LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
December 08/18
Compiled &
Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/newselias18/english.december08.18.htm
News
Bulletin Achieves Since 2006
Click Here to enter the LCCC Arabic/English news bulletins Achieves since 2006
Bible Quotations For today
No one tears a piece from a new garment and
sews it on an old garment; otherwise the new will be torn, and the piece from
the new will not match the old
Luke 05/33-39: "Then they said to Jesus, ‘John’s disciples, like the disciples
of the Pharisees, frequently fast and pray, but your disciples eat and
drink.’Jesus said to them, ‘You cannot make wedding-guests fast while the
bridegroom is with them, can you? The days will come when the bridegroom will be
taken away from them, and then they will fast in those days.’He also told them a
parable: ‘No one tears a piece from a new garment and sews it on an old garment;
otherwise the new will be torn, and the piece from the new will not match the
old. And no one puts new wine into old wineskins; otherwise the new wine will
burst the skins and will be spilled, and the skins will be destroyed. But new
wine must be put into fresh wineskins. And no one after drinking old wine
desires new wine, but says, "The old is good."
Titles For The Latest
English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on
December 07-08/18
Lebanon: 'No reason' for military confrontation with
Israel
IDF worried Hezbollah tunnels could endanger IDF patrols
IDF to UNIFIL: Neutralize additional Hezbollah tunnel
Israel may expand anti-tunnel operation into Lebanon, minister warns
Lebanon: Presidency Office Denies Premiership Remarks Attributed to Aoun
President Aoun Says Normal to Refer Government Formation Stalemate to Parliament
Samy Gemayel, Aoun Confer over Latest Developments
Hariri Says Not behind Govt. Delay, Rejects 32-Minister Govt. Proposal
Jumblat Criticizes Expansion of Cabinet Seats Proposal
Rudderless Lebanon Could Miss Out on Aid, France Warns
U.S. Ambassador Celebrates Achievements under the USAID-Funded Project
Japan to Indict Nissan as Well as Ghosn
Lebanese Businessman (Kassim Tajideen) Tied by Treasury Department to Hezbollah
Pleads Guilty to Money Laundering Conspiracy in Furtherance of Violations of
U.S. Sanctions
Analysis/Hezbollah's Attack Tunnels Prove Nasrallah Has Cracked Israel's DNA
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports
And News published on December 07-08/18
Netanyahu Told Sultan Qaboos He Is Willing to Cede Some Land
Shin Bet Inspects Qatari Money to Prevent Delivery to Hamas Military Wing
Israeli PM Netanyahu hails UN Hamas vote despite defeat
American activist tortured, killed in Syria, claims human rights group
US cautions Russia against tampering with suspected chemical attack site in
Syria
Ex-FBI Director Comey Grilled Again in U.S. Congress
Trump Nominates ex-Fox News Anchor Nauert as U.N. Envoy
Iran mass-executes 12 prisoners of drug-related cases
Report: Iran Nuclear Program has Cost over $500 Bn
Turkey Asks U.S. to Lift Syria Observation Posts
OPEC, Russia Slam Trump's Intervention in Oil Producers’ Policies
Sadr Bloc Calls for Dialogue With Amiri to Resolve Interior Ministry Portfolio
Crisis
Egypt Slams UN Rapporteur’s Statement on Cairo’s Housing Policies
Canada Arrests Huawei CFO for Violating US Sanctions on Iran -Report
Yemen Rebels Rebuff Govt. Demand for Hodeida Withdrawal
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis &
editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 07-08/18
Lebanon: 'No reason' for military confrontation with Israel/Ynetnews/December
07/18
IDF worried Hezbollah tunnels could endanger IDF patrols/Ynetnews/December
07/18
IDF to UNIFIL: Neutralize additional Hezbollah tunnel/Ynetnews/December 07/18
U.S. Ambassador Celebrates Achievements under the USAID-Funded Project/Naharnet/December
07/18/
Lebanese Businessman (Kassim Tajideen) Tied by Treasury Department to Hezbollah
Pleads Guilty to Money Laundering Conspiracy in Furtherance of Violations of
U.S. Sanctions/USA Department of Justice/Office of Public Affairs
Analysis/Hezbollah's Attack Tunnels Prove Nasrallah Has Cracked Israel's
DNA/Amos Harel/Haaretz/December 07/18
5 Steps for America to Retake Global Leadership/James Stavridis/Bloomberg
View/December,07/18
