LCCC
ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
August 13/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
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Bible Quotations
Trump needs a regional policy beyond sanctions to check
Iran’s designs
Khairallah Khairallah/The Arab Weekly/August 12/18/
That US President Donald Trump reintroduced economic sanctions on Iran should be
considered a turning point on regional and international levels. What’s more
important, however, is for Trump to synthesise a comprehensive US approach to
the entire region.
Trump has taken the right step, especially if it turns out that it wasn’t an
isolated move focusing on just the situation inside Iran and not taking into
account Iran’s expansionist project. We should keep in mind that this project is
part of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s original Shia plan for the entire region
and particularly for Iraq.
If regime change in Iran has become an urgent necessity for the Iranians
themselves, it is even more urgent to change Iran’s policies in the region. When
Trump invited the Iranian regime to bilateral negotiations without
preconditions, it was a smart move. Tehran could only refuse the offer because
it realised it had two conditions of its own for any dialogue with the United
States. The first such condition is related to Hezbollah, which Iran considers
its best achievement since 1979.
Hezbollah is not just another political party in Lebanon. It is also a
self-contained standing army in the service of Iran. Hezbollah made Beirut an
Iranian media base. Most of the satellite channels used by Iran to pursue its
objective of destabilising the region broadcast from Beirut. One example is Al
Masirah, which belongs to the Houthis in Yemen but broadcasts from Beirut.
What is required of Iran is necessarily to change its state regime. To conclude
that there are positive signs from Tehran, all Iran has to do is become a
“normal” state concerned with its internal affairs and leave those of Iraq,
Syria, Lebanon and Yemen alone.
What we’re talking about represents the challenge facing the Trump
administration. Trump should have gone beyond economic sanctions and pressured
Iran into changing its policies on the regional level.
Some in Washington might say that there is no need to waste effort to counter
Iranian influence outside Iran itself and that it is better to choke it from
inside. They say there will be no need for further steps on the regional level
since Iran is going to be kept busy limiting damage caused by the sanctions.
Such a view belittles the Iranian regime’s capacity to resist and counterattack.
For that regime, the first line of defence in ensuring its survival is to foray
head first outside Iranian borders.
There is a need for a comprehensive American approach to the problems in the
region stretching from Bab el Mandeb Strait north to Iraq and east to the Gulf
region. To understand how the United States had come to giving Iran leeway in
the region, return to the periods of US Presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald
Reagan.
The United States stood helpless when the Iranian revolution held its diplomats
hostage for 444 days starting in November 1979. Iran’s appetite for more
American shame grew out of proportion and led to a series of suicide bombings of
US facilities in Lebanon. The US Embassy in Beirut was bombed in April 1983 and
the US Marines’ headquarters near Beirut’s International Airport was hit in
November that year. Battered and bruised, the Americans withdrew their troops
from Beirut and Iran had a field day in Lebanon.
Since that fateful year, Iran has been chipping away at Lebanon, its people and
its institutions. We have reached conditions in Lebanon such that Iran could
boast through its al-Quds Force Major-General Qassem Soleimani that Tehran
controls a comfortable majority in the Lebanese parliament.
Soleimani claimed that 74 out of the 128 representatives in the parliament were
loyal to Iran. None of those individuals dared contradict him and Iran continues
to block the process of forming a new government. So, considering the economic
crisis choking the country, is Lebanon doomed?
Lebanon is not alone in suffering from Iranian hegemony. Iraq has seen worse.
Nobody knows how long Iraq will last without a government. There, too, the
Iranians were given a free hand by the Americans who pulled out militarily from
the country in 2010. At that time, US President Barack Obama was obsessed with
accomodating Iran.
Everywhere in the Middle East, the Americans backed down to Iranian hegemony so
Iran decided to reach all the way to Yemen. Its proxy agents there, the Houthis,
are threatening international sea lanes through Bab el Mandeb Strait.
The Americans also backed down in Syria and allowed pro-Iranian militias to come
and go as they wished. Nobody really knows if Iran will give in to the
Russian-Israeli demand to keep 100km off the Golan Heights.
The US sanctions on Iran will have an effect but when? As everybody awaits
regime change in Iran, which will come sooner or later, more damage will be
inflicted on Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen.
As a superpower, the United States will eventually beat Iran at this waiting
game but there will always be this nagging question: Why doesn’t the United
States have a comprehensive approach to the Middle East and its repetitive
crises and to its confrontation with Iran?
A comprehensive approach to the problems of the Middle East would spare the
local populations many a hardship, especially in Syria where Iranian hatred to
everything that is Arab is destroying the country.
*Khairallah Khairallah is a Lebanese writer.
Tehran’s ‘proxy model’ faces new constraints
Mark Habeeb/The Arab Weekly/August 12/18/
Ever since the Iranian revolution in 1979, Tehran’s leaders have employed proxy
forces — often insurgent groups and terrorist organisations — to advance the
Islamic Republic’s regional objectives. Initially, the Iranian Revolution
advocated “Muslim unity” and attempted to position itself as the leader of all
Muslims in the anti-US and anti-imperialistic struggle.
However, Alex Vatanka, a senior fellow at Washington’s Middle East Institute,
said that following the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and Iran’s subsequent
involvement in the civil wars in Iraq and Syria, Tehran increasingly has pursued
a sectarian agenda by supporting primarily Shia proxies. Vatanka details his
findings in “The Emergence of Iran’s ‘Proxy Model,’” a study released by the
Middle East Institute.
Iran’s use of proxy forces since 1979 has not been a consistent practice.
Vatanka said that after the death of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1989, Tehran
reconsidered the proxy model and the 1990s saw an Iranian retrenchment in the
region.
