LCCC
ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
August 10/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
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http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/newselias18/english.august10.18.htm
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Bible
Quotations
What no
eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor the human heart conceived, what God has
prepared for those who love him’
First Letter to the Corinthians 02/01-10: "When I came to you, brothers and
sisters, I did not come proclaiming the mystery of God to you in lofty words
or wisdom. For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and
him crucified. And I came to you in weakness and in fear and in much
trembling. My speech and my proclamation were not with plausible words of
wisdom, but with a demonstration of the Spirit and of power, so that your
faith might rest not on human wisdom but on the power of God. Yet among the
mature we do speak wisdom, though it is not a wisdom of this age or of the
rulers of this age, who are doome.
Titles For The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published on August 09-10/18
Israel’s cabinet decides against a
new Gaza campaign to halt Hamas rocket aggression/DebkaFile/August 09/18
Ottawa mosque loses charity status for promoting ‘hate and
intolerance/Stewart Bell National Global News/August 09/18
US Was Right to Give China’s Navy the Boot/James Stavridis/Bloomberg/August
09/18
Iranian diplomat accused of running web of spies across Europe/Damien
McElroy/The National/August 09/19
Iranian regime is getting richer, at the expense of the poor/Dr. Majid
Rafizadeh/Arab News/August 09/18
Prospects of US-Iran talks now more remote than ever/Maria Dubovikova/Maria
Dubovikova/Arab News/August 09/18
Iran’s struggle for existence in the face of new sanctions/Sabena Siddiqui/Al
Arabiya/August 09/18
Is Iran in a ‘revolutionary’ situation/Hamid Bahrami/Al Arabiya/August 09/18
Saudi Arabia’s foreign files: Why worry from Riyadh/Fares bin Hezam/Al
Arabiya/August 09/18
Titles For The
Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
August 09-10/18
Hariri: Lebanon’s Interest Requires
Full Cooperation with UNIFIL
Lebanon: Legalizing Cannabis Cultivation Clamps Down on Drug Lords
Report: ‘Political Settlement’ between Aoun, Hariri ‘Unbroken’
Aoun Meets Del Col, Says UNIFIL Mandate Should Not Be Modified
Foreign Ministry Denies Refusing Kuwaiti Ambassador Accreditation
Adwan on Maarab Understanding Says LF ‘Kept its Word’, FPM Should Do Same
Russia Blasts 'Unacceptable' New US Sanctions
Berri, Hariri meet in Ain el Tineh over government formation
Loyalty to Resistance: Government formation delay risks 'slide toward
tension'
Sheikh Hamoud's office: We will remain committed to national security
Ibrahim meets new UNIFIL commander, MP Baarini
Sayegh Blasts 'Indifferent' and 'Merciless' Government Formation Approach
Abu Nader: Centralized Lebanese State Is 'Failed' and 'Ailing'
Titles For The Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on August 09-10/18
Boko Haram militants kill 17 Nigerian soldiers
Canada PM Does Not Back Down on Rights Defense in Saudi Spat
Saudi patients in Canada transferred to the US
Iraq PM Says will Abide by US Sanctions on Iran, President Raises Doubts
Syrian Troops Shell Idlib to Pave Way for Assault, Monitor Says
Syria Kurds Face Tough Talks to Preserve Autonomy
Iranian Opposition Group Reveals Details of Paris Bomb Plot against it
Colombia Recognizes Palestine as Sovereign State, New Government to Review
Decision
5 Australians Lose Citizenship over ISIS Involvement in Iraq, Syria
Saudi-Led Coalition Claims Deadly Yemen Attack
UN Plans Talks on Western Sahara before End of 2018
Rape-accused Tariq Ramadan loses latest bid to be freed from French jail
Israel’s cabinet decides against a new Gaza campaign to halt Hamas rocket
aggression
The Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on August 09-10/18
Hariri: Lebanon’s
Interest Requires Full Cooperation with UNIFIL
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 9 August, 2018/Prime
Minister-designate Saad Hariri has confirmed his country’s support to the
United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon and its full commitment to Security
Council Resolution 1701. During a meeting with the new UNIFIL Commander,
Major General Stefano Del Col, at the Center House on Wednesday, Hariri
lauded the peacekeepers' role in maintaining security and stability in
southern Lebanon, stressing that the country's "interest and territorial
integrity require full cooperation between the Lebanese authorities and
UNIFIL." "Lebanon looks forward to the extension of the UNIFIL mandate,"
said Hariri. He also "underlined the importance of the solidarity of the
international community on this issue, the continued support of UNIFIL and
securing the necessary environment to enable it to carry out its work to the
fullest." As the Security Council is set to consider next week the extension
of the mission's mandate, good relations with UNIFIL fall "in the interest
of Lebanon and stability in the south," the PM-designate told Del Col. He
also lauded ongoing coordination between the Lebanese army and UNIFIL in
implementing Resolution 1701. After the meeting, Del Col said: “It is my
first day as Head of Mission and Force Commander." "I assured Prime Minister
Hariri that we will follow the 1701 UNSCR and other resolutions about UNIFIL,"
he said. "UNIFIL has guaranteed the peace process and peace over the past
twelve years and the situation on the ground in south Lebanon. This is my
third term here in Lebanon. I arrived the first time in 2008, the second one
in 2014 and now in 2018.""I really came to follow UNSCR 1701 and the goal is
to reach a permanent cease fire,” Del Col added.
Lebanon: Legalizing Cannabis Cultivation Clamps Down on Drug Lords
Beirut, Baalbek - Nazir Rida, Hussein Darwish/Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 9
August, 2018/Drug traffickers in eastern Lebanon are watching with concern
proposals to legislate the cultivation of cannabis, since the bills
submitted by politicians will put an end to their influence. The
legalization process will prevent illegal trafficking and will change the
quality of the plant in which the hallucinogenic substances will diminish
for medical purposes. Moreover, drug dealers will be deprived of the
cannabis harvest, which will go directly to the pharmaceutical companies.
Proposals to legislate cannabis cultivation for medical purposes emerged
last month, based on plans that are expected to provide material revenues
that contribute to the development of the northern Bekaa region. The plans
were widely welcomed by the residents of the Bekaa Valley, although the
official proposals, most notably a proposal made the a member of the
Powerful Republic bloc, MP Antoine Habshi, calls for changing the type of
the plant that is currently grown in the Bekaa Valley. Habshi told Asharq
Al-Awsat that the proposal submitted late last month “will not legalize
drugs in Lebanon, meaning that they will not be available in the markets.
Instead, alternative agriculture will be used for medical purposes.”He
explained that the proposal was not to legislate the current seedlings
planted in Lebanon, which are hybrid plants that contain high levels of
hallucinogenic substances and narcotics, but to introduce new seedlings, and
will oblige pharmaceutical companies to monitor their cultivation according
to specific criteria. Habshi stressed that the bill “will put a final end to
the role of drug traffickers.” Member of the Baalbek-Hermel
parliamentary bloc MP Walid Sukkarieh has a different point of view. In
remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat, he said: “I have a personal opinion on this
subject apart from that of the bloc. I am against the cultivation of
anything called drugs, for the simple reason that we have no controls in
Lebanon; but if things go towards legislation, I will not stand in the
way.”Experts believe that the Bekaa region produces a good type of cannabis
for the pharmaceutical industry. In 2013, a number of experiments were
carried out by international organizations for the purpose of positive
cultivation of cannabis for medical uses. Around 400,000 square meters were
cultivated in cooperation with farmers. As the success of the experiment and
the quality of the plant were proven, a study proposed the establishment of
five manufacturing units, each of them capable of securing 300 jobs.
However, according to official sources in the Bekaa, the study “is left in
the drawers of the chamber of commerce and industry in Zahle.”
Report: ‘Political
Settlement’ between Aoun, Hariri ‘Unbroken’
Naharnet/August 09/18/The relations between President Michel Aoun and Prime
Minister-designate Saad Hariri “are not broken” and the political pact
between the two men that brought Aoun to the presidency post remains
“intact,” al-Mustaqbal daily reported on Thursday. Talks have gathered
momentum between Baabda Palace and the Center House, and sources have
“assured” that “some constructive meetings will take place in the next 48
hours” in order to facilitate the stalemates hampering the formation of the
government since the designation, the daily said. Meanwhile, it added that
visitors to Aoun “emanated positive vibes,” as they undermined claims that
the delay was the result of an early campaign for the post of presidency, in
light of media claims that Aoun’s son-in-law, Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil
has his eye on the position in the future. They also reflected the
President’s willingness to open channels of communication to facilitate the
formation process. Denying a break in relations between the two men, the
visitors told the daily that “contacts between Baabda and the Center House
are not broken. The political pact between them remains intact.”Hariri was
tasked with forming a new government on May 24. His mission is being
hampered by political wrangling over shares, especially over Christian and
Druze representation. In 2016, a political settlement led to the election of
Gen. Aoun as president and brought Hariri back to the premiership is still
intact.
Aoun Meets Del Col, Says UNIFIL Mandate Should Not Be
Modified
Naharnet/August 09/18/President Michel Aoun has met at Baabda palace the
newly appointed UNIFIL Force Commander Maj. Gen. Stefano Del Col, to whom he
maintained Lebanon's readiness to facilitate the peacekeepers' mission and
the implementation of UN resolution 1701, the National News Agency reported
on Thursday. “Lebanon is ready to provide whatever helps the UNIFIL carry
out its mission of preserving security and stability in the south, and
implementing UN Security Council's resolution 1701," Aoun told Del Col.
Highlighting the importance of extending the UNIFIL's mandate during a U.N.
Security Council session in New York later this month, Aoun stressed that
the “peacekeepers' term and scope of operations should not be
modified.”Highlighting the repetitive Israeli violations of international
resolutions, Aoun said that "Lebanon is looking forward for the contribution
of the UNIFIL to putting an end to the breaches."For his part, Del Col
highlighted the importance of coordination between the UNIFIL and the
Lebanese army to preserve calm and security in the southern border region.
