LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS
BULLETIN
July 18/17
Compiled &
Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The
Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For Today
Whoever listens to you listens
to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me, and whoever rejects me rejects the
one who sent me
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke 10/13-16/:"‘Woe to you,
Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the deeds of power done in you had been
done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago, sitting in sackcloth
and ashes. But at the judgement it will be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon
than for you. And you, Capernaum, will you be exalted to heaven? No, you will be
brought down to Hades. ‘Whoever listens to you listens to me, and whoever
rejects you rejects me, and whoever rejects me rejects the one who sent me.’
We are mortals just like you, and we bring you good news, that you should turn
from these worthless things to the living God, who made the heaven and the earth
and the sea and all that is in them
Acts of the Apostles 14/8-18/:"In Lystra there was a man sitting who could not
use his feet and had never walked, for he had been crippled from birth. He
listened to Paul as he was speaking. And Paul, looking at him intently and
seeing that he had faith to be healed, said in a loud voice, ‘Stand upright on
your feet.’ And the man sprang up and began to walk. When the crowds saw what
Paul had done, they shouted in the Lycaonian language, ‘The gods have come down
to us in human form!’Barnabas they called Zeus, and Paul they called Hermes,
because he was the chief speaker.
The priest of Zeus, whose temple was just outside the city, brought oxen and
garlands to the gates; he and the crowds wanted to offer sacrifice. When the
apostles Barnabas and Paul heard of it, they tore their clothes and rushed out
into the crowd, shouting, ‘Friends, why are you doing this? We are mortals just
like you, and we bring you good news, that you should turn from these worthless
things to the living God, who made the heaven and the earth and the sea and all
that is in them. In past generations he allowed all the nations to follow their
own ways; yet he has not left himself without a witness in doing good giving you
rains from heaven and fruitful seasons, and filling you with food and your
hearts with joy.’ Even with these words, they scarcely restrained the crowds
from offering sacrifice to them."
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis &
editorials from miscellaneous sources published on July 17-18/17
'Israel may need to take out Iranian bases
in Syria/Herb Keinon/Jerusalem Post/July 17/17
Our Druse neighbors/Faydra L. Shapiro/Jerusalem Post/July 16/17
Trump Must Withdraw From Iran Nuclear Deal-Now/John Bolton/ Human Rights
Voices/July 17/17
Iran’s post-ISIS blues/Mohamad Kawas/The Arab Weekly/July 17/17
Abbas: Shut Up or I will Arrest You/Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/July
17/17
Turkey: Erdogan's Obsession to Take Jerusalem/Burak Bekdil/Gatestone
Institute/July 17/17
Female genital mutilation practitioners are travelling to Canada, border
officers warned/Stewart Bell/National Online Journalist/ July 17/17
Syria: Is It Over/Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/July 17/17
Liberation of Mosul, Return of Iraq/Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al Awsat/July 17/17
Putin Preferred Clinton? Let’s Test Trump’s Theory/Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg
View/July 17/17
Titles For Latest
Lebanese Related News published on
July 17-18/17
Lebanese Detained in Tehran Pleads for his Release
Aoun to audiovisual council: Army's preemptive strike always based on directives
of authority
Aoun Says Army Can't be 'Lenient' in Anti-Terror Operations
Hariri, Khalil Optimistic Wage Scale to be Passed Tuesday as Gemayel Warns
against Tax Hike
Geagea: Lebanese-Syrian Tensions Fueled by Economic Situation, Not Xenophobia
Police Arrest FB Page Admin Suspected of Incitement against Army
Saqr Charges Five Syrians With Terror Links
Hariri: Lebanon Will Always Stand by Saudi Arabia
Syrian Raids Strike Militants in Arsal's Outskirts
Jumblat: Syrian Intelligence Seeking Army-Refugees Clash
Hariri chairs meeting to discuss salary scale dossier
Kataeb head rejects additional taxes to fund salary scale
UCC, GLC to declare general strike if salary scale unendorsed tomorrow
Hariri receives Arslan and Economic Committees, offers congratulations at Saudi
embassy
Riachy meets Press Designers Syndicate, LUCW delegation
Bassil bound for Brussels for Lebanon EU annual meeting
Army chief meets German MP, Future Movement delegation
'Israel may need to take out Iranian bases in Syria'
Our Druse neighbors
Titles For Latest
LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
July 17-18/17
Russia Demands U.S. Return Diplomat Compounds before Talks
Diplomat: Russia-US Agreement Doesn’t Affect Iran’s Presence in Syria
SDF Says Advancing against ISIS in Raqqa where Baghdadi is Allegedly Located
Failed Attempts to Unify Opposition in Ghouta
US Sources: Qatar Avoided Signing Deal to Counter Terror Financing but Conceded
after the Crisis
Macron Hosts Netanyahu in Paris without Launching New Peace Initiative
French Foreign Minister: ‘Only Gulf States Can Solve the Crisis’
Egypt Raises Security Alert following Terrorist Attacks
UAE Denies Involvement in QNA Hacking
Metal Detectors Lead to New Confrontations in Al-Aqsa
Jordanian Soldier Sentenced to Life in killing of 3 US Troops
Latest Lebanese
Related News published on
July 17-18/17
Lebanese Detained in Tehran
Pleads for his Release
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July
17/17/Beirut – A Lebanese detainee, who has been arrested in Iran on charges of
spying for the United States, has pleaded with the concerned authorities to
release him. Nizar Zakka, who has been on a hunger
strike for 18 days, said: “I have reached the end. I am very tired. I am not
doing well.”“Don’t let me die silently,” he was quoted as saying according to
local Lebanese online platforms. Secretary General of the Arab ICT Organization
(Ijma’a), Engineer Nizar Zakka was arrested in Tehran in wake of his
participation in a conference that was held in September 2015. He was kidnapped
while he was headed to the airport to depart the country. It was later revealed
that he was detained by the Iranian authorities. In 2016, an Iranian court
sentenced him to ten years in jail and fined him 4.2 million dollars on charges
of conspiring against the state. His lawyer, Badawi Abou Deeb, later appealed
the sentence. Zakka began a hunger strike in June in an attempt to pressure
authorities to release him without any conditions. “His open-ended strike is a
protest against his arrest in what was a violation of the most basic of human
rights and all international laws. He will carry on with his strike until he is
freed without any conditions,” said his lawyer at the time.
Aoun to audiovisual council:
Army's preemptive strike always based on directives of authority
Mon 17 Jul 2017/NNA - Lebanese President, General Michel Aoun, stressed on
Monday that the preemptive strike carried out by the Army against terrorists was
always based on the directives of the political authority, headed by the
President of the Republic. "It is the duty of the media to ask and investigate
and obtain evidence, before disseminating charges against officials," the
President told a delegation from the Union of Workers at the Audiovisual Media
Council, headed by Randy Jabbour. After President Aoun
renewed his call to halt economic rent practices and to focus instead on
economic production, he called for more efforts to plug deficit suffered by the
treasury and to ensure the mitigation of debts. He also pushed for sounding the
alarm on the increasing state expenditures that are not covered with sufficient
revenues."The Lebanese pound is supported by production, not by debts," Aoun
explained. President Aoun also touched on the
simmering displaced Syrians issue. "Lebanon bears a lot of burdens as a result
of the increasing number of refugees," Aoun said, pointing out that "the
international community's handling of this file, has not yet reached a stage
which facilitates their return to their country.
"Lebanon hopes to reach a political solution to the Syrian crisis to end the
sufferings of the displaced and reduce its negative repercussions on Lebanon,"
the President added. During his afternoon meetings, President Aoun discussed a
number of political, economic and financial issues with Baabda interlocutors.
President Aoun received Deputy House Speaker, Farid Makari, who explained
that he had broached with the President the general situation in the country,
the latest political developments, and preparations for the implementation of
the new election law."I also discussed with the President the financial
situation in the country, the draft budget, the salary scale, and other related
topics. I saw eye-to-eye with his Excellency on the importance of giving
priority to the adoption of the general budget, especially that it will be the
first budget approved since 2005."
"I also discussed with President Aoun matters concerning the Orthodox community
in Lebanon," he added.
Fiscal and economic issues featured high between the President and Telecoms
Minister, Jamal Jarrah, who also had an audience with Aoun today."I briefed the
President on the ongoing work at the Ministry of Communications and on some
short-term plans by the ministry that are in the process of being carried out,"
Jarrah said on emerging. We also discussed projects
that support SMEs (small and medium enterprises) within the telecommunications
sector. Responding to whether there's a possibility
that a wage hike would be endorsed, and about the nature of its connection to
the salary scale, Jarrah said: "The adoption of the budget is a fundamental
issue, and there are simple points involving the salary scale that still need to
be discussed. A meeting will be held today to thrash out these standing
issues."As for new reduction of telecoms tariffs, the Minister said: "We have
started to apply the cuts, which are very large, to help citizens pay the
required bills, in addition to the new internet speeds -- 4 MB for the price of
LBP 90 thousand per month for open consumption." Also
on Monday, President Aoun met with the Archbishop of the Maronite Diocese of
Australia, Bishop Antoine Charbel Tarbieh, in presence of Minister of State for
Presidential Affairs Dr. Pierre Raffoul and Australian Ambassador Glenn Miles.
Aoun Says Army Can't be 'Lenient' in Anti-Terror Operations
Naharnet/July 17/17/President Michel Aoun stressed Monday that the army cannot
be “lenient” in its anti-terror operations, defending the military against
recent abuse allegations. “In recent days, we have witnessed false accusations
against the army, which is offering martyrs to protect Lebanon from terrorism,”
Aoun said. “How can the army be lenient in the face of this, especially when it
deals with those who do not hesitate to blow themselves up to inflict harm on
others?” the president asked. He warned that “leniency in such a situation would
double the possibility of the occurrence of terrorist crimes.” Aoun also noted
that “the army's preemptive war against terrorists has always been based on the
directions of the political authority that is led by the president,” urging
media outlets to “ask, investigate and obtain evidence before publishing
accusations against officials.”The army was accused of abusing refugees and
detainees in the wake of recent security raids on two refugee settlements in the
border region of Arsal. The raiding troops were met with suicide attacks and
grenades, and security forces subsequently arrested dozens of people from the
two encampments. Seven soldiers were wounded and a Syrian girl was killed during
the raids, the army said. Days later, the army announced that four of the Syrian
detainees had died of pre-existing medical conditions, sparking accusations of
torture.
Hariri, Khalil Optimistic Wage Scale to be Passed Tuesday as Gemayel Warns
against Tax Hike
Naharnet/July 17/17/Prime Minister Saad Hariri and Finance Minister Ali Hassan
Khalil on Monday expressed optimism that the new wage scale for civil servants
and the armed forces will be approved in Tuesday's legislative session, as
Kataeb Party chief MP Sami Gemayel warned against a proposed tax hike that “will
harm all social classes.”“We can say that we've reached the final stages of an
agreement on the wage scale and we will go to parliament tomorrow to discuss it
positively and we will reach a result,” said Khalil after a
ministerial-parliamentary meeting that was chaired by Hariri.“If we take into
consideration the atmosphere during today's meeting and the stances of the
various blocs, I'm very optimistic that the wage scale will be approved,” Khalil
added. Hariri for his part said that “God willing, the new wage scale will be
approved tomorrow.”Lebanese Forces deputy head MP George Adwan meanwhile
announced that the “meeting's atmosphere was positive” and that “there is an
inclination to pass the wage scale.”Asked about the proposed taxes, Adwan
confirmed that new taxes will be slapped on banks and seaside properties as part
of a plan to fund the new wage scale. Kataeb chief Gemayel meanwhile held a
press conference to warn that “the taxes draft decree has returned to the agenda
of tomorrow's legislative session.”“On March 15, there was a vote on a number of
taxes but, together with the people, we managed to force their cancellation. And
on March 16, they waged a defamation campaign against Kataeb... while on March
18 the ruling parties disavowed the taxes,” Gemayel said. “There are 15 taxes
that harm all social classes on the agenda of tomorrow's legislative session,”
Gemayel warned.
