Egypt's Christians with more attacks. A spate
of jihadist-linked attacks in Egypt's restive Sinai Peninsula, including the
murder of a Copt in the city of El Arish whose house was also burned, led some
Coptic families to flee. About 250 Christians took refuge in the Suez Canal city
of Ismailiya after IS released a video in February calling for attacks on the
minority.
U.S. President Donald Trump led international condemnation of Sunday's attacks.
"So sad to hear of the terrorist attack in Egypt. U.S. strongly condemns. I have
great confidence that President Al Sisi will handle situation properly," he
tweeted.
String of attacks
Prime Minister Sherif Ismail condemned the attack, stressing Egypt's
determination to "eliminate terrorism."The Cairo-based al-Azhar, an influential
Sunni Muslim authority, said it aimed to "destabilize security and... the unity
of Egyptians."Egypt's Copts have endured successive attacks since Morsi's ouster
in July 2013. More than 40 churches were attacked nationwide in the two weeks
after the deadly dispersal by security forces of two pro-Morsi protest camps in
Cairo on August 14 that year, Human Rights Watch said. Sisi, who as then army
chief helped remove Morsi, has defended his security forces and accused
jihadists of attacking Copts in order to divide the country. In October 2011,
almost 30 people -- mostly Coptic Christians -- were killed after the army
charged at a protest outside the state television building in Cairo to denounce
the torching of a church in southern Egypt. A few months earlier, the unclaimed
New Year's Day bombing of a Coptic church killed more than 20 people in second
city Alexandria.
Al-Rahi Urges Politicians
to 'Reconcile with People' with New Electoral Law
Naharnet/April 09/17/Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi on Sunday called on
politicians to “reconcile with people” through a new electoral law that gives
them the right to hold their representatives accountable. “This reconciliation
requires them to pull the people out of the state of poverty which has started
to affect one third of the population... and to respect their dignity through
granting value to their votes in the elections and giving them the right to
accountability,” said al-Rahi in his Palm Sunday sermon.He said the new
electoral law should be tailored to fit the interests of the people and the
country, “not the interests of political feudalism and influential parties.”The
politicians' “reconciliation” with people also requires them to “protect the
funds of the treasury, which are the funds of the people,” al-Rahi added, urging
the political forces to put an end to “the theft and waste of public money,
bribery and tax evasion.”
5 Dead, 32 Hurt as Heavy Ain el-Hilweh Clashes Continue for
3rd Day
Associated Press/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 09/17/At least five people
have been killed and 32 others wounded in three days of fierce clashes at the
Palestinian refugee camp of Ain el-Hilweh in the southern city of Sidon,
state-run National News Agency said. NNA identified the fifth victim killed in
the fighting between the Joint Palestinian Security Forces and hardline
Islamists led by Bilal Badr as Firas Balous. Ambulances were rushing the wounded
to hospitals near Ain el-Hilweh as the sounds of rocket-propelled grenades and
gunfire echo from inside. On Saturday, local Palestinian commander Subhi Abu
Arab vowed to crush the followers of radical preacher Bilal Badr. The clashes
erupted in the camp on Friday as the Joint Palestinian Security Force started
deploying throughout the camp. It came under fire from Badr's Islamist group in
part of the camp, which sparked fierce clashes.Among the dead were two
civilians, two members of the Joint Force and one member of the extremist group,
medical sources said. The fighting has prompted security measures outside the
camp, which Lebanese security forces do not enter by long-standing agreement. An
adjacent highway has been cut and patients moved from the Sidon governmental
hospital next to the camp. Palestinian officials in the camp called Sunday on
remaining members of Badr's group to surrender with their weapons. Salah al-Ali,
a resident of the camp, said there was damage from shelling inside the camp. "We
ask from God that the situation calms down so that we can return to our homes,"
he said at Sidon's Musally mosque, where he was taking shelter. The spokesman
for the Council of Palestinian Scholars in Lebanon said the radical groups were
issuing fatwas authorizing the killing of people they disagreed with. "This has
led to chaos in Ain el-Hilweh," said Sheikh Mohammed al-Muwad, in his office in
Sidon. "These groups do not abide by any oaths or promises."Ain el-Hilweh is
home to multiple armed factions, and has been plagued by intermittent clashes
between them as well as against smaller extremist groups. Lebanon's army does
not enter Palestinian refugee camps, where security is managed by joint
committees of Palestinian factions.
Ain el-Hilweh is home to some 61,000 Palestinians, including 6,000 who have fled
the war in Syria.
Berri Warns of 'Plots to Bury Palestine Cause' after Ain
el-Hilweh Clashes
Naharnet/April 09/17/Speaker Nabih Berri on Sunday raised the alarm over the
ongoing deadly clashes at the Ain el-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp, in a rare
comment over the recurrent violence there. “Who benefits from preventing the
Joint Palestinian Security Force from deploying in the Ain el-Hilweh camp after
all national and Islamist Palestinian factions and forces agreed on its role in
consolidating security and stability in the camp?” Berri asked in a statement.
“Is there an attempt to keep the biggest Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon a
bleeding wound in order to cover up for the schemes and plots that are being
orchestrated in black rooms with the aim of burying the Palestinian cause and
usurping the last of the Palestinian people's rights, which is the right to
return to their homeland?” the speaker added. “Our bet has always been and will
always be on the awareness of the Palestinian leaders and people and their
ability to thwart all attempts aimed at plunging the Palestinian camps, topped
by the Ain el-Hilweh camp, into the inferno of internal and continuous strife,
which only benefits Israel,” Berri went on to say. The toll in three days of
clashes in Ain el-Hilweh rose to five dead and 32 injured on Sunday, as local
factions worked to implement a security plan. Clashes erupted in the camp on
Friday as Palestinian factions participating in a joint security force begun
deploying throughout the camp. They came under fire from a local Islamic
extremist group in part of the camp. The fighting has prompted security measures
outside the camp, which Lebanese security forces do not enter by long-standing
agreement. An adjacent highway has been cut and patients moved from the Sidon
governmental hospital next to the camp. Palestinian officials in the camp called
Sunday on remaining members of a group led by local extremist Bilal Badr to
surrender with their weapons. Ain el-Hilweh is home to multiple armed factions,
and has been plagued by intermittent clashes between them as well as against
smaller extremist groups.
The camp is home to some 61,000 Palestinians, including 6,000 who have fled the
war in Syria.
Christian Parties to Boycott Any Session Aimed at Extending
Parliament Term
Naharnet/April 09/17/The Free Patriotic Movement, the Lebanese Forces and the
Kataeb Party intend to boycott any parliamentary session aimed at extending the
legislature's term in the absence of a new electoral law, a senior FPM official
told al-Hayat daily in remarks published Sunday. The Cabinet is scheduled to
convene on Monday to discuss the latest proposed electoral law formats. Reports
have said that Speaker Nabih Berri might call for a parliament session aimed at
extending the legislature's term should the parties fail to agree on a new
electoral law.
But the FPM and the LF have rejected even a so-called “technical extension” of
the parliament's term, which prompted Berri to accuse them of seeking
parliamentary “vacuum.”The country has not organized parliamentary elections
since 2009 and the parliament has since extended its own mandate twice.
Qaouq: Electoral Law Course from Bad to Worse, U.S.
Tomahawks Overflew Lebanon
Naharnet/April 09/17/Hizbullah central council member Sheikh Nabil Qaouq warned
Sunday that “the course of the electoral law is going from bad to worse,” noting
that the Tomahawk missiles that U.S. warships fired at a Syrian airbase at dawn
Friday had “violated Lebanon's airspace.”“Our eyes today are on the course of
the Lebanese parliamentary elections, because the course of the electoral law is
going from bad to worse and the crisis over it is becoming more difficult and
complicated, especially that some political forces are still making adventures,
procrastinating and maneuvering without caring about the country's fate,” Qaouq
cautioned. “Meanwhile, we are keen on rescuing the country, which will head
quickly towards certain dangers unless the Lebanese agree on a new electoral
law. That's why we are exerting efforts to agree on a law that ensures correct
and fair representation,” Qaouq added, noting that “the efforts will be
intensified in the next few days, which represent the last chance.”Separately,
Qaouq announced that “the U.S. aggression against Syria posed a direct threat to
Lebanon and violated the Lebanese sovereignty.”“What would have happened if any
of the 59 missiles that crossed Lebanon's airspace fell on any Lebanese city or
village? Didn't that pose a threat to Lebanon? Doesn't Lebanon have sanctity and
sovereignty that prevent the U.S. from violating the Lebanese sovereignty
without any accountability?” Qaouq added. The missile strike against a Syrian
airbase marks the first time the United States has directly attacked the regime
of President Bashar al-Assad. Hizbullah has sent thousands of fighters across
the border to bolster Assad's forces against an Islamist-led uprising. At around
3:40 am Syria time on Friday the U.S. military fired 59 Tomahawk missiles at the
Shayrat airfield near Homs in central Syria. According to the Pentagon, as well
as hosting Syrian aircraft the facility was used to store chemical weapons. The
Tomahawks targeted aircraft, hardened aircraft shelters, petroleum and
logistical storage, ammunition supply bunkers, air defense systems and radars,
the Pentagon said. Pentagon spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis said the strike
lasted "a couple of minutes."U.S. intelligence agents believe aircraft from
Shayrat conducted a suspected chemical weapons attack on April 4 in the
rebel-held Idlib town of Khan Sheikhun. The strike was launched from the
destroyers USS Porter and USS Ross in the eastern Mediterranean. A Russian air
unit was based at the airfield, a US military official said, with anywhere from
12-100 personnel. The Pentagon warned these forces ahead of the strike using a
special military-to-military hotline. A U.S. official said the strike was
designed to avoid casualties. "Every precaution was taken to execute this strike
with minimal risk to personnel at the airfield," he said.The Syrian army in a
statement said six people were killed at the base and that the attack caused
"significant damage." The SANA state news agency said four children were among
nine civilians killed in surrounding villages. U.S. officials stressed the
strike was a direct reaction to the chemical attack, and not the beginning of a
broader military campaign against Assad. Damascus government ally Russia said
the strike constituted an "aggression against a sovereign state" and suspended a
bilateral agreement to help avoid clashes in the skies over Syria.