George Bush Sr.: An End of a Generation and a Political Culture/Eyad Abu Shakra/Asharq
Al-Awsat/December,07/18
The Contortionist Who Would Bend but Not Break/Amir Taheri/Asharq Al-Awsat/December,07/18
Spare a Thought for Libya’s $67 Billion Wealth Fund/Mark
Gilbert/Bloomberg/December,07/18
Italy Adopts Hardline Immigration Law/Soeren Kern/Gatestone Institute/December
07/18
Palestinians: No Difference Between Hamas and Fatah/Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone
Institute/December 07/18
Why the Press Pays Less Attention to the Murder of Journalists Not Named
Khashoggi/Peter Baum/Gatestone Institute/December 07/18
Doha and Riyadh summit: What’s new?/Mashari Althaydi/Al Arabiya/December 07/18
How Arabs can tackle food security/Shehab Al-Makahleh/Al Arabiya/December 07/18
Latest LCCC English Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on
December 07-08/18
Lebanon: 'No reason' for military confrontation with Israel
Ynetnews/December 07/18
In the wake of Operation Northern Shield, Lebanese Prime Minister Hariri
condemns Israeli 'violations' of Lebanon's sovereignty but refrains from
directly mentioning IDF activity on the border meant to neutralize Hezbollah's
terror tunnels. Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri said Wednesday there is
no reason for a military confrontation with Israel despite the IDF's Operation
Northern Shield to destroy Hezbollah terror tunnels along the Israel-Lebanon
border. "The Lebanese government is fully committed to UN resolution 1701, to
the cooperation and coordination between the authorities in the two countries
and the international emergency forces,” Hariri said in a statement. “The
Lebanese army is the one authorized to ensure peace on the borders,” the
Lebanese leader said. “The government is committed to protecting the country’s
sovereignty.”On Tuesday, a tripartite meeting was held between the IDF, UNIFIL
and representatives of the Lebanese military in the area of Naqoura/Rosh HaNikra
on the Israel-Lebanon border.
"During the meeting, the Israeli team presented the evidence of the terror
tunnels that were discovered,” said the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit. Hariri stated
that during the meeting the Lebanese representatives expressed their opposition
to “the continuing violations” of the country’s borders. The Israeli side
violates Lebanon's airspace and maritime border … this is what the Lebanese
representatives emphasized at the meeting,” he stressed, adding, “The government
will continue to monitor the matter in cooperation with the relevant parties in
the UN Secretariat and the Security Council."However, the Lebanese prime
minister refrained from addressing the discovery of the terror tunnel network,
while officials in the Lebanese army rejected the IDF’s claims and demanded to
be provided with the exact location and coordinates of the underground terror
infrastructure. The IDF's Northern Command said they have enough intelligence
and operational information regarding the location of all the tunnels within 120
meters from the Israeli border, but the military cannot guarantee that all of
them will be exposed. "Hezbollah has lowered its profile since the surprising
and embarrassing discovery," a senior Northern Command officer explained. “After
we complete the task, we don’t intend on building an underground wall like we
are doing in Gaza to stop tunnel digging, therefore the operation might last not
weeks but months, and we are prepared for it,” the officer added. On Tuesday,
the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit released footage of two Hezbollah terrorists running
away from a surveillance camera planted by the IDF inside one of the tunnels, as
the camera—which had explosives attached to it—blows up. “For years, Hezbollah
and Hamas invested huge sums and efforts in building tunnels and concealing
them. Well, the army is methodically, calmly, and decisively dismantling this
weapon," said Prime Minister Netanyahu at the onset of the operation. "The
operation is due to last several weeks and will be led by the head of the IDF
Northern Command, Maj. Gen. Yoel Strick," said IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot,
emphasizing the Cabinet approved the operation on November 17 when "conditions
were ripe.”
