LCCC
ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
April 18/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/newselias18/english.april18.18.htm
News Bulletin Achieves Since
2006
Click Here to enter the LCCC Arabic/English news bulletins Achieves since 2006
Bible
Quotations
My joy would be the joy of all of you
Second Letter to the Corinthians 01/23-24/02/01-05/""But I call on God as
witness against me: it was to spare you that I did not come again to
Corinth. I do not mean to imply that we lord it over your faith; rather, we
are workers with you for your joy, because you stand firm in the faith. So I
made up my mind not to make you another painful visit. For if I cause you
pain, who is there to make me glad but the one whom I have pained? And I
wrote as I did, so that when I came, I might not suffer pain from those who
should have made me rejoice; for I am confident about all of you, that my
joy would be the joy of all of you. For I wrote to you out of much distress
and anguish of heart and with many tears, not to cause you pain, but to let
you know the abundant love that I have for you. But if anyone has caused
pain, he has caused it not to me, but to some extent not to exaggerate it to
all of you
Titles For
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published on April 17-18/18
Middle East Christian Committee (MECHRIC) Denounces Syrian Bishops for
Anti-US Statement: Assad is not protecting Christians./EINPresswire.com/April
17/18
The Real Next War in Syria: Iran vs. Israel/Thomas L. Friedman/The New York
Times/April 17/18
Escalating war of words pushes IDF and Rev Guards closer to clash in Syria/DEBKAfile/April
17/18
Israel hints it could hit Iran's 'air force' in Syria/Ynetnews/Reuters/April
17/18
Europe, Trump and the Iran Deal/Amir Taheri/Gatestone Institute/April
17/2018
Germany: Crackdown on Middle Eastern Crime Families/"The state must destroy
the clan structures/Soeren Kern//Gatestone Institute/April 17/2018
Europe, Trump and the Iran Deal/Amir Taheri/Gatestone Institute/April
17/2018
German Mass Migration: A No-Win Situation/Stefan Frank//Gatestone
Institute/April 17/2018
Hungary and the War on Immigrants/Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg/April 17/18
The West Still Stands for Something Exceptional/Hugh Hewitt/The Washington
Post/ April 17/18
Syria War's Game Theory Is Too Complex to Predict/Eli Lake/Bloomberg/April
17/18
Ten Ways Russia Tries to Win Propaganda War/Amir Taheri/Asharq Al Awsat/April
17/18
Confronting Iran, Israel key to regional stability/Abdel Aziz Aluwaisheg/Arab
News/April 17/18
Titles For Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on April 17-18/18
Hariri Asks Clerics to Rally Beirut Voters, Says Lebanon 'Not a Mailbox'
Report: Complaints Rise about Election Law Violations
Islamist Prisoners' Families Block Tripoli Southern Entrance
Report: Bassil Remarks Revive AMAL-FPM Row
Marotti, Rahi broach outcome of Rome conference
Hariri from Koraytem: Beirut is Arab and its identity is peace, moderation,
dialogue, knowledge and culture
Electoral Clash Escalates into Gunfire in Dinniyeh
Islamist detainees' families block Tripoli's southern entrance
Norwegian Minister of Defense visits Army Commander
General Security to ensure return of displaced Syrians from Shabaa to Syria
tomorrow
IDAL, OECD inaugurate seminar 'Promoting Business Linkages in Global Value
Chains: Policies and Tools'
KAS Survey Examines Lebanon's First-Time Voters
Titles For Latest
LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on April 17-18/18
False alarm, not
outside attack, sets off Syria air defenses/The Pentagon denied any American
military activity in the area.
Israel Admits to Targeting Iranians in Syria
Chemical Inspectors Enter Syria's Douma amid Concerns for Probe
Macron Says Syria Strikes 'for Honor of International Community'
Turkey, Iran Vow to Continue Alliance with Russia on Syria: Ankara
France Moves to Strip Assad of His Legion d'Honneur
Russia Says West's Diplomatic Push on Syria is 'Untimely'
Russia Hits Back at French Charges over Douma Probe
Differing Priorities Hinder European Sanctions Against Iran
France Pledges over $60 Million to Syria Aid
INC Secretary General: We Still Have No Vision for Iraq’s Future
PLO Official: Dhahran Arab Summit was Purely Palestinian
Mystery Surrounds Fate of Saddam Hussein’s Remains
Armenia's ex-President Elected PM in the Face of Protests
Six Dead in Iran Armed Clash near Pakistan Border
U.N. to Launch New Yemen Peace Roadmap within Two Months
Trump Says Kim Meeting 'Early June or Before That'
Runaway Dubai Princess 'Brought Back' to Emirate
Latest
Lebanese Related News published on April 17-18/18
Hariri Asks Clerics to
Rally Beirut Voters, Says Lebanon 'Not a Mailbox'
Naharnet/April 17/18/Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Tuesday urged the
country's Sunni clerics to “call on Beirut's people to raise the voter
turnout to its maximum level” in the upcoming parliamentary polls, warning
that “there are attempts to impose hegemony on the capital and its
representatives.”Turning to the regional developments, Hariri slammed what
he called “blatant crimes against the Syrian people and against the innocent
children and civilians in Douma, Ghouta and other places.”“I'm working night
and day to prevent the Syrian blaze from spreading to Lebanon and I stressed
the importance of abiding by the dissociation policy amid the current
international conflict and the military developments sparked by the chemical
massacres in Douma,” Hariri added.Commenting on Hizbullah chief Sayyed
Hassan Nasrallah's recent speeches, the premier lamented that “there are
parties who evading the principles of the dissociation policy and using
electoral and media podiums to attack Arab brothers.”“This is a direct
attack on Lebanon's interests and national consensus,” Hariri decried. He
added: “We have chosen the path of safeguarding the country from the
repercussions of wars and we're roaming the world to save the Lebanese
economy, while they have returned to the approach of turning Lebanon into a
mailbox that they use to send political and military messages on behalf of
the regional forces.”“It is not accepted that Lebanon be turned into a
mailbox for anyone or into an arena for the conflict of others on its soil,”
Hariri emphasized.
Report: Complaints Rise about Election Law
Violations
Naharnet/April 17/18/Fears have started mounting after reports alleging that
numerous violations against the electoral law were detected, in addition to
“clientelist vote buying and abuse of government resources,” as the country
gears up for its first general elections in nine years, media reports said
Tuesday. Well-informed political sources told An Nahar daily, there is an
“ability to prepare large files on practices violating the integrity of the
electoral process that may be submitted later to the European Union observer
mission, as well as to the Lebanese regulatory and judicial bodies.” The
sources denounced exploitation of “officials’ influence”, saying “it has
become clear that some interferences are taking a security character that
can no longer be ignored.” Several parties involved in the May 6 electoral
race “are going to unites their voices against this type of intervention,”
added the sources. “The government can no longer remain silent, at least to
prevent the portrayal of making the electoral process look like a war
intended to annul the opposition or known political parties,” they said.
Islamist Prisoners' Families Block Tripoli
Southern Entrance
Naharnet/April 17/18/Relatives of Islamist prisoners on Tuesday blocked the
southern entrance of the northern city of Tripoli, declaring the start of an
escalation aimed at pressing for a pre-elections general amnesty. Al-Jadeed
television said protesters blocked the road at the al-Salam roundabout on
Tripoli's southern entrance. “They said that they will continue their
escalation until the signing and implementation of a general amnesty before
the elections,” al-Jadeed added. Lebanon's parliamentary elections are
scheduled for May 6. President Michel Aoun has announced that he will not
sign any general amnesty that would pardon inmates involved in the killing
of Lebanese Army soldiers. Lebanese authorities have rounded up hundreds of
Sunni Islamists over the last years, including some involved in bombings
against civilians and deadly clashes with the army. They also include
extremists believed to belong to al-Qaida-linked groups and the Islamic
State group. A lot of Islamist prisoners and their families have decried
delay in judicial procedures and trials. Some prisoners are held for several
years without trial or conviction.
Report: Bassil Remarks Revive AMAL-FPM Row
Naharnet/April 17/18/Dispute between AMAL Movement and the Free Patriotic
Movement resurfaced again to “unprecedented levels,” following statements
made by Foreign Minister and FPM chief Jebran Bassil during an electoral
campaign visit to Lebanon’s (Shiite majority) South area over the weekend,
the pan-Arab daily Asharq al-Awsat reported Tuesday. Bassil’s remarks
triggered the ire of lawmakers from Speaker Nabih Berri’s parliamentary bloc
who launched “violent verbal attacks” at Bassil, said the daily. “Discontent
of AMAL-Hizbullah duo alliance may have intensified” after several electoral
visits the FPM and al-Mustaqbal Movement made in the Third South District,
which includes the districts of Bint Jbeil, Nabatiyeh, Marjayoun and Hasbaya,
areas of a Shiite majority. “Last week, two visits provoked the duo’s
resentment: Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s (Mustaqbal chief) and Bassil’s,
both of whom mobilized their voters and urged them to vote for the “South
Deserves” list formed by the FPM, Mustaqbal, the Lebanese Democratic Party
and independents,” added the daily. Christians and Sunnis have only two
parliamentary seats in the district as a whole. The seats are allocated as
follows: 3 Shiite seats in Bint Jbeil, 3 Shiite seats in Nabatiyeh, 2 Shiite
seats, 1 Orthodox seat, 1 Sunni seat and 1 Druze seat for the Marjayoun and
Hasbayya districts. MP Ali Bazzi, of Berri’s Development and Liberation
bloc, said Bassil’s remarks encourage “black division,” pointing out during
a public meeting that “electoral entitlement can’t be established on the
wreckage of national unity.” During his visit to the border town of Rmeish,
Bassil said people of the region were being subject to threats for electoral
purposes, he referred to "threats to their livelihood shall they decide to
make their own political choice.”Ties between Berri's AMAL Movement and
Bassil's FPM have been historically tense. But, in January they took a new
turn against a leaked video footage showing Bassil calling Berri a “thug.”
Marotti, Rahi broach outcome of Rome conference
Tue 17 Apr 2018/NNA - Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Mar Bechara Boutros Rahi,
on Tuesday met in Bkerke with Italian Ambassador to Lebanon, Massimo Marotti,
who hailed the “excellent” outcome of Rome conference in support of the
Lebanese Army and other security apparatuses in Lebanon. “The outcome of the
conference is beyond all expectations; Italy has allocated nearly $5.2
million in aid to the army and other Lebanese Forces,” the ambassador said.
“The international community, European countries, and a number of UN
Security Council member countries have stressed the need to preserve
security and stability of Lebanon,”the Italian diplomat added. He also
stressed the importance of "the political and security support that had been
given to Lebanon at Rome conference, which promoted the loans and donations
that Lebanon has reaped at CEDRE Conference which had been recently held in
Paris."
Hariri from Koraytem: Beirut is Arab and its
identity is peace, moderation, dialogue, knowledge and culture
Tue 17 Apr 2018/NNA - Prime Minister Saad Hariri said that the upcoming
parliamentary elections are crucial for Beirut, because some are trying to
cancel the “Future Movement”, the Koraytem residence and the “Center House.”
He added: “Some criticized my words, and wondered about Beirut’s identity.
Beirut is Arab and its identity is peace, moderation, dialogue, knowledge
and culture. We want to preserve its streets, roads, neighborhoods, people
and history, while some want to erase this history and change the names.
What are you going to tell them in these elections?”Hariri’s stances came
during a rally that held this afternoon in the garden of Koraytem residence
for the neighbors of the residence. He said: “When we say Koraytem’s
neighbors, we mean the neighbors of Rafic Hariri, the neighbors of the good
old days who witnessed daily how Rafic Hariri worked for the country. The
work was seven days a week, and it is true that the barriers were everywhere
but you did not mind and you even loved it because Rafic Hariri was among
you and the attention of the whole country was on Koraytem. Rafic Hariri is
still alive in us, in each and every one of us. This house has seen a lot of
joys and tragedies and here the Lebanese reunited, on his blood.” He added:
“We are facing in these elections a battle; some are trying to cancel this
movement, this house and the “Center House”. My hope is in you and I know
what this house means to you, and what the path of development,
reconstruction, knowledge, peace and moderation means to you, the path of
Rafic Hariri, and this house that paid a very high price. We are up to it.
Tears may drop, not out of weakness but of emotion. This is what
differentiates us from others. We feel with the people, cry with them,
rejoice with them, cherish them, and grow with them. We know that we
shouldn’t fear anything except God almighty.”He continued: “Those who killed
Rafic Hariri did not succeed. On the contrary, they unified us and made us
stand with each other. We are not running these elections for the sake of
power because we are not interested in power, positions, or being a prime
minister or an MP. The most important thing for me is you. This was Rafic
Hariri’s concern and this is the concern of Saad Hariri. You gave us a lot
when Rafic Hariri was in this house and when he martyred. We, in this
family, decided to continue the path of Rafic Hariri despite all those who
object.”
He said: “I have full confidence in you and in the people of Beirut. Each
citizen should go to the polls on May 6. The citizens of Beirut have to
vote, not for the sake of Saad Hariri or the Future movement, but for your
own interest and to make your voice heard. You know that I will work day and
night for Beirut, the people of Beirut and for Lebanon as a whole.”He
concluded: “We will continue with you the legacy of Rafic Hariri, this giant
who left us but remains in our hearts.”Earlier, Hariri received at the
“Center House” the United Arab Emirates Ambassador to Lebanon Hamad Saeed
Sultan Al Shamsi and discussed with him the situation and the bilateral
relations.
Electoral Clash
Escalates into Gunfire in Dinniyeh
Naharnet/April 17/18/An elections-related clash escalated into gunfire
Tuesday in the northern town of Bakhoun in the Dinniyeh district. “A clash
broke out between young men in Bakhoun's al-Saa Square in connection with
the hanging and removal of candidates' posters,” the National News Agency
said. “Gunshots were fired into the air during the incident and the army has
since intervened to contain the situation,” NNA added. LBCI television
meanwhile reported that the clash pitted supporters of al-Mustaqbal Movement
and ex-MP Jihad al-Samad and that no casualties were reported. Al-Samad is
running on a list led by ex-minister Faisal Karami in the Tripoli-Minieh-Dinniyeh
electoral district.
Islamist detainees' families block Tripoli's
southern entrance
Tue 17 Apr 2018/NNA - A number of the families of Islamist detainees blocked
the international highway at Tripoli's southern entrance in both directions,
upping calls for the adoption of the amnesty law for their children.
Security forces deployed in said area, and diverted traffic to other
auxiliary roads.
Norwegian Minister of Defense visits Army Commander
Tue 17 Apr 2018/NNA – Lebanese Army Commander, Joseph Aoun, on Tuesday
welcome at his office in Yarzeh, Norwegian Minister of Defense, Frank Bakke-Jensen,
who visited him with an accompanying delegation, including Norwegian
Ambassador to Lebanon, Lene Natasha Lind. Talks reportedly touched on the
areas of military cooperation between the armies of both countries. The
Secretary-General of the Lebanese-Syrian Supreme Council, Nasri Khoury, also
met with Aoun over the situation along the Lebanese-Syrian border.
General Security to ensure return of displaced
Syrians from Shabaa to Syria tomorrow
Tue 17 Apr 2018/NNA- General Security shall ensure tomorrow the voluntary
return of dozens of displaced Syrians from Shabaa region to Syria, GS Press
bureau said in a statement. "The buses which will transport the displaced
Syrians will move tomorrow [Wednesday] morning at 9 am from the Masnaa
crossing point towards Shabaa, to bring back the Syrians to their country,"
the statement said. The GS asked the Lebanese army to provide, in advance,
the names of the journalists who will cover this event.