Lebanon Registered Ship Hijacked Off Somalia Freed
Associated Press/Naharnet/April 09/17/A Lebanese registered ship hijacked off
the coast of war-torn Somalia has been freed, says a shipping expert. The
pirates who boarded the ship Saturday abandoned it Sunday before naval forces
rescued the ship, Mohamed Abdirahman, former director of Puntland's marine
forces, told The Associated Press. The pirates were unable to take the crew
hostage because they locked themselves in a safe room said Abdirahman. No
pirates were arrested and international naval forces are now escorting the ship,
he said. The ship hijacked off the coast of war-torn Yemen is a cargo vessel
owned by a Lebanon-registered company, a United Nations agency confirmed Sunday.
The hijacking was the latest in a resurgence of piracy in the waters off Somalia
and Yemen, one of the world's crucial sea trade routes. The OS 35, which can
carry non-liquid cargoes like grain or iron ore, is registered by Oldstone Cargo
Ltd, which lists its business address in Tripoli, Lebanon, said the
International Maritime Organization. The OS 35 is Oldstone's only ship
registered with the U.N. Oldstone could not be immediately reached for comment.
The pirates managed to board the ship Saturday evening near Yemen's Socotra
Island despite resistance from the crew, said Somali pirate, Bile Hussein.
Somali pirates in recent weeks have hijacked at least two vessels with foreign
crews in the waters off Somalia and Yemen, marking a return of the threat after
five years. In March, Somali pirates hijacked a Comoros-flagged oil tanker,
marking the first such seizure of a large commercial vessel since 2012. They
later released the vessel and its Sri Lankan crew without conditions.Pirates
later seized a fishing trawler, which Somali authorities warned could be used
for further piracy. Earlier this month, Somali pirates seized a small boat and
its 11 Indian crew members as the vessel passed through the narrow channel
between Socotra Island and Somalia's coast. Piracy off Somalia's coast was once
a serious threat to the global shipping industry. It has lessened in recent
years after an international effort to patrol near the country, whose weak
central government has been trying to assert itself after a quarter-century of
conflict. In December, NATO ended its anti-piracy mission off Somalia's waters.
But frustrations have been rising among Somali fishermen, including former
pirates, at what they say are foreign fishermen illegally fishing in local
waters.
Aoun to Sisi: We condemn the bombings of the two churches
and stand in solidarity with you in face of terrorism
Sun 09 Apr 201/NNA - President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, condemned
on Sunday the two terrorist crimes which targeted St. George Church in the
Egyptian City of Tanta and St. Mark Church in Alexandria. In a cable to Egyptian
President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi, Aoun expressed deepest condolences to the
Egyptian State and people and to the families of the fallen victims as a result
of said bombings. "Lebanon stands in solidarity with you in the face of
terrorism and all that aims to destabilize the security of your brotherly
country," asserted Aoun. The President also cabled Coptic Pope Twadros II of
Alexandria, denouncing the two bombings and offering sincerest condolences to
the victims' families while wishing fast healing to the wounded.
Riachy calls on Egyptians to ring bells, raise prayer calls
against terrorism
Sun 09 Apr 2017/NNA - Minister of Information Melhem Riachy
called, on Sunday, upon "Muslim and Christian brethrens in Egypt to ring church
bells and raise prayer calls against terrorism, in order to affirm the will of
peace and reveal it as a message to the West.""What happened in Egypt today is
part of the bloody and ignorant violence in the region," said Riachy, pointing
to "a positive aspect to this violence evident in the closeness of Muslims and
Christians, because both Islamic and Christian religions renounce
violence."Speaking in an interview to "New TV" Channel Station, Riachy stressed
on "insistence not to demonize Muslims in Egypt or any other region, as well as
Christians," adding that "this needs more dialogue," and that "the role of
Lebanon is undertaking such dialogue." Regarding the situation in Ain el-Hilweh
refugee camp, Riachy deemed that it was "not out of control," praising the
Army's awareness while referring to what is going on in the camp as "rearranging
the Palestinian situation." Over Monday's cabinet session, Riachy said: "This is
a meeting to discuss the election law, to remove Lebanon from the bottle neck."
He reiterated his rejection of the "60's Law" while stressing on "the need to
finalize a new law" and highlighting "the importance of representation,
especially for Christians."Riachy referred to Minister Gibran Bassil's recent
election law, considering that it "emphasizes the Christian vote without
neglecting the Muslim vote." He added that "sectarianism exists, without being
necessarily abhorrent," and called for "dealing with this sectarianism as a
matter of fact, but within the context of correcting the imbalance in Christian
representation, which has suffered injustice ever since 1992." Riachy expressed
respect for MP Boutros Harb's criticism of Gibran Bassil's recent law, adding
that "Bassil did not take into account certain calculations, but wished to
accord consideration to Christian representation."Responding to a question about
the reasons for postponement of elections without finding a solution, Riachy
said he supported "the principle of voting for an election law." He voiced
rejection of relativity "because it ensures numbers but eliminates
pluralism.""We want the proper representation of Christians, and this is
provided by the Bassil law, which leads to the election of about 55 Christian
deputies," said Riachy. He also refused to "accept the extension of the
Parliament Council's mandate without the completion of a new electoral
law."Riachy expressed confidence in the President of the Republic with regards
to reaching a new electoral law, noting that he would agree to a technical
extension draft of the Parliament's mandate till next September on condition of
reaching a new electoral law.
Hezbollah denounces bombings in Egypt: Aim at Christian
displacement from Sinai and the region, open the door for sedition and sectarian
division
Sun 09 Apr 2017/NNA - In an issued statement in wake of the two church bombings
in the Egyptian cities of Tanta and Alexandria on Sunday, Hezbollah Political
Party condemned the "heinous crimes committed by Daesh organization, which led
to the wounding and killing of dozens of innocent civilians.""These atrocious
acts aim at causing Christian displacement from Sinai and the whole region, as
well as opening the doorway for sedition and sectarian and ethic divisions which
serve the Zionist enemy," Hezbollah's statement indicated. The Party expressed
deepest condolences to the families of the fallen victims while wishing the
wounded speedy recovery. "Targeting the faithful in their churches in the
morning of the Eid is the embodiment of barbarism in all its meanings, and
evidence of said terrorist groups' loss of humanity," the statement added.
"These continuous and escalating killings by criminal gangs, in the name of
religion, are among the huge calamities that have plagued our nation, plotted
for by major powers and regional groups that support such terrorists and provide
them with political, financial and media back up," the statement went on. "We,
at Hezbollah, stand at this painful moment by Egypt and its people, and urge all
sides to realize the huge conspiracy against our nation and to remain united
against terrorists and their regional and international sponsors," the Party
statement concluded.
Jumblatt cables Sisi, Twadros II offering condolences in
wake of recent terrorist bombings
Sun 09 Apr 2017/NNA - "Democratic Gathering" Head, MP Walid Jumblatt, cabled on
Sunday Egyptian President, Abdel-Fattah Sisi, and Pope Twadros II of Alexandria,
condemning the two church bombings in the cities of Tanta and Alexandria.
Jumblatt considered that "the repeated acts of terrorism fall within the context
of a conspiracy aimed at striking stability and national unity in Egypt and
nurturing the spirit of sectarian strife and division, in a bid to weaken the
historic role of Egypt at the Arab and regional levels.""However, despite the
size and magnitude of the challenges, we are confident that the Egyptian
institutions and people can overcome this difficult and sensitive period,
thwarting the aims of such criminal attacks," asserted Jumblatt. He concluded by
expressing his sincere condolences to the Egyptian people and the families of
the fallen victims.
Derian denounces Egypt deadly blasts
Sun 09 Apr 2017/NNA - Mufti of Lebanon, Sheikh Abdul Latif Derian, condemned on
Sunday the two bomb attacks targeting two Egyptian churches. Mufti Derian said
that what happened today was a proof of an attempt to hit the Egyptian national
unity and ignite confessional strife between Muslims and Christians in Egypt. He
also offered his condolences to Egyptian President, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, and
Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria, Theodore II, wishing the
wounded a quick recovery.
Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 09-10/17
Who are Egypt's Coptic Christians?
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/April 09/17/
Egypt's Copts, targets of an apparent church bombing north of Cairo on Sunday,
are the Middle East's largest Christian minority and one of the oldest. Making
up about 10 percent of Egypt's population of 90 million, the Coptic Orthodox
form the largest Christian denomination in the Muslim-majority country.
Here is a recap of their history, their status today and recent attacks against
them.
'Dawn of Christianity'
The Copts trace their history to the dawn of Christianity, when Egypt was
integrated into the Roman and later the Byzantine empire. The word "Copt" comes
from the same root as the word for "Egyptian" in ancient Greek. The community's
decline started with the Arab invasions of the 7th century and the progressive
Islamization of the country, which today is largely Sunni Muslim. Several
churches and monasteries in Egypt are built on sites Copts believe were visited
by the Holy Family. The Bible says Joseph, Mary and Jesus sought refuge in Egypt
after Christ's birth to escape a massacre of newborns ordered by King Harod.
Copts today
Copts, represented in all social classes, are present across the whole country,
with the strongest concentration in central and southern Egypt.Most adhere to
the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria, headed since 2012 by Pope Tawadros II.
A minority is divided between Coptic Catholics and various Coptic Protestant
branches. Tawadros, who succeeded pope Shenuda III, was chosen by a blindfolded
altar boy picking his name from a chalice, according to tradition. The Catholic
Copts, who form part of the Church's eastern rite, have been headed by patriarch
Ibrahim Isaac Sidrak since 2013. The Vatican says some 165,000 Catholic Copts
lived in Egypt in 2010.Poorly represented in government, Copts complain that
they are sidelined from many posts in the justice system, universities and the
police.Authorities often refuse to issue building permits for churches, arguing
it would disturb the peace with their Muslim neighbors.
Deadly violence
Egypt's Copts have been the target of several deadly attacks since the 2011
uprising that toppled longtime president Hosni Mubarak. On January 1, 2011, more
than 20 people died in the unclaimed bombing of a Coptic church in Egypt's
second city, Alexandria. In March the same year, 13 people were killed in
clashes between Muslims and Copts in Cairo's working class neighborhood of
Moqattam, where around 1,000 Christians had gathered to protest over the
torching of a church. In May 2011, clashes between Muslims and Copts left 15
dead in the Cairo neighborhood of Imbaba, where two churches were attacked. That
October, almost 30 people -- mostly Coptic Christians -- were killed after the
army charged at a protest in Cairo to denounce the torching of a church in
southern Egypt. The 2013 ouster of Mubarak's elected Islamist successor Mohamed
Morsi after just one year in power sparked further attacks against Christians.