IDF worried Hezbollah tunnels could endanger IDF
patrols
Ynetnews/December 07/18
Senior IDF officials say they've known about the tunnels along Israel-Lebanon
border for more than two years but waited until plans for Operation Northern
Shield were finalized. The IDF's decision to launch Operation Northern Shield to
neutralize Hezbollah terror tunnels this week stemmed from a growing fear the
underground infrastructure would be used by terrorists to carry out attacks
against IDF patrols in the area, according to a senior commander of the 91st
Galilee Division. "For two and a half years, we have been certain that there are
tunnels, but the element of surprise was very important to us," the commander
stressed Wednesday during a tour of the Metula area where one tunnel was
uncovered. According to senior officials in the Northern Command, Hezbollah’s
plan for the next war with Israel involved infiltrating Israeli territory
through the tunnels, ambush the IDF forces that would be sent to the area,
paralyze Route 90 leading to the city of Metula and isolate the area so the main
Hezbollah force could invade unopposed from Lebanon. "We were debating when to
uncover the tunnel," explained the senior officer. "Should we save it for war
time or not, but my position was not to wait," he stated.
The officer underlined that the operation could continue for a long time and
that the IDF is prepared to deal with any possible scenario. The IDF's plans for
Operation Northern Shield were finalized a year ago but had been kept under
wraps. The few officers entrusted with planning the operation worked in
conjunction with the Gaza Division to study the methods to locate the tunnels,
but at a certain point it became clear that a different approach would have to
be adopted in light of the different geological conditions in the north, that
include rocky terrain as opposed to the sandy soil of Gaza. At this point, the
tensions in the north have subsided. Senior political and military sources say
Hezbollah had been left surprised and embarrassed by the Israeli discovery of
the tunnels."They don't know exactly the extent of our knowledge on their tunnel
project or their plans, but we know a lot," a senior military source emphasized.
IDF to UNIFIL: Neutralize additional Hezbollah tunnel
Ynetnews/December 07/18
GOC Northern Commander Maj. Gen. Yoel Strick shows UNIFIL commander the tunnel
IDF uncovered near Metula and presents him with aerial photos of another tunnel
in Lebanese village of Ramyeh, demanding UNIFIL neutralize it. GOC Northern
Commander Maj. Gen. Yoel Strick on Thursday gave the commander of the United
Nations Interim Force In Lebanon (UNIFIL) a tour of the Hezbollah terror tunnel
the IDF uncovered near Metula, and protested the violation of UN Security
Council Resolution 1701 that ended the 2006 Second Lebanon War. Maj. Gen. Strick
presented UNIFIL commander Maj. Gen. Sefano Del Col with aerial photos of a
group of houses in the Lebanese village of Ramyeh, where the IDF says there is
another terror tunnel is crossing into Israel. Strick demanded UNIFIL to work in
conjunction with the Lebanese army to investigate and neutralize the tunnel. "We
urge ... that UNIFIL take action together with the Lebanese armed forces to
clear the area, clear the access to the tunnels and make sure that it is not
used for (hostile) purposes against Israel," said Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, a
senior military spokesman. The UN peacekeeping force confirmed the existence of
a tunnel near the "blue line" frontier between the two countries in a statement
on Thursday, describing it as a "serious occurrence". Israel this week launched
an open-ended operation meant to expose and thwart tunnels built by Hezbollah
aimed at infiltrating Israel. The IDF said it "holds the Lebanese government,
the Lebanese Armed Forces and United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL),
responsible for all events transpiring in and emanating from Lebanon."Meanwhile,
the IDF presented dozens of foreign military attachés, including the US, with
information on Hezbollah's tunnel project. The IDF stressed Operation Northern
Shield will continue despite the winter weather. "We've prepared for that with
suitable equipment, warm food and heating to the hundreds of soldiers who are
part of the operation alongside civilian bodies," the army said in a statement.
