LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
December 06/17
Compiled &
Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
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Bible Quotations
God opposes the proud. but shows
favor to the humble
James 04/From 01-12/ What
causes fights and quarrels among you? Don’t they come from your desires that
battle within you? You desire but do not have, so you kill. You covet but you
cannot get what you want, so you quarrel and fight. You do not have because you
do not ask God. 3 When you ask, you do not receive, because you ask with wrong
motives, that you may spend what you get on your pleasures. You adulterous
people, don’t you know that friendship with the world means enmity against God?
Therefore, anyone who chooses to be a friend of the world becomes an enemy of
God. 5 Or do you think Scripture says without reason that he jealously longs for
the spirit he has caused to dwell in us. But he gives us more grace. That is why
Scripture says: “God opposes the proud. but shows favor to the humble.” Submit
yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. 8 Come
near to God and he will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners, and
purify your hearts, you double-minded. 9 Grieve, mourn and wail. Change your
laughter to mourning and your joy to gloom. Humble yourselves before the Lord,
and he will lift you up. Brothers and sisters, do not slander one another.
Anyone who speaks against a brother or sister or judges them speaks against the
law and judges it. When you judge the law, you are not keeping it, but sitting
in judgment on it. 2 There is only one Lawgiver and Judge, the one who is able
to save and destroy. But you—who are you to judge your neighbor?
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis &
editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 05-06/17
The Death of the Great Boxer/Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al
Awsat/December, 05/17
France: Islamism in the Heart of the State/Yves Mamou/Gatestone
Institute/December 05/17
UK: Perversions of Justice/Khadija Khan/Gatestone Institute/December 05/17
Religious Hate Crimes, USA.: Jews, Not Muslims, Still Key Victims/A. Z. Mohamed/Gatestone
Institute/December 05/17
Kushner Is Said to Have Ordered Flynn to Contact Russia/Eli
Lake/Bloomberg/December 05/17
The Hague and the Unbearable Slowness of Justice/Noah Feldman/Bloomberg
View/Bloomberg/December 05/17
Saleh's Murder Unites Yemenis/Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/December,
05/17
Titles For Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
December 04-05/17
Lebanese PM Hariri revokes resignation after consensus
deal
Hariri to Return to Paris Friday for Lebanon Meeting
Aoun Says Lebanon's Dignity Must Not Be Undermined
Hariri Steps Back from Resignation after Endorsement of Dissociation Policy
Mustaqbal 'Relieved' by Hariri's Withdrawal of His Resignation
Change and Reform: Paris Meeting Reflects Support for 'Lebanese Legitimacy'
MP Geagea: New Settlement Very Positive, Hizbullah Serious in Committing to It
Sami Gemayel Vows Unwavering Steadfastness, Warns History Will Have No Mercy on
Ruling Authority
International Support Group on Lebanon Meets in Paris on Friday
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on December
05-06/17
Israeli Jets Strike Syrian Military Site Near Damascus
Trump Tells Abbas, Jordan King of ‘Intention’ to Move Embassy to Jerusalem
Saudi Arabia Hopes Yemeni Uprising Will Rid Country of Houthi Terrorists
Abul Gheit: Saleh’s Assassination Reveals Houthis’ Criminal Nature
Iran Warns against Dissolving Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Forces
U.N. Security Council Calls on All Sides in Yemen to 'De-escalate'
Gulf States Skip Qatar, Blast Huthis as GCC Summit Ends
Most Detained in Saudi Purge Agree to Cash Settlements
Syria Peace Talks Resume in Geneva, without Govt. Delegation
Saudi King Warns Trump over 'Dangerous' Jerusalem Embassy Move
Trump Tells Arab Leaders He Wants to Move Embassy to Jerusalem despite Warnings
Russia Registers 9 US Media Outlets as 'Foreign Agents'
Islamist Chief Says 'Security Eased' in Ain Hilweh By Departure of Extremists
Iranian Newspapers Renew Support for Houthi-Fired Missiles Targeting Gulf
Countries
Russian, Iranian Parliamentarians Discuss Reconstruction Efforts in Syria
Iran, South Korea Sign 720-Million-Euro Contract to Buy Rail Bus Wagons
Latest Lebanese Related News published on
December 05-06/17
Lebanese PM Hariri revokes resignation after consensus
deal
http://www.nydailynews.com/newswires/news/world/lebanese-pm-hariri-revokes-resignation-consensus-deal-article-1.3678239
BEIRUT (AP) — Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri revoked his resignation
Tuesday following a consensus deal reached with rival political parties, marking
an end to one of the most bizarre interludes in Lebanese politics. The
announcement came at the end of the first Cabinet meeting to be held since
Lebanon was thrown into a political crisis following Hariri's stunning move a
month ago. Hariri announced his resignation in a Nov. 4 televised broadcast from
Saudi Arabia, citing the Iranian-backed Hezbollah's meddling in regional affairs
as a main reason for stepping down. The nature of the announcement raised
suspicions that it was orchestrated by Saudi Arabia, his main backer. The move
thrust Lebanon to the forefront of the regional rivalry between Saudi Arabia and
Iran and shattered the national unity government that Hariri headed. Following
French mediation to bring Hariri out of Saudi Arabia to Paris for a brief visit,
he returned to Lebanon on Nov. 21 and put the resignation on hold to allow for
consultations. Tuesday's Cabinet meeting, attended by Hariri, endorsed a
statement that calls on rival Lebanese groups to distance themselves from
regional conflicts and the internal affairs of Arab countries.
"The Lebanese government, through all its political components, disassociates
itself from any conflicts or wars, as well as the internal affairs of Arab
countries to protect Lebanon's political and economic relations with its Arab
brothers," Hariri said. He then said he had rescinded his resignation.It is not
clear what, if anything, the agreement entails. Hariri has complained about the
Shiite militant Hezbollah group's meddling in regional affairs, including the
affairs of Gulf countries — a reference to Yemen, where Saudi Arabia is fighting
Shiite rebels supported by Iran. Hezbollah denies having a military role in
warn-torn Yemen. Two days before Hariri returned to Lebanon, the group said its
fighters are coming back from Iraq now that the Islamic State group has been
defeated there. Hezbollah has sent thousands of fighters to Syria to shore up
President Bashar Assad's forces. Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights
reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
redistributed.
Hariri to Return to Paris Friday for Lebanon Meeting
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 05/17/Prime Minister Saad
Hariri will attend talks in Paris Friday on the crisis triggered by his recent
resignation announcement and the meeting will be attended by U.S. Secretary of
State Rex Tillerson, France said Tuesday. "The aim is to support the political
process (in Lebanon) at a crucial moment," the French foreign ministry said,
minutes after Hariri announced he had rescinded his resignation. "It will send a
message both to the various parties in Lebanon and to countries in the region,"
the ministry added. The five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council --
the United States, France, Britain, Russia and China -- will be represented at
the meeting, along with Germany, Italy and Egypt. French officials said the goal
was to shore up Lebanese institutions, by strengthening the army and supporting
Hariri's economic program, with a view to encouraging foreign investment in the
country. Hariri announced he was stepping down on November 4 in a surprise
televised address from Saudi Arabia that sent tremors through Lebanon, long a
proxy battleground for regional powers. His resignation was seen as part of an
intensifying power struggle between the Saudi kingdom -- which had long backed
Hariri -- and its regional rival Iran, which backs Hizbullah. After announcing
he was bowing out Hariri, who accused Hizbullah of destabilizing Lebanon,
remained in Riyadh, sparking speculation that he was being held hostage by the
Saudis. French President Emmanuel Macron intervened to try defuse the crisis,
inviting Hariri to Paris for talks, after which he returned to Beirut to a
hero's welcome. Two weeks later, following consultations with the various
political groups in Lebanon, Hariri announced Tuesday he was withdrawing his
resignation.
Aoun Says Lebanon's Dignity Must Not Be Undermined
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 05/17/President Michel
Aoun said on Tuesday that Lebanon reacted to the crisis that emerged following
PM Saad Hariri's shock resignation because “we do not accept the country's
dignity to be tampered with,” the National News Agency reported. “Our position
on the recent crisis stems from our inability to accept that any authority in
the world could tamper with our dignity. We believe that there is no such thing
as small or major country; these must all be equal in dignity,” Aoun said at a
Cabinet meeting from Baabda Palace. At the beginning of the extraordinary
session aimed at endorsing the country's dissociation policy, Aoun presented in
detail, the stages of the crisis that arose upon the announcement of Hariri's
resignation, NNA said. He explained that the positions he took and the
wide-scale contacts he made stem from “the main concern to absorb the situation
at home and secure the return of Hariri from abroad to find out the
circumstances that accompanied his stance." Aoun spoke about the broad
consultations he made with all parties and a number of world leaders.
Hariri Steps Back from Resignation after Endorsement of
Dissociation Policy
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 05/17/Prime Minister Saad Hariri
announced on Tuesday that he is stepping back from his resignation after an
extraordinary government meeting that endorsed the country's dissociation
policy. In a statement he read to reporters, the PM announced that he had
withdrawn his resignation in a step that comes one month after stepping down
from his post in a shock move. “The Cabinet thanks the prime minister for
rescinding his resignation,” Hariri said reading from a cabinet statement issued
after its first meeting since his return. “The government has unanimously
approved a statement pledging compliance with a policy of dissociation, the
president's oath of office in terms of dissociating the country from regional
conflicts and non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries,” he
added. "The Cabinet has also renewed commitment to the Taef Accord, the
international resolutions mainly UN Resolution 1701 and continued support for
the UNIFIL. The government will continue to strengthen relations with fraternal
and friendly countries and to reaffirm partnership with the European Union," he
said. President Michel Aoun chaired the meeting on Tuesday at the Baabda Palace
with the aim of endorsing the dissociation policy. The Cabinet convened after a
month of paralysis that gripped the country following Hariri's resignation,
which he eventually retracted, citing Iran's influence, Hizbullah's involvement
in regional wars and threats for his life. Aoun and Hariri held a closed door
meeting before the government session began. The decision to hold the
extraordinary session was reached after the political parties reached an
agreement on a statement that will reaffirm Lebanon's so-called dissociation
policy ending Hizbullah's involvement in regional conflicts. Hariri had caused
widespread perplexity on November 4 when he resigned during a TV broadcast from
Saudi Arabia, citing assassination threats and blasting the policies of Iran and
Hizbullah in Lebanon and the region. After a puzzling mini-odyssey that took him
to France, Egypt and Cyprus, Hariri arrived back in Lebanon on November 21 and
then announced that he was putting his decision to quit on hold ahead of
negotiations. But while Hariri and his Saudi backers seemed on a collision
course with Hizbullah last month, an apparent behind-the-scenes deal now appears
to be restoring the status quo.
