LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS
BULLETIN
August 05/17
Compiled &
Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The
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Bible Quotations For Today
The scribes and the
Pharisees sit on Moses’ seat; therefore, do whatever they teach you and follow
it; but do not do as they do
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 23/01-12/:"Then Jesus
said to the crowds and to his disciples, ‘The scribes and the Pharisees sit on
Moses’ seat; therefore, do whatever they teach you and follow it; but do not do
as they do, for they do not practise what they teach. They tie up heavy burdens,
hard to bear, and lay them on the shoulders of others; but they themselves are
unwilling to lift a finger to move them. They do all their deeds to be seen by
others; for they make their phylacteries broad and their fringes long. They love
to have the place of honour at banquets and the best seats in the synagogues,
and to be greeted with respect in the market-places, and to have people call
them rabbi. But you are not to be called rabbi, for you have one teacher, and
you are all students. And call no one your father on earth, for you have one
Father the one in heaven.Nor are you to be called instructors, for you have one
instructor, the Messiah. The greatest among you will be your servant.All who
exalt themselves will be humbled, and all who humble themselves will be
exalted."
Keep watch over yourselves and over all the flock, of which
the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to shepherd the church of God that he
obtained with the blood of his own Son
Acts of the Apostles 20,17-24.28.32.35./:"From Miletus he sent a message to
Ephesus, asking the elders of the church to meet him.When they came to him, he
said to them: ‘You yourselves know how I lived among you the entire time from
the first day that I set foot in Asia, serving the Lord with all humility and
with tears, enduring the trials that came to me through the plots of the Jews. I
did not shrink from doing anything helpful, proclaiming the message to you and
teaching you publicly and from house to house, as I testified to both Jews and
Greeks about repentance towards God and faith towards our Lord Jesus.And now, as
a captive to the Spirit, I am on my way to Jerusalem, not knowing what will
happen to me there, except that the Holy Spirit testifies to me in every city
that imprisonment and persecutions are waiting for me. But I do not count my
life of any value to myself, if only I may finish my course and the ministry
that I received from the Lord Jesus, to testify to the good news of God’s grace.
Keep watch over yourselves and over all the flock, of which the Holy Spirit has
made you overseers, to shepherd the church of God that he obtained with the
blood of his own Son. And now I commend you to God and to the message of his
grace, a message that is able to build you up and to give you the inheritance
among all who are sanctified. In all this I have given you an example that by
such work we must support the weak, remembering the words of the Lord Jesus, for
he himself said, "It is more blessed to give than to receive." ’
Question: "Why did Jesus
teach in parables?"
GotQuestions.org/Answer: It has been said that a parable is an earthly story
with a heavenly meaning. The Lord Jesus frequently used parables as a means of
illustrating profound, divine truths. Stories such as these are easily
remembered, the characters bold, and the symbolism rich in meaning. Parables
were a common form of teaching in Judaism. Before a certain point in His
ministry, Jesus had employed many graphic analogies using common things that
would be familiar to everyone (salt, bread, sheep, etc.) and their meaning was
fairly clear in the context of His teaching. Parables required more explanation,
and at one point in His ministry, Jesus began to teach using parables
exclusively.
The question is why Jesus would let most people wonder about the meaning of His
parables. The first instance of this is in His telling the parable of the seed
and the soils. Before He interpreted this parable, He drew His disciples away
from the crowd. They said to Him, "Why do You speak to them in parables?" Jesus
answered them, "To you it has been granted to know the mysteries of the kingdom
of heaven, but to them it has not been granted. For whoever has, to him more
shall be given, and he will have an abundance; but whoever does not have, even
what he has shall be taken away from him. Therefore I speak to them in parables;
because while seeing they do not see, and while hearing they do not hear, nor do
they understand. In their case the prophecy of Isaiah is being fulfilled, which
says,
‘Hearing you will hear and shall not understand, And seeing you will see and not
perceive; For the hearts of this people have grown dull. Their ears are hard of
hearing, And their eyes they have closed, Lest they should see with their eyes
and hear with their ears, Lest they should understand with their hearts and
turn, So that I should heal them.’ But blessed are your eyes, because they see;
and your ears, because they hear. For truly I say to you that many prophets and
righteous men desired to see what you see, and did not see it, and to hear what
you hear, and did not hear it" (Matthew 13:10-17).
From this point on in Jesus’ ministry, when He spoke in parables, He explained
them only to His disciples. But those who had continually rejected His message
were left in their spiritual blindness to wonder as to His meaning. He made a
clear distinction between those who had been given “ears to hear” and those who
persisted in unbelief—ever hearing, but never actually perceiving and “always
learning but never able to acknowledge the truth” (2 Timothy 3:7). The disciples
had been given the gift of spiritual discernment by which things of the spirit
were made clear to them. Because they accepted truth from Jesus, they were given
more and more truth. The same is true today of believers who have been given the
gift of the Holy Spirit who guides us into all truth (John 16:13). He has opened
our eyes to the light of truth and our ears to the sweet words of eternal life.
Our Lord Jesus understood that truth is not sweet music to all ears. Simply put,
there are those who have neither interest nor regard in the deep things of God.
So why, then, did He speak in parables? To those with a genuine hunger for God,
the parable is both an effective and memorable vehicle for the conveyance of
divine truths. Our Lord’s parables contain great volumes of truth in very few
words—and His parables, rich in imagery, are not easily forgotten. So, then, the
parable is a blessing to those with willing ears. But to those with dull hearts
and ears that are slow to hear, the parable is also an instrument of both
judgment and mercy.
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis &
editorials from miscellaneous sources published on August 04-05/17
Washington Post Op-Ed Shills for Hezbollah
Ally/Sean Durns/The Times Of Israel/August 03/17
Why are Jroud Arsal significant to Iran/Huda al-Husseini/Al Arabiya/August 04/17
Lebanese society on edge with Arsal raid, battle/Florence MassenaAl
Monitor/August 04/17
U.S. Security Assistance to Lebanon at Risk/David Schenker/The Washington
Institute/August 04/17
Qatar Crisis, Invasion of Kuwait/Abdulrahman Al-Rashed//Gatestone
Institute/August 04/17
The Foreign Press Association's Unlimited Bias/Bassam Tawil/Gatestone
Institute/August 04/17
JASTA: Time to move on from unjustified lawsuits/Dr. Mohamed A. Ramady/Al
Arabiya/August 04/17
Titles For Latest
Lebanese Related News published on
August 04-05/17
Report: Contacts Underway for 'International Air
Cover' for Military
Berri from Iran: Our Army is among Best Armies in Region
Mashnouq Warns of 'Int'l Isolation', Urges Integrating Hizbullah Arms into State
Nasrallah Urges Govt. to Negotiate with Syria on Refugees, Says Keen on Kuwait
Ties
Man Arrested for Smuggling Syrians into Lebanon
Two Lebanese-Australian Charged with Terrorism over Plane Attack Plot
Bassil: Lebanon-Syria Coordination for Return of Displaced 'Not Binding Nor
Forbidden'
Army Fires Artillery at IS Militants in Ras Baalbek Outskirts
Army artillery targets Daesh positions in Balbek mountains
Aoun adamant to ameliorate economic situation: For lifting immunity on all
corrupt
Berri in chat with media delegation in Tehran: Army has all capabilities to
purge eastern terrian of terrorism
Sarraf discusses current situation with US, Spanish Ambassadors
Zeaiter, Raeli signs 'strengthening and enhancing quality olive oil chain in
Lebanon' operational agreement
Washington Post Op-Ed Shills for Hezbollah Ally
Why are Jroud Arsal significant to Iran/Huda al-Husseini/Al Arabiya/August 04/17
Lebanese society on edge with Arsal raid, battle
U.S. Security Assistance to Lebanon at Risk
Titles For Latest
LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
August 04-05/17
Saudi forces counter Houthi attack on its
border with Yemen
Anti-terror quartet reiterate firm position in Jeddah meet
Blaze Rips Through Dubai Skyscraper 'The Torch'
Maduro Installs Disputed New Venezuela Assembly
Ex-Netanyahu Aide Turns State's Witness in Graft Probe
Israel Plans to Discuss 'UNIFIL Mission' During UN Chief's First Visit
Egypt Court Jails 50 Policemen over Strike
Iraq Finds Mass Grave in Former IS-Held City
Latest Lebanese
Related News published on
August 04-05/17
Report:
Contacts Underway for 'International Air Cover' for Military
Naharnet/August 04/17/Contacts with US and Russian sides, with regard
to the situation on the Lebanese border, are underway to pave the way for the
“international coalition to provide an air cover for the Lebanese army's
upcoming battle against the Islamic State group” on the outskirts of the border
towns of al-Qaa and Ras Baalbek, al-Joumhouria daily reported on Friday.
“Contacts with the Russians and Americans, with regard to the situation on the
Lebanese border, are underway in a bid to make Moscow pressure its allies in
Syria and Iran and make the Syrian regime and Hizbullah accept that the
international coalition provides an air coverage for the Lebanese army's battle
against the IS,” reported the daily. “This explains the delay in the army's
operation,” added the daily, “however, an approval has not been confirmed
yet.”Meanwhile, reports that some US special forces are already in Lebanon to
assist the army in its mission, according to the daily.A senior military source
who spoke on condition of anonymity said the reports were “inaccurate,” adding
that “US elements in Lebanon are not combat teams but training and follow-up
teams.”The army is reportedly preparing an operation aimed at eradicating IS
militants from the outskirts of al-Qaa and Ras Baalbek. On Thursday, the army
fired artillery rounds at Islamic State group posts in the outskirts of the
eastern border towns of al-Qaa and Ras Baalbek, inflicting casualties and
destroying a number of sites, state-run National News Agency reported. The
shelling continued for several hours throughout Thursday. Army units meanwhile
continued their deployment in the outskirts of the nearby border town of Arsal,
seizing control of posts abandoned by the jihadist al-Nusra Front group.
Al-Nusra was ousted from the region in a Hizbullah offensive that ended with an
evacuation deal.
Berri from Iran: Our Army is among Best Armies in
Region
Naharnet/August 04/17/Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri announced Friday during a
visit to Tehran that the Lebanese army is “among the best armies in the
region.”“The Lebanese army possesses all the capabilities that allow it to
continue the battle of ridding the eastern mountains of terrorism, especially
the part that is still under the control of the Islamic State group,” Berri told
reporters accompanying him to Iran. “Thank God our army is among the best armies
in the region and has demonstrated high combat competency in its war on terror,”
the speaker added. As for the looming offensive against the IS group in the
outskirts of the border towns of Ras Baalbek and al-Qaa, Berri said “the timing
of the battle belongs to the Army Command , which has the ability to evaluate
the circumstances and atmosphere needed to perform its missions.”Berri had
arrived earlier in the day in Tehran at the head of an official delegation to
take part in the oath-taking ceremony of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, the
National News Agency reported.Berri and the accompanying delegation had received
an invitation from Iran's Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani, NNA said. Rouhani was
sworn in for a second term on Thursday by supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamanei
after being re-elected in a landslide in May. The ceremony will be held on
Saturday.