Pro-Morsi Islamists accused the Christian community of supporting his overthrow.
They pointed to the appearance of Tawadros alongside President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi
on television in July 2013 as the then army chief, also surrounded by Muslim and
opposition figures, announced Morsi's removal. The next month, security forces
used deadly force to break up two pro-Morsi protest camps in Cairo. The
following two weeks saw attacks against more than 40 churches across the
country, according to Human Rights Watch. Amnesty International later said more
than 200 Christian-owned properties were attacked and 43 churches seriously
damaged, with at least four people killed. In December last year, a suicide
bombing claimed by the Islamic State group killed 29 worshipers during a Sunday
mass in Cairo. A spate of deadly jihadist-linked attacks in Egypt's restive
Sinai Peninsula in February prompted some Coptic families to flee their homes.
About 250 Christians took refuge in the Suez Canal city of Ismailiya after IS
released a video calling for attacks against the minority. Pope Francis is set
to visit Cairo late this month for talks with the grand imam of the capital's
famed Al-Azhar mosque and to show solidarity with Coptic Christians.
Egypt’s Sisi declares three-month state of emergency
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Sunday, 9 April 2017/President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi
declared a three-month state of emergency in Egypt following twin church
bombings that killed dozens of people in two cities on Sunday. Under the
country's constitution, Sisi will have to put the measure before parliament,
which is stacked with his supporters, for approval within a week. Sisi announced
the "state of emergency for three months" in a defiant speech at the
presidential palace after a meeting of the national defense council. He also
announced the formation of a supreme council tasked with confronting terrorism
and extremism in Egypt. During the speech after Sunday's aftermath in Alexandria
and Tanta, Sisi also called on the international community to hold to account
states that have supported terrorists during the past few years. ISIS has
claimed responsibility for the church bombings in the Nile Delta cities of
Alexandria and Tanta in which at least 44 people were killed.
Coptic Christians rage at Tanta security chief over
shortfalls
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Monday, 10 April 2017/Coptic Christians in
Tanta attacked the city’s security chief amid claims he failed to provide
adequate protection after a deadly bombing attack that saw 27 people killed at
Mar Girgis church earlier on Sunday. In the wake of the attacks, the Tanta area
security chief Hossam El-Din Khalifa was relieved of duty, according to
state-owned Al Ahram news. The attack on Khalifa, which was caught on video,
reportedly took place at St. George's Cathedral. The explosion killed at least
27 people, and was followed hours later by a second bombing at a church in
Alexandria, which killed 17. Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi declared a
state of emergency for three months after the attacks. Under the country's
constitution, Sisi will have to put the measure before parliament, which is
stacked with his supporters, for approval within a week.
Pope on Palm Sunday decries suffering from war, terrorism
The Associated Press, Vatican City Sunday, 9 April 2017/Pope Francis on Sunday
decried a deadly attack on a Coptic church in Egypt during Palm Sunday
celebrations, just weeks before his planned visit to Cairo. The pontiff
expressed his “deep condolences” to the Coptic patriarch, Tawadros II, calling
him “my brother,” to the Coptic church and “all of the dear Egyptian nation,”
and said he was praying for the dead and injured in the attack that occurred
just hours earlier as Francis himself was marking Palm Sunday in St. Peter’s
Square. The pontiff asked God “to convert the hearts of those who spread terror,
violence and death, and also the hearts of those who make, and traffic in,
weapons.”The pope’s remarks on the church attack were handed to him on a piece
of paper after he remembered the victims of the Stockholm attack Friday night.
Tight security
The Palm Sunday celebrations in St. Peter’s Square were held under tight
security, with streets surrounding St. Peter’s Square blocked to traffic and
security search of the faithful entering the square. The pope and cardinals in
red robes led a solemn process clutching elaborately braided palm fronds as they
walked through the throngs, followed by the papal blessing of palm fronds and
olive branches. The processions recalls the bittersweet nature of Holy Week,
with the faithful clutching simple palm fronds and olive branches to commemorate
Jesus’ triumphant entrance into Jerusalem only to be followed later by his death
on a wooden cross. In his homily, the pope remembered the suffering in the world
today, citing those who “suffer from slave labor, from family tragedies, from
diseases ... They suffer from wars and terrorism, from interests that are armed
and ready to strike.”
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman sends letter of condolence to
Egypt’s Sisi
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Sunday, 9 April 2017/Saudi Arabia’s King Salman
has sent a letter of condolences to Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi
regarding the two terror bombing attacks in Alexandria and Tanta that claimed
the lives of at least 27 people. King Salman expressed sorrow regarding the news
of the “terrorist bombings that took place in the cities of Tanta and
Alexandria, and the resulting deaths and injuries. We express our deep
condemnation and condemnation of these two criminal acts.”“We affirm Saudi
Arabia's stand with the Arab Republic of Egypt and its brotherly people against
anyone who tries to undermine its security. And to the families of the brotherly
Arab Republic of Egypt and to the families of the victims on behalf of the
people and the government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and on our behalf, our
sincere condolences and sincere condolences. We wish their families patience and
solace and wish the injured a speedy recovery,” his letter to Sisi read. On
their parts, Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Naif and Deputy Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman also sent separate letters of condolences. An
official source of the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs has said Saudi Arabia
strongly condemns Sunday’s two deadly bombings of Coptic churches. The blasts
were in Margarges Church in the Egyptian city of Tanta and close to St Mark’s
Church in Alexandria, northern Egypt leaving dozens dead even more wounded. The
source confirmed said the ‘cowardly acts of terrorism were contrary to all
religious principles and moral and humanitarian values’.And he said the kingdom
offered its condolences to the families of the victims and the Arab Republic of
Egypt's government and people, wishing a speedy recovery for the wounded.
Muslim Egyptians donate blood to deadly church blast
victims
By Ashraf Abdelhamid Al Arabiya Net Sunday, 9 April 2017/Egyptian men and women
rushed to mosques in Tanta to donate blood for people injured in Sunday’s deadly
blast, which struck the Coptic Christian Church earlier in the day. Mohammed
Ahmad Hassan, a Tanta resident, said loudspeakers were used to call on people in
the city to head to mosques and donate blood to help those injured by the
attack. The call came bloods stocks at the hospitals were beginning to run out.
And he added said that it seemed a large proportion of those responding were
mostly Muslim. Hassan added that hundreds of blood bags were being delivered to
blood banks and the General Hospital where the injured were being treated.
Assad allies: US attack on
Syria air base crosses 'red lines'
Ynetnews/Associated Press/April 09/17
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Iran's Hassan Rouhani said in a phone call
that aggressive US actions against Syria were not permissible and violated
international law.
A joint command centre made up of the forces of Russia, Iran and militias
supporting Syrian President Bashar al Assad said the US strike on a Syrian air
base on Friday crossed "red lines" and it would respond to any new aggression
and increase its support for its ally.
The United States fired dozens of cruise missiles at a Syrian air base on Friday
from which it said a deadly chemical weapons attack had been launched earlier in
the week, escalating the US role in Syria and drawing criticism from Assad's
allies including Russia and Iran.
"What America waged in aggression against Syria is a crossing of red lines. From
now on we will respond with force to any aggressor or any breach of red lines
from whoever it is and America knows our ability to respond well," read the
statement.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, meanwhile, blamed Russian inaction for
helping fuel the chemical weapons attack it had reacted to, saying Moscow had
failed to carry out a 2013 agreement to secure and destroy chemical weapons in
Syria.
He said the United States expected Russia to take a tougher stance against Syria
by rethinking its alliance with Assad because "every time one of these horrific
attacks occurs, it draws Russia closer into some level of responsibility."
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Iran's Hassan Rouhani said in a phone call
that aggressive US actions against Syria were not permissible and violated
international law, the Kremlin said on Sunday.
The two leaders also called for an objective investigation into an incident
involving chemical weapons in Syria's Idlib and said they were ready to deepen
cooperation to fight terrorism, the Kremlin said in a statement on its website.
Syrian army forces had been losing ground across the country until Russia
intervened militarily in September 2015, propping up Assad and protecting its
own interests in the region.
Assad has also drawn heavily on foreign Shi'ite militias sponsored by Iran, led
by Lebanon's Hezbollah group, for his most important gains since the Russian
intervention.
The joint command centre also said the presence of US troops in northern Syria
where Washington has hundreds of special forces soldiers helping the Syrian
Democratic Forces (SDF) to oust ISIS was "illegal" and that Washington had a
long-term plan to occupy the area.
The regional alliance said the US cruise missile strikes on a Syrian base which
Washington said was involved in a chemical attack that killed dozens of
civilians would not deter their forces from "liberating" all of Syrian
territory.
Many Syrians opposed to Assad's rule consider Lebanon's Hezbollah and
Iranian-backed troops as occupiers seeking to drive out mainly Sunni Syrians
from the areas they live in. They hold Iran and its allies responsible for the
displacement of millions outside the country.
They also see Russia as a foreign occupier whose relentless aerial bombardment
of rebel-held areas has led to thousands of civilian casualties. Some accuse
Moscow of applying a "scorched-earth policy" that targets hospitals, schools and
residential areas more than frontlines to break the resolve of the anti-Assad
insurgency. In Iran, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the U.S. missile
strike was a "a strategic error, and a repeat of the mistakes of the past," the
state news agency IRNA reported. "The Islamic Republic has shown that.. it does
not back off and its people and officials ... do not retreat in the face of
threats," said Khamenei. Many Syrians opposed to Assad's rule consider Lebanon's
Hezbollah and Iranian-backed troops as occupiers seeking to drive out mainly
Sunni Syrians from the areas they live in. They hold Iran and its allies
responsible for the displacement of millions outside the country.
They also see Russia as a foreign occupier whose relentless aerial bombardment
of rebel-held areas has led to thousands of civilian casualties. Some accuse
Moscow of applying a "scorched-earth policy" that targets hospitals, schools and
residential areas more than frontlines to break the resolve of the anti-Assad
insurgency.
