LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS
BULLETIN
April 25/17
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The
Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For Today
The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few;
therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out labourers into his harvest
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke 10/01-07/:"After this the
Lord appointed seventy others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs to every
town and place where he himself intended to go. He said to them, ‘The harvest is
plentiful, but the labourers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to
send out labourers into his harvest. Go on your way. See, I am sending you out
like lambs into the midst of wolves. Carry no purse, no bag, no sandals; and
greet no one on the road. Whatever house you enter, first say, "Peace to this
house!" And if anyone is there who shares in peace, your peace will rest on that
person; but if not, it will return to you. Remain in the same house, eating and
drinking whatever they provide, for the labourer deserves to be paid. Do not
move about from house to house."
Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt, so
that you may know how you ought to answer everyone
Letter to the Colossians 04/05-10/:"Conduct yourselves wisely
towards outsiders, making the most of the time. Let your speech always be
gracious, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how you ought to answer
everyone. Tychicus will tell you all the news about me; he is a beloved brother,
a faithful minister, and a fellow-servant in the Lord. I have sent him to you
for this very purpose, so that you may know how we are and that he may encourage
your hearts; he is coming with Onesimus, the faithful and beloved brother, who
is one of you. They will tell you about everything here. Aristarchus my
fellow-prisoner greets you, as does Mark the cousin of Barnabas, concerning whom
you have received instructions if he comes to you, welcome him."
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published on April 24-25/17
Hezbollah Fundraising Underscores its Financial
Crisis/David Daoud &Yaya Fanusie/Cipher/April 24/17
How New is the New Hamas Charter/Denis MacEoin/Gatestone Institute/April 24/17
China Deploys Floating Nuclear Power Plant to South China Sea/Debalina Ghoshal/Gatestone
Institute/April 24/17
Assad's unproved allegations about Jordan/Raed Omari/Al Arabiya/April 24/17
Chinese diplomacy amid the US-North Korea standoff/Talmiz Ahmad/Al Arabiya/April
24/17
The practice of social McCarthyism/Turki Aldakhil/Al Arabiya/April 24/17
The French elections have produced few surprises yet, but what of round 2/Dr.
Mohamed A. Ramady/Al Arabiya/April 24/17
Titles For Latest Lebanese Related News published
on
April 24-25/17
Hezbollah Fundraising Underscores its Financial Crisis
Lebanese Army Pounds IS Posts
in Bekaa Outskirts amid Helicopter Raids
Aoun Says Proposed Anti-Hizbullah U.S. Bill to 'Harm Lebanon, Lebanese'
Report: Hariri to Introduce Electoral Law Format Similar to 2013 Initiative
Gemayel Blasts Govt. over Electoral Law, Constitution, Sovereignty
Hizbullah Says Its Fighters Bombed IS Positions in Ras Baalbek
PSP Delegation Holds Electoral Law Talks with Hariri
Social Affairs Contractual Employees Protest Program Termination
Arms Maker, IS Militant Referred to Judiciary
Abi Khalil: U.S. Team in Beirut Soon to Mediate Maritime Dispute with Israel
Palestinian Security Clash with Drug Dealers in Beddawi Camp
Lebanon clerics order 'scandalous' Coca-Cola ads to be replaced
Titles For Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 24-25/17
WHouse calls all US Senators for NKorea briefing
U.S.-Backed Forces Enter Major IS-Held Syria Town Tabqa
Al-Qaida Leader Tells Fighters to Prepare for Long Syria War
US Treasury sanctions Syria officials over sarin attack
Trump Urges 'Stronger Sanctions' on N. Korea's 'Nuclear, Ballistic Missile
Programs'
Saudi FM: No basis for media speculation over Saudi-Egypt ties
Saudi Arabia, Egypt hold Riyadh summit to strengthen ties
Symposium] What Conservative Historians Are Saying about Trump's First 100 Days
Palestinian Leader on Hunger Strike Sees Health Decline
Israel Charges Teenager Accused of U.S. Bomb Threats
Palestinian Stabs Israeli Guard, Arrested
Increased Security Measures on the Eve of Iran Regime's Presidential Election
Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Clerical Regime: Presence in Iraq,
Syria Is the Regime's Security Shield
Arizona Official Congress Passed a Resolution to List the IRGC as a Terrorist
Group
Iran's Ridiculous Presidential Election Debates Scene
Latest Lebanese Related News published
on
April 24-25/17
Hezbollah Fundraising Underscores its Financial Crisis/جمع التبرعات عند حزب الله
يؤكد على أزمته المالية
David Daoud &Yaya Fanusie/Cipher/April 24/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=54662
Hezbollah is ramping up its grassroots fundraising efforts with an intensive
online outreach campaign aimed at making its revenue streams more resistant to
U.S. pressure. The campaign indicates that Hezbollah – likely on advice from
Iran – is seeking more financial autonomy from its Iranian patrons as they
struggle under the weight of U.S. sanctions and the costs of military
interventions abroad.
Tehran provides Hezbollah with approximately $200 million annually, but the
group has never depended exclusively on Iranian support. Early after the group’s
establishment in 1983, it created the Islamic Resistance Support Association (IRSA)
– the official fundraising arm of Hezbollah’s military activities – to raise
money domestically. Over the last few decades, the IRSA has distributed
propaganda to win over the Lebanese population – particularly the country’s
Shiites – and enlist their support in financing the group through fundraisers
and charitable donations.
One annual IRSA fundraiser, the Equip a Mujahid Campaign, raises money to buy
military gear for Hezbollah fighters. The latest installment of this fundraiser,
which ran from February to early March of this year, was more aggressive than in
the past and was accompanied by an extensive media campaign. According to the
Lebanese press, prior to this year’s Equip a Mujahid Campaign, the last time
that Hezbollah publicly appealed to the Lebanese populous to fund its military
activities was four years ago, when the group first became openly involved in
the Syrian civil war.
As part of the recent IRSA campaign, billboards bearing Hezbollah chief Hassan
Nasrallah’s face and urging followers to contribute funds sprang up throughout
Lebanon’s predominantly Shiite areas. The campaign appealed to religious
sensibilities to get its followers to donate, using slogans like “financial
jihad is a [religious] obligation,” and quoting sayings attributed to the
Prophet Muhammad encouraging followers to ensure warriors are properly equipped.
The IRSA’s message was simple: contributing is a religious duty and acts as a
substitute for carrying arms oneself. In addition to bringing in money, IRSA’s
messaging intended to reinforce solidarity between Hezbollah and its Shiite
base, which has been feeling the brunt of the casualties of war in neighboring
Syria. As IRSA officials have said, giving makes the donors feel as though they
are participating in Hezbollah’s fight just as much as its foot soldiers.
But Hezbollah was not content appealing only to Shiites. Its most recent
campaign included videos of Sunni, Druze, and Catholic clergymen endorsing the
money drive and urging their co-religionists to donate.
The campaign appeared on various Hezbollah media outlets, and pointed potential
donors from Lebanon and abroad to IRSA’s phone numbers for details on
contributing. For the first time, Hezbollah used social media to spread word of
its Equip a Mujahid campaign, complete with slick graphics, a dedicated Facebook
and Twitter hashtag, and videos overlaid with dramatic music.
The campaign could not have come at a more urgent time for Hezbollah, as recent
reports confirm that the group is experiencing a financial crisis. Iran’s
expenditures on its direct and proxy regional interventions – particularly in
Syria, but also in Iraq, Yemen, and Bahrain – are likely straining Tehran’s
budget. Additionally, with the new U.S. Administration’s stated eagerness to
impose additional sanctions on Iran, Hezbollah appears to be taking overall
preemptive action to become more autonomous and ensure its survivability. Just
days before Hezbollah launched this year’s Equip a Mujahid fundraising campaign,
the U.S. Treasury Department imposed new sanctions on an Iranian government
financier of the group. Thus, the campaign may indicate the success of these
U.S. financial sanctions in hindering Iran’s ability to deliver funds to its
Lebanese proxy.
Beyond feeling the squeeze of Tehran’s financial responsibilities, congressional
passage of the Hizballah International Financing Prevention Act (HIFPA) in
December 2015 has also hindered the group’s revenue streams. In mid-2016,
Nasrallah defiantly said that the measures put in place by Congress would not
affect his group financially. “Hezbollah’s budget, its salaries, expenses, and
its food, drink, and weapons and missiles [are funded by] the Islamic Republic
of Iran. As long as there is money in Iran, then we’ll have money,” Nasrallah
said. Despite the banking sanctions, Hezbollah’s chief reaffirmed that Tehran’s
funding would still reach his group, “just as the rockets with which we threaten
Israel reach us, and no law is capable of preventing that.”
Yet this year’s campaign belied Nasrallah’s statements. Indeed, the group has
described the banking sector’s compliance with the U.S. law as a “war of
annihilation,” and even detonated a bomb outside of a major bank in Beirut last
year as a warning. Nonetheless, it does not appear that Lebanese banks have
eased their pressure on the organization. This is hindering Hezbollah’s Iranian
cash-flow, leading it to turn domestically with the Equip a Mujahid campaign to
fund military gear such as rifles, ammunition, uniforms, and canteens – the same
types of supplies that Nasrallah had said Iran would cover. According to IRSA’s
campaign, this gear costs $1,000 per fighter annually.
Finally, Hezbollah is now entering its sixth year of involvement in the Syrian
civil war, with no end in sight. Paying the salaries of the 6,000 to 8,000
fighters it has in Syria – estimated at $500 to $1,200 monthly per fighter– and
caring for the families of the 1,500 fighters killed and 5,000 wounded in that
war are straining the organization’s purse strings.
Hezbollah’s recent fundraising efforts show the benefits of U.S. financial
pressure on the group – pressure that policymakers should continue. Analysts
should watch carefully, however, as Hezbollah’s shift to direct, online, and
grassroots fundraising will require more creative strategies to interdict.
**David Daoud is an Arabic-language research analyst at Foundation for Defense
of Democracies. Prior to joining FDD, he worked as an advisor on the Middle East
on Capitol Hill. Previously, David was a research associate on terrorist groups
at the Potomac Institute, a law clerk at the Egyptian American Rule of Law
Association, and an intern at UNIFIL headquarters in South Lebanon. David holds
a BS in Government and History as well as a JD with a concentration on
International Law and the Laws of...
**The Coauthor is Yaya Fanusie
Yaya J. Fanusie is the director of analysis for the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies’ Center on Sanctions and Illicit Finance (CSIF). Yaya spent seven
years as both an economic and counterterrorism analyst in the CIA, where he
regularly briefed White House-level policy makers, U.S. military personnel, and
federal law enforcement. In 2008, he personally briefed President George W. Bush
on terrorism threats, and in 2009, he spent three months in Afghanistan
providing analytic support to...
https://www.thecipherbrief.com/article/exclusive/middle-east/hezbollah-fundraising-underscores-its-financial-crisis-1089
Lebanese Army Pounds IS Posts in Bekaa Outskirts amid Helicopter
Raids
Naharnet/April 24/17/The Lebanese army launched major operations Monday evening
in the outskirts of the Bekaa border towns of Ras Baalbek and al-Qaa, state-run
National News Agency reported. “It is firing heavy artillery and multiple
rockets launchers at the posts of the militants after detecting suspicious
movements,” NNA said. “Helicopters are hovering heavily over the area and the
sounds of shelling are being heard clearly in the northern Bekaa region,” the
agency added. Voice of Lebanon radio (100.5) said army helicopters fired several
missiles at IS posts in Ras Baalbek's outskirts. Al-Mayadeen television
meanwhile reported that the army had destroyed a large IS post between the
outskirts of Ras Baalbek and the outskirts of al-Qaa. “More than 20 IS leaders
and members were killed and wounded in Lebanese army air raids on Ras Baalbek's
outskirts,” it added. Earlier in the day, Hizbullah had attacked IS posts in Ras
Baalbek's outskirts, killing and wounding several militants, Hizbullah's al-Manar
TV said. Jihadist militants from the IS and the rival Fateh al-Sham Front are
entrenched in rugged mountains along the Lebanese-Syrian border. The Lebanese
army regularly shells their positions while Hizbullah and the Syrian army have
engaged in clashes with them on the Syrian side of the border. The two groups
overran the northeastern border town of Arsal in 2014 and engaged in deadly
battles with the Lebanese army for several days. The retreating militants
abducted around 35 troops and policemen of whom four have been executed and nine
remain in captivity.