Foreign Ministry Denies Refusing Kuwaiti Ambassador
Accreditation
Naharnet/August 09/18/Lebanon’s Foreign Ministry denied in a statement on
Thursday reports published in al-Akhbar daily claiming it rejected the
accreditation of a new Kuwaiti ambassador.“The ministry categorically
rejects al-Akhbar’s reports published on Thursday, August 9 claiming the
Lebanese ministry has rejected accreditation of a new ambassador of
fraternal Kuwait,” said the statement. It added: “The State of Kuwait has
decided a while ago to extend the term of its current ambassador in Lebanon,
Abdul-Al al-Qinai, which is a sovereign right to countries that the Lebanese
state has never opposed.” “Kuwaitis and Lebanese people have historic
relations rooted in the Arab conscience and stronger than any attempt to
undermine them,” it affirmed.
Adwan on Maarab Understanding Says LF ‘Kept its Word’,
FPM Should Do Same
Naharnet/August 09/18/MP George Adwan said the Lebanese Forces has kept its
word regarding the agreement with the Free Patriotic Movement, urging the
latter to “adhere to the (Maarab) accord” which brought President Michel
Aoun (FPM founder) to the presidential post. The Lebanese Forces “has
implemented an essential part of the Maarab Agreement regarding the
presidency, the other party cannot abandon the rest of the accord, it must
respect it,” said Adwan of the Lebanese Forces party in remarks he made
before the joint parliamentary meeting on Thursday. The 2016 “highly
secretive” Agreement was signed by FPM chief Jebran Bassil and LF leader
Samir Geagea and led to an inter-Christian reconciliation that paved the way
for the election of Aoun as president in Oct. same year. It tackled the May
parliamentary elections, the distribution of ministerial portfolios between
the two parties and the distribution of the first class jobs. It was brought
to public in July by the LF when tension escalated between the two parties.
On the delayed Cabinet line-up, Adwan said “we fully back the prime
minister-designate and have made many facilitations. The major problem is
internal and related to the sizes (of political parties). Another major
problem is that the FPM is confusing between its own Cabinet share and that
of the president.”The FPM insists the allocation of Cabinet quota separate
from that of Aoun, also founder of the FPM.
Hariri was tasked with forming a new government on May 24. His mission is
being hampered by political wrangling over shares, especially over Christian
and Druze representation.
Russia Blasts 'Unacceptable' New US Sanctions
Agence France PresseNaharnet/August 09/18/
The Kremlin on Thursday branded as "unacceptable" new US sanctions against
Russia over its alleged role in a nerve agent attack on a former spy, as the
ruble and Russian stocks tumbled. The action by the US State Department is
the latest salvo in a series of disputes between the rival powers, and comes
less than a month after US President Donald Trump met his Russian
counterpart Vladimir Putin in Helsinki. The State Department said Wednesday
the new sanctions were in response to "the use of a 'Novichok' nerve agent
in an attempt to assassinate UK citizen Sergei Skripal" -- who was a Russian
double agent -- and his daughter Yulia on English soil in March. They are
aimed at punishing Putin's government for having "used chemical or
biological weapons in violation of international law," spokeswoman Heather
Nauert said in a statement. But the punitive measures -- which were welcomed
by Britain -- triggered a furious response from Moscow. "We consider
categorically unacceptable the linking of new restrictions, which we as
before consider illegal, to the case in Salisbury," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry
Peskov told journalists. However, he added that "Moscow retains hopes
of building constructive relations with Washington". The ruble sank to 66.48
against the dollar, its lowest since November 2016, while the Russian stock
market index RTS dropped 3.2 percent and the MOEX nearly 1.2 percent at
around 0745 GMT, before rebounding slightly. Russian banks were also
affected, with shares in state-run Sberbank sliding 4.7 percent.
Threat of wider sanctions -The move could
cut off hundreds of millions of dollars worth of exports to Russia,
according to another senior State Department official, who requested
anonymity in order to speak about the sanctions. The official told reporters
that the administration decided to impose a "presumption of denial" for the
sale to Russia of "national security sensitive" US technologies that require
federal government approval. Such technologies have often been used in items
including electronic devices as well as calibration equipment. The exports
were previously allowed on a case-by-case basis.
In the event of non-compliance, the official added, a second round of
"draconian" sanctions would be given a green light. These could go as far as
a ban on Russian airlines using US airports. Shares in Russia's main airline
Aeroflot plunged by more than 10 percent but later rebounded. The latest US
action follows the Treasury's imposition of sanctions in March against 19
Russian citizens and five entities for interfering in the 2016 US election
-- the toughest steps against Moscow since Trump took office. Also in March,
Washington ordered the expulsion of 60 Russian diplomats, and the closure of
Russia's consulate general in Seattle.Moscow ordered 60 American diplomats
expelled in a tit-for-tat response.
- 'Provocative, reckless behaviour' - Britain said it welcomed the US
response to the chemical attack in Salisbury, the sleepy English town where
the Skripals were poisoned. A spokesman for Prime Minister Theresa May said
the sanctions send "an unequivocal message to Russia that its provocative,
reckless behaviour will not go unchallenged". "Thank you USA for standing
firm with us on this," Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt tweeted. This week,
Britain's the Guardian newspaper reported London is preparing to ask Moscow
to extradite two Russian citizens suspected of carrying out the Salisbury
nerve agent attack.
The Skripals survived the attack but a British couple was poisoned by the
same Novichok agent in a nearby town, one of whom, 44-year-old Dawn Sturgess,
subsequently died. Moscow has angrily rejected any involvement in the
poisoning, plunging diplomatic relations with London into crisis. The
Russian economy is still reeling from international sanctions imposed on
Moscow in 2014 over its actions in Ukraine and a crash in oil prices the
same year. While Russia returned to growth in 2017 after two years of
recession, it pales in comparison with growth figures seen during Putin's
first two terms in office from 2000 to 2008 thanks to soaring oil prices.
Berri, Hariri meet in Ain el Tineh over government
formation
Thu 09 Aug 2018/NNA - Speaker of the House, Nabih Berri, on Thursday
welcomed at his Ain el-Tineh residence Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri,
who came accompanied by Caretaker Culture Minister Ghattas Khoury and former
minister Bassem Sabaa. The meeting was also attended by Caretaker Minister
of Finance, Ali Hassan Khalil. Discussions reportedly dwelt on the current
situation and government formation issue. Following the two-hour meeting,
Hariri deemed his meeting with the Speaker as "very positive", relaying
Berri's unwavering willingness to provide all needed assistance for
government formation. "We are in a difficult economic and regional
situation," Hariri said, disclosing that further meeting will be taking
place in the coming days for the sake of government formation. He hoped
positive outcome would evolve in the coming days in the government formation
issue, urging all political sides to think of the country's interests before
they think of their political parties' interests. Hariri denied any external
interference to prevent the formation of a new government, saying such a
delay was an "internal" issue due to shares in the new Cabinet. The
PM-designate also stressed that he is trying the hardest to facilitate the
birth of the new government, defying claims that he's the one to be blamed
for such a delay. In reply to a question, Hariri disclosed that he has asked
for Berri's help in the government formation process, stressing that all
political sides are working on calming situation. Hariri also indicated that
he shall be holding meetings soon with political officials, including with
Free Patriotic Movement chief, Gebran Bassil. Earlier during the day, Berri
met with the newly appointed UNIFIL Force Commander Maj. Gen. Stefano Del
Col, with whom he discussed UNIFIL's work and the current situation in the
South. The Speaker also welcomed Australian Ambassador to Lebanon, Glenn
Miles, and discussed with him bilateral relations and current developments.
Among Berri's itinerant visitors for today had been former Speaker of the
Arab Parliament Mohammed Jassim Al-Saqer.
Loyalty to Resistance: Government formation delay risks
'slide toward tension'
Thu 09 Aug 2018/NNA - The "Loyalty to the Resistance" parliamentary bloc on
Thursday sounded the alarm on the delayed formation of the new government,
warning that further deferment risks dragging the country into tension."The
formation process has taken so long and the delay has started to risk
sliding toward tension as well as toward acting outside the state
institutions; this is a danger we warn of," the bloc said in a statement
following its regular meeting, held under the chairmanship of MP Mohammad
Raad. "The bloc sees in the government formation the key entrance to ward
off that risk and the delay's repercussions," the statement read. Moreover,
the bloc highlighted the necessity of "serious cooperation" between the
concerned sides regarding the electricity sector. Furthermore, the bloc
criticized the "negative approach" to the Lebanese-Syrian ties. "It had
become clear that the political contact between the Lebanese and Syrian
governments is the mandatory route to address several issues," the statement
read. "Any other bet is only a waste of time and opportunities," it
concluded.
Sheikh Hamoud's office: We will remain committed to national security
Thu 09 Aug 2018/NNA - The office of Sheikh Maher Hamoud highlighted
commitment to preserving national security, in a statement issued in the
wake of a scuffle between the sheikh's guards and an Internal Security
Forces' patrol in Sidon on Thursday.
"Regardless of the details and in clarification of the truth, we confirm
that the mistake was not made by our office guards, but by an ISF officer,"
the statement read. "We are waiting for the competent authorities to punish
him and whoever is involved, in preservation of the ISF mission," it said.
"Still, we will remain committed to backing and contributing to national
security on all levels," it added.
Ibrahim meets new UNIFIL commander, MP Baarini
Thu 09 Aug 2018/NNA - General Security chief Abbas Ibrahim welcomed on
Thursday newly appointed UNIFIL Force Commander Maj. Gen. Stefano Del Col,
who came on a courtesy visit. The pair reportedly discussed the current
situation along the southern borders.
Ibrhaim wished General Del Col success in his new mission. On the other
hand, Ibrahim met with MP Walid Baarini, with whom he discussed the general
situation and stringent needs related to the district of Akkar.
Sayegh Blasts
'Indifferent' and 'Merciless' Government Formation Approach
Kataeb.org/ Thursday 09th August 2018/Kataeb's Deputy-President Salim Sayegh
on Thursday slammed the officials' indifference and recklessness towards the
government formation, stressing the need to restore people's confidence in
their nation.
"There is an indifferent and merciless approach that the ruling class is
adopting, especially when it comes to the government formation," Sayegh said
following talks with Maronite Patriarch Bechara Al-Rahi in Diman.