Then, in 2003, came the US-led invasion of Iraq and overthrow of Saddam Hussein,
which “catalysed a sudden power vacuum in that country.” This created a tempting
opportunity, especially for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
“After 2003,” Vatanka writes, “Iran’s IRGC stepped quickly in to identify and
cultivate what is in Persian referred to as the ‘goro-haaye vije,’ or ‘special
groups’ — Arabs and other non-Iranians — who would become the Islamic Republic’s
foot soldiers.”
When civil war broke out in Syria in 2011, Tehran applied the template it
developed in Iraq as it “bolstered local non-state militant actors as its foot
soldiers in the broader fight for influence,” Vatanka said. In Syria, Tehran
also had the advantage of being on the same side as the regime and, later, of
Moscow.
There was one key difference in Iran’s involvement in Syria compared to Iraq,
writes Vatanka: “The major departure in Syria, when compared to the situation in
Iraq, was the need for Iran to bring in droves of non-locals — such as Iraqis,
Afghans, Pakistanis and Hezbollah from Lebanon — to fight under Iranian
leadership to keep the Assad regime from collapse,” he said.
Vatanka suggests that Tehran has had a harder time selling to the Iranian people
why Syria is a national security issue, which was a much easier argument to make
when the fighting was in neighbouring Iraq. As a result, Iranian leaders have
been careful to limit Iranian casualties and rely even more on proxy forces to
do the fighting.
Because both the Iraqi and Syrian civil wars quickly took on a sectarian nature,
Iran has found itself no longer posing as the revolutionary vanguard for all
Muslims. Its proxies are almost solely Shia forces or at least non-Sunni forces
such as the Houthis in Yemen.
As a result, Iran’s broader revolutionary message has diminished. Tehran is no
longer viewed, for example, as a key supporter of the Palestinians’ struggle
against Israel.
Vatanka said he does not believe that Iran purposefully chose to express its
revolutionary fervour in sectarian terms. Rather, the situations in Iraq and
Syria, along with broader instability throughout the region after the “Arab
spring,” created an environment in which “Tehran’s reliance on Shia militant
groups is where it has found the most return for its investments.”
Vatanka argues that “Tehran will continue to look for ways to break its image as
a ‘Shia power,’ which inherently limits its ability to manoeuvre.” However,
outside of on-and-off again support for Hamas, it is hard to see how Iran can
retreat from the sectarian fight.
The forecast, Vatanka said, was for more of the same: “The proxy model approach
has overall been successful for Iran. Unless its costs outweigh the benefits, no
major shift in this policy can be expected while Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei remains the decisive voice in policymaking in Tehran.”
It is yet to be seen whether the Trump administration’s resumption of harsh
sanctions on Iran will put a brake on its ability to conduct war by proxy.
If Vatanka is correct, the sectarian dimension of regional conflicts in the
region will continue and perhaps even grow. In the meantime, Vatanka counsels
Iran’s Sunni competitors, especially Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates,
“to continue to appeal to non-Islamist Shia Arabs. The policy of treating all
Shia, regardless of their political persuasions, as Iranian proxies badly
backfired.”
*Mark Habeeb is East-West editor of The Arab Weekly and adjunct professor of
Global Politics and Security at Georgetown University in Washington.
Deadly conflict brews within Coptic Church in Egypt’s Wadi
al-Natroun
Sonia Farid/Al Arabiya English/August 12/18
In the early hours of July 29, Bishop Epiphanius, Abbot of Saint Macarius the
Great Monastery in Wadi al-Natroun, was found dead in a hallway inside the
monastery.
The 64-year-old bishop was lying in a pool of blood and investigations revealed
he was hit on the head with a heavy object.
Coptic monk Isaiah al-Makari was accused of the murder has been detained and
will remain in custody for four days pending investigations into the suspicious
death of a bishop, his lawyer said on Saturday.
On August 2, the Coptic Orthodox Church issued a number of decrees concerning
monastic life. These included giving monks one month to close all their accounts
on social networking websites—the Pope starting by closing his Facebook page—and
not accepting new monks for one year in all monasteries across the nation. The
church also warned monks of appearing in the media, being involved in any
financial interactions or taking part in any projects without the prior approval
of their respective monasteries, getting out of their monasteries without
reason, or receiving visitors without permission.
The 64-year-old bishop was lying in a pool of blood and investigations revealed
he was hit on the head with a heavy object. (Facebook)
On August 5, the church announced the defrocking of Makari, a young monk at the
same monastery, for “committing inappropriate behavior that contradicts monastic
behavior,” yet no further details were released. On August 6, a young monk
called Fatlaous al-Makari slit his wrist and jumped off a high building also in
the same monastery and was taken to hospital. Finding it hard to dismiss a
connection between the three incidents, questions about a conflict within the
Coptic Orthodox Church seem rather inevitable.
Father Boulos Halim, the spokesman of the Coptic Church, said that no one inside
or outside the monastery has been officially charge and denied that the
defrocking is related to the murder. “Isaiah al-Makari was questioned by the
Monastic Affairs Committee at the Holy Synod early this year and a decision to
send him away from the monastery was issued because of issues pertaining to
monastic laws,” he said. Halim added that several of Makari’s fellow monks
signed a petition that requested forgiving him and they pledged that his
behavior would change. “The petition was submitted to the late Bishop Epiphanius,
who in turn submitted it to the pope recommending that he accepts it. Makari was
forgiven and stayed at the monastery, yet unfortunately his behavior did not
change, which drove the committee to finally defrocking him.” Halim did not,
however, specify what this “behavior” was.
Past conflicts
However, it was hard for many to overlook the possible link between past
conflicts within the Coptic Church, in which the monastery of Saint Macarius the
Great featured prominently, and the current developments. Journalist Maged Atef
comments on the latest incidents bring back to the surface the long disagreement
between the late Pope Shenouda III and Father Matta al-Meskin, the late abbot of
the monastery.