Aoun Says Proposed Anti-Hizbullah U.S. Bill to 'Harm
Lebanon, Lebanese'
Naharnet/April 24/17/President Michel Aoun warned Monday that a new anti-Hizbullah
sanctions bill that the U.S. Congress is mulling would “greatly harm Lebanon and
its people.”“The draft law that is being prepared in Congress to slap new
financial sanctions on Lebanese parties, institutions and individuals will
greatly harm Lebanon and its people,” Aoun told a delegation from the American
Task Force for Lebanon, an organization that “unites Americans of Lebanese
heritage to promote a secure, stable, free and sovereign Lebanon.”Media reports
said a Lebanese delegation is conducting contacts abroad in a bid to tone down
the U.S. bill. According to reports, the proposed law might for the first time
target AMAL Movement, Hizbullah's key Shiite ally. Other reports said the bill
might target several other allies of Hizbullah.
Report: Hariri to Introduce Electoral Law Format Similar to
2013 Initiative
Naharnet/April 24/17/Lebanon's political parties rally to put a
new format for a voting system that will govern May's parliamentary polls before
the term of the current parliament ends on June 20. In that regard, “Prime
Minister Saad Hariri is expected to suggest a format that he previously
presented in 2013 from Paris when parties in Lebanon were divided over an
electoral law at the time before the parliament extended its term,” al-Joumhouria
daily reported on Monday. “Hariri's proposal is much more than an electoral
law,” said the daily, “it goes beyond that to the application of the Taef accord
which is based on the establishment of a senate while the parliament would be
elected based on a proportional representation system.”Shall an agreement on a
senate fail to be reached within a specific period of time, “the elections will
then be held based on the sectarian qualification law in the first stage and
then based on the proportional system in the second,” it added. In 2013, Hariri
called for a small-district law for the parliamentary elections and for the
establishment of a senate representing all religions and sects as stipulated by
the Taef agreement. According to information obtained by the daily, Hariri is
now marketing his proposal with various political parties ahead of May 15
deadline. Efforts to find a new law have picked up steam lately after President
Michel Aoun on April 12 suspended the parliament for one month -to avoid another
term extension- paving way for Lebanon's parties to deliberate a law that meets
approval of all.
Before Aoun decided to invoke his constitutional powers and suspend the
parliament, Lebanon's deputies were set to vote to postpone national elections
and extend their term for a third time since 2013. Several draft law proposals
to replace the current 1960 majoritarian law have failed so far.
On Sunday, the Progressive Socialist Party announced a format that is said to be
followed by another by Speaker Nabih Berri and Hariri.
Gemayel Blasts Govt. over Electoral Law, Constitution,
Sovereignty
Naharnet/April 24/17/Kataeb Party chief MP Sami Gemayel on Monday lashed out at
the Cabinet for failing to convene for two weeks now, while accusing it of
violating the constitution regarding the electoral law and sovereignty. “The
Cabinet has not convened since two weeks, as if the situation is excellent or as
if we're in Switzerland,” said Gemayel at a press conference. He reminded that
“only two weeks remain of the grace period that was given by the president for
the approval of an electoral law.”“We also remind you of the social and economic
situation and we're heading to an all-out economic collapse amid the huge
deficit. Doesn't this deserve the convention of the Cabinet?” Gemayel added.
“Another important issue is the violation of (U.N. Security Council) Resolution
1701, which you had pledged to respect in the ministerial Policy Statement. The
violation happened in coordination with the Lebanese state, so how do you
condemn the violation after the state oversaw it?” Gemayel went on to say,
referring to Hizbullah's announcement that it had “coordinated” its latest
border tour for reporters with the Lebanese army and U.N. forces. He reminded
the government parties that they cannot “dodge their responsibilities” after
having “committed themselves to the issue of elections, respect for sovereignty,
and the state budget.” “From our position in the opposition, we will continue to
expose the mistakes that are being committed and we will not allow the ruling
class to mislead the Lebanese,” Gemayel vowed. He added: “The country can rise
should you implement the law and abide by the constitution, which stipulates
sovereignty over all territory, the drafting of an electoral law and respect for
the deadlines.” “Consuming the deadlines and keeping the 1960 (electoral) law
mean that there is a conspiracy against the Lebanese that should be punished by
prison,” Gemayel said. “Had there been a tax on lying, we would have funded the
new wage scale,” he went on to say.
Hizbullah Says Its Fighters Bombed IS Positions in Ras
Baalbek
Naharnet/April 24/17/Hizbullah fighters have reportedly launched an attack
against Islamic State positions entrenched in the outskirts of the border town
of Ras Baalbek, killing and wounding several, Hizbullah's al-Manar said in a
tweet on Friday. “Fighters of the Resistance have targeted with missiles the
positions of the Islamic State group in Choabat al-Khabieh on the outskirts of
Ras Baalbek,” said al-Manar. “Several IS militants were killed and others were
injured,” it added. Militants from the al-Qaida-linked, Jabhat Fateh al-Sham,
and the Islamic State group are entrenched in rugged mountains along the
Lebanese-Syrian border. The Lebanese army regularly shells their positions while
Hizbullah and the Syrian army have engaged in clashes with them on the Syrian
side of the border. The two groups overran the northeastern border town of Arsal
in 2014 and engaged in deadly battles with the Lebanese army for several days.
The retreating militants abducted around 35 troops and policemen of whom four
have been executed and nine remain in captivity.
PSP Delegation Holds
Electoral Law Talks with Hariri
Naharnet/April 24/17/Prime Minister Saad Hariri met Monday evening at the Center
House with a delegation from the Progressive Socialist Party, Hariri's office
said. The delegation comprised Taymur Jumblat, Minister Ayman Shuqeir and the
MPs Ghazi Aridi and Wael Abu Faour and the meeting was held in the presence of
Nader Hariri, the premier's adviser, the office added. The meeting tackled “the
ongoing contacts with the various parties to devise a new draft electoral law,”
it said. “The delegation explained the content of the draft law that has been
proposed by the party in this regard.”The PSP had on Saturday proposed a hybrid
electoral law that mixes the proportional representation and winner-takes-all
systems in an equal manner across 26 districts.
Social Affairs Contractual Employees Protest Program
Termination
Naharnet/April 24/17/Contractual employees at the Social Affairs Ministry
blocked the entrance to the ministry on Monday protesting Minister Pierre Bou
Assi's decision to end a program they were hired to work on. Social Affairs
Minister Bou Assi said in a press conference on Monday: “We can't carry on with
the population monitoring program because it was destined to end in 2016.”“After
a comprehensive reappraisal of the program, we realized that it wouldn't be able
to do the service for which it was established because its duration has expired
and is no longer valid,” said Khoury. “When I arrived at the Ministry I had
examined the program of the contractual employees and realized that it ends in
2016,” said the minister, who assured that his step comes out of “keenness to
preserve public funds.”As soon as the Minister made his statement, the
contractual employees who were assigned on the so-called population monitoring
program for displaced Syrians in Lebanon, blocked the entrance to the Ministry's
headquarters. The employees demanded a contract extension until December, and
threatened to shut down the offices of the ministry in the entire Lebanese
regions. “Ending this program will leave 400 individuals unemployed, what shall
we do?” one of the campaigners said.The protesters later formed a delegation of
13 members and met with the Minister. They said: “The Minster has stressed that
his decision is irrevocable,” and added, that Bou Assi has expressed readiness
for incorporating the employees in other new projects.
Arms Maker, IS Militant Referred to Judiciary
Naharnet/April 24/17/The army on Monday referred to the judiciary a man accused
of manufacturing weapons and another accused of belonging to the terrorist
Islamic State group. “Mustafa Mohammed Suleiman was referred to the relevant
judicial authorities for manufacturing and repairing artillery and assault
weapons for terrorist groups,” an army statement said. Jaafar Mohammed al-Moussa
was meanwhile referred to the judiciary on charges of “belonging to a cell
affiliated with the terrorist IS group, planning to target a Lebanese army post
in the Wadi Khaled region, and drug abuse and trade.”
Abi Khalil: U.S. Team in Beirut Soon to Mediate Maritime
Dispute with Israel
Naharnet/April 24/17/Washington will soon send a delegation to Beirut to resume
discussions over the maritime border dispute between Lebanon and Israel, Energy
Minister Cesar Abi Khalil has revealed. In an interview with the Al-Iktissad
Wal-Aamal magazine, Abi Khalil said he met during his recent visit to the U.S.
with the newly-appointed special envoy, who told him that there is an
inclination to renew the efforts that had been launched by the previous U.S.
administration. The Lebanese government approved the long-awaited offshore oil
and gas exploration decrees on January 4, describing them as its first
achievement. The key decrees pave the way for oil and gas extraction off
Lebanon's coast, after more than two years of political deadlock had stymied
previous efforts. Lebanon's successive governments, beset by infighting and
corruption, made only marginal progress toward that goal. Lebanon and Israel are
bickering over a zone that consists of about 854 square kilometers and suspected
energy reserves that could generate billions of dollars. Lebanon has been slow
to exploit its maritime resources compared with other eastern Mediterranean
countries. Israel, Cyprus and Turkey are all much more advanced in drilling for
oil and gas. In March 2010, the U.S. Geological Survey estimated a mean of 1.7
billion barrels of recoverable oil and a mean of 34.5 trillion cubic meters of
recoverable gas in the Levant Basin in the eastern Mediterranean, which includes
the territorial waters of Lebanon, Israel, Syria and Cyprus.
Lebanese officials have continuously warned that Israel's exploration of new
offshore gas fields near Lebanese territorial waters means Israel is siphoning
some of Lebanon's crude oil. Lebanon argues that a maritime map it submitted to
the U.N. is in line with an armistice accord drawn up in 1949, an agreement
which is not contested by Israel.
Palestinian Security Clash with Drug Dealers in Beddawi
Camp
Naharnet/April 24/17/Armed clashes have erupted on Monday at dawn at al-Beddawi
Palestinian refugee camp in north Lebanon between drug dealers and the
Palestinian security forces, the National News Agency reported. The clashes
started between a group of drug dealers and it soon escalated into heavy gunfire
and grenade explosions, NNA said. The joint security Palestinian committees
responded to the clash by firing at them, which aggravated into an exchange of
fire between the two wounding one dealer and damaging tens of vehicles and
stores, it added. Palestinian security managed to arrest four of the dealers one
of whom was identified by his nickname as al-Tablouj. Another two gang members,
Mohammed A. and S.S. , and others have fled to an unknown destination. Schools
at the camp were closed for the day, and so did the UNRWA which informed its
staff of the closure because of the security situation. The Palestinian factions
and the security committee held an urgent meeting Monday morning and decided to
hand in the four detainees to the Lebanese army.