Abu Nader: Centralized Lebanese State Is 'Failed' and
'Ailing'
Kataeb.org/ Thursday 09th August 2018/Kataeb leader's top adviser Fouad Abu
Nader on Thursday said that the centralized system adopted in Lebanon has
proved to be a fiasco, deeming the centralized Lebanese state as "failed and
ailing". "Lebanon is made up of several sects. However, we are avoiding the
fact that the country is based on sectarian conflicts," Abu Nader said in an
interview on OTV. "The day we resolve this issue, it would become easy to
put the corrupt to account. Today, the Lebanese are still living in a
constant state of fear and anxiety. The fear of the others is preventing the
complete merging between the Lebanese," he added. Abu Nader noted that the
Kataeb party had fought the parliamentary elections with a one-of-a-kind
approach that was based on dealing directly with the people's concerns,
adding that the party fought a great battle alone. Abu Nader said that it
was MP Samy Gemayel who motivated him to join the Kataeb's ranks again,
adding that he chose to return so as to work through a large institution on
building a better future for Lebanon.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News
published
on August 09-10/18
Boko Haram militants
kill 17 Nigerian soldiers
AFP/August
09/18/KANO: At least 17 Nigerian soldiers were killed in a fresh Boko Haram
attack on a military base in the country’s northeast, military sources told
AFP Thursday, the third assault on three different bases in less than a
month. On Wednesday evening, heavily armed extremists riding in trucks
stormed and looted weapons and vehicles from a military base in Garunda
village in Borno State, the epicenter of the insurgency that has been raging
for nine years. The attack is the latest of a series of bloody Boko Haram
assaults on military bases in Nigeria, underscoring the continued threat the
extremists pose to the region and putting the spotlight on the Nigerian
government’s claim that Boko Haram is “decimated.”“Our troops came under
attack from Boko Haram terrorists in Garunda last night,” a military officer
told AFP. “Unfortunately we lost 17 troops, 14 others were injured while an
unspecified number is still unaccounted for,” said the military source, who
asked not to be identified because he was not authorized to speak on the
incident. The source added that the militants looted weapons and vehicles
before fleeing. In the past month, Boko Haram extremists have launched two
other major assaults on military bases in the remote northeast region. On
July 14, militants suspected to be loyal to Abu Mus’ab Al-Barnawi, who is
affiliated with the Daesh group, attacked a base in Jilli village, in
neighboring Yobe state. Dozens of troops were killed, wounded or missing,
according to several security sources. The army conceded the base was
attacked but did not give a death toll, saying that the “troops reorganized
and successfully repelled the attack and normalcy has since returned to the
area.”On July 26, the extremists stormed a base on the outskirts of
Maiduguri, the state capital of Borno state. The base attacked yesterday in
Garunda village of Borno state had just been set up for troops from the 81
brigade who had been stationed in Jilli village and forced to move after the
July 14 assault. “The truth of the matter is that the troops in Jilli were
relocated to Garunda where a new base was established,” said the second
military source, who gave a similar death toll. “Troops were just setting up
and the excavator operator was working to fortify the base with trenches
against attack from the terrorists when the attack happened,” said the
officer. The Nigerian army did not respond to requests for comment.
Nigeria’s National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) on Thursday confirmed
in a statement that a staff member, an excavator operator attached to the
military, “was killed by Boko Haram yesterday in Damasak, Borno state.”Boko
Haram no longer controls swathes of territory in northeast Nigeria as it did
at the height of its insurgency in 2014, yet the militants still pose a
threat to the impoverished region.Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has
insisted that the extremists are a spent force as he gears up for elections
next year. In an interview with Nigerian press published on Thursday,
Buhari’s information minister Lai Mohammed said “we promised to fight
insecurity...despite what anybody says, we have decimated Boko Haram.”Six
months away from presidential polls, Buhari is under pressure to defend his
track record as he battles insecurity across Nigeria, Africa’s most populous
country.
Canada PM Does Not
Back Down on Rights Defense in Saudi Spat
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 09/18/Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday refused to apologize for calling out
Saudi Arabia on its human rights record, after Riyadh said it was
considering further punitive measures against Ottawa over its criticisms of
the kingdom. Tensions have been high between the two countries since Monday,
when Riyadh expelled Canada's ambassador, recalled its own envoy and froze
all new trade and investments. Riyadh also said it will relocate thousands
of Saudi students studying in Canada to other countries, while state airline
Saudia announced it was suspending flights to Toronto. The kingdom was angry
at Ottawa for openly denouncing a crackdown on rights activists in Saudi
Arabia. But on Wednesday, Trudeau stood firm. "Canada will always speak
strongly and clearly in private and in public on questions of human rights,"
he said. "We do not wish to have poor relations with Saudi Arabia," he
added, saying Ottawa recognizes that Riyadh "has made progress when it comes
to human rights."Trudeau noted that his foreign minister, Chrystia Freeland,
had "a long conversation" on Tuesday with her counterpart Adel al-Jubeir to
try to resolve the dispute. "Diplomatic talks continue," he said. On
Wednesday, Saudi state media said the kingdom has nevertheless also stopped
all medical treatment programs in Canada and was working on transferring all
Saudi patients there to other countries. Further straining ties, the Saudi
central bank has instructed its overseas asset managers to dispose of their
Canadian equities, bonds and cash holdings "no matter the cost," the
Financial Times reported. But in an apparent effort to safeguard its
economic interests, Saudi energy minister Khalid al-Falih said the dispute
will not affect state oil giant Aramco's clients in Canada. Saudi oil
supplies are independent of political considerations, Falih was quoted as
saying by state media. - 'Matter of national security' -Last week, Canada
sparked fury in Riyadh by calling for the "immediate release" of rights
campaigners, including award-winning women's rights activist Samar Badawi,
the sister of jailed blogger Raif Badawi. That arrest came after more than a
dozen women's rights campaigners were detained and accused of undermining
national security and collaborating with enemies of the state. When asked
about the jailed activists, Jubeir on Wednesday reiterated the government's
stance that they had been in contact with foreign entities, but did not
specify the charges against them. "The matter is not about human rights, it
is a matter of national security," Jubeir told reporters. "Saudi Arabia does
not interfere in the affairs of Canada in any way. Therefore, Canada must
correct its actions towards the kingdom."Jubeir ruled out mediation as a way
to put an end to the row. "There is nothing to mediate," he said. "Canada
made a big mistake... and a mistake should be corrected."Jubeir added that
Saudi Arabia was "considering additional measures" against Canada, without
elaborating. Experts have said the Saudi move illustrates how the oil-rich
kingdom is increasingly seeking to use its economic and diplomatic muscle to
quell foreign criticism under its young de facto leader, Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman. In Canada, there was disappointment that major Western
powers including the United States -- a key ally of Saudi Arabia -- have not
publicly come out in support of Canada, though it is not the first country
to be targeted for speaking up. In March 2015, Saudi Arabia recalled its
ambassador from Stockholm over criticism by the Swedish foreign minister of
Riyadh's human rights record. Earlier this year, Bloomberg News reported
that Saudi Arabia was scaling back its dealings with some German companies
amid a diplomatic spat with Berlin. The move came after Germany's foreign
minister last November remarked that Lebanon was a "pawn" of Saudi Arabia
after the surprise resignation of its Prime Minister Saad Hariri while in
Riyadh.
Saudi patients in Canada transferred to the US
Arab News/August 09/18/JEDDAH: All Saudi patients receiving medical care in
Canada have been transferred to the United States to continue their
treatment, the Kingdom’s ambassador the country said on Thursday. Naif bin
Bandar Al-Sudairi said there were “not that many” Saudi citizens affected.
Speaking from Riyadh, the ambassador told Al-Arabiya News Channel, that the
Saudi embassy is offering all the necessary assistance to its citizens, and
will be taking all necessary measures that protect their interests. The
ambassador was recalled from Ottawa and his Canadian counterpart ordered to
leave the Kingdom in a dispute that erupted earlier this week. Saudi Arabia
accused Canada of interfering in its internal affairs after the Canadian
foreign ministry tweeted that the Kingdom should release detained “civil
society activists.” Saudi Arabia has halted all new investments, cut flights
and arranged for Saudi patients and students in the country to be moved
elsewhere. When asked about Saudi students on scholarships in Canada who are
about to finish their studies and graduate, specifically those enrolled in
medical schools, the ambassador said there are no exceptions “so far” to the
decision. The ambassador noted that it will be considering “exceptional
cases” among the Saudi scholarship students “in the future”, noting that the
embassy is keen to do all it can to protect the benefits of its citizens. He
said even those students studying on their own expense have decided to leave
“as per their own will” because they also do not accept the Canadian stance
towards the Kingdom.
Iraq PM Says will
Abide by US Sanctions on Iran, President Raises Doubts
Baghdad - Hamza
Mustafa/Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 9 August, 2018/Iraq’s partisan and
official positions on how to deal with US sanctions on Iran clashed as
President Fuad Masum declared it ‘difficult’ for Baghdad to comply with the
first wave of Washington-imposed economic sanctions against Tehran, but
Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi affirmed his commitment. “In principle, we
are against imposing sanctions on the people. Iraq paid a steep price for
unjust sanctions imposed 13 years ago to weaken the former regime, and it
led to the disruption of our people and destroyed the Iraqi social fabric,”
Abadi told a press conference on Tuesday evening. He added that previous
sanctions only empowered the former regime to implement the worst repressive
policies against the people. Based on first-hand experience, Abadi said that
although Iraq will abide by the sanctions, it does not support them. “We
will abide by them not to direct Iraqis into harm’s way and to protect our
people, we cannot depart from the international system and world economy,
and we cannot harm the interests of our people.”On the other hand, Masum
said in a televised statement that the circumstances of Iraq and the nature
of its relations with Iran make it difficult for it to abide by the
anti-Tehran sanctions. “Iraq must not be with one party against another in
the current conflicts,” he said. As for what appears to be a contradiction
in positions, Iraqi presidential adviser Sherwan al-Waeli told Asharq Al-Awsat
that “the president and the prime minister reject the principle of sanctions
because it does not punish regimes as much as it does the people.” “Iraq has
already suffered from sanctions imposed against its former ruling regime,
which left a severe impact on Iraqis, yet did not weaken the regime in any
way.”“The special conditions which apply when it comes to a relationship
joining two neighboring countries such as Iraq and Iran is well known, and
the United States must understand,” he said. “While the prime minister
stressed that Iraq, despite the refusal, will abide, he wants to show that
national interests come first.”