“The two men adopted different views on the role of the church. While Shenouda
worked on consolidating ties between the church and the state, al-Meskin
believed that the church’s role should only be spiritual,” he wrote. “Al-Meskin
was also more open to reconciliation with other sects than Shenouda who was
quite hostile to the West, hence its churches, and was more affected by Gamal
Abdel Nasser’s nationalist discourse.” While the conflict started at an earlier
stage, it escalated remarkably after Shenouda had taken office as the Patriarch
and started launching a campaign against al-Meskin.
“This campaign, carried out by Shenouda’s supporters, focused on accusing al-Meskin
of heresy and discrediting all the studies he conducted on Coptic Orthodoxy and
monastic life,” Atef explained, adding that al-Meskin’s books were banned from
all libraries affiliated to the church. Matta al-Meskin, on the other hand,
retired to the monastery and there attracted a large number of disciples who
subscribed to his views. “This drove Shenouda to send more of his supporters to
the monastery, which therefore became the center of the conflict.”
It is noteworthy that Bishop Epiphanius was among the supporters of Matta al-Meskin
while both Isaiah al-Makari and Fatlaous al-Makari belong to the more
conservative school led by Pope Shenouda.
Conflicts within the monastery
According to journalist Tamer Hendawi, the circumstances surrounding the murder
of Bishop Epiphanius link it to the conflicts within the monastery. “The bishop
was killed on his way from his room to the church, which makes it more likely
that the killer is from inside the monastery,” he wrote. Hendawi added that in
monasteries only monks are allowed in and a very limited number of workers. “As
for visits, they are preplanned and are not frequent.” Hendawi added that for
years that monastery has been divided between supporters of two different
schools and the disputes escalated in the years between the death of Matta al-Meskin
in 2006 and the death of Shenouda in 2012. “When Pope Shenouda visited the
monastery in 2009, then Abbot Bishop Mikhail submitted his resignation. During
this visit, Pope Shenouda made the monks wear a coif and Matta al-Meskin was
against that and spent all his monastic life without wearing one.”
Hendawi notes that the escalation of tension in the monastery drove Bishop to go
back to managing the monastery. “Yet as soon as Pope Tawadros II took office,
Mikhail asked to be relieved of his duties and this is when Bishop Epiphanius
was chosen.” Hendawi also points out the decision to close all monks’ accounts
on social media is another proof that the conflict is related to recent
developments. “Closing those accounts was obviously a means of avoiding further
tension between the two camps in the monastery and preventing this tension from
coming out to the public.”
Writer Shadi Luis notes that the monastery of Saint Macarius the Great has
always been a symbol of rebelling against the authorities since Byzantine times
and argues that while there is no proof that the latest incidents are linked to
past disputes, they at least highlight the fact that the monastery of Saint
Macarius the Great is still a center of such conflict.
“And regardless of what investigations would prove, the church is likely to use
the murder as a pretext for subjugating all forms of rebellion and for which the
monastery has for years been a symbol,” he wrote, adding that the monastery on
the other hand will try as hard as it can to maintain the independence it
managed to gain throughout the years.
Despite the fact that Pope Tawadros II is considered a reformist who to a great
extent subscribes to many of Matta al-Meskin’s ideas, Luis argues that he is
more likely to continue the work of his predecessors as far as centralizing the
power of the Coptic Church is concerned. “The pope will work on becoming the
sole representative of the Copts on both the spiritual and political levels and
will be supported in that by the state as well as by the general political
atmosphere,” he added. “If this happens, it will put an end to a history of
rebellion within Coptic Christianity, one that actually goes back to the fourth
century AD and that was always epitomized by the monastery of Saint Macarius the
Great.”
Europe’s dangerous illusions about Iran
Amir Taheri/Al Arabiya/August 12/18
It was an almost surrealistic scene the other day when the European Union’s
foreign relations spokeswoman Federica Mogherini traveled halfway around the
world to New Zealand to lobby for “continued trade with the Islamic Republic of
Iran” in defiance of sanctions re-imposed by US President Donald Trump.
Here was an official of a bloc of democracies supposedly allied to the United
States not only criticizing an American policy, something quite legitimate, but
inviting others to oppose it with full resolve. Almost on the same day Alistair
Burt, the minister in charge of the Middle East in the British Foreign Office,
told BBC Radio 4 that the United Kingdom, still part of the EU, was adopting a
similar position against Trump’s move.
By re-imposing some of the sanctions imposed by four of his predecessors, Trump
may have been impolitic or provocative. But he has betrayed no signature and
violated no treaty. All he has done is refusing to continue suspending some
sanctions as Bill Clinton and Barack Obama had done before him
Other European Union officials have also expressed similar views. The problem is
that they don’t really know what they are talking about.
Illegitimate intervention
To start with, they all insist that the so-called “nuke deal” concocted by
former US President Barack Obama is inviolable because, in Mogherini’s words,
the EU must “honor its signature.” However, the EU never signed the so-called
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), nor did anyone else. There is no
signature to honor or not.
In any case, though hovering on the sidelines like a ghost, the EU was never
part of the negotiations that took place between Iran on one hand and the five
permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany on the other.
Moreover, the so-called 5+1 group that negotiated with the Islamic Republic was
an informal group with absolutely no legal existence and certainly no legally
binding mission and no mechanism for enforcing its decisions and answerability.
If Mogherini and Alistair Burt are serious in their campaign in favor of the
JCPOA they should re-write it in the form of a treaty signed by EU members and
ratified by their respective parliaments or at least the EU’s Council of
Ministers. Even then, for JCPOA to acquire some legal dignity it would have to
be re-written in the form of an act of parliament and submitted to the Islamic
Majlis in Tehran for proper ratification according to the Iranian Constitution,
something that the Islamic government is loathing to do.
All of that would require an agreement on a single official version of the deal,
which means discarding the various English and Persian versions in circulation.
By re-imposing some of the sanctions imposed by four of his predecessors, Trump
may have been impolitic or provocative. But he has betrayed no signature and
violated no treaty. All he has done is refusing to continue suspending some
sanctions as Bill Clinton and Barack Obama had done before him.