U.S. Envoy Says Assad Must Go after 'Chemical Attack'
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/April 09/17/Washington's U.N. ambassador said that
Syria's President Bashar al-Assad cannot stay in power after a suspected
chemical attack that prompted the first direct U.S. military action against his
government. Nikki Haley's comments in an interview airing Sunday came as part of
an apparent shift in U.S. policy towards Assad's government after the alleged
chemical attack last week on the rebel-held town of Khan Sheikhun that killed 87
people, including many children. Images of civilians suffering the apparent
effects of a gas attack, including convulsions, vomiting and foaming at the
mouth, provoked international outrage and prompted U.S. President Donald Trump
to order a strike on a Syrian airbase. In the interview with CNN, Haley said
peace in Syria was impossible with Assad in power. "There's not any sort of
option where a political solution is going to happen with Assad at the head of
the regime," she told the "State of the Union" program. "If you look at his
actions, if you look at the situation, it's going to be hard to see a government
that's peaceful and stable with Assad." "Regime change is something that we
think is going to happen," she said, adding that Washington was also focused on
fighting the Islamic State group in Syria and ending Iranian influence.
Tillerson: IS fight top priority
U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson insisted however that defeating IS in
Syria remained Washington's top priority. "It's important that we keep our
priorities straight. And we believe that the first priority is the defeat of
ISIS," Tillerson said in an interview with CBS television's "Face the Nation"
being broadcast later Sunday. "Once the ISIS threat has been reduced or
eliminated, I think we can turn our attention directly to stabilizing the
situation in Syria," he said, using an alternative acronym for IS. After years
of calling for Assad's removal during former president Barack Obama's tenure,
Washington appeared to be stepping back from seeking regime change in Syria in
recent weeks. Prior to the attack in Khan Sheikhun, Tillerson said Assad's fate
should be decided by the Syrian people, suggesting Washington would not oppose
him standing for reelection. And Haley too said Washington's priority was "no
longer to sit and focus on getting Assad out." But in the aftermath of the
attack, Trump ordered the strike targeting the Shayrat air base in central
Syria's Homs province with 59 Tomahawk missiles.
And his administration informed Congress that it could "take additional action,
as necessary and appropriate, to further its important national interests."
Iran's Rouhani calls Assad
Syria's government has denied any involvement in Tuesday's attack on Khan
Sheikhun, suspected to be the second-deadliest chemical weapons attack since the
country's war began in March 2011. It killed at least 87 civilians, including 31
children, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based
monitor. Hundreds more suffered symptoms that the World Health Organization said
were in some cases consistent with exposure to chemicals that include nerve gas.
The exact nature of the substance used in the attack has not been confirmed, and
Syria has insisted it would not and has not used chemical weapons. Assad's
government signed the Chemical Weapons Convention and agreed to turn over its
chemical armaments in 2013, after being accused of a sarin attack outside
Damascus that killed hundreds of people. But there have been repeated
allegations of chemical weapons use by the government since then. Syria's
closest allies Russia and Iran have defended Damascus against the allegations of
chemical weapons use, with Moscow saying a conventional strike hit a rebel depot
containing "toxic substances."Iran's President Hassan Rouhani called Assad to
reaffirm his support for the Syrian leader in the wake of the U.S. strike,
Rouhani's office said on Sunday. "The nation of Iran will remain alongside the
Syrian nation in fighting terrorism and safeguarding Syria's territorial
integrity," Rouhani said in the call on Saturday evening, according to a
statement on the presidency website. He said allegations that Assad's regime was
behind a chemical weapons attack were "baseless" and suggested it was carried
out by rebel groups to influence global public opinion. Moscow on Sunday also
slammed Britain after Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson cancelled a trip over
Russian support for Assad. The British have "no real influence," Russia's
foreign ministry said. More than 320,000 people have been killed in Syria since
the conflict began, and strikes have continued since the suspected chemical
attack. On Saturday, one woman was killed in a suspected Russian air strike on
Khan Sheikhun, the Observatory said. New strikes hit outside the town on Sunday,
with no immediate reports of casualties, the monitor added.
Norway Police Destroy Suspect Device in Oslo
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/April 09/17/Norwegian police said Sunday they had
destroyed a suspect "bomb-like" device in the capital Oslo and made one arrest,
on the heels of a deadly truck attack in neighboring Sweden killed four people.
"Bomb disposal officers carried out a controlled explosion overnight Saturday,"
a Norwegian police statement said. Police cordoned off part of the busy Gronland
district and evacuated local bars and restaurants after the crude device --
described as having the capacity to cause only limited damage -- was discovered
Saturday evening. Norway's PST police security agency is investigating. There
were no immediate further details. The device was discovered a day after four
people were killed and 15 injured after a truck rammed into shoppers in
Stockholm. Swedish police have detained a 39-year-old Uzbek man in connection
with that incident.
Iraq Forces Foil Double Car Bomb Attack at Syria Border
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/April 09/17/Iraqi forces on Sunday foiled a double
suicide car bomb attack by the Islamic State group on a remote border crossing
with Syria, officers and local officials said. "The attack was launched from the
desert on the Iraqi side of the border," said a senior military officer with an
army division stationed in Rutba, the nearest town. The Al-Walid crossing, which
lies 515 kilometers (320 miles) west of Baghdad, was attacked shortly after
midnight. "The attack was repelled by the tribal forces manning the crossing,
with the aerial support of the international coalition," the officer told AFP.
The officer and a local official from Anbar - the vast western province which
has borders with Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia -- said the tribal fighters
neutralized the two vehicles before they could reach the border position. The
Iraqi border guard has a presence at the Trebil border crossing with Jordan
further south but the Al-Walid post is guarded by a local tribal force known as
the Desert Hawks. It is comprised of around 100 men from Anbar clans and their
commander is Shaker al-Rishawi. Iraqi forces have over the past 18 months
retaken most of the major towns and cities in Anbar but IS retains some fixed
positions near the Syria border and some desert hideouts that allow it to
continue harassing government troops across the province.
Election Campaigning Makes Muted Start in Algeria
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/April 09/17/Campaigning for Algeria's May 4
elections got off to a muted start Sunday, with the public showing little
interest in the poll despite government efforts to persuade disillusioned voters
to participate. Over the coming three weeks, 12,000 candidates will compete for
462 seats in the People's National Assembly, with 23 million Algerians
registered to vote. But in Algiers, few parties posted candidate lists on the
boards reserved for them. Many people walked past hoardings without a glance.
"Every time, we are promised wonders and marvels, then: nothing," said Fatma
Zohra, a widow who said she is struggling to provide for her three children. The
cleaner in her fifties said she is unlikely to vote. "I don't have time for
that. I work at a company in the morning and in private homes in the afternoon,"
she said. Analyst Rachid Tlemcani predicted a "morose" election campaign and the
lowest turnout in the country's electoral history, blaming "the economic and
political situation and the fact that the public is fed up."
Government-sponsored advertisements play in a continuous loop on television in a
bid to attract a larger turnout than about 43 percent for the last legislative
poll in 2012.
But Tlemcani says the public is tired of quarrels between political parties.
"Once elected, candidates disappear completely," he said. "Voters are not
idiots." Algeria's parliament has been dominated since independence in 1962 by
the National Liberation Front (FLN), which ruled in a single party system until
the early 1990s. Today, with its coalition ally the Rally for National Democracy
(RND), the FLN has a majority of seats in the house. Observers say they are
likely to keep their majority after other parties said they would boycott the
polls. In the last election, Islamist parties hoped to ride to victory on top of
their movement's achievements during the Arab Spring uprisings. But they
registered their worst score since Algeria's first multi-party poll in the early
1990s. This year, they have merged or formed alliances in order to increase
their chances. Between them, Algeria's political parties have scheduled no fewer
than 1,826 rallies across the country by the last day of campaigning on April
30. Whether that brings out the vote is yet to be seen. "Supporters of the
ruling parties will vote," said Mohamed, a trade unionist. "So if we want to
turn things around, we must vote."
First Palm Sunday since IS in Iraq's Main Christian Town
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/April 09/17/Members of Iraq's Christian minority
celebrated Palm Sunday in the country's main Christian town of Qaraqosh for the
first time since it was retaken from the Islamic State group. Hundreds of
faithful gathered in the town's Tahira al-Kubra church for mass before starting
the traditional Palm Sunday march, a procession during which palms are carried
to commemorate Jesus' entry to Jerusalem. "Thank God, we are returning to our
towns and churches after two years," said Abu Naimat Anay, an Iraqi priest.
Qaraqosh, with an overwhelmingly Christian population of around 50,000 before
the jihadists took over the area in August 2014, was the largest Christian town
in Iraq. It was retaken by Iraqi forces late last year as part of a massive
offensive to wrest back the nearby city of Mosul from IS but it remains almost
completely deserted. The area is now considered safe and the Palm Sunday mass
and march were secured by the Nineveh Plain Protection Units, an Assyrian
militia. The archbishop of Mosul, Yohanna Petros Mouche, moved back to the town
last week but it needs to be extensively rebuilt and basic services restored
before displaced Christians can return en masse. "Honestly, this makes the heart
happy and sad at the same time, because we were torn away from our birthplace
and this kind of devastation we didn't even see during the wars of the '80s and
'90s," Aby Naymat Anay said. Many of the more 120,000 Christians believed to
have fled their homes when IS swept across the region less than three years ago
moved in with relatives or into camps in the nearby autonomous region of
Kurdistan. "There is a mixed feeling but sadness dominates. We fled to Arbil and
we are not back yet," 62-year-old Yusef Nisan Hadaya said, referring to the
Iraqi Kurdish capital.
Iran: Remarks by Chair of
Foreign Affairs Committee of NCRI, on Rouhani's Position on Assad's Chemical
Attack on the Syrian People
NCRI/ Sunday, 09 April 2017 /- Mohammad Mohaddessin said: The Iranian regime’s
President Hassan Rouhani’s phone call to the Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad and
reaffirming his full-fledged support for this war criminal is indicative of two
facts: First - The Iranian regime is fully participating in the crimes against
humanity, war crimes and genocide that are perpetrated in Syria. Second - It
proves that both factions of the clerical regime, which has acted as the main
obstacle to the overthrow of Assad in the past six years, have total unanimity
in supporting Assad and the massacre of the Syrian people. So far as it pertains
to suppression and export of terrorism and extremism, there is no difference
between the Iranian regime’s factions. Bashar al-Assad, his regime’s officials
as well as Khamenei, Rouhani, and the IRGC commanders who are responsible for
the murder of 500,000 Syrians and displacing more than half of the population of
that country, should be brought to justice. In fact they are more criminal than
many of the individuals who were tried in Nuremberg. Rouhani, who blatantly
attributes the mass killing of the innocent people of Khan Sheikhoun, in
particular women and children, with chemical weapons to the opposition, is the
same individual who for the past 38 years has been attributing the suppression
and massacre of the Iranian people to the regime’s opposition and has boasted
about duping the international community over the regime’s nuclear projects.