“This is not the first time that the US has imposed sanctions on Iran, but
in terms of the degree of Iraq's commitment to them, there is something that
is absolutely binding and is related to dollar and euro bound remittances,”
Iraqi economist Dr. Majid al-Suri told Asharq Al-Awsat. “But what cannot be
controlled is dollar-free trade exchange between the two countries which is
conducted away from bank regulations,” he added. Suri went on to say that
the Iraqi-Iranian border is long and porous, in an explanation that at times
trade flow between the two countries can go unmonitored by authorities.
Syrian Troops Shell
Idlib to Pave Way for Assault, Monitor Says
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 09/18/Syrian regime forces shelled
rebel and jihadist positions in the northwestern province of Idlib on
Thursday, a monitor said, as reinforcements arrived ahead of an expected
assault. The province is the largest piece of territory still in rebel
hands, and President Bashar al-Assad has warned it would be his military's
next priority. On Thursday morning, artillery and rocket fire slammed into
territory around Jisr al-Shughur, a key town in the southwestern part of the
province, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. "The
shelling is in preparation for an assault but there has been no ground
advance yet," said Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman. "Regime
reinforcements including equipment, soldiers, vehicles and ammunition have
been arriving since Tuesday," he told AFP. They were being distributed along
three regime-held fronts, including in neighbouring Latakia province just
west of Jisr al-Shughur, in the Sahl al-Ghab plain that lies south of Idlib,
and in a sliver of the province's southeast that is already in government
hands. The Al-Watan daily, which is close to the government, also reported
on Thursday that army troops had bombed rebel and jihadist positions in the
area. Idlib, which has escaped regime control since 2015, lies along the
border with Turkey but is otherwise nearly completely surrounded by
government-held territory. Around 60 percent of it is now held by Hayat
Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which is led by Al-Qaeda's former Syria affiliate,
while the rest is controlled by rival opposition factions. Syrian troops
have recaptured key swathes of the country in recent months with help from
ally Russia, which has brokered a string of surrender deals with rebels.
Apparently fearing a similar arrangement for Idlib, HTS has been arresting
dozens of figures in the province that have been go-betweens with the
regime. Early Thursday, the group detained several such figures from
villages in Idlib's southeast, calling them "chiefs of treason," according
to an HTS-linked media agency. The Britain-based Observatory, which relies
on a network of sources inside Syria, said it had documented more than 100
such arrests by HTS and rival forces this week alone. Idlib province is home
to around 2.5 million people, including rebels and civilians transferred en
masse from other territory that fell to Syrian troops after intense
assaults.
Syria Kurds Face Tough Talks to Preserve Autonomy
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 09/18/Syria's Kurdish minority, hailed
as an indispensable Western ally during the war against the Islamic State
group, faces hard bargaining with Damascus to save its hard-won autonomy.
Early last year, President Bashar al-Assad's government held just 17 percent
of Syrian territory and was unable to do anything about the autonomous
institutions the Kurds have set up in areas under their control. But a
succession of Russian-backed victories over the jihadists and a range of
rebel factions has transformed the balance of power. Assad's government now
controls nearly two-thirds of Syria and is determined to reassert its
authority over Kurdish-held territory which forms the lion's share of the
rest. Recognising their weakened position, Kurdish leaders and their
supporters last month opened talks with Damascus, desperate to salvage what
they can of the institutions they painstakingly built over the years. "We
are trying to preserve everything we built in terms of the autonomous
system, the institutions, the democracy," said leading Kurdish figure Saleh
Muslim. "But there's a mentality that won't accept this right away, so it
has to happen gradually," Muslim told AFP.
Before the start of Syria's civil war in 2011, the Kurds were an oppressed
minority in what was effectively a one-party state with an Arab nationalist
ideology that had no tolerance for Kurdish traditions or the Kurdish
language. Hundreds of thousands did not even have Syrian citizenship. But
after government troops withdrew from Kurdish-majority areas in 2012, local
authorities began forming their own security forces and institutions,
including a Kurdish-language school curriculum. Trying to reconcile those
institutions with the system in force in government-held areas will be a
formidable task. "Syria will not go back to what it was. There needs to be
decentralised democracy," Muslim said. "We have our project, which we
believe will be a model for all of Syria -- and we're holding onto it." -
'Everything recalculated' -In late July, Damascus hosted the first round of
talks with the Kurdish administration. Joint committees were formed to
discuss economic issues, politics, military affairs and public services. The
ultimate goal was "drawing a roadmap that leads to a decentralised Syria,"
says the political arm of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), the
Kurdish-led alliance which Washington backed against IS.
Between them, the SDF and its allies control around 30 percent of Syria,
including several of its largest oil fields. "The government and Kurdish-led
SDF are the two players that control the vast majority of Syrian land," said
Mutlu Civiroglu, an analyst in Kurdish affairs. "One way or another,
these two forces will find a solution. Either they fight, or they do it
peacefully."The Kurds are ready to negotiate because of President Donald
Trump's repeated pledges to end the US troop presence in northern Syria that
has been their principal protection. In late May, Assad gave the Kurds a
stark choice, warning that if talks fail, "we're going to resort... to
liberating those areas by force." Nonetheless, the Kurds feel they have a
strong negotiating position. "We had never been part of the equation, but
today, everything has been recalculated... We will defend what we
established," Muslim said.
- 'Red line' -As momentum builds, the
talks' main stumbling block remains how much power Damascus will have over
areas that have been under Kurdish administration for as many as six years.
Other points of contention include whether to retain Kurdish-language
education in the north and the fate of the SDF and other Kurdish armed
groups. "They are not going to agree to go back to the old days. This is the
red line from the Kurdish point of view," Civiroglu said. Ilham Ahmad, who
headed the Kurdish delegation to Damascus last month, told AFP self-rule was
one of "the things we won from fighting Daesh (IS) and confronting
tyranny."But the central government will not relinquish control over nearly
one-third of its territory so easily, and wants state institutions to return
in force. "The Syrian state will not accept an autonomous administration,"
said Damascus-based analyst Bassam Abou Abdallah. Instead, the Kurds should
content themselves with the provisions of an as yet unimplemented law
granting more powers and responsibilities to municipalities, he told AFP.
Abou Abdallah said Syrian Kurdish armed groups would eventually be
"dismantled." The head of the SDF delegation denied the subject was even
discussed. With such entrenched opposing views, the talks are likely be
drawn out, said Haid Haid, of London-based think tank Chatham House.
"Emboldened by its recent military gains, the regime appears more determined
than ever to prevent the establishment of parallel centres of authority in
Syria," Haid recently wrote. "The huge gap between what the two sides are
trying to achieve makes it difficult to imagine they will be able to reach a
substantive agreement any time soon."
Iranian Opposition Group Reveals Details of Paris Bomb
Plot against it
Brussels – Abdullah Mustafa/Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 9 August, 2018/The
Paris-based National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) revealed on
Wednesday the details of the failed plot to bomb its conference in late
June. Chairman of the NCRI’s Foreign Affairs Committee Mohammad Mohaddesin
told a press conference in Brussels that the opposition group had identified
three of the suspects involved in the plot, which he said was ordered by the
Iranian regime. The purpose of his press conference was to highlight the
role of the regime in planning terrorist attacks, he stressed. Two of the
suspects, married couple Amir Saadouni, 38, and Nasimeh Naamani, 34, were
arrested in Belgium. They claimed to be supporters of the NCRI and attempted
to infiltrate its ranks, said Mohaddesin. Naamani had traveled from Belgium
to Iran in 2009 where she married Saadouni. Saadouni had secretly traveled
to Iran on July 2. Mohaddesin identified the third suspect as Assadollah
Assadi, 46, the chief of Iranian intelligence in the Iranian embassy in
Vienna. He was appointed to the embassy in 2014 under the position of “third
secretary.”Assadi gave the final order to the terrorists to carry out their
attack against the NCRI in June, he added. The attack was plotted months ago
by Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei, President Hassan Rouhani, Foreign
Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif, head of intelligence, chief of the national
security council, the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps and its Quds Force
and Khamanei’s political and security affairs deputy, said Mohaddesin. The
Iranian intelligence ministry tasked Assadi with carrying out the plot, he
added. The intelligence and security center in Vienna has been transformed
into the coordinator of intelligence and security in Europe, he charged. The
plotters were planning on bombing an NCRI meeting that was held on June 30
in Villepinte, a Paris suburb. US President Donald Trump's lawyer Rudy
Giuliani and several former European and Arab ministers attended the
meeting. Six people, including the Iranian diplomat, were arrested for the
crime.
Colombia Recognizes Palestine as Sovereign State, New Government to Review
Decision
Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 9 August, 2018/Colombia recognized Palestine as a
sovereign state in the last days of former President Juan Manuel Santos’
administration, according to a letter from the foreign ministry made public
on Wednesday. "I would like to inform you that in the name of the government
of Colombia, President Juan Manuel Santos has decided to recognize Palestine
as a free, independent and sovereign state," said the letter dated August 3.
However, Colombia’s new government said it would review the decision in
accordance with international law and good diplomatic practice. “Given
possible omissions that could come to light about the way in which this
decision was taken by the outgoing president, the government will cautiously
examine its implications and will act according to international law,” new
Foreign Minister Carlos Holmes said in a statement. "It is a priority for
this government to maintain cooperative relations with its allies and
friends, and to contribute to international peace and security," Holmes
added in another statement. Before the announcement, Colombia had been one
of only two countries in the region, along with Panama, not to recognize
Palestinian statehood, AFP reported. The Palestinian mission in Bogota told
AFP that they were told of the decision last Friday. It welcomed the move by
Bogota as evidence of "profound efforts to reach a rapprochement."“We thank
the Colombian government for this decision and we are sure that it will
contribute significantly to generating the necessary conditions in the
search for peace in the Middle East,” the Palestine representative said in a
statement on Wednesday. For its part, the Israeli embassy in Bogota said it
was surprised and disappointed, according to Reuters. “We ask the Colombian
government to reverse the decision made by the previous administration in
its last days, which contravenes the close relations, extensive cooperation
in vital areas and interests of both countries,” it said in a statement
posted to its Twitter account.