The premier has called for dissociating Lebanon from the regional conflicts
through ending Hizbullah’s involvement in them.
Hariri: From Resignation to U-turn
Naharnet/December 05/17/Events since the surprise announcement a month ago by
Prime Minister Saad Hariri that he was resigning, up to his U-turn on Tuesday:
Shock resignation
On November 4, Hariri announces from Saudi Arabia that he is resigning, citing
Iran's "grip" on Lebanon and threats to his life. In a broadcast, he accuses
Tehran of "creating a state within the state" and blasts its Lebanese ally
Hizbullah.
Iran rejects what it calls "unfounded accusations."
Detained or free?
On November 10, President Michel Aoun expresses "concern" at Hariri's situation.
Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah says Hariri was "detained" by Saudi
Arabia.French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian says Hariri is "free to move
around."
Hariri says 'free'
On November 12, Hariri says he will "return to Lebanon very soon."
"I am free here. If I want to travel tomorrow, I will," he says in an interview
from Riyadh with his political movement's Future TV. French President Emmanuel
Macron reiterates his wish that "Hariri can go to Lebanon," during a meeting
with Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil.On November 15, Aoun accuses Saudi Arabia of
having "detained" Hariri.
Long route home
Le Drian on November 16 flies to Riyadh and meets Hariri, as Saudi Foreign
Minister Adel al-Jubeir insists he is free to leave the kingdom "when he
pleases." Two weeks after announcing his resignation, Hariri leaves for France
on November 18 with his wife. Two of his children remain in Riyadh. Hariri is
greeted at the Elysee Palace by Macron. He returns to Lebanon on November 21 for
the first time since resigning, stopping in Egypt and Cyprus en route for talks
with their presidents.
Withdraws resignation
The next day, at Aoun's request, he agrees to suspend his decision to quit
pending talks on the political situation, including Hizbullah's involvement in
regional conflicts. Hariri accuses the group of violating Lebanon's policy of
"disassociation" from regional conflicts by fighting alongside Syria's
government and assisting Huthi rebels in Yemen. On November 27, Hariri says he
wants to remain premier, but that his decision hangs on the discussions under
way. On November 30, he charges that the Syrian regime, which he blames for his
father's assassination in 2005, also wants him killed. On December 5, Hariri
says he has withdrawn his resignation. The Cabinet, which comprises both rival
camps and is meeting for the first time in a month, reaffirms its official
policy of "disassociation."
Mustaqbal 'Relieved' by Hariri's Withdrawal of His
Resignation
Naharnet/December 05/17/Al-Mustaqbal parliamentary bloc on
Tuesday expressed “relief” over Prime Minister Saad Hariri's formal withdrawal
of his resignation. “The bloc welcomed the resolution that was issued by the
Cabinet today in which it reaffirmed the commitment of all of the government's
components to the policy of dissociation from any conflicts or wars, as well as
the internal affairs of Arab countries," Mustaqbal said in a statement issued
after its weekly meeting. The bloc also lauded “the efforts that PM Saad Hariri
carried out in order to reach this resolution and to the implementation of the
dissociation policy through both action and words.”And expressing “relief” over
Hariri's withdrawal of his resignation, Mustaqbal hoped there will be “a quick
resumption of the government's work” in order to “confront the major challenges
that Lebanon is facing at the economic, social and political levels.”Hariri had
announced a shock resignation in a Nov. 4 televised broadcast from Saudi Arabia,
citing Hizbullah's meddling in regional affairs as a main reason for stepping
down. The nature of the surprising announcement raised suspicions that it was
orchestrated by Saudi Arabia, his main backer. Following international mediation
efforts led by France and Egypt, Hariri revoked his resignation on Tuesday after
the government components agreed on a statement reaffirming Lebanon's so-called
policy of dissociation from regional conflicts.
Change and Reform: Paris Meeting Reflects Support for
'Lebanese Legitimacy'
Naharnet/December 05/17/The meeting of the International Support Group for
Lebanon that will be held in Paris Friday is “an international rally in support
of the Lebanese legitimacy embodied in the president, the premier and the
parliament,” the Change and Reform bloc said on Tuesday. “Thank God for
Lebanon's safety after the major crisis that we went through,” said the bloc in
a statement issued after its weekly meeting. “We stress the bloc's full support
for the statement that was issued by the government today and its commitment to
its content,” it added, referring to a “settlement” statement according to which
Prime Minister Saad Hariri rescinded his resignation. The statement reaffirmed
Lebanon's so-called dissociation policy. "The Lebanese government, through all
its political components, dissociates itself from any conflicts or wars, as well
as the internal affairs of Arab countries to protect Lebanon's political and
economic relations with its Arab brothers," the statement said. “Lebanon has
returned to its sound constitutional course, and the government and all state
institutions have resumed work and returned to the pre-November 4 phase,” Change
and Reform said, adding that “Lebanon draws its dignity from the dignity of its
presidents and institutions.”Recalling the period of Hariri's presence in Saudi
Arabia after his resignation announcement, the bloc said “Lebanese diplomatic
action, with full support from all Lebanese, led to a strong and firm
international stance in support of Lebanon and the return of the premier.”It
also said that the upcoming Paris meeting is “a clear message to the Lebanese
and the world that Lebanon's stability is a red line and that Lebanon is
supported and not abandoned.”Hariri had announced a shock resignation in a Nov.
4 televised broadcast from Saudi Arabia, citing Hizbullah's meddling in regional
affairs as a main reason for stepping down. The nature of the surprising
announcement raised suspicions that it was orchestrated by Saudi Arabia, his
main backer. Following international mediation efforts led by France and Egypt,
Hariri revoked his resignation on Tuesday after the agreement on the settlement
statement.
MP Geagea: New Settlement Very Positive, Hizbullah Serious
in Committing to It
Naharnet/December 05/17/MP Sethrida Geagea of the Lebanese Forces bloc on
Tuesday described the new settlement that was reached among the government's
components as “very positive,” noting that Hizbullah is “serious” in committing
to it. “The LF was not away from the negotiations that led to the new
settlement, although that was not highlighted clearly in the press,” Geagea said
in an interview with al-Markazia news agency. “The settlement in the formula
that was approved today in Cabinet is a victory for all Lebanese, because it
will enhance internal stability and reactivate the government after months of
absence, and this is what we in the Lebanese Forces were calling for,” Geagea
added. “We will maintain our presence in the government, because what has been
approved is a victory for us,” the lawmaker went on to say. Geagea saluted Prime
Minister Saad Hariri over the “positive shock” he created through his surprise
resignation from Riyadh last month. “Had it not been for it, the new settlement
would not have been achieved,” the MP said. She also saluted “the souls of the
martyrs, topped by martyr ex-premier Rafik Hariri and ex-minister Mohammed
Shatah,” noting that “what was achieved today did them some justice.”And in
response to a question, Geagea pointed out that “Hizbullah is serious in
committing to the stipulations of the new settlement” and that “France is
playing a key role in guaranteeing this.”Hariri announced his resignation in a
Nov. 4 televised broadcast from Saudi Arabia, citing Hizbullah's meddling in
regional affairs as a main reason for stepping down. The nature of the shock
announcement raised suspicions that it was orchestrated by Saudi Arabia, his
main backer. Hariri revoked his resignation Tuesday following an agreement on a
government statement that reaffirmed Lebanon's so-called policy of dissociation
from regional conflicts. "The Lebanese government, through all its political
components, dissociates itself from any conflicts or wars, as well as the
internal affairs of Arab countries to protect Lebanon's political and economic
relations with its Arab brothers," the statement said.
Sami Gemayel Vows Unwavering Steadfastness, Warns History
Will Have No Mercy on Ruling Authority
Kataeb.org/Tuesday 05th December 2017/Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel on Tuesday
lashed out at the Justice Minister's request to refer his oil-related statements
to the Judiciary so as to be probed, saying that it is his duty as a lawmaker to
question any act that may seem as dubious to him.
"It is my duty as a lawmaker to inform the Lebanese about the hidden aspects of
the oil exploration project," he said in a press conference held in Saifi. "By
referring my statements to the judiciary, you have officially allowed political
meddling into the judicial authority's work," he stressed. "The Judiciary is
being used for political purposes." Gemayel wondered why Speaker Nabih Berri,
MPs Walid Jumblat and Boutros Harb, former PM Najib Mikati and other officials
who openly cast doubt over the power barges deal were not referred to the
Judiciary so that their stances would be probed as well as his.
"You are being discriminating as you are only seeking to muzzle the opposition
forces and pressure free people in Lebanon," he noted. "This referral indicts
you because it encloses a blatant alteration as you premeditatedly omitted my
stances related to the power barges deal which you are trying to evade due to
the watertight evidence proving its illegality."The Kataeb chief slammed the
justice minister's claim that he was jeopardizing Lebanon's stability due to his
stances, adding that such allegations bring back to minds the same accusations
that were used during the Syrian tutelage era.
"Isn't the group using its weapons inside as well as outside Lebanon, and
disrupting ties with other countries destabilizing the country?" he asked. "Are
we the ones destabilizing the country just because we are trying to defend the
Lebanese who are struggling to live in dignity in their country?"
"What was still missing is to replace the name of State Prosecutor Samir Hammoud
with that of his predecessor during the Syrian tutelage era, Adnan Addoum," he
stated. "I advise the ruling authority to change its policy and performance
because neither we nor the people nor history will have mercy on it," he stated.
Gemayel affirmed that the Kataeb party will continue to say the truth and defend
the Lebanese people just like it did during the darkest days that the country
had witnessed, pledging to keep on confronting the political settlement based on
which the country is being ruled.
"We will continue to reject the political deal that relinquished Lebanon's
sovereignty and paved way for shady deals," he vowed. "Not one will subdue
us."Commenting on PM Saad Hariri's decision to rescind his resignation after the
government had endorsed a policy of dissociation, Gemayel deplored the failure
to seize the "historical opportunity" that was presented to the local factions
to make a drastic change, saying that the Lebanese were dragged into a state of
confusion and despair for nothing. "All the confusion that you made the Lebanese
experience during the past month ended up with the same old settlement," he
said."The government issued a statement endorsing a policy of dissociation as if
it was the Lebanese state or the Army the ones that were involved in regional
conflicts and interfering in the internal affairs of other countries," Gemayel
stressed.
International Support Group on Lebanon Meets in Paris on
Friday
Asharq Al-Awsat/05th December 2017/The International Support
Group on Lebanon will meet in Paris on Friday where Lebanese Prime Minister Saad
Hariri will meet ministers from major powers. Discussions will focus on ways to
stabilize the country a month after his surprise resignation sent shockwaves
across Lebanon and threatened to plunge it into political turmoil, three
diplomats said. A French official said the meeting will be co-chaired by the
United Nations and French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, aiming at
"reiterating the international community's commitment to supporting Lebanon's
stability, integrity and security" and to encourage cooperation among rival
Lebanese factions. The Arab and European diplomats said Hariri would take part
in the meeting of the Group that includes the five members of the UN Security
Council - Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States.