Lebanon clerics order 'scandalous' Coca-Cola ads to be
replaced
The New Arab/April 24/17/A religious committee in northern Lebanon has demanded
that local authorities take action against the display of "scandalous"
advertising billboards in Tripoli. The Association of Muslim Scholars in Lebanon
this month ordered Tripoli's municipality to remove several offensive Coca-Cola
ads from the streets of the conservative Sunni majority city. The billboards
were taken down out of "respect for the common morals of people" the association
said in a statement on Saturday. It posted an image on social media of the ads -
which featured a topless man and a swimsuit-wearing woman embracing on the beach
- being torn down. Raid Hlaihel, head of the Association of Muslim Scholars,
told local media that the large outdoor ads were "indecent and immoral". "It was
disrespectfully placed outside a mosque. If we could have removed them ourselves
we wouldn't have hesitated so we took legal action and asked the municipality to
take it down," Hlaihel said. "As summer is approaching we ask companies to not
exploit women's bodies to sell their products and to respect our values… some of
these images I haven't seen in Europe before."The Association of Muslim Scholars
has made headlines in the past for making controversial decisions such as
banning Muslims from taking part in non-Islamic religious ceremonies.This order
came about after a video went viral showing Muslim girls singing at Christmas
mass. It has also been accused of having close ties to extremists movements
after it mediated between the Lebanese army and jihadi groups. Many Lebanese
have taken to social media to comment on the decision to take down the
advertisement. "We will not be silent about Tripoli being expelled from Lebanese
society," TV journalist Dima Sadek said on Twitter. Professor at Lebanese
University, Rouba Dalati, said: "Coca-Cola thanks you for the free marketing".
Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 24-25/17
WHouse
calls all US Senators for NKorea briefing
DEBKAfile Special Report April 24,
2017/In view of escalating threats from North Korea, all 100 US senators were
invited to the White House Wednesday for a rare classified briefing on the
crisis from the administration’s top security chiefs: Secretary of State, Rex
Tillerson, Secretary of Defense James Mattis, National Intelligence director Dan
Coats and Chairman of the US chiefs of Staff Gen. Joseph Dunford. Vice President
Mike Pence has interrupted his Asian trip to attend. The briefing is set for
1900 hours GMT. President Donald Trump, who spoke Sunday with Chinese President
Xi Jinping and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said: The status quo in North
Korea is unacceptable. It’s a big problem, has been for decades and we must
finally solve it.” As North Korea prepares to mark the 85th anniversary on
Tuesday of the founding of its Korean People's Army – a possible date for the
regime to test military hardware – its official website warned Monday that
Pyongyang will “wipe out” the United States if Washington starts a war on the
peninsula. US commercial satellite images have indicated increased activity
around North Korea’s nuclear test site, while Kim has said that the country’s
preparation for an ICBM launch is in its “final stage.” Earlier, Pyonyang
threatened to sink the USS Carl Vinson aircraft carrier which is leading a
strike group toward the Korean peninsula along with two Japanese destroyers.Xi
told Trump that China strongly opposed North Korea’s nuclear weapons program and
hoped “all parties will exercise restraint and avoid aggravating the situation.”
This drew an angry response from North Korean media: The state-owned KCNA news
agency suggested Beijing was “dancing to the tune of others” and warned China of
“catastrophic consequences”.
U.S.-Backed Forces Enter Major IS-Held Syria Town Tabqa
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 24/17/The U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic
Forces penetrated the Islamic State group's bastion of Tabqa in northern Syria
on Monday, overrunning territory in the town's south, a monitor said. "The SDF
entered Tabqa for the first time after besieging it from all sides," the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said. "They seized control of several points in the
town's south and were advancing on its western edges," said Observatory head
Rami Abdel Rahman. In an online statement, the SDF said it had captured IS-held
positions in west Tabqa, including a roundabout, and part of a southern
district. "There are now clearing operations in the liberated positions," the
SDF said. Tabqa and the nearby major dam of the same name are considered key
prizes in a broader offensive for Raqa, the de facto Syrian capital of IS'
self-proclaimed "caliphate", 55 kilometers (34 miles) to the east. IS is under
pressure on several fronts, with government forces attacking it elsewhere in
Syria and a U.S.-backed offensive targeting its Iraqi stronghold of Mosul. The
SDF launched its campaign for Raqa in November and has since captured most of
the surrounding province.
Al-Qaida Leader
Tells Fighters to Prepare for Long Syria War
Associated Press/Naharnet/April 24/17/Al-Qaida's leader has urged his followers
and all militants in Syria to unite ranks and prepare for protracted jihad, or
holy war. Ayman al-Zawahri tells the jihadis to remain steadfast and change
tactics to a guerrilla war. His remarks came in an audio message released on
Monday by al-Qaida's media arm As-Sahab. Al-Zawahri says an "international
satanic alliance" will never accept Islam's rule in Syria. He says the war isn't
an exclusively nationalist Syrian cause but a campaign by the entire Muslim
nation that seeks to establish divine rule. Al-Qaida's Syria branch — formerly
the Nusra Front but now known as the Fatah al-Sham Front — has come under
increasing attack from the U.S.-led coalition in recent months and some of its
most senior leaders have been killed in airstrikes.
US Treasury sanctions Syria
officials over sarin attack
Al Arabiya and news agencies Monday,
24 April 2017/The US government imposed “sweeping sanctions” on Syrian officials
in response to what the United States says was a sarin gas attack on civilians
earlier this month, the Treasury Department announced Monday. The Treasury
ordered a freeze on all assets in the United States belonging to 271 employees
of the Syrian Scientific Studies and Research Center (SSRC), and blocked any
American person or business from dealing with them. The SSRC was responsible for
producing the chemical weapons Washington believes were used in the attack and
the means to deliver them, the statement said. “There is no doubt that the
Donald Trump administration policies on the Middle East differs drastically from
the previous Obama administration,”Al Arabiya News Channel’s Washington Bureau
Chief Nadia Bilbassy reported. “Insiders in Washington are aware that Trump’s
officials are less tolerant of Syrian officials getting away with killing Syrian
civilians, especially with chemical weapons, and today’s sanctions are an
example of that,” Bilbassy added.
‘Sending a strong message’
A suspected chemical attack left 87 dead, including many children, in rebel-held
territory in Idlib province on April 4, with the West accusing Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad of being responsible. “These sweeping sanctions target the
scientific support center for Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad’s horrific
chemical weapons attack on innocent civilian men, women, and children,” Treasury
Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin said in a statement. “The United States is sending a
strong message with this action that we will hold the entire Assad regime
accountable for these blatant human rights violations in order to deter the
spread of these types of barbaric chemical weapons.” Treasury already had
imposed sanctions against 18 Syrian officials in January, and Mnuchin said the
administration “will relentlessly pursue and shut down the financial networks of
all individuals involved with the production of chemical weapons used to commit
these atrocities.”The United States also fired 59 cruise missiles at a Syrian
airfield on April 7 in response to the suspected chemical weapons attack.
Trump Urges 'Stronger Sanctions'
on N. Korea's 'Nuclear, Ballistic Missile Programs'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April
24/17/The U.N. Security Council has to be ready to impose tougher sanctions on
North Korea over its nuclear and missile programs, U.S. President Donald Trump
said Monday, calling the status quo "unacceptable.""This is a real threat to the
world," Trump said while hosting U.N. Security Council ambassadors at the White
House. "North Korea is a big world problem. And it's a problem we have to
finally solve." "The council must be prepared to impose additional and stronger
sanctions on the North Korean nuclear and ballistic missile programs," he said.
The comments are sure to once again ratchet up tensions. North Korea is pushing
on with its ballistic missile program, believed to be preparing a sixth nuclear
weapons test, and has detained a U.S. citizen -- the third to be held in the
country. At the same time, the United States has ordered an aircraft carrier
strike group to the western Pacific, near North Korea. The group is due to
arrive by the end of April. The Pentagon said its leaders and other top
officials will give a classified briefing on North Korea to U.S. senators on
Wednesday at the White House, rather than the usual secure rooms at the Capitol.
U.S. Vice President Mike Pence is heading back to Washington after visits to
Asia and Australia, with North Korea headlining talks. Trump has intimated he is
willing to ramp up U.S. military pressure on North Korea while simultaneously
encouraging China to use its influence on its ally, while rejecting bilateral
diplomacy with Pyongyang. "People have put blindfolds on for decades and now
it's time to solve the problem," he said. The U.S. leader spoke about North
Korea in telephone conversations with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Sunday and
with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday, the White House said. In the
call with Xi, "the two leaders reaffirmed the urgency of the threat posed by
North Korea's missile and nuclear programs, and committed to strengthen
coordination in achieving the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula," a White
House statement said.
Saudi FM: No basis for media speculation over Saudi-Egypt ties
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English
Monday, 24 April 2017/Saudi foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir denied all media
speculation recently voiced about Egyptian-Saudi relations and said ties between
Cairo and Riyadh are only getting stronger. “Recent media outlets’ reports
voicing speculation about Saudi-Egyptian relations are completely baseless. The
two countries have a historical and a strategic relationship, and we expect
these ties to get even stronger,” Jubeir said following his meeting with his
Egyptian counterpart Sameh Shoukry in Riyadh. Jubeir said the meeting addressed
the situation in the region, particularly in Syria, Iraq, Yemen and Libya,
adding that they both think it’s important to find solutions especially that
Egypt and Riyadh agree on the same “visions and orientations.”He also voiced the
importance of coordination between the two countries to achieve the best
possible results and serve the interest of the two brotherly countries’ people
and of the Arab and Islamic region. Meanwhile, Shoukry reiterated the
significance of strong coordination between the two countries. “I had the chance
to hold a long round of talks with (Jubeir). We voiced the importance of unified
work and strong coordination and we agreed on holding frequent meetings and
talks to formulate stances that serve both countries’ interests,” Shoukry added.
The Egyptian FM also said it’s important that Egypt and Saudi Arabia work
together to serve Arab national security as it’s a joint responsibility. “We
must not be negligent regarding it. We must stand as one in terms of Arab
national security, just like the case is regarding other affairs,” Shoukry
added.
Saudi Arabia, Egypt hold Riyadh summit to strengthen ties
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English
Sunday, 23 April 2017/Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz held at the Al
Yamamah Palace in Riyadh on Sunday a formal session of talks with Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. During the meeting, both leaders reviewed the
close relations between their countries, as well as the latest developments in
the region. King Salman had invited the Egyptian president to visit the kingdom
at the Arab Summit held in Jordan last month. King Salman received him at the
King Salman Airbase. Among those who were present at the airbase to receive the
Egyptian president were Riyadh Gov. Prince Faisal bin Bandar, Minister of State
and Cabinet member Essam bin Saad, Saudi Ambassador to Egypt Ahmad Qattan and
Egyptian Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Nasser Hamdi. The visit will be a
consultation on various regional and international issues of common concern,
especially the fight against terrorism in the region, as well as among the
international community.