5 Australians Lose Citizenship over ISIS Involvement in
Iraq, Syria
Asharq Al-Awsat/Thursday, 9 August, 2018/Five Australians have been stripped
of their citizenship for fighting alongside ISIS in Iraq and Syria, with
officials saying Thursday the country was a better place without them. They
join notorious ISIS militant Khaled Sharrouf -- who made headlines in 2014
when he posted a Twitter image of his young son holding a severed head of a
soldier -- as the only nationals to be kicked out under tougher anti-terror
laws."I can confirm that five more individuals have ceased to be Australian
citizens because of their involvement with ISIS offshore," home affairs
minister Peter Dutton said in a statement. "Fundamentally, citizenship
requires allegiance to this country... these five dual-nationals have been
acting against Australia's interests by engaging with terrorism and have
effectively chosen to leave the Australian community." The five are all aged
in their 20s and 30s. Dutton provided no further details on their identities
but welcomed their exclusion. "Australia is a safer place for not having
them return," he said. Canberra has become increasingly concerned about
Australian nationals returning home after fighting alongside the extremist
group abroad and has passed a series of tougher national security laws in
recent years. That includes legislation where people can forfeit their
citizenship if they also hold a passport from another country, and therefore
are not left stateless. Sharrouf, the first Australian national stripped of
his passport for terror links, was also a Lebanese citizen. He left
Australia for Syria in 2013 with his family. His Australian wife Tara
Nettleton, who went with him, has since died and Sharrouf was believed to
have been killed in a drone strike in Iraq in 2015. Later media reports cast
doubt on whether he was dead. The fate of their five children remains
unknown.
Saudi-Led Coalition
Claims Deadly Yemen Attack
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 09/18/A Saudi-led coalition battling in
Yemen said it carried out a deadly attack in the rebel-held north on
Thursday, which the Red Cross said hit a bus carrying children. In a
statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency, the coalition called
the strike a "legitimate military action" that targeted elements responsible
for a rebel missile attack on the Saudi city of Jizan on Wednesday. The
coalition did not specify the target, but the International Committee of the
Red Cross said the attack hit a bus filled with children, causing dozens of
casualties. "Following an attack this morning on a bus driving children in
Dahyan Market, northern Saada, (an ICRC-supported) hospital has received
dozens of dead and wounded," the organisation said on Twitter without giving
more details. "Under international humanitarian law, civilians must be
protected during conflict," it added. The Huthi rebels' Al-Masirah TV
reported that 39 people had been killed and 51 wounded, "mostly children".
The UN children's agency UNICEF said it was "very concerned with the initial
reports of children being killed". The coalition, which also includes the
United Arab Emirates, intervened in 2015 to try to restore the
internationally recognised government after the rebels drove it out of the
capital Sanaa. Saudi Arabia shot down a missile fired by the Huthis on
Wednesday, with debris killing a Yemeni man and wounding 11 others, the
coalition said. The missile was fired from the rebel-held Yemeni province of
Amran towards Jizan, the coalition said. Last Thursday, attacks on a
hospital and a fish market in the strategic rebel-held port city of Hodeida
killed at least 55 civilians and wounded 170, according to the ICRC. The
coalition denied responsibility for those attacks.
UN Plans Talks on
Western Sahara before End of 2018
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/August 09/18/The UN envoy for Western Sahara
is planning to convene talks before the end of the year between Morocco and
the Algerian-backed Polisario Front on ending their decades-old conflict,
the Security Council president said Wednesday. Horst Koehler, a former
German president and ex-director of the International Monetary Fund, briefed
the council behind closed doors on his efforts to restart talks after a
10-year break. "There is a lot of support from the council for his approach
and for his proposal to see if he can try to bring the parties together by
the end of the year," said British Deputy Ambassador Jonathan Allen, whose
country holds the council presidency this month. Koehler will be holding
consultations with "all the parties involved" on "modalities, format and
everything else," Allen told reporters after the meeting. Morocco and the
Polisario Front fought for control of Western Sahara from 1975 to 1991.
Diplomatic efforts to end the conflict have been deadlocked since the last
round of UN-sponsored talks in 2008. Morocco maintains that negotiations on
a settlement should focus on its proposal for autonomy for Western Sahara
and rejects the Polisario's insistence on an independence referendum. The
Security Council in April approved a US-drafted resolution that urged
Morocco and the Polisario to prepare for talks, setting a six-month deadline
for action. A council diplomat, who spoke on background, said the envoy was
hoping to send invitations in September to the parties to attend talks --
before the deadline expires in October. A settlement in Western Sahara would
allow the UN peacekeeping mission there, known as MINURSO, to end its
mission at a time when the United States is seeking to reduce the cost of
peace operations.
Rape-accused Tariq
Ramadan loses latest bid to be freed from French jail
AFP/August 09, 2018/PARIS: An appeals court in Paris has
upheld a decision by judges to keep Islamic scholar Tariq Ramadan in jail
while he is being investigated on rape charges brought by two women, a legal
source told AFP on Thursday. Lawyers for Ramadan had requested his release
last month after unsuccessfully trying to have the charges dropped over
discrepancies in testimony given by one of the women. Ramadan, who took
leave from his post at Oxford University after the allegations surfaced, has
also complained that his imprisonment has made it more difficult for him to
receive treatment for multiple sclerosis. But the appeals court upheld his
detention on Wednesday, considering Ramadan, who holds Swiss citizenship, is
a flight risk despite his offer to surrender his passport and post €300,000
($350,000) in bail. Investigative magistrates had already denied several
requests for his release. Ramadan, whose grandfather founded Egypt’s Muslim
Brotherhood movement, has been held since February on charges that he raped
two women in France in two separate incidents. His accusers came forward in
October in the wake of the “Me Too” campaign which began after several women
accused Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein of sexual assault, prompting women
worldwide to share accounts about sexual attack and harassment. Ramadan, a
married father of four who is one of European Islam’s best-known figures,
has denied any sexual relations with the two women, saying he met with each
of them only once and in public places. He has denounced the accusations as
part of a smear campaign by his critics. His first accuser, Henda Ayari, who
was questioned by judges last month in Ramadan’s presence, had originally
said that he raped her at the Crowne Plaza hotel in Paris on May 26, 2012.
But investigators later determined she was attending her brother-in-law’s
wedding that day in Rouen, northern France. Ayari subsequently admitted she
could not remember the exact date. On September 18, Ramadan will be
questioned in the presence of his second accuser, a disabled woman
identified as “Christelle” who claims he raped and beat her in a hotel in
the southeastern city of Lyon in 2009. French investigators are also looking
into rape claims made by a third woman with whom he has admitted to having
had an affair. Those allegations have not yet let to charges. In
Switzerland, a Swiss woman has also filed a complaint against Ramadan.
Israel’s cabinet decides against a new Gaza campaign to halt Hamas rocket
aggression
DebkaFile/August 09/18
After 250 rockets from Gaza hit Israeli locations, one a heavy Grad,
Israel’s security cabinet meeting Thursday, Aug. 9, directed the IDF to
continue to pursue “powerful action against terrorist forces.” This was
tantamount to a decision against a major Israeli military campaign against
Hamas at this time, while instead carrying on with tit-for-tat air strikes
as before, and leaving the targeted communities to their despair. Some 19
people were injured in the last two days. Hamas is therefore still allowed
to call the shots, exactly as it has done in the last four months, while
inflicting in Israel diverse brands of terror. It is still up to Hamas to
decide whether to stop shooting rockets at Israel or continue the barrage
ongoing for two days, as well as determining the level of its retaliation
for Israeli reprisals.
Therefore, after an Israel air strike demolished the five-story Hamas
internal security building in the Gaza City’s Rimal district – in return for
the first Grad fired on Beersheba, a major city in southern Israel, in four
years, Hamas is expected to ratchet up its rocket fire on Israeli civilian
locations in the coming hours and days. Israel forewarned residents of the
Rimal district of the bombardment. The building was therefore empty of Hamas
officials, a repeat of the “knock on roof” tactic the Israeli Air Force used
in the past to avert collateral civilian casualties in counter-terror
attacks.
This practice is an element in the IDF-Hamas duel which has its own strange
rules. In the heat of Wednesday’s rocket barrage, Chief of Staff Lt. Gen.
Gady Eisenkot stated that the IDF “is better prepared than it has been in
the past decades.” Prepared for what? No answer was forthcoming from the
cabinet the next day. In the general’s judgment, Hamas has still not broken
those unwritten rules. He therefore persuaded the prime minister Binyamin
Netanyahu and Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman to hold back from approving
a full-scale campaign to halt Hamas’ nagging violence once and for all.
Realizing that this stance will offend the popular will, in the sight of the
suffering of the targeted population of southwestern Israel, both have not
been seen or heard in public for some days. Meanwhile, they are hoping
against hope that something may come of the long term truce mediation effort
conducted by the UN emissary and Egypt, although realistic chances of this
are practically nil.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on August 09-10/18
Ottawa mosque loses
charity status for promoting ‘hate and intolerance’
By Stewart Bell
National Online Journalist, Investigative/Global News
https://globalnews.ca/news/4373959/ottawa-mosque-charity-hate-intolerance/
US Was
Right to Give China’s Navy the Boot
James Stavridis/Bloomberg/August 09/18
The vast annual military operation known as the Rim of the Pacific Exercise
(simply RIMPAC in Pentagon jargon) just concluded on the beaches of Southern
California with a huge demonstration of an amphibious assault, which
involves sending troops ashore from warships at sea — a highly complex
maneuver whether D-Day or present day.
The exercise is held every two years all over the Pacific Basin, and is the
largest international maritime exercise in the world. It is globally
regarded by naval officers as the Olympic Games of naval power. Run by the
US Pacific Fleet, which is headquartered in Pearl Harbor, it normally
includes warships and troops from every branch of the U.S. armed forces, and
those of than 20 foreign nations.