Mashnouq Warns of 'Int'l Isolation', Urges
Integrating Hizbullah Arms into State
Naharnet/August 04/17/Interior Minister Nouhad al-Mashnouq warned Thursday that
Lebanon could soon face an international isolation in connection with
Hizbullah's presence as a paramilitary force that has regional roles, calling
for integrating the Iran-backed group's weapons into the Lebanese state.
“Hizbullah's arms cannot have Lebanese legitimacy without a national strategy
that would integrate these weapons into the state,” said Mashnouq in an
interview on LBCI television.
“We are not Vietnam to speak of an army-people-resistance equation. I'm not
saying that we are Hong Kong but let's have something in the middle between
Vietnam and Hong Kong,” the minister added. He also warned that Lebanon might
face “a major Arab and Western political and economic siege in the upcoming
period,” stressing that the country should have a “united domestic front” in
order to deal with such a possibility. Turning to Hizbullah's military operation
in the outskirts of the border town of Arsal in which it managed to oust
al-Nusra Front militants from the area, Mashnouq said he cannot congratulate
Hizbullah over a victory in Arsal's outskirts as he congratulated the families
of five freed Hizbullah captives on “their safe return.”
“The army chief told some politicians that the army had the ability to liberate
Arsal's outskirts although for a high casualty toll... The political forces did
not give a greenlight to the army,” the minister explained.
Nasrallah Urges Govt. to Negotiate with Syria on Refugees, Says Keen on Kuwait
Ties
Naharnet/August 04/17/Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah on Friday called
on the Lebanese government to “negotiate” with Damascus over the return of
Syrian refugees to their country, following the successful evacuation operation
that saw the transfer of thousands of refugees and militants from northeast
Lebanon to central and north Syria.
“I call on Lebanese politicians to draw lessons from these negotiations. This
operation led to the transfer of hundreds of militants and thousands of families
without international efforts and without a role for the U.N. or the
international Red Cross... The guarantors on the ground were the Lebanese
General Security and the Syrian regime,” said Nasrallah in a televised speech
marking the completion of an evacuation and prisoner exchange agreement with
al-Nusra Front, al-Qaida's former Syrian affiliate. The agreement followed days
of clashes in the outskirts of the Lebanese border town of Arsal and the Syrian
town of Flita that saw Hizbullah fighters and Syrian troops besiege Nusra's
militants in a small pocket of territory.
Urging the Lebanese government to “negotiate” with Damascus over the return of
more than one million refugees to Syria, Nasrallah reassured that Syria's
government will offer "all the needed guarantees" in the vein of its role in the
Arsal evacuation deal.
“The media has not been fair towards the Syrian army and its sacrifices on this
front and we must appreciate its sacrifices, martyrs and wounded,” added
Nasrallah, referring to the Syrian forces' role in the border offensive.
Moreover, Hizbullah's chief revealed that President Michel Aoun and Prime
Minister Saad Hariri had “agreed to and facilitated” the exchange and evacuation
negotiations.
“President Michel Aoun agreed to the negotiations... and offered the necessary
facilitation to ensure success. I know his sympathy and love towards the
martyrs, captives, fighters and those who have offered sacrifices,” Nasrallah
said.
“This is a brave president who has said that this is a victory for Lebanon,”
Nasrallah added, referring to Aoun's Army Day speech. “As for PM Saad Hariri, he
had agreed to the negotiations from the very beginning and was keen on their
success. He offered all the necessary facilitation although some things would
have embarrassed him” towards his popular base and the public opinion, Nasrallah
said.
“He said that Hizbullah 'achieved something' in the outskirts and this is a step
forward. The State acted responsibly which led to the completion of this
victory,” Hizbullah's leader went on to say.
Nasrallah also lauded what he called “the remarkable efforts and strenuous and
critical work that was exerted by General Security chief Major General Abbas
Ibrahim,” who played a key role in the negotiations that involved the release of
eight Hizbullah fighters who were in Nusra's captivity and the handover of a
number of bodies.
Turning to the Lebanese army's expected offensive against Islamic State
jihadists entrenched in the outskirts of the border towns of Ras Baalbek and
al-Qaa, Nasrallah warned IS' militants that “the Lebanese and Syrians will come
for them from all sides.”
“You will not be able to resist. This is a losing battle and you will definitely
lose and get killed, wounded or captured. You better do the right calculations
and draw a lesson from al-Nusra who tried us instead of heeding the warnings,”
Nasrallah warned, noting that there can be negotiations over nine Lebanese
servicemen abducted by IS in 2014.
Nasrallah also noted that Hizbullah and the Syrian forces are ready to assist
the Lebanese army in its expected assault against IS' militants in order to
“lower the casualty toll” among the army's troops.
Separately, Nasrallah denied any role for Hizbullah in what Kuwait has dubbed an
Iranian-backed terrorist cell known in the Gulf emirate as al-Abdali cell.
“I stress Hizbullah's keenness on the best relations between Lebanon and Kuwait
and we acknowledge Kuwait's support for Lebanon and its assistance in the wake
of the July War. We value and appreciate its stance and we don't want anything
to harm the relation. We are ready to discuss any ambiguity through the
diplomatic channels,” Nasrallah noted.
He also underlined that Hizbullah has not “sent, smuggled or stored weapons” in
Kuwait, describing the accusations as baseless.
Kuwaiti Ambassador to Lebanon Abdul-Al al-Qinai has handed a letter of protest
over Hizbullah's alleged involvement in the cell to Foreign Minister Jebran
Bassil and has held talks with PM Hariri and Interior Minister Nouhad
al-Mashnouq over the issue.
The supreme court in Sunni-ruled Kuwait, which has a sizable Shiite minority,
last month convicted 21 Shiites of forming a "terrorist cell" with ties to Iran
and Hizbullah and plotting attacks in the Gulf state.
Kuwait has protested to Lebanon over the alleged training of the cell members by
Hizbullah, which has ministers in the Lebanese government.
Earlier this month, Kuwaiti authorities expelled 15 Iranian diplomats and shut
down the military, cultural and trade missions of the Iranian embassy in Kuwait
over Tehran's backing of the "terrorist cell."
Iran said the allegation is baseless
Fourteen of the 21 convicted members are on the run. Local media said they fled
to Iran by sea. Around a third of Kuwait's native population of 1.35 million are
Shiites.
Man Arrested for Smuggling Syrians into Lebanon
Naharnet/August 04/17/State Security police arrested a Syrian man in the Aley
district on Friday on accusation of helping to smuggle Syrian nationals into
Lebanon, the National News Agency reported. The suspect, who was identified as
Fayez Hmeid, was accused of smuggling people through illegal crossings between
Lebanon and Syria in return for sums of money, NNA said. Hmeid was referred to
the related judicial authorities.
Two Lebanese-Australian Charged with Terrorism over Plane
Attack Plot
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 04/17/Two Lebanese-Australian men have been
charged with terrorism offenses after Australian police thwarted an alleged plot
to blow up a plane, and were refused bail on Friday, with a third still being
questioned. A man instructed by Islamic State to bring
down an Etihad Airways flight tried to use an unsuspecting passenger to carry a
bomb on board, with a second poisonous gas plot also in the works, Australian
police alleged Friday. The improvised device, using "high military-grade
explosive", was due to be smuggled onto a July 15 service from Sydney, but the
attempt was aborted before they reached security. Two men -- Khaled Khayat and
Mahmoud Khayat -- have been charged with terrorism offences and were refused
bail on Friday, with a third still being questioned.
Police claim one of them planted the bomb in the passenger's luggage. Local
reports said the luggage belonged to the man's own, innocent, brother. "We will
be alleging the person who was to carry the IED had no idea they were carrying
an IED," said Australian Federal Police Deputy Commissioner Michael Phelan.
"There is a little bit of conjecture as to why it didn't go ahead. It
didn't get past the check-in."Police are working on the theory that it was
called off because the device may have been too heavy. Authorities also foiled a
second alleged plot involving a "chemical dispersion device", designed to
release hydrogen sulphide, but this was in the early stages. Hydrogen sulphide
is highly toxic, and often fatal for people exposed to it.
"Not only have we stopped the IED that was believed to go on the plane but we
have also completely disrupted the intended chemical dispersion device," said
Phelan. The second plan was hatched after the first
one failed, police alleged, and was not necessarily targeted at a plane. "They
were talking about crowded closed spaces, you know, potentially public
transport, and so on," Phelan said, but added that they "got nowhere near making
one". The plot was orchestrated by "a senior member of the Islamic State" based
overseas. Communications with the extremist group began in April and they sent
components and propellants through international cargo from Turkey to the men,
police said. The men were then directed on how to build a bomb that would have
caused "significant damage". "With assistance from the
ISIL commander, the accused assembled the IED into what we believe was a
functioning IED to be placed on that flight," said Phelan, referring to Islamic
State by an alternative acronym.
- Originated in Turkey -The destination of the flight was not revealed, although
reports have previously suggested it was Abu Dhabi. Etihad earlier this week
confirmed it was working with authorities in Australia on their investigation.
Police would not reveal who the IS link was but said it will be alleged the men
were introduced to him by a relative who is a senior IS member in Syria. "It is
a concern that it got through," said Phelan about the bomb components arriving
in Australia through the mail. "What we're alleging is
the components of the IED originated in Turkey at this stage. We are very
confident that we have found every single component of that IED."
Security was tightened at domestic and international airports across
Australia after four men were arrested in raids in Sydney on Saturday over what
Phelan called "one of the most sophisticated plots that has ever been attempted
on Australian soil".
Justice Minister Michael Keenan said the impacts "could have been catastrophic".
"I understand that Australians will feel very unnerved about hearing this
news and the police allege that we have been the target of a very serious ISIL
plot," he told reporters. "But I do want to remind everyone that this is the
13th time, because of the excellence of our law enforcement agencies, that we
have been able to stop a terrorist attack from occurring on Australian soil in
the past three years." Khaled Khayat, 49, and Mahmoud Khayat, 32, have been
charged with two counts of "acts done in preparation for, or planning, a
terrorist act" and are next due in court on November 14.
One of the four has been released without charge and another is still
being questioned.