Symposium] What Conservative Historians Are Saying about Trump's First 100
Days
Daniel Pipes/Apr 23, 2017
Cross-posted from History News Network
http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/2017/04/conservative-historians-trump-100-days
Donald Trump's first 100 days have seen the appointment and termination of
decorated general Michael Flynn from the Defense Intelligence Agency, the
eclipse of former Breitbart News executive Steve Bannon, a steady decline in the
relationship with Russia, the bombing of Syria, a failed attempt to repeal and
replace Obamacare, and two failed attempts to impose a ban on certain groups of
immigrants. This wasn't exactly what Trump promised. On the plus side he
succeeded in appointing a religious conservative to the Supreme Court,
fulfilling his commitment to evangelicals, while issuing executive orders that
many conservatives approved.
We wondered what conservative historians make of Trump's debut. Here's what they
[Larry Schweikart, Daniel Pipes, Victor Davis Hanson, Paul Gottfried, Brad
Birzer, and Robert Merry] told us.
Donald Trump as president hardly differs from Trump as candidate: a blowhard who
insouciantly breaks with customs and laws, delighting his fans and infuriating
the rest of the world, sometimes getting it right but more often proving
ineffectually amateurish. The great question is whether he will learn from his
many mistakes and turn into a more conventional, respectable, and intelligent
president – or whether he will continue in the same mold through the whole
four-year period. I am pessimistic. However, if he is egregious enough and
Republican members of Congress sick enough of him, we could well have a
President Pence.
In my field, the Middle East, the new administration has strikingly ignored
Trump's campaign assertions about such matters as the Iran Deal, moving the
embassy to Jerusalem, and staying out of Syria's civil war. This makes
prediction of its future steps particularly difficult.
Palestinian Leader on Hunger Strike Sees Health Decline
Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti's health has declined seriously over the
past week after he joined a hunger strike with more than 1,000 other prisoners
in Israel, an NGO said Monday. Barghouti, 57 and serving five life sentences
over his role in the second Palestinian intifada, is refusing medical treatment,
according to Amani Sarahneh of the Palestinian Prisoners' Club NGO. He told AFP
this was causing his health to decline seriously. The hunger strike began on
April 17, with those taking part ingesting only water and salt. They have issued
demands ranging from better medical care to phone access.
Asked about Barghouti, however, an Israeli Prisons Service spokesman said that
"no decline in his health condition has been observed." "If Barghouti feels bad,
all he has to do is eat," the spokesman told AFP. According to the NGO,
authorities at the Jalame prison, where Barghouti was transferred and placed in
solitary confinement after the strike began, have pressured him to accept
medical treatment and also urged other prisoners to try to convince him. Some
6,500 Palestinians are currently detained by Israel for a range of offenses and
alleged crimes. Around 500 are being held under Israel's system of
administrative detention, which allows for imprisonment without charge.
Palestinian prisoners have mounted repeated hunger strikes, but rarely on such a
scale. Barghouti is popular among Palestinians, with polls suggesting he could
win the Palestinian presidency. While many Palestinians view him as a hero,
Israelis point to the bloody suicide attacks of the second intifada of 2000-2005
and his role in the uprising. He was convicted of attacks that killed five
people, though declined to defend himself and did not recognize the court's
legitimacy. For Palestinians, the prisons have become a stark symbol of Israel's
occupation. Some 850,000 Palestinians have been incarcerated since the start of
Israel's occupation 50 years ago, Palestinian leaders say. Palestinian leaders
have denounced Israel's refusal to negotiate with the hunger strikers, warning
of a "new intifada" if any of them die. Demonstrations have been held in the
occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip to support the prisoners, occasionally
resulting in clashes with Israeli forces, though they have been limited in
number. A Palestinian former minister, Hamas member Wasfi Kabha, released on the
fourth day of the hunger strike, said on Facebook that Barghouti had told him
"the strike aims to achieve more humane, fairer and more dignified prison
conditions."
Israel Charges Teenager Accused of U.S. Bomb Threats
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 24/17/Prosecutors charged an
Israeli-American teenager on Monday with making more than 2,000 threats against
Jewish institutions, airlines, police stations and even a professional
basketball team's plane, Israel's justice ministry said. The charges follow a
wave of bomb threats to Jewish institutions in the United States that helped
spread fears over whether anti-Semitism was rising in the country. A justice
ministry statement said that the 18-year-old from the southern Israeli city of
Ashkelon was also charged with extortion, money laundering, assaulting a police
officer, drug trafficking and possessing pedophile pornography. Among the
threats he is accused of making was one against a plane flying the Boston
Celtics U.S. basketball team to a game and another against Delaware state
senator Ernesto Lopez. He is also suspected of making a hoax bomb call to Delta
Airlines in February 2015 which led to an emergency landing, and another against
an Israeli El Al flight over Switzerland. The statement said Swiss and French
warplanes were scrambled to escort the El Al plane and to shoot it down if it
became evident that it would crash on Swiss soil.The teenager is accused of
being behind similar threats in New Zealand and Australia. He was arrested on
March 23 following an investigation that included the FBI and police forces from
other countries. His identity is under a court gag order in Israel, but the U.S.
Justice Department has named him as Michael Kadar.
Trial in Israel
He was charged in the United States on Friday with making threatening calls to
Jewish community centers in Florida, conveying false information to police
dispatch in Georgia and cyberstalking, the Justice Department said. While the
U.S. and Israel have an extradition treaty, a justice ministry official told AFP
on Monday that he would be tried in the Jewish state. "He committed offenses not
only in the United States but also in a dozen other countries which have
actively cooperated in the investigation," he said. His motives are so far
unknown, although his lawyers say he may not have been responsible for his
actions as he has a brain tumor and suffers from autism. He was a minor at the
time of some of the offenses, allegedly committed online and by phone. A wave of
bomb threats to American Jewish institutions since the start of the year helped
spread fears of a surge in hate crimes and anti-Semitic acts in the United
States. Some have said that the rise of Donald Trump as U.S. president
encouraged the extreme right and emboldened hate groups. The arrest of a Jewish
teenager over many of the threats has complicated the debate, however. Among the
charges filed against the teen in a Tel Aviv court on Monday was making "threats
and intimidation against more than 2,000 institutions worldwide: airports,
airlines, police stations and others". "In several cases, planes made emergency
landings and flights were canceled. In other cases, Jewish schools and
institutions were evacuated and security forces were deployed in large numbers,"
the statement said.
Palestinian Stabs Israeli Guard, Arrested
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 24/17/A Palestinian woman stabbed an Israeli
guard at a key crossing between the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem on Monday
before being arrested, the police said. A police statement said Asia Kaabneh, a
39-year-old mother of nine from the West Bank, stabbed a guard at the Qalandia
checkpoint, injuring her lightly. The guard was taken to hospital while Kaabneh
was arrested by other guards. A separate statement from the Shin Bet Israeli
domestic security service said Kaabneh had admitted under interrogation to
planning the attack after her husband threatened to divorce her. A wave of
unrest which erupted in October 2015 has claimed the lives of 261 Palestinians,
41 Israelis, two Americans, one Jordanian, an Eritrean, a Sudanese and a Briton,
according to an AFP count. Most of the Palestinians killed were carrying out
knife, gun or car-ramming attacks, Israeli authorities say.
Others were shot dead during protests or clashes, while some were killed in
Israeli air strikes on the Gaza Strip.The violence has greatly subsided in
recent months.
Increased Security Measures on the Eve of Iran Regime's
Presidential Election
NCRI/ Monday, 24 April 2017/Pointing to ‘300 thousand police forces’ being on
alert, Iranian regime’s chief of police announced Saturday April 22 that the
cyber police is monitoring all Telegram channels during the elections and that
the slightest violations will be dealt with. According to state-run Mehr news
agency on April 22, Iranian regime’s police chief ‘Hossein Ashtari’ announced
the news while speaking among correspondents about police priorities for
regime’s 12th presidential election show. Ashtari then warned over holding any
kind of gathering, saying “gatherings should have authorization, and police will
deal with any gathering held without permit.”He added that “the cyber police
will monitor all (Telegram) channels and will deal with violators.”Regardless of
practicality of monitoring ‘all’ Telegram channels, Ashtari’s warning comes at a
time when ‘Hossein Nejat’, deputy chief of Revolutionary Guards’ intelligence
office, has recently criticized Hassan Rouhani, acknowledging that Telegram
voice calling service has been blocked because “we could control nothing”
otherwise. Nejat’s remarks in favor of blocking Telegram voice calling service
was made a few days after the service was blocked in Iran.
The newly added voice service of the popular Telegram app was blocked by court
order on Friday April 21, two days after being launched. Iranian regime’s head
of judiciary Sadegh Larijani had recently called on regime’s judicial and
security officials to act in coordination with the country’s prosecutor-general
to deal with demonstrations or ‘turbulences’, as regime’s officials put it,
during the elections.
Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Clerical Regime:
Presence in Iraq, Syria Is the Regime's Security Shield
NCRI/ Monday, 24 April 2017/Revolutionary Guard General Mohammad Bagheri, Chief
of Staff of the clerical regime’s Armed Forces, once again acknowledged that the
criminal intervention and the massacre of defenceless people of Syria and Iraq
was the clerical regime's security shield. In his message to mark the
anniversary of the founding of the Revolutionary Guards, he said: "Iranian
Revolutionary Guards … with the support and cooperation of Islamic Resistance in
Syria and Iraq have set themselves as ‘the security shield’ of the Iranian
people and the whole Islamic Ummah (nation). Bagheri stressed: “The
Revolutionary Guards...with Khamenei’s guidance” has boasted "the deterrence
power" and "the defense power" of the clerical regime to the world beyond
“Iran’s geography”. He added: As Khomeini said, "If the IRGC did not exist, the
country would not have existed” (State-run media April 23, 2017). By “the
country”, Khomeini and Khamenei mean the religious fascism ruling Iran. Khamenei
had said earlier if we did not stop the enemy in Syria "we had to stop them in
Tehran, Fars, Isfahan and Khorasan" (State run news media Januray 6, 2017). Open
acknowledgment of the highest ranking Iranian military officials clearly shows
that as long as this regime is in power, its intervention in the whole region
including in Syria, Iraq, Yemen Lebanon and Bahrain will continue. This doubles
the need to designate the Iranian Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist
organization and to evict the regime and the IRGC from the region. *Secretariat
of the National Council of Resistance of Iran/April 23, 2017
Arizona Official Congress Passed a Resolution to List the
IRGC as a Terrorist Group
NCRI/ Monday, 24 April 2017/The Arizona House of Representatives passed a
resolution calling on the U.S. government to list the Iran regimes Islamic
Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist group. The representatives
noted in the resolution that they considered the IRGC as the main source of
international terrorism and they enumerated examples of crimes committed by them
against the Iranian people, as well as their terrorist acts throughout the
region. Therefore, they stressed the need to condemn these crimes and to list
the IRGC as a terrorist group. At the meeting held in the Arizona Congress, the
Chair of the Democrats in Arizona House of Representatives, Rebecca Rios
introduced the resolution and stated that the IRGC has been exporting terrorism
and destabilizing the Middle East for more than 30 years. After that, the text
of the resolution was read. According to the resolution, in 1984 the U.S.