He noted that only basic commodities exempted from VAT would not be affected by
Tuesday's proposed tax hike. “All items that we buy
from supermarkets will witness an increase in price,” Gemayel cautioned. Instead
of hiking taxes, authorities should “fund the wage scale from the banks'
extraordinary profits which amount to $800 million,” Kataeb's chief added, while
also calling for an end to the waste and theft of public money.
“Putting an end to only 20% of tax evasion would secure the funds needed
to finance the wage scale,” Gemayel noted. “Do not put
a burden on people because they cannot withstand further strains,” he warned.
Kataeb's student and youth department meanwhile called for an anti-tax demo
outside parliament at 5:00 pm Tuesday. The Syndical Coordination Committee, a
coalition of private and public school teachers and public sector employees, has
been pushing for the approval of the new wage scale for several years now and
has organized numerous street protests and strikes to this end. The members of
the armed forces would also benefit from the new wage scale. The ruling class
argues that hiking taxes is necessary to fund the wage hike but opponents of
such a move have called on authorities to find alternative funding sources.
Geagea: Lebanese-Syrian Tensions Fueled by Economic Situation, Not Xenophobia
Naharnet/July 17/17/Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea noted Monday that the
growing tensions between Lebanese citizens and Syrian refugees are not of a
“xenophobic” nature but are rather related to the difficult economic situation.
“The refugee influx has caused major repercussions, topped by the tensions that
are growing day after day between Lebanese citizens and Syrian refugees,” Geagea
said at a Maarab seminar on terrorism. “These tensions are not xenophobic,
religious, sectarian or political, but have been caused by the fact that a
narrow territory, a small economy and a weak infrastructure cannot cope with 1.5
million displaced Syrians... There is a proverb that says that the lack of money
leads to bickering, especially regarding the issue of job opportunities,” Geagea
explained. As for the thorny issue of returning refugees to Syria, Geagea noted
that the LF has prepared a paper in this regard and sent it to some
parliamentary blocs. “The paper calls on the Lebanese government to take a
decision to help Syrian refugees return to Syria, especially to the Syrian south
where Russia and the U.S. are present, in addition to the Kurdish-majority
northeastern region,” Geagea said. “Each of these two regions is bigger than
Lebanon and contains major infrastructure,” the LF leader noted, urging the
Lebanese government to “cooperate with the international institutions to devise
a plan for the return of the refugees.” Geagea also suggested that the return of
refugees should begin with those among them who “do not have a problem with the
regime.”“Why don't we start with this part? Let them go to the regime's
strongholds and this will alleviate the burden on Lebanon,” the LF leader added,
referring to Syrians who have visited Syria several times since the eruption of
the Syrian conflict. “This needs a stance from the Lebanese government,” Geagea
went on to say, while rejecting “any politicization of the issue.”“Any call for
reestablishing ties or expanding relations with the Syrian regime will only
obstruct the return of the refugees,” he warned.
Police Arrest FB Page Admin Suspected of Incitement against
Army
Naharnet/July 17/17/Police has reportedly arrested a man said to be behind a
Facebook page that published provocations against the Lebanese Army, media
reports said on Monday. Reports said that police detained a suspect who was
identified by his initials as H.A. in the Taamir neighborhood in the southern
refugee camp of Ain el-Hilweh. They said the suspect is the administrator of a
Facebook page, The Union of Syrian People in Lebanon, that posted incitements
against the army. On Sunday, an invitation posted on the said page called
“independent Syrian and Lebanese activists and civil society groups for a demo
in solidarity with the Syrian refugees,” in Downtown Beirut. Calls for rival
demos at the same place and time by a number of Syrian and Lebanese groups and
threats of violence from some parties have sparked concerns that the Samir
Qassir Square in central Beirut could witness a Syrian-Lebanese clash on
Tuesday. The rival calls amid tensions sparked by the army's recent raids on two
Syrian refugee encampments in and around the northeastern border town of Arsal
in which more than 350 Syrians were detained. The mass arrests followed a
confrontation between troops and a number of militants in the two encampments
during which five men blew themselves up and others hurled grenades at the army.
The army said seven soldiers were wounded and a Syrian child was killed in the
incident.
Saqr Charges Five Syrians With Terror Links
Naharnet/July 17/17/State Commissioner to the Military Court Judge Saqr Saqr
charged 5 Syrian suspects with belonging to the Islamic State organization and
with fighting against the Lebanese army, the National News Agency reported on
Monday. The suspects were charged with having planned to carry out terrorist
attacks and for taking part in battles against the Lebanese army during the
Arsal 2014 clashes, NNA added. The Arsal deadly gunbattles erupted after
jihadists from al-Nusra Front and the Islamic State extremist group overran the
town. The militants took with them hostages from the army and police and later
executed four of them. The rest remain in captivity on Arsal's outskirts in the
Syrian region of Qalamoun.
Hariri: Lebanon Will Always Stand by Saudi Arabia
Naharnet/July 17/17/Prime Minister Saad Hariri stressed on Monday that Lebanon
will always be supportive of Saudi Arabia as it has supported it before.
“Lebanon will always stand by Saudi Arabia's side as it has in turn supported
it,” said Hariri.The PM's remarks came in a statement he made during a visit to
the Saudi Arabian embassy to extend his congratulations on the newly-appointed
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. "Congratulations, this is the era of the
youth, we hope it will be a blessing for Saudi Arabia and the Arab world,” said
Hariri.
Syrian Raids Strike Militants in Arsal's Outskirts
Naharnet/July 17/17/Early on Monday, Syrian warplanes staged raids on positions
of militants in the outskirts of Arsal on the border with Syria, the National
News Agency said. Syrian warplanes regularly target militants in the border area
with Lebanon.
The Lebanese army frequently clashes with the militants in their hideouts near
the Syria border.
Jumblat: Syrian Intelligence Seeking Army-Refugees Clash
Naharnet/July 17/17/Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblat on
Monday rejected calls for demos in support of the refugees, and pointed out that
the Syrian Intelligence might be seeking to initiate clashes between the
Lebanese Army and the Syrian refugees. “No to demos on the issue of refugees. No
to the 1975-67 (war) past experience that has devastated and divided the
country. Yes to distinction between terror and Syrian refugees,” said Jumblat in
a tweet. A Facebook page called The Union of Syrian People in Lebanon had
initially posted on Sunday a call for a Saturday demo before postponing the
event to Tuesday. The invitation said: “Independent Syrian and Lebanese
activists and civil society groups are organizing a sit-in in solidarity with
the Syrian refugees on Saturday, July 15 at Beirut's Samir Qassir Square.”The
PSP leader added: “There is the terror of the Islamic State group and the
extremist organizations. Who said the Syrian Intelligence is innocent. It may be
seeking an indiscriminate clash between the (Lebanese) Army and the refugees.
“Let the (Lebanese) army do its job away from incitements,” he
emphasized.
Some Lebanese politicians have urged the interior ministry to ban the protest.
They fear the demos might trigger clashes and aggravate to develop into a
crisis similar to the 1975 war. MP Wiam Wahhab said the Ministry should ban the
demo of the “Syrian regime opponents” and urged “all Lebanese to rally” on the
same day “in support of the Lebanese army in the face of terrorism.” The calls
for rival demos at the same place and time by a number of Syrian and Lebanese
groups and threats of violence from some parties have sparked concerns that the
Samir Qassir Square in central Beirut could witness a Syrian-Lebanese clash on
Tuesday.
Hariri chairs meeting to discuss salary scale dossier
Mon 17 Jul 2017/NNA - Prime Minister Saad Hariri chaired, at the Grand Serail on
Monday, a meeting devoted to discussing the salary scale issue, in addition to
the state's expenditures and revenues. The meeting was attended by Minister Ali
Hassan Khalil (Finance), Minister Jamal Jarrah (Telecommunications), Head of the
Finance and Budget House committee MP Ibrahim Kanaan, as well as lawmakers
George Adwan, Ali Fayyad, and Akram Shehayeb. "We can say that we have reached
the final stages of agreeing over the salary scale," Minister Khalil told
reporters following the meeting. "I am optimistic that the new salary scale will
be endorsed tomorrow," he said.
Kataeb head rejects additional taxes to fund salary scale
Mon 17 Jul 2017/NNA - Kataeb Party head, MP Sami Gemayel, on Monday sternly
rejected additional taxes that would be mulled at the Parliament tomorrow to
fund the salary scale, highlighting the necessity to dissociate the scale from
levies. "The tax decree has been rescheduled on
tomorrow's legislative session's agenda," Gemayel told a news conference at
Kataeb Central House in Saifi. "We were taken aback
when they relisted the taxes on the agenda," he said, warning that those levies
directly would target all the social categories, namely the poor, and would lead
to a higher cost of life. Gemayel then urged the Parliament not to pass the
taxes, as well as to control the waste of public funds and endorse the required
reforms "in order to put Lebanon on the track of growth."
UCC, GLC to declare general strike if salary scale
unendorsed tomorrow
Mon 17 Jul 2017/NNA - The Union Coordination Committee and the General Labor
Confederation on Monday threatened to declare general strike at Lebanon's public
and private sectors, if the Parliament fails to endorse the long-awaited salary
scale during tomorrow's legislative session. The UCC and GLC held a joint
meeting today at the headquarters of the Teachers' Union.
Hariri receives Arslan and Economic Committees, offers
congratulations at Saudi embassy
Mon 17 Jul 2017/NNA - Prime Minister Saad Hariri visited today the embassy of
the kingdom of Saudi Arabia in Beirut, and offered his congratulations on the
appointment of Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdul Aziz as Crown Prince,
Hariri's press office indicated on Monday.
Hariri was received by Acting Charge d'Affaires Walid Al-Bukhari and the embassy
staff. He wrote in the guestbook: "May God bless Crown Prince Mohammed Bin
Salman and help him confront all the challenges. In Lebanon we always had a
brotherly and historic relationship with the Kingdom that we hope will always
continue."Separately, Hariri received at the Grand Serail the Minister of the
Displaced Talal Arslan, in the presence of a delegation from the Central Fund
for the Displaced. The meeting focused on taking the necessary steps to develop
the regions that witnessed a displacement in order to reinforce the return of
the inhabitants to their villages.