IDAL, OECD inaugurate seminar 'Promoting
Business Linkages in Global Value Chains: Policies and Tools'
Tue 17 Apr 2018/NNA - In the framework of the EU-OECD joint Programme on
Promoting the Investment in the Mediterranean, the Investment Development
Authority of Lebanon (IDAL) along with the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) organized a regional conference on
"Promoting Business Linkages in Global Value Chains: Policies and Tools"
that was attended by governmental representatives as well as investment and
development officials from Mediterranean countries. In the opening session,
IDAL's Chairman, Engineer Nabil Itani, stated that this conference comes at
a time when Lebanon is embarking on a major reform process in an attempt to
address the main challenges facing its economy. In this context, he hoped
that the new economic vision puts Lebanon back on the track of prosperity
and supports IDAL in attracting further investments. He announced that,
despite the local and regional circumstances, Lebanon was able to show a
good performance of 8% in attracting FDI inflows to the MENA region between
2012 and 2016. He explained that "this can be mainly attributed to the
investments of Lebanese diaspora and their confidence in the Lebanese
economy as well as the recent government policies geared towards the
development and support of the productive sectors such as new technologies
and the start-up ecosystem." Engineer Itani also emphasized the generous
support of the international community to stabilize Lebanon combined with
the unbreakable will of the Lebanese community facing the mounting
challenges. Today this seminar in partnership with the European Union and
the OECD is a major evidence of this continuous support to the Government of
Lebanon to increase its capacity to attract quality investment that will
ultimately help in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. He
highlighted that this conference aims at learning from the experience and
vision of multinationals' representatives how to establish business linkages
with local companies and participate in global value chains. "The promotion
of business linkages is crucial in maintaining competitiveness against
globalization. This conference will provide us with the necessary tools to
improve such linkages, and therefore, serve the goals of our local economic
development", he added. For his part, the Head of the MENA-OECD
Governance programme, Carlos Conde, clarified that the expected growth level
in the region during 2018-2019 will enhance the margin of action, through
the implementation of economic structural reforms, reducing deficit,
fostering competitiveness and boosting investments in order to create job
opportunities and achieve growth. He underlined that such reforms could
focus on the advantages that the region holds, particularly its geographical
location that serves as a hub between Europe and Africa, its large markets,
including Asian markets, its young and educated population, and its
competitive edge in many sectors. Such advantages provide the countries in
the region with a great opportunity to participate in global value chains."
Conde confirmed that OECD strives, through the EU-OECD joint Programme on
Promoting the Investment in the Mediterranean, to introduce reforms,
establish linkages and support governments in the region, in an endeavor to
promote comprehensive investment; thus, achieving sustainable development
that provides job opportunities and ensures economic stability. The two-day
conference will be followed by a local conference on "Encouraging
comprehensive investment for local development in Lebanon."
KAS Survey Examines Lebanon's First-Time Voters
Kataeb.org/Tuesday 17th April 2018/The Beirut office of the
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung (KAS) on Monday released the findings of a
countrywide voter profile survey on the attitudes and opinions of the
Lebanese youth towards the upcoming parliamentary elections; a study
targeting first-time voters aged between 21 and 29 years old. "The intention
to vote in the parliamentary elections (76%) is substantially higher than
during the municipal elections. It is clear that those who did not vote in
the municipal elections because their names were not listed on the voters
list are intending to vote in the forthcoming elections," the report noted.
According to the KAS study, the main reasons that drove the youth to
participate in the elections are the national right/duty to vote, and the
right to express an opinion.
The youth had high levels of agreement that the participation in the voting
process is the duty of every person to communicate their opinion (83%),
contribution to decision-making (74%), and type of accountability (69%)."On
the other hand, the main reasons for not voting are lack of trust and
uselessness of the elections," it added. With respect to the electoral
choice, the survey found that the vast majority (83%) has already chosen the
list they will vote for. "Their voting choice is mainly based on loyalty to
parties (66%) or candidates (26%). The minority will be voting for a civil
society list (6%). The main stream (88%) of those who intend to vote will
still vote for their party even if the electoral list includes other parties
whom they object."Voting for a candidate from another sect has shown less
agreement (55%) among the youth, the report pointed out, as the top
influences on electoral choices are the services offered (69%), political
party (66%) or personality (68%), and family (60%).The single most
compelling influence is the political party (25%) just slightly ahead of the
“person providing services” (21%).The new parliamentary electoral law is
almost clear to 77% of the respondents with regard to how to vote (77%)
however it is less clear how the votes are sorted (57%). The representation
under new law has been improved according to 56% of the respondents and a
near third (29%) did not agree. Lebanese youth seemed to have diverse
opinions regarding whom they consider as their ideal public figure. In
addition to that 27% of the respondents do not have any ideal public figure,
a considerable number of respondents (24%) believed that none of the
political figures express their opinions. The vast majority of the
respondents (91%) are not members of any political party. The minority of
the respondents (9%) are members either because they (28%) or their family
(27%) support the party leader or because the idea of the party convinces
them (25%). The majority considered TV as their main source of information
(79%). Followed by social media (30%) and websites (24%). Only 1% rely on
the press. The vast majority (93%) uses independent accounts and pages to
get the news from the social media. "The current study showed that the
participation of the first-time voters might not yield a significant change
in the political landscape since the new voting generations are still
traditional and sectarian in their voting choices," the report concluded.
Middle East Christian Committee (MECHRIC) Denounces Syrian Bishops for
Anti-US Statement: Assad is not protecting Christians.
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/63945
WASHINGTON, DC, USA, April
17, 2018 /EINPresswire.com/ -- The Middle East Christian Committee (MECHRIC)
firmly rejects the statement issued by John X, Greek Orthodox Patriarch of
Antioch and all the East, Ignatius Aphrem II, Syrian Orthodox Patriarch of
Antioch and all the East, and Joseph Absi, Melkite-Greek Catholic Patriarch
of Antioch, Alexandria, and Jerusalem which condemns the US strike on Syrian
chemical weapons facilities.
“This strike was designed to discourage Assad’s blatant effort to ethnically
cleanse the suburbs of Damascus by the heinous use of indiscriminate weapons
of mass destruction, in this case poison gas,” said MECHRIC co-chair Tom
Harb. “By using these weapons, Assad is causing fear and flight. He is
changing the demography to please Iran. If the US does not stop this now,
where will it end? Will other inconvenient minorities be next?”
“These bishops have clearly been influenced by Syrian and Iranian
propaganda,” added MECHRIC member John Hajjar. “The Alawite regime in Syria
has facilitated the growth and arming of Hezbollah in Lebanon for decades
which has destroyed the last Christian political stronghold in the Middle
East. Assad is not concerned about the future of Christianity, his only
concern is holding on to power.
“In the 1980's and 90's” continued Hajjar, “the Syrian Baath regime actively
slaughtered the Christians of Lebanon by shelling Christian areas such as
Ashrafieh, Jounieh, Zahle which killed over 150,000 people and forced over
700,000 people to leave the country.”
“If the Assad regime is so safe, so why there are over 4 million refugees in
Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey? asked Mr. Harb. “Why don't they go back? Some
sources believe that the Assad regime is not allowing their return because
his goal is to force demographic change.”
MECHRIC stands firmly behind President Trump in the belief that the US and
the world cannot allow the use and spread of chemical and biological weapons
of mass destruction.
Rebecca Bynum
The American Mideast Coalition for Democracy
(615) 775-6801
Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on
April 17-18/18
False alarm, not outside attack, sets
off Syria air defenses/The Pentagon denied any American military activity in
the area.
Associated Press/April 17/2018
BEIRUT: A false alarm set off Syrian air defense systems early on Tuesday,
the military said, denying earlier reports of an “outside aggression” and
incoming airstrikes and underscoring the chaotic nature of the multiple
actors in Syria’s theater of war. Syrian state media reported hours earlier
that the country confronted yet another assault, shooting down missiles over
the central region of Homs and a suburb of Damascus before dawn. The reports
did not say who carried out the alleged strikes, adding to Mideast jitters
only days after the United States, Britain and France conducted airstrikes
targeting Syria’s alleged chemical weapons facilities in retaliation for a
suspected chemical weapons attack that they blamed on the Syrian government.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human rights, which follows the war
through a network of activists on the ground, reported the sound of
explosions and lightning-like flashes in the skies over Homs and near
Damascus, without saying what it was.
The government-run Syrian Central Media said six missiles targeted the
Shayrat air base in Homs on Tuesday, adding that Syrian air defenses shot
down most of them. The Syrian outlet also reported another, separate
airstrike on the Dumayr air base, in a suburb of the capital, Damascus.
The Pentagon denied any American military activity in the area. There was no
comment from Israel, which frequently carries out airstrikes in Syria but
rarely acknowledges them. Only hours later, Syrian TV carried a military
statement saying that air defenses fired a number of missiles because of a
“false alarm,” without providing more information.
Earlier this month, four Iranian military personnel were killed in an
airstrike on Syria’s T4 air base, also in Homs. Syria and its main allies
Iran and Russia blamed Israel for that attack. Israel did not confirm or
deny mounting the raid. The report came as experts from the international
chemical weapons watchdog were in Damascus, waiting to visit the site of the
suspected chemical attack in the town of Douma, just east of Damascus. On
Monday, Syrian and Russian authorities prevented investigators from the
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons from going to the
scene, the head of the OPCW said, blocking international efforts to
establish what happened and who was to blame. The U.S. and France say they
have evidence that poison gas was used in the April 7 attack in Douma,
killing at least 40 people, and that Syrian President Bashar Assad’s
military was behind it.
But they have made none of that evidence public, even after they, along with
Britain, carried out airstrikes on Saturday, bombing sites they said were
linked to Syria’s chemical weapons program.
Syria and its ally Russia deny any chemical attack took place, and Russian
officials went even further, accusing Britain of staging a “fake” chemical
attack. British Prime Minister Theresa May accused the two countries — whose
forces now control the town east of Damascus — of trying to cover up
evidence.
The lack of access to Douma has left unanswered questions about the attack.
OPCW Director-General Ahmet Uzumcu said Syrian and Russian officials cited
“pending security issues” in keeping its inspectors from reaching Douma.
“The team has not yet deployed to Douma,” Uzumcu told an executive council
meeting of the OPCW in The Hague on Monday.
Instead, Syrian authorities offered them 22 people to interview as
witnesses, he said, adding that he hoped “all necessary arrangements will be
made ... to allow the team to deploy to Douma as soon as possible.”Russian
military police were ready to help protect the OPCW experts on their visit
to Douma, said Maj. Gen. Yuri Yevtushenko of the Russian military’s
Reconciliation Center in Syria. Igor Kirillov, a Russian chemical weapons
protection expert in The Hague, said the team is set to visit the site
Wednesday. Earlier Monday, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov
said the inspectors could not go to the site because they needed approval
from the U.N. Department for Safety and Security. He denied that Russia was
hampering the mission and suggested the approval was held up because of the
Western airstrikes. However, U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the
United Nations has “provided the necessary clearances for the OPCW team to
go about its work in Douma. We have not denied the team any request for it
to go to Douma.”
Until Saturday, Douma was the last rebel-held town near Damascus, and the
target of a government offensive in February and March that killed hundreds
and displaced tens of thousands. Hours after the alleged chemical attack,
the rebel faction that controlled the town, the Army of Islam, relented and
was evacuated along with thousands of residents. The Associated Press,
during a government-organized visit Monday to Douma, spoke to survivors and
witnesses who described being hit by gas. Several said a strange smell
started spreading and people screamed, “It’s chlorine! It’s chlorine!”
The AP visited a two-room underground shelter where Khaled Mahmoud Nuseir
said 47 people were killed, including his pregnant wife and two daughters,
18-month-old Qamar and 2 1/2-year-old Nour. A strange smell lingered, nine
days after the attack.
Nuseir, 25, said he ran from the shelter to a nearby clinic and fainted.
After he was revived, he returned to the shelter and found his wife and
daughters dead, with foam coming from their mouths. He and two other
residents accused the rebel Army of Islam of carrying out the attack. As
they spoke, government troops were not far away but out of earshot. Nuseir
said a gas cylinder was found leaking the poison gas, adding that he didn’t
think it was dropped from the air because it still looked intact.
Separately, the AP spoke to a medic who was among those who later were
evacuated to northern Syria. Ahmed Abed al-Nafaa said helicopters were
flying before the attack and when he reached the site, people were screaming
“chlorine.” He said he tried to enter the shelter but was overcome by a
strong smell of chlorine and his comrades pulled him out.
The accounts contradict what the Syrian government and Russia have reported:
that there was no gas attack in Douma.
Israel Admits to
Targeting Iranians in Syria
Ramallah - Kifah Zaboun/Asharq Al Awsat/Tuesday, 17 April, 2018/Israel
struck an Iran-operated air base in Syria, a senior Israeli military
official confirmed on Monday, as Israeli sources reported that Israel sent a
clear message to Russia that the sale of the advanced S-300 missile defense
system to the Syrian regime will cross a red line. Meanwhile, Iran's Foreign
Ministry spokesman Bahram Qassemi said his country will sooner or later
respond to the recent crime and aggression of Israel. It was the first time
we attacked live Iranian targets in Syria, both facilities and people, the
Israeli military source admitted to New York Times. This is the first time
an Israeli officials admits to directly targeting Iranian forces in Syria,
given that Israel usually refrains from commenting on any reports about
targets. The official indicated that Israel
targeted the Iranian drone command center at the T4 air base in Syria on
Monday, in response to an Iranian drone entering Israeli airspace earlier in
Febraury. During the attack, Israel killed 14 people, seven of which were
Iranian advisers, including a Colonel who led the drone unit operating out
of T4, east of Homs. The official noted that the armed Iranian drone that
entered Israeli airspace "opened a new period," saying that “this is the
first time we saw Iran do something against Israel, not by proxy."This was
the second time T4 was targeted. Round one occurred on February 10, when an
Iranian drone launched by a Revolutionary Guards Force operating out of
Syria’s T4 air base was shot down with a missile from an Israeli Apache
helicopter that was following it after it penetrated Israeli
airspace.Reports stated that the drone’s flight path and Israel’s
“intelligence and operational analysis of the parts of the Iranian unmanned
vehicle” indicated that “the aircraft was carrying explosives” and that its
mission was “an act of sabotage in Israeli territory.”Israeli Media outlets
discussed that Israel's admission to the nature of the drone's mission
brings the Israeli-Iranian conflict out into public. Israeli media voiced
their concerns that more effective Syrian air defenses built around advanced
Russian equipment would limit Israel's ability to operate . Russian Defense
Ministry’s plans to reconsider supplies of S-300 systems to Syria, which
according to Israeli reports is considered "crossing red lines."In response,
Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qassemi said in his weekly press
conference that Israeli regime will sooner or later receive the necessary
responses to its recent crime and aggression, and they will regret their
misdeed. Asked about Iran’s response to an Israeli attack on the Syrian T-4
airbase near Homs, Qassemi said the attack will be met with a response,
emphasizing that Israel’s “hit and run” policy shouldn't be tolerated
anymore.
Later in his statement, Qassemi pointed out that one of the goals of the
rash and unwise act of US and its two allies in breaching the sovereignty
and territorial integrity of Syria was to create discord among the three
guarantors of the ceasefire in Syria, in reference to Iran, Russia and
Turkey brokers of the Astana peace talks and guarantors of de-escalation
zones in Syria.
Chemical Inspectors
Enter Syria's Douma amid Concerns for Probe
Naharnet/April 17/18/International investigators on Tuesday entered a Syrian
town hit by an alleged chemical attack, after days of delay and warnings by
Western powers that crucial evidence had likely been removed. The suspected
gas attack on April 7 on Douma, near Damascus, reportedly left more than 40
people dead and was blamed by Western powers on the regime of Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad. In response, the United States, France and
Britain conducted unprecedented missile strikes on Syrian military
installations, but Paris admitted on Tuesday they were a matter of "honor"
that had solved nothing.
"Experts from the chemical weapons committee enter the town of Douma," state
news agency SANA wrote, referring to the Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons (OPCW). The inspectors arrived in Damascus on the day of
the Western strikes but had not been allowed to enter Douma. France and the
United States appeared to question the purpose of such a mission, warning
that any incriminating evidence had likely been removed by now. "It is
highly likely that evidence and essential elements disappear from the site,
which is completely controlled by the Russian and Syrian armies," the French
foreign ministry said. The U.S. ambassador to the OPCW, Ken Ward, had
claimed Monday that the Russians had already visited the site and "may have
tampered with it."
Stripping Legion d'Honneur
In an impassioned defense to the European Parliament on Tuesday, France's
President Emmanuel Macron admitted that Saturday's strikes had been a more
political than military decision. "Three countries have intervened, and let
me be quite frank, quite honest -- this is for the honor of the
international community," he said in the French city of Strasbourg. "These
strikes don't necessarily resolve anything but I think they were important,"
Macron added. The French leader was also set to strip Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad of a prestigious award he was granted by former president
Jacques Chirac in 2001.