Department of State has called the Iran regime a state sponsor of terrorism. The
Iran regime is in fact the most involved government in supporting terrorism,
since the IRGC has always provided the terrorist groups and militias of the
Middle East and Central Asia with financial support, materials, and logistic
supplies.The resolution also refers to the crimes committed by the IRGC in
Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as Iran's missile tests in defiance of the
Security Council's resolutions. It also states that the IRGC is involved in the
ongoing massacre of the Syrians and it supports the Assad regime incessantly.
They intend to protect a regime that is responsible for the murder of hundreds
of thousands and the displacement of millions of Syrians. The resolution also
refers to the direct role of the IRGC in internal repression and "serial
murder," stating that according to the NCRI, this group has established at least
144 terrorist training centers in Tehran and other cities in February 2017. The
foreigners receive terrorist training in these centers before going to Syria,
Lebanon, Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, and other regions. According to the
resolution, the U.S. is responsible for the continuing violations of human
rights committed by the IRGC in Iran, including the illegal arrests, torture,
detaining, and executions against the international standards and the violation
of a fair trial. The Representatives of the Arizona Congress in their resolution
pointed out some gross violations of human rights by the Iran regime, which were
also listed in the report of the U.S. Department of State, including the growing
wave of executions, arbitrary killings, long-term solitary confinements, and
severe beatings of prisoners. The resolution passed by Arizona Congress at the
end noted the threats made by the IRGC for establishing security in the region
and the world. The representatives stipulated that the Arizona House of
Representatives would pass the following clause: The resolution condemns the
IRGC and the Iran regime for their efforts in supporting and financing terrorist
groups in the Middle East and other parts of the world. We call on the U.S.
government to publicly condemn such actions and to list the IRGC as the
terrorist organization because of its support for terrorism.
Iran's Ridiculous Presidential Election Debates Scene
NCRI/ Monday, 24 April 2017/ The regime’s election campaign commission at the
Interior Ministry made a decision during a meeting with representatives of the
judiciary to ban live debates of the presidential candidates. The decision was
met with a reaction and response from Khamenei’s faction, including Abdul Ali
Askar, chairman of the Iranian regime’s state broadcasting services. After the
announcement of the election campaign commission's decision on April 21st, Askar
said, "Despite the insistence of the national media for live broadcast
candidates debates, the election campaign commission, at a meeting chaired by
the Interior Minister, unfortunately rejected the proposal and approved a
recorded debate yesterday.” Another member of Khamenei’s faction and a Member of
Parliament, Ahmad Salak said while attacking Rouhani on April 22nd, “Those
people who are afraid of a live debate, they do certainly have some difficulties
with their acts and they do not have the appropriate responses for people’s
problems. They should be afraid of live debates.”A former member of parliament
from Khamenei’s faction, Masoud Mir-Kazemi, also called the removal of a live
debate of the candidates as a soft dictatorship by the executive branch. Alireza
Zakani, a disqualified candidate from Khamenei’s faction, said regarding banning
of live debate, "Unfortunately, given the secrecy and lack of transparency of
the executive branch in past 4 years, we must mark this as another
discriminatory act brought on the major and minor candidates.” Khamenei’s
faction media showcased similar reactions. For example, State run Evening Site
wrote, "Holding no debates, means civil rights are nothing. The fear of knowing
the facts of 4 years of detrimental political and economic conditions by the
people led the executive branch elected election campaign commission to place it
in an air bobble!” The regime’s parliament Site Mazand wrote, “In your opinion,
what is the charm of recorded debate to a live one? Why are some opposed to live
broadcasting?”
Similar reactions are seen in many of the media outlets of Khamenei’s faction.
For example, the IRGC News Agency (known as Fars) wrote on April 22nd, “They
don’t want to place Rouhani in a responsive position, but not live broadcasting
the debates is a civil rights violation.” Tadbir, a state controlled site, has
written, “What is the meaning of canceling a live debate? What are they really
fearful of? They were qualified by the Guardian Council! If these individuals
are so trustworthy that could become the head of the executive branch, why
should it be fearsome for them to talk? If they don’t have the qualifications
for talking straight with the public, how did they became qualified to run a
country?”It is interesting that this decision was apparently taken by both
factions, along with the judiciary representatives, out of fear of opening a gap
at the top of the system and fear of another uprising. It is now not only
protested by Khamenei’s faction, but also Hassan Rouhani, whose contested
election campaign commission made this decision. He said in his remarks in
Shiraz on April 31st, "I am a supporter of most free debates in a way that
people can better understand all the facts, a man should speak without any
stuttering, be able to criticize, and express their points of view.” His rival
factions have immediately seized upon his contradictions to undermine him. Mehdi
Mohammadi, from Khamenei’s faction, wrote immediately in his telegram, "Mr.
Rouhani has apparently not understood what will happen on May 20. It is an
election and he is a candidate. He has ordered his representatives in the
election campaign commission to kill the debates and then in Shiraz he preaches
that he is a pro-live debate. It is just an insult to the intelligence of the
nation.”
Mohsen Rezai, secretary of the regime’s Expediency Council and former IRGC
commander, on his own site as Tabnak uncovered and pointed out that in the
decision-making meeting, representatives of both factions were present and
admitted that ban of live debate was a joint decision due to fear of uprising.
Now both factions are trying to save face and shifting the blame onto others.
The above mentioned site wrote, “ A meeting took place at the Interior Ministry
headed by the minister deciding on recorded debates instead of live ones……Now,
all are playing the game of - who was and wasn’t - blaming each other and
protesting the decision. The Rouhani faction is now claiming that rival faction
supporters were more involved in that meeting and Khamenei’s factions are saying
that the opposition to the live broadcasting of debates was to the benefit of
Rouhani’s faction.”In reality, both rival factions are so afraid of an uprising
that they decided to ban live broadcasting of the debates and at the same time,
they need to undermine each other. As a result, such a ridiculous drama is
created.
Titles For
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on
April 24-25/17
How New is the New Hamas Charter?
Denis MacEoin/Gatestone Institute/April 24/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10229/new-hamas-charter
The Arab states that reject Israel today forget that they themselves would not
exist without the Mandate system – a point seldom if ever acknowledged in public
forums where the legitimacy of Israel is debated.
If there is any Palestinian desire for a two-state solution, it is questionable:
according to current maps of "Palestine," and the New Hamas Charter, it is
supposed to be on its neighbouring state, Israel; not next to it. The wish of
Palestinian leaders to have a Palestinian state is never realized solely due to
the unending rejection of their Jewish neighbour.
Article 19 of the New Charter repeats that there will never be peace so long as
Israel still exists. It declares: "We do not leave any part of the Palestinians'
land, under any circumstances, conditions or pressure, as long as the occupation
remains. Hamas refuses any alternative which is not the whole liberation of
Palestine, from the river to the sea."
Anyone with a serious interest in the conflict between Israel and the
Palestinians will be familiar with the oft-cited Charter (or Covenant [mithaq])
of the terrorist group currently ruling the Gaza Strip, Hamas. The Charter (in
Arabic here) was published on 18 August 1988. Its proper title is "The
Charter/Covenant of the Islamic Resistance Movement 'Hamas' Palestine", Hamas
being an acronym for "the Islamic Resistance Movement".
This April, the Lebanese news site al-Mayadeen leaked a draft version of a
much-revised version of the 1988 Charter, due to be released "in the coming
days". The anti-Israel website Mondoweiss subsequently provided an English
translation of the draft, made by someone from the Ayda refugee camp in the West
Bank. So far, I have been unable to find the Arabic text of the draft online,
even though it has been discussed many times in the wider Arabic media. We shall
turn to it later, but it is obviously sensible to look first at the 1988 version
as a basis of comparison. And even before that, we need to see how the Hamas
Covenant differed from, and resembled, the PLO Covenants of 1964 and 1968.
The full title of the movement is crucial to an understanding of the document
and its aims. Hamas had been founded in 1987 as an intransigent extension of the
Palestinian Mujamma linked to the Muslim Brotherhood, and was explicitly
hardline and neo-Salafi in its religious orientation. This was in conspicuous
contrast to its rival Palestinian movement, the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO), founded by the Arab League in 1964 as an overtly secular and
nationalist entity. The two PLO National Covenants of 1964 and 1968 exclude
religion as a basis for the anti-Israel struggle.[1]
But in those versions, that secular nationalism takes two distinct forms. The
1964 PLO Charter is based on the concept of pan-Arabism as inspired by the Arab
League and Egypt's president at the time, Gamal Abdel Nasser. Palestinians are
simply Arabs among millions of Arabs, and their struggle for liberation was
carried out with little emphasis on the creation of a Palestinian state. This
view changed, however, after 1967, when the Six-Day War showed the powerlessness
of the Arab states to resolve the Palestinian issue. When Egypt and Jordan
attacked Israel (Egypt's closing the Strait of Tiran was a legitimate casus
belli, cause for war), Israel repelled them and ended up sitting on land --
Gaza, the Sinai Peninsula, Judaea and Samaria -- which it immediately offered to
return in exchange for recognition and peace. That offer was rejected in a
matter of weeks at the Khartoum Conference.
During and after the "peace process" and the Oslo Accords of the 1990s, the
Palestinian leadership promised that it would delete the most offensive and
anti-peace clauses of the 1968 Charter. Many years later, nothing has been done,
and the existing Charter remains unchanged.
Nationalism is not an Islamic concept. Even pan-Arabism falls outside the remit
of Islamic ideology and practice. Almost from the beginning, Islam has been
predicated on the idea of a global community (the umma), which embraces all
Muslims and Islamic regions, allegedly since the beginning of time, with a
promise of eventual Islamic control over the Earth. According to a sound
tradition in the canonical collection by al-Bukhari, among the five things given
to Muhammad that had not been given to any previous prophet was that, "Every
Prophet used to be sent to his nation only but I have been sent to all
mankind."[2] In another version, he is recorded as saying: "I have been sent to
all mankind and the line of prophets is closed with me."[3]
This sense of global scale has characterized the Islamic world from its
beginning in the form of empires. These started with the Umayyads (661-750) and
ended with the Ottomans (1299-1922). The long history of Islamic imperialism had
two imperishable effects: it prevented the development of nation-state polity
and imposed the theory of religious rule. Self-identification for imperial
citizens functioned only through the family, clan, tribe, village or town or
city; or according to religious affiliations of various kinds. Everywhere, the
only true citizens were orthodox Muslims; subjugated minorities such as Jews and
Christians were kept strictly as inferiors, with a separate set of harsh laws
and a special tax, the jizya, to pay for "protection".
This legacy of Islamic dominance, of jihad as a legitimate and regular policy
towards non-Muslim Europe, African regions, Central Asia and India, combined
with the illegitimacy and unacceptability of Jewish, Christian or secular rule
over Islamic territory, has left a deep mark on the Palestinian sense of
identity. Formerly subjects of the Ottoman Empire in Syria, almost overnight in
the 1920s the Arab Palestinians found themselves adrift in a sea of
international rules and regulations concerning territory and national identity.
This was the never-acknowledged pivot around which the growing conflict with the
Jewish Palestinians revolved -- and still revolves.
The emergence of various nationalisms in the Islamic world since the early
twentieth century (such as Pakistan, Bangladesh, or Syria) owes little or
nothing to traditional Islam and much, if not everything, to the impact of the
West, where nationalism first developed. Some Muslim states (such as Iran,
Morocco or Egypt) have always had a sense of territorial identity, but most have
been provinces of imperial systems. When the League of Nations set up three
Class A mandates for Syria/Lebanon, Palestine/Transjordan, and Mesopotamia
(Iraq), it created five nations out of two provinces. The Arab states that
reject Israel today forget that they themselves would not exist without the
Mandate system – a point seldom if ever acknowledged in public forums where the
legitimacy of Israel is debated.