Bassil: Lebanon-Syria Coordination for Return of Displaced
'Not Binding Nor Forbidden'
Naharnet/August 04/17/Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil said on Friday that a
decision to make displaced Syrians return home must not be linked to any events
happening in Syria, as he pointed out that contacts with the Syrian regime to
that end are "not binding nor prohibited.”“We have stepped into a phase where we
will raise the voice for the return of displaced people. The current
international policy gives displaced people assistance to stay in Lebanon, while
it should be helping them return to Syria,” said Bassil in an interview with the
weekly al-Sayyad newspaper.Bassil said that linking the decision of return to
events in the war-torn country or to a political solution “is impermissible,”
stressing his rejection of “the logic of dependence on foreign states or
external developments to resolve the crisis of the displaced.”Whether handling
this issue required a higher level of political contacts between the two
governments, the Minister said: “The return of displaced peopl can happen with
or without contact with the Syrian government. Contact with Damascus is not
binding, but it is not prohibited either.”"It is imperative that the return of
Syrian refugees from Lebanon to their country is not governed by a UN
resolution. What would we do if the international community decided it was not
high time for them to return? What should we do if the solution is delayed for
years in Syria?” asked Bassil. The Minister stressed the need for the adoption
of a “national policy that would actually lead to the return of the displaced.”
Army Fires Artillery at IS Militants in Ras Baalbek Outskirts
Naharnet/August 04/17/The army was on Friday firing artillery rounds at posts
and vehicles for the terrorist Islamic State group in the outskirts of the
eastern border town of Ras Baalbek, state-run National News Agency reported.
On Thursday, the army also shelled IS posts in the outskirts of Ras
Baalbek and the neighboring town of al-Qaa, inflicting casualties and destroying
a number of sites. Also on Thursday, army units
continued their deployment in the outskirts of the nearby border town of Arsal,
seizing control of posts abandoned by the jihadist al-Nusra Front group.
Al-Nusra was ousted from the region in a Hizbullah offensive that ended with an
evacuation deal.The army is reportedly preparing a major operation aimed at
eradicating IS militants from the outskirts of al-Qaa and Ras Baalbek.
Army artillery
targets Daesh positions in Balbek mountains
Fri 04 Aug 2017/NNA - The Lebanese Army artillery is targeting the positions of
Daesh terrorists in Baalbek mountains, according to the NNA correspondent.
Aoun adamant to ameliorate economic situation: For lifting
immunity on all corrupt
Fri 04 Aug 2017/NNA - President of the Republic, Michel Aoun, on Friday
underlined the necessity that immunity be lifted on all those who practice
corruption, hoping that the task of fighting corruption would succeed to rectify
the current situation. "It is essential that immunity be lifted on all those who
practice corruption, and they are not few," President Aoun said during his
meeting at the Baabda palace with a wide delegation of Kesrouan-Ftouh district.
Aoun hoped before the delegation that combating corruption would succeed in
order to set the current situation right, notably that Lebanon is facing a major
crisis that requires swift economic action plan. "The Lebanese currency is
solely supported through production rather than via debts," Aoun said, stressing
determination to ameliorate the current economic situation and move it towards
the upward path. The President underscored the paramount importance of taking
initiatives to regulate and systematize our deteriorating economic sphere. He
stressed the need to heed care to all economic sectors. On the other hand, Aoun
met in the presence of First Lebanese Mrs. Nadia Al-Shami Aoun, a delegation
from the "Happiness of Heaven" Association, led by Father Majdi Allwai.
Berri in chat with media delegation in Tehran: Army has all capabilities to
purge eastern terrian of terrorism
Fri 04 Aug 2017/NNA - House Speaker, Nabih Berri, said that the Lebanese army
has all the capabilities to rid the eastern terrain of terrorism, especially the
remaining parts which are still under the control of the terrorist Daesh
Organization. Speaker Berri's fresh words on Friday came in a chat with his
accompanying delegation to Tehran, where he will attend the sworn-in ceremony of
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. "Our army is one of the best armies in the
region.. It [army[ proved a high combat efficiency in its war on terrorism,"
Berri said, adding that the army command is the authority to decide upon the
timing of the battle.
Sarraf discusses current situation with US, Spanish
Ambassadors
Fri 04 Aug 2017/NNA - National Defense Minister, Yaacoub Sarraf, on Friday
stressed that the military institution is the sole authority to determine the
timing and place of the tasks entrusted upon it. Minister Sarraf urged all to
avoid engaging in military and security analysis and to stay away from
speculation and giving unsubstantiated and groundless information. Sarraf met
respectively with the US Ambassador to Lebanon, Elizabeth Richard, and Spanish
Ambassador to Lebanon, Jose Maria Ferre de la Pena, with talks reportedly
touching on the general situation in Lebanon and the broader region, in addition
to the bilateral ties.
Zeaiter, Raeli signs 'strengthening and enhancing quality
olive oil chain in Lebanon' operational agreement
Fri 04 Aug 2017/NNA - In a press release by the Italian Embassy
in Beirut, it said: "Minister of Agriculture, Ghazi Zeaiter, and the Director of
the International Center for Advanced Mediterranean Agronomic Studies (CIHEAM)
Bari, Maurizio Raeli, initialled the operational agreement on "Strengthening and
enhancing quality olive oil chain in Lebanon". On the same occasion, the
President of CDR, Nabil Jisr, and the Director of the International Center for
Advanced Mediterranean Agronomic Studies (CIHEAM) Bari initialled the "Master
Plan for the sustainable development of Lebanese coastal communities" financed
by Italy. The Ambassador of Italy, Massimo
Marotti, and the Director of the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation
(AICS), Donatella Procesi, were also present at the ceremony held at the
Lebanese Ministry of Agriculture Headquarters in Beirut. "Strengthening
and enhancing quality olive oil chain in Lebanon" project is the third phase of
two very successful initiatives already executed by CIHEAM, an intergovernmental
organization, jointly with the Ministry of Agriculture (MoA) in Lebanon, both
financed by Italy for an amount of 1 million euros. This phase will last 18
months and encompasses activities aiming at encouraging income-generating
activities related to olive oil, via the support to olive oil chain associations
and producers, oil millers and traders. The initiatives will improve the
socioeconomic conditions of olive oil operators, whether organized into
associations or not, and of their families, and increasing food security level,
while strengthening quality of Lebanese olive oil along its value chain. The
"Master Plan for the Sustainable Development of the Lebanese Coastal
Communities" project will last one year and is jointly implemented by the
Council for Development and Reconstruction (CDR), and executed by CIHEAM Bari,
in close collaboration with the Lebanese Ministry of Agriculture (MoA). The
Master Plan is funded by Italy through a grant of around 500 000 euros. The
Master Plan preparation will extend over a period of 12 months and will identify
specific sector interventions and setup integrated market systems, while
encouraging the sustainable use of local natural resources. It will define
significant income-generating opportunities, especially in vulnerable coastal
areas within South, Mount Lebanon and North Governorates (especially among
fishermen communities). The expected achievements include the production of a
"Sustainable Development Master Plan Document", to comply with the overarching
guiding principles of sustainability, social inclusion and social businesses."
Washington Post Op-Ed
Shills for Hezbollah Ally
Sean Durns/The Times Of Israel/August 03/17
There's an elephant in the room in a recent Washington Post Op-Ed “Can Lebanon
survive Syria, Israel—and President Trump” that discusses challenges facing the
Lebanese state. That elephant is the open support of the Lebanese government for
Hezbollah, the Shi'ite Muslim, U.S.-designated terror group, which has fed off
its Beirut host-turned-advocate for decades. The July 25, 2017 Post commentary
by former Post correspondent Nora Boustany and writer Daniel Williams
effectively whitewashes the country's current support for Hezbollah.
Boustany, now a journalism professor at the American University of Beirut, and
Williams, an author of a recent book on Christians in the Middle East, argue
that Lebanon is “trying to navigate a summer of tensions with its neighbors” and
is “seemingly always under existential siege from forces inside and out
[emphasis added].”
Those neighbors, the commentators assert, include a “bellicose” Israel that “is
unhappy with archenemy Hezbollah's growing power and is talking about flattening
the country if Hariri doesn't do something about it.” Lebanon, they say, is a
“beleaguered country” currently led by Prime Minister Saad Hariri who, in a
recent visit to the U.S., was seeking to prevent the Trump administration from
ending a “State Department program of military aid to Lebanon worth about $80
million this year.”
Trump, the writers argue, “Should not end U.S. support for Lebanon's armed
forces.” Yet—perhaps in order to advance their argument—The Post Op-Ed omits
relevant facts, namely why and how Hezbollah's power is “growing” and what this
portends for Lebanon, Israel and the region writ large.
Indeed, two key words are missing from Boustany and Williams' Op-Ed: Michael
Aoun. This is curious given that Aoun is Lebanon's President. He's also a
Hezbollah ally.
Amazingly, Aoun's name is not mentioned even once in the 841-word
commentary—despite the fact that his electoral victory was announced in an Oct.
31, 2016 Washington Post report entitled “Lebanese lawmakers pick Hezbollah ally
to end presidential logjam.”
Aoun, The Post noted in that October dispatch, had angered “many Lebanese by
dispatching fighters to aid President Bashar al-Assad's forces in Syria without
receiving permission from Lebanon's government.” That is, the eighty-one
year-old Aoun, as commander-in-chief of the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF),
assisted a U.S.-designated terrorist group in its efforts to prop up a genocidal
dictator.
Hezbollah, like other Iranian-backed proxies, has been active in Tehran's
efforts to support al-Assad. Aoun's position, Post reporter Hugh Naylor stated,
showed that “Hezbollah has become the dominant player in Lebanon.” In this, it
has the active cooperation of the LAF. Indeed, as analyst Tony Badran noted in a
July 26, 2017 Tablet commentary entitled “Lebanon is Another Name for
Hezbollah”:
“At the same time Hariri is visiting Washington, however, the LAF is taking part
in a joint military operation with Hezbollah in northeastern Lebanon, targeting
a pocket of Syrian armed groups—including the group formerly known as the Nusra
Front—on the Syrian border. Hezbollah, of course, controls the Lebanese
government and dictates the operations of its armed forces. Indeed, it was
Hezbollah that laid out the battle plans for the current operation in
northeastern Lebanon, including what role the LAF would play in it. And it was
Hezbollah's chief, Hassan Nasrallah, who announced the impending start of the
joint operation with the LAF during a televised appearance a couple of weeks
ago.”
Badran also pointed out that the LAF “chaperoned” Hezbollah on a media tour of
the border with Israel—an area in which the terror group used environmental NGOs
as cover to conduct surveillance on Israel, as the Committee for Accuracy in
Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA) noted in an Aug. 2, 2017 Washington
Examiner Op-Ed (“Hezbollah's Media Relations Department”).