Hariri resigned as prime minister on November 4 in protest against Iranian
meddling in Lebanese affairs and the “Hezbollah” group’s interference in
regional affairs. He suspended the resignation on November 22 pending
consultations with Lebanese powers. A European diplomat said the Paris meeting
would be an opportunity to reinforce that the Lebanese must stick by the state
policy of "disassociation", or keeping out of regional conflicts. A guest list
was not released, but the meeting comes when US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
is scheduled to be in Paris. Before Hariri sets off, Lebanon's cabinet is this
week set to meet for the first time since the political crisis erupted. The date
of the cabinet meeting has not yet been confirmed but it is expected to address
Hariri's resignation. MP Wael Abou Faour, who met Hariri on Monday, said
discussions among politicians were "moving positively" and would result in a
"unanimous stance" by the cabinet soon. The Lebanon support group, launched in
2013, also includes the European Union, the Arab League and United Nations.
Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on December
05-06/17
Israeli Jets Strike Syrian Military Site Near Damascus
Agencies/Tuesday 05th December
2017/Israeli jets struck a Syrian military site on the outskirts of Damascus
late Monday night, as per media reports.The airstrike targeted the Jamarya
military facility and research center, northwest of the Syrian capital. “Israeli
planes targeted the Jamarya region near Damascus including a scientific research
center and warehouses where weapons and ammunition of the regime and its allies
were stocked,” Rami Abdel Rahmane, director of the Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group told AFP. Syrian state TV reported
that the country's air defenses intercepted three missiles shot by Israel. The
Jamraya research center is known to be a complex where the Syrian regime has
developed missiles and weapons.
Trump Tells Abbas, Jordan King of ‘Intention’ to Move Embassy to Jerusalem
Tuesday 05th December 2017/US
President Donald Trump on Tuesday spoke to Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas and Jordanian King Abdullah II over the phone, informing them
separately of his “intention” to relocate the US embassy from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem. Trump “informed the president (Abbas) on his intention to move the US
embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem,” a statement from the Palestinian presidency
said. The Royal Hashemite court released a statement with similar language.It
was not clear from either statement if Trump planned to move the embassy
immediately or at some point in the future, with no further details provided.
Abbas told the US leader the “firm” Palestinian position is “there is no
Palestinian state without East Jerusalem as its capital,” the readout said. The
PA president also warned Trump that moving the embassy to Jerusalem would be
dangerous for the peace process, as well as to peace and security across the
region and the world. The PA president’s spokesperson Nabil Abu Rudeineh said
Abbas would continue to be in touch with world leaders to prevent what he called
the “unacceptable action.”The Jordanian king warned Trump of the “danger” the
measure will have if taken outside the framework of a comprehensive solution for
a Palestinian state. He also cautioned it will have “dangerous repercussions”
for peace and stability throughout the region and the world, according to the
kingdom’s readout of the call. The White House said Trump was also scheduled to
speak with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Trump’s call to Abbas and Abdullah
came with Palestinian and Arab leaders warning that US recognition of Jerusalem
as Israel’s capital would ruin Trump’s efforts to reach an Israeli-Palestinian
peace deal. Abbas has been speaking with world leaders over the past several
days as part of diplomatic efforts to persuade Trump not to make the move. Trump
on Monday delayed a decision on whether to recognize Jerusalem as the Israeli
capital and move the US embassy there.The White House said Trump would miss a
deadline to decide on shifting the embassy from Tel Aviv, after a frantic 48
hours of public warnings from allies and private phone calls between world
leaders. There have been suggestions he will stop short of moving the embassy
for now but recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital — a move that would upturn
years of precedent and run contrary to international consensus. Nabil Shaath, an
adviser to Abbas, told journalists on Tuesday that a decision by Trump to
recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital “totally destroys any chance that he
will play a role as an honest broker.”Israel captured East Jerusalem and the
West Bank in the 1967 Six Day War. It later extended sovereignty over East
Jerusalem in a move never recognized by the international community. Israel
claims the entire city as its undivided capital, while the Palestinians want
East Jerusalem as the capital of their future state.The city’s status is among
the most difficult issues in the conflict. US traditional policy has been that
its status must be negotiated between the two parties.
Saudi Arabia Hopes Yemeni Uprising Will Rid Country of Houthi
Terrorists
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 5 December, 2017/Saudi Arabia stressed on Tuesday the
Kingdom’s constant support for Yemen’s stability, hoping that it will return to
its Arab fold, reported the Saudi Press Agency (SPA). Custodian of the Two Holy
Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz chaired the cabinet session at the Yammama
palace in Riyadh. The government hoped that the Yemeni people’s uprising against
the terrorist sectarian Iranian-backed Houthi militias would help rid the
country of their oppression, said Information Minister Dr. Awadh bin Saleh al-Awadh.
It hoped that the Yemenis will be able to preserve their country’s security,
identity, unity and social fabric within an Arab, regional and international
framework, he continued. In addition, the Saudi cabinet welcomed the outcomes of
the international meeting on Yemen that was held in London last week. The
gatherers stressed the Kingdom’s right to defend itself against threats that
target its stability and security. They said that the launch of ballistic
missiles by the Houthis against the Kingdom is a threat to regional security
that will prolong the Yemeni conflict, calling for the need to put an immediate
end to these attacks by the Houthis and their allies. Addressing the recent
dispute over the possibility that US President Donald Trump may recognize
Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, the Saudi cabinet expressed its constant
support to the Palestinian people. It said that the Palestinians have the right
to establish their own state, whose capital is East Jerusalem. It therefore
expressed its deep concern over the reports that Trump may recognize Jerusalem
as the capital of Israel. Such a move may hamper peace talks and lead to very
serious consequences, warned the Saudi cabinet. It hoped that the US would not
go ahead with such a step so that it would not affect Washington’s ability to
pursue a just solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
Abul Gheit: Saleh’s Assassination Reveals
Houthis’ Criminal Nature
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 5 December, 2017/Arab League chief Ahmed Abul Gheit
called on the international community on Tuesday to take immediate action in
order to contain the dangerous developments in Yemen. His spokesman Mahmoud
Afifi quoted Abul Gheit as saying that the assassination of former Yemeni
President Ali Abdullah Saleh on Monday demonstrates the criminal nature of the
Houthi militants. Saleh was killed on Monday at the hands of the Houthis days
after he announced that he wanted to open a new chapter of ties with the
Saudi-led coalition aimed at restoring legitimacy in Yemen, effectively ending
his three-year alliance with Iran-backed group. Abul Gheit added that the
Saleh’s death leaves Yemen, which is already exhausted by war, on the brink of
further deterioration on the humanitarian level. The Houthi militias have
rejected all solutions that have been proposed to resolve the conflict that
erupted in 2014, he said according to his spokesman.Their refusal to deal with
any political efforts reveals that their devious plot is aimed at having the
Yemeni people submit to their rule, he continued. This plan should be thwarted
through all possible legitimate means, he demanded. It is time that the
international community, especially the influential powers, realizes that the
Houthi militia is a terrorist organization that is ruling the people through the
force of arms. All means should be used to save the Yemeni people from this
nightmare, he stressed.
Iran Warns against Dissolving Iraq’s Popular
Mobilization Forces
London, Baghdad -
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 5 December, 2017/Iran warned on Monday against any
attempts to dissolve the Hashd al-Shaabi or Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) in
Iraq, and considered any calls to dismantle those units, which include militias
loyal to Tehran, as a “conspiracy.”Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security
Council Ali Shamkhani said that calls for dissolving the PMF is a “new
conspiracy that would drive the comeback of instabilty and terrorism to the
region.”He made his remarks during a meeting in Tehran on Monday with Humam
Hamoudi, the head of Iraq’s Islamic Supreme Council and the country’s first
deputy parliament speaker, reported Iran’s news agency ISNA.Shamkhani added:
“The patience and perseverance of the Iraqi people and the heroics of the
country’s army, security and popular forces, especially the PMF, led to the
destruction of the region's greatest threat, ISIS, despite the discontent of
some countries.”He stressed that the wisdom of the Iraqi officials and deputies
would not allow enemies to sew conspiracies that would disintegrate the country.
Sources close to the Islamic Supreme Council said that Hamoudi’s visit to Tehran
aims to inform the Iranian leadership about the nature of alliances in the
upcoming elections and to discuss the fate of Iraq’s Shi’ite “National
Alliance.” Some Shi’ite blocs and figures, including the Islamic Supreme
Council, are concerned about the “ambiguous” future that awaits the National
Alliance, after the withdrawal of the Sadrist Movement and divisions among its
members. Some sources said that Iran was currently exerting efforts to “repair”
the crack left inside the Alliance, and to make sure that Shi’ite forces would
win the prime ministry seat during the upcoming round of elections. On Sunday,
Hamoudi criticized French President Emmanuel Macron, who on Saturday called on
Iraq to dismantle all militias, including an Iran-backed military force, and for
the government in Baghdad to open dialogue to ease tensions with Iraqi Kurdish
leaders. Hamoudi said that the French position was an intervention in the
internal affairs of Iraq.
U.N. Security Council Calls on All Sides in Yemen to
'De-escalate'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 05/17/The U.N. Security Council called
Tuesday on all sides in war-torn Yemen to "de-escalate" and return to talks as
the conflict there took an ominous turn with the killing of ex-president Ali
Abdullah Saleh. "The members of the Security Council call all sides to
de-escalate and to recommit and re-engage without preconditions in the U.N.-led
political process to achieve a durable ceasefire," Japanese ambassador Koro
Bessho, the council's president, said after a closed-door meeting on the
situation. Bessho said the 15-member council was deeply concerned about the
sharp escalation in violence as well as "the dire and deteriorating"
humanitarian situation in Yemen. "Yemen stands on the brink of a catastrophic
famine," he said. At the same time, he said the Security Council members
"strongly condemn" missile attacks on Saudi Arabia. Huthi forces have fired at
least two ballistic missiles over the past month at Saudi Arabia, which is
leading a coalition against the Iranian-backed rebels. On Monday, Huthis killed
Saleh, a former ally, and moved to consolidate their grip on Sanaa Tuesday after
a night of heavy air strikes. At least 234 people have been killed and 400
wounded in five days of heavy fighting in the Yemen capital, according to the
International Committee of the Red Cross.
Gulf States Skip Qatar, Blast Huthis as GCC
Summit Ends
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 05/17/The Gulf Cooperation Council
wrapped up an annual summit Tuesday without discussing the Qatar crisis, the
worst in the bloc's history, but they did blast Yemen's Huthi rebels and Iran.