"The Elysee confirms that a disciplinary procedure for withdrawing the
Legion d'Honneur (Legion of Honor) is under way," Macron's office said. The
war of words continued to spiral between the Russian-backed Syria regime and
the West but a military escalation looked to have been averted despite both
sides trading threats after the strikes. Yet, a report on state news agency
SANA that Syrian air defenses had shot down missiles over Homs province
overnight raised fears that further action had indeed been taken. It branded
the incident an "aggression" but did not name a specific country. Big
explosions were heard overnight near Shayrat air base, southeast of Homs
city, and near Damascus where two other air bases are located, the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights reported.
'False alarm'
Later Tuesday, however, SANA retracted the report, stressing there had been
"no external attack" on Syria. "Last night, a false alarm that Syrian air
space had been penetrated triggered the blowing of air defense sirens and
the firing of several missiles," a military source told the agency. Both the
U.S. and Israel appeared to deny involvement in the overnight incident,
which would have been the third time that Homs province was bombed in just
over a week. After Saturday's strikes, which destroyed mostly empty
buildings, the trio of Western powers trying to reassert influence on the
seven-year-old war have appeared to favor diplomatic action. A series of
meetings was scheduled in a bid to relaunch talks aimed at ending a war that
has left more than 350,000 people dead and displaced more than half of the
Syrian population. Analysts have said however that it would take more for
the West to mount a meaningful challenge to Russia's weight as a broker.
"For a new diplomatic initiative to work, the balance on the ground must be
changed... otherwise the regime backed by Russia and Iran will still have
the upper hand and no political transition is possible," said Nabeel Khoury.
"As it is, even with this latest bombing, the West does not have a seat at
the table," said the former U.S. diplomat, currently a fellow at the
Atlantic Council think-tank.
Macron Says Syria
Strikes 'for Honor of International Community'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 17/18/France, Britain and the United
States carried out air strikes targeting chemical weapons sites in Syria to
defend the "honour of the international community", French President
Emmanuel Macron said Tuesday. In an impassioned defence to the European
Parliament, Macron said the allies had to act to defend global rules and
accused Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad of being "at war with his
people.""Those that are shocked by images of women, of children who have
been attacked by chlorine, we need to stand up to defend our rights. What
are we going to say, our rights and principles just for us? No, that simply
isn't acceptable," Macron said. "Three countries have intervened, and let me
be quite frank, quite honest -- this is for the honour of the international
community," Macron said. He added that the strikes were conducted "within a
legitimate, multilateral framework, and in a very targeted way without any
human victim, not a single human victim, to destroy three sites where
chemical weapons were being produced or processed. "These strikes don't
necessarily resolve anything but I think they were important," he said.
Turkey, Iran Vow to Continue Alliance with
Russia on Syria: Ankara
Tue 17 Apr 2018/NNA - The presidents of Turkey and Iran on Tuesday vowed to
press on with their alliance alongside Russia over Syria, the Turkish
presidency said, after Ankara backed strikes by the US and its allies
against a number of Syrian targets.“The two leaders emphasized the
importance of continuing the joint efforts of Turkey, Iran and Russia… to
protect Syrian territorial integrity and find a lasting, peaceful solution
to the crisis,” a Turkish presidential source said following telephone talks
between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Iranian counterpart
Hassan Rouhani.—AFP
France Moves to Strip Assad of His Legion
d'Honneur
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 17/18/The French government plans to
strip Syrian President Bashar as-Assad of his Legion d'Honneur, France's
most prestigious award, days after participating in airstrikes against
suspected chemical weapons sites in Syria. "The Elysee confirms that a
disciplinary procedure for withdrawing the Legion d'Honneur (Legion of
Honour) is underway," Macron's office said late Monday. Assad was decorated
with the Legion's highest rank of Grand Croix (Great Cross) by former
president Jacques Chirac in 2001, shortly after taking power following the
death of his father Hafez al-Assad. Only a French president, who by
tradition is the top-ranking Legion member, can decide to withdraw the
distinction from a foreigner. About 3,000 people are granted the distinction
each year, including 400 foreigners recognised for their "services rendered
to France" or for defending human rights, press freedom or other causes,
according to the Legion's web site. Assad has been accused of a series of
chemical attacks on his own people during the brutal civil war which has
torn Syria apart since 2011. He has become a pariah for Western powers while
maintaining the support of Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose military
intervention in the conflict gave Assad the upper hand against rebel
opposition groups. Putin himself is also a recipient of the Legion's Grand
Croix, decorated by Chirac in 2006. It is not the first time President
Emmanuel Macron has stripped a foreigner of France's highest honour, having
moved to withdraw the award from Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein after a
series of accusations of sexual harassment and rape. Macron had already
signalled he planned to crack down on Legion d'Honneur handouts, surprising
many in July by awarding just 101 to mark Bastille Day instead of the
customary 500-600. Former president Francois Hollande drew critics' ire by
granting the honour to Saudi Arabia's previous crown prince Mohammed bin
Nayef in 2016 despite a sharp increase in death sentences by Saudi courts, a
punishment France has long deemed inhumane. In 2010 France made it easier to
take back the award, created by Napoleon, from foreigners who have committed
"dishonourable acts". Lance Armstrong lost his after the seven-time Tour de
France winner was found to have used performance-enhancing drugs, and
fashion designer John Galliano's was pulled in the wake of an
alcohol-fuelled volley of anti-Semitic slurs. French citizens are
automatically stripped of the Legion of Honour if convicted of crimes
leading to prison sentences of at least one year.
Russia Says West's Diplomatic Push on Syria is
'Untimely'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 17/18/Russia's U.N. ambassador on
Tuesday dismissed as "untimely" a push by the United States, France and
Britain at the United Nations to establish a new chemical weapons
investigation in Syria and re-energize peace efforts. The three allies on
Saturday presented a draft Security Council resolution just hours after
carrying out military strikes on three targets they said were linked to
Syria's chemical weapons program. Asked about the draft text, Russian
Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia told AFP that it was "untimely," indicating
Moscow was not ready to engage with the West on Syria after the military
strikes. "First they have to undo what they did a few days ago," Nebenzia
said, referring to the military action. The draft resolution would set up a
new inquiry to identify perpetrators of chemical attacks in Syria, push for
the full dismantling of Syria's chemical stockpiles, call for a ceasefire
and demand that Syria engage in peace talks. A first round of negotiations
on the draft resolution was held on Monday, but diplomats said Russia did
not engage in discussions and no date has been set for a vote on the
measure. Western diplomats said they were ready to allow time for
negotiations to make every effort to bring Russia aboard. "The resolution is
being discussed but we are not looking for quick progress on this," British
Ambassador Karen Pierce told reporters. "We need to chart a path back to the
political process and I think we all know this is going to take time."
Russia has used its veto 12 times at the Security Council to block action
targeting its Syrian ally. International investigators of the Organisation
for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) were on Tuesday on the ground
in the Syrian town of Douma, where dozens were killed in a suspected
chemical weapons attack on April 7. The OPCW team can determine whether
chemical agents were used at a weapon but it does not have a mandate to
identify those who carried out the attack. The Security Council in 2015 set
up such a mechanism for attribution, but Russia in November killed off the
panel, known as the Joint Investigative Mechanism (JIM), when it vetoed the
renewal of its mandate. The JIM had determined that Syrian forces were
responsible for the use of sarin in an attack in April last year in Khan
Sheikhun.The war in Syria entered its eighth year last month, with diplomacy
making little headway to end the conflict that has killed more than 350,000
people and forced millions to flee.
Russia Hits Back at French Charges over Douma
Probe
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 17/18/Russia on Tuesday rejected French
accusations it is blocking access to the site of a suspected chemical attack
in Syria and called on Western countries to "stop manipulating public
opinion" on the issue. "It is unclear why the French foreign ministry is
speaking in the name of the OPCW (Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons). If the inspectors experienced problems, they would make a
statement on this issue," Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria
Zakharova said. Earlier on Tuesday the French government said it was "highly
likely" evidence would "disappear" from the site of a suspected chemical
attack in Syria's Douma before weapons experts arrived. Zakharova called the
accusation "very surprising," saying that Russia had supported the
inspection. The U.S. and Britain have also voiced concerns that Moscow might
have tampered with evidence on the site. "We call on Western countries who
took part in the illegitimate bombing of Syria to stop manipulating public
opinion and interfering in the work of international organizations,"
Zakharova said. The Kremlin on Monday dismissed claims that Russia and Syria
were blocking access to the site as "groundless." The US, Britain and France
fired around 100 missiles at three suspected chemical facilities in Syria on
Saturday, saying they had proof the government of President Bashar al-Assad
was behind the Douma attack.
Differing Priorities Hinder European Sanctions
Against Iran
London- Asharq Al Awsat/Tuesday, 17 April, 2018/EU Foreign ministers on
Monday suggested sanctions by Germany, France and UK against the ballistic
missiles program and Tehran’s regional role didn't lead to a breakthrough.
There has been a dispute among the EU countries on the priorities in dealing
with the Iranian file, after less than one month from US President Donald
Trump withdrawal from the deal. The three EU countries (Germany, France, UK)
suggested last month a sanctions draft against Tehran, targeting the
ballistic missiles program and its role in the Middle East. Trump announced,
mid of January, that his country would stay in the nuclear deal under the
condition of solving four basic problems in the deal. Federica Mogherini,
High Representative of the EU for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy,
European Union, said Monday upon arrival to Luxembourg to participate in a
meeting for EU Foreign ministers that she didn’t expect imposing sanctions
on Tehran. Mogherini added that the EU is seeking to maintain parties'
commitment to the deal since it represents a topic of “strategic interest
for the EU”. At the same time, she warned from the impact of any decision on
the position of International Atomic Energy Agency, amid anticipated
negotiations with North Korea regarding its nuclear program. The European
division on imposing sanctions on Iran and its role in the region,
continued. Italy, Spain and Austria are among the countries objecting to
imposing new sanctions. In this context, Austrian Foreign Minister Karin
Kneissl said that the topic is not a significant issue on the agenda,
knowing that Austria, Italy and Sweden remain undecided regarding imposing
new sanctions. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, however, expressed
frustration towards Tehran and worrisome towards its role in the region due
to its ballistic missiles program. French President Emanuel Macron and
German Chancellor Angela Merkel will visit Washington on April 24 and April
27 respectively, in a final attempt to persuade Trump to stay in the nuclear
deal.
France Pledges over $60 Million to Syria Aid
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 17 April, 2018/French President Emmanuel Macron
revealed on Monday that Paris will pledge 50 million euros ($61.9
million) for urgent humanitarian aid in Syria. He made the
announcement after a meeting with a group of non-governmental organizations
(NGO) in Paris.
"This evening I brought together NGOs working on the ground in Syria. Faced
with the humanitarian situation, France is setting up an emergency program
of 50 million euros," Macron said on his official Twitter account. The funds
will be allocated to NGOs and UN agencies working on the ground in Syria,
including the UN office for humanitarian affairs, the French president's
office said. Some two dozens NGOs participated in
the meeting with Macron at the Elysee presidential palace, including Action
Aid, Handicap International, the Red Cross and Care. The projects will focus
on the Idlib region where some 1.2 million displaced people live, according
to UN estimates, as well as the Eastern Ghouta region near Damascus and in
the northwest in areas recently liberated from the ISIS group. According to
the UN, some 13 million people including six million children are in need of
humanitarian aid in Syria, ravaged by a seven-year war that has displaced
millions. The United Nations said on Thursday that it was hopeful of getting
aid to at least 100,000 Syrians who are desperate for help after months of
battle ended years of siege around the rebel-held enclave of Eastern Ghouta.
Macron’s decision comes two days after France took part in US-led air
strikes on chemical sites in Damascus following a chemical attack in the
Ghouta town of Douma. The strikes raised fears of an escalation of the
conflict in which more than 350,000 people have died, but key players on
Monday appeared keen to shift the focus to diplomacy.
INC Secretary General: We Still Have No Vision
for Iraq’s Future
Baghdad- Hamza Mustafa/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 17 April, 2018/The
Secretary-General of the Iraqi National Congress, Aras Habib Kareem, said
that the political class that has been ruling Iraq after the fall of Saddam
Hussein “does not have, after 15 years of change, a clear vision in the
political and economic fields.”Habib was the most prominent aide to the late
Iraqi politician Ahmad Chalabi and his successor in the leadership of the
Iraqi National Congress. He is running in the next parliamentary elections
in an alliance with Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi. “We still do not have a
monetary, financial or economic policy, while the development of any country
depends on the existence of such key policies,” the politician said. Asked
about his vision of the current Iraqi political scene in light of the
ongoing preparations for the upcoming elections scheduled for May 12, Habib
said: “The current political scene is linked to what can be achieved during
the upcoming elections,” noting that the balances of power during the last
three sessions were based on ethnic and sectarian dimensions, as “political
blocs were built on that basis.” “Today, the situation is different,” Habib
said, explaining that the size of blocks was not clear yet, so it would be
impossible for any bloc to obtain 90 seats in Parliament, as it happened
before. “The dissolution of the blocs that were based on ethnic and
sectarian foundations reflected positively on the nature of the formation of
lists that will run in the next elections, where almost every candidate is
running individually and not on the bases of race and sect,” he stressed. As
for his vision as a businessman for the future of the Iraqi economy, he
said: “Working in the private sector in Iraq makes you look at many issues
that will annoy you unless there is a real change in vision and plans.”
PLO Official: Dhahran Arab Summit was Purely
Palestinian
Ramallah – Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 17 April, 2018/Secretary General of the
Palestinian Liberation Organization’s (PLO) Executive Committee, Saeb Erekat,
described Sunday’s Arab Summit in Dhahran as a “Palestinian summit”. The
Palestinian foreign ministry said the Arab leaders’ meeting has achieved
remarkable success in terms of Palestinian rights. Erekat said that the
summit was “purely Palestinian”, praising the condemnation by all Arab
leaders of the US president’s recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of
Israel. The Arab “position confirmed the Palestinian right to have Jerusalem
as the capital of the state of Palestine,” he added. The PLO official
welcomed the adoption by Arab leaders of all Palestinian proposals, mainly
the peaceful political vision presented by Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas before the United Nations Security Council in February, which is based
on the 2002 Arab peace initiative.
Palestinian officials had extensive contacts with Arab countries before the
summit, to push for the adoption of Abbas’ peace plan, which presented
details for the negotiation process, mechanism and references, namely, the
Arab peace initiative. The Palestinian president called for convening an
international peace conference in mid-2018, to form an international
multilateral mechanism that will help Palestinians and Israelis resolve
outstanding issues, including the status of Jerusalem, based on the Oslo
Agreement. Abbas proposed that during the negotiations, all unilateral
actions be stopped, including Israeli settlement expansion. He also demanded
the freeze of the decision recognizing Jerusalem as the capital of Israel
and stopping the relocation of the US embassy to the city. “The Arab summit
has achieved remarkable success with regards to the Palestinian issue,” the
Palestinian Foreign Ministry said in a statement. It stressed that dubbing
the Arab Summit as the “Jerusalem Summit” has reaffirmed “the centrality of
the issue of Jerusalem at this particular stage.”“It also means a clear Arab
response to Israeli-American attempts to erase the issue of Jerusalem, pull
it off the table or Judaize it,” the ministry added.
Mystery Surrounds Fate of Saddam Hussein’s
Remains
Baghdad - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 17 April,
2018/Deputy head of the Higher Criminal Court in Iraq, Judge Munir Haddad,
who attended the hanging of former ruler Saddam Hussein, revealed that the
fate of his body remains a mystery. He told Asharq Al-Awsat that after his
execution, his family requested his body so that he could be buried
according to Islamic rituals in his hometown of al-Awjah in the Salaheddine
province. Haddad, who at the time served as head of the Higher Criminal
Court, had presided over Saddam’s 2006 hanging and led him personally to the
gallows. “The Iraqi government at the time agreed to his clan’s request,” he
added. Two members of the clan were present to receive his body and it was
indeed transported to al-Awjah onboard an American helicopter. Commenting on
reports about Saddam's secret grave, Haddad said: “I have no knowledge about
claims that his corpse had been removed or that his mausoleum was blown
up.”There were also rumors that his daughter had taken the decision to bury
him in another location. “Our role ended with his execution and the transfer
of his body to his family at their request,” stressed Haddad. “We were more
forgiving than him because we turned him over after he was executed. He, on
the other hand, executed our relatives and used to bury them in mass
graves,” he remarked. Sheikh Ahmed al-Enzi of the
Salaheddine elders council told Asharq Al-Awsat that Saddam’s family moved
his corpse to a secret location before the ISIS terrorist group occupied the
region. He said it was not clear if it was relocated due to fears over what
ISIS could do to the corpse. “The motive for the
move is known by very few members of his clan,” he stated.