As a junior officer, I participated in several of these huge war games, and
found them profoundly important for national security. They have been held
since the early 1970s, and include nations not only from the Western Pacific
rim — Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Brunei, Vietnam, Thailand,
Singapore and so on — but also from the Pacific coast of South America,
including Mexico, Peru, Chile and Colombia.
India, an emerging maritime power, had a significant operational role for
the first time this year. Several European allies with interests in the
Pacific, including the UK, France and Germany, also send ships. Israel sends
a small staff contingent.
Some wags would say that the most important business is done at the big
cocktail parties, and that the most dangerous moments are the photo shoots
at sea (where the huge fleets come together undertaking very precise and
scary formations, with the added degree-of-difficulty of challenging
language barriers).
But in truth, RIMPAC is an incredibly important opportunity to for allies
together to practice complex maneuvers: amphibious landings, long-range
aircraft strikes, counterpiracy, antisubmarine warfare, counterterrorism,
anti-air missile shoots, and humanitarian responses to large natural
disasters.
It is also, above all, a visible signal of the most important militaries of
the vast Pacific Basin being willing to share training, tactics and
technology. With some 50 ships from a couple of dozen nations sharing and
learning from each other, the opportunities to improve warfighting
capability are rich. We are able to exercise our powerful tactical
ballistic-missile submarines, which can launch Tomahawk missiles. And
through exercises like this we can also find the best way to operate our new
Littoral Combat Ships — frigate-sized warships capable of working in
relatively shallow seas — in tight regional conflict.
But this year, in a break with recent tradition, China was “disinvited” in
May because of its militarization of a variety of artificial islands in the
volatile South China sea, where it is sending troops and setting up
combat-aircraft, runways and missile systems. There was also a distinct
undercurrent of opposition to China’s presence by the Donald Trump
administration, which sensibly criticizes Beijing for trade practices and
theft of intellectual property.
While I’ve repeatedly criticized Trump for his dealings with allies and
foes, cutting Beijing “out of the pattern” this year was the right decision.
It deprived China of not only the chance to observe and learn about allied
naval practices, but also of the prestige of engaging with the top navies in
the world. The increasing involvement of India — the obvious strategic
counterweight to China — as well as this year’s addition of Vietnam — a
growing naval actor deeply concerned about Chinese dominance in the South
China Sea — sends a powerful signal. All of this underlines how important
military exercises are to our ability project power; maintain sea control
(and therefore ensure shipping lanes around the world remain open); and
exert influence on allies, friends and partners. It also shows why Trump’s
decision to stop U.S. military exercises with South Korea — in return for a
few vague promises from North Korea — is a bad idea.
Such military exercises have three principal functions, and RIMPAC is at the
top level of such events: First, they provide a strategic context to our
overall policies in a given region, and no region is probably more critical
than the Western Pacific. This is all the more vital because the Trump
administration made a significant mistake by pulling out of the
Trans-Pacific Partnership. Leaving aside the economic issues attendant to
that call, it was a major geopolitical foot fault. We can mitigate some of
the damage that decision inflicted on our leadership role in the region by
conducting robust, meaningful exercises like RIMPAC — while excluding China.
Second, warfighting “practice sessions” give us real insight into not just
allied military capabilities, but also those of adversaries. They help
reveal the surveillance and intelligence-gathering abilities of opponents
like China: how capable they are and what their evaluation of us is all
about. That is prime-grade intelligence.
Third and finally, RIMPAC is a “carrot” that over time may be applied to
China. If we are to avoid the Thucydides Trap, which holds that war between
the dominant power and a rising rival is inevitable — we will need a
strategy over time to offer China opportunities to be included in meaningful
security cooperation. Perhaps we missed such a chance with Russia at the end
of the Cold War, possibly leading to Vladimir Putin’s adventurism today. If
we can dissuade Beijing from continuing unacceptable behavior in cyber, the
South China Sea and intellectual property theft, the situation may become
less fraught in the long throw.
Overall, this year’s exercises were a resounding strategic success, and a
tactical treasure trove of information. We should continue to exclude China,
hold our opponents close, add new partners, and make inclusion in RIMPAC
something that Beijing so wants to be part of it will change its ways.
Iranian diplomat
accused of running web of spies across Europe
دبلوماسي إيراني متهم بإدارة موقع ألكتروني للتجسس في كل أوروبا
Damien McElroy/The National/August 09/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/66630/damien-mcelroy-iranian-diplomat-accused-of-running-web-of-spies-across-europe-%d8%af%d8%a8%d9%84%d9%88%d9%85%d8%a7%d8%b3%d9%8a-%d8%a5%d9%8a%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%86%d9%8a-%d9%85%d8%aa%d9%87%d9%85-%d8%a8/
Iran's diplomats operate an espionage network that plots
assassinations and procures parts for its missiles at the heart of Europe
Iran is running a wide-ranging espionage network across Europe with the aim
of procuring technology to boost the country’s missile arsenal, disrupt
opposition groups and carry out targeted assassinations, intelligence
reports and opposition groups have disclosed.
Opposition sources revealed on Wednesday that Asdollah Assadi, the Iranian
diplomat arrested in Germany in June for orchestrating a bomb plot against
an opposition rally in Paris, headed the Tehran-run European-wide network.
Assadi remains in detention in Germany pending an extradition request from
Belgium where the alleged bombers were intercepted.
Activists said the decision to authorise the attack in Paris was taken by
Tehran’s Supreme National Security Council in January this year and that the
head of Foreign Intelligence and Movements in the Ministry of Intelligence
and Security (MOIS), Reza Amiri Moghadam passed control of the plot to
Assadi in March.
Half-a-kilo of home-made explosives TATP and a detonator was seized from the
car of a married couple who were identified as being residents in the
Belgian city of Antwerp. Another alleged facilitator of the plot was
arrested and extradited from France to face trial.
Among those who attended the rally of the Paris-based National Council of
Resistance of Iran (NCRI) on June 30 was Rudy Guiliani, the ex-New York
mayor who now serves as Donald Trump’s lawyer, and the former prime minister
Stephen Harper of Canada. Some of the politicians who were at the event at
Villepinte outside Paris now plan to join the trial as civil complainants,
the NCRI said.
German domestic intelligence reports reviewed by The National have revealed
Iranian agents are active throughout the country. At least four of the
country’s 16 states reported missile proliferation activity by Iranian
agents.
The provincial report on foreign espionage in Baden-Württemberg state in
2017 said Iran was actively attempting to penetrate its scientific and
military institutions. “The focal points of the current Iranian
proliferation-related activities is in the acquisition of vacuum and control
technology, measuring instruments and other equipment,” the report seen by
The National said.
The intelligence bureau said the focus of Iranian activity appeared to have
shifted after the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) from
nuclear proliferation to rocket and missile technology. The report noted the
rapid expansion of Iran’s missile arsenal and the increasing range of its
weapons.
“Iran continues its ambitious expansion in rocket and carrier technology,
areas that are not included in the agreements. Iran reported in an official
statement on September 23, 2017, the successful test of the medium-range
rocket, Khorramshahr 12, and thus the country now has at least three missile
types with ranges up to 2,000 km.”
Officials in Hamburg also noted the challenge posed by the “ambitious
Iranian programme to modernise its missile technology with the aim of
further increasing the range”.
While the reports uniformly state Iran is in compliance with the JCPOA, it
is unclear how much of the activity identified is prohibited under
international sanctions or Germany’s own security laws.
“The reports confirm that Iran has not stopped proliferation activity even
if there may have been a significant decrease in illicit nuclear attempts,”
said Benjamin Weinthal, a fellow at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies. “There must be questions over whether Germany has reported
these to the UN committees overseeing both the nuclear deal and rocket
development work.”
Meanwhile, seven of the states also reported cyber-attack activity on a
significant scale by Iran and six said they were tracking Iranian
involvement in Hizbollah networks within their territory. These Hizbollah
groups were described as instruments of Iranian governance and influence.
The state of North Rhine-Westphalia identified arms procurement activities
and recruitment by Hizbollah as issues for the security services. “Germany
represents, for the organisation, an operating room, which is dedicated to
logistical support services and the generation of finances as well as the
recruitment of new members,” its 2017 report said. “For Germany, this would
confirm that the possibility of attacks by Hizbollah in the European space
are possible.”
A diplomat formerly based at Iran’s Baghdad embassy in post-Saddam Hussein
Iraq, Assadi arrived in Vienna just as the station emerged as the
“nerve-centre” of Iran’s European spy network, according to the NCRI report.
“The station of the MOIS in Vienna, located on the third floor of the
embassy, is the headquarters and the coordinator of the MOIS stations and
agents in Europe,” the group said. “According to statements of various
officials of the regime, the government of Austria and the Iranian regime
have extensive, yet low profile relations. This has created a very suitable
situation for setting up the main station of the MOIS in Europe.”
It also named the heads of other stations in Berlin and Paris, claiming
these were among the “most important” outposts under the supervision of the
Vienna bureau.
At a press conference in Brussels on Wednesday, Mohammad Mohaddessin,
chairman of the NCRI’s Foreign Affairs Committee said that Iran resumed
active terror operations in Europe in 2016.
Iran has rejected the allegations of a plot, claiming the incident was
staged to disrupt President Hassan Rouhani’s trip to Switzerland and
Austria, which was ongoing as the events unfurled. It has demanded Assadi’s
diplomatic immunity be recognised and the third secretary is allowed to
return to his post at the embassy. German prosecutors have, however,
concluded that Assadi is linked to the MOIS and its efforts to “observe and
combat” opposition groups.
According to a report titled Iran’s Deadly Diplomats in the August
publication of West Point's Combating Terrorism Centre Sentinel journal
published Wednesday, Tehran has increasing used diplomatic cover to carry
out assassinations and other terror plots in Europe.
It said two Iranian diplomats were expelled from the Netherlands in June
after the assassination of Iranian Arab activist. Albania arrested two
Iranian officials in March for allegedly carrying out surveillance on exiles
Nowruz (New Year celebrations). There were also police raids on Iranian
operatives in Germany in January.