The Washington Post itself, in a July 31, 2017 report made after another “tour”
with the terrorist group, pointed out that “nowhere was there any evidence of
the Lebanese state” on the Israel-Lebanon border; Hezbollah, which de facto runs
the country, controlled it all. Hezbollah even has elected members of
parliament—not that they're necessary when a pro-Hezbollah commander-in-chief is
able to send forces abroad sans parliamentary support.
Importantly, that July 31 Post dispatch, like Boustany and Williams' Op-Ed,
omits that Hezbollah's very existence violates U.N. Security Council Resolutions
1559 and 1701, which called for the group to disband.
Instead, Hezbollah has made war on the Jewish state and turned Lebanon into a
Vichy-like state that, similar to France during World War II, is also led by an
aging autocrat who has made his peace with and concessions to Jew-hatred and
war.
Hezbollah's ally and enabler, the LAF, as journalist and analyst Lee Smith
pointed out in The Weekly Standard, is the fifth largest recipient of U.S.
military aid. In 2016, the LAF received $220 million (“The Lebanese Army is
Misusing Aid,” Nov. 14, 2016). Yet, Prime Minister Hairi—who Boustany and
Williams paint as fighting Hezbollah—wants more. This, despite the fact that,
according to Smith, “pictures of a Hezbollah parade in the Syrian city of Qusayr
showed Hezbollah fighters using American-made personnel carriers
(ACPS)”—illustrating the danger that U.S. military aid to the LAF can wind up in
the hands of a terrorist group, which, prior to the Sept. 11, 2001 al-Qaeda
attack, was responsible for more American deaths than any other Islamist group.
Unsurprisingly, these details were also omitted in the Post commentary. Perhaps
it would have ruined the sales pitch.
Why are Jroud Arsal
significant to Iran/لماذا جرود عرسال دون غيرها مهمة لإيران؟
Huda al-Husseini/Al Arabiya/August
04/17
هدى الحسيني/الشرق الأوسط/03 آب/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=57640
Hezbollah fought and negotiated with al-Nusra Front and then swapped prisoners
and corpses. As if what happened is in a state other than Lebanon but it’s in
fact Lebanon and we’re particularly reminded of that when we recall how
Hezbollah said it will not fight ISIS but it will let the Lebanese army perform
the task. Hezbollah however decides when to fight its battles and imposes
certain battles on the Lebanese army.
Hezbollah Secretary General Sayyid Hassan Nasrallah said he dedicates the
victory to Lebanon and the Lebanese people. He knows that no one is with
al-Nusra or ISIS. We’re grateful to anyone who saves Lebanon and the Lebanese
people from these groups but why don’t we believe that this battle was for
Lebanon’s sake? What’s the role of linking Jroud Arsal to Qalamoun?
Where will Iran’s land bridge to reach the Mediterranean Sea pass through? A
Hezbollah official said during a tour with the press: “We will hand Jroud Arsal
to the Lebanese army once it’s capable because it has the battle of confronting
(ISIS).”
Is it a coincidence that Iran’s supreme guide Ayatollah Khamenei’s website
published a video of Hezbollah members in Lebanon with Nasrallah standing at the
podium as they cheered “We are the sons of Khomeini” and of Hezbollah members in
front of Khomeini’s shrine as they chanted “We are the sons of the Khamenei” as
Khamenei himself saluted them?
It seems Iran is using these militias in sectarian and geopolitical wars while
pitting the states and Shiite militias it supports against Sunni blocs in Sunni
countries.
The video was captioned: “Following the divine victory achieved by the
Resistance’s arms in Jroud Arsal, we, for the first time broadcast, a video of
Hezbollah youths.”
Jroud Arsal is very far from Iran but it’s very important especially that the
timing of the battle came amid the Palestinians’ defense of Al-Aqsa. At the
beginning of the “victory speech,” Nasrallah only saluted them and the Houthis
and then saluted the Lebanese army.
Iran established Hezbollah in Lebanon and then formed other armed Shiite
militias in order for its “land bridge” to extend from Tehran to Lebanon,
Israel’s border, Jordan and eventually to the Gulf of Aden. It seems Iran is
using these militias in sectarian and geopolitical wars while pitting the states
and Shiite militias it supports against Sunni blocs in Sunni countries.
The Arab Spring
In the summer of 2011, at the beginning of the Arab Spring, hundreds of Lebanese
and Syrian youths gathered in the Bekaa valley and were militarily trained by
Hezbollah. Lebanese journalist Fidaa al-Itaani who was back then a supporter of
the group spoke about his experience to BuzzFeed.
The report detailed how “after witnessing the spectacle in the Bekaa Valley that
day in 2011, Itaani asked a contact in Hezbollah’s intelligence unit why so many
men were being trained so aggressively. Were they preparing for another war
against Israel, he wondered. ‘We are training them in everything,’ Itaani said
the Hezbollah official told him. ‘Municipal governance, self-defense, religion,
how to use the infrastructure of the state, electricity, water, civil defense.’
‘Assad may leave,” he described his contact as saying. ‘If so we will take a
small part of Syria. If he wins, we will take all of Syria.’”
Iran is the victim of the sectarian division policy which Ayatollah Khomeini
paved way for. The sectarian extremism policy emerged with Khomeini’s rise in
1979 when he raised the slogan of exporting the revolution to Islamic states and
sought to remove geographic borders. To achieve this aim, Khomeini needed a
military power with a strong basis in Tehran to continue to expand in the
region.
He did not trust the regular army and executed most of its prominent officers.
The Revolutionary Guards was thus established as a military tool to suppress
others and protect the governance of the jurist and develop the Islamic
revolution according to Khomeini’s agenda.
The Revolutionary Guard’s system stipulates that it is an institution which is
under the command of the supreme guide and it ideologically and politically
submits to it. It’s also well-known that the Revolutionary Guards has two tasks.
The first one is internal and it includes suppressing protests and assigning
thousands of the Basij members to spy on people on a daily basis, monitor the
internet and satellite dishes and hack public, private and regional companies
and supervise what audiovisual and audio media outlets broadcast.
The second one is foreign in which the guards target those who defected from the
regime outside Iran and target other countries. The revolutionary guards had
carried out terrorist operations to demonstrate its strength. It blew up the
Marines headquarters in Beirut and the headquarters of French troops.
Terrorist operations
It was responsible for blowing up a Jewish center in Argentina and for the
Khobar explosions in Saudi Arabia in 1996. This is in addition to terrorist
operations in other countries as perpetrators were caught most of the time and
their ties to the Revolutionary Guards have been exposed.
Since what empowers the Revolutionary Guards is exporting the revolution, the
Quds Brigade was established. Its task is to recruit, educate and organize
groups like Hezbollah in Lebanon. The guards’ relations with extremist Sunni
groups have been strong since the 1990’s and many of these groups’ leaders,
including al-Qaeda, were transferred to Iraq and Syria after these countries
hosted the Quds Brigade for years.
The invasion of Iraq in 2003 gave the Iranian regime a chance to get close to
achieving its aim of expanding sectarian division and extremism. The invasion
brought the Iraqi al-Qaeda from which ISIS branched. Both groups reflect the
sectarianism of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards. Former President Barack
Obama’s policy of appeasement was exploited by Tehran to intervene in the Middle
East.
An observer of the Iranian strategy said the Iranian regime’s main goal is
create a crisis and maintain instability through the Quds Brigade and the
Revolutionary Guards’ branches. The Quds Brigade headed by Qassem Soleimani
controls dozens of Shiite militias in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, Afghanistan
and Pakistan.
The complex of the Iranian-Iraqi war still controls Soleimani’s strategies and
orientations. All the armed groups and militias which Iran establishes and
deploys will not make Soleimani realize that the Iraqi army stood against
exporting the revolution and even crossed the borders and entered Iranian
territories.
The price of war
On July 10, Soleimani said that the Iraqi army is on its way to embrace Iran’s
ideology. Since the Iranian-Iraqi war obstructed the project to export the
revolution, he revealed how he thinks diplomacy does not solve anything. He
said: “We resort to diplomacy sometimes but some problems, especially big ones,
cannot be resolved via diplomacy.”
Iran lets Rowhani and Zarif keep the West busy with the nuclear and missiles
program but the real governors in Iran have their eyes on Arab countries and
plan to hijack authority there and seize control of their armies, trade and
economies.
Iran spends money on its foreign strategy in Arab countries in hopes that it
will reconstruct the countries which militias helped destroy. Therefore, it
spends very little – almost nothing – on general services inside Iran. On July
10, Iranian President Hassan Rowhani said that “amid the international
sanctions, the country’s economic situation is at the disposal of the war
machine in Iraq and Syria. Some people think it’s just a sacrifice but they do
not ask who pays the wages and bears the cost of arms.”
Tehran’s former mayor Gholamhossein Karbaschi wondered why Iran sends fighters
to the region and said: “We want peace in Syria, Lebanon and Yemen but can’t
this be achieved unless by providing money and arms? Can’t this be achieved
unless through murder and harm?”
Let’s go back to Lebanon, Hezbollah chose the timing of its battle with al-Nusra
at the same time as Al-Aqsa revolution and during summer which is the tourist
season. The Lebanese army almost turned into a protector of Hezbollah. It’s true
that it brought down black banners but Lebanon will continue to defy whoever
tampers with its stability and traditions. The festivals of joy will continue to
dominate. There will not be silence or submission and the arenas in our cities
and squares will not be emptied.
Lebanese society on edge with Arsal raid, battle
Florence MassenaAl
Monitor/August 04/17
Expressing critical thoughts in Lebanon is risky business these days. Public
criticism of human rights abuses by the army is met with threats from Lebanese
figures — the authorities and citizens alike — that seek to prevent civil
society activists, journalists and even lawyers from acting against racism and
advocating for justice. This unusual situation is related to an increase in
security measures against terrorism by the authorities.
Activists and lawyers defending Syrian refugees in Lebanon and uncovering human
rights violations committed against them are receiving threats and are banned
from expressing their opinion.
The rising social tension started June 30, after the Lebanese army raid on
Arsal, a town near the Syrian border. Looking for terrorists in Syrian refugee
camps, soldiers were met by five suicide bombers. The army arrested around 350
people, four of whom died in detention. More recently, the Hezbollah fight in
the Arsal region against militants from the Islamic State and Jabhat Fatah
al-Sham, followed by the national army that has taken up defensive positions
around Arsal, has led to rising tensions among Lebanese citizens, who are
divided on what to think of the current situation.
On July 16, Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk banned all protests. This came
following calls by the leftist political group Socialist Forum to hold a sit-in
July 18 with other human rights groups in support of Syrian refugees, blaming
the army for mistreatment of detainees. Following the ban, the Socialist Forum
issued a statement asking for accountability for the death of the four Syrians.