Moreover, he said that the mausoleum where he was originally buried
had turned into a form of pilgrimage site for his supporters. The site was
later blown up by ISIS, Enzi said, but Saddam’s remains were not there at
the time. At Saddam's grave, the Popular
Mobilization Forces (PMF), tasked with security in the area, said the
mausoleum was destroyed in an Iraqi air strike after ISIS posted snipers on
its roof, said an Agence France Presse report.
Sheikh Manaf Ali al-Nida, a leader of the Albu Nasser tribe to which
Saddam's clan belongs, said he was not there to witness the blast -- but he
is convinced that Saddam's tomb was "opened and blown up". He did not
specify who he believes is behind the attack “because we know nothing of al-Awjah
since we departed it.” He currently resides in Erbil in Kurdistan.
Al-Awjah has been completely depleted of its residents and it is
being guarded by the PMF. No one is allowed into the town without prior
authorization. Saddam's clan was forcefully
displaced from the area, he charged. “We have been wronged and are still
being wronged because we are Saddam's relatives. Should generation after
generation keep paying the price of being his relative?”Jaafar al-Gharawi,
the PMF security chief, insisted that Saddam’s “body is still there."One of
his fighters, however, speculated that Saddam's exiled daughter Hala had
flown in on a private plane and whisked her father's body away to Jordan.
"Impossible!" said a university professor and longtime student of the Saddam
era, who declined to give his name. "Hala has never come back to Iraq," he
said. "(The body) could have been taken to a secret place... nobody knows
who moved it or where."If that was the case, Saddam's family would have
closely guarded the secret of the location, he added.
Saddam's tomb could have suffered the same fate as that of his father, at
the entrance to the village, which was unceremoniously blown up. But some,
including Baghdad resident Abu Samer, believe the Iraqi strongman is still
out there. "Saddam's not dead," he said. "It was one of his doubles who was
hanged."
Armenia's ex-President Elected PM in the Face of
Protests
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 17/18/Armenia's former president Serzh
Sarkisian was on Tuesday elected prime minister in a move the opposition
says is designed to extend his chokehold on power despite protests in the
impoverished country. Lawmakers backed the candidacy of the
Kremlin-supported veteran politician with 77 to 17 votes, after his second
and final term as president ended last week. The opposition denounced the
vote -- which makes Sarkisian Armenia's top leader under a new parliamentary
system of government -- saying the 63-year-old lacked popular support.
Earlier in the day, several thousand demonstrators marched through the
center of the capital Yerevan and staged sit-in protests outside government
buildings. Protesters blockaded the entrances to about a dozen government
buildings, including those housing the foreign ministry and the central
bank. A bigger protest was planned for Tuesday evening. Ahead of the vote,
Sarkisian blamed the opposition for rocking the boat. "Extinct volcanoes
should not wake up if we want to live in a prosperous Armenia, in a country
of the rule of law. And volcanoes will not wake up if no one provokes them."
'Start of velvet revolution'
Opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan urged Armenians to take to the streets en
mass. "I proclaim today the start of a peaceful velvet revolution in
Armenia," he told a rally in Yerevan earlier in the day, calling on
supporters to "paralyze the work of all government agencies." Rallies were
also held in the country's second- and third-largest cities of Gyumri and
Vanadzor. Police said 14 demonstrators were briefly detained. On Monday
police used stun grenades as protesters sought to break through a barbed
wire cordon in the center of Yerevan in an effort to get to the parliament
building. Authorities said 46 people including six police and opposition
leader Pashinyan required medical help.
'Nothing good'
Student Irina Davtyan said she skipped lectures to join the protests. "My
generation -- my friends and me -- are against Serzh Sarkisian and against
his government," she said on Monday. "He's been in power for 10 years and we
can all see that nothing good has come out of it."The spokesman for the
ruling party, Eduard Sharmazanov, has dismissed the protests as "the
opposition's artificial and fake agenda."Sarkisian, a shrewd former military
officer, has been in charge of the landlocked South Caucasus nation of 2.9
million since winning a presidential vote in 2008. He stepped down last week
after serving two consecutive presidential terms. He also held the office of
prime minister in 2007-2008. The country's new president, Armen Sarkisian,
was sworn in last week but his powers will be weaker under the new system of
government. Even though the two men share the same surname, they are not
related. The constitutional amendments were passed after a referendum in
December 2015, with some 63 percent of the voters backing the changes. After
the plebiscite, thousands of opposition supporters rallied in protest
against alleged mass violations at polling stations. Council of Europe
observers have said the referendum was marred by allegations of large-scale
vote buying and multiple voting, among other irregularities. Opposition
politicians say the shift to a parliamentary republic with a powerful prime
minister has been designed to increase Serzh Sarkisian's grip on power in
the impoverished Moscow-allied country. "Sarkisian wants to perpetuate his
rule," the leader of the opposition Heritage party, Raffi Hovannisyan, told
AFP. After Sarkisian was first elected in 2008, 10 people died in bloody
clashes between police and supporters of the defeated opposition candidate.
He won a second presidential term in 2013.
Six Dead in Iran Armed Clash near Pakistan
Border
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 17/18/Three
"terrorists" and three members of the Iranian security forces were killed
during night-time clashes along Iran's border with Pakistan, state news
agency IRNA reported on Tuesday. "At 0130 this morning (2100 GMT Monday], a
terrorist group from Pakistan attacked" a police post in the border area of
Mirjaveh, around 75 kilometres southeast of Three of the attackers were
killed along with a police officer and two members of the Revolutionary
Guards, it added. Iran has criticised Pakistan in the past for supporting
the Jaish al-Adl jihadist group, which it accuses of ties to Al-Qaeda and
carrying out numerous attacks in Sistan-Baluchistan. The restive province is
poor and home to a population that is predominantly Sunni and ethnic Baluchi,
in a country where 90 percent are Shiite and two-thirds are Persian. From
2005 to 2010, Sistan-Baluchistan suffered a prolonged insurgency by the
Balochi-Sunni jihadist group Jundallah, meaning "soldiers of Allah",
although violence was largely curbed after the killing of its leader in
mid-2010.
U.N. to Launch New Yemen Peace Roadmap within
Two Months
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 17/18/The United Nations' new peace
envoy for Yemen said Tuesday he will present a plan within two months to
re-launch negotiations to end the war but warned that missile strikes on
Saudi Arabia risked derailing the effort. Addressing the Security Council,
Martin Griffiths said a possible sharp escalation from the missile attacks
on Saudi Arabia and intensified fighting could "in a stroke, take peace off
the table." "My plan is to put to the council within the next two months a
framework for negotiations," Griffiths said in his first council report
since taking over as special envoy in February. The Saudi-led coalition
battling Yemen's Huthi rebels on Monday warned it was ready to inflict a
"painful" response if new attacks are carried out against Saudi Arabia.
Riyadh said last week it had shot down two Iran-supplied drones in the south
of the kingdom as well as interceptws ballistic missiles fired from
rebel-held parts of Yemen, the latest in a series of similar incidents.
Griffiths cited the increased number of ballistic missile launches,
intensified military operations in northwest Saada governorate, ongoing air
strikes and movements of forces in the Hodeidah region as worrisome
developments. "Our concern is that any of these developments may, in a
stroke, take peace off the table. I am convinced that there is a real danger
of this," said the envoy. War-wracked Yemen is the world's worst
humanitarian crisis, according to the United Nations, with 75 percent of the
population -- 22 million people -- in need of aid, seven million of whom are
at risk of famine. More than 9,200 people have been killed since the
Saudi-led alliance joined the Yemen war, according to the World Health
Organization. A severe cholera outbreak has also killed 2,000 people and
infected one million, the International Committee of the Red Cross said.
Trump Says Kim
Meeting 'Early June or Before That'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 17/18/U.S. President Donald Trump on
Tuesday revealed "five locations" were being considered for a landmark
summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un being scheduled for early June
or before. "Depending on various meetings and conversations we'll be having,
we'll be having discussions with Kim Jong Un very soon," Trump said as he
hosted Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at his Mar-a-Lago resort in
Florida. "That will be taking place probably in early June or before that
assuming things go well. It's possible things won't go well and we won't
have the meetings and we'll just continue to go on this very strong path we
have taken," Trump added.
Runaway Dubai Princess
'Brought Back' to Emirate
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 17/18/A Dubai princess who announced in
a video published in March she was fleeing the emirate has since been
"brought back", a source close to the Dubai government said Tuesday. "What I
can confirm is they took her and she was brought back," the source told AFP
by phone on condition of anonymity. The source said he did not know where
the royal -- 32-year-old Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum
-- was tracked down or by whom, only that she was now "with her family" and
"doing excellent". Sheikha Latifa, a daughter of Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed
bin Rashid Al-Maktoum, first appeared in a YouTube video in March,
announcing she was about to flee. "I'm making this video because it could be
the last video I make," she began. Dressed simply in a t-shirt with her hair
pulled back and sitting by a curtained window, the young woman appeared to
be filming the video herself. She said she was the daughter of the Dubai
ruler and an Algerian mother, Horriya Ahmed, and that she had tried to
escape in years past -- before she had access to the internet. "Pretty soon
I'm going to be leaving somehow and I'm not so sure of the outcome, but I'm
99 percent positive it will work. And, if it doesn't, then this video can
help me because all my father cares about is his reputation," Latifa said.
She said her leaving was "the start of me claiming my life, my freedom."Over
the past month, Latifa's cause has been taken up by a UK-based group called
Detained in Dubai, which claims to assist victims of injustice across the
United Arab Emirates. The group said the young woman attempted to flee Dubai
by ship, but the vessel was intercepted on March 4 -- less than 50 miles off
the coast of India. Detained in Dubai has since launched a vocal media
campaign on behalf of the royal. The source close to Dubai's government said
it was a "private matter" that had been "exploited" -- accusing rival Qatar
of fueling the campaign. "It is a domestic issue that transformed into a
soap opera that transformed into a rampaging scheme to tarnish the
reputation of Dubai and Sheikh Mohammed," the source said. He said Latifa's
three main companions who participated in the escape attempt -- a Finnish
woman and two French men, one with dual U.S. citizenship -- were wanted in
Dubai on previous charges.
Latest LCCC Bulletin
analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on April 17-18/18
The
Real Next War in Syria: Iran vs. Israel/الحرب
الحقيقية المقبلة في سوريا هي بين حزب الله وإسرائيل
Thomas L. Friedman/The New York Times/April 17/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/63931
SYRIA-ISRAEL BORDER, Golan Heights — Stop me if you’ve heard this one
before: Syria is going to explode. I know, you have heard that one before,
but this time I mean really explode. Because the U.S., British and French
attack on Syria to punish its regime for its vile use of chemical weapons —
and Russia’s vow to respond — is actually just the second-most dangerous
confrontation unfolding in that country.
Even more dangerous is that Israel and Iran, at the exact same time, seem to
be heading for a High Noon shootout in Syria over Iran’s attempts to turn
Syria into a forward air base against Israel, something Israel is vowing to
never let happen. This is not mere speculation. In the past few weeks — for
the first time ever — Israel and Iran have begun quietly trading blows
directly, not through proxies, in Syria.
And this quiet phase may be about to end.
Israel and Iran are now a hair-trigger away from going to the next level —
and if that happens, the U.S. and Russia may find it difficult to stay out.
Let me try to explain what is unfolding from a lookout post on the
Syrian-Israel border, where I stood a couple of days ago. To follow along at
home, I highly recommend this website, which tracks the multiple
interlocking Syrian conflicts in real time and is used by the U.N. observers
here on the Golan Heights.
Let’s start with the fact that the latest U.S., British and French cruise
missile punishment attack appears to be a one-off operation and the impact
will be contained. Russia and Syria have little interest in courting another
Western raid and raising the level of involvement in Syria by the three big
Western powers. And the three Western powers do not want to get more deeply
involved in Syria.
It is the potentially uncontained direct shooting war brewing between Israel
and Iran that is much more likely and worrisome, because it may be about to
enter round two.
Round one occurred on Feb. 10, when an Iranian drone launched by a
Revolutionary Guards Quds Force unit operating out of Syria’s T4 air base,
east of Homs in central Syria, was shot down with a missile from an Israeli
Apache helicopter that was following it after it penetrated Israeli
airspace.
Initial reports were that the Iranian drone was purely on a reconnaissance
mission. But the official Israeli Army spokesman, Brig. Gen. Ronen Manelis,
said Friday that the drone’s flight path and Israel’s “intelligence and
operational analysis of the parts of the Iranian unmanned vehicle” indicated
that “the aircraft was carrying explosives” and that its mission was “an act
of sabotage in Israeli territory.”
I have no ability to independently verify that claim. But the fact that the
Israelis are putting it out should raise alarm bells. If it is true, it
suggests that the Quds Force — commanded by Iran’s military mastermind
Qassem Suleimani — may have been trying to launch an actual military strike
on Israel from an air base in Syria, not just reconnaissance.
“This is the first time we saw Iran do something against Israel — not by
proxy,” a senior Israeli military source told me. “This opened a new
period.”
It certainly helps to explain why Israeli jets launched a predawn missile
raid on the Iranian drone’s T4 home base last Monday. This would have been a
huge story — Israel killed seven Iranian Quds Force members, including Col.
Mehdi Dehghan, who led the drone unit — but it was largely lost in the
global reaction to (and Trump tweets about) President Bashar al-Assad’s use
of chemical weapons two days earlier.
“It was the first time we attacked live Iranian targets — both facilities
and people,” said the Israeli military source.
(After the story appeared, the Israeli Army’s spokesman’s office disputed
the characterization and accuracy of the raid by my Israeli source, and
emphasized that Israel maintains its policy to avoid commenting on media
reports regarding the raid on the T4 airfield and other events. He would not
comment further.)
Russian and Syrian military officials both attributed the attack to Israel
and the Iranians not only openly announced their embarrassing losses through
the semiofficial Fars news agency — they have played down previous indirect
casualties from Israeli strikes in Syria — but then publicly vowed to take
revenge.
“The crimes will not remain unanswered,” Ali Akbar Velayati, a top adviser
to Iran’s supreme leader, said during a visit to Syria.
Since then, senior Israeli defense officials have let it be known that if
the Iranians were to strike back at Israeli targets, Israel may use the
opportunity to make a massive counterstrike on Iran’s entire military
infrastructure in Syria, where Iran is attempting to establish both a
forward air base, as well as a factory for GPS-guided missiles that could
hit targets inside Israel with much greater accuracy — inside a 50-meter
radius — and deploy them from Syria and with Hezbollah in Lebanon.
These defense officials say there is zero chance Israel will make the
mistake it made in Lebanon — of letting Hezbollah establish a massive
missile threat there — by letting Iran do the same directly in Syria.
Now you can understand why it is such a dangerous situation — even without
the U.S., French and British punishment for Assad’s use of chemical weapons.
Iran claims it is setting up bases in Syria to protect it from Israel, but
Israel has no designs on Syria; it actually prefers the devil it knows there
— Assad — over chaos. And it has not intervened in the civil war there
except to prevent the expansion of Iran’s military infrastructure there or
to retaliate for rebel or Syrian shells that fell on Israel’s territory.
I understand Iran’s security concerns in the Gulf; it faces a number of
hostile, pro-American Sunni Arab powers trying to contain its influence and
undermine its Islamic regime. From Iran’s perspective, these are a threat.
But what is Iran doing in Syria?