After the meeting, Arslan said: "This meeting is a very advanced step in the
sensitive file of the displaced, which is directly related to coexistence and
unity between Lebanese in general and in the mountain in particular. First, I
would like to thank Prime Minister Hariri for his personal interest and I
consider that, of all political stages that I witnessed since 1990, he is the
first prime minister who looks into the details of this file. He took the great
initiative of forming a joint committee comprising the Ministry of the
Displaced, the Displaced Fund and advisors, headed by Fadi Fawaz whom I thank
for his technical and practical approach to solving such a thorny issue. I also
thank the President of the Displaced Fund Nicolas Habr and the Director General
of the Ministry, Ahmad Al Mahmoud for their hard work. We reached a draft law
that differs from the previous laws that dealt only with the issue of securing
funds. A part of this draft is funding and another part relates to new
regulations that are laid down in clear and explicit legal texts."He added: "The
file of the displaced is not an easy file; it includes the reconciliation
demands from each village and city, and demands for restoration, reconstruction
and infrastructure. The most important thing is that there is a new approach to
close this file. The draft will be studied by the president and the Prime
minister before presenting it to the cabinet and then to Parliament."
Hariri also met with a delegation of the Economic Committees, headed by former
minister Adnan Kassar and discussed the economic and financial situation in the
country.
The delegation presented the following text to PM Hariri:
"The Economic Committees, headed by former Minister Adnan Kassar, held an
extraordinary meeting at the headquarters of the Chamber of Commerce, Industry
and Agriculture in Beirut and Mount Lebanon. As a result of the deliberations
and consultations, the following statement was issued:
First: the Economic Committees emphasize the importance of legislative work and
the return of life to constitutional institutions. They also congratulate the
government on the adoption of a new budget, after none was voted since 2005.
Second: the Economic Committees believe that the priority today should be
to stimulate the economy and not to increase taxes on an economy in crisis. Also
a new budget should be voted, that is transparent and balanced, and where
expenditures are not greater than revenues, with a real reform process to combat
corruption that has penetrated frighteningly in all departments and
institutions. The first steps of reform should be to combat tax evasion and to
activate the collection of unpaid bills and fees, which would protect the
national economy.
Third: The Committees consider that the government should launch an economic
plan, and strengthen the incentives that will activate the economy and raise
growth rates. This is the right way to revitalize the national economy, stop
institutions from closing, and create new job opportunities for Lebanese.
Fourth: The Economic Committees believe that the proposed tax increases
shouldn't be approved, because they will have negative repercussions on the
Lebanese economic situation as a whole, because they will increase the pressure
on institutions that suffer from difficult conditions and will affect a large
part of the working class, which might create a crisis difficult to
overcome."Later on, Hariri received a delegation from the army command, headed
by Brigadier General Rifaat Ramadan and coprising Brigadier General Fatek Al
Saadi and Colonel Elie Najm Mezher, who invited Prime Minister Hariri to attend
the 72nd Army Day on August 1st in the Military College.
On a different note, Hariri headed a meeting attended by Finance Minister
Ali Hassan Khalil, Minister of Communications Jamal Al-Jarrah, Chairman of
Finance parliamentary Committee Ibrahim Kanaan and MPs George Adwan, Ali Fayyad
and Akram Chehayeb.
The meeting, which aims to prepare for tomorrow's parliamentary session, focused
on the salaries scale, expenditures and revenues.
Hariri earlier met with MP Bahia Hariri and received a delegation from the
Lebanese Golf Club headed by Riad Makkawi. He also received Eric Favre who asked
him to sponsor the Beirutfight Games to be held in the Lebanese capital next
year.
Riachy meets Press Designers Syndicate, LUCW delegation
Mon 17 Jul 2017/NNA - Minister of Information, Melhem Riachy, on Monday met with
a delegation of the Lebanese Press and Graphic Designers' Syndicate, headed by
Patrick Nacouzi. Talks reportedly touched on the formation of a union for the
orders of employees at media institutions. Riachy
later met with a delegation of the Lebanese Union for Child Welfare (LUCW),
headed by Fadia al-Assaad.
Bassil bound for Brussels for Lebanon EU annual meeting
Mon 17 Jul 2017/NNA - Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil is heading to Brussels on
top of an official delegation, to partake in the annual meeting between Lebanon
and the European Union. The meeting will take place tomorrow (Tuesday), under
the chairmanship of Minister Bassil and High Representative of the European
Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Federica Mogherini. Bassil will
also hold a series of talks over the ties between Lebanon and Belgium.
Army chief meets German MP, Future Movement delegation
Mon 17 Jul 2017/NNA - Lebanese Army Chief, General Joseph Aoun, met, at his
Yarze office on Monday, with MP Assem Qanso, over most recent developments in
the country.He later welcomed German MP Gunter Krings, accompanied by German
Ambassador to Lebanon, Martin Huth and Defense Attaché Colonel Dietrich Jensch.
Talks reportedly featured high on the current situation in Lebanon and
the broader Arab region, in addition to the cooperation between the Lebanese and
German armies. General Aoun also received a delegation of Future Movement,
accompanied by Marjeioun and Hasbaya Mufti Sheikh Hassan Dallah, and Head of
Arqoub Municipalities' Union Mohammad Saab.
'Israel may need to take out Iranian bases
in Syria'/قد يكون من الضروري لإسرائيل
تدمير القواعد الإيرانية في سوريا
Herb Keinon/Jerusalem Post/July 17/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=57092
Former NSC head says Iranian nuke deal source of problems Iran is causing in
region, and deal is "worse than we imagined."
Israel may need to take military action to prevent Iran or Hezbollah from
setting up permanent bases in Syria, former National Security Council head
Yaakov Amidror said on Monday.
Amidror’s comments come a day after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told
journalists in Paris that Israel was opposed to the Syrian cease-fire brokered
recently by the US and Syria because it perpetuates Iran’s military presence in
the the country.
If Israel's interests are not taken into account by those determining what the
future arrangements will be in Syria – the Americans, Russians or others – “that
might lead the IDF to intervene and destroy every attempt to build [permanent
Iranian] infrastructure in Syria,” he said.
Amidror, a fellow at the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies who has
remained in contact with Netanyahu, made his comments during a press conference
with journalists organized by The Israel Project.
“We will not let the Iranians and Hezbollah be the forces that will win the very
brutal war in Syria” and then move their focus onto Israel, he said. Up until
now Israel has been very careful to say out of the war in Syria, saying it will
only intervene – and indeed only has intervened – to protect the red lines
Netanyahu established: that game-changing weaponry is not transferred to
Hezbollah via Syria, that Hezbollah and Iranian troops are not on the border
with Israel, and that the Iranians do not establish permanent bases in Syria.
Amidror said that the cease fire plan was made without taking into sufficient
consideration Israel’s need to defend itself.
“At the end of the day it is our responsibility, not the responsibility of the
Americans, or the Russians, to guarantee ourselves, and we will take all the
measures that are needed for that,” he said.
Explaining how the Americans and Russians -- with which Israel has good ties and
a dialogue -- agreed to a deal that could allow for a permanent Iranian presence
in Syria, Amidror said that the Russian strategic goal in the cease-fire was to
ensure that Assad's regime remains, and the the American strategic goal was to
destroy Islamic State.
Israel, he said, needs to “take care of its strategic goal,” which he defined as
“keeping Iran and Syria from building launching pads in Syria.”
Amidror said that that while Israel obviously wants to see the killing in Syria
end, “the price can't be having Iran and Hezbollah on our borders.”
He said that Israel has both diplomatic and military options to keep this from
happening, and said “both options should be used.”
Amidror attributed Iran's current success in the region to the Iranian nuclear
deal signed two years ago. Iran, he said, is implementing a strategy that for
the first time in modern history places them on the cusp of establishing a land
corridor from Tehran, through Baghdad to Damascus and the Mediterranean.
“The ability of the Iranians to do what they are doing now in Syria and Iraq,
and be involved in both Syria and Iraq, and their relations with Hezbollah, it
is all built on the legitimacy they gained from this [nuclear] agreement,” he
said.
Amidror said that it is very much in the Iranian interests to abide by the
agreement, since in the meantime they are changing the contours of the entire
Middle East. After the period of the agreement ends they can then dash to the
nuclear finish line, with their strategic situation in the region considerably
improved, as well as their ability to withstand any new wave of sanctions.
“The agreement is the source of all the problems ,” he said. “It is even more
dangerous than we imagined when signed.”
http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Politics-And-Diplomacy/Israel-may-need-to-take-out-Iranian-bases-in-Syria-499937
Our Druse neighbors/جيراننا الدروز
Faydra L. Shapiro/Jerusalem Post/July 16/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=57096
Haiel Stawi reminds us, in life and in death, that this country is a place more
diverse, more complex and more beautiful than even I knew. This is all of our
Israel. May his memory be a blessing.
There’s a standard picture, one of the most powerful poses there is – a father
cradling his newborn to his chest. It projects that essential moment when a
young man recognizes that he is now something entirely different, responsible in
a new kind of way, holding in his hands at once both hope and power and complete
fragility. I kept looking at that picture.
It had been a hot and difficult Friday, starting with the terrifying news of a
terrorist attack in Jerusalem. Worse yet, a terrorist attack by Arab citizens of
the State of Israel. Worse yet, at the holy Temple Mount itself. And worst of
all, two Israeli police officers had been murdered as they tried to protect
innocent lives.
Officer Haiel Stawi, 30 years old, was the young man holding his newborn son.
The other officer, Kamil Shnaan, was preparing to celebrate his engagement. The
cutting down of life in its prime, well, the depth of tragedy was clear to
everyone.
It was a few hours to Shabbat when I realized that Stawi was in fact a neighbor,
from a couple of villages over, in the mixed Druse-Christian-Muslim town of
Maghar.
That’s when I walked over to my husband and explained that we needed to change
our Friday afternoon take-thekids- to-the-pool plans. We had a funeral to
attend. I admit, we were both a little nervous. We have Christian friends in
Maghar, but no Druse friends. In fact, I suddenly realized, I didn’t know any
Druse at all. But it was important to me that we show up. To remind ourselves
and our children that just as important as celebrating the return of Jews to our
ancestral homeland is saluting those who give their lives in its – in our –
defense. To remind ourselves that the Jewish state does not mean only Jews. And
to remind ourselves that all those who endanger their lives in service here do
so for all our citizens.
Earlier this week, an op-ed appeared in an Israeli newspaper that included the
following:
“No Israeli parent has the right to give birth to a child in this country and
not teach them why they live in Israel, why they are Jewish, why we came back to
this land after 2,000 years and why we need to defend it. The stakes are
extremely high.”
NATURALLY, I was incensed. What about the 20% of our citizens who would have a
difficult time doing so because well, they aren’t Jewish? How can we forget the
other 20%? It happens so easily. Barriers of language, culture, religion, dress,
schooling, villages, neighborhoods, and suddenly you forget how diverse and
complex and beautiful this “Jewish state” really is.
As we turned off the highway toward the village, we saw two young men
hitchhiking. They were easy to understand: huge kippot, long earlocks, big
backpacks. God forgive me, but I thought to myself “these guys look like the
church-burning type.” Obviously we weren’t going to pick them up. It was clear
that they were on their way to the isolated Jewish community near the village,
with its military yeshiva. We were headed somewhere different entirely. That
wasn’t our Israel.
The funeral itself was packed, and stoic. My husband and I certainly stood out,
both as “not Druse” and as religious Jews. But as the casket passed, we felt
that it was a huge honor to be able to accompany this brave young man’s body a
little ways toward its final resting place.
And, to be perfectly honest, I admit that I was feeling pretty good about myself
for doing the right thing.