“We just wanted to highlight abuses and demand an independent investigation,”
Farah Kobeissi, a member of the Socialist Forum, told Al-Monitor. “The violence
against Syrian refugees is becoming more frequent and is normalized under this
appellation of 'war against terror.' But even if the army is responsible, there
needs to be accountability."
An autopsy report of the bodies of the four Syrian detainees requested by
military prosecutor Judge Saqr Saqr concluded that the deaths resulted from
“health complications.” The report, however, was not made public. An independent
medical analysis ordered by a Zahle judge, Antoine Abi Zeid, almost went
through, until the lawyer representing the victims’ families, Diala Chehade, was
compelled to hand over forensic samples to military intelligence officers in
plainclothes.
“When we tried to protest, we were defamed and came under a violent backlash,”
Kobeissi said. “We received threats from citizens and also from different
political parties. It is something that needs to be looked at and we intend to
file a lawsuit after following up with our lawyers. I think a war on terror is
very dangerous when it acquires a place within public discourse. It constructs a
national unity behind very authoritarian political parties and institutions
within the state, creating the illusion of an enemy that is all Syrian men
between 18 and 40. Since when did we become a country ruled by the army without
being told so? Since when are we denied the right to question?”
It seems that the right to simply express a concern is being denied to many
Lebanese citizens, as was the case of freelance journalist Fidaa Itani, who was
summoned by the Internal Security Forces’ Cybercrime Bureau after publishing a
blog post criticizing Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, the Lebanese army and
President Michel Aoun for what happened in Arsal.
“I was asked to remove the post and to sign a paper apologizing and promising
not to write anything criticizing them again,” Itani told Al-Monitor.
“I removed the post, but I didn’t sign the paper. Since then, I don’t go out of
my house a lot. I receive threats, phone calls, but this is normal, I’m just
paying the price," Itani said." But we have to face what is happening. For 10
years Hezbollah has inherited the Syrian regime in Lebanon and is very well
implemented in public services — like with the head of General Security Abbas
Ibrahim, who is very close to Hezbollah. This group and its allies now try to
push away people like me or Diala [Chehade], by creating so much propaganda that
anyone who is critical is seen as a traitor. I used to cover the Syrian war, and
the last place where I expected to see everything collapsing around me is my own
country. I didn’t expect things to turn that way.”
Several political and human rights groups as well as local intellectuals have
observed a rise in racism against Syrian refugees. Nearly 300 public figures
signed a letter published July 24 in the daily French-language newspaper
L’Orient-Le Jour. Journalist and blogger Joey Ayoub translated the letter that
reads: “What follows these practices, such as the campaigns of incitement to
hatred against Syrians across social media and in certain media outlets, or via
declarations by certain politicians, is no less ugly as the criminal practices
themselves. These do not just attack Syrians but the image of Lebanon itself and
the conscience of the Lebanese. This does not represent us, but puts us in front
of extreme options, including the need to purge our patriotism from its
chauvinism. The position adopted toward refugees must become one of the criteria
of our patriotism through which we want to consolidate democracy and the respect
of human rights.”
Kobeissi noted, “Syrian refugees lack education, medical care, infrastructure,
jobs and basic rights, but still contribute to the economy while being blamed
for unemployment, pollution and economical dysfunction. All those are marks of
the lack of efficiency from our administration and government, so why not blame
the policies responsible for this situation instead?”
For Farah Salka, the executive director of the Anti-Racism Movement, racism is
reaching “peaks of levels of violence and hatred toward refugees.”
Salka told Al-Monitor, “Refugees have slowly and gradually turned into the
'black sheep' of this place and they are supposed to be silent, invisible,
obedient, do as instructed or risk their lives, get killed and be blamed for it.
On top of that — and that's a first — the black sheep label has extended to not
only refugees but any person or group that stands in solidarity with them and
speaks loudly about the violations they are enduring and their basic intrinsic
human rights. These are such tragic and sad times.”
Salka has not been personally threatened for her opinion but admitted “feeling
the constant need to think twice before giving your opinion or going to a
demonstration or writing something — which is an indirect threat to your freedom
to speak, express and take positions.”
She added, “This is a slow way of shutting everyone up and making people of
forced unanimous positions — which we are not.” Her advice to Lebanese citizens:
“We need to stick together against politicians and not allow them to divide us
and laugh at us for being so easily swayed as we are now.”
U.S. Security Assistance to
Lebanon at Risk المساعدات العسكرية الأميركية للبنان في خطر
David Schenker/The Washington Institute/August 04/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=57630
http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/u.s.-security-assistance-to-lebanon-at-risk
Despite collusion between the LAF and Hezbollah, the United States may still
have an interest in funding the Lebanese military.
Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Shia militia, is winding down its offensive against
Sunni Islamist militants in Arsal, a Lebanese town near the Syrian border. In
recent weeks, Hezbollah backed by Syrian airpower, pressed into the outskirts of
Arsal from the Syrian side to drive out Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, a Sunni jihadist
group that opposes the Assad regime. But Hezbollah wasn’t supported only by
Syria. The operation was also aided by the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF), which
reinforced its units surrounding Arsal on the Lebanese side prior to the
campaign and subsequently targeted militants with artillery during the battle.
The LAF’s role in Arsal is just the latest evidence of its ongoing coordination
with Hezbollah. And while this particular incident may serve U.S. short-term
interests, it also complicates matters for Washington. Since 2005, the United
States has been providing the LAF with baseline military assistance amounting to
nearly $85 million per year. Last year, U.S. assistance to the army exceeded
$150 million. Despite widespread praise for the LAF at U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM),
cooperation between recipients of U.S. foreign assistance and U.S.-designated
terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah is prohibited.
BACKGROUND
In the aftermath of the Cedar Revolution, the 2005 popular uprising that ended
the decades-long Syrian military occupation of Lebanon, the Bush administration
increased its annual support to the LAF from $1.5 million in International
Military Education and Training (IMET) to more than $100 million to purchase
weapons. At the time, some administration officials expressed the hope that the
LAF would eventually become a counterbalance to Hezbollah; others eyed the more
modest goal of improving the LAF’s domestic counterterrorism capabilities.
Regardless, over the past twelve years, the LAF has developed to the point that
today many U.S. military officers consider Lebanon’s military to be — man for
man — the best Arab army.
The issue with the LAF, however, is not capability but domestic politics.
Lebanon is home to eighteen officially recognized confessions, predominantly
Sunnis, Shia, and Christians, and rife with sectarianism. While the LAF is a
“national institution” staffed by all Lebanon’s confessions, the organization
itself is beset by sectarianism. In the 1970s, when tasked to operate against
Palestinian and Christian militias, the LAF fractured as Lebanon devolved into
civil war. Today, the LAF remains institutionally incapable of taking on
politically sensitive missions, such as opposing Hezbollah in any way.
Reflecting this dynamic, successive Lebanese governments have legitimated
Hezbollah’s weapons and the organization’s “resistance” mission against Israel
in their ministerial statements. But since the war in Syria and the arrival of
nearly two million refugees, Lebanese governments have prioritized stability —
and security — which in practice has implied closer coordination between state
institutions and Hezbollah.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF COLLUSION
In July 2006, less than a year after the United States began funding the LAF,
Hezbollah launched a cross-border raid into Israel, killing and kidnapping
several soldiers and provoking a thirty-four-day war. During the conflagration,
Hezbollah fired a C-802 land-to-sea missile that hit and nearly sank the Hanit,
an Israeli navy corvette operating ten miles off Lebanon’s coast. The Hanit had
no forewarning of the attack because LAF elements allowed Hezbollah to use
Lebanese naval radar to track and target the vessel. In retaliation, Israel
destroyed all the LAF’s naval radar stations.
When the war ended, in a widely applauded move, the LAF deployed to the south
for the first time in decades. It had been hoped — though not expected — that
the LAF might help implement United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701,
which obliged Beirut to prevent the postwar rearming of Hezbollah. Over the past
eleven years, however, the LAF has only interdicted the movement of Hezbollah
weapons on one occasion, in 2007, as the militia has fully rearmed. According to
Israeli claims at the time, the LAF was also tipping Hezbollah off about UN
Interim Force in Lebanon site visits, protecting the militia’s assets and
undermining UNIFIL’s mission.
In 2008, the then pro-West government in Beirut mandated the removal of
Hezbollah’s dedicated fiber-optic network from the south up to Beirut and the
removal of LAF Gen. Wafiq Chocair, the Hezbollah-sympathetic officer who ran
Beirut airport. But when the LAF declined to remove Chocair and the government
persisted in its demand, Hezbollah militarily took over large swaths of the
capital, killing nearly a hundred civilians. At no point did the military
challenge Hezbollah’s offensive, and after the government backed down, the LAF
coordinated with the organization and took up Hezbollah’s positions following
its withdrawal.
Along these lines, since the Syrian war began in 2011, the LAF has done nothing
to prevent, and has perhaps facilitated, the movement of Hezbollah troops and
weapons into and out of Syria, where the militia has been fighting in support of
the Assad regime. Notably, even as the LAF has tolerated Hezbollah’s deployments
to Syria, it has taken steps to interdict the movement of Sunni fighters
crossing the borders from Lebanon.
In broad terms, Hezbollah’s involvement in the Syrian war — in which more than
500,000 mostly Sunni Muslims have been killed — has generated some anger among
Lebanese Sunnis. Thus, between 2013 and 2014, Lebanon saw a series of
high-profile car bombings targeting Shia neighborhoods in Beirut. To prevent a
further deterioration, the LAF and Hezbollah established joint security
checkpoints during this period. In June 2013 in particular, Hezbollah-LAF
cooperation went beyond checkpoints, when the two forces fought side by side
against two to three hundred heavily armed supporters of the anti-Assad Salafi
cleric Sheikh Ahmed Assir in the southern city of Saida. Both Hezbollah and the
LAF participated in daylong skirmishes, culminating in an assault on Assir’s
compound in the Abra neighborhood.
More recently, in April 2017, Hezbollah brought more than a dozen international
journalists on a tour of Lebanon’s frontier with Israel, breezing through
several checkpoints manned by national intelligence organs and LAF units,
suggesting a high degree of coordination. The next month, Hezbollah turned over
several of its Syria border observation posts to the LAF, and is currently
reportedly in negotiations with the LAF about other, more sensitive border
locations. Some of these Hezbollah positions, however, will likely remain.
Finally, in late June, the LAF sent 150 officer cadets to tour Hezbollah’s
Mleeta war museum, near Nabatiyah, a shrine to the organization’s “resistance”
credentials vis-a-vis Israel.