Tehran’s attempt to build a network of bases and missile factories in Syria
— now that it has helped Assad largely crush the uprising against him —
appears to be an ego-power play by Iran’s Quds Force leader Suleimani to
extend Iran’s grip on key parts of the Sunni Arab world and advance his
power struggle with President Hassan Rouhani. Suleimani’s Quds Force now
more or less controls — through proxies — four Arab capitals: Damascus,
Beirut, Baghdad and Sana.
Iran has actually become the biggest “occupying power” in the Arab world
today. But Suleimani may be overplaying his hand, especially if he finds
himself in a direct confrontation with Israel in Syria, far from Iran,
without air cover.
After all, even before this, many average Iranians were publicly asking what
in the world is Iran doing spending billions of dollars — which were
supposed to go to Iranians as a result of the lifting of sanctions from the
Iran nuclear deal — fighting wars in Syria, Lebanon and Yemen.
That is surely one reason Iran has not retaliated — yet. Suleimani has to
think twice about starting a full-scale, direct war with Israel, because of
another big story many people have not noticed: Iran’s currency is
collapsing back home. Consider this April 12 story on CNBC.com:
The Iranian rial “has plummeted to a record low amid growing economic and
political uncertainty, causing a rush to the banks as Iranians desperately
try to acquire U.S. dollars with exchanges forced to shut their doors to
prevent long and chaotic lines.” The rial has lost one-third of its value
just this year, the story noted.
Moreover, Israeli military officials believe Russian President Vladimir
Putin and Suleimani are no longer natural allies. Putin wants and needs a
stable Syria where his puppet Bashar Assad can be in control and Russia can
maintain a forward naval and air presence and look like a superpower again —
on the cheap. Iran’s President Rouhani probably also prefers a stable Syria,
where Assad has consolidated his power and that is not a drain on the
Iranian budget. But Suleimani and the Quds Force seem to aspire to greater
dominance of the Arab world and putting more pressure on Israel.
Unless Suleimani backs down, you are about to see in Syria an unstoppable
force — Iran’s Quds Force — meet an immovable object: Israel.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/15/opinion/war-syria-iran-israel.html
Israel hints it could hit Iran's 'air force' in Syria
إسرائيل تلمح إلى احتمال ضرب القوات الإيرانية الجوية في سوريا
Ynetnews/Reuters/April 17/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/63951
Escalating war of words pushes IDF and Rev Guards
closer to clash in Syria
تصاعد التهديدات الكلامية المتبادلة بين إسرائيل وإيران قد تؤدي إلى حرب بينهما
في سوريا
DEBKAfile/April 17/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/63951
Escalating war of words pushes IDF and Rev Guards
closer to clash in Syria
تصاعد التهديدات الكلامية المتبادلة بين إسرائيل وإيران قد تؤدي إلى حرب بينهما
في سوريا
DEBKAfile/April 17/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/63951
An unusual IDF communique Tuesday, April 17, divulged details of Iran’s UAV
bases in Syria and named their commanders, while the threats traded between
them gained volume. These disclosures and their tone stood in marked
contrast to the Israeli government and security chiefs’ strange silence and
passive acquiescence to Tehran’s steady buildup of its military assets in
Syria during the past two years. The information now released, much of it
available to DEBKA’s readers in the past, attests to the growing conviction
among Israel’s strategic leaders that Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) are
on the point of a military operation to punish Israel for its April 9 air
attack on the SyrianT-4 airbase, which left eight IRGC aerospace officers
dead, including Col. Mehdi Dehgan Yazdeli. The IDF is finally leveling on
the threat so as to prepare the Israeli public for what looks like an
inevitable military clash with Iran.
A leak to the New York Times and Israeli media on Monday incorrectly defined
the T-4 strike as Israel’s first live attack on Iranian commanders. In fact,
the Israeli air force struck a group of Iranian commanders on a secret visit
to Quneitra opposite Israel’s Golan border on Jan. 18, 2015, killing two
Iranian generals, Mohammad Ali Allah Dadi and Abu Ali al-Tabtabani. And in
the following year, on July 26, an Israeli rocket attack aimed at and missed
another secret visitor to Quneitra, Iranian Gen. Mohammad-Reza Naghdi.
Al Qods chief Gen. Qassem Soleimani is leading the preparations for the
first direct Iranian assault on Israel, not just by proxy. Soleimani is the
overall commander of Iran’s Middle East warfronts.
Iranian air force units in Syria are gearing up for the attack.
Military Il-76 freight planes, disguised as Iranian Simorgh Air and Pouya
Air commercial flights, are ferrying military equipment into Syria. The IRGC
air fleet is spread out in four Syrian bases outside Aleppo, Saiqal,
Damascus and T-4 near Homs.
Israel hints it could
hit Iran's 'air force' in Syria
إسرائيل تلمح إلى احتمال ضرب القوات الإيرانية الجوية في سوريا
Ynetnews/Reuters/April 17/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/63951
Spotting Iranian planes suspected of transferring arms in Syria, Israel
signals readiness to attack shipments should they pose a threat to national
security.
Israel released details on Tuesday about what it described as an Iranian
"air force" deployed in neighboring Syria, including civilian planes
suspected of transferring arms, a signal that these could be attacked should
tensions with Tehran escalate.
Iran, along with Damascus and its big-power backer Russia, blamed Israel for
an April 9 air strike on a Syrian air base, T-4, that killed seven Iranian
Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) members. Iranian officials have promised
unspecified reprisals.
Israeli media ran satellite images and a map of five Syrian air bases
allegedly used to field Iranian drones or cargo aircraft, as well as the
names of three senior IRGC officers suspected of commanding related
projects, such as missile units. The information came from the Israeli
military, according to a wide range of television and radio stations and
news websites. Israel's military spokesman declined to comment.
However, an Israeli security official seemed to acknowledge the leak was
sanctioned, telling Reuters that it provided details about "the IRGC air
force (which) the Israeli defense establishment sees as the entity that will
try to attack Israel, based on Iranian threats to respond to the strike on
T-4." The official, who requested anonymity, would not elaborate. Army Radio
reported that, given tensions with Iran over Syria, the Israeli air force
cancelled plans to send F-15 fighter jets to take part in the US-hosted
exercise Red Flag, which begins on April 30.
"Exposed"
Roni Daniel, military editor for Israeli TV station Mako, said the
disclosure was a signal to Iran that its deployments in Syria "are totally
exposed to us, and if you take action against us to avenge (the T-4 strike)
these targets will be very severely harmed". According to Daniel, Israel was
bracing for a possible Iranian missile salvo or armed drone assault from
Syria. There was no immediate response from the IRGC or Syria. The Iranian
death toll in T-4 was unusually high. "It was the first time we attacked
live Iranian targets—both facilities and people," the New York Times on
Sunday quoted an Israeli military source as saying.
Iran, Israel's arch-foe, has cast its military personnel in Syria as
reinforcements helping President Bashar al-Assad battle a seven-year-old
insurgency. The Iranians have also described their cargo flights to Syria as
carrying humanitarian aid only. An Israeli-Iranian showdown over Syria has
loomed since Feb. 10, when Israel said an armed drone launched from T-4
penetrated its air space. Israel blew up the drone and carried out a raid on
Syrian air defences in which one of its F-16 jets was downed.
"Israel is headed for escalation," Yaacov Amidror, former national security
adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told Tel Aviv radio
station 103 FM. "There could be a very big belligerent incident with Iran
and Hezbollah."While not claiming responsibility for the T-4 strike, Israel
has restated a policy of preventing Iran setting up a Syrian garrison.
Scores of previous such raids went unanswered but Israel worries that
changing conditions may now embolden Iran.
Russia, which long turned a blind eye to Israeli actions in Syria while
serving as a brake on retaliation by Iran or its Lebanese Hezbollah
guerrilla allies, is now at loggerheads with Western powers over
accusations, denied by Syria's government, that it has used chemical
weaponry in fighting.
Europe, Trump and the Iran Deal
Amir Taheri/Gatestone Institute/April 17/2018
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12169/europe-trump-iran-deal
If we were to go by Mogherini's or Westmacott's "commitment" to an unchangeable
"Iran Deal", Britain and France should have never denounced the "peace accord"
that Chamberlain signed in Munich in 1939.
However, the EU argument about "respecting signatures" on the Iran Deal has
another problem, because nobody signed anything.
Ironically, the only P5+1 member that has partially complied with the deal is
the US, including by Mafia-style smuggling of $1.7 billion cash to Tehran.
Earlier this month, the spokesman for the Iran Atomic Energy Agency told a press
conference that Iran's nuclear project was "going full speed ahead" with "new
and more ambitious plans under preparation."
The so-called "Iran nuclear deal," a witches' brew concocted by that most
deserving of Nobel peace laureates, Barack Obama, has furnished the theme of
many bizarre diplomatic twists and turns. The latest is an attempt by the
European Union to persuade President Donald Trump to renege on his campaign
promise to improve or scrap the deal.
During the past year, the EU's foreign policy point-woman, Federica Mogherini
has been collecting air-miles calling on world capitals to demand "commitment"
to the deal, as if this were an article of faith in an as-yet undefined
religion.
The EU's chief diplomat, Federica Mogherini, has been collecting air-miles
calling on world capitals to demand "commitment" to the "Iran Deal," as if this
were an article of faith in an as-yet undefined religion. Pictured: Mogherini
(left) stands with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, during her August 2017
visit to Iran. (Image source: European External Action Service/Flickr)
The retiring British Ambassador to Washington, Sir Peter Westmacott, has been
granting interviews to Iranian media, demanding kudos for having spent "much
time and energy" trying to persuade the US to stick by the deal.
Outgoing German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel also boasts about having spent
much energy in his final months in office "defending the deal" as a Crusading
knight protecting a holy relic.
And now is the turn of the French Ambassador to Washington, Gerard Araud, to
launch a Twitter campaign to persuade the Trump administration to "honor" that
most questionable item in Obama's legacy.
Basically, the Europeans advance four arguments.
The first, advanced by Westmacott, is that discarding the deal could damage the
credibility of the "major powers", that is to say Britain, France, Germany and
the US that signed it along with China and Russia.
There are two troubles with that argument.
The first is that it assumes that any diplomatic deal should be treated like a
Catholic marriage that one abides "til death do us part". Such an assumption
would mean the end of diplomacy as the art of responding to changing realities.
If we were to go by Mogherini's or Westmacott's "commitment" to an unchangeable
"deal", Britain and France should have never denounced the "peace accord" that
Chamberlain signed in Munich in 1938.
However, the EU argument about "respecting signatures" has another problem,
because nobody signed anything.
The so-called Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) is no more than a press
release stating a set of desirable moves by Iran and the P5+1 which,
incidentally, didn't include the EU as such. Moreover, there are significant
differences between the JCPOA's English and Persian versions, making various
imaginative re-readings, à la Roland Barthes or Jacques Derrida, possible.
Mogherini cannot claim respect for "signatures" which never happened and that,
had they happened, would not have included the EU.
The second argument is that the deal is working and, thus, the dictum "if it
ain't broken why fix it" applies.
That assumption is not borne out by facts.
Iran and the P5+1 have either tried to circumvent or have brazenly broken their
promises.
Sir Peter, the retired UK diplomat, certainly knows that his government, in
violation of the deal, still refuses to allow the Iranian Embassy to open a bank
account in London. Nor has the UK government unfrozen more than $600 million in
Iranian assets.
The Germans and the French still refuse to issues export guarantees to firms
seeking trade with Iran. Huge memorandums of understanding are signed but put on
the back-burner, as Iran remains subject to sanctions by the United Nations, the
EU and US.
As for Russia, during an official visit to Iran last week, Chairman of the
Russian Duma Vyacheslav Volodin heard an avalanche of complaints.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has shown what he thinks of Iran, a supposed
ally notably in Syria, by his recent treatment of Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani in Ankara. At the end of a "summit" with Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, Rouhani demanded a on-on-one meeting with Putin. The Russian President
consented to a brief standing encounter that lasted around 8 minutes. Tsar
Vladimir had no time to sit down with the Iranian mullah for a cup of tea.
As for China, it says Iran could use its frozen assets, piled up through oil
exports to the People's Republic, only by buying Chinese goods.
Beijing even refuses to let the 3,000 or so Iranian students in China to receive
their stipends through banks, forcing the embassy to send people around to
distribute cash among the budding scholars.
Ironically, the only P5+1 member that has partially complied with the "deal" is
the US, including by Mafia-style smuggling of $1.7 billion cash to Tehran.
Iran, for its part, asserts that there has been no change in its nuclear
project.
Earlier this month, spokesman for Iran Atomic Energy Agency Behruz Kamalvand
told a press conference in Tehran that the Iran's nuclear project was "going
full speed ahead" with "new and more ambitious plans under preparation."
More importantly, Iran has managed to block international inspection of key
research and development centers by claiming they are military sites and thus
off limits.
Less than half of Iran's enriched uranium stocks have been shipped abroad, along
with 10 percent of plutonium accumulated at the Arak plant.
Last week, marking National Nuclear Day, Rouhani unveiled what he called "83 new
nuclear projects" as slaps in the face of the American "Great Satan."
Why should Mogherini or Araud beat their chests about a "deal" not honored by
either side?
The ambassador advances one last argument: If you scrap the "deal" how could you
be sure Iran will not go "full speed ahead" with its nuclear ambitions?
This is a casuistic argument: accept the bad for fear of getting the worse.
Since the JCPOA was unveiled Iran's national currency has fallen by some 40
percent to an all-time low against foreign currencies, including the Iraqi dinar
and the UAE dirham.
The Tehran government cannot regularly pay the salaries of its employees. Had it
not been for the cash smuggled and funneled by Obama, the mullahs would have
been unable to pay their military either. Right now, Tehran has difficulty
bankrolling the Lebanese "Hezbollah" and paying the salaries of Bashar
al-Assad's regime forces and civil service.
So the Obama "deal", as Trump said during his campaign, is a bad deal.
What Trump didn't say was that the "deal" was bad, both for Iran and the rest of
the world.
Araud would do well to re-read what Laurent Fabius, then France's Foreign
Minister, said in 2015: "France will not accept a deal if it is not clear that
inspections can be done at all Iranian installations ... We'll accept a deal,
but not any deal."
It was partly because of France's refusal to give the JCPOA legal status by
signing that the Obama "deal" was launched as an informal initiative.
Interestingly, Araud who now campaigns for the "deal" was appointed by Fabius,
who took care to have a pinch of salt about it.
Amir Taheri, formerly editor of Iran's premier newspaper, Kayhan, before the
Iranian revolution of 1979, is a prominent author based on Europe. He is the
Chairman of Gatestone Europe.
**This article first appeared in Asharq Al Awsat and is reprinted here with the
kind permission of the author.
© 2018 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.
Germany: Crackdown on Middle Eastern Crime
Families/"The state must destroy the clan structures."
Soeren Kern//Gatestone Institute/April 17/2018
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12177/germany-crime-families
Middle Eastern crime clans now control large swathes of German cities and towns
— areas that are effectively lawless and which German police increasingly fear
to approach. The crime families, which have thousands of members, have for
decades been allowed operate with virtual impunity: German judges and
prosecutors were unable or unwilling to stop them, apparently out of fear of
retribution.
"The police cannot win a war with the Lebanese because we outnumber them." —
Criminal clan members to Gelsenkirchen Police Chief Ralf Feldmann.
Peter Biesenbach, now Justice Minister of North Rhine-Westphalia, had repeatedly
called for an official inquiry to determine the scope of clan activity. Those
pleas had been rejected by his predecessor, because such a study would be
politically incorrect.
German authorities have launched a crackdown on Middle Eastern crime families in
Essen, a city in North Rhine-Westphalia where some 70 Turkish, Kurdish and
Arab-born clan members regularly engage in racketeering, extortion, money
laundering, pimping and trafficking in humans, weapons and drugs.
Middle Eastern crime clans now control large swathes of German cities and towns
— areas that are effectively lawless and which German police increasingly fear
to approach.
The crime families, which have thousands of members, have for decades been
allowed operate with virtual impunity: German judges and prosecutors were unable
or unwilling to stop them, apparently out of fear of retribution.
The nascent crackdown comes nearly a year after the center-right Christian
Democratic Union (CDU) won regional elections in North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW)
and replaced the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD), which, apart from
one legislative period, has ruled the region since 1966.