In his phone call, Rouhani reiterated that the clerical regime will stand
alongside the Assad regime. This is the only true part in the conversation of
this criminal mullah, since Assad’s downfall would tremble the very foundation
of the religious fascism ruling Iran.
This is exactly what Rouhani’s master, Khamenei, specified a while ago when he
indicated: ‘If we do not fight in Syria, we will be forced to fight in Fars,
Isfahan, and Tehran.’
Iran: Raisi's Candidacy Intensifies Crisis Within the
Regime
NCRI/ Sunday, 09 April 2017 /Ebrahim Raisi is officially announced the Iranian
regime’s presidential candidate, with his candidacy revealing more than ever the
Iranian regime’s critical conditions. As one of the executioners and a member of
the death committee that executed 30,000 political prisoners in 1988, and also
for his running the empire of plundering ‘Astan Quds’ foundation, Raisi by
himself is a true symbol of a regime that has been built on the foundations of
blood and plundering. With such a figure entering regime’s presidential show, it
more than ever reveals the deadlock the regime is faced with while confronting
the crises surrounding it from every side. The main crisis, however, is the
imminent confrontation of the Iranian people with the entire regime. With
Raisi’s candidacy, the 1988 massacre of MEK members and other political
prisoners will inevitably be more than ever exposed to people, an unavoidable
consequence that even state media are referring to with disapproval. State-run
Bultannews website writes in this regard on April 5 “with the release of
Montazeri’s audio file and particularly the possibility of Ayatollah Raisi’s
candidacy, it’s quite a while that the anti-revolutionary media are putting the
spotlight on execution of MEK members in 1988, using it as an excuse to attack
the regime, Khomeini, and recently Raisi.”This is a concern for regime’s both
rival bands, with Rouhani’s, which in the power struggle within the regime is
standing against Raisi, being involved in the massacre as much as its rivals, so
that Rouhani’s Justice Minister ‘Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi’ , for instance, is
another executioner involved in 1988 massacre. Thus, in the clash of regime’s
two rival bands, the Resistance of Iran has inevitably entered the equation as a
decisive parameter, turning the election show into a unique opportunity for
people and the movement seeking justice for the victims of 1988 massacre. Kayhan
newspaper writes in this regard “today, similar to the 2009 sedition in which
they revealed that ‘elections is just an excuse, the entire regime is targeted’,
speaking of this or that candidate is just an excuse… Raisi, Jalili, and the
likes of them are excuses. This is Khomeini’s decisiveness against the MEK in
1988 that’s being hated by the invaders.” Thus, Raisi’s candidacy by itself
approves the point that the entire regime is based and formed on the basis of
massacre, a fact that regime leaders from both rival bands are struggling to
hide by preventing the names of the murderers from being revealed. State-run
Rooydad website writes in this regard on April 4 “Raisi was one of the trio
whose names were mentioned in Montazeri’s audio file, so that young people not
familiar with Raisi’s past created an (unrealistic) image of him in their minds,
an image that needs to be corrected through efforts that are underway.” And by
efforts to correct the revealed image of a murderer, they mean launching
propaganda campaigns, like the one called “Raisi, come” in which young girls and
women have been employed whose makeup and dresses by itself is considered an
offense by regime’s standards, or giving free food with a daily cost of 9600
million tomans coming from Astan Quds’ immense wealth, or arranging dramatic
meetings with poor people, etc. But the fact is that such efforts to improve the
image of executioners could only fuel the fury and hatred of the Iranian people.
Raisi is also considered a candidate for Khamenei’s successor, with his win or
loss in the election significantly impacting this issue as well. If Raisi loses
the race, he’ll also miss the chance to achieve succession. The result of this
battle is also as much vital for Rouhani and his band, since if they lose the
race, Rouhani will be doomed to a fate similar to Khatami’s, with his band
forced to leave the scene or at least being sidelined for quite some time.
Iran: Ascending Trend of Population Living in City
Outskirts
NCRI/ Sunday, 09 April 2017 /20 million people are living in Iran’s city
outskirts, according to the regime’s parliamentary Social Commission chair. In a
recent interview with state TV, Salman Khodadadi said 35% of the country’s
population is living in such conditions, adding this is not an issue that can be
resolved in a short period. This phenomenon is the result of the Iranian regime
plundering the people’s wealth and destroying the country’s production lines.
Furthermore, entities such as the Revolutionary Guards are in control of a large
swathe of Iran’s economy. The relationship between poverty and people living in
city outskirts are directly related. A large percentage of Iran’s population are
forced to find refuge in city outskirts. In an interview with the parliament
news agency Iranian MP Homayoun Hashemi said this trend has been increasing. “11
provinces across the country are faced with the outskirt city crisis,” said Reza
Mahboubi, an advisor to the Interior Minister and Deputy Interior Minister in
social affairs, said in an interview with state TV. “The work of the Road and
Construction Ministry and the Health Ministry, aimed at rendering developments
in people’s health, confirm these numbers,” he added.
Unofficial residential areas and people living in city outskirts in Khuzestan
Province, southwest Iran, has increased, according to the province governor.
Alireza A’rafi, a mullah in charge of religious schools, described people living
in city outskirts as a sign of social damages. One of the reasons behind this
escalating crisis is the annihilation of agricultural production, leading to
villagers migrating to city outskirts. “Around 33,000 villages across the
country are empty of any residents,” according to the semi-official Quds Online
website citing remarks made by the Iranian vice president in charge of village
development.
“Studies indicate decreasing incomes amongst villagers resulting from a lowering
amount of cultivation, shortage in water resources and grounds being sold,
migration from villages to cities are continuing, strengthening the phenomenon
of more people living in city outskirts and Iran’s villages being annihilated,”
this website added. After four decades of the Iranian regime being in power, the
number of people living in city outskirts, especially outside large cities, has
grown to an unprecedented scale.
Bereaved Syrian father: US missile strike not enough
The Associated Press, Istanbul Sunday, 9 April 2017/Abdel Hameed al-Yousef woke
to the sound of an early morning bombardment in the northern Syrian town of Khan
Sheikhoun and told his wife Dalal to take their twins Aya and Ahmed to safety
outside.
He emerged to find the home covered in dust, and then a new strike exploded
about 300 meters away. Within minutes, he said, his eyes started to water, and
he soon lost consciousness. “I estimate I came to about five hours later, he
said. “And I had lost 19 of my close relatives. They were all on the
ground.”Eventually, “They found Ahmed, Aya and my wife and four other people
near my house,” the 29-year-old shopkeeper recalled. They were among the nearly
90 people who died from what US and other experts have determined was a Syrian
government attack using sarin, an outlawed nerve toxin. While the Syrian
government denied the attack and its Russian ally suggested the toxic agents
were released when a bomb hit a rebel chemical weapons arsenal, the US
government responded with a barrage of 59 cruise missiles against Shayrat air
base in central Syria that apparently had been used in the gas attack.
For the bereaved al-Yousef, speaking to The Associated Press after fleeing
across the border to the southern Turkish province of Hatay, the retaliation
wasn’t enough. “We thought he (US President Donald Trump) would strike all the
air bases,” al-Yousef said. “Striking one is not enough.”
Still operational
Even the one may still be operational. Opposition activists said on Saturday
that Syrian warplanes took off from Shayrat air base, despite the US missile
strike. The Syrian civil war, now in its sixth year, has left an estimated
400,000 people dead. Al-Yousef wants the bloodshed to end. “What I want is for
this waterfall of blood to end, for my people to live a good life, like humans,
free and with justice. I want this cruelty to end and to go back to living how
we used to,” he said. He frequently glanced at the photographs of his lost wife
and children saved on his cellphone. “My goal from now on,” he said, “will be to
tell everybody what I have lived through.”
Al Shabaab car bomb outside Mogadishu army base kills at
least 15
Reuters, Mogadishu Sunday, 9 April 2017/A car bomb targeting senior officials
leaving a military base in Mogadishu killed at least 15 people and destroyed a
minibus carrying civilians, the Somali military said on Sunday, an attack claim
by Islamist al Shabaab militants. It occurred a week after President Mohamed
Abdullahi Mohamed replaced his security chiefs and called on al Shabaab fighters
to surrender within 60 days in return for education and jobs. “At least 15
people, mostly civilians, died in (Sunday’s) the blast,” Somali Major Hussein
Nur told Reuters. “We do not know the exact figure of casualties. All the people
on board the ruined minibus perished. Soldiers and other private security guards
also died.” A Reuters witness at the scene of the explosion saw a wrecked
minibus, human flesh and damage to the tarmac road. Roads were sealed off even
to private ambulances.
A government official said given the state of the dead bodies, it would be
difficult to give an exact death toll. “Many people died but we cannot know the
exact figure of casualties. We cannot count human flesh,” Abdifatah Omar Halane,
spokesman for Mogadishu’s mayor, told reporters. Al Shabaab, waging an
increasingly deadly campaign of bombings despite losing most of its territory to
African Union peacekeepers supporting the Somali government, was behind the
attack, according to Abdiasis Abu Musab, al Qaeda-affiliated group’s spokesman
for military operations. Nur said the car bomber appeared intent on hitting a
convoy carrying Somali military commander Ahmed Mohamed Jimale and other senior
officers, but was not close enough to cause any casualties among his
entourage.Al Shabaab confirmed Jimale was their intended target, and that they
had killed seven of his bodyguards in the attack.
France expels Swiss Islamist grandson of Brotherhood
founder
AFP, Paris Sunday, 9 April 2017/France on Saturday expelled controversial Swiss
Islamist preacher Hani Ramadan who posed "a serious threat to public order", the
interior ministry said. Ramadan, whose brother is the intellectual Tariq Ramadan
and whose grandfather founded Egypt's radical Muslim Brotherhood, was arrested
in Colmar, eastern France, while attending a conference. He was "known in the
past to have adopted behavior and made remarks which pose a serious threat on
French soil," the ministry said in a statement. "The interior ministry and the
forces of law and order are fully mobilized and will continue to fight
ceaselessly against extremism and radicalization," Interior Minister Matthias
Fekl said in the statement. In 2002 Hani Ramadan was sacked from his teaching
post in Switzerland after writing an article in French newspaper Le Monde in
support of the stoning of adulterers and suggesting that AIDS was a divine
punishment. Six years later he won 345,000 Swiss francs (just over 200,000 euros)
compensation over the sacking. Ramadan's brother Tariq is banned from entering
the United States.