Equally problematic — beyond these particular incidents of coordination,
communication, and deconfliction — have been the perennial reports of LAF-Hezbollah
intelligence sharing. On the positive side, the LAF boasts a nearly perfect
record of accounting for its U.S.-origin equipment, having transferred none of
it to Hezbollah.
LESSONS FOR U.S. POLICY
Notwithstanding the collaboration with Hezbollah, senior U.S. military officials
still support the military assistance and training program. CENTCOM commander
Gen. Joseph Votel, for example, praises the LAF as “among the most capable and
valued partners” in the Middle East. On March 15, he told the House Armed
Services Committee that Lebanon was “a key partner in our efforts to counter
violent extremism,” described the LAF as a great “return on investment,” and
advocated increased U.S. support for Lebanon’s military. General Votel also
claimed that a strong LAF “acts as a counterweight to the militant arm of
Hezbollah” and said that while Hezbollah was fighting in Syria, the LAF had
“gained increasing credibility” in Lebanon.
While General Votel is undoubtedly correct about the LAF’s high value in
fighting domestic Sunni Islamist militants, his claims about its rising domestic
credibility or potential role as an alternative to Hezbollah are less easily
substantiated. The Lebanese people are generally supportive of the LAF’s
counterterrorism role, but many bristle at the collaboration with Hezbollah,
which is seen as exclusively targeting Sunnis. In June 2017, the LAF evidently
tortured and killed four detained (Sunni) Syrian refugees, initially claiming
the prisoners died from “preexisting conditions.” This incident offered scant
assurance to many Sunnis of the LAF’s status as a “national institution.”
U.S. budget funding for the LAF presents a conundrum, even setting aside the
torture allegations. The initial 2018 administration budget request zeroed out
U.S. assistance to the LAF, but CENTCOM’s support for the program matters
greatly. Still, the indisputable collaboration between the LAF and a
U.S.-designated terrorist organization could well cause lawmakers to oppose the
aid in the future. Equally troubling, the pro-West majority has disappeared in
Beirut’s government over the past decade as the United States has deepened its
ties with the LAF.
Pragmatically speaking, the U.S. assistance is helping the LAF better secure
Lebanon against the threat of Sunni Islamist militants. And Washington
undoubtedly has an interest in preventing deterioration in yet another Middle
East state, especially one bordering Israel. Perhaps more important, ending the
program would be taken as a clear signal by Tehran — and other states in the
region — that Washington is abandoning its interests and vulnerable allies in
Lebanon.
At $100 million per year, the LAF program is relatively inexpensive. Given the
dynamics of Lebanon, however, U.S. expectations must remain limited. The LAF is
no panacea; it is a U.S.-funded institution that works with Hezbollah. Despite
this significant drawback, Washington may still have an interest in supporting a
program that promotes stability and maintains a U.S. stake in Lebanon.
**David Schenker is the Aufzien Fellow and director of the Program on Arab
Politics at The Washington Institute.
Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
August 04-05/17
Saudi forces counter Houthi attack on its border with Yemen
Staff writer, Al Arabiya EnglishFriday, 4 August 2017/The Saudi forces on
Thursday evening foiled a major offensive by the Houthi militias and the ousted
Saleh’s militia against military checkpoints on the Saudi-Yemeni border in Jazan
region. Military sources confirmed that the Saudi
forces managed to thwart the attack, inside the uninhabited Yemeni border
villages in the governorate of Sa'ada where the militias gathered to launch the
attack. Military sources stated that their positions were identified through the
joint operations’ control room, where they were dealt with through rocket
launchers, artillery and the Apache helicopters. Al Arabiya correspondent
reported that the attack lasted two hours and ended with the killing of dozens
of Houthis and the destruction of a number of military vehicles loaded with
ammunition.
Anti-terror quartet reiterate firm position in Jeddah meet
By Saudi Gazette Thursday, 3 August 2017/The anti-terror quartet (ATQ) countries
— Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt — on Thursday
reiterated their firm stance against terrorism in all its manifestations. In
this regard, the ATQ reaffirmed that various media channels should continue to
be on alert to ward off any threat to the world security and stability. Senior
information officials of the ATQ countries, Saudi Culture and Information
Minister Dr. Awwad Bin Saleh Al-Awwad; Bahrain’s Minister of Information Affairs
Dr. Ali Bin Muhammad Al-Rumaihi; UAE’s Minister of State and Chairman of the
National Council for Information Dr. Sultan Al-Jaber; and chief of Egypt’s
Supreme Council for Media Regulation Makram Mohamed Ahmed, met in Jeddah on
Thursday to formulate their strategy on Qatar crisis and emphasized the
importance of continuing to fight terrorism through various media channels. The
officials reviewed the latest developments regarding Qatar crisis as well as the
contacts they made regionally and internationally in this regard.
Recap on crisis developments. The four countries reaffirmed the main
principles announced earlier that represent the international consensus on
fighting terrorism and extremism and their financing in addition to rejecting
interference in the affairs of other countries. They also confirmed and praised
the huge and great role that Saudi Arabia has been playing during all these
years to host millions of pilgrims from all over the world. Rejecting the Qatari
demand to internationalize the holy sites, the four countries supported Foreign
Minister Adel Al-Jubeir’s statement describing it as “an aggressive act and a
declaration of war against the Kingdom.” On the
sidelines of an ATQ meeting in Manama recently, Al-Jubeir had said: “We reserve
the right to respond to any party working in the field of internationalization
of the holy sites.”Egypt’s Makram Mohamed Ahmed said after the meeting that
foreign ministers of the four countries should be in regular and constant touch
for a consensus on a long-term strategy to combat terror.
Stance towards anti-terrorism
“The four countries will spare no effort even if the battle takes 100 years. We
are confident it will not continue for 100 years because we have a friendly
Qatari people. The media should refrain from disparaging them,” he said.
In a statement before the meeting, Ahmed said: The four-country bloc has a clear
and specific stance toward Qatar. “Our four countries have been greatly harmed
by terrorism and we are working toward expanding the resistance against terror.
Our stance toward Qatar is related to its support for and funding of terrorism.
It is unfortunate that this is happening among the Arab countries.”The Egyptian
official said participants in Thursday’s meeting agreed to go to the United
Nations with a united stance and complete charter related to terror-funding.
“The aim is to sterilize terrorism,” he said. “The stance of the four countries
is final and we are capable of continuing with it for years without being
harmed,” he said.
Blaze Rips Through Dubai Skyscraper 'The Torch'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 04/17/Panicked residents fled one of the
tallest towers in the glitzy Gulf city state of Dubai early on Friday after a
fire ripped through it, the second blaze to hit the skyscraper in as many years.
Authorities said no casualties were reported from the blaze which erupted in the
middle to upper floors of The Torch, once the tallest residential development in
the world. The 337-metre (1,105-foot) tower was the scene of a 2015 inferno that
caused extensive damage to its luxury flats and triggered an evacuation of
nearby blocks in the seafront Marina neighbourhood. Dubai authorities said
firefighters arrived at the scene within four minutes of the blaze erupting at
12:45 am (2045 GMT Thursday). They said residents were immediately evacuated and
the fire put out by 2:58 am without any casualties. Dubai's civil defence
authority said it started on the 65th floor of the luxury tower block. In the
morning, an AFP correspondent saw torched vehicles in the block's car park and
extensive fire damage to the middle and upper storeys of the left side of the
building. "We thank God that there were no casualties, that because of the
efforts of all teams on the ground... the residents were evacuated from this
building to another one and there were no injuries," Dubai police commander
Major General Abdullah Khalifa al-Marri said. In January, Dubai announced
tougher rules to minimise fire risks after a series of tower blazes in the
emirate mostly due to flammable material used in cladding, a covering or coating
used on the side of the buildings.In November 2015, fire engulfed three
residential blocks in central Dubai and led to services on a metro line being
suspended, although no one was hurt. On New Year's Eve that year, 16 people were
injured when a fire broke out in a luxury hotel, hours before a massive
fireworks display nearby. Dubai has established a reputation for building dozens
of futuristic skyscrapers, which have transformed its skyline. The city state
boasts the world's tallest building, Burj al-Khalifa, which stands 828 metres
(2,700 feet) tall, as well as iconic palm tree-shaped, man-made luxury
residential islands. Saudi Arabia's Kingdom Holding is building a tower in
Jeddah that is planned to surpass the Burj Khalifa, rising more than a
kilometre. Dubai first became a magnet for property investments when it opened
the sector to foreigners in 2002, standing out in a region that largely confines
freehold ownership to citizens. The value of property surged at breakneck speed
until the global financial crisis hit the debt-laden emirate in 2009, sending
prices into free-fall. A recovery led by tourism, trade and transportation
pushed prices up again between 2012 and 2014. But Dubai's real estate sector
again slowed down, with residential prices dropping around 12 percent in 2015
before slowly starting to climb in 2016.
Maduro Installs Disputed New Venezuela Assembly
Associated Press/Naharnet/August 04/17/Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was
to install a powerful new assembly of his allies on Friday, dismissing an
international outcry and opposition protests saying he is burying democracy in
his country. The Constituent Assembly, elected last weekend in a vote marred by
violence and allegations of fraud, will sit in a chamber in the Legislative
Palace in Caracas, where the opposition-controlled legislature is located. The
inaugural session of its 500-plus members -- who include Maduro's wife and son
-- will take place under high tension. The opposition has called a mass march in
the capital, raising fears of violence that could add to a death toll of more
than 125 over the past four months. "Let there be no provocations, nor should
people fall into provocations," Maduro said late Thursday as he assured all was
ready for the Constituent Assembly. The Vatican on Friday urged the inauguration
of the new assembly be suspended. It also appealed for Venezuelan security
service to show restraint. Meanwhile, Venezuela's intelligence service
unexpectedly transferred a high-profile opposition figure, Caracas mayor Antonio
Ledezma, from jail to house arrest, his wife said. Ledezma and another
opposition figure, Leopoldo Lopez, had been taken from their homes to military
prison on Tuesday, reversing earlier home detentions. Lopez remains
incarcerated, one of hundreds of what the opposition called political prisoners.
Unlimited powers
The Constituent Assembly marks a new stage in Venezuela's rule. With unlimited
powers to dissolve the National Assembly or amend laws, the new body is tasked
with rewriting the 1999 constitution brought in under Maduro's late mentor and
predecessor, Hugo Chavez. Maduro claims its work will yank Venezuela out of its
worsening spiral of political and economic crisis, though he has not detailed
how. Nor has he given an end-date for the Constituent Assembly, which he said
would operate for years. The body is being challenged on several fronts. Backing
opposition allegations of fraud, Smartmatic, a British-based company involved in
the vote technology behind the election last Sunday, said the official turnout
figure had been tampered with and exaggerated by at least a million voters.