Other factors point to EU’s hypocrisy in this matter.
With the re-imposition of American sanctions, thousands of firms trading with
both Iran and the US would face a dilemma: which of the two markets do they
choose? It is not in the EU’s mandate to resolve that dilemma for them. So far,
and at least two years after the ”nuke deal” was unveiled, European firms are
not quite sure how or even if they can treat the Islamic Republic as a normal
trading partner. Nor has the EU’s lobbying for the mullahs persuaded them to
free a dozen European Union citizens still held hostage in Tehran about whom
neither Mogherini nor Burt ever make a noise.
If sincere, the EU could use a range of tools at its disposal to encourage at
least some firms to continue trading with Iran in areas affected by the
re-imposed sanctions. Four-fifths of Iran’s trade with the EU bloc is with
Germany, France, the UK and Italy. All those countries have well-established
mechanisms for export protection but none is prepared to use them in support of
trading with Iran. Interestingly, some of the sanctions that the EU is still
keeping in place against Iran are tougher than those re-imposed by Trump.
Trump-bashing
Leaving all that aside, the EU’s Trump-bashing on the issue will not change some
facts. Even supposing the EU did something to render the re-imposed American
sanctions less painful or utterly ineffective the concerns that Trump has raised
about aspects of Tehran’s behavior would remain worthy of consideration by
Europeans.
Shouldn’t one try to persuade or force Tehran to stop “exporting revolution”
i.e. terror? Doesn’t peace and stability in the Middle East benefit from an end
to Tehran’s meddling in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Yemen and Bahrain, not to mention
Afghanistan and Pakistan? Would it not be a good thing if the present rulers in
Tehran allowed the Iranian people a greater space for self-expression and
participation in shaping their nation’s destiny?
The EU could play a positive role by acting as a broker between Iran and the US
rather than go for empty diplomatic gesticulations. The EU should seek to
persuade Iran that its traditional cheat-and-retreat strategy peaked out under
Obama and its pursuit would only lead to disaster.
Obama encouraged the mullahs in their reckless strategy by supposedly granting
them “the right to enrich uranium” as Islamic Foreign Minister Mohammad-Javad
Zarif goes around boasting. However, all nations have the right to enrich
uranium if they so wish or even to build nuclear weapons.
The mullahs wanted another “victory over the Infidel” and Obama gave them the
illusion of one through secret negotiations in Oman. Obama’s behavior persuaded
the mullahs that regardless of what mischief they may make at home or abroad no
one would make them pay a price for it.
Even better, a faux anti-American profile might give a morally bankrupt and
repressive regime some prestige in parts of the world where anti-Americanism is
the last refuge of every scoundrel. In a talk in New York in 2016, Zarif noted
that without its “anti-Imperialist” profile the Islamic Republic would be “just
another Pakistan”, which in his world view means a nobody.
Trump isn’t repeating Obama’s mistake by getting involved in secret shenanigans
favored by the mullahs; he is playing above board. His message is, behave
differently and you shall be treated differently.
That may or may not be the right policy, but it is at least a policy. The EU, on
the other hand, has no policy on Iran apart from using it as an excuse for a
little bit of Trump-bashing, a favorite global sport these days.
Iran’s mullahs and the orphan regime
Abdullah bin Bijad Al-Otaibi/Al Arabiya/August 12/18
Has US President Donald Trump’s position on Iran changed? Has he demolished his
stated strategy as well as the statements of his senior administration
officials, abandoned the conditions set by his foreign affairs minister and set
closed doors and dead-end paths before the Iranian regime, the biggest sponsor
of terrorism in the world?
These questions were raised by some observers in the past phase.
The answer to these questions is simple; no such thing has happened. President
Trump’s recent offer is part of his strategy and vision in dealing with the
Iranian regime. The Iranian regime is required to change its evil behavior,
either under the threat of force or through sanctions that make it conform to
international laws. The extent of these sanctions’ strength and cruelty will
specify the time needed to subjugate the regime, and this is what Trump has said
more than once, that the Iranian regime should change its behavior, and that
sanctions will force it to change and the Iranians will want to negotiate sooner
or later.
Common stand
The truth is that this is a desire shared by Saudi Arabia and its allies in the
region in their confrontation of the Iranian regime and its destructive policies
in the region. The Iranian regime should end its illegitimate interference in
four Arab countries: Yemen, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon and should also look after
its people’s interests, and if it does not, it would be forced to do so, as was
famously stated by the Saudi Crown Prince.
Despite its statements of defiance, the Iranian regime is desperately seeking to
communicate with Washington. The US also welcomes any communication as long as
it leads to the Iranian regime’s compliance. Messages are exchanged, some of
which have been made public while others were not. However, all of them are in
the same direction. The Iranian regime uses ideology and sectarianism in its
expansionist project in the region but it had previously dealt with the country
it calls ‘Great Satan’ and other countries which it opposes via its slogans so
why would it be different this time?
The Iraqi people have risen up against Iran and its agents in the country, on
politicians, parties and militias in all parts of the country and mostly in the
south
The popular discontent against the mullahs’ regime has reached an unprecedented
level. The Supreme Leader and the Revolutionary Guards — the two most powerful
bodies in the Iranian regime — are unable to see the strength, depth, and
expansion of this discontent which is increasing and which will further increase
due to the new sanctions.
The imposed sanctions and the sanctions which will be imposed in the coming
months all aim to weaken the regime’s economy and its ability to meet internal
commitments and resume external adventures. The Iranian regime would thus have
two options. The first one is reverting to the concerns of the Iranian people
and looking after their interests, not out of its desire to serve its people or
make them happy but out of fear of a major revolution that it cannot confront
and which may lead to its fall. The second one is to continue spreading
destruction in the region and the world and this will subject it to more
sanctions and increase the world’s awareness about the past 40 years during
which this radical regime supported all kinds of terrorism – and in the end it
will lose and suffer on several counts.