The six-nation regional alliance affirmed in a joint declaration the importance
of preserving the GCC's existence which was threatened by a bitter dispute
between its members. "The holding of the summit amid these delicate situations
proves the faith and conviction of GCC leaders in this organization," Kuwait
Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al-Sabah told a concluding news conference.
The summit was shortened to one day from the original two and saw the absence of
the leaders of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, which along
with Egypt severed political and economic ties with Qatar six months ago. "We
appreciate the level of representation of any country and highly evaluate that
the six member states have participated in the summit," the Kuwaiti minister
said. When asked if the summit discussed the dispute, GCC secretary-general
Abdullatif al-Zayyani said: "This meeting was to reaffirm the solidarity within
the GCC states and their joint work." In their declaration, the Gulf states
called for faster integration of programs like the common market and the customs
union to achieve complete economic unity by 2025. They affirmed "the important
role of the GCC, its cohesion and unity among members" and reiterated their
resolve to fight terrorism and extremism. The GCC members strongly condemned
Yemen's Shiite Huthi rebels for killing former president Ali Abdullah Saleh.
They called for unity of all Yemeni groups and parties, including the party of
Saleh, to "get rid of the Huthi militias which are following and being backed by
Iran." The GCC condemned "all terrorist actions carried out by Iran and its
continued interference in the internal affairs and Arab countries," the
statement said. It said GCC leaders were committed to work with the
administration of U.S. President Donald Trump in confronting terrorism and
Iran's expansionist policies in the region. They selected Oman to host the next
summit.
Most Detained in Saudi Purge Agree to Cash
Settlements
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 05/17/Most of those detained in a
sweeping anti-corruption purge of the Saudi elite have struck monetary
settlements in exchange for their freedom, the attorney general said Tuesday, a
month after they were locked up in a 5-star hotel. Dozens of high-profile
figures including princes, ministers and tycoons are being held in Riyadh's
Ritz-Carlton hotel, now a makeshift luxury prison, in the biggest sweep of the
kingdom's elite in its recent history. Some 320 people were called in for
questioning and 159 people are currently being detained, many of whom have
agreed to a "settlement", or handing over allegedly ill-gotten gains to the
Saudi state treasury, attorney general Sheikh Saud al-Mojeb said. "The necessary
arrangements are being finalized to conclude such agreements," Mojeb said in a
statement. The attorney general has previously said he estimates at least $100
billion has been lost in embezzlement or corruption over several decades. His
latest statement comes after Prince Miteb bin Abdullah, the former National
Guard chief once seen as a contender to the throne, was released last week
following a settlement reportedly exceeding $1 billion. Some analysts saw Prince
Miteb's removal as an attempt by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is also
Saudi defense minister, to consolidate his control over the security services.
But Saudi authorities insist the purge was meant solely to target endemic
corruption as the kingdom seeks to diversify its oil-dependent economy. In a
recent interview to The New York Times, Prince Mohammed described as "ludicrous"
reports equating the crackdown to a power grab, saying that many of those
detained at the opulent Ritz-Carlton had already pledged allegiance to him. The
attorney general said the bank accounts of 376 people have been frozen, all of
whom are detained or linked to corruption allegations. Saudi forces also
grounded private jets at airports, possibly to prevent high-profile figures from
leaving the country, an aviation source told AFP. The purge has triggered
uncertainty among businesses that could lead to capital flight or derail
reforms, experts say, at a time when the kingdom is seeking to attract badly
needed investments to offset a protracted oil slump. Other high-profile targets
of the crackdown include billionaire Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal, dubbed the
Warren Buffett of Saudi Arabia. The government has not commented on his current
status. The crackdown has exposed the kingdom's once-untouchable elite to rare
public scrutiny -- Saudis on social media have quipped that the Ritz-Carlton was
not the worst place to be trapped.
Syria Peace Talks Resume in Geneva, without
Govt. Delegation
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 05/17/U.N.-backed peace talks for
war-ravaged Syria were set to resume in Geneva Tuesday, but without Syrian
government negotiators, who sources said have yet to determine if they will
return."The delegation will not leave today or tomorrow for Geneva, and the
final decision (on attending) has not been taken yet," a source close to the
government delegation told AFP on Tuesday. An eighth round of peace talks aimed
at ending Syria's nearly seven-year war began in Geneva last week. U.N. Syria
envoy Staffan de Mistura announced shortly after the talks began that they would
be extended by two weeks. Negotiations were paused over the weekend, but both
sides were expected to return to Geneva to resume discussions on Tuesday. A U.N.
spokeswoman said the talks would indeed resume Tuesday as planned. "The Special
Envoy has announced last week a recess. This recess (ends) today," Alessandra
Vellucci told reporters in Geneva. However, the Al-Watan newspaper, which is
close to the government, said the regime's delegation was in Damascus and was
not expected to leave either Tuesday or Wednesday. The daily said the invitation
to return to the talks "is still being studied by the Syrian leadership". When
asked about the delay, Vellucci said the government delegation had "been invited
back in Geneva as of today (Tuesday). The Special Envoy stands ready to engage
them when they return.""We expect and we hope they will be here very soon," she
added. Meanwhile, the opposition delegation to the talks said its head Nasr
al-Hariri had arrived in Geneva and would meet de Mistura on Tuesday afternoon.
'No final decision'
On Monday, a government source had already cast doubt on the return of the
delegation to the talks. "For the time being there has been no final decision.
Damascus is still thinking about the feasibility of its participation," the
government source told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity. "As soon as a
decision is reached, it will be made public through the usual diplomatic
channels."The government delegation left Geneva on Saturday, after its chief
negotiator Bashar al-Jaafari said there were "big problems in this round of
talks". He was referring to a communique published by the opposition last month
in Riyadh signaling that it was maintaining its insistence on President Bashar
al-Assad's removal. The opposition, united in one delegation for the first time,
has defied calls to give up on its demand that Assad must step down before any
peace deal can be reached. Jaafari described that position as "provocative" and
"irresponsible," warning that "there will be no progress" if the opposition
maintained that position. De Mistura has tried to maintain an upbeat note on the
talks, and on Friday he published a document suggesting 12 principles for a
future Syria that he suggested the two sides could agree, including that the
country "shall be democratic and non-sectarian."He asked the parties to discuss
the points and add their thoughts before the talks resumed. More than 340,000
people have been killed in Syria since the conflict began with anti-government
protests in March 2011.
Saudi King Warns Trump over 'Dangerous'
Jerusalem Embassy Move
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December
05/17/Saudi Arabia's King Salman on Tuesday warned President Donald Trump that
moving the U.S. embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem was a "dangerous
step" that could rile Muslims around the world. "Moving the U.S. embassy is a
dangerous step that provokes the feelings of Muslims around the world,"
state-run al-Ekhbariya TV quoted King Salman as telling Trump in a phone call.
Trump Tells Arab Leaders He Wants to Move Embassy to Jerusalem despite Warnings
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 05/17/President Donald Trump on Tuesday
slapped down warnings of widespread Middle East unrest as he told anxious Arab
leaders he still intends to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, on the eve of a
much-anticipated policy speech. Amid a frantic round of telephone diplomacy,
Trump told Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas and Jordan's King Abdullah that the
deeply controversial move was coming, but crucially did not give a timeframe.
Trump "informed the president (Abbas) on his intention to move the U.S. embassy
from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem," the Palestinian leader's office said in a statement
that was echoed from Amman. Trump missed a Monday deadline to decide whether to
keep the embassy in Tel Aviv or fulfill a campaign promise and move it to
Jerusalem -- de facto recognizing Israel's claim on the disputed city. Such a
move would delight both Trump's donors and the conservative and evangelical base
that is so vital for the embattled president's survival. But it could also
extinguish Trump's much-vaunted efforts to broker Middle East peace and ignite
the flames of conflict in a region already reeling from crises in Lebanon,
Syria, Iraq, Yemen and Qatar. The 71-year-old president will give a speech on
his decision Wednesday, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said.
Anticipating widespread demonstrations, U.S. government officials have already
been ordered to avoid Jerusalem's Old City and the West Bank.
'Threading the needle'?
U.S. officials talk of "threading the needle" -- fulfilling Trump's pledge,
while keeping the peace process on the rails -- but critics say Trump's approach
is more like "splitting the baby." Officials say he will hold off on moving the
embassy right away, largely for logistical reasons, but may present a timetable
for that to go ahead on Wednesday. Equally controversially, he is also expected
to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital, while leaving open questions about
control of the predominantly Palestinian eastern part of the city. The White
House argues that such a move would not prejudge final talks and would represent
the reality that west Jerusalem is and will continue to be part of Israel under
any settlement. But it could upend a decades-old western policy -- observed by
both Republican and Democratic presidents -- that stated Jerusalem's status can
only be decided by negotiation. Saudi Arabia's King Salman warned his close ally
that moving the U.S. embassy was a "dangerous step" that could rile Muslims
around the world. "Mr Trump! Jerusalem is a red line for Muslims," Turkey's
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a raucous televised speech, echoing alarm
expressed by Palestinian and Arab leaders.
In his address, Erdogan warned that any move to back Israel's claim to the city
would mobilize "the entire Islamic world" and even prompt Ankara to sever its
recently renewed diplomatic ties with Israel. Israel's government has largely
been silent. It earlier left the Trump administration with the impression that
moving the embassy was a "no go," leading to Trump signing the waiver the first
time around. The armed Islamist Hamas movement has threatened to launch a new
"intifada" or uprising. Most of the international community, including the
United States, does not formally recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
'A way must be found'
Following talks in Brussels with U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, top EU
diplomat Federica Mogherini warned that any move which risked undermining
efforts to jumpstart moribund peace talks "must absolutely be avoided.""A way
must be found through negotiations to resolve the status of Jerusalem as the
future capital of both states, so that the aspiration of both parties can be
fulfilled," she said. In Cairo, Arab League chief Ahmed Abul Gheit warned it
would be viewed as an act of "clear aggression" against the Arab and Muslim
world. The Palestinians said it would shatter any illusion about Trump's ability
to fairly mediate in any talks. "That totally destroys any chance that he will
play a role as an honest broker," said Nabil Shaath, an adviser to Abbas.
The Jerusalem Embassy Act
In Israel, however, hardline Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman hailed the
moment as a "historic opportunity" for Trump, expressing hope he would see the
U.S. embassy in Jerusalem "next week or next month."The U.S. Congress has
already made its aim clear in the so-called Jerusalem Embassy Act, which was
passed in 1995 and which stated that the city "should be recognized as the
capital of the State of Israel" and that the U.S. embassy should be moved there.