Although brushed off by Maduro as part of a plot by "the international enemy,"
that gave grounds for Venezuelan Attorney General Luisa Ortega -- a thorn in
Maduro's side -- to order an investigation. She said prosecutors had lodged
court cases seeking to have the Constituent Assembly annulled, though few in
Venezuela believed that would be achieved. The country's supreme court has
systematically sided with the president in blocking prosecutorial or legislative
gambits against the government.
Defiance
Using his daily appearances on state television, Maduro has lashed out at
several of the 40 countries that admonished him for seeing through the creation
of the new assembly. After being hit with US sanctions and called a dictator by
U.S. President Donald Trump, Maduro said defiantly that he was standing up to
what he called imperialism. The Venezuelan leader also slammed Mexico, Chile and
Peru as American vassals for saying they would not recognize the new assembly.
But with the European Union and other nations also condemning the Constituent
Assembly, Maduro is fighting against a broad tide, even if he has support of
Russia, which holds billions in Venezuelan debt, as well as Cuba, Bolivia and
Nicaragua.
Diving currency
The uncertainty and unease surrounding the path Maduro has set Venezuela on has
been reflected in an accelerated collapse of the country's already debilitated
currency. The bolivar lost more than 17 percent of its value against the dollar
on Thursday, placing scarce imported food and medicine further out of reach for
many Venezuelans.One analyst, Luis Salamanca, said the new assembly "is being
born badly, but Maduro doesn't care. He just wants a Constituent Assembly that
suits him."According to Datanalisis, a polling firm, 72 percent of Venezuelans
reject the assembly. And 80 percent reject Maduro's leadership. But the
president enjoys the backing of the military, as well as judicial and electoral
authorities, allowing him to forge on. "More than changing the constitution, the
main goal is to govern without limits," said another analyst, Benigno Alarcon.
Ex-Netanyahu Aide Turns State's Witness in Graft Probe
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 04/17/Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu's former chief of staff has agreed to give evidence against him on
suspicions of bribery, fraud and breach of trust, local media reported on
Friday. "Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's former chief of staff Ari Harow has
reached an agreement with the prosecution to turn state's witness in two
corruption cases against Netanyahu," the Haaretz newspaper said on its website.
"Former chief of staff Ari Harow signed today a state's witness agreement,"
public radio said. There was no official comment on the reports and any leaked
details of the case are banned from publication by court order. U.S.-born
Israeli immigrant Harow worked for Netanyahu from 2009-10 and 2014-15, when he
stepped down over allegations of corruption. He has been under investigation for
more than two years on suspicion of bribery, breach of trust, conflict of
interest and fraud, the media said.
Haaretz said Harow has already been giving investigators information on two of
the ongoing investigations into Netanyahu. One is based on suspicions that the
premier unlawfully received gifts from wealthy supporters, including Australian
billionaire James Packer and Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan. Also being probed
is a suspicion that Netanyahu sought a secret deal with the publisher of
top-selling daily Yediot Aharonot. The proposed deal, which is not believed to
have been finalized, would have seen Netanyahu receive positive coverage in
return for him helping scale down the operations of Israel Hayom, Yediot's main
competitor.
The investigations have stirred Israeli politics and led to speculation over
whether Netanyahu will eventually be forced to step down.
Israel Plans to Discuss 'UNIFIL Mission' During UN Chief's
First Visit
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 04/17/UN Secretary General
Antonio Guterres will pay his first visit since taking the UN helm to Israel and
the Palestinian territories, including the Gaza Strip, at the end of the month,
as Israel plans to discuss the UNIFIL's mission in Lebanon in light of
“skirmishes on border,” diplomats said Thursday. The UN chief will hold talks
with Israeli leaders, travel to Ramallah to meet Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas
and to the Gaza Strip, where the United Nations runs a major Palestinian aid
program, during the three-day visit beginning August 28.
Israel's UN Ambassador Danny Danon said the visit will allow Guterres to "build
a relationship" with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He will also hold
meetings with the Israeli president and defense minister. "We are very happy
about this visit," Danon told AFP. "It's a great opportunity for the secretary
general to experience Israel, to meet the leaders of Israel and to understand
the challenges that Israel faces day-in and day-out."Palestinian ambassador
Riyad Mansour described the upcoming visit as "very important," indicating that
it signaled a stronger UN focus on the plight of Palestinians.
"The UN has been involved since its inception with the question of Palestine and
will remain involved until the question is resolved in all its aspects on the
basis of international law," he told AFP by email. The visit comes as diplomatic
efforts to revive Israeli-Palestinian peace talks appear deadlocked. Guterres, a
former prime minister of Portugal, "is experienced. He has been to Israel in the
past. He knows the complexity of the issues. He is not someone who comes to our
region and has no clue about what is happening," said Danon.
The Israeli government will discuss strengthening the mission of the UN interim
force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), said Danon, following a series of skirmishes along
the UN-monitored demarcation line between Israel and Lebanon. Relations between
the United Nations and Israel have been tense over the expansion of Jewish
settlements, which the world body has condemned as illegal. Since taking over
from Ban Ki-moon on January 1, Guterres has been cautious in his approach to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, partly in response to US accusations that the
United Nations was biased against Israel. In March, the UN chief demanded that a
report by a UN body be withdrawn after it accused Israel of imposing an
apartheid system on the Palestinians. Guterres had initially distanced himself
from the report, but the United States insisted that it be withdrawn altogether.
During the recent flareup of violence in Jerusalem, Guterres called for
de-escalation and respect for the status quo at holy sites after Israel
installed metal detectors at the Haram al-Sharif mosque compound, known to Jews
as the Temple Mount.
Egypt Court Jails 50 Policemen over Strike
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 04/17/An Egyptian court has jailed 50
policemen for three years after convicting them on charges related to a strike
earlier this year, state media reported. The low-ranking policemen were also
fined 6,000 pounds (roughly $330) by the South Sinai court on Thursday, the
state-owned Al-Ahram newspaper reported on its website. The policemen had gone
on strike in January to protest reduced holidays and allegedly "threatened
violence" against superior officers, the newspaper said. Egyptian policemen held
several demonstrations and strikes after the 2011 overthrow of president Hosni
Mubarak.The authorities have shown little tolerance for protests since the army
toppled Mubarak's Islamist successor Mohamed Morsi in 2013, unleashing a bloody
crackdown on his followers and a deadly jihadist insurgency in the Sinai
Peninsula.
Iraq Finds Mass Grave in Former IS-Held City
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 04/17/Iraqi troops have found a mass grave
in the western city of Ramadi containing the bodies of 40 men believed to have
been executed by the Islamic State group, officials said Friday. It is the
latest of dozens of such grisly finds made by Iraqi forces since they drove the
jihadists out of the swathes of northern and western Iraq that they occupied in
2014. Ammar Nuri al-Dulaimi, an official from a Martyrs Committee for Anbar
province, said the bodies had bullet wounds to the head, suggesting they were
executed by IS. An army colonel, who asked not to be named, said troops had
uncovered the mass grave during a sweep of the Al-Tach neighborhood in the south
of Ramadi, capital of the province. The army retook the city in December 2015.
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published on August 04-05/17
Qatar Crisis, Invasion of Kuwait
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed//Gatestone Institute/August 04/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=57634
Pro-Doha government are endeavoring to use the anniversary of the Kuwait
occupation in favor of the Qatari crisis. They claim that Qatar today is in
danger like Kuwait was in the past and that Saudi Arabia and its allies
represent Saddam Hussein!
Regardless that this is a forging of truth, it is also historically stated that
Qatar is the only Gulf country that tried to hurdle the liberation of Kuwait
through forbidding the GCC decision to adopt a military action to liberate
Kuwait during December meeting in 1990.
Crown Prince, then, Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani insisted that there is no
liberation of Kuwait before obliging Bahrain to relinquish the conflict islands
with Qatar, upsetting the five countries that obliged him to back off or leave
Doha.
At that time, Saddam Hussein forces were residing in Dasman Palace in Kuwait,
and more than 1.5 million Kuwaiti citizens and residents were displaced.
Weirder, though, was the stance by the Muslim Brotherhood – current ally of
Qatar.
Muslim Brotherhood was also frank towards the liberation via a stance expressed
by the International Organization Of The Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan, Egypt,
Sudan, Tunisia and others.
It justified its support of Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait to its objection over the
military solution and the recruitment of foreign forces! In fact, it was
cooperating with Saddam’s government to replace Al Sabah family!
At the anniversary of the Kuwaiti occupation, the Qatari and some Kuwaiti media
are promoting two issues: reducing the role of the GCC – including Saudi Arabia
– in that crisis, and comparing the Qatari crisis to the Kuwaiti occupation.
But the truth is the total opposite since in this crisis Qatar is the offender
and the four states are the victims. The situation might seem strange because
Qatar is a small country, but the four states have been patient over its policy
and dangerous acts for years not because they are weak states but because Qatar
is a small country and there was some hope that the leadership might become
rational with time.
You might wonder what crime did Qatar commit to compare it to Saddam.
For years, Doha’s authorities have been working on destabilizing and ousting
regimes of Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and UAE. I listed them according to the
damage.
Qatar is funding the opposition against Saudi Arabia in London, Turkey and Qatar
itself – an opposition demanding throwing out the regime. Qatar was an
accomplice in the assassination of King Abdullah, and it admitted conspiring
with Gaddafi to oust the regime in Riyadh. Everytime, it presents excuses and
pledges to halt this policy before it returns to it!
Two months ago, it promoted a revolution holding the title of “7 Ramadan
Movement”, and bribed agents to serve this purpose. As for its acts in Bahrain
and Egypt, then it is obvious through the state-channels that Qatar supports the
extremist opposition in Bahrain to oust Al Khalifa and funds the Muslim
Brotherhood to throw out Sisi. Only Qatar supports and funds Emirati opposition
abroad!
These states said that they have ran out of patience and it is time to set
limits for Qatar. Brothers in Kuwait must recall that these four states
mobilized to rescue their country when Saddam ousted the regime, and Kuwait
should stand by them out of loyalty or at least should not allow Qatar to
exploit Kuwait on any level (political, media, economic).
What is the difference between what Saddam did in ousting the regime in Kuwait
and what the Qatari government is doing? In fact, Qatar is worse because it
hides behind slogans and claims of democracy and Islam – both unfamiliar with
it.
At the anniversary of Saddam invasion of Kuwait, we should be aware of the tough
and costly lesson, to be more keen to respect ties and treaties and to support
each other stability. The Gulf countries should be more strict against the
Qatari’s government acts and to support the demands of the four states, since
they didn’t ask for ousting the regime but for stopping the threats against
their security and existence.