Iran’s proxies suffer
After North Korea’s bid to make a historical reconciliation with the world, the
Iranian regime will become an orphan in the world with no one like it. The evil
regime that’s internationally been outcast will have no supporters. All its
tricks are exposed, and it would not benefit from playing the game of
vacillating between the so-called reformists and hardliners. The world now knows
very well that the Iranian regime does not have any moderates, as they are all
hardliners with varying degrees.
Iran’s wings in the region are also suffering. The Iraqi people have risen up
against Iran and its agents in the country, on politicians, parties and militias
in all parts of the country and mostly in the south. This uprising is supported
by the traditional reference in Iraq which represents the opposite of the
reference of Vilayat-e Faqih which has been modernized at the hands of Khomeini
and Khamenei after him. Iran’s militias in Syria are suffering a lot from the
repeated Israeli targeting, from the regime’s desire to abandon them and from
the ability of any Russian-American understandings to undermine them and lead to
their expulsion from Syria.
Similar reversals now face the terrorist Hezbollah militia in Lebanon, which has
hijacked the Lebanese state and which commits murder and massacres against the
Syrian people. The party’s Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah admitted that the
group’s wages, expenses, food and drink come from the regime in Tehran. Drug
trafficking will not be enough for Hezbollah to cover the financial shortages
that may happen after sanctions are fully re-instated on the Iranian regime.
The Houthi militia in Yemen might be the foremost of these Iranian affiliates to
succumb from this pressure because it will face what similar militias are facing
in the three mentioned countries and it’s also confronting an Arab alliance that
has already regained legitimate control over large tracts of Yemen and which is
winning every day and not losing. The Houthi militia is only holding on to what
it has but it’s not regaining any liberated land. It’s facing a strong Yemeni
army, an effective Yemeni resistance and a victorious Arab alliance on all
fronts. All its practices are internationally condemned, while it keeps killing
civilians and bombing markets as it did in Hodeidah earlier this month.
There are two clear military approaches in Yemen since the launch of ‘Operation
Decisive Storm’. The first approach is that of the Yemeni state, the Yemeni army
and the alliance and which is fully committed to the international law in all
respects. The second approach is that of the Houthi militia and which violates
international laws and commits crimes and atrocities. Any observer of what is
happening in Yemen since the beginning of the war can easily see who is
responsible for incidents like the Hodeidah bombing, the murder of civilians and
the use of civilians as human shields.
The Iranian currency has fallen to its worst level. This is drastically
affecting the Iranian economy. This fall has occurred before all sanctions are
fully re-instated. The regime is incapable of waging a military war to escape
from internal problems and is incapable of convincing its people that it cares
for their interests or defends their rights.
These are two major failures that would make a huge impact in forcing the regime
to obediently return to the international community and force it to fully comply
with international laws and end its major adventures of sabotage and destruction
and permanently betting on terrorism, whether Sunni and Shiite, and which it has
done ever since the mullahs’ revolution in 1979 until today.
In the end, no one thinks that the Iranian regime will change overnight but
after the strict sanctions, it will find itself obliged to change its behavior
and policies and it will reluctantly give up its ambitions and delusions. It’s
only a matter of time.
Human development precedes democracy
Mohammed Al Shaikh/Al Arabiya/August 12/18
Democracy is not always the perfect solution in relations between government and
the people and as long as societies do not have their most important elements in
place: individualism and abandoning sectarian and tribal affiliations.
Sectarian voting
When sectarian and tribal people vote for a candidate, they don’t choose him
because they think he is the best and the most capable of politically and
economically leading the country. They vote to whoever represents the group,
whether on a religious sectarian level or an ethnic and tribal level. I am
totally convinced that societies which believe in tribal or sectarian
affiliations as a primary identity before individualism will most likely lead to
social unrest where the majority, whether sectarian or tribal, deprives the
minorities that are different from them of their rights.
This may develop into a civil war, which only God knows its duration. That’s why
I fully believe that human development and freeing an individual of his or her
inherited sectarian or tribal affiliations are an essential condition which
democracy cannot be achieved without.
Failed states
The Arab revolutions, which President Obama called the Arab Spring and appointed
Qatar to foment through its funds and media led to a lot of bloodshed, massacres
and human and financial disasters, which continue till today.
Qarar is a small state that’s limited in population and geography and if we take
it as an example and if Hamad bin Khalifa – who sponsored the so-called Arab
Spring – establishes democracy there as the media he backs demands and holds
elections, tribal affiliations will play a key role in empowering this or that
tribe. This would be for reasons based on the candidate’s tribal affiliations
and not on his competence. In fact of all Gulf countries, Qatar is the one where
the majority of its small population has tribal affiliations.
Libya is another example. The war that broke out there after the fall of
President Gaddafi is going on between different tribes and groups with different
religious ideologies. They seek with the force of arms to possess power either
for religious reasons, like the Muslim Brotherhood, or for tribal motives. I do
not think that Libya would end up democratic even if the war continues for
another 100 years unless one of the contenders imposes himself by the power of
arms and exclude others.
Corruption in democracies
The West along with some Arab intellectuals still believes that democracy offers
the best solution for Arab countries. They overlook the mindset of Arabs who
give priority to sectarian and tribal loyalty over national loyalty. All
experiences which tried a democratic solution have failed drastically, and many
such states have ended up among the most corrupt countries, as is confirmed by
Transparency International.
Iraq which is an oil-rich country that enjoys resources which other countries do
not have and which also has a proud historical heritage is an example. It is
suffering form from corruption, insecurity and several more of the era’s
maladies. On the other hand, Gulf countries, primarily Saudi Arabia and the UAE,
had never claimed to be democratic and despite that their people are reconciled
with their leaders. These countries also enjoy security, stability and relative
welfare especially when compared to Iraq that has similar economic resources. If
things are measured in terms of outcomes, why have Gulf States succeeded without
democracy, while states that imported democracy from the West failed?