Joint naval maneuvers between Oman and Iran begin
By Staff writer Al Arabiya News English Sunday, 9 April 2017/An Iranian Navy
flotilla departed for Oman on Saturday to attend a joint “maritime rescue drill”
in the South Sea and north of the Indian Ocean, the official Iranian news agency
IRNA reported. The agency quoted the commander of Iran's First Naval Zone
Admiral Hossein Azad as saying: “Providing security of the ships and preparing
their rescue is necessary.” However, last year, there were 527 interactions
between US naval forces and Iranian naval forces, 35 of which the US deemed to
be unsafe or unprofessional on Iran’s part. There had been seven such
interactions so far this year, according to US statistics. (ANALYSIS Maritime
implications of Trump’s threats against Iran). The Washington Times said last
month that Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen are using a new weapon that
raises fears of seaborne attacks on both military and commercial shipping in the
region. The weapon is an Iranian-designed remotely piloted small boat filled
with explosives, a defense official told the news site, The exact number of
explosive drone boats is not known, but the rebels are believed to have enough
to threaten ships that pass through strategic routes off the Yemeni coast. The
newspaper added that the navy has intelligence photos of the deadly boats but
declined a request to release them. The boats were first detected after one was
used in an attack Jan. 30 on a Saudi frigate in the Red Sea. IRNA said, this
year, Oman hosts one-week long joint maritime rescue drill in the South Sea and
the Indian Ocean, aimed at providing security of the region. The official said
that the Iranian flotilla, attending the drill, consists of Iran's Sabalan
destroyer, Lavan logistic warship, SH3D helicopter and Falakhen navy ship with
the capacity of 1000 crew members.
Rex Tillerson on Syria: Our ‘first priority’ is to eliminate the ISIS threat
AFP, Washington Sunday, 9 April 2017/The top priority for the United States in
Syria is to defeat ISIS even before stabilizing the country, Secretary of State
Rex Tillerson says. Defeating the group and its self-proclaimed caliphate would
eliminate not only a threat to the US but to "the whole stability in the
region," Tillerson told CBS television's "Face the Nation" program in an excerpt
released Saturday. "It's important that we keep our priorities straight. And we
believe that the first priority is the defeat of ISIS," Tillerson said in a clip
made public on the eve of the Sunday talkshow's air time. "Once the ISIS threat
has been reduced or eliminated, I think we can turn our attention directly to
stabilizing the situation in Syria," he said. "We're hopeful that we can prevent
a continuation of the civil war and that we can bring the parties to the table
to begin the process of political discussions."The former ExxonMobil chief
executive noted that holding such talks would require the participation of
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime along with its allies. He narrowed his
focus on key Damascus ally Moscow, with whom Washington has particularly frosty
relations. "We're hopeful that Russia will choose to play a constructive role in
supporting ceasefires through their own Astana talks, but also, ultimately,
through Geneva," Tillerson said. "If we can achieve ceasefires in zones of
stabilization in Syria, then I believe -- we hope we will have the conditions to
begin a useful political process." The top US diplomat insisted he had no
concerns about possible Russian retaliation following an unprecedented US strike
on a Syrian airfield this week. "The Russians were never targeted in this
particular strike," Tillerson said. "It was a very deliberate, very
proportional, and very targeted strike undertaken in
Iraq’s Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr urges Syria’s Assad to
step down
AFP, Najaf Saturday, 8 April 2017/Influential Iraqi cleric Moqtada al-Sadr on
Saturday called on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to step down, also calling
on Washington and Moscow to stop intervening in the conflict. The Najaf-based
Shiite cleric condemned the killing of 87 people, including 31 children, in a
suspected chemical attack last week in a rebel-held Syrian town that has been
widely blamed on Damascus. “I would consider it fair for President Bashar
al-Assad to resign and leave power, allowing the dear people of Syria to avoid
the scourge of war and terrorist oppression,” he said in a statement. The United
States fired a barrage of 59 cruise missiles at Shayrat airbase in Syria early
on Friday to push Damascus, despite its denials of responsibility. Sadr, who led
a militia that fought the US occupation of Iraq, also condemned the American
missile strike, urging all foreign parties involved in the Syria conflict to
pull out. “I call on all sides to withdraw their military assets from Syria so
that the Syrian people take things into their own hands. They are the only ones
with the right to decide their fate -- the alternative will turn Syria to
rubble,” he said. Several Iraqi Shiite militias, some of them directly supported
by Iran, are helping Assad’s camp in the Syria conflict by sending fighting
units across the border. Sadr’s forces have focused on protecting the holy sites
and his drive against corruption and nepotism has drawn support from beyond his
traditional base.The Iraqi government on Friday condemned the suspected chemical
attack and said it supported any initiative aimed at punishing those
responsible.
Erdogan holds giant Istanbul rally week ahead of referendum
AFP, Istanbul Sunday, 9 April 2017/Tens of thousands packed one of the biggest
public spaces in Istanbul as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan hosted a giant rally
seeking votes in Turkey’s largest city just over a week ahead of a nation-wide
referendum. Lambasting Turkey’s enemies and taking pot shots at his opponents,
Erdogan said a ‘Yes’ vote in the April 16 referendum would give Turkey more
stability and power.“On April 16, do you want to say ‘Yes’ to a strong Turkey?”
Erdogan asked the crowd, who waved a sea of red and white crescent moon Turkish
flags.“Do you want a great Turkey? Do you want to say ‘Yes’ to stability? Will
you be there Istanbul?” he added, as the crowd roared back ‘Yes!”.This handout
picture taken and released on April 8, 2017 by the Turkish Presidential Press
Service shows supporters waving the Turkish national flag and 'YES' banners as
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech during a campaign rally
for the 'yes' vote in a constitutional referendum at the Yenikapi Square in
Istanbul. (AFP) Erdogan arrived by helicopter to cheers at the vast open ground
space in the Istanbul district of Yenikapi on the shores of the sea of Marmara.
It was here on August 7, 2016 that he held a mass rally to promote national
solidarity in the wake of the failed July 15 coup blamed on the US-based
preacher Fethullah Gulen and clearly wanted to capture the spirit of that day.
Erdogan said that the likes of Gulen, who denies being behind the coup, and the
outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), wanted to see a ‘No’. He said that ‘No’
vote backers also were also against his projects to transform Turkey through
modern infrastructure projects such as bridges and tunnels. Supporters of
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan cheer during a rally for the upcoming
referendum in Istanbul. (Reuters) “They said ‘No’ to the bridges. They say ‘No’
to a modern Turkey,” he roared, prowling around a walkway that extended from the
stage like at a rock concert. If approved, the new system will see the scrapping
of the post of prime minister, the creation of vice presidents and the
empowering of the president to appoint ministers. The changes will also allow
the president to be affiliated with a party, allowing Erdogan to restore his
ties with the Justice and Development Party (AKP) that he co-founded and helped
sweep to power in 2002. Supporters say that the new system will create an
efficient US-style structure but critics argue the lack of checks-and-balances
risk handing Erdogan one man-rule.
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published
on April 09-10/17
Why Does the West Keep Colluding with Terrorists?
Douglas Murray/Gatestone Institute/April 09/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=54183
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10177/ayaan-hirsi-ali-islam-terrorism
Like other criticisms of Hirsi Ali, the effort was to portray her as the problem
itself rather than as the response to a problem.
That this type of campaign can succeed -- that speakers can be stopped from
speaking in Western democracies because of the implicit or explicit threat of
violence -- is a problem our societies need to face.
There is a whole pile of reasons why Islamists want to stop her explanations
from being aired. But why -- when the attacks keep on happening -- do our own
societies collude with such sinister people to keep ourselves the dark?
Only a fortnight after a vehicular terrorist attack in Westminster, London,
another similar attack took place in Stockholm, Sweden. On one of the city's
main shopping streets, a vehicle was once again used as a battering-ram against
the bodies of members of the public. As in Nice, France. As in Berlin. As so
many times in Israel.
Amid this regular news there is an air of defeatism -- a terrible lack of policy
and lack of solutions. How can governments stop people driving trucks into
pedestrians? Is it something we must simply get used to, as France's former
Prime Minister Manuel Valls and London's Mayor Sadiq Khan have both suggested?
Must we come to recognise acts of terror as something like the weather? Or is
there anything we can do to limit, if not stop, them? If so, where would we
start? One place would be to have a frank public discussion about these matters.
Yet, even that is easier said than done.
There is a terrible symmetry to this past week in the West. The week began with
the news that the Somali-born author and human-rights activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali
had been forced to cancel a speaking tour in Australia. "Security concerns" were
among the given reasons. A notable aspect of this issue, which has been made
public, is that one of the venues at which Hirsi Ali was due to speak was
contacted last month by something calling itself "'The Council for the
Prevention of Islamophobia Incorporated". Nobody appears to know where this
"incorporated" organisation comes from, but its purported founder -- Syed
Murtaza Hussain -- claimed that the group would bring 5000 protestors to the
hall at which Hirsi Ali was scheduled to talk. This threat is reminiscent of the
occasion in 2009 when the British peer, Lord Ahmed, threatened to mobilise
10,000 British Muslims to protest at the Houses of Parliament in Westminster if
the Dutch politician Geert Wilders were allowed to speak. On that occasion -- as
on this one -- the event was cancelled. Promises to mobilise thousands of angry
Muslims can have such an effect. But the long-term implications often get lost
in the short-term outrage.
Other attacks on Hirsi Ali began, in fact, weeks before her now-cancelled tour
had been due to start. On the web, for instance, a widely-watched video was
disseminated showing a group of headscarf-covered Australian Muslim women. All
were attacking Hirsi Ali and protesting her appearance in the country.
Addressing her directly, they complained that, "Your narrative doesn't support
our struggles. It erases them."
Like other criticisms of Hirsi Ali, the effort was to portray her as the problem
itself rather than the response to a problem. Once again, mixing up
(deliberately or otherwise) the arsonist and the firefighter, such groups
present a homogenous, agreed-upon opinion -- or "narrative" -- as the only
necessary answer to any problems that may or may not exist. Hirsi Ali, according
to them, thinks the "wrong" things and says the wrong things. Therefore she must
be stopped.