But an inbuilt waiver, which allows the president to temporarily postpone the
move on grounds of "national security," has been repeatedly invoked by
successive US presidents, meaning the law has never taken effect. Israel seized
the largely-Arab eastern sector of Jerusalem during the 1967 Six-Day War and
later annexed it, claiming both sides of the city as its "eternal and undivided
capital."But the Palestinians want the eastern sector as the capital of their
future state and fiercely oppose any Israeli attempt to extend sovereignty
there. Several peace plans have unraveled over the issue of how to divide
sovereignty or oversee sites in the city that are holy for Christians, Jews and
Muslims.
Russia Registers 9 US Media Outlets as 'Foreign
Agents'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 05/17/Russia's justice ministry on
Tuesday named nine US media outlets including Voice of America as "foreign
agents" after President Vladimir Putin signed a law last month allowing
international media to be slapped with the controversial label.
The ministry on its website posted a statement saying that US-funded Voice of
America and Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty and seven of their media affiliates
have been recognised as "carrying out the functions of a foreign agent."Russia
last month hastily issued legislation allowing the measure to target media in a
retaliatory move after Kremlin-funded RT television registered itself as a
"foreign agent" in the United States under official pressure. Radio Free Europe
and Voice of America had already been formally warned by the justice ministry
that they risked recognition as "foreign agents."The justice ministry has now
formalised this, naming them and their affiliates, including Radio Free Europe's
news sites dedicated to regions including Crimea, which Russia annexed from
Ukraine, and the Caucasus and a television channel run jointly by Radio Free
Europe and Voice of America called Telekanal Nastoyashchyeye Vremya. The 2012
law previously applied only to non-governmental organisations that had
international funding. Those branded "foreign agents" have to present themselves
as such on all paperwork and submit to intensive scrutiny of their staffing and
financing. Many NGOs have closed down as a result, saying the measure made it
too difficult for them to operate.Rights groups fear the measure applied to
media could have a chilling effect on the ability of outlets to carry out
independent reporting.
Islamist Chief Says 'Security Eased' in Ain
Hilweh By Departure of Extremists
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 05/17/In light of reports that two
prominent suspects taking refuge in the Palestinian refugee camp of Ain el-Hilweh
in Sidon have left the camp and headed to Syria, Jihadi Islamist Movement's
chief Sheikh Jamal Khattab affirmed the reports on Tuesday saying “it eases the
security burden in the camp.”In remarks he made to al-Mustaqbal daily, Khattab
said he obtained information confirming that the suspects identified as Haitham
al-Shaabi, Palestinian, and Mohammed al-Arafi, Lebanese, have “likely” fled to
Syria. There is no definite information on whether other extremists have
followed the same steps he said in reference to the extremist group of Bilal
Badr. Khattab pointed out saying that some people view the departure of
extremists as positive while others see it the contrary, “but in overall it
reduces the security burden on the camp.”Ain el-Hilweh, the largest Palestinian
refugee camp in the country, is home to about 50,000 refugees and is known to
harbor extremists and fugitives. By long-standing convention, the Lebanese army
does not enter the country's 12 refugee camps, leaving security inside to the
Palestinians themselves.
Iranian Newspapers Renew Support for Houthi-Fired
Missiles Targeting Gulf Countries
London – Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 5 December, 2017/Iranian newspapers supported
the Tehran-backed Houthi group in Yemen in their launching of a cruise missile
at the Barakah nuclear power plant in the United Arab Emirates. Papers led with
headlines and justifications saying that the alleged missile attack last was in
response to confrontations witnessed by the forces of late former President Ali
Abdullah Saleh and Houthi militias. Iranian newspapers omitted however the UAE’s
denial that any missile had struck the nuclear reactor project’s site. They went
ahead instead and promoted the claims made by Houthis. Iranian Foreign Ministry
spokesman Bahram Qasimi meanwhile denied reports by local news agencies of arson
in the Iranian embassy in Yemen. He also denied that Iranian diplomats were
present in the capital Sanaa. Ultra-conservative newspapers loyal to the
Revolutionary Guard led with headlines supporting the launch of Houthi rockets
into Saudi Arabia and the UAE even after Iranian President Hassan Rouhani had
called for resolving the region's disputes through dialogue. An editorial from
the Iranian Kayhan newspaper led with stirring headlines that supported the
missile attacks by the Houthis. In addition, Iranian media went into a state of
alert after clashes erupted in Sanaa last week between forces loyal to Saleh and
the Houthi militias.The newspaper, which is close to the office of the Iranian
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, renewed calls on the Houthis to fire rockets
against countries participating in the coalition to support the legitimacy in
Yemen. A semi-official Iranian news agency said authorities at the Iranian
culture and information ministry suspended the Kayhan newspaper for two days
following its calls for rockets to be fired against the UAE. Officials in the
spiritual administration said that such calls went against Iran's supreme
interests. The Kayhan ban came after it ran a headline saying Dubai was the
"next target" for Yemen's Houthis.
Russian, Iranian Parliamentarians Discuss
Reconstruction Efforts in Syria
Moscow- Taha Abdul
Wahed/Tuesday, 5 December, 2017/Iran's parliament speaker Ali Larijani and
Russian Parliament speaker Vyacheslav Vallodin held talks on the sidelines of an
anti-drug conference in Moscow on Monday. The talks dealt with several issues,
first and foremost the situation in Syria. Speaking at presser afterward,
Larijani told reporters that both Russia and Iran affirmed their determination
to continue cooperation to combat terrorism, pointing out that the cooperation
between the two countries in this area in Syria “made progress, and saw
important achievements.”Larijani also criticized the US military presence in
Syria, calling it "illegal”."We look suspiciously at the role of the United
States in Syria. They establish military bases there and carry out adventures.
"He also condemned Israeli operations in Syria and said they were "military
drills" that caused problems in the region. For his part, Leonid Slutsky, First
Deputy Chairman of the State Duma's Committee on International Affairs, said the
committee would hold a meeting with the Iranian parliamentary delegation. The
two sides will discuss the reconstruction efforts for Syria’s infrastructure.
RIA Novosti quoted Slutsky as saying that parliamentarians from both countries
will also discuss the activities of the ‘Shiite police’ in areas where Shiite
citizens live in Syria. US Ambassador to Russia Jon Huntsman said in an
interview to the newspaper Vedomosti that discussing US withdrawal from Syria
will be possible only after terrorism is abolished there. Huntsman pointed out
that all the terrorists can be expelled from Syria’s Raqqa and from the
Euphrates region in general. “But they can regroup and regain their strength,”
he said, stressing that “for this reason it is necessary to ensure that the war
on terror is successfully completed before withdrawing troops.” The two
presidents made great progress at their meeting in Vietnam's Da Nang, the
ambassador said in an interview. Huntsman added that he considered the content
of talks more important than their length, and the meeting between Putin and
Trump in Da Nang was important in terms of content. The joint statement of Putin
and Trump was issued on November 11, following their meeting on the sidelines of
the APEC conference in Vietnam. The two presidents confirmed their commitment to
defeating ISIS in Syria and also agreed on the inadmissibility of a military
solution for Syria.
Iran, South Korea Sign 720-Million-Euro Contract
to Buy Rail Bus Wagons
Tehran - Asharq Al-AwsatTuesday,
5 December, 2017/Iran has signed a contract worth 720 million euro Saturday with
the South Korean company Hyundai Rotem to buy 450 rail bus wagons, reported the
Iranian TV. The contract was signed in Tehran by Hyundai Rotem and Iranian Rail
Industries Development Co (IRICO), which is part of Iran's railways department.
Iranian Minister of Roads and Urban Development Abbas Akhoundi attended the
signing ceremony. As per the contract, funded by the South Korean side, Hyundai
Rotem will manufacture 300 trailers in Iran in cooperation with the Iranian
company, and will create 1,000 direct jobs and 1,700 indirect, along with
manufacturing 150 vehicles in South Korea, according to IRICO’s general manager.
In August, Iran received an 8 billion-euro loan from the Export–Import Bank of
Korea (KEXIM). Director of Iran’s Central Bank Valiollah Seif said that the loan
will boost many of the development and production projects. South Korea is an
important economic and trade partner for Iran, but has greatly reduced its ties
with Tehran over international sanctions linked its nuclear program. Since the
signing of the nuclear deal between Iran and the world powers in July 2015,
Tehran has sought to develop its economic and trade relations with Asian and
European countries despite the opposition of US President Donald Trump. In
September 2017, Iran signed an agreement with the Bank of China to fund several
infrastructure projects worth $10 billion, and was promised to receive an
additional $25 billion fund, the central bank said.
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published on December
05-06/17
The Death of the Great Boxer
Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al
Awsat/December, 05/17
The Houthis immediately sensed the danger of former President Ali Abdullah Saleh
abandoning the alliance that brought them together three years ago. They
realized that he had taken away the excuse they had used to seize the Yemeni
state. His absence uncovered their agenda and threatened to lead to their
isolation. The end of the alliance would have changed military, political and
tribal balances and would have turned them back into a rebel militia that lacks
popular support in Yemen. The internal isolation would exacerbate the external
one and lead to the break of the Yemeni link in the regional plot that they are
a part of. They realized the danger of his abandonment of the alliance and
immediately sought to kill him.
Taking into consideration the complexities of the Yemeni scene, as well as the
security, military, popular and tribal support that Saleh enjoyed, we realize
that yesterday’s scene may be more dangerous than previous ones. It is more
dangerous than the image of the noose being tightened around Saddam Hussein’s
neck amid the ecstasy of the onlookers. It is more dangerous than the image of
Libyans harassing Moammar Gadhafi before his death. It is more dangerous than
the image of the Lebanese people failing to find Rafik Hariri’s corpse because
his killers sought to blow it up in all directions.
Ali Abdullah Saleh was not a regular player along the Yemeni faultline. The
story of Yemen since the late 1970s is also his story and it bears his
hallmarks. When he first became president in 1978, the country was still reeling
from the assassination of two presidents, Ibrahim al-Hamdi and Ahmed al-Ghashmi,
within eight months. Saleh fondly used to remember how the Washington Post
predicted that he would not remain in power for more than six months. He left
the presidential palace 34 years later in 2012.
He was not a regular player on the Yemeni scene. He was the great boxer, who
dealt punches and received them. He bent to the will of the storm and then stood
up straight again. He launched cannons and then mobilized mediators. He
controlled Yemen, from the ballot boxes to the security agencies to the
military, but above all else, he had a deep understanding of the Yemeni fabric
and the ties between the state and the tribes.
From the capital Sana’a, he watched how “friends” back-stabbed each other in
Aden in 1986. With the fall of the Berlin wall and Soviet Union, northern and
southern Yemen united in 1990. He was called the maker of Yemen’s unity and he
emerged victorious from a four-year war that threatened to divide the country
once again.