Thus, we must be convinced of a truth which stipulates that human development,
educating the individual and strengthening individualism come first. When Arabs
get rid of sectarian or tribal tendencies, then it may be possible for one to
think of the democratic solution as a way to regulate the social contract
between the government and the governed.
Ordinary people pay the price for Tehran’s support of
Assad
الدكتور ماجد ربيزاده: الناس
العاديين هم من يدفع ثمن مساندة إيران للأسد
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/August 12/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/66693/dr-majid-rafizadeh-ordinary-people-pay-the-price-for-tehrans-support-of-assad-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AF%D9%83%D8%AA%D9%88%D8%B1-%D9%85%D8%A7%D8%AC%D8%AF-%D8%B1%D8%A8%D9%8A%D8%B2%D8%A7%D8%AF/
It is ironic how history can surprise many historians, scholars,
politicians and policy analysts. When the uprising began in Syria in 2011, many
world leaders and experts predicted that Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime
was on the verge of collapse. They most likely drew their conclusions from the
historic developments that occurred in other Arab countries such as Egypt, Libya
and Tunisia during the Arab Spring.
World leaders such as the former US President Barack Obama, former French
President Nicolas Sarkozy, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and former British
Prime Minister David Cameron appeared to contend that Assad’s fall was “only a
matter of time.” Hence, they famously called for the Syrian president to step
down. But, after more than seven years of civil war, the Syrian regime has
survived and it is widely perceived that Assad has come out of the conflict
triumphant. In fact, in the last few months, after Assad recaptured the last
major stronghold of the rebels in the suburbs of Damascus, and after their
surrender in the city of Daraa (which was the birthplace of the popular
uprising), Israel recently announced that the Syrian civil war had effectively
came to an end. Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman told reporters last
week: “From our perspective, the situation is returning to how it was before the
civil war, meaning there is a real address, someone responsible, and central
rule.”
Nevertheless, it is worth noting that suppressing most of the rebellion,
recapturing major cities and rebel holdouts, and maintaining control in Damascus
was not simply a result of luck for Assad and his loyalists.
The external dimension of the Syrian civil war played a far-reaching role in the
Assad regime’s fate. To put it simply, the hesitation, lack of coordination and
unification, in addition to the reluctance of Assad’s external enemies to enact
a firm policy against the Syrian regime, combined with the commitment,
determination and political willpower of Assad’s allies to sustain his grip on
power, ultimately tipped the balance of power in favor of Assad’s Alawite-dominated
state. A game-changer for Damascus was the extensive role that its staunchest
geopolitical, ideological and strategic ally — the Iranian regime — has
fulfilled.
At the beginning, Tehran only provided advisory assistance and moral support to
the Syrian regime. Subsequently, specifically during 2012 and 2013, when Assad’s
forces showed weakness and lost several major battles and territories to the
opposition and rebel groups, Iran ratcheted up its involvement. At this point,
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei instructed the government to provide
military, intelligence and economic assistance to Assad. Iranian leaders across
the political spectrum — moderates, hard-liners and principlists — also reached
a consensus by unanimously calling for more robust support to defend their ally.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and its elite branch, the Quds Force,
which conducts military and ideological operations in foreign countries,
dispatched low-level soldiers as well as senior military generals to Syria. In
addition, Iran used Hezbollah, Shiite militias from across the region, and
recruited fighters from other countries such as Afghanistan to fight in Syria
alongside Assad’s forces.
From both the Iranian leaders and Assad’s perspectives, they have finally
emerged as winners of the seven-year-old civil war, although violence and brute
force was deployed and nearly half a million of people, including thousands of
children, have been killed
More importantly, as inflation skyrocketed in Syria and the regime lost revenue
due to the war, as well as regional and international sanctions, Iran did not
hesitate to open the doors of its nation’s treasury to fulfill Assad’s economic
needs. Iran spent roughly $16 billion a year to support Assad. Tehran also
opened a credit line for Damascus and continued to extend it — it has now
reached over $3 billion. With such strong financial and military support, Iran
has deeply infiltrated the political, military and security structures of Syria.
From both the Iranian leaders and Assad’s perspectives, they have finally
emerged as winners of the seven-year-old civil war, although violence and brute
force was deployed and nearly half a million of people, including thousands of
children, have been killed. The Iranian regime celebrated accomplishing its
mission as Assad regained control of most territories.
But what Iran’s leaders did not predict was the unintended consequences of their
unequivocal support for Assad and his forces. As the Tehran regime hemorrhaged
$100 billion of the nation’s wealth in order to keep Assad and his Alawite-dominated
state in power, its own citizens suffered dramatically. The financial situation
for ordinary Iranian people became unbearable; the unemployment rate increased,
inflation rose, and millions of people could no longer make ends meet.
If the Iranian leaders had invested the billions of dollars that they used to
save Assad on creating jobs at home and improving the economy, they would not be
facing nationwide protests.
The irony is that Assad may have won the civil war with the assistance of Iran,
but now Tehran is in deep turmoil. But the difference is that Assad is not in a
position to reciprocate Tehran’s favor and come to its aid, since he is
presiding over a battered and war-torn country.
*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
The media is wrong — Trump is not tough enough on Iran
Baria Alamuddin/Arab News/August 12/18
Sometimes the world’s media resembles a giant echo chamber. A high proportion of
the liberal media is consumed by endless criticism of President Donald Trump’s
divisive policies — often justifiably. So with Trump reimposing sanctions on
Tehran, this vast media machine has steamrolled ahead, thoughtlessly denouncing
Trump’s “tough” position against Iran. We are treated to TV debate shows without
any debate: Participants simply take turns repetitively and tediously arguing
that the nuclear deal seemed to be working fine, and “Trump’s approach will only
undermine Iran’s moderates.”