Palestinian nationalism is, therefore, an extension of the wider Arab
nationalisms created out of the mandates, both in terms of the Palestinian
Kingdom of Jordan and the long-postponed future state of Palestine. If there is
any Palestinian desire for a two-state solution, it is questionable: according
to current maps of "Palestine," and the New Hamas Charter, it is supposed to be
on its neighbouring state, Israel; not next to it. The wish of Palestinian
leaders to have a Palestinian state is never realized solely due to the unending
rejection of their Jewish neighbour.
So long as the PLO dominated the political landscapes of the West Bank and Gaza,
an eventual shift, through reasonable political compromise presumably from both
sides, to a two-state solution, remained the only game in town. The
secular-nationalist position of the Palestinians offered some hope of political
normalization and the publication of a new Covenant. That changed in 1987 with
the emergence of a major rival to the secular-nationalist position in the form
of a new resistance organization, Hamas, founded shortly after the start of the
First Intifada. Hamas is an acronym for harakat al-muqawama al-islamiyya
("Islamic Resistance Movement"). One year later, in 1988, Hamas made waves when
it released its own Charter, an uncompromising document that took the PLO
commitment to the abolition of Israel into deeper and little-charted waters,
including the elimination of all Jews everywhere.
While both Hamas and the PLO/Fatah dreamed -- and still dream -- of a single
Palestinian nation to replace Israel and its surrounding disputed territories,
they differed in one major respect: the Hamas nation of Palestine would be an
Islamic state, governed by Islamic values and shari'a law. Things had changed
regionally since the two PLO Covenants were made public.[4]
The Middle East and the Islamic world in general were experiencing a shift: from
Western-influenced political values based on modern states ruled by man-made law
and based on secular governments whether democratic (as in Lebanon) or
dictatorial (as in Syria) towards a return to and intensification of traditional
Islamic theories of governance, made and governed solely by Allah (God, although
their qualities are quite different, if not opposite).
Some form of Salafi Islam had existed from the eighteenth, nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries, but the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979, together with
the financial windfall from oil and the rise of jihadi movements such as
al-Qaeda, brought violent radicalism to the fore, not only in the Shi'i world,
but across Sunni countries from Egypt to Afghanistan.
Hamas had started life through connections with Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood,
which, although fundamentalist in orientation, originally was not particularly
violent. Hamas, however, clearly engaged with the broadening current of
anti-Western terrorism justified by jihad, a current that culminated later in
the emergence of the Islamic State.
Hamas's 1988 Charter reflects this. It notes more than once that Palestinian
nationalism should be religious in nature and quite distinct from other secular
forms of national expression:
"Nationalism, from the point of view of the Islamic Resistance Movement, is part
of the religious creed... If other nationalist movements are connected with
materialistic, human or regional causes, nationalism of the Islamic Resistance
Movement has all these elements as well as the more important elements that give
it soul and life. It is connected to the source of spirit and the granter of
life, hoisting in the sky of the homeland the heavenly banner that joins earth
and heaven with a strong bond." (1988 Charter, Article 12)
"Nationalism of the Islamic Resistance Movement is part of its religion. Its
members have been fed on that. For the sake of hoisting the banner of Allah over
their homeland they fight." (1988 Charter, Article 13)
Notably, other parts of the 1988 Hamas Charter resemble the 1968 PLO Covenant.
For example, in Article 13, we read:
"There is no solution for the Palestinian question except through Jihad.
Initiatives, proposals and international conferences are all a waste of time and
vain endeavors." (1988 Charter, Article 13)
This comes very close to the PLO's secular use of "armed struggle" (al-kifah
al-musalah):
"Armed struggle is the only way to liberate Palestine. This is the overall
strategy, not merely a tactical phase. The Palestinian Arab people assert their
absolute determination and firm resolution to continue their armed struggle and
to work for an armed popular revolution for the liberation of their country and
their return to it" (1968 PLO Charter, Article 9).
And the use of "jihad" by Hamas comes even closer to the PLO's "Commando action"
(al-'amal al-fida'i), literally "self-sacrificial action". (1988 Charter,
Article 10). Fida'i is from the same Arabic root that gives us fida'iyin
(Fedayeen).
Hizbullah, Israel's greatest military threat in Lebanon, is, like Hamas, a
revolutionary religious organization inspired by the Shi'i clerical regime that
has been ruling Iran since 1979. Although Hamas is a Sunni entity, it has been
as happy to accept arms and money from the Islamic Republic as Iran has been
delighted to give them. This is of major significance. The assault on Israel is
only part of what we see now as an international religious undertaking, one that
incorporates the Iranian regime, Hizbullah in Lebanon and Syria, the Islamic
State in the Middle East and Europe, al-Qaeda, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and dozens
of Islamic actors from ideological movements such as the Muslim Brotherhood and
Pakistan's Jama'at-i Islami to outright terrorists such as the Taliban in
Afghanistan or Boko Haram in Nigeria.
Hamas, then, is far from being alone. While it may have ideological differences
that make it hard to form a unity coalition with Fatah in Gaza and the West
Bank, it is clearly open to alliances with Iran, Hizbullah, and whatever remains
of the Islamic State in Sinai, Libya or elsewhere.
Armed Hamas militiamen on parade with a mock rocket in Gaza. (Image source: i24
News video screenshot)
However, the announcement of a new Charter this year, along with its supposedly
reformed content, has suggested to some that Hamas may be about to enter a new
phase. But is this so? Even a cursory glance will show that it is not.
The truth is that the new Charter, though vaunted as a major shift for the
group, is, in reality, little more than a public-relations exercise. Hamas
leaders have got smart, but have not changed their spots.
The most obvious change lies in the wording concerning Jews and Israelis.
Whereas the Charter Mark I of 1988 contained numerous examples of pure
anti-Semitism, singling Jews out as repellent enemies of God and calling for
their wholesale destruction, it has finally dawned on the leadership that
racist, anti-Semitic and genocidal words do not fare well in many Western
states, even in ones with an anti-Zionist agenda.
The result is now a presumed distinction between Jews and Zionists/Israelis.
Thus, we read:
"Hamas differentiates between Jews as people of the holy book, and Judaism as a
religion and the occupation and the Zionist Project as something separate, and
it sees that the conflict is with the Zionist Project not with the Jewish people
because of their religion. And Hamas does not have a conflict with the Jews
because they are Jews, but Hamas has a conflict with the Zionists, occupiers and
aggressors." (New Charter 2017, Article 15)
However, this article follows one that is quite different:
"The Zionist Project is a racist, aggressive and separatist project based on
violating others' rights and is against Palestine's people and its vision for
freedom, liberation, sovereignty and the return of the refugees. And the Israeli
state is the tool of this project and its foundation." (New Charter 2017,
Article 13)
Needless to say, it is alleged that Hamas cannot possibly be anti-Semitic --
evidently trying to block out the 3,000 years of documented history that took
place before World War II:
"Hamas sees that the Jewish problem and the "anti-semitism" and the injustice
against the Jewish people is a phenomenon related to European history, not to
the history of Arabs and Muslims or their heritage." (New Charter 2017, Article
16)
This is, of course, mere bluster that ignores the fact that outright
anti-Semitism is to be found in the Qur'an, the Sacred Traditions (ahadith),
shari'a law regarding the treatment of Jews and Christians as dhimmi inferiors
to Muslims, or the countless persecutions and pogroms carried out against Jews
in Muslim countries.[5]
In Article 16 of the New Charter, propaganda dominates the narrative and
distracts us from Hamas's underlying commitment to traditional Islamic thinking
about Jews and Judaism.
The difference between Hamas's unchanged jihad ideology and the image it now
wants to project may be found in Articles 8 and 9 of the New Charter:
"8. Hamas understands Islam in all its details, and it is appropriate for all
places and times in its neutral spirituality, and Hamas believes that it is the
religion of peace and forgiveness, and under its shadow all different religious
followers live safe and in safety. As well as it believes that Palestine was and
will stay as an example of coexistence, forgiveness and civilian innovation."
(New Charter 2017, Article 8)
"9. Hamas believes that the message of Islam came with morals of justice, truth,
dignity and freedom, and is against injustice in all its shapes, and
criminalizes the criminals whatever their sex, color, religion or nationality
are. Islam is against all shapes of religious extremism, sectarian extremism and
ethnic extremism, and it is the religion that teaches its followers to fight
against the tyranny and help weak people and it teaches its followers to
sacrifice their time, money and themselves in the defense of their dignity,
land, people and holy places." (New Charter 2017, Article 9)
Here, we see in a fuller form the same connectivity to religion that
characterized the first Charter.
Despite the claim that Islam is "the religion of peace and forgiveness, and
under its shadow all different religious followers live safe and in safety", it
soon becomes clear that Hamas's intentions towards Israel and the rest of the
non-Muslim world have not changed in the least. First, the New Charter declares
the Balfour Declaration, the British Mandate, and the 1947 UN partition
resolution to be "illegal from the beginning" (New Charter 2017, Article 17),
meaning that there can be little room for manoeuver about Israel's right to
exist. That is driven home in the next article:
"We do not recognize the Zionist state. All shapes of occupation, settlements,
Judaization and the forgery of truth are illegal. These rights do not dissolve
with time." (New Charter 2017, Article 18)
And that is followed by a return to the jihad doctrine:
"Hamas confirms that no peace in Palestine should be agreed on, based on
injustice to the Palestinians or their land. Any arrangements based on that will
not lead to peace, and the resistance and Jihad will remain as a legal right, a
project and an honor for all our nations' people." (New Charter 2017, Article
21)
Article 19 of the New Charter repeats that there will never be peace so long as
Israel still exists. It declares:
"We do not leave any part of the Palestinian's land, under any circumstances,
conditions or pressure, as long as the occupation remains. Hamas refuses any
alternative which is not the whole liberation of Palestine, from the river to
the sea." (New Charter 2017, Article 19)
The New Charter is mere window-dressing; even a casual reading of it should show
that the new Hamas is the old Hamas wearing a different face to try to disguise
the true intransigence and hatred that have always characterized it.
Dr. Denis MacEoin is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Gatestone Institute,
where he writes about Islam, Israel, Left-wing and Christian anti-Semitism and
the Middle East.
[1] For the Arabic originals see here and here
[2] Narrated Jabir bin 'Abdullah, in Bukhari, Volume 1, Book 7, Number 331
[3] Narrated Abu Hurayra, Sahih Muslim 4:1062
[4] A short but scholarly comparison of the three charters by Philipp Holtmann
is available here.
[5] See Andrew Bostom (ed.), The Legacy of Islamic Antisemitism: From Sacred
Texts to Sacred History, reprinted 2008.
© 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.
China Deploys Floating Nuclear Power Plant to South China Sea
Debalina Ghoshal/Gatestone Institute/April 24/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10253/china-floating-nuclear-reactor
A nuclear power plant on the sea would ensure a continuous supply of water as
coolant -- a necessity for any reactor.
China's motive for building the nuclear reactors is clear: to exert its
dominance and influence throughout the area.