Observers say that the clans have become so powerful and ruthless that the
government's only solution is to wage all-out war to utterly annihilate the
clans. If the initial raid in Essen is any indication, however, the Middle
Eastern crime families in Germany have little to fear.
On April 12, more than 300 police officers, accompanied by dozens of customs,
tax and anti-money-laundering agents, searched nearly 100 commercial businesses,
hookah bars, gambling halls and betting offices in downtown Essen. After
questioning 600 individuals and searching 60 vehicles at checkpoints, police
arrested eight people, most of whom were wanted on open arrest warrants. Another
20 people were charged with drugs and immigration violations.
Many of the so-called Lebanese clans actually consist of ethnic Kurds from
Southeastern Anatolia who migrated to Lebanon in search of work, and then moved
to Germany during Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war. In Germany, they built parallel
societies based on tribal and clan customs and Islamic honor codes.
Many clan members receive unemployment benefits while they launder profits from
illegal activities through bars, restaurants and the used-car trade.
Police have been no match for the clans, whose members use cellphones to summon
backup support. Within moments, dozens of clan members form mobs to insult and
intimidate law enforcement officers.
"Respect for the police tends towards zero with these clans," said Arnold
Plickert, head of the GdP police union in NRW. "These people live in their own
parallel society and have no regard for the German constitutional state."
Focus magazine described the brute-force methods used by the clans to gain
control over the sports betting sector in Essen:
"Five years ago, three leading clan members harassed the operator of several
betting shops. They demanded 10,000 euros per month in protection money. In
addition, he was told to open two new betting offices for blackmailers and pay
another 150,000 euros. Moreover, he was told that he could not operate any
business in Essen without participation by the clans. If he refused to comply,
he would be killed.
"The businessman turned to the police for help but the investigation dragged on.
After a while the police stopped the telephone monitoring. The judge took three
years before scheduling the trial. In the end, the accused were found not guilty
for lack of evidence.
"Abdou Gabbar, the victim's lawyer, has now appealed the verdict: 'The
experience with the Essen police and justice in matters regarding the Al-Zein
clan was frustrating. The district court did not even want to translate the
incriminating telephone calls properly, and simply pronounced the defendants
free.'
"Further charges against the protagonists, including for insulting police
officers, were also dropped. The judge deemed the risk was too high that clan
members would riot in the courtroom."
Police guard the scene of a shooting murder in Essen, Germany, on April 9, 2016.
The murder was part of a bloody feud within a Lebanese clan. (Image source: WDR
video screenshot)
In nearby Gelsenkirchen, Kurdish and Lebanese clans are vying for control of
city streets, some of which have become zones that are off-limits to German
authorities. Senior members of the Gelsenkirchen police department have held
secret meetings with representatives of the clans to "cultivate social peace
between Germans and Lebanese."
According to a leaked police report, clan members informed Police Chief Ralf
Feldmann that "the police cannot win a war with the Lebanese because we
outnumber them." They added: "This applies to all of Gelsenkirchen, if we so
choose."
When Feldman countered that he would dispatch police reinforcements to disrupt
their activities, the clan members laughed and said: "The government does not
have enough money to deploy the numbers of police necessary to confront the
Lebanese." The police report concluded that German authorities must be realistic
about the actual balance of power: "The police would be defeated."
In Duisburg, a leaked report prepared for the NRW state parliament revealed that
Lebanese clans do not recognize the authority of the police and have divided up
neighborhoods to pursue criminal activities. Their members are males between the
ages of 15 and 25 and "nearly 100%" of them are known to police.
The report described the situation in Duisburg's Laar district, where two large
Lebanese families seem to have taken over control: "The streets are actually
regarded as a separate territory. Outsiders are physically assaulted, robbed and
harassed. Experience shows that the Lebanese clans can mobilize several hundred
people in a very short period of time by means of a telephone call."
Police say they are alarmed by the aggressiveness and brutality of the clans,
which are said to view crime as leisure activity. If police intervene, hundreds
of clan members are mobilized to confront the police.
"If this is not a no-go area, then I do not know what is," said Peter Biesenbach
(CDU), now NRW Justice Minister. Before assuming his current post, he repeatedly
called for an official inquiry to determine the scope of clan activity. Those
pleas were rejected by the previous NRW Interior Minister Ralf Jäger (SPD)
because such a study would be politically incorrect:
"Further data collection is not legally permissible. Both internally and
externally, any classification that could be used to depreciate human beings
must be avoided. In this respect, the use of the term 'family clan' (Familienclan)
is forbidden from the police point of view."
The new NRW Interior Minister, Herbert Reul (CDU), has pledged a course
correction: "We will not tolerate any illegal activities or parallel justice. We
have a zero-tolerance-strategy. We will use all means of the rule of law to
fight crime." How effective his strategy will be remains to be seen.
Ralph Ghadban, a Lebanese-German political scientist and a leading expert on
Middle Eastern clans in Germany, said that the only way for Germany to achieve
control over the clans is to destroy them. In an interview with Focus, he
explained:
"In their concept of masculinity, only power and force matter; if someone is
humane and civil, this is considered a weakness. In clan structures, in tribal
culture everywhere in the world, ethics are confined to the clan itself.
Everything outside the clan is enemy territory.
"I have been following this trend for years. The clans now feel so strong that
they are attacking the authority of the state and the police. They have nothing
but contempt for the judiciary.... The main problem in dealing with clans: state
institutions give no resistance. This makes the families more and more
aggressive — they simply have no respect for the authorities....
"The state must destroy the clan structures. Strong and well-trained police
officers must be respected on the street. In addition, lawyers and judges must
be trained. The courts are issuing feeble judgments based on a false
understanding of multiculturalism and the fear of the stigma of being branded as
racist."
An Emnid poll published by Bild on April 14 found that 51% of those surveyed
were worried about German no-go zones, areas where the state is unable or
unwilling to enforce the law; 77% said that they wanted the state to take more
forceful action against the clans.
"The state has not managed to get the problem under control," said Ghadban, the
clan expert. The reason for this is the prevailing political ideology: "The
police can only act as politicians allow. The multicultural atmosphere, in which
everything is to be tolerated, leads in practice to the fact that the clans are
not pursued."
**Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
© 2018 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.
Europe, Trump and the Iran Deal
Amir Taheri/Gatestone Institute/April 17/2018
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12169/europe-trump-iran-deal
If we were to go by Mogherini's or Westmacott's "commitment" to an unchangeable
"Iran Deal", Britain and France should have never denounced the "peace accord"
that Chamberlain signed in Munich in 1939.
However, the EU argument about "respecting signatures" on the Iran Deal has
another problem, because nobody signed anything.
Ironically, the only P5+1 member that has partially complied with the deal is
the US, including by Mafia-style smuggling of $1.7 billion cash to Tehran.
Earlier this month, the spokesman for the Iran Atomic Energy Agency told a press
conference that Iran's nuclear project was "going full speed ahead" with "new
and more ambitious plans under preparation."
The so-called "Iran nuclear deal," a witches' brew concocted by that most
deserving of Nobel peace laureates, Barack Obama, has furnished the theme of
many bizarre diplomatic twists and turns. The latest is an attempt by the
European Union to persuade President Donald Trump to renege on his campaign
promise to improve or scrap the deal.
During the past year, the EU's foreign policy point-woman, Federica Mogherini
has been collecting air-miles calling on world capitals to demand "commitment"
to the deal, as if this were an article of faith in an as-yet undefined
religion.
The EU's chief diplomat, Federica Mogherini, has been collecting air-miles
calling on world capitals to demand "commitment" to the "Iran Deal," as if this
were an article of faith in an as-yet undefined religion. Pictured: Mogherini
(left) stands with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, during her August 2017
visit to Iran. (Image source: European External Action Service/Flickr)
The retiring British Ambassador to Washington, Sir Peter Westmacott, has been
granting interviews to Iranian media, demanding kudos for having spent "much
time and energy" trying to persuade the US to stick by the deal.
Outgoing German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel also boasts about having spent
much energy in his final months in office "defending the deal" as a Crusading
knight protecting a holy relic.
And now is the turn of the French Ambassador to Washington, Gerard Araud, to
launch a Twitter campaign to persuade the Trump administration to "honor" that
most questionable item in Obama's legacy.
Basically, the Europeans advance four arguments.
The first, advanced by Westmacott, is that discarding the deal could damage the
credibility of the "major powers", that is to say Britain, France, Germany and
the US that signed it along with China and Russia.
There are two troubles with that argument.
The first is that it assumes that any diplomatic deal should be treated like a
Catholic marriage that one abides "til death do us part". Such an assumption
would mean the end of diplomacy as the art of responding to changing realities.
If we were to go by Mogherini's or Westmacott's "commitment" to an unchangeable
"deal", Britain and France should have never denounced the "peace accord" that
Chamberlain signed in Munich in 1938.
However, the EU argument about "respecting signatures" has another problem,
because nobody signed anything.
The so-called Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) is no more than a press
release stating a set of desirable moves by Iran and the P5+1 which,
incidentally, didn't include the EU as such. Moreover, there are significant
differences between the JCPOA's English and Persian versions, making various
imaginative re-readings, à la Roland Barthes or Jacques Derrida, possible.
Mogherini cannot claim respect for "signatures" which never happened and that,
had they happened, would not have included the EU.
The second argument is that the deal is working and, thus, the dictum "if it
ain't broken why fix it" applies.
That assumption is not borne out by facts.
Iran and the P5+1 have either tried to circumvent or have brazenly broken their
promises.
Sir Peter, the retired UK diplomat, certainly knows that his government, in
violation of the deal, still refuses to allow the Iranian Embassy to open a bank
account in London. Nor has the UK government unfrozen more than $600 million in
Iranian assets.
The Germans and the French still refuse to issues export guarantees to firms
seeking trade with Iran. Huge memorandums of understanding are signed but put on
the back-burner, as Iran remains subject to sanctions by the United Nations, the
EU and US.
As for Russia, during an official visit to Iran last week, Chairman of the
Russian Duma Vyacheslav Volodin heard an avalanche of complaints.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has shown what he thinks of Iran, a supposed
ally notably in Syria, by his recent treatment of Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani in Ankara. At the end of a "summit" with Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, Rouhani demanded a on-on-one meeting with Putin. The Russian President
consented to a brief standing encounter that lasted around 8 minutes. Tsar
Vladimir had no time to sit down with the Iranian mullah for a cup of tea.
As for China, it says Iran could use its frozen assets, piled up through oil
exports to the People's Republic, only by buying Chinese goods.
Beijing even refuses to let the 3,000 or so Iranian students in China to receive
their stipends through banks, forcing the embassy to send people around to
distribute cash among the budding scholars.
Ironically, the only P5+1 member that has partially complied with the "deal" is
the US, including by Mafia-style smuggling of $1.7 billion cash to Tehran.
Iran, for its part, asserts that there has been no change in its nuclear
project.
Earlier this month, spokesman for Iran Atomic Energy Agency Behruz Kamalvand
told a press conference in Tehran that the Iran's nuclear project was "going
full speed ahead" with "new and more ambitious plans under preparation."
More importantly, Iran has managed to block international inspection of key
research and development centers by claiming they are military sites and thus
off limits.
Less than half of Iran's enriched uranium stocks have been shipped abroad, along
with 10 percent of plutonium accumulated at the Arak plant.
Last week, marking National Nuclear Day, Rouhani unveiled what he called "83 new
nuclear projects" as slaps in the face of the American "Great Satan."
Why should Mogherini or Araud beat their chests about a "deal" not honored by
either side?
The ambassador advances one last argument: If you scrap the "deal" how could you
be sure Iran will not go "full speed ahead" with its nuclear ambitions?
This is a casuistic argument: accept the bad for fear of getting the worse.
Since the JCPOA was unveiled Iran's national currency has fallen by some 40
percent to an all-time low against foreign currencies, including the Iraqi dinar
and the UAE dirham.
The Tehran government cannot regularly pay the salaries of its employees. Had it
not been for the cash smuggled and funneled by Obama, the mullahs would have
been unable to pay their military either. Right now, Tehran has difficulty
bankrolling the Lebanese "Hezbollah" and paying the salaries of Bashar
al-Assad's regime forces and civil service.
So the Obama "deal", as Trump said during his campaign, is a bad deal.
What Trump didn't say was that the "deal" was bad, both for Iran and the rest of
the world.
Araud would do well to re-read what Laurent Fabius, then France's Foreign
Minister, said in 2015: "France will not accept a deal if it is not clear that
inspections can be done at all Iranian installations ... We'll accept a deal,
but not any deal."
It was partly because of France's refusal to give the JCPOA legal status by
signing that the Obama "deal" was launched as an informal initiative.
Interestingly, Araud who now campaigns for the "deal" was appointed by Fabius,
who took care to have a pinch of salt about it.
Amir Taheri, formerly editor of Iran's premier newspaper, Kayhan, before the
Iranian revolution of 1979, is a prominent author based on Europe. He is the
Chairman of Gatestone Europe.
**This article first appeared in Asharq Al Awsat and is reprinted here with the
kind permission of the author.
© 2018 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.
German Mass Migration: A No-Win Situation?
Stefan Frank//Gatestone Institute/April 17/2018
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12052/german-mass-migration
In October 2017, Salzgitter was the first city to impose immigration
restrictions: It will not accept any additional refugees.
"I see it every day: 'Woman, step aside!' The elderly, who are often severely
handicapped, stand no chance to compete." — Norbert Reinartz, a volunteer with
the Essener Tafel food bank.
Faced with unchecked mass immigration, it seems, more and more people and
institutions in Germany feel compelled to draw their own borders.
The recent decision of Essener Tafel, a food bank in the city of Essen, Germany,
temporarily to stop issuing membership cards to non-Germans has triggered an
outcry among German politicians, journalists and activists, who have accused the
charitable organization of "racism". Serving about 16,000 poor people in the
industrial city of Essen, Essener Tafel is one of the biggest charities in
Germany, operated by volunteers only.
Essener Tafel's announcement read:
"Due to the increase in the number of refugees, the share of foreign fellow
citizens among our customers has increased to 75 percent. To guarantee a
reasonable integration, we see ourselves forced currently to accept only
customers with a German passport."
A board member of Essener Tafel told the weekly Die Zeit that the five-member
board had discussed and changed the wording of these two sentences "for hours...
until no one had an objection". Neither had there been any criticism from the
migrants who had to be sent away or among other charities with which the Essener
Tafel cooperates, he said.
It was clear that the measure would not affect existing clients and was supposed
to remain in place only as long as it took to restore the balance between
Germans and migrants -- supposedly only a few weeks. This goal was reached in
mid-April: As the share of German customers had climbed from 25 to 56 percent,
Essener Tafel announced a new policy: From now on, in it will give priority to
senior citizens, disabled people, families with minors, and single parents,
without regard to nationality. Still, scores of politicians and journalists
expressed their moral outrage on Twitter.
Karl Lauterbach, an MP for the Social-Democratic Party (SPD) and the party's
healthcare expert, tweeted: "Hunger is the same for everybody. Too bad,
xenophobia has arrived among the most poor."
Berlin's Secretary for Integration, Sawsan Chebli (SPD) tweeted: "I'm shivering.
Food only for Germans. Migrants excluded."
Chancellor Angela Merkel -- who needed a whole year to express her condolences
to the relatives of the victims of Berlin's jihadist massacre in December 2016
-- immediately gave a television interview in which she berated the decision as
"not good". One "should not use such categorizations", she advised; instead,
"one should look for good solutions".
Dunja Hayali, a television presenter with Germany's public broadcaster ZDF,
tweeted: "It's not very smart to organize hunger games at the bottom of society
and pit Germans against foreigners." (The Hunger Games is an American science
fiction trilogy of novels -- and films based on the novels -- that feature a
televised event in which participants are forced to fight to the death in a
dangerous arena.")
As the the philosopher and theologian Richard Schröder pointed out in a
commentary in the daily Die Welt, food banks are "no soup kitchens... their goal
is not to fight hunger". The food banks were created to avoid the moral calamity
of throwing perfectly edible food, which for any reason cannot be sold, to the
garbage. At the same time, they enable poorer -- but certainly, in the case of
Germany, not "hungry" -- people to spend money they would otherwise spend on
food on other goods. Or, in the case of asylum seekers, to send more money to
their home countries. Recently, Die Welt reported about a Syrian refugee who
sends as much as 300 euros ($400) a month of his welfare benefits to his family
in Syria.