Skill was Saleh’s primary asset. He had an extraordinary political instinct and
ability to sense dangers. He would let the game play out and once its crosses
the red line, he would seize the reins and don his general’s cap once again. On
the internal and external fronts, he was not a compliant ally nor an easy
adversary. He was a master at the art of longevity.
Saleh was the victim of his fate of the great boxer who did not find meaning for
his life outside of the ring. I heard him say more than once that he was tired
and longed to spend time with his grandchildren after the presidency deprived
him of their company. I heard him say that he admired Lebanon, where a former
president could stroll freely in the country without feeling threatened. He once
said that it was time to break the rule that says an Arab president only leaves
power to head to the grave or to exile. I used to skeptically listen to him
because he was a man who clearly loved to remain at the heart of the game no
matter how dangerous it became.
Those who knew Saleh, knew that he never got over the scene of Saddam Hussein’s
death. He saw it as a form of revenge, not justice. He saw it as a bad omen,
similar to what happened with Moammar Gadhafi. He said: “When they shave the
beard of your neighbor, you must prepare to shave your own beard.” Despite these
omens, the joy of staying in the heat of the battle never left him. His passion
for the game was not diminished even after his body burned in a failed
assassination attempt. He treated his wounds and returned to the game. He was
forced to leave the presidential palace in order to preserve his role as the
great boxer, who could not be taken out of the equation.
Saleh’s story cannot be separated from the thorny issue of Yemen that goes back
to the past four decades. He was the focal point of this story and his absence
will open a new chapter in this tragedy. Who knows, perhaps his blood would
tighten the noose around the Houthis if the legitimacy forces came together with
the supporters of the General People’s Congress and if the tribes mobilized
against the militias that are trying to impose themselves on the country. They
will however fail in altering Yemen’s Arab identity.
In 2009, I asked Saleh if ruling Yemen was tiring, he replied: “Ruling Yemen is
like dancing on the heads of snakes.” I asked him the same question a year
later, and he replied that the snakes have now turned into vipers.
The region is full of surprises and dangers where even the most expert player
could be stung.
France: Islamism in the Heart of the State
Yves Mamou/Gatestone
Institute/December 05/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/11423/france-state-islamism
On all questions dedicated to immigration and Islam, France's Council of State
has become an Islamo-leftist body, dedicated to encouraging Muslim immigration
and protecting the expansion of Islam and Islamism in France.
The government wanted to expel foreign workers immediately after the
cancellation of their work permit. Due to the Council of State, deportation was
delayed by 24 hours, enough time to allow them to escape and become permanent
illegal immigrants.
Maybe the elites are looking for "redemption" after France colonized parts of
Africa. They are forgetting, however, that it was Muslims who colonized the
Middle East, the Christian Byzantine Empire, North Africa, Greece, much of
Eastern Europe and Asia, Northern Cyprus and Spain.
On October 25, 2017, the highest French administrative court, the Council of
State (Conseil d'État), ordered the removal of a Roman Catholic cross from the
top of a monument dedicated to Pope John Paul II in a public square in Ploërmel,
Britanny. According to the France's highest administrative court, this cross was
said to violate the secular nature of the State. Not the statue of the ex-pope
John Paul II by itself; just the cross above it.
Social media, in France and abroad -- especially in Poland where John Paul II
was born -- flew into an immediate uproar: How could the government of a country
considered the "eldest daughter of the Catholic church" ask for the removal of a
Catholic cross in a tiny village that nobody even knew about before this
incident?
The Council of State is an independent legal body that has jurisdiction over
disputes concerning civil liberties, administrative police, taxes, public
contracts, the civil service, public health, competition rules, environmental
law and secularism, to name just a few of its missions. The Council of State is
also -- as its name implies -- the main advisor of every branch of government.
Each time a minister or a prime minister has a difficult political decision to
make, he sends the case to the Council of State. Generally, the Council of
State's advice becomes the law.
The immense respect due to the Council of State seems to have caused even the
keenest observers to miss the fact that, on all questions dedicated to
immigration and Islam, the Council of State has become an Islamo-leftist body
dedicated to encouraging Muslim immigration and protecting the expansion of
Islam and Islamism in France.
On all questions dedicated to immigration and Islam, France's Council of State (Conseil
d'État) has become an Islamo-leftist body, dedicated to encouraging Muslim
immigration and protecting the expansion of Islam and Islamism in France.
A few examples include:
1978. The right to migrate and work in France without an employment contract.
The Council of State cancelled the government's decision to require an
employment contract for a foreigner to migrate and work in France.
1978. The right to family reunification. Against the will of the government,
which wanted to adapt migratory movements to a slower growth of the economy, the
Council of State ruled that non-French immigrants have the "right to a family
life", meaning that the wives and children of migrants workers are authorized to
come, live and work in France as if they were French citizens. From that date,
"family reunification" became an open door to migrants from North Africa and
sub-Saharan Africa.
1980. The right to polygamy. A foreign citizen is allowed to migrate in France
with as many wives as he is married to in his country of origin. In 1993, a
previous law had prevented second wives from obtaining visas.
1985. The right to illegal immigration. The government wanted to expel foreign
workers immediately after the cancellation of their work permit. Due to the
Council of State, deportation was delayed by 24 hours, enough time to escape and
become a permanent illegal immigrant.
1989. Islamic veil in school is not "incompatible" with secularism. Since 18th
century, state public schools were a tool of the state to build an education
system away from the influence of the Catholic church. In 1989, with the
authorization for schoolgirls to wear the Islamic veil, the Council of State
introduced the right for a religion to influence a secularist education system.
After 15 years of heated controversy, a 2004 law reversed that ruling and again
prohibited the Islamic veil in the public secondary-school system, but not at
universities.
2004. Authorization of Al Manar, Hezbollah's virulently anti-Semitic television
channel, to broadcast in France. After strong protests by leaders of the Jewish
community, however, the government passed a law that made it obligatory for the
Council of State to prohibit the Islamist channel.
2010. The Council of State strongly opposed the government's decision legally to
ban the burqa in the public space. A law banning the burqa was eventually
passed.
2011. Public money is allowed for building mosques after the Council of State
bypassed the secularist law from 1905.
2013. The Council of State gives the right to veiled mothers to be part of
public school trips. Before that, school trips were considered an extension of
the school. Consequently, the 2004 law prohibiting Islamic veil at school was
applied against veiled mothers. In 2012, however, that law was reversed; now,
veiled mothers are allowed to accompany pupils on school trips.
2013. The Council of State opposed the dismissal of a veiled employee in a
daycare nursery, Baby Loup. The Baby Loup veil controversy, which lasted five
years, mobilized national and international media, politicians, and a large part
of the judicial system. The question was: Does a female employee have the right
to wear an Islamic headscarf, even if company rules prohibit it? Eventually, the
employee was dismissed and Baby Loup, which was located in a Muslim suburb,
moved elsewhere.
2016. The Council of State allowed burkinis, the full-covering swimsuit for
women. The ruling affects seaside resorts such as Nice, and places where the
burkini does not create public disorder. In August 2016, burkinis started
appearing on French beaches. In Nice, the capital of the Côte d'Azur, a few
weeks after an Islamist terrorist murdered 82 people on July 14, four policemen
delivered a warning to a burkini-clad woman lying on a beach. Pictures in the
Daily Mail of policemen surrounding "poor and isolated Muslim woman," were
published throughout the world. The Council of State ruled that any municipal
prohibition of the burkini was prohibited -- unless the burkini was creating
public disorder.
2016. More money for "refugees". The Council of State ruled that the State had
to give more money to help tens of thousands of "refugees" to find a place to
sleep while their files were being examined by immigration officials, contrary
to other applicants.
2017. A government-funded mega-mosque in Paris. The Council of State helped the
mayor of Paris legally build a giant mosque and donate it as a gift to an
Islamic association.
2017. Islamic veil in nursing schools. The Council of State authorized the
Islamic veil in nurses' training institutions even if internal rules prohibited
exhibiting conspicuous religious signs.
2017. Public showers and toilets for migrants. The Council of State ruled that
the government has an obligation to provide illegal immigrants with public
showers and public toilets in Calais, where thousands of young men from Africa
and the Middle East try every day illegally to cross the Channel to England.
Notably, this ruling is based on Article 3 of the European Convention on Human
Rights, which says this obligation is only for prisoners of war. Does the
Council of State consider the French State as a jailer of migrants? There is no
mention whatsoever in the ruling of considerations of public health.
Although the list above is not exhaustive, the rulings of the Council of State
in favor of Islam, Islamism and unlimited, unvetted Muslim migration is
systematic.
The question is: Why? Many French elites seem to be followers of a globalist
ideology of no borders, no rules -- only the "human rights" of migrants from
other nations vs. the rights of the citizens of France.
Perhaps many elites feel guilty after French State actively collaborated with
Nazis, especially against Jews, during World War II, so that now they are
trying, instead, to help Muslims -- whose culture and goals could hardly be
farther from that of the Jews. Nevertheless, many seem to think of Muslims as
"the Jews" of 21st century.
Perhaps many among the elites secretly do not like their country.
Or perhaps many elites are looking for "redemption" after France colonized parts
of Africa and Northern Africa. They are forgetting, however, that it was Muslims
who colonized the Middle East, the Christian Byzantine Empire, North Africa,
Greece, much of Eastern Europe and Asia, Northern Cyprus and Spain.
Maybe it is a mix of all these guilts. What is certain is that after the
collaboration of the French State with the Nazis, the judges of the Council of
State are collaborating with yet another totalitarian ideology: political Islam.
**Yves Mamou, author and journalist, based in France, worked for two decades as
a journalist for Le Monde. He is finishing a book about "Collaborators and
Useful Idiots of Islamism in France," to be published in 2018.
© 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.
UK: Perversions of Justice
Emboldening Muslim Pedophiles, Discrediting Law Enforcers
Khadija Khan/Gatestone Institute/December 05/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/11481/uk-perversions-of-justice
That the British government turned on the chief executive of the Association of
Police and Crime Commissioners, Nazir Afzal -- a pioneer of the campaign to
rescue under-aged girls from the drugging, torture and rape of violent criminals
-- is beyond shocking.
While the British authorities made a concerted effort to sweep the identity of
the pedophiles under the carpet, the perpetrators themselves proudly shouted "Allahu
Akbar" ("Allah is the greatest") in the courtroom after they were convicted and
sentenced.
Boys educated by their fathers and radical clerics to view women as chattel
would be likely to grow up as misogynists. Accounts from the female family
members of some of the convicts in the grooming cases revealed a monstrous
hatred for women in general, and non-Muslim women in particular.