In April 2016, reports began coming in that China has plans to build floating
nuclear power plants in the South China Sea. A floating nuclear power plant
consists of one or more nuclear reactors, located on a platform at sea. China
apparently plans to "speed up the commercial development" of the South China Sea
and views the nuclear power plants as part of that plan. [1]
Final assembly of the reactor is reported to start in coastal city of Huludao,
in Liaoning province, and will be built by Bohai Shipbuilding Heavy Industry Co
Ltd, a unit of China Shipbuilding Industry Corp (CSIC).[2]
China's 2016 nuclear plan, a component of the China's 13th five-year plan, is
evidently to complete 58 nuclear reactors by 2020 and build another 100
gigawatt-sized reactors by 2030. These would make China the largest nuclear
power producer in the world. China's floating nuclear reactor initiative seems
to be a component of this nuclear plan.
Reasons for such reactors
China's stated reasons for venturing into such technologies include providing an
inexpensive source of electricity and fresh water for both military and economic
gains, as well as ensuring China's strategic dominance in the South China Sea.
Nuclear power plants could not only provide cheap electricity to defense
facilities but also to desalination plants. Normally, the defense facilities
such as airports and harbors depend on oil or coal for power generation. A
nuclear power plant on the sea would ensure a continuous supply of water as
coolant -- a necessity for any reactor.
A 60 MWe reactor is said to be beneficial for supplying electricity, heat and
desalination, and could be used on islands and on coastal areas or for offshore
oil and gas exploration.
A scale-model of a Russian floating nuclear power plant. (Image source:
Felix/Flickr)
A common theme in the narrative about floating nuclear power plants is that they
would provide energy and freshwater to the disputed Spratly Islands and also to
China's artificial islands in the South China Sea, such as Woody Island.
Beijing, however, is entangled in territorial disputes with Japan, the
Philippines, Malaysia, and Vietnam, to name a few in the region.
China is already building man-made islands in the South China Sea by shifting
sediment from the sea floor to the reefs. It is also building ports, airstrips
and radar facilities. In 2016, reports also stated that China has deployed HQ-9
surface-to-air missiles in the Woody Island, close to the Paracel Islands. in
South China Sea. China has also deployed a HQ-9 and shorter ranged HQ-6 air
defence system at the Paracel Islands.
At the Hainan base, China operates guided missile-destroyers: Yinchuan, Hefei,
Kunming, and the Changsha. The DF-21D "carrier killer" anti-ship ballistic
missile (ASBM) is also an added asset for China.
China has, as well, unilaterally established an Air Defense Identification Zone
(ADIZ) in the East China Sea and stated that it had the right to establish
similar zones in the South China Sea.
As China flexes its muscles in the South China Sea, building a floating nuclear
reactor is yet another step toward strengthening this regional dominance.
All these man-made islands have limited amounts of fresh water. A key part of
aircraft maintenance to avoid corrosion when operating in a salt water
environment is washing the planes down with fresh water or chemical solvents.
While desalination is an option, nuclear energy might facilitate that. China
already has experience in nuclear desalination, with China General Nuclear Power
commissioning a sea-water desalination plant that uses waste heat to provide
cooling water at the Hongyanhe project at Dalian, in Liaoning province.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates that there are 11 billion
barrels of oil and 190 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in the seabed.
Geopolitical and energy security analyst Jeremy Maxie writes:
"Most of the gas in the SCS is located in offshore deep-water fields (defined as
400-1,200 meters) that is more technologically challenging and costly to develop
than shallow-water or onshore fields. In order to monetize any potential
deep-water gas discoveries, subsea pipelines would need to be built to onshore
processing facilities."
This plan that may or may not be politically conceivable. Maritime nuclear
floating reactors would apparently provide an advantage for offshore gas
exploration.
The South China Sea is crucial for states vying to gain influence in the Persian
Gulf and the Middle East, as well as for maritime commerce. The South China Sea
is also rich in hydrocarbons and fish in a region where the staple diet is fish.
In addition, with proven oil reserves, the South China Sea would yield 130
billion barrels of oil, according to Chinese estimates. Moreover, 80 percent of
the China's energy requirements pass through the Malacca Strait into the South
China Sea; China is therefore largely dependent on the Malacca Strait and the
South China Sea, a circumstance termed by then-Chinese President Hu Jintao as
the "Malacca Dilemma."
Building nuclear reactors in the South China Sea would enable Beijing to exert
its assertiveness at every turn.
Hazards
Constructing such reactors in a region prone to typhoons is, as can be imagined,
hazardous, resulting in accidents and meltdowns. Radioactive waste would spread
to neighboring countries and cause catastrophic damage to sea-currents as well
as maritime flora and fauna. Moreover, the capacity of maritime reactors to
produce power is far less than for land-based reactors. China's motive for
building the nuclear reactors, however, is clear: to exert its dominance and
influence throughout the area.
Debalina Ghoshal is a Research Fellow specializing in nuclear and missile issues
at the Centre for Human Security Studies, Hyderabad, India.
[1] The China General Nuclear Power Corporation (CGN) is to build the nuclear
power plants in cooperation with China National Offshore Oil Corporation
(CNOOC). This reactor ACPR50S is a 60MWe reactor based on the 100MWe China
National Nuclear Corporation's ACPR100S MR.
[2] The Bohai Company convened to discuss possible location and relevant
viability issues pertaining to the construction of the reactor with the Liaoning
Provincial Economy and Informatization Commission, Huludao Municipal Economy and
Informatization Commission, CSIC's nuclear safety department's safety inspection
team and Wuhan Second Institute of Ship Design-Institute 719 under the CSIC.
© 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.
Assad's unproved allegations about Jordan
Raed Omari/Al Arabiya/April 24/17
Once again, Syria's leader Bashar al-Assad has pointed an accusing finger at
Jordan, claiming that the security-concerned kingdom is planning to deploy
troops in his war-torn country. Assad made his allegations in an interview
Friday with Russia's news website Sputnik during which he accused Jordan of
coordinating its military deployment plans with the Washington. Assad was very
brief in his allegations on Jordan only saying: "We have such information, but
anyway Jordan was part of the American plan since the beginning of the war in
Syria." Amman's response to Assad was brief as well with the government
spokesperson Mohammad al-Momani who dismissed the claims of the embattled
president's as "baseless" and reiterating Jordan's push for a political solution
to Syria's six-year-old conflict.Jordan's official position on Syria has mostly
remained unchanged advocating a political solution to the ongoing war there
The story ended calmly at this stage with no escalation of rhetoric from Amman
on Damascus simply because Jordan is used to such accusations from Assad and his
officials. Since the early beginning of Syria's ongoing conflict, Damascus has
been always accusing Amman of sending fighters and arms to rebels in southern
Syria; not only to the Free Syrian Army but, strangely enough, to the Nusra
Front and other extremist groups. But I really wonder here: Would the military
situation in southern Syria be as it is now if Jordan, in cooperation with the
U.S., had really opened its almost 400 kilometers borders with Syria as Damascus
always claims?
Jordan’s stand
Assad told Sputnik news that Damascus has "intelligence information" on Jordan's
plans to deploy troops in Syria but what was put as a secret report by the
Damascus ruler has been in fact the subject of much speculation and analysis in
international press after king Abdullah's meeting with President Trump and UK
Theresa May's visit to Amman earlier this month. Several news agencies and
political analysts have touched upon the possibility of Jordan changing its
neutral position and its 'delicate balancing' of the international dynamics of
the Syrian conflict with some of them even expecting Amman to send troops to
southern Syria. But Jordan's official position on Syria has mostly remained
unchanged advocating a political solution to the ongoing war there. Amman, a
strategic Washington's ally, has even kept communication channels with Moscow
and was the only Arab country attending the Astana talks. Amman's position on
Syria has also been described as "vague" and, at times, "pragmatic" by key
regional and international players, especially members of the anti-Assad camp
but concerns of security spillover from Syria coupled with political, economic
and demographic troubles have all obliged Jordan to remain cautious supporting
neither the regime nor the opposition. However, Jordan has grown daring on Syria
placing security as its first and foremost priority mainly after the emergence
of ISIS and its affiliates and considering that the ISIS-affiliate Khalid bin
Walid Army has secured a strong foothold inside the Syrian territory just few
kilometers from its northern and eastern borders. It is never a secret that most
of the Jordanian army is stationed on the northern and eastern border line with
the war-torn Syria and Iraq all to prevent ISIS from penetrating southward and
westward into Jordan, especially after the bloody attacks of the ultra-radical
groups on the Jordanian border guards last summer.Jordan, which is an active
member in the U.S.-led anti-ISIS coalition, has launched a number of airstrikes
unilaterally against the militant group's posts inside Syria with its army
vowing to attack "terrorist" targets whenever and wherever they are.
The Rubkan camp
Jordan's major concern now is the Rukban refugee camp for displaced Syrians in
its northeast borders with Syria. According to the Jordanian army, ISIS has more
than 2000 agents inside the camp which has become home to around 80,000 refugees
since the outbreak of the conflict. Following the ISIS-claimed suicide car
bombing attack that killed six Jordanian troops in June 2016, Jordan designated
its border areas with Syria as "closed military zones" and sealed the Rukban
border crossing. Participating in a media tour to northeast borders with Syria
just five kilometers from the Rukban camp, I have been told by the Jordanian
border guards' commander that the makeshift camp and no man's land between
Jordan and Syria are "full of ISIS members, mostly from Raqqa, awaiting the
go-ahead from their leaders to attack Jordan." Journalists were also told that
the Khalid bin Walid Army is active in the massive desert areas between Jordan,
Syria and Iraq.
The talk nowadays, although still not publicly announced, is about Jordan
supporting or creating the so-called 'Jaysh al-Ashaer' (the tribes' army) inside
Syria to fight ISIS and protect the Rukban makeshift camp that has grown from
368 shelters to 8,295 this month, according to Amnesty.
With the absence of protection for the Rukban camp by the Syrian regime or the
opposition thus leaving the huge facility vulnerable to ISIS's penetration and
exploitation, the least expected from Jordan is to take precautionary measures
to prevent the group from expanding in the camp that is becoming a real
nightmare for Jordan. This concern is no secret at all and it was expressed by
Jordan's Joint Chiefs-of-Staff Lt. Gen. Mahmoud Freihat during an interview with
the BBC Arabic in December last year when he raised the alarm of possible
sleeper ISIS cells among hundreds of thousands who came from Raqqa, and are
currently living in refugee settlements close to the Kingdom’s borders, such as
Rakban. "The ISIS-affiliate Jaysh Khalid bin Al Waleed group, near the Golan
Heights, is very close to the Jordanian border, and it has tanks, armoured
vehicles and other weapons that would reach the Jordanian side," Freihat said,
stressing readiness to deal with any threat.
To make the long story short, Jordan's position in Syria is still advocating a
political solution to its ongoing war but, in case of security spillovers or any
ISIS's threats, Jordan, I think, will act swiftly and daringly and will not wait
for international peace conferences on Syria to convene.
Chinese diplomacy amid the US-North Korea standoff
Talmiz Ahmad/Al Arabiya/April 24/17
The last two weeks have seen an increasingly shrill rhetoric from North Korea,
provocative tests of missiles, and US and South Korean military manoeuvres. The
latter have evoked harsher North Korean warnings: its state media have
threatened to deliver “the most ruthless blow” if there is “even the smallest
provocation” from the United States, and that the United States and South Korea
could be “completely destroyed in an instant" if North Korea were to launch a
pre-emptive strike.