After walking with the funeral procession a short way toward the cemetery, we
made our way back through the village to our car. The heat was fierce, and I
turned to accept a cup of water from one of the residents. And as I turned back
around I was shocked to see that there stood the two hitchhikers we hadn’t even
considered picking up, with a simple question on their lips: “Where is the
funeral”?
Haiel Stawi reminds us, in life and in death, that this country is a place more
diverse, more complex and more beautiful than even I knew. This is all of our
Israel. May his memory be a blessing.
*The writer is the director for the Israel Center for Jewish-Christian Relations
and an associate fellow at the Philos Project. She can be contacted at director@jewishchristianrelations.com.
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Our-Druse-neighbors-499881
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Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
July 17-18/17
Russia Demands U.S. Return Diplomat Compounds before Talks
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/July
17/17/The Kremlin on Monday said Washington must unconditionally restore its
access to diplomatic compounds in the United States ahead of high-level talks on
the issue. Russia is angry that Washington is still barring its diplomats from
using two compounds in the states of New York and Maryland after then president
Barack Obama in December ordered the ban on access in response to suspected
Russian meddling in the U.S. election. "We consider it absolutely unacceptable
to place conditions on the return of diplomatic property, we consider that it
must be returned without any conditions and talking," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry
Peskov told journalists. He spoke as Thomas Shannon, the U.S. State Department's
third-in-command, was set to host Russia's deputy foreign minister Sergei
Ryabkov in Washington later Monday. Diplomats quoted by Russian news agencies
said the issue of the residential complexes would be on their agenda.
The talks between Shannon and Ryabkov were earlier scheduled for June but
Russia canceled them, citing new U.S. sanctions linked to the conflict in
Ukraine. When President Vladimir Putin and U.S.
counterpart Donald Trump met for the first time at the G20 summit in Hamburg
this month, the Kremlin strongman raised the question "quite unambiguously,"
Peskov said. He added that "we still hope our American colleagues will show
political wisdom and political will." Obama announced the U.S. was shutting down
residential complexes in December at the same time as he expelled 35 Russian
diplomats for spying. He said the measures were in response to U.S. intelligence
reports of Russian hacking and an alleged influence campaign to sway the U.S.
presidential election in Trump's favor, describing the compounds as used by
Moscow for "intelligence-related purposes."At the time Putin held off from
retaliating, saying he would wait to see how Trump reacted after he came into
the White House. But hope that Trump will soon follow up on campaign pledges to
boost relations have fizzled as any ties to Moscow have become toxic for the
White House amid a maelstrom of U.S. investigations into possible collusion
between Russia and the Trump campaign. Now Russia has decided to ratchet up
threats that it could belatedly take revenge by blocking a country house and a
storage facility used by the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov said last week: "If Washington decides not to solve this issue, we will
have to take counter actions." Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova
complained last week that the U.S. was also refusing to issue visas for Russian
diplomats to replace those expelled.
Diplomat: Russia-US
Agreement Doesn’t Affect Iran’s Presence in Syria
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July 17/17/London- Iranian senior diplomat Houssein
Jaberi Ansari has said that the presence of Iranian troops in Syria will not be
limited by any Russian-US deal. The Foreign Ministry’s Deputy for Arab-African
Affairs stressed that his countries’ troops in Syria remain unaffected by
stances of regional or international role-players. The diplomat was speaking
after a meeting with Russian President’s Special Envoy on Syria Alexander
Lavrentiev who had earlier in the day held talks with Secretary of Supreme
National Security Council Ali Shamkhani in Tehran. “Even if others sign
agreements [on areas] covering Iran’s presence [in Syria], these pacts would
have no real impact,” IRNA quoted Ansari as telling reporters on Saturday. The
two diplomats led the Iranian and Russian delegations in Astana peace talks on
Syria, whose fifth round was held on July 4-5. Ansari said they discussed in
detail the latest Syrian developments and reviewed ways of resolving differences
among players in the conflict blocking a political settlement.
Today, we tried to find innovative solutions to problems. We will have
similar discussions with Turkish officials too, and in two weeks, we will
convene an expert-level meeting in Tehran. We hope these meetings will help us
gradually overcome obstacles,” he said. Recent weeks have seen a flurry of
diplomatic activity regarding the crisis in Syria and frequent meetings between
Iranian and Russian officials. The two countries, backers of the Syrian regime,
and Turkey, a supporter of Syrian rebels, tried in the latest round of Astana
talks to finalize an agreement on creating four de-escalation zones in Syria but
failed. They agreed to resume their discussions on creating the safe zones in
Syria in the next round scheduled for late August. The next conference will be
preceded by the expert-level meeting set for August 1-2 in Tehran. The latest
round of UN-brokered Geneva talks on political settlement of the conflict
started last Monday and ended on Saturday. United Nations Special Envoy on Syria
Staffan de Mistura said following the conclusion of the talks that little
progress was made. “Today, we tried to find innovative solutions to problems. We
will have similar discussions with Turkish officials too, and in two weeks, we
will convene an expert-level meeting in Tehran. We hope these meetings will help
us gradually overcome obstacles,” said Ansari.
SDF Says Advancing against ISIS in Raqqa where Baghdadi is
Allegedly Located
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July 17/17/The Syrian Democratic Forces said Monday they
had seized a new neighborhood from ISIS in the militant stronghold of Raqqa
where the terrorist group’s leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi is allegedly located.
The SDF, an alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters backed by the US, have been
pressing an operation to capture northern Syria’s Raqqa since last year, and
entered the city in June. “The Al-Yarmuk district was liberated yesterday,” the
SDF’s spokeswoman for the Raqqa operation Jihan Sheikh Ahmed told Agence France
Presse.Al-Yarmuk is a large neighbourhood on the southwestern outskirts of the
city. “The operation is continuing but there are many fierce clashes,” Ahmed
said, speaking in the town of Ain Issa, some 50 kilometers north of Raqqa. “We
are taking steady and sound steps. What is important to us is not speed, but
liberating civilians and eliminating ISIS,” she added. The Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said the SDF had advanced in Al-Yarmuk but did not
yet fully control the district. The monitor said the militia held the western
portion of the district but that heavy fighting was continuing.
It also reported that hundreds of civilians had fled ISIS-held parts of
the city towards areas now controlled by the SDF in the last 48 hours. The
monitor estimates the US-backed force currently holds around 35 percent of the
city. The SDF began an operation to capture Raqqa in November 2016 and spent
months taking territory around the city before finally entering it in June. It
has been backed by heavy US-led coalition air strikes, including on Monday,
which killed at least three civilians, according to the Observatory. Following
reports that Baghdadi had been killed, top Kurdish counter-terrorism official
Lahur Talabany told Reuters in Iraq that he was 99 percent sure that the ISIS
leader was alive and located south of Raqqa. “Baghdadi is definitely alive. He
is not dead. We have information that he is alive. We believe 99 percent he is
alive,” Lahur Talabany said. “Don’t forget his roots go back to al-Qaeda days in
Iraq. He was hiding from security services. He knows what he is doing.”
Failed Attempts to Unify Opposition in Ghouta
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July 17/17/Beirut- Jaish al-Islam’s announcement on
Saturday that it agrees to dissolve itself and integrate into the Damascus
Military Council could not succeed to end division between its militants and
Faylaq al-Rahman and to form a unified opposition national army, therefore,
putting an end to an initiative that aims to unify factions in Damascus’ eastern
Ghouta. This failure came after Failaq al-Rahman officials doubted the
intentions of Jaish al-Islam, at a time when regime forces escalated their
military attacks in the area, with an aim to narrow the presence of opposition
forces. Last Saturday, Jaish al-Islam rebel group has announced its agreement to
dissolve itself and to integrate into the Syrian opposition national army.
A source from Jaish al-Islam said the initiative “ends a long division in
Ghouta, and helps to unify the fronts and prevent regime forces from benefiting
from the situation and fight each faction as an isolated force.”
However, this announcement failed to end division between the two groups
to form a unified opposition national army and prevent regime forces from
terminating their presence in the Ghouta area, sources from the city said.
In a linked development, Bashar Assad’s regime withdrew on Sunday the
security privileges given to all militias and security apparatuses, operating
under the auspices of the Interior Ministry. An informed source from Damascus
told Asharq Al-Awsat that “Ali Mamlouk, the head of Syria’s National Security
Bureau intelligence service, sent a cable to head of the military police and
asked him to order his militants to withdraw any security missions issued by
whichever party except the National Security Bureau.” The source said that this
decision is effective as of July 3, 2017. The cable
also said that the Russian forces, Hezbollah militants and members of the
Revolutionary Guards were not involved in the decision.
US Sources: Qatar Avoided Signing Deal to Counter Terror
Financing but Conceded after the Crisis
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July 17/17/Washington– Forty days following the decision
by the anti-terrorism quartet to boycott Qatar, Doha has aborted all initiatives
and mediations to end the crisis. Although it has finally signed an agreement to
counter terrorism with the United States, statements issued by Qatari officials
contradict the deal’s spirit. Senior US sources told Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper
that Qatar has conceded to US demands to sign the memorandum of accord, in the
wake of the escalation of the crisis with Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and
Egypt. The agreement, which was signed by the two countries’ foreign ministers
last week, was proposed to Doha long ago, but the Gulf state was turning a blind
eye to it, according to the sources. The sources noted that the agreement was
presented to Doha a year ago, and two weeks or more before the crisis began with
the four countries, “but officials in Qatar treated it lightly and did not take
the outputs of the Islamic-American summit in Riyadh seriously.”“The authorities
in Doha considered that the signing of this deal may be a satisfactory solution
after the outbreak of the crisis with the neighboring countries,” the sources
added, noting that Washington’s position on this agreement is to stop all means
of terrorism financing, to support the Kuwaiti mediation, and to see change in
Doha’s behavior. The sources pointed out that
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has sought, during his recent trips to the
Gulf, to end the crisis between Qatar and its four sisterly countries, stressing
that the US official was in constant contact with President Donald Trump to
achieve this purpose. The US position on the Gulf crisis has seen a major
development, when Trump has hinted at the possibility of seeking alternatives to
the US military presence at Al Udeid airbase in Qatar. “If we ever had to leave,
we would have 10 countries willing to build us another one, believe me, and they
will pay for it,” the US president told CBN conservative channel. Tillerson and
his Qatari counterpart, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, signed the
memorandum to counter terrorism financing in Doha on Tuesday. “The agreement
which we both have signed on behalf of our governments represents weeks of
intensive discussions between experts and reinvigorates the spirit of the Riyadh
summit,” the US state secretary said at a joint news conference with Sheikh
Mohammed.
Macron Hosts Netanyahu in Paris without Launching New Peace Initiative
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July 17/17/Paris – For three days, French President
Emmanuel Macron hosted in Paris Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu where
he took part in a ceremony commemorating the 75th anniversary of the deportation
of thousands of French Jews to Nazi concentration camps during World War II.
Sunday marked the day of official talks between the two leaders, which saw them
hold a meeting that lasted more than two hours at the Elysee Palace. The
discussions focused on the resumption of the Palestinian-Israeli peace
negotiations that have been halted for three years.