Ayaan Hirsi Ali, author and human-rights activist. (Image source: The Aspen
Institute)
That this type of campaign can succeed -- that speakers can be stopped from
speaking in Western democracies because of the implicit or explicit threat of
violence -- is a problem our societies need to face. But in the meantime, we
also have to face the reality that a shut-down of opinion has on our public
policy as well as our public discourse.
What, after all, is the acceptable discourse -- or "narrative" -- on which we
can agree to speak about the attacks in Stockholm, Berlin, Nice and elsewhere?
Can the discussion be allowed to include the Islamic portion? Can anyone be
allowed to say that the attackers act in the name of Islam, or must we continue
to present all jihadist terrorists as people suffering from any affliction apart
from that one?
In the middle of the week, at a memorial service in Westminster Abbey, the Very
Reverend John Hall, Dean of Westminster, said that the UK was "bewildered" after
the terrorist attacks of a fortnight earlier. He went on in his sermon to ask:
"What could possibly motivate a man to hire a car and take it from Birmingham to
Brighton to London, and then drive it fast at people he had never met, couldn't
possibly know, against whom he had no personal grudge, no reason to hate them
and then run at the gates of the Palace of Westminster to cause another death?
It seems likely that we shall never know."
If it is true that our societies are "bewildered", as the Dean says, might it be
because we have not heard a wide-enough range of possible explanations for such
outrages -- because we have deliberately cut ourselves off, by choice,- from the
warnings of ex-Muslims such as Hirsi Ali? Amid the "narratives" that are
acceptable and to be tolerated, perhaps we have failed to listen to the
explanations that outline the sheer scale of the religious and societal problem
now in front of us?
Of course, for many Muslims, such as those critics of Hirsi Ali in Australia,
there is a clear reason why they want to stop her speaking. Were people to hear
her, they would realise the vast enormity of the challenge ahead of us and the
depth and breadth of its nature. Her audiences would discover the defensive play
around the world in which many Muslim organisations are engaged -- a campaign to
limit speech precisely in order to protect their own interpretation of their
religion and keep out any other.
It is, however, the dissenting, silenced voices such as Hirsi Ali's that are
precisely the voices the world needs to hear at present. How tragic that a week
that began with a silencing, should end with yet another all-too-predictable
terrorist attack -- one which Sweden will do as much to fail at comprehending as
Britain did two weeks before her.
Hearing from voices such as that of Hirsi Ali could lift the fog of our
"bewilderment" and explain, for instance, what does motivate some people to
drive a car or truck into crowds of people going about their lives. There is a
whole pile of reasons why Islamists want to stop her explanations from being
aired. But why -- when the attacks keep on happening -- do our own societies
collude with such sinister people to keep ourselves in the dark?
**Douglas Murray, British author, commentator and public affairs analyst, is
based in London, England.
© 2017 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.
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10177/ayaan-hirsi-ali-islam-terrorism
It’ll Take More Than a Missile Strike to Clean Up
Obama’s Mess in Syria
Robert Kagan/The Washington Post/April 09/17
American missile strikes against Syria are a critical first step toward
protecting civilians from the threat of chemical weapons, and President Trump
deserves credit for doing what the Obama administration refused to do. But
Thursday’s action needs to be just the opening salvo in a broader campaign not
only to protect the Syrian people from the brutality of the Bashar al-Assad
regime but also to reverse the downward spiral of US power and influence in the
Middle East and throughout the world. A single missile strike unfortunately
cannot undo the damage done by the Obama administration’s policies over the past
six years. Trump was not wrong to blame the dire situation in Syria on President
Barack Obama. The world would be a different place today if Obama had carried
out his threat to attack Syria when Assad crossed the famous “red line” in the
summer of 2013. The bad agreement that then-Secretary of State John F. Kerry
struck with Russia not only failed to get rid of Syria’s stock of chemical
weapons and allowed the Assad regime to drop barrel bombs and employ widespread
torture against civilian men, women and children. It also invited a full-scale
Russian intervention in the fall of 2015, which saved the Assad regime from
possible collapse.
Today, thousands of Russian forces operate throughout Syria, and not chiefly
against ISIS but against the civilian population and the US-backed moderate
opposition. Russia has also greatly expanded its military presence in the
eastern Mediterranean. The extensive air-defense and anti-ship systems Russia
has deployed have nothing to do with counterterrorism — because neither the ISIS
group nor al-Qaeda has planes or ships — and everything to do with threatening
US and NATO assets. Obama and Kerry spent four years panting after this
partnership, but Russia has been a partner the way the mafia is when it presses
in on your sporting goods business. Thanks to Obama’s policies, Russia has
increasingly supplanted the United States as a major power broker in the region.
Even US allies such as Turkey, Egypt and Israel look increasingly to Moscow as a
significant regional player.
Obama’s policies also made possible an unprecedented expansion of Iran’s power
and influence. Iran has at least 7,000 of its own fighters in Syria, and it
leads a coalition of 20,000 foreign fighters, including Iraqis, Afghans and
8,000 Lebanese Hezbollah.
If you add the devastating impact of massive Syrian refugee flows on European
democracies, Obama’s policies have not only allowed the deaths of almost a
half-million Syrians but also have significantly weakened America’s global
position and the health and coherence of the West. Future historians will have
to determine whether Vladimir Putin was emboldened to move in Ukraine by
Obama’s failure to carry through on his threat in Syria, or whether China felt
free to act more aggressively in the South China Sea. But at the very least US
friends and allies in the Middle East and in Eastern and Central Europe have
questioned how serious the United States is about countering aggression. Even in
East Asia, American allies such as Japan and South Korea were left wondering
whether the United States could still be counted on to keep its military
commitments.
Trump, of course, greatly exacerbated these problems during his campaign, with
all the strong rhetoric aimed at allies. Now he has taken an important first
step in repairing the damage, but this will not be the end of the story.
America’s adversaries are not going to be convinced by one missile strike that
the United States is back in the business of projecting power to defend its
interests and the world order. The Russians, by suspending an agreement with the
United States to coordinate air operations over Syria, are already implicitly
threatening to escalate in Syria. The Iranians are likely to step up their
activities and could strike at Americans in Syria and Iraq. The testing of
Trump’s resolve actually begins now. If the United States backs down in the face
of these challenges, the missile strike, though a worthy action in itself, may
end up reinforcing the world’s impression that the United States does not have
the stomach for confrontation.
Instead of being a one-time event, the missile strike needs to be the opening
move in a comprehensive political, diplomatic and military strategy to rebalance
the situation in Syria in America’s favor. That means reviving some of those
proposals that Obama rejected over the past four years: a no-fly zone to protect
Syrian civilians, the grounding of the Syrian air force, and the effective
arming and training of the moderate opposition, all aimed at an eventual
political settlement that can bring the Syrian civil war, and therefore the
Assad regime, to an end. The United States’ commitment to such a course will
have to be clear enough to deter the Russians from attempting to disrupt it.
This in turn will require moving sufficient military assets to the region so
that neither Russia nor Iran will be tempted to escalate the conflict to a
crisis, and to be sure that American forces will be ready if they do.
It was precisely because Obama and his White House advisers were unwilling to go
down that path that they resisted military action of any kind, regardless of the
provocation. Let’s hope that the Trump administration is prepared for the next
move. If it is, then there is a real chance of reversing the course of global
retreat that Obama began. A strong US response in Syria would make it clear to
the likes of Putin, Xi Jinping, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and Kim Jong Un that the
days of American passivity are over.
Counter-Propaganda against US Strike on Syria
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Al Sharq Al Awsat/April 09/17
Reactions from Iran, Russia and Syria following the US attack on Shayrat
military airbase were exactly as expected. Condemnation statements were issued.
The US strike came in response to the Syrian regime’s mass murder chemical
attack on civilians on Friday morning, the day everyone in the region suddenly
woke up to the new US stance. Later that day, the tripartite media outlets-
Russian, Iranian and Syrian- and social networking pages shared their fake news
that questioned whether the Syrian regime was really behind the toxic gas attack
in Idlib. The media outlets promoted news that the Syrian opposition had shelled
Khan Sheikhoun. Then they marketed another story claiming that the Syrian air
force did indeed shell areas of the “armed terrorist opposition-held” and the
strikes hit a terrorist storage containing chemical gases similar to that
previously used by ISIS in Iraq.
By claiming that, the opposition is the party that committed the crime of
possessing internationally prohibited chemical weapons. However, this story was
only believable to Damascus camp supporters.
The propaganda was altered the next day in light of the new development
represented in Arab reactions welcoming the US strike on Syria.
The Arab popular stance had turned and welcomed the move after it had been angry
with Trump’s administration due to reports accusing it of taking restrictive
measures against Muslim refugees and travelers. In response to the sense of joy
and victory, fake news surfaced claiming that the US strike was a mere charade
carried out in agreement with Russia. Media outlets published forged photos
showing some burnt airplanes inside concrete bunkers that weren’t shelled,
trying to debunk the US strike narrative. Other news reports admitted that the
strike happened but said it was a failure without achieving any goals.
It’s true that influencing the Syrian and regional public opinion is an
important part of the psychological war, but it’s not definitive. Military
operations are usually a result of political actions. The US strike sent
political messages to the Syrian, Iranian and Russian governments, followed by
messages to the Syrian public. The strike, which destroyed a few jets and killed
six military personnel from the Syrian regime, will shake the conviction of
those who support the regime so they don’t bet on it anymore. It will also
provide the opposition with a dose of hope following political disappointments
and military defeats they witnessed recently.
Shelling Shayrat airbase will not stop the aggression of the military alliance
in support of Damascus regime, especially that it resumed bombarding civilians
on Friday further defying everyone.
The US strike will not alter the balance of power on ground. It’s also unlikely
that there will be any new US military strikes. The United States Ambassador to
the United Nations said the possibility of US’s military intervention depends on
whether the Syrian regime reuses chemical weapons or not which is unlikely at
the time being. The new and important thing now is political positioning as it
seems that Trump administration changed its stance and decided to be a party in
the Syrian crisis. Previous statements, said that the administration was only
concerned in fighting ISIS in Syria. Therefore, the victory announced by
Damascus and its allies has become far-off. Until a week ago, most regional and
international powers announced or conveyed their approval to the Syrian solution
as per Moscow’s desire thus leaving Assad in power and ending the armed
opposition.