It is bad enough that women and girls in the Middle East are inferior in the
eyes of their families and the law. Yet, for Britain to look the other way, if
not sanction, practices that are anathema to a democracy that prides itself on
human rights, is a perversion of justice to Britons of all backgrounds,
including law-abiding Muslims.
The former Manchester police detective who exposed a pedophile ring in Rochdale
-- and resigned in 2012 over the failure of the system to bring the perpetrators
to justice -- recently broke her silence. She told the British press about the
abuse to which she was subjected in her department for attempting to reveal that
the perpetrators were Muslim men of Pakistani origin.
Maggie Oliver explained that the reason she decided to come forward with her
story was the discovery that a former colleague, detective John Wedger, not only
had experienced similar bullying at the hands of the Greater Manchester Police
department, but is suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of
his ordeal. Wedger said he was forced into early retirement in October, after
more than two decades of service, due to his mental state. His shaky condition
was caused, he said, by the behavior of his colleagues and superiors, who were
aware that children were being sexually exploited; not only did they dismiss the
fact, however, but at least one officer was providing the perpetrators with
information about the investigation.
Oliver recounted that her assignment during what was dubbed "Operation Span" was
to gain the confidence of the victims and encourage them to speak about their
abusers. She claimed that once the children started pointing fingers at mostly
Muslim men, the police department began to downplay her findings.
Oliver and Wedger were not the only secondary victims of Operation Span,
however. In May 2017, a few months before their stories were made public, the
chief executive of the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners, Nazir
Afzal, was forced to resign over harsh statements he made about Islamists,
following the Manchester Arena bombing.
Sadly, Afzal was shunned by certain groups of fellow Muslims for his part, as
Chief Crown Prosecutor, in bringing the Rochdale "grooming gang" to justice,
while openly attributing their misogyny to radical Islam. That the government,
however, also turned on him -- a pioneer of the campaign to rescue under-aged
girls from the drugging, torture and rape of violent criminals -- is beyond
shocking. That he was ousted for putting British law and safety above any
personal racial, ethnic or religious consideration conveys three dangerous
messages.
Nazir Afzal was shunned by certain groups of fellow Muslims for his part, as
Chief Crown Prosecutor, in bringing the Rochdale "grooming gang" to justice,
while openly attributing their misogyny to radical Islam. (Image source: United
States Mission Geneva)
First, it signals to members of the police that it is not in their best interest
to tell the truth about Muslim criminals and terrorists. Second, it indicates to
Muslim criminals and terrorists that they can get away with anything in the
U.K., where the level of religious tolerance trumps even the law. Third, it
serves to discourage victims (in this case, young girls) or those who are
helping them -- such as Afzal, Oliver and Wedger -- from speaking out and
reporting crimes, for fear of the devastating repercussions that befall anyone
labeled racist or "Islamophobic."
The tragic irony is that the racists or "Islamophobes" are actually those who
give Muslim criminals and terrorists a pass -- those who have lower expectations
of Muslims than of anyone else. Furthermore, willfully ignoring the link between
radical Islam and certain types of violent behavior makes it impossible for law
enforcement agencies to confront and eradicate that behavior. While the British
authorities made a concerted effort to sweep the identity of the pedophiles
under the carpet, the perpetrators themselves proudly shouted "Allahu Akbar"
("Allah is the greatest" in Arabic) in the courtroom after they were convicted
and sentenced.
In August, Sarah Champion, the Labour MP for Rotherham, resigned from her
position as shadow women and equalities minister, after she penned an op-ed in
The Sun in which she said, "Britain has a problem with British Pakistani men
raping and exploiting white girls."
Champion wrote the piece after 17 men and one woman were found guilty of
committing violent crimes, including rape, against women and girls in Newcastle.
In the wake of Champion's resignation, Channel 4 News examined the statistics,
published in a 2013 Child Exploitation and Online Protection report that
referred to the identity and motives of perpetrators. What the data revealed is
that the number of Muslims from South Asia involved in grooming gangs is three
times higher than that of criminals of other backgrounds.
The situation is not coincidental. Boys educated by their fathers and radical
clerics to view women as chattel would be likely to grow up as misogynists.
Accounts from the female family members of some of the convicts in the grooming
cases revealed a monstrous hatred for women in general, and non-Muslim women in
particular.
The daughter of one of the convicts told the Daily Mail:
"My dad is in prison because he was with others raping small white girls. I hate
him. He made my mum pregnant eight times even when she didn't want to do it. I
heard her crying. Six babies died. He did that to her for so long. But never
went to prison."
Another woman said: "You know our girls are raped by uncles, fathers, brothers
and imams. My neighbour's daughter had a baby when she was 12. It was her uncle.
They blamed her. Sent her to Pakistan. We don't see the truth."
Many others also blamed the victims. White girls, one said, are "filthy. How
they dress. They have no shame, no fear of Allah."
This sentiment was echoed by one of the convicts, Badrul Hussain, who -- when
caught in 2014 by a female ticket inspector for not having paid for his ride on
public transportation -- had shouted: "All white women are only good for one
thing: for men like me to f*** and use like trash. That's all women like you are
worth."
Rather than rejecting the culture in which Hussain and other sex offenders were
raised, Britain enables it to flourish, as is illustrated by a well-documented
book -- Women and Shari'a Law: The Impact of Legal Pluralism in the UK --
published in 2016.
According to author Elham Manea, a Muslim professor and human rights champion,
Islamic sharia courts in Britain are more extreme and "totalitarian" than those
in some parts of Pakistan. Manea's findings, the result of a four-year study of
approximately 80 Islamic councils in London and the Midlands, reveal that some
of the clerics who head them support fathers having the power to annul their
daughters' marriages at will.
One cleric interviewed in the book said, "A woman will be beaten in the name of
religion. Beaten. And it will be legal." Another asserted, "A man should not be
questioned why he hit his wife because this is something between them." Yet
another, discussing property disputes, said, "We are very happy to give the
woman half and the man double because I think this is a very fair way of dealing
with the situation."
It is bad enough that women and girls in the Middle East are inferior in the
eyes of their families and the law. Yet, for Britain to look the other way, if
not sanction, practices that are anathema to a democracy that prides itself on
human rights, is a perversion of justice to Britons of all backgrounds,
including law-abiding Muslims.
Afzal is pessimistic about the direction that Britain is headed in this respect.
"Will South Asian communities condemn these atrocities -- and take the necessary
action? I'm not convinced," he wrote in the Daily Mail. "As for wider society,
we must start to understand what drives this abuse if we want to stop it."
It is perhaps not surprising, then, that a mere few weeks ago, Afzal was
disinvited from giving the keynote address at the annual gala for the Society of
Asian Lawyers (SAL). A month before the October 28 event, he received a letter
from the SAL committee, informing him, "Candidly, and regrettably, a member of
our committee voiced concern over whether your article in The Mail on Sunday on
grooming and your keynote speech may cause offence to guests at the ball."
**Khadija Khan is a Pakistani journalist and commentator, currently based in
Germany.
© 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.
Religious Hate Crimes, USA.: Jews, Not Muslims,
Still Key Victims
A. Z. Mohamed/Gatestone Institute/December 05/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/11447/religious-hate-crimes
Hate crimes -- defined as those directed at someone "based on his race,
religion, disability, sexual orientation, or ethnicity" -- are not only illegal;
they are immoral and should not be tolerated.
However, we must not allow the dictates of political correctness, according to
which "Islamophobia" is the most rampant form of bias in America, to cloud the
reality that anti-Semitism is still more widespread.
In a prepared statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 2, 2017, Prof.
Brian Levin -- director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at
California State University, San Bernardino -- stated, "Hate crime, especially
those based on religion, have [sic] increased in recent periods."
Levin, who has dealt extensively with the topic for decades -- analyzing
statistics, compiling data and advising American and European policy-makers --
argued that one of the problems involved in tracking hate crimes in the U.S. is
that some states do not cooperate in collecting or reporting on the information.
Another, he said, is that there is no uniform way in which different bodies
(such as the FBI and the Anti-Defamation League) receive and investigate
complaints.
Prof. Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at
California State University, San Bernardino. (Image source: CNN video screenshot
via CSUSB)
Additional confusion lies in that some crimes initially suspected as having been
motivated by hatred of Muslims or Jews often turn out not to be "hate crimes" at
all, but something else entirely. One example Levin provided was that of an
attack on a Muslim establishment that turned out to be a simple robbery. Another
was the recent case of a disturbed American-Israeli teenager who issued bomb
threats to Jewish community centers and other institutions in the U.S. and
elsewhere.
One thing, nevertheless, seems to be constant and underreported. Since 1992, two
years after Congress passed the Hate Crime Statistics Act, the FBI Uniform Crime
Reporting (UCR) Program information showed that anti-Semitic incidents have been
higher than those perpetrated against other groups. By contrast, from 1992 to
2000, anti-Muslim incidents were the second least-reported. This changed in
2001, after the 9/11 attacks, when reports on anti-Muslim incidents rose to the
rank of second-highest, with a steep spike in the immediate aftermath of the
World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks. To this day, the greatest number of
reported religion-based hate crimes have been directed at Jews, and the second
greatest against Muslims.
Between 2010 and 2014, the number of people victimized for their religion
declined dramatically. This shifted in 2015, when there was a sharp rise in
religion-based hate crimes, particularly against Islam and Muslims. Yet even
then, Jews were 2.38 times more likely than Muslims to become victims of a hate
crime. Hate crimes -- defined as those directed at someone "based on his race,
religion, disability, sexual orientation, or ethnicity" -- are not only illegal;
they are immoral and should not be tolerated. However, we must not allow the
dictates of political correctness, according to which "Islamophobia" is the most
rampant form of bias in America, to cloud the reality that anti-Semitism is
still more widespread.
**A.Z. Mohamed is a Muslim born and raised 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.
Kushner Is Said to Have Ordered Flynn to Contact
Russia
Eli Lake/Bloomberg/December 05/17
Former national security adviser Michael Flynn's guilty plea Friday for lying to
the FBI is alarming news for Donald Trump. But the first person it's likely to
jeopardize will be the president's son-in-law, Jared Kushner.
Two former officials with the Trump transition team who worked closely with
Flynn say that during the last days of the Obama administration, the retired
general was instructed to contact foreign ambassadors and foreign ministers of
countries on the UN Security Council, ahead of a vote condemning Israeli
settlements. Flynn was told to try to get them to delay that vote until after
Barack Obama had left office, or oppose the resolution altogether.
That is relevant now because one of Flynn’s lies to the FBI was when he said
that he never asked Russia's ambassador to Washington, Sergey Kislyak, to delay
the vote for the UN Security Council resolution. The indictment released today
from the office of special prosecutor Robert Mueller describes this lie: "On or
about December 22, 2016, Flynn did not ask the Russian Ambassador to delay the
vote on or defeat a pending United Nations Security Council resolution."