The media speculated whether Macron would adopt the initiative of the previous
French government, but the president, when addressing reporters, was brief in
calling all sides to resume negotiations in order to reach a solution that is
based on two states that can live side by side. “This is the approach that
represents the firm French diplomatic line that I commit to,” Macron added. With
this, he has altered Paris’ role that had previously leaned towards taking the
lead in launching initiatives, to simply saying that it backs “all diplomatic
efforts as specified by international agreements on peace.” The French president
also eased the harsh tone that was previously directed by France against Israeli
settlement building in the West Bank, sufficing by saying that “it is important
to make sure that the necessary conditions to resume the negotiations and reach
peace are not thwarted by the facts on the ground.” He
then “reminded” Netanyahu of his and France’s stance on settlements.
The truth of the matter is that Macron avoided focusing on contentious
issues in his statements to the public. He knows, on the one hand, that the
Israeli PM has fought against past French initiatives. On the other, he is aware
that any wrong step would put him at odds with the right-wing members of his
government who advocate increasing settlement building.
French diplomatic sources said that one should not confuse what is said
in the open and what is said behind closed doors. For
his part, Netanyahu did not address the settlement issue or the negotiations in
his statements. Playing on Macron’s words, the Israeli official said that
opposing Zionism is a form of anti-semitism, to conclude that terrorism against
Israel is due to the Palestinian refusal to recognize it as a Jewish state.
The French sources said that Macron is not seeking to take initiatives in
the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, but he wants Paris to play the role of
“facilitator” to help resume negotiations. In addition, should it make a peace
proposal, it will only do so after the US vision on the issue is revealed.
Addressing regional developments, Macron said that he “shares”
Netanyahu’s concerns over “Hezbollah’s” armament in southern Lebanon.
He stressed that France will contribute to supporting “stability in
Lebanon by respecting all of its sects and by relying on diplomatic
initiatives.”Macron and Netanyahu also tackled the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, which
the French leader said that Paris is “diligent” to whether Tehran will
accurately implement it.
French Foreign Minister: ‘Only Gulf States Can Solve the
Crisis’
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July 17/17/Kuwait- French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le
Drian has concluded his tour to four Gulf states by asserting from the UAE on
Sunday that the solution lies in the hands of GCC countries themselves and
noting the pivotal role played by Saudi Arabia to combat terrorism. Le Drian
concluded his Gulf tour in Abu Dhabi where he met UAE Crown Prince Sheikh
Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and discussed means of boosting bilateral
cooperation in addition to other regional and international issues besides the
Qatari crisis. The French FM arrived in Abu Dhabi from Kuwait, which is
mediating the crisis, where he held talks with Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad
al-Sabah and his Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled al-Hamad al-Sabah.
Le Drian met with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and FM Adel al-Jubeir
in Jeddah on Saturday. “We salute Saudi Arabia for its
role in the fight against terrorism and extremist ideology, and Saudi Arabia has
shown its leadership in the fight against terrorism,” Le Drian said. He started
his tour from Doha, where he met his Qatari counterpart Sheikh Mohammed bin
Abdulrahman Al Thani on Saturday. He told reporters after the meeting that
“France should be a facilitator in the mediation that is led by Kuwait.”
German FM Sigmar Gabriel, UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and US
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson visited the Gulf in recent weeks to try and
resolve the dispute. However, their efforts to resolve
the crisis with Qatar did not succeed as Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the UAE and
Egypt accuse it of leading a policy that encourages extremism, nurtures
terrorism and systematic intervention in the internal affairs of the states to
create chaos, tension, and hatred. In this context, Le Drian’s visit to Jeddah
resulted in a Saudi-French agreement on the necessity to fight all terrorist
parties and commit to halt funding and supporting them. Jubeir said Saudi Arabia
would give Le Drian “comprehensive dossiers of the negative acts committed by
Qatar over the years”, adding that a similar file was given to Tillerson.
“There are basic principles that must be committed to by all countries,
including Qatar,” he said. “The first is not supporting terrorism and the
financing of terrorism. The second is to refrain from supporting extremism and
from inciting and spreading hatred.”Jubeir said Riyadh hoped the crisis could
still be solved “within the Gulf house.”Le Drian agreed that “solving this
crisis should be done by the Gulf countries themselves”, reiterating Paris’
support for the Kuwaiti mediation. “We look for
everyone’s determined commitment against terrorism, its support and financing.
In this perspective, it is important that GCC countries be united, to remain a
rampart against instability,” he said.
Egypt Raises Security Alert following Terrorist Attacks
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July 17/17/Cairo – Egyptian security forces increased
its security measures during the last few hours in an attempt to end the series
of terrorist attacks inflicting the country over the past couple of weeks.
Egyptian army killed on Sunday nine militants which it described as
“extremely dangerous” in central Sinai and destroyed a number of ammunition
storehouses belonging to them. In response, Minister of Interior Magdy Abdul
Ghaffar ordered his aides to increase their security measures especially around
churches and public facilities and areas. Dozens of soldiers, police officers
and foreigners were killed and injured during the past few days during terrorist
attacks at resorts in the north of Sinai, al-Giza and al-Ghardaqah. The attacks
occurred as Egypt has a declared state of emergency since last April.
A highly informed security commander told Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper that
the increase in terrorist attacks in the country recently is due to Egypt’s
boycott of relations with Qatar. He added that terrorist groups increased their
attacks after Qatar and its relations with these groups have been exposed.
Recent investigations with terrorists apprehended revealed they have contact
with Doha. Earlier last month, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, UAE, and Bahrain cut their
ties with Doha for supporting and financing extremists organizations in the
region, primarily the “banned” Muslim Brotherhood. Dozens of people had been
enrolled on the list of terrorists for their relations with Qatar. Armed Forces
Spokesman Tamer al-Rifai said that the forces killed three militants and
arrested another, in addition to destroying a vehicle and five depots containing
ammunition and explosives, in central Sinai.
He added that the troops of field army forces managed to destroy a vehicle
loaded with large amounts of explosives and killed six armed extremists at a
mountainous area in central Sinai. On Egypt’s western
border with Libya, warplanes attacked and destroyed 15 four-wheel-drive vehicles
carrying weapons, ammunition, and contraband. The
Egyptian air forces destroyed on Sunday the 15 vehicles before they infiltrated
into Egypt, raising the number of such destroyed vehicles since May to 42. The
air strikes took place following intelligence revealed that criminal subjects
were gathering to sneak into Egypt. Cairo Security Chief Khaled Abdel Aal made
on Sunday surprise inspection visits to several churches in the Egyptian
capital, included the tour of Cathedral in Abassia, ordering maximum security to
prevent possible terror attacks. Aal inspected the
security measures taken to protect the churches and deployed security forces
around Cairo. Aal mandated bomb disposal experts to
continuously comb the areas around churches across Cairo to achieve the highest
level of security. He also ordered the Rapid Deployment Forces to go on patrols
around the capital, and mandated the criminal investigation services to increase
surveillance by using the cameras in churches. In related news, Chief of Staff
of the Egyptian Armed Forces Lt-Gen Mahmoud Hijazi emphasized Sunday the
importance of boosting coordination between his country and the US to support
security and stability in the Middle East, and counter terrorism. Egypt’s Chief
of Staff Mahmoud Hegazy made the remarks during a meeting with the Commanding
General of US Army Central Michael Garrett, in which they discussed further
military cooperation between the two countries. Garett
expressed his aspirations towards boosting joint work with Egypt at all levels
to better serve the mutual interests of both nations.
Both sides also tackled cooperation including joint exercises, exchanging
expertise and enhancing combat and technical capabilities of the armed forces.
UAE Denies Involvement in QNA Hacking
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July 17/17/The United Arab Emirates was not responsible
for an alleged hack of Qatari websites which helped spark a month-long
diplomatic rift with Doha, the UAE’s foreign minister said on Monday.
“The Washington Post story today that we actually hacked the Qataris is
also not true,” Anwar Gargash, the UAE state minister for foreign affairs told
the London-based think-tank Chatham House. Asked about
a Washington Post report citing US intelligence officials saying the UAE may
have been behind the hack, Gargash said it was “purely not true”.
“This is our message: You cannot be part of a regional organization
dedicated to strengthening mutual security and furthering mutual interest and at
the same time undermine that security,” he said. “You
cannot be both our friend and a friend of al-Qaeda.”Saudi Arabia and its allies
imposed sanctions on Doha on June 5, including closing its only land border,
denying Qatar access to their airspace and ordering their citizens back from the
emirate. “We’ve sent a message to Qatar. We’ve said we
are not there to escalate. We are not after regime change. We are after a change
of behavior,” Gargash said. “We need to do that and
when we do that, come back to the fold and we can work together,” he added.
Regarding the possibility of Qatar being excluded from the GCC, Gargash
said: “The GCC is in crisis and I don’t think it serves our purposes to say
let’s take Qatar out.”“What we really do want is we either reach an agreement
and Qatar’s behavior changes, or Qatar makes it own bed and they can move on and
we can move with a new relationship. But we cannot have a member who is
undermining us and supporting extremism,” he said. The
Qatari foreign ministry said in a statement neighboring countries have shown
readiness to participate in the investigation of the alleged hacking of the
Qatari state-owned Qatar News Agency (QNA) website, stressing that Qatar will
take all means, measures and legal procedures necessary to prosecute
perpetrators, Russia’s Sputnik reported. Doha has
continued to push with allegations on QNA hacking, but the publication of
statements by the Emir of Qatar on more than one QNA-linked platform on social
communication raises much doubt on the website’s security being compromised.
Many signs confirm the “Al Jazeera” justification story on QNA hacking is
potentially false news.
Metal Detectors Lead to New Confrontations in Al-Aqsa
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July 17/17/Ramallah- Israel on Sunday partly reopened
Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque gates but placed strict security measures at the
entrances of the compound, including metal detectors to search worshipers.
The new step led to bigger disputes and a war on “the sovereignty of the
mosque,” leading to further confrontations near one of the gates, and leaving
several Palestinians injured. The confrontations started when dozens of
worshipers refused to enter and gathered to pray at the entrances of the
compound to object the new Israeli security measures. Youssef Ideiss,
Palestinian Minister of Waqf and Religious Affairs, said the Authority would not
allow any party to damage the sovereignty of the Mosque.
Al-Aqsa mosque was closed for two days following a Friday attack, which
saw three Arab Israelis open fire at Israeli police near the site, killing two
of them, before fleeing into the compound, where they were shot dead by security
forces. Separately, Palestinian sources said that the
Hamas Movement, which controls the Gaza Strip, was currently looking to gain a
foothold in Algeria, with an aim to gather the party’s leaders after the
majority of them left the Qatari capital, Doha, and resided in other countries.
The sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that Algeria received an official request from
the Movement to open a representative bureau in the capital where it will be
capable to host a number of Hamas leaders. However, the sources said that
Algeria has not yet responded to the Movement’s request. The sources explained
that the Hamas authorities do not wish to limit the presence of its leaders, who
are in Gaza, Lebanon, Malaysia and Qatar, in one particular country.
Jordanian Soldier Sentenced to Life in killing of 3 US
Troops
Asharq Al-Awsat English/July 17/17/A Jordanian soldier on Monday received a life
sentence in the shooting deaths of three US military trainers at the gate of an
air base in southern Jordan last November.A military court in Jordan sentenced
the defendant, 1st Sgt. Marik al-Tuwayha, to life in prison with hard labor. He
had pleaded “not guilty,” saying he opened fire because he feared the base was
coming under attack. Tuwayha has said he believed he was complying with rules of
engagement. He has said he had “no intention of killing anyone” and felt no
resentment toward Americans. The three US Army Green
Berets were killed Nov. 4, as their convoy waited at the base gate. The victims
were 27-year-old Staff Sgt. Matthew C. Lewellen of Kirksville, Missouri;
30-year-old Staff Sgt. Kevin J. McEnroe of Tucson, Arizona; and 27-year-old
Staff Sgt. James F. Moriarty of Kerrville, Texas.