However, the chemical attack and other attacks on civilian areas occurred, in
addition to the arrogant statements of Syrian government officials against other
countries in the region, which prompted all countries to reconsider the whole
situation.
Once again, the Assad regime proved it cannot change its behavior and that it’s
responsible for the major relapse in Syria, regardless whether Iran and Russia
agree to its crimes or not.
Shayrat Attack… Significant but Insufficient
Salman Al-dossary/Al Sharq Al Awsat/April 09/17
Last week’s morning was a turning point in the US dealing with the Syrian
crisis. When 59 missiles Tomahawk were launched towards Shayrat airport, this
was the first direct attack by the |United States on Bashar Al-Assad regime
since the beginning of the revolution six years ago.
The attack has stopped a US clinical sleep towards complications of a war that
has resulted in the worst humanitarian crisis in recent history. Surely,
speaking about whether the US has started practically correcting its stance is
early. This might be a sole step and reaction for a massacre that was one among
many committed by Assad’s regime – but it is at least a sign that the world is
facing a new US administration that has done in less than four months what has
not been done by the former administration in eight years.
The attack on Shayrat airbase, although it was surprising and important, is a
small step in changing the field condition and ending the Syrian tragedy. Maybe,
if the attack happened when Barack Obama threatened with the “red line” in 2013
and before the Russian military intervention then its influence might have been
bigger – it might have contributed to supporting the opposition and putting huge
pressure on Assad’s regime.
One strike will not change the horrible way Assad treats civilians and will not
affect his power, even if it prevents him from using chemical weapons soon.
Nonetheless, Washington believes that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapon
in Khan Sheikhoun massacre and, thus, it should be punished.
During the Iranian-Iraqi war, the US supported Iraq against Iran, but soon after
that it turned against Saddam Hussein regime after it used chemical weapons in
Kurdistan. Also, Shayrat attack might be viewed as a warning to Moscow that
their might be consequences for the acts of its ally, Assad.
Russians deceived the international community in 2013 agreement that admitted
Assad has submitted his ammunition of chemical weapons, although Moscow knew
that Assad kept some storage that was used later on without facing any real
consequences by the international community.
Throughout the past years, the regime has carried out airstrikes that killed
hundred thousands of innocent Syrians – it used the tactics of starving and
bombing hospitals as well as chemical attacks. Despite that, Assad did not face
any real consequences, not even once, for his barbarism. However, this time, the
Trump administration saw that it has to destroy one of Assad’s airbases to
prevent warplanes from striking innocent people and dropping Sarin gas on them.
It is true that the US attack is a huge symbolic step but it will be considered
a limited tactic if compared to the facts on ground. If Trump’s slogan was
“America first” then this does not necessarily mean acting indifferently towards
the world matters but means that America stays strong and leads the world.
The US is not Switzerland to act impartially towards international conflicts and
50 Tomahawk missiles alone will not trigger a huge change. If the US chooses the
relatively low-cost option represented in limited military response such as
Cruise missiles, then it can also take an international efficient step against
Assad’s regime through exerting pressure to implement the international
resolutions – establishing safe zones.
As much as striking Shayrat airbase has achieved several goals, its influence
will be limited with time if it remained a sole step and not a new strategy. Six
years of war have proven that only Russia, Iran and “Hezbollah” are messing in
the Syrian territories to support a practically collapsed regime.
The military strike at Assad’s regime might be a first step towards regaining
respect to the international resolutions and pushing the international
community, US in the lead, to play its role in putting an end to the Syrian
tragedy.
Continued bombing by Assad shows limits of single U.S.
attack
David Nakamura/The Washington Post/April 09/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=54178
PALM BEACH, Fla. — President Trump on Saturday praised the U.S. military for
carrying out the missile attack on a Syrian airfield and struck back at mounting
questions over whether it would help achieve a momentum shift in Syria’s bloody
civil war.
In an afternoon tweet, Trump defended the operation against criticism from some
members of Congress and military analysts that the nighttime volley of 59
Tomahawk cruise missiles two days earlier did not target the runways at the
Shayrat air base in eastern Syria.
Administration officials have said the attack successfully destroyed refueling
stations, hangars and some planes, effectively making the base inoperable.
“The reason you don’t generally hit runways is that they are easy and
inexpensive to quickly fix (fill in and top)!” Trump wrote on Twitter from
Mar-a-Lago after playing a round at the nearby Trump International Golf Club.
The president is spending the weekend here after completing a two-day summit at
his winter estate with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
In an earlier message, Trump offered: “Congratulations to our great military men
and women for representing the United States, and the world, so well in the
Syria attack.”
The White House has sought to cast the mission — which came in response to
evidence that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime had carried out an
attack on civilians with the nerve agent sarin — as a major success in putting
Assad on notice that he can no longer use such weapons without consequences.
Officials announced Saturday that Trump had spoken with King Salman of Saudi
Arabia, who offered support for his decision.
But Saturday brought fresh reminders that a single U.S. attack would hardly
dissuade Assad from his brutal campaign to crush a six-year rebellion that has
claimed hundreds of thousands of lives. Residents in the northwestern town of
Khan Sheikhoun, where at least 86 people had been killed in the sarin attack,
reported that Syrian warplanes had returned and dropped new conventional bombs.
Since a U.S. Navy destroyer launched the missiles early Friday in Syria, the
Trump administration has struggled to explain how the attack — which came four
years after President Barack Obama chose not to strike Assad unilaterally after
a similar use of chemical weapons — fits into its broader policy on Syria and
the Middle East.
Trump aides said that they could not unequivocally rule out future strikes
against Assad’s forces, but they cautioned that the president’s decision did not
signal a broader ramping up of U.S. military engagement on the ground.
In a letter to Congress on Saturday, Trump said his aim was to “degrade the
Syrian military’s ability to conduct further chemical weapons attacks and to
dissuade the Syrian regime from using or proliferating chemical weapons, thereby
promoting the stability of the region and averting a worsening of the region’s
current humanitarian catastrophe.”
Senior administration officials have acknowledged that the targeted operation
did not eliminate Assad’s ability to carry out chemical attacks. And Trump, who
has attempted to enact a ban on Syrians and those in five other majority-Muslim
nations from entering the United States, has not indicated that he is willing to
accept more Syrians who are fleeing violence.
Meanwhile, the administration is nearing completion of a review of long-term
strategy to combat the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, which remains the
priority over removing Assad from power. A fully developed proposal is expected
to be delivered to Trump’s desk in the near future, a senior administration
official said.
Among the questions being considered is what level of military support to give
Syrian rebel forces, potential military cooperation with Russia against the
Islamic State, how to deal with meddling in the region by Iran and what to do
about fighting between Turkish government forces and autonomous Kurdish fighters
in northern Syria.
Of the U.S. missile strike on Assad, the senior official said: “We don’t yet
know if this is a one-time effort or not. We can’t predict what may or may not
happen.”
The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal
deliberations, added: “Certainly, it’s the hope of the administration that this
action will influence [Assad’s] behavior in a positive direction, and we will
not see further chemical attacks.”
Foreign-policy analysts cautioned that ordering a military strike before
developing a strategic policy carried significant risks for the White House.
The U.S. assault on the airfield drew sharp condemnation from Assad as well as
his patrons in Moscow, where President Vladimir Putin has offered him political
backing and military support. U.S. analysts said that despite his show of force,
Trump has offered no broader strategy to achieve a cease fire between the Assad
regime and rebel groups to help broker a diplomatic solution.
In recent days, the administration has offered conflicting statements on key
questions, including whether Assad can remain in power under any sort of
negotiated peace settlement.
“They seem to be celebrating the strike almost as accomplishment in itself
rather than as a tool to achieve any particular strategy,” said Jeffrey
Prescott, who served as director for Iran, Iraq, Syria and the Gulf States at
the National Security Council under Obama from 2015 to 2017. “Even days later,
they are basking in the glow, but we do not have a clear sense of why this
strike and to what particular end.”
In an interview on CBS News’s “Face the Nation” set to air Sunday, Secretary of
State Rex Tillerson said the administration’s top priority is defeating the
Islamic State.
“Once the ISIS threat has been reduced or eliminated, I think we can turn our
attention directly to stabilizing the situation in Syria,” he said, using an
acronym for the militant group. “We’re hopeful that we can prevent a
continuation of the civil war and that we can bring the parties to the table to
begin the process of political discussions.”
Tillerson added that he does not expect the Russians to retaliate for what he
characterized as a targeted and proportional U.S. attack on Syrian targets.
White House aides said that Trump, who had campaigned generally on a
noninterventionist platform, was moved to act after aides on Tuesday delivered a
detailed assessment of the chemical attack and the president viewed television
images of dead and suffering children. Over 2 1/2 days of intensive
deliberations with aides, including at the Pentagon, State Department and
National Security Council, Trump authorized the strikes.
But the White House did not ask Congress for permission and it offered no public
explanation until after the mission had been completed, when administration
officials, including Vice President Pence and Cabinet officials, placed calls to
U.S. lawmakers and foreign capitals, and briefed reporters.
After considering a unilateral strike in 2013, Obama ultimately asked Congress
for permission to strike after evidence was found that the Assad regime had
crossed Obama’s “red line” against using chemical weapons. Obama aides said at
the time that the president wanted broad political and public support before
acting after years of U.S. military conflicts in the Middle East and Central
Asia. But lawmakers voted against the authorization.
On Capitol Hill, reaction to Trump’s action has been mixed, with Republican
leaders endorsing the president’s belief he did not need congressional approval
to act.
But some rank-and-file GOP members, along with many Democrats, have criticized
Trump for acting impulsively and betraying his own past opposition to U.S.
intervention in Syria.
Analysts questioned whether the Trump administration, in its rapid deliberations
over less than three days, had fully considered how to deal with the unknown
consequences of the missile attack.
“I do not see any grounds for optimism and worry that expectations be
disappointed,” said Tamara Cofman Wittes, a former deputy assistant secretary
for Near East affairs at the State Department under Obama. “I worry that Assad
could escalate. One possibility is that Assad could hasten his use of
conventional weapons to end the war on his terms.“In this lightning process,”
Wittes said, “the idea that [the White House] worked through the second- and
third-order effects — I find that questionable.”