"We continue with the effort of gathering intelligence about what's happening in
Lebanon. Many Hezbollah members, including senior members, didn't even know
about these tunnels," the IDF continued. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
toured the operation's area with a group of ambassadors Thursday. "I told the
ambassadors that they need to unequivocally condemn this aggression against us
by Iran, by Hezbollah and by Hamas, and of course, to also strengthen the
sanctions against these elements," Netanyahu said.
Netanyahu also said he will demand the UN Security Council discuss the matter.
He said that at the end of the operation, the tunnels "will no longer exist and
will no longer be effective."Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, a military spokesman,
told reporters Thursday that the army is now operating in three areas where
tunnels have been discovered. "We are aware of additional tunnels," he said. In
Lebanon, the LBC TV posted an audio message that it said some residents of the
border village of Kfar Fila received on their cellphones Thursday warning them
to stay away from tunnels. "Hezbollah is putting your lives in danger because of
digging tunnels," said the Arabic audio message, which appeared to have been
sent by Israel. "These tunnels could explode. Anyone who is close to the tunnels
is putting his or her life in danger."IDF Spokesman Brig. Gen. Ronen Manelis
rejected Lebanese reports from recent days that Hezbollah already has accurate
missiles. "An accurate missile hits a specific target, like a building, and
Hezbollah's capability in this regard is minor to non-operational. We continue
operating against Hezbollah's accurate missile project, in Syria as well," he
said.
*The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this story.
Israel may expand anti-tunnel operation into Lebanon, minister
warns
Reuters,
Jerusalem/Friday, 7 December 2018/Israel is prepared to take action in Lebanon
against Hezbollah cross-border tunnels if necessary, an Israeli cabinet minister
warned on Friday. Israel’s military said earlier this week that it had found a
number of passages dug across the Israel-Lebanon border to be used in carrying
out attacks inside Israel. The Israeli military sent mechanical diggers, troops
and anti-tunneling equipment to the border to shut them down. The Israeli
military, which launched the operation on Tuesday, has said its activity would,
for now, stop on the Israeli side of the border. But Israeli news media on
Thursday quoted a unnamed senior official saying that Israel could extend its
activity into Lebanon, and on Friday Israeli Intelligence Minister Israel Katz
reiterated that messages. “If we think that in order to thwart the tunnels that
one needs to operate on the other side - then we will operate on the other side
of the border,” Katz told a local Radio in Tel Aviv. What form the action would
take was not clear. Over the past year, at least 15 tunnels from the Gaza Strip
into Israel were found and destroyed, the Israeli military said. The United
Nations peacekeeping Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), confirmed the existence
of a tunnel near the “blue line” frontier between the two countries on Thursday,
describing it as a “serious occurrence”. In the aftermath of the Israeli tunnel
announcement, the situation has remained calm on both sides of the border. But
the Israeli operation has brought renewed attention to a frontier across which
Israel and Hezbollah last fought a war in 2006. Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran
Bassil has instructed the country’s envoy to the UN to complain that Israel is
waging “a diplomatic and political campaign against Lebanon in preparation for
attacks against it”, Hezbollah’s l-Manar TV said. Since the 2006 war, Israel has
largely refrained from striking at Hezbollah on Lebanese soil, but it has
carried out dozens of attacks in Syria against what it said were advanced
weapons shipments to the Iranian-backed Shiite group.
Lebanon: Presidency Office Denies Premiership Remarks
Attributed to Aoun
Naharnet/December 07/18/The Presidency’s media office stressed on Friday that
government formation remarks attributed to President Michel Aoun were “inaccurate.”“Remarks
attributed to President Michel Aoun are inaccurate and do not apply to his
positions on the government formation,” the president’s media office said on
Twitter. “The Constitution has given lawmakers the right to name the
PM-designate. If the delay to form a government persists, then it will be normal
to refer this issue to the Parliament,” the office added. A media report
attributed remarks to Aoun on Thursday that Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri
could be replaced by another figure should he reject a proposal to form a
32-minister cabinet as a way out of the Sunni representation dilemma.The reports
also said that Aoun’s visitors have quoted him as saying that he “will give a
brief ultimatum to Hariri to declare his stance on the 32-minister proposal or
else he will address a letter to Parliament to discuss the governmental
situation.”