Jordan initially said the Americans triggered the shooting by disobeying entry
rules, a claim that was later withdrawn. Relatives of the slain troops were in
court on Monday.
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on
July 17-18/17
Trump Must
Withdraw From Iran Nuclear Deal-Now
John Bolton/ Human Rights
Voices/July 17/17
"For the second time during the Trump administration, the State Department has
reportedly decided to certify that Iran is complying with its 2015 nuclear deal
with the Security Council's five permanent members and Germany, known formally
as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action ('JCPOA').
If true, it will be the administration's second unforced error regarding the
JCPOA. Over the past two years, considerable information detailing Tehran's
violations of the deal have become public, including: exceeding limits on
uranium enrichment and production of heavy water; illicit efforts at
international procurement of dual-use nuclear and missile technology; and
obstructing international inspection efforts (which were insufficient to begin
with).
Since international verification is fatally inadequate, and our own intelligence
far from perfect, these violations undoubtedly only scratch the surface of the
ayatollahs' inexhaustible mendaciousness.
Certification is an unforced error because the applicable statute (the Iran
Nuclear Agreement Review Act of 2015, or 'INARA') requires neither certifying
Iranian compliance nor certifying Iranian noncompliance...Certifying compliance
is far from neutral. Indeed, it risks damaging American credibility should a
decision subsequently be made to abrogate the deal. Beyond the procedural
question, however, is the importance of swiftly resolving the underlying policy
gridlock. President Trump has repeatedly made clear his view that the Iran deal
was a diplomatic debacle. It is not renegotiable, as some argue, because there
is no chance that Iran, designated by Ronald Reagan as a state sponsor of
terrorism in January 1984, will agree to any serious changes. Why should it?
President Obama gave them unimaginably favorable terms, and there is no reason
to think China and Russia will do us any favors revising them.
Accordingly, withdrawing from the JCPOA as soon as possible should be the
highest priority. The administration should stop reviewing and start deciding...
The Trump transition team should have identified abrogating the deal as one of
the incoming administration's highest policy priorities..."
Iran’s post-ISIS blues
Mohamad Kawas/The Arab Weekly/July 17/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=57099
These days, the American agenda in the region does not go well with Iran’s mood.
Iran reaped major benefits by cooperating with the United States and the
international coalition in the post-September 11 invasions of Afghanistan and
Iraq. The purely American agenda in the region eliminated in one blow two
strategic enemies to Iran: The Taliban in power to the east and Saddam Hussein’s
regime to the west.
These days, however, the American agenda in the region does not go well with
Iran’s mood. Something has changed in Washington and it is irking the regime in
Tehran. It was very happy when Kabul and Baghdad fell to American hands in 2001
and 2003, respectively, but it certainly was not comforted by American military
presence on its eastern and western borders.
The Taliban and Saddam regimes represented regional threats to Iran but with
the US presence in the region, it is the very existence of the revolution regime
that is at stake.
Tehran and Moscow had covertly agreed to aid the Taliban resistance against the
American invasion. The United States knew that the level of armament and of
intelligence in the hands of the Afghan jihadist movement was far superior to
the movement’s limited resources.
While the Russians remained discrete about their role in Afghanistan, the
Iranian regime did not try hard enough to hide its own role in the affair. In
recent years, Iranian officials publicly met in Tehran with leaders in the
Afghan movement and the Iranian media regularly reported the movement’s news.
Iraq was a different story. Iran was clearly opposed to the US presence in Iraq.
Its position was visible in the actions of the Iraqi national opposition and in
the anti-coalition stance of Muqtada al-Sadr’s movement. Let’s not even talk
about Iran’s role in the reincarnation of al-Qaeda under the leadership of Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi and its different subsequent versions that led to the
appearance of the Islamic State (ISIS) headed by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
All these anti-American presence workshops can be traced to two major
geographical sources: Tehran and Damascus.
In Syria, the Iranian regime had enough clout to influence security decisions.
This is how the Syrian security apparatus followed strictly the Iranian agenda
in the area by facilitating the crossing of jihadists to Iraq. It also closely
collaborated with Iranian agents to maintain communication channels with all
the jihadist movements, including the Sunni ones, in the area.
Former al-Qaeda members revealed that its chief, Ayman al-Zawahiri, had
instructed al- Qaeda-related movements not to target Iranian interests in
recognition of Tehran’s support and aid. These ties between a Shia regime and
anti-Shia organisations might seem deeply paradoxical but, in fact, are in
keeping with the Iranian regime’s Machiavellian approach to its security and
interests.
We have in the “Irangate” scandal of 1985 a perfect illustration of this
stance. At that time, the Iranian regime used American agents to purchase 3,000
TOW missiles from Israel to be used in the Iran-Iraq war. For its survival,
ideological principles are of no use to the Iranian regime.
The mystery behind the appearance of ISIS must be found within the framework of
the traditional collusion between Iranian and Syrian intelligence services and,
in the case of ISIS, the Iraqi intelligence services as well.
Logically, this collusion is made possible only because of Iran’s dominance of
the political regimes in Iraq and Syria. During the US occupation of Iraq, the
Iranian and Syrian regimes actively collaborated to nurture and sustain armed
resistance groups opposed to the US presence.
In a surrealistic repeat of circumstances, Baghdad and Damascus simultaneously
released imprisoned jihadist leaders who quite naturally regrouped in al- Qaeda
and ISIS. The two organisations have not always seen eye to eye. ISIS, under
the leadership of Baghdadi, ended up founding the “Islamic State” in what was
essentially Iraq, while the Nusra pseudo-state was created in Syria under Abu
Muhammad al-Jolani.
It might be unfair to blame the Iranian regime for the entire terrorist
phenomenon in the region. What is, however, fair to say is that this regime has
collaborated with just about all of the terrorist organisations in the region
and has benefited from their activities. The political Islamist movements
seemingly had access to Iranian political, media, military and financial
support, some of it covert and some overt.
Therefore, the unprecedented international determination to fight terrorism must
not stop at the technical and tactical aspects but must reach all the way to the
behind-the-scene sources that continue to finance it or facilitate it.
The Iranian regime is perfectly aware of this shift in international strategy
and knows that the elimination of ISIS spells bad news for it. This time, the
Americans are no longer unwittingly doing the Iranian regime a favour. By
eliminating ISIS, the Americans are depriving Tehran of its network inside the
region and preparing to isolate it internationally.
The international mood has shifted. With US President Donald Trump insisting
since the Riyadh summit on the necessity of putting an end to the financing of
terrorist organisations, Iran will no longer be able to get away with the claim
that has long served its interest, namely that terrorism is a legitimate
political tool. For the first time since the Islamic revolution, Iran is
experiencing the revolution’s decline.
http://www.thearabweekly.com/?id=8865
Abbas: Shut Up or I will Arrest You!
Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/July 17/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10684/palestinian-cyber-crime-law
Critics say the Palestinian Authority's (PA) Cyber Crime Law, which permits the
imprisonment of Palestinians for "liking" or sharing published material on the
internet, paves the way for the emergence of a "police state" in PA-controlled
territories in the West Bank. They also argue that the law aims to silence
criticism of Abbas and the PA leadership.
"What is laughable is that this law carries penalties that are tougher than
those imposed on thieves and sex offenders... the law, in its present form, is
designed to limit the freedom of the media and punish people for simple
matters." — Journalist in Ramallah.
This latest dictatorial move in the PA-controlled territories might also serve
to remind the international community about the current readiness of the
Palestinian leadership for statehood, and what such statehood would look like.
In its current incarnation, that state would fit in just fine with its brutal
Arab neighbors.
A new Palestinian law combating information technology (IT) crimes has sparked a
wave of protests from Palestinian journalists and human rights organizations.
The controversial Cyber Crime Law, signed by Palestinian Authority (PA)
President Mahmoud Abbas on July 11, permits the imprisonment of Palestinians for
"liking" or sharing published material on the internet.
Critics say the law paves the way for the emergence of a "police state" in
PA-controlled territories in the West Bank. They also argue that the law aims to
silence criticism of Abbas and the PA leadership.
The new law comes on the heels of the PA's recent decision to block more than 20
Palestinian websites accused of publishing comments and articles critical of the
PA leadership.
The law was approved by Abbas himself, without review by the Palestinian
parliament, known as the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC). The PLC has been
paralyzed for the past decade, as a result of the power struggle between Abbas's
PA and Hamas -- the Islamist movement that controls the Gaza Strip.
In the absence of parliamentary life, Abbas and his senior officials and
advisors have felt free to pass their own laws to serve their interests and
promote their personal and political agendas.
In the view of Palestinian journalists and human rights advocates, the new Cyber
Crime Law will further restrict freedom of expression, especially on social
media, which will now be closely monitored by the PA security forces. They say
that the law makes a mockery of the PA leadership's motto that the "sky is the
limit when it comes to freedom of expression."
The absence of a free and independent media in the PA-controlled territories has
prompted many Palestinian journalists, bloggers and political activists to
resort to Facebook and Twitter. There, they express their opinions, air their
grievances, and discuss taboo issues -- such as financial and administrative
corruption among the top brass of the Palestinian Authority leadership.
The new law legalizes what has long been happening in the PA-controlled
territories, however. PA security forces have long targeted Palestinians who
post critical and controversial comments on social media.
Hardly a week passes without two or three Palestinians arrested or summoned for
interrogation by the PA security forces regarding a Facebook or Twitter posting
or comment. Many Palestinians have been taken into custody for "liking" or
sharing a post, article or photo that was deemed offensive to Abbas or a senior
PA official.
Yet, the Cyber Crime Law is indeed a watershed in repression: prior to it, no
law existed that prohibited Palestinians from expressing their views on social
media platforms.
Now, anyone who commits the offense of establishing a website with the intent of
disseminating news that could "undermine the safety of the state or its internal
or external security" is liable to a prison sentence and fine. The law also aims
to punish anyone who promotes such news by "liking" or sharing it.
Palestinian journalists identify themselves as the real targets of the Cyber
Crime Law. One journalist in Ramallah remarked:
"What is laughable is that this law carries penalties that are tougher than
those imposed on thieves and sex offenders. This is a law with a purely
political goal, although it has some positive aspects such as preventing
extortion, fraud and impersonation on social media. But the law, in its present
form, is designed to limit the freedom of the media and punish people for simple
matters."
Jihad Barakat, a Palestinian journalist who was recently arrested by the
Palestinian Authority security forces for filming the motorcade of PA Prime
Minister Rami Hamdallah while it was passing through an Israeli military
checkpoint, expressed outrage over the new law. He too said that the law was
aimed at curbing freedom of expression and intimidating critics of the PA.
"This is a dangerous law," Barakat complained. "The law should conform with
public freedoms and not be used to curb them." Barakat later was charged with
"begging and loitering in a public place in suspicious circumstances." He was
arrested because his filming of the PA prime minister at the checkpoint was
considered embarrassing and offensive.
Palestinian journalists and human rights activists point out that the law
contains ambiguous references, such as the "undermining or endangering of the
safety of the state."