If Kuwait and other states take a just stance, then Doha might be more rational
and rescue the region from the Gaddafi mentality.
Tomorrow, my opinion article is about the confrontation of Saddam’s invasion.
The Foreign Press Association's Unlimited Bias
Bassam Tawil/Gatestone Institute/August 04/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10768/foreign-press-association
The truth is that in nearly most Arab and Muslim countries, there is no such
thing as a "Foreign Press Association." That is because Arab and Islamic
dictatorships do not allow such organizations to operate in their countries.
The second question that comes to mind in light of the Foreign Press
Association's opposition to Israel's security measures is: What exactly are the
foreign journalists demanding from Israel? That Israeli authorities allow them
to run around freely while Palestinian rioters are hurling stones and firebombs
at police officers? Are the journalists saying that Israelis have no right to
safeguard their own lives?
Outrageously, the FPA is nearly stone-deaf when it comes to wrongdoing by
Palestinians. Where is the outcry of the organization when a Palestinian
journalist is arrested or assaulted by the Palestinian Authority (PA) in the
West Bank or Hamas in the Gaza Strip? Where is the outcry over PA President
Mahmoud Abbas's recent decision to block more than 20 news websites?
The Foreign Press Association (FPA), an organization representing hundreds of
foreign journalists who work for various media outlets in Israel, is upset. What
seems to be the problem? In their view, recent Israeli security measures in
Jerusalem are preventing reporters from doing their jobs. The FPA's position,
expressed in at least two statements during the past three weeks, came in
response to Israeli security measures enforced in the city after Muslim
terrorists murdered two police officers at the Temple Mount on July 14.
Earlier this week, the FPA, which has often served as a platform for airing
anti-Israeli sentiments, went farther by filing a petition to Israel's High
Court of Justice challenging the actions and behavior of the Israeli security
forces toward journalists during Palestinian riots in protest against the
installation of metal detectors and cameras at the entrances to the Temple
Mount. The petition demanded that the Israeli security forces stop restricting
journalists' entry to the Temple Mount compound. It also complained of verbal
and physical abuse against journalists by the police.
The FPA protest should come as no surprise to those familiar with the
anti-Israel agenda of its leadership. This organization has a long record of
black-and-white thinking about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- and somehow,
the Israelis always come out in the wrong.
While the FPA is teeming with self-proclaimed "open-minded" journalists, their
minds seem closed to facts surrounding Palestinian violence. Funny how
enlightened folks -- generally ready to side with the underdog -- become
suspiciously overcome by intellectual darkness when the underdog might be an
Israel trying to manage Palestinian terror in the most humane manner possible.
Surprise or no surprise, the latest FPA onslaught against Israel serves as a
reminder that many of the foreign journalists have no shame in advancing an
anti-Israel agenda.
The journalists so distraught over Israel's recent security measures are the
very ones who refuse to enter Syria out of fear of being beheaded by ISIS. These
are the journalists who have stopped traveling to Iraq, fearing for their lives.
Many of these journalists, particularly the women among them, will not report in
Egypt, lest they be raped, let alone targeted by a terror group.
These journalists, when they travel to most Arab and Islamic countries, are
assigned government "minders" who accompany them, openly and covertly, 24/7.
They will wait in vain to receive a visa to enter Iran or Saudi Arabia -- or be
made to wait and beg for months before receiving it.
What does one do, then, when one's journalistic options in the Middle East are
constrained by a rather realistic fear for one's life? One stays where one feels
safe -- in Israel.
It is no secret that Middle East correspondents prefer their residences and
bureaus in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv than in Ramallah, Amman, Damascus, Baghdad,
Tehran and Riyadh. In Israel, no matter what they write today, they will live to
write again tomorrow.
Unlike with most of the Arab and Islamic countries, most journalists do not need
advance permission to visit Israel. Any journalist -- or, more accurately,
anyone even claiming to be a journalist -- can disembark at Ben Gurion Airport
and start reporting.
How is this relevant?
The FPA's stance on the recent Israeli security measures in Jerusalem, which
came in response to the murder of two police officers and violent Arab riots,
reeks of hypocrisy and a severe misrepresentation of reality.
The first question that comes to mind in this regard: Would foreign journalists
based in an Arab or Islamic country dare to go to the High Court of the land to
challenge security measures and restrictions by the authorities there? The truth
is that in nearly most of those countries, there is no such thing as a "Foreign
Press Association." That is because Arab and Islamic dictatorships do not allow
such organizations to operate in their countries.
The Foreign Press Association in Israel, which has often served as a platform
for airing anti-Israeli sentiments, this week filed a petition to Israel's High
Court of Justice (pictured) challenging the actions and behavior of Israeli
security forces toward journalists during Palestinian riots. (Image source:
Almog/Wikimedia Commons)
The second question that comes to mind in light of the FPA's opposition to
Israel's security measures is: What exactly are the foreign journalists
demanding from Israel? That Israeli authorities allow them to run around freely
while Palestinian rioters are hurling stones and firebombs at police officers?
Are the journalists saying that Israelis have no right to safeguard their own
lives? Or that people should allow themselves to be injured by stones and
firebombs? Some have indeed by injured during the Palestinian riots.
The third question that begs an answer is: How was it that during the recent
riots, the number of journalists covering the events often surpassed the number
of rioters? This was the case many times in the Old City of Jerusalem,
particularly at the Lion's Gate, where you would find two journalists for each
Palestinian rioter.
Where did all these foreign -- and Palestinian -- journalists come from? Someone
must have given them access to the scenes of the clashes between the rioters and
security forces. The "someone" is Israeli authorities, who saw no reason to stop
the reporters from doing their jobs.
The hypocrisy of the journalists reaches new heights when they are injured as
they are covering the riots. You cannot go to the swimming pool and later
complain that you do not know how you got wet. A journalist who stands in the
line of fire is knowingly putting his or her life at risk.
You cannot stand among the rioters and then complain that you got hit by a
rubber bullet or tear gas canister fired by a policeman. What do you expect the
policeman to do? Not to defend himself because there is a journalist in the
crowd?
Outrageously, the FPA is nearly stone-deaf when it comes to wrongdoing by
Palestinians. Where is the outcry of the organization when a Palestinian
journalist is arrested or assaulted by the Palestinian Authority in the West
Bank or Hamas in the Gaza Strip? Where is the outcry over Palestinian Authority
President Mahmoud Abbas's recent decision to block more than 20 news websites?
But perhaps such fair-minded reporting would demand too much of the FPA's time:
were it to follow assaults on public freedoms and the freedom of the media in
the West Bank and Gaza Strip, it would have to issue a statement of condemnation
every two hours. Hardly a day passes without a Palestinian journalist or blogger
or Facebook user being detained or beaten up for expressing his or her views.
The FPA and its members are well aware that Israel has been and remains a
paradise for the foreign media in the Middle East. They also know that, unlike
many of its Arab and Islamic neighbors, Israel does not have a policy of
targeting journalists. If there were such a policy, most of the foreign
journalists would not be in Israel in the first place.
Their rhetorical attacks on Israel are not only a sign of hypocrisy, but should
also be seen as a policy of appeasement to Arabs and Muslims -- a ticket that
gives you access to the Arab and Islamic countries. The more you prove that you
are against Israel, the better are your chances of getting a visa to enter Iran
or Saudi Arabia.
It is time for the FPA to change its name to the FHA -- the Foreign Hypocrites
Association. At least in that one respect, then, it would be living up to its
name.
**Bassam Tawil is an Arab Muslim based in the Middle East.
© 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.
JASTA: Time to move on from unjustified lawsuits
Dr. Mohamed A. Ramady/Al Arabiya/August 04/17
The issue of JASTA – or the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act – is now
in the news as the Kingdom has started legal action to throw out lawsuits
against it in the New York courts. The matter has serious implications for
several reasons, namely setting a precedent for waiving sovereign immunity and
the obstacles it creates for a possible listing of the Aramco IPO in the New
York stock exchange.
JASTA was passed by the US Congress in 2016, and hundreds of relatives of
individuals killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks have sued Saudi Arabia in a US
court, seeking to take advantage of this law that allows victims of such attacks
on US soil to sue state sponsors.
Under normal circumstances, such litigations can be ignored as being spurious
and opportunistic but given the importance placed on listing the Aramco IPO in a
global stock market with depth and the ability to attract many investors like
the New York exchange, the matter is now a priority for Saudi Arabia to remove
as an obstacle and move on. Saudi Arabia, which has denied any role in the 2001
attacks, has raised strong objections to JASTA.
Saudi foreign minister Adel Al-Jubeir tried to persuade US lawmakers to amend
the law, during his visit to the country last year and the Kingdom believed that
the matter has been put on ice, with the Kingdom receiving numerous support from
both Gulf and other allies against the JASTA bill, which if applied, will leave
the US open to counter suits worldwide and argued that the law would expose US
companies, troops and officials to lawsuits in other countries and could anger
allies.
For years, US law granting foreign nations broad immunity from lawsuits scuttled
attempts by Sept. 11 victims to sue Saudi Arabia in New York. In 2015, US
District Court dismissed claims against the kingdom from Sept. 11 families,
saying that it did not have jurisdiction over a sovereign nation under
international law. This is the argument that Saudi Arabia will still put
forward, irrespective of the new law.
For years, US law granting foreign nations broad immunity from lawsuits scuttled
attempts by Sept. 11 victims to sue Saudi Arabia in New York
Personal rapport
It will also be a test of the newly forged personal rapport between President
Trump and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to see if the new Trump
Administration will try to veto or delay any possible legal action like
President Obama’s earlier failed veto effort.
Will the master “dealmaker” pull off another deal, away from public scrutiny,
and avoid jeopardising the expected multi billion investment flow to the US
promised by Saudi Arabia under the newfound political and strategic
relationship, but which can potentially open them to possible asset seizure
under the JASTA claims?
No country is willing to invest in another with such a hostile legal cloud
hanging over its head as there are many other friendly countries eager to
welcome its investments without a constant litigation worry in the background.
Will this make Saudi Arabia more hesitant to float part of the planned Aramco
IPO in the New York stock exchange? Again, many international bourses are
competing to have the world’s largest IPO listed in their jurisdiction with
welcoming assurances, which could sway the Kingdom to avoid New York until and
unless the JASTA issue is put to rest.
The emergence of JASTA has opened a hornet’s nest of unanswered questions and a
level of unwelcome uncertainty in the new and warmer Saudi-US relationship, but
everything is possible in Trump’s administration. How both sides manage it will
determine whether the matter is a wrinkle or a mere passing blip in the
relationship.