Meanwhile — instead of working with America to create a workable successor deal
— Europe is vigorously trying to appease Tehran and subvert US efforts, dreaming
up a bizarre framework for conferring anti-sanctions protection for Western
firms who have mostly been smart enough to interpret the wind direction and exit
the Iranian economy as fast as possible.
The fundamental problem is what the nuclear deal didn’t cover: Namely, the
ballistic program, the long-term future of Iran’s nuclear program, and the
unleashing of paramilitary hordes across the region to sabotage the governing
systems of Middle Eastern states. Why is the latter point consistently ignored
by the Western media?
Iran’s paramilitary proxies strategy is arguably an outgrowth of Western
pressure on the nuclear program. During the 1980s, revolutionary Iran bankrolled
paramilitary forces almost literally everywhere: Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain,
Iraq, Kuwait, etc. However, after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s death, it was
the “pragmatists” – Ali Khamenei and Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani — who curtailed
this activity, allowing Iran to rebuild after the catastrophic war with Iraq.
Sanctions are necessary. Yet, despite the accumulation of international
sanctions after 2005, Iran’s paramilitary spending similarly mushroomed; partly
because the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps filled its coffers through
monopolizing sanctions-evading networks in oil, heavy arms, narcotics and basic
goods
We now know that Supreme Leader Khamenei, the “pragmatist,” spent the 1990s
quietly pursuing breakout nuclear capacity so Tehran could menace its enemies —
America, Israel, Europe, and the Gulf Cooperation Council states — with nuclear
holocaust. When this program was discovered in 2003, Khamenei was forced to
shelve his frenzied ambitions for nuclear apocalypse. So, in order to retain his
warmongering abilities, Khamenei dusted off Khomeini’s revolutionary blueprint
for a transnational proxy army of brainwashed militants based on the hugely
successful model of Hezbollah, which today outguns the Lebanese state itself.
Within a couple of years, Khamenei’s lieutenant, Gen. Qassem Soleimani, had
armed and trained Iraqi Shiite militants for staging thousands of attacks
against American, British and Iraqi forces, causing hundreds of fatalities. Then
came the Syrian uprising, where around 60,000 proxies have retained Bashar Assad
in power as an Iranian puppet. Iran, likewise, armed various parties in
Afghanistan, while cashing in on the lucrative opium trade. In Yemen, Houthi
terrorists rain down Iranian missiles upon Saudi Arabia and menace the globally
crucial Bab Al-Mandab Strait. Iran, meanwhile, has sought to exacerbate
religious and political tensions throughout the Middle East and North Africa,
while its arms smuggling networks penetrated deep into the African continent.
Sanctions are necessary. Yet, despite the accumulation of international
sanctions after 2005, Iran’s paramilitary spending similarly mushroomed; partly
because the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps filled its coffers through
monopolizing sanctions-evading networks in oil, heavy arms, narcotics and basic
goods. The IRGC reinforced its stranglehold on the economy while ordinary
Iranians suffered.
During the 1980s, the Western media portrayed Khomeini as a deranged,
bloodthirsty demagogue, while Khamenei was widely viewed as a pragmatic voice of
reason. Today we have Hassan Rouhani and Mohammed Javad Zarif providing the
“reformist” facade. Yet, from the earliest days of the revolution, Rouhani,
alongside Khamenei, was a quintessential regime insider. Instead of meeting
America halfway, Rouhani is today escalating his anti-Western rhetoric and
winning plaudits from Soleimani and Khamenei.
What would be the point of negotiating with Rouhani, when the so-called
president isn’t sufficiently senior to be properly briefed about Khamenei and
Soleimani’s bellicose regional strategy? The presidency is a smiling facade for
a repressive and hated terrorist regime. Let’s not kid ourselves.
By trying to honor a deal that is already dead, Europe is undermining any hope
of a holistic and enforceable containment program against Iran. Meanwhile,
China, Russia and India will happily circumvent American efforts and provide
Iran’s economy with back-door funds.
Yet Trump himself lacks a coherent Iran containment strategy. I doubt he clearly
understands who the Hezbollah Brigades, Asa’ib Ahl Al-Haq and the Houthis are,
despite these factions threatening to attack American assets. Nevertheless, some
officials driving Trump’s policies comprehend Iranian meddling all too well.
Defence Secretary James Mattis was on the ground in Iraq when US troops were
being slaughtered by Iranian munitions. Mattis spent the past decade having his
stark warnings of Iranian aggression being completely ignored by the Obama
administration.
Sanctions ratchet up the pressure, but they are a blunt instrument that often
produce perverse results — not least enriching the IRGC and paramilitary
factions. If Trump has the stomach for confronting this militia menace, he must
stop hinting about quitting Syria and block their further expansion, while
working with allies to ensure that militants cannot dominate Iraq’s forthcoming
government. He must assist the GCC coalition in halting Iran’s pipeline of heavy
munitions to the Houthis. Trump likes quick, easy wins — but there is no cheap
win against Iran. Tehran is patient, tenacious and single-minded in building up
its war-making assets across the region, until one day we wake up and it is the
sole dominant force on the field.
Instead of castigating Trump for being mean to nice Mr. Rouhani, the world’s
media must take a hard look at what Iran is actually doing — and then criticize
Trump for not going far enough in devising an all-encompassing strategy to stop
Tehran in its tracks. Only this can prevent the Arabian Gulf, the Red Sea and
the Eastern Mediterranean from becoming Iranian zones of control, from which
Iran can menace the global economy — with equally catastrophic consequences to
the ayatollahs having been allowed to possess a nuclear bomb in the first place.
*Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaster in the Middle
East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has
interviewed numerous heads of state.