Jörg Sartor, chairman of the Essener Tafel and the focus of the fury, explained
that the measure was necessary to restore a "balance" between Germans and
foreigners, one that was more representative of the population at large. Since
2015, when Chancellor Angela Merkel opened Germany's borders to more than a
million migrants from Africa, Asia and the Middle East, the migrants' quota
among Essener Tafel clients has increased from 35% to 75%. That means, of
course, that there is less food for German families. It was not this shortage,
however, that compelled the organization to change its policy. According to
Sartor, he and the other volunteers had observed that a "large number" of local
elderly women and single mothers had stopped coming in for food:
"The German grandma is crowded out because she feels uncomfortable among the
foreign men in the queue who all speak Arabic... Would your mother, when she
leaves the streetcar on a Wednesday and sees 50 Arabs, join the queue?"
If there was only one troublemaker, Sartor said, he could sort him out. "But
they're a pack." The journalist commented: "Sartor doesn't care about diplomatic
language."
A female client of the Essener Tafel told a journalist that many Arab men just
walked past the queue and "pretend that they don't understand German". Another
woman said that she had stopped coming for a while because she had been tired of
the "pushing and shoving". Her daughter added: "This is really bad. The men who
cut the line don't even react when they are spoken to."
Norbert Reinartz, a volunteer with the Essener Tafel, said:
"What has been written, is not made up out of thin air. I see it every day:
'Woman, step aside!' The elderly, who are often severely handicapped, stand no
chance to compete."
Another volunteer said that he didn't "feel in the mood" to resort to "physical
force to restore law and order".
Some migrants seemed to share a "give-me gene" and could not understand
Germany's "queuing culture", Sartor said. He thinks that they could "learn to
adopt this mentality" if there was a "German majority setting an example". Even
at school or in kindergartens, he said, integration only worked in mixed groups.
"If 90 percent of the group don't speak German, there is no integration."
Although the recent media coverage revealed that problems at the food banks are
widespread, there were, until now, few reports. An exception was the food bank
in Bochum-Wattenscheid, where problems spiraled so out of control in February
2015 that 300 out of 430 volunteers quit. The local newspaper, back then, quoted
the director of Wattenscheider Tafel, Manfred Baasner, as saying:
"Our volunteers get insulted and sworn at. We are insulted because some bananas
have brown spots. There's scrambling and shoving, the elderly and children are
pushed aside. There's an aggressiveness and sense of entitlement that drives me
crazy."
Baasner said that he was "afraid to say" that it was "almost entirely people
from Southeastern Europe and exceedingly also refugees" who behaved that way. A
volunteer described the situation: "I gave three apples to a young immigrant.
When I told him that other people wanted apples, too, he brutally hit me in the
face."
While politicians of the ruling CDU and SPD parties unequivocally condemn
Sartor's decision, polls show that more than 60% of the German population
support it, while only 27% percent think it was wrong.
Sartor says that he had always voted for the center-left SPD party: "My father
was the SPD spokesman in Gelsenkirchen, my whole family is SPD." But now the SPD
was pushing him "in a completely different direction", he said, adding that the
anti-immigration party Alternative for Germany (AfD) was "no alternative" for
him and that he had sent away a party representative who had asked to meet him.
The HuffPost German edition stressed that "the case of Jörg Sartor is
symptomatic for the failure of the SPD... It shows how the party alienates its
core voters."
A column in the Frankfurter Allgemeine daily pointed out that the food banks'
problems with migrants "don't fit into the fairy tale ideal of all those who are
never faced with such problems". Indeed, Sartor has an entirely different social
and cultural background than almost everybody who criticized him. Most
high-ranking German politicians have never held a job outside the political
sphere. The SPD healthcare expert Karl Lauterbach, for instance, attended
top-notch centers of learning such as Harvard Medical School -- but has never
practiced as a doctor. Andrea Nahles, the new SPD chairwoman, started her
political career at the age of 18 and never held any job at all, until, in 2013,
Chancellor Merkel appointed her Minister of Labor. Sartor, on the other hand,
worked for more than 30 years as a coal miner, 1,100 meters below the surface of
the Earth. When he retired at the age of 49, he wanted to do something "that
made sense". He joined the food bank 13 years ago because he wanted to "carry
boxes" and "be among people". After just one year, he was elected chairman. "I'm
not a do-gooder, I'm no Mother Teresa, and I'm certainly no refugee aid worker",
he said.
Even though Sartor's opponents are a minority, they make headlines. Countless
media outlets reported that the ADD, a minor German political party with ties to
the AKP Party of Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, had filed a criminal
complaint against Essener Tafel, arguing that it was guilty of "tax evasion"
because it could "no longer be regarded as a charity". This step had been
"necessary", party spokesman Recep Dadas said, "because we are disappointed by
the lack of moral courage shown by Essen's citizens".
HuffPo reported that the grocery chains which donate food to Essener Tafel now
had to "justify" themselves for doing so. On the Facebook page of the EDEKA
grocery chain, a user wrote:
"For more than a week, there has been exclusion and racism at Essener Tafel.
When do you finally comment on this issue? How do you want to explain to
employees with a migrant background that you still cooperate with such an
organization?"
At the end of February, activists with "Refugees Welcome" banners held a protest
rally in front of Essener Tafel's headquarters. Andreas Brinck, one of the
protesters, said:
"We're here to criticize a racist and discriminatory measure. This is against
the Constitution. We are especially upset because the mayor and the head of the
social welfare department tolerate it."
During one of the the previous nights, vandals had sprayed "Nazis" and "FCK NZI"
on the food bank's entrance and on six of the seven trucks that carry the food
for the needy. Asked for a comment, Sartor said: "If they don't like me, fine,
but it's an infamy to defame the volunteers." He announced that he would not
remove the graffiti. "Everyone shall see this," he said.
In the meantime, more and more German cities have declared themselves unable to
host more migrants. In October 2017, Salzgitter in Lower-Saxony was the first
city to impose immigration restrictions: It will not accept any additional
refugees. Wilhelmshaven and Delmenhorst, Cottbus, Eschweiler and Pirmasens
followed suit. Faced with unchecked mass immigration, it seems, more and more
people and institutions in Germany feel compelled to draw their own borders.
**Stefan Frank is a journalist and author based in Germany.
© 2018 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.
Hungary and the War on Immigrants
Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg/April 17/18
To win parliamentary elections last weekend, Hungary's ruling party, Fidesz, ran
a single-issue campaign against immigrants. That may seem strange in a country
with one of the lowest shares of foreign-born population in the developed world
and a fertility rate below even the abysmal European average. But it wasn't a
response to demographic facts; it was a cultural crusade that has made Hungary
the least refugee-friendly country in Europe.
Hungary isn't really an anti-immigrant country. In 2016, the latest year for
which official data are available, 23,803 foreigners moved there, and the
numbers have been stable since before Prime Minister Viktor Orban came to power
in 2010. Fewer than half of the migrants were European Union citizens.
That's not a large number by rich-country standards, but it's not a small one,
either; Portugal — like Hungary, a country of 10 million people — took in only
15,100 foreign nationals that year. Besides, the Orban government ran, until
March, 2017, a much-criticized residency bond program targeted largely at
Asians. For a 300,000-euro ($370,000) investment in Hungarian government bonds,
permanent residency could be obtained, and 20,000 people signed up between 2013
and 2017, helping enrich a group of politically connected individuals who ran
officially appointed intermediary firms.
Orban's Hungary, however, is fiercely against a certain kind of immigrant.
"We've been living next to Islam and with Islam for 500 years and we know it's
not going to integrate," government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs told me in an
interview this week. "We treat it as a civilizational problem."
According to Kovacs, Muslim immigrants create "parallel societies" in the
European countries that receive them, and Hungarians want none of that. Indeed —
though it may be the result of relentless government propaganda — according to a
2016 Pew Research study, 72 percent of Hungarians have a negative view of
Muslims in their country, compared with the EU average of 43 percent.
According to Gabor Gyulai, refugee program director at the Hungarian Helsinki
Committee, the only group in Hungary that provides free legal assistance to
refugees, Fidesz was energized when people from war-torn Middle Eastern
countries started pouring across the Serbian border in 2015 on their way to
Germany and Scandinavia. "They'd just been re-elected in 2014, but their
popularity was going down because of corruption and other scandals," Gyulai
said. "So they found this topic, and they've been abusing it ever since."
Gyulai said that government propagandists even coined a negatively connotated
word — migráns — to avoid using more neutral, perhaps even sympathy-inducing
words like "immigrant" or "refugee." Hungary, after all, had itself produced
hundreds of thousands of refugees during the Communist era.
Keeping xenophobia levels high can be a problem in itself. It rubs off, for
example, on the local Roma population, which the Orban government is working to
integrate. Roma are among the biggest beneficiaries of Hungary's public works
program that has given work to more than 160,000 long-term unemployed. The Pew
study, meanwhile, shows that 64 percent of Hungarians have a negative view of
Roma.
But perhaps the biggest problem with the Orban government's relentless focus on
Muslim immigration is the pain it inflicts on asylum seekers. According to
Gyulai, the government has completely dismantled the country's asylum system.
Since the refugee crisis began, Hungary has erected a fence on its border with
Serbia. Its preferred method of dealing with people who somehow get through is
to "escort" them to the other side of the fence from wherever within Hungary the
undocumented immigrant has been caught.
This is not a formal expulsion process that leaves a paper trail: You're found
without a visa, driven to the fence, pushed into Serbia and that's that. The
term the Helsinki Committee uses for this extrajudicial procedure is "pushback";
according to Hungarian police data, 9,136 people were "escorted" to the other
side of the fence last year.
Trying to get into Hungary to apply for asylum is increasingly useless.
Thousands of people stranded in Serbia would attempt it, but the Hungarian
authorities are setting arbitrary daily quotas for asylum seekers allowed to
cross to the Hungarian side of the fence. According to Gyulai, the initial quota
was 50. Now it's down to one person. "If a family of five is let in, no one else
can come in all week," Gyulai says.
Once they're admitted into Hungary, the applicants are detained for the duration
of the application process in container compounds surrounded by razor wire.
There's nothing for them to do, barely any moving space in the containers, and
the temperatures in them can go up to 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees
Fahrenheit) in summer. Media and nongovernmental organizations aren't allowed
into the compounds. Conditions are so inhumane that the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees on Wednesday called on European countries not to send
any asylum seekers to Hungary under the so-called Dublin system, under which one
must apply for refugee status in the first EU country one enters.
In most cases, weeks or months in a shipping container — 101 people live like
this in Hungary now, according to the UNHCR — will be wasted. The rejection rate
in Hungary last year was 70 percent for Afghans (they're told they can move to
safer regions within their own country), 74 percent for Iraqis and 60 percent
for Syrians.
Even the applicants who succeed can expect nothing from the Hungarian
government. They are given 30 days of rudimentary support in an open reception
facility strategically placed near the Austrian and Slovak borders. There are no
language courses or employment programs. The Hungarian authorities hope the
newly minted asylum recipients will just go away, and they do. Few stay the full
30 days.
The system is designed to last. I asked Gergely Gulyas, head of the Fidesz
faction in the Hungarian parliament, why the government was so worried about
migrants to a relatively poor country when more attractive destinations are
available for them. "Our living standard is about 69 percent of the Western
European one," he replied. "When it gets to 80 percent, it'll become a problem,
and we don't want it."
The finishing touch is coming, probably in May, soon after the Hungarian
parliament reassembles. Fidesz, armed with a supermajority, aims to push through
what's been dubbed the "Stop Soros package," which would crack down on
nongovernmental organizations that help migrants. The Orban government accuses
Soros, the financier and philanthropist, of hatching an evil plan to flood
Europe with immigrants to undermine national cultures.
If the legislation takes effect as drafted, the groups will be forced to obtain
licenses from the government to "help immigration" — a process Gyulai doubts his
group will be able to complete. Even if it succeeds, it'll have to pay a 25
percent tax on all foreign contributions, including not just contributions from
Soros charities, but also from EU and UN organizations. The group's lawyers, who
helped 234 clients get asylum last year (out of the total of 1,216 who received
protection in Hungary), could be banned from the detention camps and even the
border area.
Even though various European and international institutions have condemned
Hungary, the Orban government is willing to take a stand. To the Orbanites, it's
a matter of national sovereignty, the core of their political creed.
I asked Kovacs why the government couldn't make a deal with the EU, relieve the
political pressure it faces, and let in a couple of thousand refugees who could
easily be absorbed. He would have none of it. "All trouble always looks minor
when it starts," he said. "We can't have our ability to decide for ourselves
gradually eroded."
I doubt that international pressure can achieve much except provoking Orban step
up his anti-refugee, anti-Muslim and anti-NGO campaigns. It won't make
Hungarians nicer to the kind of newcomers they do not want.
The only possible solution to the Hungarian refugee issue is political: Not even
Orban can hold on to power forever. A more welcoming culture is a matter of
political change. Absent such change, the government will keep asserting its
sovereignty. Any reluctant concessions it could make to EU governing bodies and
courts will be matched by further restrictive measures.
The best other European countries can do is demonstrate that Muslim immigrants
can be successfully integrated to society's benefit. It's a long game, but if it
goes well, hard evidence will eventually convince those who don't understand yet
that, unaided, Europe's aging demographics are unsustainable.
The West Still Stands for Something Exceptional
Hugh Hewitt/The Washington Post/ April 17/18
Last Monday “the lede” was a trade war with China. Then the Justice Department
seized Trump attorney Michael Cohen’s files, then Mark Zuckerberg came to town,
then House Speaker Paul D. Ryan announced his retirement, then CIA Director Mike
Pompeo had his (very successful) hearings to become secretary of state, then
former FBI director James B. Comey began his book PR blitz and the Justice
Department’s inspector general tore into former Comey deputy Andrew McCabe.
Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein told key staffers he expected to be
fired, and the buzz was that if the deputy AG went, then Attorney General Jeff
Sessions might be going, too.
And then the United States, Britain and France called out Russia in the UN
Security Council — and smashed three of Bashar al-Assad’s WMD sites to
smithereens with a display of military prowess and precision that reminded the
world that America and its allies are not to be ignored when “red lines” are in
play.
Last Monday “the lede” was a trade war with China. Then the Justice Department
seized Trump attorney Michael Cohen’s files, then Mark Zuckerberg came to town,
then House Speaker Paul D. Ryan announced his retirement, then CIA Director Mike
Pompeo had his (very successful) hearings to become secretary of state, then
former FBI director James B. Comey began his book PR blitz and the Justice
Department’s inspector general tore into former Comey deputy Andrew McCabe.
Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein told key staffers he expected to be
fired, and the buzz was that if the deputy AG went, then Attorney General Jeff
Sessions might be going, too.
And then the United States, Britain and France called out Russia in the U.N.
Security Council — and smashed three of Bashar al-Assad’s WMD sites to
smithereens with a display of military prowess and precision that reminded the
world that America and its allies are not to be ignored when “red lines” are in
play.
Jammed together into six days, it all makes the first few chapters of Genesis
look like slow pacing.
The danger is what my friend Bill Bennett used to warn about: the problem of
scale. Americans are losing the ability to be other than breathless and, along
the way, the ability to distinguish between orders of magnitude.
Thus all stories get thrown in a hopper and some editor, producer or host has to
try and make a show rundown or a front-page layout. It is easiest just to
concentrate on the president and ignore everything else, or to jam him into
every story, or to abandon scale and simply make every story feel big. The
casualty of that is the ability to detect genuine significance.
Not this weekend. One very big thing stands out: The West still stands for
something exceptional.
The United Nations’ Security Council meeting Friday was extraordinary. On many
levels, not the least of which were humor (Ambassador Nikki Haley telling her
Russian counterpart that she was in awe of his ability to say what he said with
a straight face) and absurdity (Bolivia’s ambassador lecturing the French on
their revolution of 1789 and the Brits on the Magna Carta). Most striking,
though, was the tone of outrage from the Western ambassadors — an outrage long
missing from Western rhetoric and finally delivered first with words and then
with missiles and bombs. The United States has its scandals and its loud,
confusing, divisive and great-for-ratings president, but far more important than
he, or his successors, the United States has its principles. Central among them
is commitment to the rule of law and to the restraining of tyrants and
barbarians.