The US, meanwhile, has conducted missile defence drills with the South Korean
and Japanese navies, sent its newest F-35 stealth fighters to train in South
Korea, flown B-1 bombers to South Korea, and commenced “Max Thunder,” billed as
the second-largest military flying exercise between US and South Korean forces.
The Pentagon has also dispatched the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson strike
group to the Korean Peninsula. The British tabloid, Sunday Express, has spoken
of an imminent World War III.
North Korea has conducted five nuclear tests since 2006, the last in September
last year. It also has conducted numerous medium- and long-range missile tests
since Kim Jong-un took power in 2011.
While China is pursuing a balanced approach between the US and North Korea,
China’s interests differ from those of the US in crucial areas. In the context
of North Korea, Chinese media generally portrays the US as an aggressive,
militarist and interfering force
Sino-US cooperation
It is in this fraught background that Chinese president Xi Jinping visited
Washington on 6-7 April. China is North Korea’s principal ally, accounts for 90
percent of its trade and is the main source of the country’s food and energy. In
spite of Trump’s anti-China remarks during the election campaign, the most
interesting outcome of this interaction was China’s support for the US vis-à-vis
North Korea.
On 17 April, the State Department said that China had sent the Trump
administration “positive signals” that it would increase economic sanctions to
pressure North Korea to abandon its development of nuclear weapons and missiles.
Later, a day after North Korea’s Vice Foreign Minister said Pyongyang would test
missiles weekly and use nuclear weapons if threatened, a Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokesman said Beijing was “gravely concerned” about North Korea's
recent nuclear and missile activities. In the same press conference, spokesman
Lu Kang praised recent US statements on the North Korean issue: “American
officials did make some positive and constructive remarks... such as using
whatever peaceful means possible to resolve the (Korean) Peninsula nuclear
issue.”
Given the close economic ties between North Korea and China, US military
officials have said Beijing is critical to solving the situation, with President
Donald Trump recently commending Chinese President Xi Jinping for his efforts to
curb Pyongyang’s activities.
The latter have included reducing fuel sales to North Korea. This has evoked
some harsh words from Pyongyang, including the warning that China “should get
itself ready to face the catastrophic consequences to its relations with the
DPRK.”
China’s strategic concerns
While China is pursuing a balanced approach between the US and North Korea,
China’s interests differ from those of the US in crucial areas. In the context
of North Korea, Chinese media generally portrays the US as an aggressive,
militarist and interfering force. China on its part is chary of efforts to
pressurise the North Korean regime militarily, being concerned about the
unpredictable North Korean retaliation should the regime in Pyongyang fear
collapse, the attendant region wide political turmoil and an influx of refugees
into China itself.
China also views negatively the possible reunification of the Koreas under a
South Korean government that is closely allied to the United States, since that
would expand US influence at its borders. More immediately, China sees with
great disfavour the increasing US military’s presence in South Korea,
specifically the US decision to deploy elements of the Terminal High Altitude
Area Defence, or THAAD, missile defence system. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi
has said THAAD is “not a simple technical issue, but an out-and-out strategic
one”. Countering a powerful missile defence system means more advanced Chinese
missiles, with more aggressive deployment.
The security affairs commentator Ian Armstrong has pointed out that China is not
so much concerned about the interception capabilities of THAAD, but another
major THAAD component — the AN/TPY-2 radar, which identifies and communicates
the location of missile targets to the interceptor.
Though the US and South Korea have repeatedly stated that THAAD will be directed
only at North Korean missiles, the Chinese know that THAAD’s radar can be easily
switched into a long-range mode that would give the US an early warning of
Chinese missile launches.
Chinese commentators see this as evidence of US reluctance to work with China on
promoting regional stability and see no alternative to pursuing their own
missile programmes to counter the US’s strategic advantage in the region. The
latter could include hypersonic glide vehicles and multiple, independently
targetable re-entry vehicles (MIRVs). MIRVs are difficult to detect and would
thus effectively counter the strategic advantages provided by THAAD. China is
also expected to accelerate the development of its hypersonic glide vehicles (HGVs),
which can bypass THAAD’s interception capabilities. Observers expect China to
deploy its HGVs between 2920-2025, though this programme could get speeded up to
meet the threat from THAAD. North Korea will celebrate the 85th anniversary of
the foundation of its Korean People's Army on Tuesday, 25 April, and has marked
important events in the past by launching missiles or conducting nuclear tests.
As the USS Carl Vinson speeds toward the region and US officials have warned
that “all options are on the table”, there are fears that North Korea might use
this day for its sixth nuclear test.
The practice of social McCarthyism
Turki Aldakhil/Al Arabiya/April 24/17
There is an electronic army out there that has plenty of free time and attacks
its rivals in such a provocative manner. There is a case of unprecedented
chauvinism, categorization and McCarthyism.
When an incident occurs, dozens of questions are made demanding a stance on
every subject no matter how irrelevant it is to your interests and
responsibilities. What’s dangerous is that this extent of complaints affects
social peace and creates hostilities. Not only that, but these complaints also
do not hold any scientific value or make intellectual contributions, and they do
not have any positive political effects. Twitter continuously examines others.
Some therefore categorize themselves as the role model whom others must follow.
This, however, implies recommending oneself and such claims oppose the values
and concepts of Sharia (Islamic law).
What’s more important is for people to abandon the inevitability of expression
in every single hashtag. Life is much more than a hashtag, there is beauty in so
much more.
The French elections have produced few surprises yet, but
what of round 2?
Dr. Mohamed A. Ramady/Al Arabiya/April 24/17
Despite last minute jitters over a late surge by far-left candidate Lean-Luc
Melenchon, independent centrist Emmanuel Macron and National Front leader Marine
Le Pen were the frontrunners. At the end of the first vote the pair held
significant leads over the initial four key contenders in presidential race.
With so much at stake, what can we expect from Macron or Le Pen? This will have
consequences far beyond France. Like Brexit in the UK or Trump in the US, one of
the big questions after the second and final vote, will likely focus on who is
appointed to the winning candidate’s team. Campaigning for the second round in
the French election will start in earnest, with behind the scenes manoeuvring by
both camps as the seek support for their candidacies.
If Macron wins, then the Socialists have indicated they will support whoever he
chooses to appoint as prime minister, but only under certain conditions. Macron
will also seek support from the centre-right. But the shift from Les
Republicains could be much smaller than the Socialist defections. The
center-right is structurally and historically the majority party in France, and
they will want to protect their position, if they are to win the next
legislative elections, even under a Macron presidency. And so with no absolute
majority for Macron in the National Assembly, there would be a need to seek
support from within the reformist wing of the Socialist Party, the UDI, and the
left wing of the Republicans.
Taking a different path
But Macron could take a different path in choosing his Prime Minister. He could
select a PM with a high political profile, someone experienced and knowledgeable
of the political in-fights of parliament. Names being floated include Richard
Ferrand, current defense minister Yves Le Drian, and Gerard Collomb. The new
President could also flip the table and appoint a woman with a political
profile, perhaps Laurence Parisot, Liberal MEP Sylvie Goulard, or IMF President
Christine Lagarde, who has not given up on her political ambitions in France.
There are serious concerns in French political circles that a victory for the
National Front’s Le Pen, could be followed by a period of civil unrest
Macron could appoint a PM who combines the two qualities, while also being
little known. That would point to Bariza Khiari, a woman and a senator since
2004, who has the advantage of knowing the parliamentary mechanism, without
being widely known to the general public, and who would also tick an interesting
diversity box.
Political insiders expect Macron to tap a slate of experienced people for other
key government posts. This would start with Jean Pisani-Ferry, an economist who
has contributed to Macron’s program, and is expected to get an economic
ministry. Spokesman Benjamin Griveaux, who may be appointed minister of health,
and Laurence Haïm, who could get spokesman of the government or the ministry of
culture. Macron will also draw from a number of young local administrators with
hands-on government experience who have enthusiastically supported his campaign.
There are serious concerns in French political circles that a victory for the
National Front’s Le Pen, could be followed by a period of civil unrest. It is
feared there could be clashes between her supporters and her opponents, on the
streets of Paris following the first round results. It’s also feared she could
use that unrest to consolidate authority by drawing on wide presidential powers
provided in the Constitution of the Fifth Republic.
In the event of major disturbances, which the National Front could fuel during
the run-up to parliamentary elections, the call to introduce Article 16 of the
Constitution (relating to full powers) should not be ruled out. Full powers are
typically limited to 30 days, but Le Pen’s opponents fear that could well be
enough time to encourage a concerned electorate to spring an elections surprise,
which is a very Putin or Erdogan-styled show of strength. With a platform that
appeals to French nationalism: abandoning the Euro, a new referendum on EU
membership, fighting “Islamic” extremism and tougher immigration controls, a
future ‘President Le Pen’ would certainly require even more sweeping
presidential powers .
If that doesn't give Le Pen a working majority, the second option for the
National Front would be to conclude a government agreement with Les Republicains,
which for now seems like a stretch given the differences in economic policy
between the two parties.
Will Le Pen become more mainstream?
But it was apparent that in the presidential debate on April 4, Le Pen attempted
a turn towards more mainstream economic policies. Probably already with an eye
on fighting the second round, she proposed a reduction in taxation for small and
medium-sized enterprises. Both Macron and Le Pen are now positioning themselves
as champions of the forgotten fringes, as well as appealing to the centre, a
hard act to follow under normal circumstances.
A blue-brown coalition supporting a right wing government would be put to the
test from the outset with the first parliamentary votes – not least the vote on
the budget. The scenario of a relative majority for the FN in the National
Assembly, while difficult to envisage – given the widespread opposition
throughout France, would lead to opponents sending plenty of candidates to the
Assembly that are opposed to FN policies. For example, it is unlikely that even
one of the 18 constituencies of Paris will go to the FN.
If Le Pen aims at luring more traditional Gaullist voters, she could decide to
give the post of Prime Minister to a right-wing personality like Gérard Longuet,
Philippe de Villiers, Thierry Mariani (who is also in the race for foreign
minister) or Claude Guéant. Other hard-right personalities like Eric Ciotti,
Guillaume Peltier, Geoffroy Didier, Henri Guaino, Nadine Morano or Lionnel Luca
could also join the government team. Finally, a former adviser of Nicolas
Sarkozy, Patrick Buisson, could return to the Elysée or a ministry, along with
cadres of the micro-party “Common Sense,” now close to François Fillon.
However, in the event of a small victory, and with a view to seeking unity
within her party, Le Pen is expected to appoint a good number of more
“mediocre,” extreme party loyalists. The Ministry of the Interior could be given
to David Rachline or Steeve Briois, with the latter also in the race to be
appointed Minister of Finance. The Justice Department would seem likely to go to
Gilbert Collard. But his strained relations with a number of FN executives could
work against him to the benefit of an experienced personality like Jacques
Bompard, despite announcements to the contrary by Marine Le Pen.
For the Gulf countries, a Macron presidency would mean following the same French
policies on Syria and the Middle East. But a Le Pen presidency would see France
recalibrate some of its Middle East and global foreign policy relations. This
would mean especially rebooting warmer relations with Russia - and rather
paradoxically - also with the USA. President Trump is seemingly rooting for her,
given Le Pen’s EU reformist agenda and vow to fight the “establishment” and
globalization. On May 7, French voters will tell us which candidate they
resonate with, and bring some modicum of centrist stability or another political
earthquake in Europe .