“The Assadi arrest is therefore just the most recent alleged example of
Iranian state-sponsored terrorism in which Tehran uses visiting government
officials or accredited diplomats to plot,” it said.
https://www.thenational.ae/world/iranian-diplomat-accused-of-running-web-of-spies-across-europe-1.758203
Iranian regime is getting richer, at the expense of the poor
النظام الإيراني يزداد ثراءً على حساب الفقراء من الشعب الإيراني
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/August 09/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/66633/dr-majid-rafizadeh-iranian-regime-is-getting-richer-at-the-expense-of-the-poor-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%86%D8%B8%D8%A7%D9%85-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A5%D9%8A%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%8A-%D9%8A%D8%B2%D8%AF%D8%A7%D8%AF/
The latest large-scale protests in several Iranian cities have created a
significant challenge to Iran’s ruling political establishment. The protests
are not isolated events but a continuation of the widespread anti-government
movement that began in late 2017. The most recent protests broke out not
only in small towns and cities, but also in the major hubs of Tehran,
Isfahan, Karaj, Shiraz, Rasht, Khuzestan and Tabriz.
One of the key grievances of the demonstrators is economic inequality and
financial hardship. Many protesters have been taking to the streets to
express their frustration, anger and outrage over the ongoing financial
crisis, which is caused by the high unemployment rate, skyrocketing
inflation, and the rapid devaluation of the currency.
But why would a wealthy country like Iran be afflicted with such economic
misery? It is worth noting that Iran is one of the richest countries in the
world when it comes to natural resources and commodities. In fact, by having
approximately $27.3 trillion in natural resources, Iran is ranked fifth in
the world, ahead of China and Australia and only behind Canada, the US,
Saudi Arabia and Russia.
The nation has the world’s second and fourth largest gas and oil reserves
respectively. Iran has roughly one-sixth of the world’s gas reserves with a
value of nearly $12 trillion, and one-tenth of the world’s oil reserves
worth almost $17 trillion. Iran is the 18th largest country in the world
when it comes to purchasing power parity. In addition, the country is
considered the largest car manufacturer in the Middle East.
It is worth noting that Iran is one of the richest countries in the world
when it comes to natural resources and commodities
In fact, enriched with a plentitude of natural resources and commodities,
Iran has the potential to become one of the 11 largest economies in the
world, according to Goldman Sachs investment banker and economist Jim
O’Neill. Even the Iranian leaders, including President Hassan Rouhani, have
acknowledged this fact.
When Rouhani came to power, he promised to improve the economy and people’s
living standards. Instead, the economic situation has deteriorated
exponentially. Rouhani is not the first mullah to make such failed economic
promises. In fact, in order to gain and maintain power, the regime itself is
based on the concept of making deceitful economic promises to its citizens.
For example, when the ruling mullahs sought to grasp more power in 1979,
they made several promises to the nation. When the founder of the Islamic
Republic, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini returned to Tehran from Paris, he
famously promised to bring “oil to the people’s tables,” meaning that the
money from the nation’s oil exports would be distributed among the people.
He also pledged that no one would have to pay for water and electricity in
the country. The tape of Khomeini’s famous speech was banned after he
assumed power.
This brings us to the million dollar question: Where is the nation’s wealth?
The country is plagued with a stark rich-poor divide. There exists no robust
socio-economic class, which can be identified as the middle class.
While the ruling politicians, those who are connected with them, and the
regime’s loyalists are getting richer, the ordinary people are becoming
poorer. For example, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who is the second
longest-ruling autocrat in the Middle East, gained most of his wealth after
1979. His financial empire is currently proven to be worth at least $95
billion; not only does this make him the richest autocrat Iran has ever had,
but most likely the richest man in the world. Leaked reports have also
revealed that Khamenei, his son Mojtaba and other family members allegedly
keep billions of dollars in foreign banks.
Through nepotism, corruption, connections and illicit financial activities
such as insider trading and disruption of the market, some officials and
their families and friends have accumulated significant wealth, while
millions of ordinary people cannot make ends meet. In fact, after the
Iranian regime was granted significant sanctions relief and benefited from a
rise in oil exports thanks to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, not
only did the Iranian people not experience the fruits of the sanctions’
relief, but their economic situation has become much more severe since 2015.
Roughly 35 million Iranians (nearly 40 percent of the population) are
currently living under the poverty line.
The stark rich-poor divide in Iran is the direct result of the accumulation
of wealth by Iranian leaders and those who are connected to them, at the
expense of the poor. Political authoritarianism may survive longer if there
is at least economic liberalizations and equality. But political
authoritarianism without redistribution of wealth and economic opportunities
for the ordinary people is suicidal for the ruling power.
**Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated Iranian-American political
scientist. He is a leading expert on Iran and US foreign policy, a
businessman and president of the International American Council. Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh
Prospects of US-Iran talks now more remote than ever
Maria Dubovikova/Maria Dubovikova/Arab News/August 09/18
The US on Tuesday reimposed the first segment of economic sanctions on Iran
after President Donald Trump gave carte blanche for America to exercise more
pressure on the Iranian government. This is in order to get it to return to
the negotiating table and reconsider new articles and amendments to the 2015
nuclear agreement that was signed by Tehran and the five permanent states of
the UN Security Council plus Germany.
These sanctions include halting all US financial transactions with Iran,
which affects the deals signed between Tehran and American auto and aircraft
producers. The second batch of sanctions will come into effect in November
and these will be the most dangerous as they will apply to Iranian oil and
gas exports.
To what extent will Trump’s threats affect countries trading with Iran, such
as the EU, China, India and Russia? Will they counter the American measures
even though Trump has warned that any nation that does business with Iran
will be violating US sanctions and, as a result, would lose their business
deals with the US?
“Anyone doing business with Iran will not be doing business with the United
States,” the president tweeted. He had earlier called the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action agreement “one-sided,” “disastrous” and the
“worst I’ve ever seen.” Trump believes renewed economic pressure will force
Tehran to agree to sit and talk about a new deal. Trump’s statements against
Iran are deemed a humiliation to the countries which approved the nuclear
deal, including the EU, which is still committed to the pact in order to
protect European firms that have projects and ventures in Iran, such as
Germany’s Siemens, France’s Total and Renault, and the British-Dutch oil
company Shell.
It sounds like the American administration is divided into two: Those who
seek to exercise more pressure on Iran to gain more benefits from the
Iranians and their allies China, India, Russia and Turkey on the one hand,
and those who seek a peaceful settlement for the issue by opening dialogue
with Iran through backdoor channels on the other.
For Iran, this is a soap opera, as many believe Trump wants to have all
these economic and trade deals given to American companies. Iranian
president Hassan Rouhani said: “They want to launch psychological warfare
against the Iranian nation. Negotiations with sanctions doesn’t make sense.
We are always in favor of diplomacy and talks... but talks need honesty.”
For Russia, the sanctions aim to push the Iranians to complete surrender. In
other words, to denuclearize, announce a permanent cessation of atomic
enrichment, and to stop producing ballistic missiles that are a threat to
other countries.
Trump has warned that any nation that does business with Iran will be
violating US sanctions and, as a result, would lose their business deals
with the US
Trump believes that Iranian allies such as Russia would dissuade Tehran from
normalizing ties with other countries in the Middle East and the US as they
would face an inevitable collapse similar to the 1990s demise of the Soviet
Union, which led to the implosion of the USSR into the Russian Federation
and other independent republics.
Would the implosion of Iran be safe for the region? Would it be safe for
Russia, India, Pakistan and China? Only Trump knows the real answer as he is
the one who initiated the idea of imposing an embargo on Iran and its
military arms, which include the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. It also
remains to be seen if the sanctions will be conducive to the cessation of
Iranian logistical support to Hezbollah in Lebanon and Al-Hashd Al-Sha’abi
and other factions that Iran supports in Iraq, Yemen and Syria.
Russians believe that the US always wants to take the whole pie for itself
without sharing with others. This justifies why Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo had a meeting in Muscat with Omani Foreign Minister Yusuf bin Alawi.
Isn’t this the same scenario as a few years ago, when the US was talking to
the Iranians secretly in Oman to reach a nuclear deal?
It is possible that the US is playing both parties in the Gulf region,
seeking the utmost benefit from both before announcing remarkable progress
has been achieved vis-a-vis the nuclear deal and Iranian commitment to the
peace and stability of its neighbors on the basis of non-interference in
their internal affairs.
Will such unilateral actions by the US help disband the IRGC? Iran’s recent
maneuvers with speedboats in the Arabian Sea and the Strait of Hormuz reveal
that it would act if cornered.
What prompted Trump to offer “unconditional” dialogue with Iran, in the time
and place that the latter sets? The initiative of unconditional dialogue was
launched by the president, but the Iranians do not trust him. Thus, any
dialogue will not take place before the next segment of sanctions is
imposed, meaning the Iranian government will be weakened.
**Maria Dubovikova is a prominent political commentator, researcher and
expert on Middle East affairs. She is president of the Moscow-based
International Middle Eastern Studies Club (IMESClub). Twitter: @politblogme
Iran’s struggle for existence in the face of new
sanctions
Sabena Siddiqui/Al Arabiya/August 09/18
Implementing a financial package just in time before the first round of US
sanctions hit its economy, Iran has tried to halt a currency free-fall with
measures to control allocation of foreign currency and keep it strictly for
essential imports.
Preparing for the worst, people have also started hoarding gold causing high
prices and an insufficient supply. Hoping to continue with the JCPOA nuclear
deal if its demands of continued oil exportation and access to the global
banking system are accepted, Iran is trying to survive. Making things worse,
unemployment and the crunch of inflation is beginning to hit the middle class
and discontent has erupted on the streets even as the Iranian rial sinks.
Seeking to stem “malign activity” by Iran in a decisive manner, since the
previous deal was “decaying and rotten”, Pompeo has declared that the US
requires “enormous change” in Iran if it wants to escape sanctions. Abandoning
the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) nuclear deal in May, the US has
imposed the first string of sanctions targeting a range of economic sectors.
Banning the purchase of dollar bank notes by Iran as well as preventing it from
trading in precious metals or acquiring industrial metals, the Trump
administration also offers a dozen additional concessions in return for
accepting new limits on its nuclear program. In the impending second round in
November, Iran’s exports ranging from carpets to pistachios will be affected
while its auto sector and oil and energy industries will suffer severe setbacks.