President Aoun Says Normal to Refer Government Formation
Stalemate to Parliament
Kataeb.org/ Friday 07th December 2018/President Michel Aoun on Friday denied a
press report claiming that he will soon ask the Parliament to question the
ongoing failure to form a new government. Local media quoted Aoun as telling his
visitors that he's intending to send a letter to the Parliament calling for
lawmakers to question PM-designate Saad Hariri over the government formation
stalemate. In a statement issued by his media office, President Aoun dismissed
said allegations as "inaccurate", adding that they contradict with the stance he
had voiced repeatedly regarding the government formation. "The truth is that the
President considers that the Constitution has given lawmakers the right to name
the Prime minister-designate through the binding parliamentary consultations
(Article 53- 2nd clause)," the statement noted. "Therefore, if the government
stalemate persists, it will be normal that his Excellency refers this issue to
the Parliament."
Samy Gemayel, Aoun Confer over Latest Developments
Kataeb.org/ Friday 07th December 2018/Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel Friday met with
President Michel Aoun at the Baabda palace, with talks featuring high on the
latest developments. Gemayel was accompanied by his adviser, Fouad Abu Nader. No
statement was made following the meeting.
Hariri Says Not behind Govt. Delay, Rejects 32-Minister
Govt. Proposal
Naharnet/December 07/18/Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri stressed Friday
that he is not to blame for the continued delay in the cabinet formation process
but rather the Hizbullah-led camp. “The government formation mechanism is clear
according to the constitution and it stipulates that the PM-designate forms the
government in agreement with the President. Period. This is the constitution
that was devised by those who participated in the Taef conference after the
bloody civil war that the Lebanese lived,” Hariri said. “There’s no doubt that a
lot of parties do not prefer that implementation of the Taef Accord, the
constitution and the laws. What these people want and what their project is have
become clear and what happened last week does not harm Saad Hariri but rather
Lebanon,” the PM-designate added, referring to verbal attacks against him by
pro-Hizbullah parties and a botched Internal Security Forces operation in
ex-minister Wiam Wahhab’s hometown Jahliyeh. “Everything that is happening is
aimed at obstructing the formation of the government. The problem has become
clear and no one can hide behind any issue to justify what they are doing. My
political beliefs are well-known and the subservience of the others is blatant,”
Hariri went on to say. Referring to the verbal attacks against him and against
slain ex-PM Rafik Hariri, the PM-designate said: “What happened insults Lebanon
and my family and this is something I won’t allow or tolerate no matter what
they do. In the end, every person must bear the responsibility for his actions.”
A statement distributed by the premier’s office had earlier said that “reviving
the 32-minister proposal to justify naming a minister from the group of six MPs
is unacceptable.”“Creating a new norm in the formation of governments is
rejected and the PM-designate categorically rejects to endorse it,” the
statement added.
Jumblat Criticizes Expansion of Cabinet Seats Proposal
Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblat criticized on Friday a
suggestion to expand the cabinet seats from 30 to 32, in light of the state’s
“efforts to curb squandering and expenses.”
“In light of full swing efforts to curtail squandering and expenses, it seems
cloning two new ministers is what’s required,” Jumblat said in a sarcastic
tweet. Lebanese parties are currently mulling a new proposal under which a
32-minister government would be formed instead of one comprising thirty members.
This would give Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri a Alawite seat in return
for him giving up a Sunni seat to the pro-Hizbullah MPs. An obstacle related to
the representation of pro-Hizbullah Sunni MPs has been delaying the formation of
the new cabinet for several weeks now after the so-called Christian and Druze
hurdles were resolved.