At the time, the UN Security Council resolution on Israeli settlements was a big
deal. Even though the Obama administration had less than a month left in office,
the president instructed his ambassador to the United Nations to abstain from a
resolution, breaking a precedent that went back to 1980 when it came to
one-sided anti-Israel resolutions at the UN.
This was the context of Kushner's instruction to Flynn last December. One
transition official at the time said Kushner called Flynn to tell him he needed
to get every foreign minister or ambassador from a country on the UN Security
Council to delay or vote against the resolution. Much of this appeared to be
coordinated also with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose envoys
shared their own intelligence about the Obama administration's lobbying efforts
to get member states to support the resolution with the Trump transition team.
(Kushner's lawyer, Abbe Lowell, did not return an email seeking comment for this
column before deadline.)
For now it's unclear what to make of all of this. Lying to the FBI is a felony
and always a serious matter. We also know from Flynn's "statement of the
offense" that he lied to FBI agents as the bureau was investigating Russia's
meddling in the 2016 election and any links between Russia and the Trump
campaign in this period. Nonetheless, nothing in the Flynn plea sheds any light
on whether the Trump campaign actually colluded with Russia to influence the
election.
ABC News reported Friday that Flynn is prepared to tell Mueller's team that
Trump had instructed him to make contact with Russia during the campaign itself.
If those contacts involved the emails the US intelligence community charges
Russia stole from leading Democrats, then Mueller will have uncovered evidence
of actual collusion between the president and a foreign adversary during the
election. Impeachment could then be in the cards.
But it's also possible that the Justice Department became interested in Flynn's
initial conversation with Kislyak on other, less explosive grounds. One leading
theory pushed Friday by Democrats involves a violation of a 1799 statute known
as the Logan Act. A relic of the John Adams administration, this discredited law
makes it illegal for a private US citizen to undermine the foreign policy of a
sitting president in contact with a foreign power. No American has ever been
successfully prosecuted under that law. Some conservatives urged the George W.
Bush administration to prosecute former House speaker Nancy Pelosi under the
Logan Act in 2007 when she visited the Syrian dictator, Bashar al-Assad, when
the White House was trying to isolate him. Nothing ever came of that.
A Logan Act investigation would explain the bureau's interest in Flynn's
conversations about the UN Security Council resolution on Israel. This is what
Senator Dianne Feinstein, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary
Committee, said on Friday: "This shows a Trump associate negotiating with the
Russians against US policy and interests before Donald Trump took office and
after it was announced that Russia had interfered in our election. That’s a
stunning revelation and could be a violation of the Logan Act, which forbids
unauthorized US citizens from negotiating with a foreign power."
If that's all there is, then the whispers of collusion will look foolish.
Nonetheless, it may be enough to take out not only Flynn, but also the man who
married the president's daughter.
The Hague and the Unbearable Slowness of Justice
Noah Feldman/Bloomberg View/Bloomberg/December 05/17
The suicide of Croatian war criminal Slobodan Praljak in open court last week
was bizarre -- mostly because it felt like something out of another century.
Sure, Hermann Goering famously cheated the executioner at Nuremberg by
swallowing cyanide. But Praljak wasn’t going to be executed, no matter how many
innocent civilians he was found guilty of killing. In the highly civilized,
highly bureaucratic world of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia, the worst thing that can happen is a long jail sentence -- like the
20 years awarded to Praljak.
It’s precisely the old-timey, anachronistic aspect of the public suicide that
carries a lesson. There’s a reason the act seemed very 20th century: because it
was. The crimes for which Praljak was convicted took place in 1993, when he let
his soldiers round up Muslims for slaughter. He was indicted in 2004, and gave
himself up for trial then. He was convicted in 2013, 20 years after his crime;
his suicide followed the denial of his appeal four years later, in 2017.
The lesson is the unbearable slowness of international criminal justice. And
it’s not only a lesson about Europe. The trials of the Sept. 11 plotters at the
US military tribunal at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, are going on now.
There are three major problems with such a super-slow judicial process. One is
about justice to the particular defendant, who may claim a lack of due process.
A speedy trial is a basic constitutional right in the US and in most
jurisdictions. The main reason is that no one should be detained for too long
without being convicted, but it’s also true that the passage of time makes
witnesses unreliable and can make it harder for a defendant to mount a credible
defense.
The difficulty with this criticism as applied to the Hague trials or Guantánamo
is that delay can also be the result of a careful process designed to respect
all of a defendant’s rights. If the defense has made the trial go slowly, the
defendant shouldn’t be able to use that delay to impugn fairness.
The second problem with a slow process involves the cruelty of holding someone
for too long before executing a sentence. On the US Supreme Court, the former
Justice John Paul Stevens took the view that it becomes unconstitutional to
execute someone for a crime when he has been on death row for as long as 17
years. (Among current justices, Stephen Breyer has embraced this position)
The claim might someday be relevant for the Guantánamo defendants. Assuming some
or all of them are sentenced to death, there will unquestionably be a long and
complex appellate process before the sentences are carried out.
In the case of the Yugoslavia tribunal, the cruelty wouldn’t stem from keeping
the defendants on death row, because, like Europe and most of the rest of the
world, the tribunal doesn’t administer the death penalty. It could conceivably
be argued that spending a long time awaiting the resolution of one’s case has
some elements of cruelty. Once again, however, it would be hard to make this
claim if the delay was attributable to a careful process of trial and appeal.
That leaves the most important problem with a slow judicial process: the
extended gap between the crimes and the ultimate punishment. This may not be a
problem as a matter of pure justice, because terrible wrongs deserve to be
addressed even after much time has passed. But it is a significant problem when
it comes to the pragmatics and the symbolism of punishing terrible wrongs like
those that took place in Yugoslavia.
Practically, the deterrent effect of the eventual punishment is bound to be
substantially reduced when it takes so long to bring the perpetrators to
justice. A potential genocidal actor might conceivably think twice based on the
imminent threat of punishment. But if that punishment is many decades in the
future, that actor, like the rest of us humans, will be inclined to discount the
future probability of punishment.
Symbolically, the problem with long-delayed justice lies in the slow, grinding
nature of the war crimes tribunals when compared with the short, sharp shock of
most war crimes. When a trial takes so long, the problem isn’t so much that the
evil of the underlying crime becomes banal as that the judicial process takes on
its own bureaucratic banality. The process essentially ensures that no one,
least of all the defendants or the survivors, can relate the trial to the actual
events that gave rise to it.
Praljak’s suicide stands out because it seems so serious, so extreme and so
urgent. That’s in stark contrast to the dullness of the tribunal’s justice,
slowly moving along a conveyor belt outside of public attention. Soon enough,
however, we’ll forget about Praljak, the way we forget about all trials that
take so long. And that’s just the problem.
Saleh's Murder Unites Yemenis
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/December, 05/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=60838
Had President Ali Abdullah Saleh been killed five days ago, the Saudi-led
coalition and the legitimate government would have been blamed for his murder.
But, Saleh was killed by the Houthis after he had terminated his alliance with
them.By killing Saleh, the Houthis have practically become rivals to all of
Yemen’s components as Saleh was their only alleged patriotic card and their
political front before the Yemenis and the world.
The war map in Yemen dramatically changed the night he appeared in a televised
speech announcing his acceptance of the reconciliation, and his assassination
will not stop the new change he imposed. The question now is whether the late
president can manage the battle from his grave by allying with the legitimate
government and confronting the Houthis? In other words, will his influence,
institutions, and men who have been loyal to him, his instructions and ideas as
result of his forty years of influence, carry on?
What we know is that all attempts to abolish Saleh have failed in the past. Even
after he was forced to quit as a result of popular protests, he continued to be
a leader. Also, after the assassination attempt at al-Nahdayn mosque, everyone
thought he was finished. He spent months in a military hospital in Riyadh for
burn treatment. Saleh surprised everyone after he returned, ruled Sanaa, and
managed political and military battles. This is why Houthis finally decided to
kill him; not to retaliate because he turned against them but because he’s
capable of destroying their political project.
A few days ago, he altered the equation when he ended his alliance with the
Houthis and cut the number of the legitimate government’s enemies to half,
shrinking areas controlled by the armed insurgency. Saleh abandoned the enemy
camp and joined the allies camp which would have expedited Houthis’ defeat and
ended the main war. But Saleh’s murder was meant to reshuffle the deck and stop
the reconciliation project.
As long as we realize that Saleh's assassination is aimed at thwarting the
reconciliation, we must work to ensure its success. What the late president did
in the last four days of his life is the most important development since the
war began three years ago. It will boost operations against Houthis and besiege
them in their areas north of Yemen, that is, of course, if Saleh army's
commanders decided to participate in the fighting alongside ranks of the Yemeni
army.
In the past few days, Saleh tried to liberate the capital, which has been
occupied by the insurgents since 2014, when Houthis seized the headquarters of
the First Division and the remaining military and security institutions were
defeated without much resistance. Questions today revolve around the size of
Houthis’ power in Sanaa, with rumors claiming they are the strongest party and
that any attempt to get them out would cause a bloody war between the two sides
in the city's historic streets. It was difficult to figure out the truth but
assassinating President Saleh proved that Houthis are an influential power.
In the past, Sanaa was Saleh’s stronghold and Houthis could only enter and
occupy after his approval. But, ever since they entered the capital, they seized
arms’ warehouses, bought loyalties and laid plans for the day when they clash
with their ally Saleh, and perhaps assassinate him and take control of the
capital.
The new reality is critical, dangerous, and requires Yemeni army and the
coalition forces to enter Sanaa and work with Saleh’s forces that are in shock.
The people of Sanaa and forces of late Saleh have a great interest in going to
war to restore their city from Houthis. In his televised speech, the late
president called for lifting the siege, including resuming military and civil
navigation in the airport for the first time since the beginning of the war and
reopening crossings for aid convoys and trade activity. It is not possible to do
so after Saleh’s assassination without entering into a new alliance with Saleh’s
forces and deterring Houthis in Sanaa. If the reconciled parties agree on
managing Sanaa, it will be reconstructed faster and restore its role as the
administrative capital of the country, after most governmental institutions had
been moved to Aden as a temporary alternative capital. People of Sanaa, leaders
of the General People’s Congress and commanders of Saleh’s forces must realize
the importance of change which Saleh adopted and was killed for. They must
defend his decision and project.
What about the savage wolves, i.e. Houthis? They succeeded in getting rid of
Saleh, their new enemy, and disrupting his plan. Yet, practically, they’re
finished as decision makers in this big war. Their hope to influence the shape
of the governing political system is over. The Houthis went from being partners
in governance to murderers of Saleh. This is a crime they cannot justify, and by
losing Saleh, they became nothing more than Iran’s militias against Yemenis.