A choice between reform, adjustment and self-sabotage: Tehran considers its
options
Raghida Dergham/The National/August 12/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/66695/%D8%B1%D8%A7%D8%BA%D8%AF%D8%A9-%D8%AF%D8%B1%D8%BA%D8%A7%D9%85-%D8%A5%D9%8A%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%AA%D8%AE%D8%AA%D8%A7%D8%B1-%D8%A8%D9%8A%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A7%D9%87%D8%AA%D8%B1%D8%A7%D8%A1-%D8%A7/
What will Iran do now? It is difficult to answer this question, not only because
its leadership has been left scrambling by US President Donald Trump’s
withdrawal from the nuclear deal and the re-imposition of crippling sanctions
but also because it has very limited and costly options, which all carry fateful
implications for the future of the Iranian project – from its insistence on
exporting its revolutionary ideology to the geographical consolidation between
Tehran and Beirut, through Baghdad and Damascus.
Clearly the US president’s policy of bringing Iran to its knees with economic
pressure has started to succeed. But what is less clear is whether this policy
will tame the regime and convince its leaders to change their behaviour or
whether it will lead to new deals that were not possible before Mr Trump’s
painful blow.
The statements coming out of Iran suggest its seasoned leaders have understood
the gravity of Mr Trump’s renouncement of his predecessor’s policy and that they
have taken stock of the need to rein in their expansionism in the region,
especially in Yemen. For the Trump administration, targeting the stability of
the US’s allies in the Gulf has become a red line, contrary to the equation
under Barack Obama, who made overtures to Tehran at the expense of those
alliances.
Experienced diplomats and politicians in the Iranian regime have thus started to
indicate they might be willing to mend relations. However, these pragmatists in
the Iranian regime do not fully control the decision-makers and have to contend
with the hardliners, who fear existential challenges that threaten the survival
of the regime and its core ideology. They believe that any concessions today
will wipe out yesterday’s gains and preclude the ambitions of tomorrow.
Other hardliners are driven by the pulse of the people, whose protests have so
far not formed a critical mass. For now, demonstrations remain confined to the
middle classes, intellectuals and women.
If we were to simplify things, we would say first that the Iranian domestic
crisis could become a fateful showdown for the regime and second, that the
internal conflict is not between reformists and hardliners but is in fact within
each of these two camps. There are calls for the reformist president Hassan
Rouhani, a cleric, to step down, including by former president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad. The Iranian parliament impeached the minister of labour, Ali Rabiei,
as unemployment soared and living standards fell. It was a clear blow to Mr
Rouhani. Mr Rabiei blamed the government, parliament and the judiciary for the
country's economic collapse, clashing with parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani.
Meanwhile, the Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) is facing questions and mounting
criticism regarding the vast sums of money it is spending on its ventures in
Yemen, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. People are on the verge of panic as the currency
collapses and major companies flee to avoid US sanctions, with a large share of
wealth in Iran set to evaporate as the nation returns to regional and
international isolation.
Yet the impression we get from Iran is that no one has a solution. The IRGC
cannot pretend to have the keys to the government in Iran, not simply because
Qassem Soleimani is no longer a national hero but because even his Quds Force
cannot disobey the government’s orders.
If the IRGC and the hardliners decide to turn against the reformists in power,
this could bring about the implosion of the regime. And if they decide to attack
US interests and invite a military response, for instance, by shutting down
maritime corridors vital for energy supplies, it is unlikely Iran’s civilian
infrastructure can bear the consequences. Indeed, the result would be
self-immolation.
Astonishingly, Germany’s Foreign Minister Heiko Maas cited Iran’s options for
sabotage and proximity to Europe, to implicitly warn the US. Mr Maas said anyone
who's hoping for regime change “must not forget that whatever follows could
bring us much bigger problems”, adding that “isolating Iran could boost radical
and fundamentalist forces”. That came on the heels of a warning by cybersecurity
experts that Iran’s huge electronic warfare capabilities give it the ability to
mount a devastating attack, to dissuade Europeans from adopting US sanctions.
Iran’s options for reprisal attacks are not limited to the cybersphere, where
the US has identified Iran as the fourth most serious cyber threat to US
national security. The reformist foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, was
quoted by Iranian media as making thinly veiled threats, in response to
questions about the second round of US sanctions coming into effect in November
targeting oil exports, saying: “They can’t think that Iran won’t export oil and
others will export.”
In other words, Iran is prepared to shut down international maritime corridors
including the Strait of Hormuz and Bab Al Mandeb to block the oil exports of the
Gulf states.
Mr Zarif used duplicitous language that same week, with the Fars agency quoting
him as saying that Tehran was interested in the stability and security of the
region. Was this a climbdown from his extreme position or was he really
beginning to implement a bold new move to open up to Iran’s neighbours?
One expert on Iranian affairs stresses the significance of the appointment of
Mohammad Alibak in the Iranian foreign ministry. An Iranian official spokesman
described the move as a “breakthrough”. But is this a tactical move designed to
prompt a seeming change in Iranian behaviour for damage limitation purposes?
Many in the Iranian regime understand that the key to a real breakthrough is
Yemen, where they can end their intervention – through arming and funding the
Houthis – construed to threaten Saudi national security. Such a qualitative and
serious shift in Iranian policy would de-escalate the situation and buy enough
time to produce a lasting accord. However, it falls to
Iran's top leaders to decide whether the Iranian setbacks so far warrant
sacrificing their project in Yemen.
Most likely, the Iranians will want to reach a deal. Washing their hands of
Yemen could be accompanied by assurances about Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. The
quality of these assurances not only depends on mending relations with the Gulf
states but also on the negotiations with Washington, Moscow and the bargaining
taking place between the US and Russia.
Now is the phase for sorting options, crafting bargains and the tug-of-war to
prevent collapse in Iran, secure reconstruction in Syria, end the bloodletting
in Yemen and bolster the states of Iraq and Lebanon. It is too early to jump to
conclusions, however, because decision-makers are still considering their
options between reforming, adjusting and self-immolation.