Hinting at stringent measures to fully contain the Iranian nuclear program, the
intention is to coerce Iran to re-negotiate under economic crisis. Offering
negotiations, the White House national security adviser John Bolton recently
advised that, “They could take up the president’s offer to negotiate with them,
to give up their ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programs fully and really
verifiably not under the onerous terms of the Iran nuclear deal, which really
are not satisfactory.”Saving the Iranian regime will get difficult if the
sanctions don’t work the way the US wants, the next step could be cutting off
Iranian oil exports
Complete denuclearization
Observing that if the Iranians want a deal they would come to the table, Bolton
felt this factor alone would prove their sincerity. As predicted before, the US
intention does appear to be the complete denuclearization of Iran as per its
long-term strategy to allow a very select few nuclear powers in the world.
Walking out of the JCPOA had not given fast results because the EU was not
supportive. Maintaining sustainable trade could enable Iran to survive even a
second round of sanctions if the Europeans, China and India play their role. For
a while, many European firms did try to continue doing business but could not
risk falling out of favor with the US, especially as they could face ‘secondary
sanctions” from Washington. Forcing various European energy giants to scale back
or fully cut their operations in Iran, the United States has now clearly
demarcated the two sides of the divide. Even India had intended to continue
purchasing oil from its third largest supplier and continue as normal, but two
of the largest Iran affiliated banks in the country have already begun falling
in line with American demands for sanctions. But now the situation is different
as the economic crisis at home gets worse, it is fast becoming reminiscent of
US-Iran relations before the nuclear deal. Protests at home along with the
departure of European trade from Iran has upped the ante and it is a make or
break situation. Washington believes the choppy domestic scenario will
pressurize Iran into agreeing to negotiations for a new deal. Stabilizing the
rial remains Iran’s only safeguard and finding space, Chinese oil futures
contracts have spiked 5 percent extra from their daily limit even as the US
sanctions sunk in, significantly boosting yuan denominated oil trade.
Previously, banking transactions were conducted in US dollars and the shortage
of foreign exchange forced Iran to look for an alternative currency like the
yuan. Eventually however, it will not be just a matter of economic survival for
Iran. Saving the present regime will also get difficult if the sanctions game
does not work the way the US wants, the next step could be cutting off Iranian
oil exports.
Countering this move, Iran could block oil shipments through the Strait of
Hormuz affecting oil supplies all over the world. Even Tehran’s foreign policy
is turning more aggressive with warnings that regional insecurity will spin out
toward the Middle East and beyond.
The extreme worst-case scenario would be Iran speeding up its nuclear
activities, creating a war-like situation and potentially affecting global
security. Stabilizing the region, the JCPOA deal was a diplomatic success.
Considering the implications, it would be best for Iran and the other
stakeholders that a nuclear deal be re-negotiated at the earliest.
Is Iran in a ‘revolutionary’ situation?
Hamid Bahrami/Al Arabiya/August 09/18
When the poor people in a nation has nothing to lose and starvation forces them
to look for food in bins while critics of their oppressor are met with brutal
repression, neither bullets nor mass arrests can stop them from protesting
against the status quo. At a time when masses only see a dark future for
themselves and their families, any organized opposition effort to tear down the
wall of repression will foster a culture of resistance and give courage to the
silent majority to join the starving protesters on the streets. When the
affluent ruling class is riddled with corruption and the ruling system can no
longer deceive people because of growing internal conflicts among the political
establishment and is unable to reinstate the atmosphere of fear by its security
organs because of losing ideological leverage, a real change in favor of the
poor class is inevitable. The above is the very definition of a revolutionary
situation in a society. However, when there also exists a determined popular
resistance movement to overthrow the authoritarian system, no powers, no cunning
opportunists nor behind the scene deals can provide the ruling class with
security guarantees and ensure their survival by stopping the change whose time
has come.
Such is the situation today in Iran’s society. What makes this wave of
demonstrations different is that the people have finally had enough of being
robbed by the ruling regime and decided to come out on the streets
Reforming the republic
Discussions over reforming the Islamic Republic has dominated the Iran debate
for nearly two decades. But this illusion only resulted in a destroyed country
with constant state attacks on the civil liberties and fundamental rights of the
citizens, faltering economy, high suicide rate (due to social and economic
difficulties) and environmental crisis. Earlier this year, poor and starving
Iranians rose up against the regime in at least 100 major and small cities
across the country despite the authorities responding with bullets to their
legitimate demands. At the time, the middle class did not join them because of
the high risks associated with dissent. Now in the hot Iranian summer, a
different scenario is being played out on streets of Iran. Voice of America
reported last week that “anti-government protests by Iranians fed up with their
nation’s economic woes have spread to 10 major cities ... these protests are yet
to be dispersed”.
What makes this wave of demonstrations different is that the people have finally
had enough of being robbed by the ruling regime and decided to come out to the
streets. Hassan, an employee of the Sepah bank in Isfahan whose last name is not
provided because of security reason, tells me that, “until last year, my family
and I could afford living expenses if I worked hard and economized but this is
now impossible. This is while our money is being spent in Syria and Iraq or is
being stolen by officials and their children”. “I did not attend the nationwide
protests last January because I thought that was not my problem but now
middle-class citizens like me are rapidly becoming poorer”, he adds. I have
heard similar stories from dozen others like Hassan and most of them say they
will be forced to take the risk and join other protesters if the situation does
not change.
Brutal crackdown
The Iranian regime’s brutal crackdown shows that it is unable to address and
deliver on the legitimate demands of the people on the street.
Now, one could argue that a revolutionary situation with popular protesters on
the streets needs an organized opposition movement and strong leadership who are
able to articulate the demands of the poor and middle class into a clear roadmap
for success. These crucial ingredients for success is provided by the opposition
coalition the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), and its main
organized constituent, the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK),
among the various Iranian opposition groups. Both the MEK and the NCRI have
spearheaded the struggle against the Iranian regime for a free, democratic and
secular Iran for the last 40 years and are the opposition most feared by the
regime’s Supreme Leader and officials. These days the MEK is organizing
anti-regime protests through its network inside Iran and help the people to
break through the brutal crackdown of the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) forcing
the Supreme Leader and other senior officials to acknowledge this reality
publicly. Losing the domestic struggle to the forces of democratic change, the
Iranian regime is now desperate to deflect the crisis by provoking a controlled
military tension in the region. Considering the situation on Iran’s streets, the
Trump administration should not fall in the theocracy's trap as the clerics are
looking for ways to secure their survival and instead continue to support the
protesters on the streets in Iran as Secretary Pompeo did recently in his speech
to the Iranian-American community.
Saudi Arabia’s foreign files: Why worry from Riyadh?
Fares bin Hezam/Al Arabiya/August 09/18
For three years now, all eyes have been on Riyadh due to its consecutive
surprises. It entered a war in the beginning of the new era and decisively dealt
with domestic and foreign affairs. This brave policy caused Arab and
international worry. The question has thus been asked: Are we witnessing a new
expansive state? The Arab world has lived for decades with regimes led by ideas,
and whose foreign and domestic policies were drawn according to a Baathist,
Nasserist, leftist and nationalist approach, and some Libyan thing that is not
understandable. These regimes were tinctured with the characteristic of
expansion at the expense of other states and sought to spread their ideas via
military coups. They were countries whose pillars were the ideology that goes
beyond their people’s aspirations and that’s based on lecturing, inventing
fragile projects and wasting their people’s years and money. Riyadh today is
working according to a serious developmental approach, continuous modernization
and balance between its interests and the interests of other people, whether the
bond they share is that of joint fate or friendshi. The truth is that we are
before a progressive state, and not an expansionist one as the former is an
added value to each country that allies with it, and the latter raises
suspicions of dominance over it.
A modernizing state
Riyadh today is working according to a serious developmental approach,
continuous modernization and balance between its interests and the interests of
other people, whether the bond they share is that of joint fate or friendship.
It never did anything that raised questions, like what is being speculated about
it as a result of envious grudges, because it’s a country that gained its status
via its own project and attained regional and international appreciation thanks
to its credibility. And here we are today, seeing it as a nation of progress and
modernization in all fields and a country with a solid and fixed policy without
any substantial changes to its strong structure. While noting what the kingdom
has achieved, we must also note the models of other countries which maintained
their Islamic fabric and system while modernizing all their fields, beginning
with education and ending with providing people’s welfare, and the best example
of that is Malaysia.In the kingdom’s policy, there is something that calls for
meditation and learning from the experience. It’s needless to say that politics
has different patterns, but it has a clear vision when serving legitimate
interests. Today, Saudi Arabia handles dozens of Arab and international affairs
as it is managing the signs of a relationship with Iraq following a long
severance, observing the scene in Syria, drawing a new method with Lebanon,
resuming its legitimate mission in Yemen by restoring legitimacy and
reconstruction, and standing as an impenetrable embankment against Iran’s
expansion.
Given all of that and according to its fixed policy, the kingdom continues to
progress and modernize today. It began with the factor of economic power as it
is investing in giant companies whose activities extend to different major
countries hence creating political influence in addition to the expected
financial returns. It is an influential strong weapon, that’s currently present
in the strategy of public investment fund by moving from shy investment to brave
investment.
Riyadh knows its size on the map and formulates its foreign policy accordingly.
It sees in its comprehensive influence in the Islamic world a national role,
which is predetermined by its Islamic leadership and it launches its efforts
based on geographic presence, religious influence, economic power and political
vision. These factors together are only present in Riyadh; it’s thus normal that
it was endued leadership and not to Turkey, Iran or Qatar. Riyadh took decisive
decisions and reformulated its foreign policy. It’s aware of the consequences of
what it’s doing through every step of the way and comes up with the necessary
alternatives. It replaced the benefits of relations with Canada with other
options and it did not do that with Qatar since there is no need, given the
absence of an added value to Riyadh.
Saudi Arabia’s tone and concern is this: This is I and my view of what is at the
end of the horizon and I go beyond it. I am biased to the bigger and more
comprehensive future. My eyes see beyond the reality’s spaces, and in my hands
there is a pure history of giving and building. A deficient outlook is not one
of my characteristics, while others are concerned about their immediate success
and their vision does not extend beyond what their hands can reach, and these
are many, let’s extend the map so we can know more.