We cannot always accomplish the restraining successfully, but we can and often
have, in the past two-plus decades — in Kosovo, Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and now
Syria — tried to encourage genuine progress, best understood as the ongoing,
incremental expansion of liberty and literacy in a growing number of stable
regimes in or aligned with the West. We have sometimes failed, but it is
important that we tried and keep trying.
We tried again this weekend, and the president’s choice, developed with a
national security team second to none in two decades, chose a path between the
twin dangers of too little and too much. The president thanked our allies and
our military when the strikes were, at least for a time, over. We should thank
him and his national security team of Vice President Pence, Defense Secretary
Jim Mattis, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr.,
CIA Director and Secretary of State-designate Pompeo and new national security
adviser John Bolton, Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats and Chief of
Staff John F. Kelly as well as their teams of professionals. However they got
there and whatever process they used, they got to the right place, along with
our allies.
The West will not allow use of weapons of mass destruction to go unpunished.
That was the lesson a year ago, the same lesson of 2003 and 2001, a lesson that
was not absorbed last year and thus was repeated with twice the ferocity. We
mean it. Really. Anywhere and always, at least as long as the West stays true to
its principles. That’s the big story. That’s the lede. Don’t bury it.
Syria War's Game Theory Is Too Complex to Predict
Eli Lake/Bloomberg/April 17/18
Some strategic games are too complex to be readily modeled, and when we see such
games in the real world that’s exactly when we should be the most worried.
That’s my immediate reaction to the situation in Syria and environs.
Consider the distinct yet interrelated clashes going on. Not only did the US
strike early Saturday at Syria’s chemical weapons facilities after the regime
used such weapons against its citizens in Douma. Tensions between Israel and
Iran have been escalating. It seems that Israel recently bombed Syria to limit
that country’s support of Iran-backed Hezbollah and to send a signal to Iran.
There has also been talk that Hezbollah concentrations in Lebanon will lead to
another conflict there. The situation in Gaza has heated up again, with Israeli
fire against Palestinian demonstrators leading to significant casualties. As a
sideshow to these struggles, US President Donald Trump declined to certify that
Iran was in compliance with its nuclear accord and may ditch the deal
altogether. In Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu’s government faces significant
corruption charges.
The situation between Iran and Saudi Arabia has been worsening, and their proxy
war in Yemen has assumed greater significance. Yemeni insurgents have been
firing missiles into Saudi Arabia. Also, the Kingdom has recently undergone a
major revolution, bringing about the new Saudi Arabia.
Other related stories involve the Turkish regime and its regional policies and
Arab displeasure at the shift of Qatar into Iran’s orbit. By the way, the US is
in the midst of restructuring its National Security Council, probably in a more
hawkish direction, and there is no confirmed secretary of state. Toss in the
recent Russian use of a nerve agent for an attempted assassination in the UK.
Some historical events are relatively easy to model with game theory: the Cuban
Missile Crisis, many of the Cold War proxy wars, the crisis over North Korean
nuclear weapons. In those conflicts, the number of relevant parties is small and
each typically has some degree of internal cohesion.
To find a situation comparable to the Middle East today, with so many involved
countries, and so many interrelationships between internal and external
political issues, one has to go back to the First World War, not an entirely
comforting thought.
The situation right before that war had many distinct yet related moving parts,
including the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, the imperialist scramble for
colonies, the prior Balkan Wars, a rising Germany seeking parity or superiority
with Great Britain, an unstable alliance system, an unworkable Austro-Hungarian
Empire, and the complex internal politics of Russia, which eventually led to the
Bolshevik Revolution.
What do we learn from the history of that time? Well, even if the chance of war
was high by early 1914, it was far from obvious that the Central Powers’ attack
on France, Belgium and Russia would be set off by a political assassination in
the Balkans.
Nonetheless, in sufficiently complex situations, chain reactions can cause small
events to cascade into big changes. In World War I, one goal behind the
assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand was to break off parts of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire into a new Yugoslavia. The empire responded by making
some demands on Serbia, which were not heeded, a declaration of war followed,
and the alliance system activated broader conflicts across Europe.
If you don’t quite follow how a single assassination, which was not even seen as
so important the day it occurred, triggered the death of so many millions, and
the destruction of so much of Europe, that is exactly the point. When there is
no clear way for observers to model the situation, a single bad event can take
on a very large significance and for reasons that are not entirely explicable.
In today’s Middle East, we also have a broadly festering situation across
multiple fronts, with many smaller players, lots of internal political struggles
and unstable political units, and commitments from some major external powers,
including the US, Russia, Iran and Turkey. I find that an uncomfortably close
analogy with 1914.
Optimists such as Steven Pinker might suggest that today’s situation in the
Middle East is more likely to converge into peace, or only limited struggles,
than a major war. But this is not just about the most likely outcome, it is also
about the expected value of what will happen. Even a small chance of a major
escalation probably makes this messy situation the No. 1 issue facing the world
right now.
And if you’re grumpy about the inability of social scientists or the news media
to explain it to you in simple terms, that is exactly why the situation is so
dangerous.
Ten Ways Russia Tries to Win Propaganda War
Amir Taheri/Asharq Al Awsat/April 17/18
After the Western military air strike against Syria, one fact is overlooked: the
two powers are already at war in the battlefield of propaganda. And, so far in
that battlefield, the two adversaries have adopted different tactics in pursuit
of their aims.
The Russian war plan is a classic example of disinformation (disiniformazia in
Russian) developed by KGB’s specialists in propaganda during the Cold War.
The war plan is aimed at undermining the credibility of the American narrative
regarding the use of chemical weapons by Syrian regime leader Bashar al-Assad.
Moscow’s narrative is spread through a vast media network controlled by the
Kremlin with significant audiences inside the Russian Federation and across the
globe. The message is amplified by an estimated 60,000 full-time “social media
soldiers”, pejoratively labeled “trolls”, in cyberspace in more than a dozen
languages.
Moscow’s narrative promotes 10 themes.
The first is that the chemical attack in Douma, close to Damascus, simply didn’t
happen and that the pictures and video footage posted on Internet were produced
by Assad’s opponents using actors, including children, to simulate a disaster.
Where such a claim is hard to sell, the Russians advance a second theme: We
don’t know with any certainty that there was any attack and, if there was one,
who was responsible for it.
When that claim, too, is questioned, Russia comes up with a third theme: Why not
have an independent investigation on the ground in Douma?
If one reminds Russia that it has already vetoed such an investigation, the
Kremlin plan switches to a fourth theme: An attack on Assad’s forces could lead
to a wider war, perhaps even the Third World War. In other words the choice that
we face is between doing nothing and risking a global conflagration. The fact
that numerous military, political and economic options remain between the two
extremes is brushed under the carpet.
A fifth theme, related to the previous one, is that intervention by Western
democracies could only lead to disaster as it has done in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The fact that the overwhelming majority of Afghans and Iraqis are safer, happier
and more hopeful than they were under the Taliban or Saddam Hussein is
forgotten. Also ignored is the fact that the West’s non-intervention in Syria,
has not prevented the deaths of over half a million people, more than twice as
many than those who died in the Western interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The Russian propaganda plan then switches to attempts at beautifying Assad’s
ugly regime. We are told that Bashar is a secular leader acting as barrier to
religious fanatics. However, the Syrian Constitution, written by Bashar’s father
Hafez, acknowledges Islam as the religion of the state and, in the past seven
years at least, the regime has used sectarianism as a weapon against its
opponents.
A seventh theme is that the choice in Syria is between Assad and ISIS and that
Assad deserves support because he has been fighting the fake Caliphate. However,
the fact is that Assad’s forces have had no more than four major clashes with
the ISIS forces, the largest in and around Palmyra. For years, Assad and ISIS
lived side by side, focusing attention on fighting non-ISIS opponents of the
Baathist regime. Russia and its Iranian sidekicks played no role in smashing
ISIS, which was destroyed by Iraqi, Western and Syrian Kurdish forces who ended
up controlling 90 percent of its territories in both Syria and Iraq.
The eighth theme is that a Western attack on pro-Assad targets could also hit
Russian forces and assets in Syria, forcing Moscow to retaliate.
However, US and Russia have a mechanism called Emergency Communication Channel (ECC)
through which they could coordinate actions likely to affect either of them in
Syria. The mechanism was used almost a year ago when the US attacked an Assad
air base after giving Russia warning to remove its personnel there. In any case,
Russia did not react when Turkey shot down one of its fighter planes. Nor did
Moscow rush to war when an American attack claimed the lives of dozens of
Russian military personnel, supposedly on private contract, in Syria. Despite
his penchant for braggadocio, President Vladimir Putin is a risk-averse player;
he stops if he hits something hard.
A ninth theme is built on the claim that Putin’s plan for stabilizing Syria is
already beginning to work and that, in time, Moscow will quietly nudge Assad
towards the exit. So, why heat things up by attacking Assad’s assets? This means
allowing hope to obliterate the reality of seven years of atrocity, including 14
instances of chemical attacks on civilians, by Assad’s forces.
The tenth theme is related to the ninth as it claims that Russia would rein in
Assad and prevent him from using chemical weapons again. But that is exactly the
same promise that Moscow gave in 2013, following it with the assertion that “all
of Syria’s chemical weapons stocks and production facilities” had been
destroyed. At the time President Barack Obama believed that claim, or feigned to
believe it, encouraging Assad to cross “the red line” again and again.
Josef Goebbels, Hitler’s propaganda guru, believed that a good disinformation
strategy is aimed at destroying facts by offering ever multiplying versions of
any event. That, he argued, would turn any fact into a “henid”, an effervescent
tablet that when thrown into water fizzes itself out of existence.
The current Kremlin “Disinformazia” is aimed at turning any account of the
recent chemical attack on Douma into a “henid”.
It has had some success as illustrated by Jeremy Corbyn’s opposition to Britain
taking any action against Assad.
“We simply don’t have all the facts,” says the UK Labor Party chief. He wants
“an independent investigation” and a UN Security Council resolution authorizing
any action.
Corbyn’s French counterpart Jean-Luc Melanchon warns against the risks of “a
broader war”. Perhaps even the Third World War?
Both imply that it would be better to do nothing. Problem is that such a
position gives Assad green-light to do more of what he has been doing for seven
years.
Confronting Iran, Israel key to regional stability
Abdel Aziz Aluwaisheg/Arab News/April 17/18
The Middle East has been plagued by instability for decades, but especially
since 2011 with the tumultuous events of the Arab Spring, which have led to the
death, injury or uprooting of millions of people in Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen
and elsewhere. The United Nations, World Bank and the Gulf Cooperation Council,
among others, have held countless meetings to try to restabilize the region, but
with only limited success.
One reason for the lack of success is outside meddling and these foreign powers’
lack of interest in workable solutions that could bring stability. The
instability created by the events of the Arab Spring gave Iran an opening to
extend its presence in those countries, and a return to stability would weaken
its influence. Similarly, instability in Israel’s neighbors made it easier for
the Israeli leadership to ignore entreaties by the UN and others to reach a
solution with the Palestinians. In turn, the lack of progress on the Palestinian
question was used as a pretext by Iran to bolster its regional footprint.
There was a remarkable event in Dubai last week, which saw hundreds of
politicians, academics, artists and journalists meet to discuss the conflicts
raging in the region. The candid discussions were organized by the Arab Thought
Foundation, the brainchild of Prince Khaled Al-Faisal, a statesman, educator,
poet, artist and sportsman.
This was the first event I am aware of that encouraged a public discussion of
these problems on such a large scale. It was given prominence by the
participation of luminaries such as Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum,
Prince Khaled and other high-level political leaders. Prince Khaled, who is
governor of the Makkah Region and special adviser to King Salman, started the
foundation in 2000 to serve as a non-governmental incubator for ideas on
literature, art, innovation, and politics. Using this mix, the foundation
dedicated its 16th annual conference in Dubai to “stabilization challenges
amidst regional turmoil.”
Sheikh Mohammed, the Ruler of Dubai and Vice President and Prime Minister of the
UAE, played host. Himself a renowned poet, Sheikh Mohammed fitted perfectly with
the highly intellectual crowd. Prince Bandar bin Khaled, the Arab Thought
Foundation chairman and a royal adviser with ministerial rank, acted as the glue
that held everything together. Like his father, Prince Bandar attended almost
every session from start to close. He was instrumental in sharpening the focus
of discussions and disciplining the sometimes emotional or frenzied discourse.
Over three days, participants deliberated on the causes of the crises in Syria,
Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen and Libya. They debated the apparent as well as the hidden,
underlying origins of conflict. Poverty, unemployment and the skewed
distribution of wealth and power were agreed to be the underlying causes of
instability, while flawed political processes in those countries failed to deal
with the economic and social challenges. Experts then explained how extremist
ideologies, as well as terrorist groups, take advantage of those distortions.
Participants got especially animated discussing the role of external players.
Iran was identified by most participants as the main malign force, and Israel
its evil twin. Turkey and Russia also came in for criticism for meddling. The
United States, Britain and Europe were criticized for sins of omission —
withdrawing from the region when the going got tough. The United Nations and
Arab League were dismissed as impotent organizations, as their influence has
been neutralized by internal disagreements.
After three days of discussing the roots of instability and conflict, a panel of
eminent politicians and experts was asked to identify the antidotes. Iraq’s Vice
President and former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi and ex-Lebanon PM and minister
of finance Fouad Siniora were among the speakers. All agreed that we need to use
a clever mix of tools to lead Arab societies back to stability. One of the
mistakes that compounded the problems was a reliance on brute force to address
essentially political and economic challenges.
The panel identified several parallel tracks for restoring stability. First, the
political process has to be inclusive, fair, transparent and accountable.
Corruption has to be fought and eliminated. Allawi emphasized the need for a
codified bill of rights for citizens.
Since 1979, Iran has been trying to export its revolution to the region. It has
managed to masquerade its imperial ambitions under the cloak of religion.
Second, economic opportunities have to be fairly distributed, without
discrimination, nepotism or favoritism. To provide adequate jobs for growing
populations, economic growth has to continue, which requires investment. For
local or foreign businesses to invest, countries have to reform their ways of
doing business.
Third, social cohesion has to be restored after decades where extremist
ideologies dominated and divisive sectarian discourse defined social relations.
Teachers, intellectuals and religious figures have to guide their societies to
regain their old traditions of civility, chivalry, generosity and tolerance.
The security track was agreed to be one of the most difficult to change, but
most urgent to address nevertheless. All agreed that fighting terrorism has to
continue, increase even. However, for the counter-terrorism fight to be
effective and sustainable, two prerequisites are necessary: Due process of law,
strictly observed, and the state must have a monopoly over the use of force. No
freelance militias should be allowed to usurp the role of the state. In Lebanon,
Syria, Iraq, Libya and Yemen, militias have frequently acted as states within a
state and thus undermined the fight against terrorism. No amount of reform on
the other tracks would be effective without disarming militias, it was
universally agreed.
The final and most difficult track was countering external actors, who thrive on
chaos and instability and would therefore fight attempts to restore stability.
All speakers agreed that Iran and Israel are the two most dangerous outside
actors because their interests are diametrically opposed to those of the people
of the region.
By effectively abandoning the two-state solution, Israel has embarked on a
collision course not only with Palestinians, but with all its neighbors.
Reversing that course is necessary for restoring and maintaining stability.
Revolutionary Iran is unique, it was universally agreed. Since 1979, Iran has
been trying to export its revolution to the region. It has managed to masquerade
its imperial ambitions under the cloak of religion. To succeed, it created deep
fissures in Arab societies along sectarian lines, so addressing those divisions
is key to reversing Iran’s meddling and countering its destabilizing activities.
Furthermore, Iran and its proxies frequently justify themselves as champions for
the Palestinians against Israeli aggression. That is another key argument for
the urgency of reaching a solution for the Palestine question.
• Abdel Aziz Aluwaisheg is the GCC Assistant Secretary-General for Political
Affairs & Negotiation, and a columnist for Arab News. The views expressed in
this piece are personal and do not necessarily represent GCC views. Twitter:
@abuhamad1