Journalist Shatha Hammad said that she and her colleagues were not sure what
this phrase actually means.
"As journalists, we are confused," she said. "We don't know what type of news or
postings which are considered -- according to this law -- a threat to the
security of the state." She also pointed out that the new law comes amid a
continued crackdown by the PA on Palestinian journalists and activists over
their Facebook postings.
Alarmed by the new law, several Palestinian journalists and writers said it
paves the way for the emergence of a repressive regime whose goal is to suppress
public freedoms and violate the privacy of people.
"This law is aimed at providing the Palestinian Authority with a legal cover to
suppress the voices of its opponents," explained Palestinian writer Ahmed Al-Najjar.
"In this way, the PA can arrest any journalist or ordinary citizen for
publishing an article or posting something on social media that is deemed
harmful to the security of the state. This is a bleak scenario that makes it
clear that we are facing a repressive police system. This dangerous law drives
the final nail in the coffin of public freedoms."
The Ramallah-based Palestinian human rights organization Al-Haq joined the
chorus of critics of the new law restricting freedom of expression. "The law was
issued by President Abbas without being presented to the public," the
organization said. "It was issued in a very secretive manner."
Al-Haq also noted that the PA leadership turned down requests and appeals by
Palestinian groups and individuals to receive copies of the new law before it
was passed. The organization went on to denounce the law as a "Sword of
Damocles" over the head of Palestinian journalists.
The Cyber Crime Law showcases the fact that the Palestinian Authority regime is
being run as a one-man show.
This latest dictatorial move in the PA-controlled territories might also serve
to remind the international community about the current readiness of the
Palestinian leadership for statehood, and what such statehood would look like.
In its current incarnation, that state would fit in just fine with its brutal
Arab neighbors.
*-*Khaled Abu Toameh, an award-winning journalist and television producer, is
based in Jerusalem.
© 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.
Turkey: Erdogan's Obsession to Take Jerusalem
Burak Bekdil/Gatestone Institute/July 17/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10638/turkey-erdogan-jerusalem
Simply put, Jerusalem's Judaic history dates back to thousands of years before
the birth of Islam, only in the seventh century CE.
As an American friend delicately asked: "Isn't Turkey supposed to be investing
millions to help rebuild Gaza?"
Not, it seems, when Islamist ideology is involved.
Less than a year ago, Turkey and Israel agreed to end their six-year-long
diplomatic stand-off and officially "normalized" their relations. They appointed
ambassadors Kemal Okem to Israel and Eitan Na'eh to Turkey, two prominent career
diplomats, who, since then, have been struggling actually to normalize formally
normalized ties. As some observers, including your humble correspondent,
cautioned in 2016:
"Erdogan had pragmatically agreed to shake hands with Israel, but his
ideological hostility to the Jewish state and his ideological love affair with
Hamas have not disappeared; so the Turkish-Israeli 'peace' would not be easy to
sustain".
Only half a year into the "normalized charter" Erdogan in May pledged that his
government would work with the Palestinian people to guard against the "Judiazation
of Jerusalem." This may be vintage Erdogan. The Turkish president's promise was
not too different from a call for a struggle to guard against the
"Catholicization of the Vatican."
It is elementary history that Jerusalem's pre-Islamic period of 3300-1000 BCE
appeared in the book of Genesis -- the time of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob -- when
Erdogan's ancestors were probably hunters in the steppes of Central Asia. The
years 1000-732 BCE marked the period of the ancient kingdoms of Israel and
Judah. Simply put, Jerusalem's Judaic history dates back to thousands of years
before the birth of Islam.
Nevertheless, according to Erdogan, there is a necessity "to protect-against the
Judaization of Jerusalem." Erdogan, in his May speech, also repeated an earlier
call for Muslims from around the world to "visit al-Aqsa" mosque, located on the
Temple Mount in Jerusalem. "As a Muslim community, we need to visit al-Aqsa
Mosque often," he said. "Each day that Jerusalem is under occupation is an
insult to us."
In 2016, a total of 26,000 Turks visited al-Aqsa Mosque (out of a population of
80 million). Erdogan also said he wants "hundreds of thousands of Muslims" at
the Muslim holy site in his campaign to "flood Jerusalem [with Muslims] and
drive out the occupiers".
During the reconciliation with Israel, Ankara pledged to end its support for
Hamas; Turkey even expelled Saleh al-Arouri, the most senior Hamas official then
residing in the country. But ultimately, there were reports that Erdogan was not
really willing to live up to his end of the bargain. The journalist Yoav Zitun
wrote in Ynet News:
Hamas' presence in Turkey continues despite the departure of Saleh al-Arouri,
who headed Hamas in Turkey before leaving the country following Israeli demands
during the reconciliation negotiations.
His successors are recruiting Palestinian students to study in Muslim countries
in general and Turkey in particular. The students are then sent for military
training in Lebanon or Syria, and from there, return to the West Bank to carry
out attacks against Israel.
Zitun details some intriguing cases:
For example, two months ago, the IDF and Shin Bet detained, a Palestinian who
had been living in Turkish Cyprus for several years. In August 2015, Qazmar was
recruited in Jordan by Hamas, given military training and explosives expertise.
During a meeting with Hamas operatives in Istanbul last January, he was
instructed to recruit terrorists in the West Bank using encrypted memory cards.
Another highly publicized case concerns Muhammad Murtaja, who has head of a
humanitarian aid organization of the Turkish government in Gaza. According to
the Shin Bet following his arrest, Murtaja was accused of transferring millions
of dollars to Hamas operatives that was donated by Ankara.
Turkish money flowing into the hands of men who are committed to the
annihilation of Israel is part of ideology, not humanitarian aid.
Trying to brand itself as the international savior of the Islamist cause, Turkey
has, since 2004, invested millions of dollars into 63 different projects
designed to "defend and strengthen the Muslim heritage and character of
Jerusalem." The money is often channeled through a government agency, the
Turkish Cooperation and Development Agency (TIKA).
In these efforts to "defend and strengthen Jerusalem's Muslim heritage and
character" Turkey also partnered with Sheikh Raed Salah, leader of the Northern
Branch of the Islamic Movement in Israel, and with Sheikh Akram Sabri, a former
mufti of Jerusalem. Both men oppose to Israel's right to exist.
As an American friend delicately asked: "Isn't Turkey supposed to be investing
millions to help rebuild Gaza?"
Not, it seems, when Islamist ideology is involved.
*Burak Bekdil, one of Turkey's leading journalists, was just fired from Turkey's
leading newspaper after 29 years, for writing what was taking place in Turkey
for Gatestone. He is a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
© 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.
Female genital mutilation practitioners are travelling
to Canada, border officers warned
By Stewart Bell/National Online Journalist/ July 17/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=57102
"It is almost certain" that female genital mutilation is happening in Canada,
according to intelligence reports obtained by Global News.
While it has long been suspected that Canadian girls and women have been going
abroad to undergo female genital mutilations, the reports show federal officials
believe the practice is now occurring in Canada.
Practitioners of female genital mutilation are believed to be entering Canada to
perform the illegal procedure on girls, according to intelligence reports
distributed to frontline border officers.
The reports obtained by Global News show the Canada Border Services Agency has
been on the alert for the arrival of travelling “PFGMs,” or practitioners of
female genital mutilation, for more than a year.
Photos of the cutting tools, belts and “special herbs” practitioners might be
carrying in their baggage when they arrive in the country have been circulated
to border officers.
Once in Canada, the practitioners are typically called into homes to perform the
procedures, the CBSA Intelligence Operations and Analysis Division wrote in a
report titled, “Female Genital Mutilation Practitioners Entering Canada.”
A second Intelligence Advisory told officers to “be aware of girls and women
travelling to or returning from regions where they may be subjected to the
practice.” An accompanying map highlighted countries in Africa and the Middle
East.
While it has long been suspected that Canadian girls were being taken abroad to
undergo female genital mutilations, the reports show that federal officials
believe the practice is now occurring in Canada.
Female genital mutilation refers to “cutting of female genitalia and permanently
mutilating the sexual organs of young females for non-medical reasons,”
according to the Ontario Human Rights Commission.
Although it can cause chronic health problems and trauma, the procedure is used
“to control female sexuality, ensure chastity until marriage and to render young
women more desirable for marriage purposes,” the rights commission said on its
website.
The practice has been illegal in Canada since 1997. There has never been a
successful prosecution in this country but in the U.S., six people have been
arrested since April for allegedly performing genital mutilations at a Detroit
clinic.
In Australia last year, a former midwife, Kubra Magennis, 72, was convicted of
performing genital mutilations on two girls, ages 6 and 11. Their mother was
also found guilty as well as a religious cleric.
“Practitioners of Female Genital Mutilation are almost certainly entering Canada
to engage in Female Genital Mutilation on both girls and women of primarily
African and South-East Asian descent,” the CBSA wrote in one of the reports.
Disclosed under the Access to Information Act, the reports show that Canadian
border officials have been told to treat those “committing, aiding and abetting”
female genital mutilations as possible criminals. The reports were labelled as a
“human trafficking” priority.
“PFGMs enter Canada with the purpose of committing a crime (aggravated assault)
but may not have the awareness or belief that they are doing so. Those aiding
the PFGM may also be charged in accordance with the Criminal Code,” said one of
the reports.
Tens of thousands of girls and women in U.S., United Kingdom and Australia have
undergone the procedure or are at risk, the reports said. Officials don’t yet
know how widespread the problem is in Canada but one intelligence report said
identifying practitioners at points of entry was “an important first step.”
“According to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Canadian health care
providers, it is almost certain that FGM is also happening in Canada, despite
the legislation against the practice in 1997,” it said.
“Canada has sizeable diaspora populations from Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Sudan
and Nigeria, all countries where a high percentage of the female population is
estimated to have experienced FGM.”
The report said PFGMs use razor blades, shards of glass, strips for binding legs
as well as ash, oil and herbal mixtures. “These items may be present in the
practitioner’s baggage,” it said. The “patient” undergoing the procedure and
family members may greet them at the airport, it added.
“In Canada, a PFGM is most likely to be called to the home of a woman to be
re-infibulated post-partum (re-sewn) or of a girl to perform the initial FGM,”
the report said.
Preventing female genital mutilations is difficult because the parents “may
believe it is a good thing” for daughters and it is “not culturally acceptable”
for girls to talk openly about it, another CBSA report said.
A report by the Canadian Women’s Health Network said female genital mutilation
was considered a form of child abuse and those at risk could be removed from
their homes to prevent it from happening.
**Stewart.Bell@GlobalNews.ca
http://globalnews.ca/news/3602227/female-genital-mutilation-canada-border-officers-warned/
Syria: Is It Over?
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/July 17/17
Russian air strikes and cruise missiles, foreign militias and Assad armed forces
continue to use coercive force as towns and land stretches from eastern Aleppo
to southern Raqqa are brought back under regime control.
Syrian rebels, or what is left of them, fight with great valor, no aid, and
under impossible circumstances against Iranian proxies and pro-regime militias.
Ever since the shutdown of Turkish and Jordanian passageways, support for the
Syrian opposition has received a considerable blow.
In short, things in Syria are at their worst yet. Internationally speaking, the
impressive and decisive stance the US put up against Moscow in Syria did not
last long, France’s newly elected President Emmanuel Macron portrayed the
country’s worst Syria standing so far, and UN Special Envoy Staffan Di Mistura
is known for viewing the Syrian people and opposition representatives with
negativity.