Rudderless Lebanon Could Miss Out on Aid, France Warns
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 07/18/France on Friday warned Lebanon it
could lose the international community's goodwill and much-needed investments if
it takes any longer to form a government. Lebanon's economy has looked on the
brink of collapse for some time but a Paris conference dubbed CEDRE in April
earned it $11 billion in aid pledges. Polls held the following month gave Saad
Hariri a new term as prime minister but Lebanon's fractious political class has
since failed to agree on a government line-up. Seven months on, a breakthrough
does not seem imminent and French Ambassador to Lebanon Bruno Foucher warned
that Lebanon stood to lose a lot. "We deeply regret that our Lebanese friends
are not able to agree on a government," he said during a press conference held
on a French frigate making a stop in Beirut. The amounts pledged in Paris were
unexpectedly high and other conferences have also mustered support for Lebanon,
whose economy has been in a downward spiral for years due to political divisions
and corruption. The outbreak of violence in neighboring Syria in 2011 added to
those woes, keeping tourists away and triggering a massive influx of refugees
that has strained public services. "The lack of a government in Lebanon means
running the risk that this dynamic in the international community is lost,"
Foucher said."That moment could pass." The French envoy explained that a new
government was needed to undertake the program contained in the CEDRE plan and
warned that investors would not wait for forever. "There are other countries
that may need international assistance," he said. Government formation is often
a drawn-out process in Lebanon, where a complex governing system seeks to
maintain a precarious balance of power between its various political and
religious communities.'
U.S. Ambassador Celebrates Achievements under the USAID-Funded
Project
Naharnet/December 07/18/
U.S. Ambassador Elizabeth Richard celebrated the successes and achievements of
the $46 million agribusiness and rural development project funded by the United
States Agency for International Development (USAID), the US embassy said in a
statement on Friday.
Held in the presence of 300 officials, partners, beneficiaries, and
stakeholders, the event showcased the Lebanon Industry Value Chain Development (LIVCD)
project’s achievements in the agro food and rural tourism sectors over the past
six years. LIVCD reached 19,000 beneficiaries, leveraged $27.7 million in
private investment, and generated more than $140 million in sales, including
about $20 million in new exports.
In her remarks, Ambassador Richard reiterated the U.S. Government’s ongoing
commitment to enhance economic opportunities for small businesses, women and
youth. Ambassador Richard then toured an exhibition where LIVCD partners
displayed their products and new technologies introduced by the project.
Participating enterprises shared their experiences and communicated the impact
that USAID had on their businesses.
Launched in 2012, LIVCD worked to strengthen the agriculture and agro-processing
sectors by increasing the productivity and competitiveness of Lebanese products
with potential to spur economic growth in rural areas of Lebanon. Supported
value chains include olives, honey, grapes, avocados, cherries, apples food
processing, and rural tourism. The project has increased the incomes of more
than 8,800 rural households, creating new opportunities for local people to
remain in or return to their hometowns. Since 2007, the U.S. government has
provided nearly $5 billion dollars in assistance to Lebanon.
Following are Ambassador Richard’s remarks:
I am really delighted to be here today. Thank you so much for inviting me and
thank you all for coming. We are here to celebrate something tonight. We are
here to celebrate our joint achievement under USAID’s Lebanon Industrial Value
Chain Development project. This is a big congratulations to everyone for a
successful six years of support to the agro food and rural tourism sectors in
Lebanon. Together, we helped build better businesses and we increased the
incomes of thousands of rural households.
The U.S. Government views Lebanon as a vital partner in this important region
and we want our partners to have a strong and healthy economy that benefits the
whole population.
We invest in Lebanon because we believe in Lebanon. Our investments cross a
broad range of areas, from education, to security, to essential services, to
agriculture.
It is particularly important to ensure the success of Lebanon’s rural areas that
are vulnerable, and yet vital to its economy. This is why for the past 10 years
the United States has engaged with local partners to promote economic
opportunities in all of Lebanon’s rich agricultural areas.
We must all work to ensure the participation of all Lebanese in the country’s
prosperity.
With our partners under the LIVCD program we have reached 19,000 beneficiaries,
we have leveraged 27.7 million dollars in private investment, and we have
generated more than 100 million dollars in sales.
More than 4,700 of the businesses we helped improve or establish are owned or
managed by women. By directly engaging with local communities, this project has
created jobs and sustainable sources of income necessary for individuals to
remain in their familial villages.