Capitalizing on blunders of Syrian revolution allies, such as Qatar, Iranians
and Russians have succeeded with rebranding the Syrian people’s cause to a fight
against terrorism. Like always, Qatar’s actions were largely built on
miscalculations.
Most of Syrian rebels fighting to remove the oppressive regime headed by Bashar
al-Assad are by no means linked to terror groups or extremist ideology.
It was enough for extremist groups to be present on Syrian grounds and for media
outlets to run spotlight publicity, so that terrorist groups become a worldwide
ogre feeding off on the Syrian revolution.
Despite the overbearing difficulty faced by the opposition, pro-regime forces
and Iranian multi-national proxy militias remain unable to guarantee safe-zones
in areas it took control over.
At the moment, Iran considers securing strategic privilege a priority over
reinstating regime control in Syria, which explains why it has focused fighting
to oil-rich areas in southern Raqqa.
Tehran resorted to Iraqi and Lebanese militias to secure Syrian land passages
with governorates in West Iraq to secure control over Iraq and ensure a long
path from Iran’s borders in south of Iraq to Lebanon.
Under presumptions of a US-Syrian opposition initiative to move towards
Damascus, and eventually force Assad to step down, Iranian proxies targeted the
district bordering Jordan, Daraa.
Daraa was a major and surprising win that shook the Damascus tripartite, Russia,
Iran and the Syrian regime. It is worth mentioning that Iran-aligned militias
had suffered sizable losses in the southern city.
Nevertheless, recent political compromises have auctioned off those victories as
the US stance rolled back in the face of Russian demands. US support ranked top
for the past six years had it not been for politicians in the latest rounds of
discussions failing those taking arms.
Amid a new American retreat, a negative French stance, Gulf disputes and
Turkish-Moscow rapprochement, the Syrian opposition stands before a uniquely
alarming situation.
The final wager made by rebels is placed on the Syrian regime’s failure to
manage the areas it seizes control.
Given its lacking capacities, the Syrian regime continues to seek help from Iran
militias, Hezbollah, Iraqi militias and Russia. Such deficiency and resorting to
foreign interference will strengthen national public opposition.
Liberation of Mosul, Return of Iraq
Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al Awsat/July 17/17
The state of ISIS was not expected to live long. Neither Iraq can bear a
cancerous tumor of this kind, nor the Kurdistan region can accept such a
dangerous neighbor.
The countries of the region cannot be lenient towards it. The world cannot
tolerate it. Al-Baghdadi’s state raised everyone’s concerns. It had to be
eradicated, and this is what happened.
From the very beginning, experts said that the terrorist state’s fall would be
inevitable. Terrorism makes a fatal mistake when it has a well-known location
that can be prayed. Terrorism is powerful when it is concealed and unpredicted,
and when it does not have a specific “billing” address to hold it accountable
for its doings. Iraqi authorities have the right to
celebrate the victory. ISIS’ control over Mosul was a serious threat to the
country’s stability and existence. It was a project of an open massacre and a
permanent sedition.
One does not exaggerate when saying that the achieved victory has erased a
painful memory three years ago, when entire divisions of the Iraqi Army
surrendered to ISIS and enabled the terrorist group to seize a full arsenal of
modern American weapons.
The Iraqi Army made great sacrifices to wipe out that image and save the city
and the country. The Peshmerga forces, in turn, paid a heavy price to thwart
ISIS’ dream of consolidating its presence in the region and across the borders
with Iran, Turkey and Syria.
Haider al-Abadi had the right to salute the forces celebrating victory. He is
the Prime Minister and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. His tenure and
his experience were certainly dangled on the outcome of the Mosul battle. Today,
he can say that the army was defeated under his predecessor, but won under his
reign. Mosul fell in the era of Maliki and was restored in the era of Abadi.
The victory of Mosul has uplifted his legitimacy within his own party and at the
national level. This is not a small matter for anyone who knows the story of the
thorny relationship between the current prime minister and his predecessor, who
remained dominant in political life despite leaving the office in the wake of
the Mosul disaster. When talking about defeating ISIS,
it is necessary to pay attention to developments that preceded the invasion of
Mosul. The truth is that the terrorist group was practically the result of a
number of mistakes, factional politics and regional intervention that have
accompanied the rift in the Iraqi structure and the relations between the
country’s components.
ISIS was born on a scene that has witnessed wrong decisions and provocative
policies. One must not forget the decision of Paul Bremer to dissolve the Iraqi
army followed by a decision to uproot the Baath party, which has led the
soldiers of Saddam Hussein’s army into the wings of the resistance, then into
the hands of “jihadist” organizations, and to Baghdadi’s terrorist group.
ISIS also emerged because the winning team, which was Shi’ite, did not rush to
place its victory at the disposal of a state-for-all project. Part of that team
has dealt with victory as a means to settle a historical account, which paved
the way for the establishment of a new injustice based on the revenge of a
previous discrimination. Neither the winning team has
well managed its victory nor the defeated team has used the best policy to
reduce its losses.
There is a striking fact in this context. Following the fall of Saddam Hussein,
a delegation of Sunni Arab activists visited Kurdistan Region President Masoud
Barzani to discuss the future of Iraq. During the meeting, Barzani advised the
members of the delegation to form a body to speak in their name and express
their concerns and fears to other components.
Barzani stressed before the delegation that it was important to spare Iraq a
bloody clash between its constituents. He said Sunni Arabs should consider their
position in the new Iraq because returning to the past was impossible.
He noted that the Iraqi Constitution provides for the right to establish regions
that keep Iraq unified but reduce the causes of rift and collision between the
country’s factions. He also said that the Arab Sunnis should think about their
future because they would have to pay the price for any divisions among them.
Arab Sunni leaders failed to agree. Some of them were drifted by the new
situation and were tempted by the gains, while others were attached to the dream
of turning the clock back.
As the Sunni presence in the military and security institutions and
decision-making circles has dropped, and as Iran bolstered its role in managing
Iraq, part of the Sunni public opinion was attracted to suicide options and ISIS
found a window to infiltrate into the country.
This is not meant to underestimate the victory that has sparked an Arab, Islamic
and international relief. What is meant to say is that the defeat of ISIS
militants does not imply the end of the terrorist group, which might become more
dangerous when it loses its known address. The victory over an ISIS militant may
be easier than the victory of the idea of ISIS itself.
The permanent triumph over the conditions that facilitated the birth of ISIS
necessitates reforms, reevaluation of policies and the building of a state of
institutions in Iraq. This means the adoption of the principle of citizenship
and national partnership and respect for the Constitution, as well as
reinstating the state authority and its ability to make decisions in Baghdad.
In order to prevent the reemergence of “ISIS” and to deter the birth of a
similar or more dangerous group, Abadi must turn the Mosul victory into an
opportunity to build an Iraqi state on the basis of reconciliation and
partnership – a basis that transcends sectarian and confessional considerations.
Haider al-Abadi should pay attention to his watch. Difficulties are colossal and
the pressure is great. But turning the Mosul battle into an imminent return of
Iraq deserves this journey: the return of Iraq as a normal state after the
restoration of relations between all of its components.
If this spirit prevails in Baghdad, it will certainly be possible to find a
formula to keep the Kurdistan region part of Iraq, even if the Kurdish component
said its word in the referendum.
The return of Iraq is an urgent Iraqi necessity and an Arab and regional
requisite. The rift in the Iraqi society has unleashed the appetite of non-Arab
countries in the region. Moreover, conflicts within the Arab Sunni community
have led to disintegration and fragmentation and transformed the country into an
arena for local and foreign militias.
Latest statements by the authorities over the necessity to treat all Iraqis
equally before the law should encourage Abadi to go further in this attempt.
Mosul’s liberation is not enough. Iraq must return to its unity and
institutions, freedom of decision and respect for its borders. Iraq is not a
peripheral country, neither in geography nor in history. It is only through the
vigilance of the Iraqi spirit, away from feelings of intolerance and narrowness
that the Iraqi entity is preserved and the return of ISIS is prevented.
Putin Preferred Clinton? Let’s Test Trump’s Theory
Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg View/July 17/17
In two recent interviews, President Donald Trump made the argument that Russian
President Vladimir Putin would have preferred Hillary Clinton in the White
House.
Trump’s argument is that he “campaigned on strong military, strong borders, and
low oil prices” and these goals don’t benefit Putin:
Look what I’ve done – oil prices have been driven down. We’re sending LNG to
Poland, massive shipments to Poland. That’s not what Putin wants. And for the
military, we’ve got $56 billion more of equipment than anybody ever thought of,
in the last budget. Putin doesn’t want that – so why would Putin want me?”Under
Clinton, Trump said, the US military would be “decimated” and oil prices would
be higher:
We’re going to be exporting energy – he doesn’t want that. He would like Hillary
where she wants to have windmills. He would much rather have that because energy
prices would go up and Russia as you know relies very much on energy.
Putin doesn’t care whether the US standing army exceeds half a million or not,
or whether the US Navy has more ships. Even during the Cold War, when the Soviet
Union was a much bigger country than today’s Russia, it couldn’t outspend the US
on defense. Today, the US military vastly outnumbers the Russian one, and once
other North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries are added in, Russia is
dwarfed, frankly. That, however, doesn’t matter because both countries’ vast
nuclear arsenals deter them from ever having an all-out war, and for possible
local and proxy clashes, numerical strength isn’t important.
Russia and the US back different sides in the Syrian war. There, Trump is doing
roughly what Clinton intended to do to defeat ISIS. He intensified the US air
campaign and stepped up support for rebels opposing Syrian President Bashar
Al-Assad. He has also launched isolated attacks on Assad’s forces, ostensibly to
restrain them from using chemical weapons or striking US allies, but perhaps
also to make sure the US-backed forces don’t have to compete for areas they’re
clearing of ISIS militants. President Barack Obama refrained from such
aggressive actions, but Clinton, who established herself as a Syria hawk, likely
would have acted along the same lines. Many feared she would have been more
insistent on removing Assad — she has called it a “number one priority” — but if
she did, that would hardly have made her Putin’s preferred candidate, since he
continues to stand by Assad as an ally.
On energy, too, President Clinton would have been an equal or greater nuisance
to Putin.
Democratic members of Congress currently support a bill broadening Russia
sanctions to include energy pipeline projects, another indication that Clinton
probably would have pushed through similar measures to retaliate for what she,
in the summer of 2016, came to see as a major Russian effort to defeat her.
Whether or not Putin would have preferred Clinton as president hinges on more
esoteric considerations than whether or not she would have followed traditional
US military and energy policies, which have always clashed with Russian
interests and to which the Kremlin has long adapted.
Clearly, given the role the Russian propaganda machine took on during the 2016
campaign, Putin was interested in short-term destabilization and in mocking US
democracy. But he has given no indication that he wants instability in the US
over the long term. It’s not clear how it can benefit the Kremlin except by
diverting attention from its quieter exploits, such as the long-term, slow
movement of the Russian border into Georgian territory occupied by Russia’s
puppet state of South Ossetia.
If Putin is learning anything from the chain of events following Trump’s
election, it’s probably a deepening conviction that he can’t get any traction
with the US because its institutions are inherently hostile toward someone like
him.