These accomplishments are part of what makes us proud of the more than 46
million dollars that the U.S. Government provided for this support. And this is
only a small percentage of the nearly 5 billion dollars that the United States
has provided to Lebanon since 2007.
But beyond numbers, what really inspires us is seeing first-hand the impact of
this assistance on farmers, beekeepers and small and medium-sized enterprises.
From an olive farmer in Koura to a pickles producer in Zahle to a beekeeper in
Metn El Aala, we have partners in all areas of Lebanon.
Each of these entrepreneurs has turned a small window of opportunity into a
gateway to a better future. Some of their stories are reflected in the
exhibition you see down there, and I encourage everyone to go have a look.
Tonight ladies and gentlemen is the closing ceremony for this project and it is
a chance for us to look back, and to celebrate our successes, and thank all
those who made the great accomplishments that we see here today happen, from the
implementing partners to the farmers themselves and to the municipal authorities
across the country.
But that does not mean we are finished. Our next strategic partnership will be
based on the successes and the lessons learned from this effort, and will shift
toward value-added food processing quality enhancement, branding and exports.
So, in closing, I want to thank you all really for being here tonight. Clearly,
you all believe in the importance of local economic development, the importance
of creating jobs, and the rewarding work of improving people’s lives. Your
commitment was the principal engine driving this project’s success. We will
continue to support Lebanon and we urge all of you to continue your commitment
to help move the wheels of the Lebanese economy and lay a strong foundation for
a more stable and prosperous Lebanon. Thank you very very much and
congratulations to everyone who worked on this project. Thank you all.
Japan to Indict Nissan as Well as Ghosn
Tokyo prosecutors have decided to
indict Nissan as well as its former chairman Carlos Ghosn and another executive
as early as next week over alleged financial misconduct, a report said Friday.
The report comes amid speculation that Ghosn and his right-hand man Greg Kelly
will face new allegations related to under-reporting of the auto titan's
compensation.The pair were arrested on November 19 on suspicion of conspiring to
understate Ghosn's pay by some five billion yen ($44 million) in official
filings during the five years up to March 2015. The Nikkei business daily
reported Friday that Ghosn and Kelly would likely be indicted on those
allegations as soon as Monday, when their current detention period expires. The
daily said prosecutors had decided that Nissan was also responsible for the
alleged financial wrong-doing and would bring charges against the firm.It
reported that Nissan's chief executive Hiroto Saikawa signed documents
discussing payment and employment for Ghosn after his term as chairman. But
prosecutors reportedly doubt Saikawa was involved in the under-reporting, though
he may face questions about failing to correct the false reports even though he
apparently had opportunities to do, the Nikkei said. Under Japanese law,
prosecutors can hold suspects for up to 22 days while investigating a single
allegation. But they can seek an additional 22 days of detention for each new
accusation against a suspect. Reports suggest Ghosn and Kelly could face a new
accusation related to under-reporting of the former chairman's compensation by
another four billion yen ($35.5 billion) over the last three years. The new
accusation is also expected to be announced next week. Japanese prosecutors said
they could not comment on the report and Nissan said only that it was
cooperating with the prosecutor's office. "The company has been... fully
cooperating with its investigation. We will continue to do so," spokesman
Nicholas Maxfield told AFP. Neither Ghosn nor Kelly have yet been officially
charged, and they deny any wrongdoing. Ghosn's November 19 arrest in Tokyo shook
the business world, where he has long been a highly regarded top executive. In
Japan, Ghosn was celebrated as a charismatic business leader who saved Nissan
from the brink of failure and rebuilt it as a money-maker in the alliance with
Renault. But since his shock arrest, he has been removed from the boards of
Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors. Nissan has begun the process of choosing Ghosn's
successor, with the final decision expected on December 17.
الموقوف في أميركا قاسم تاج الدين تاج الدين يعترف: انتهكت العقوبات لمصلحة حزب
الله
Lebanese Businessman (Kassim Tajideen)
Tied by Treasury Department to Hezbollah Pleads Guilty to Money Laundering
Conspiracy in Furtherance of Violations of U.S. Sanctions
USA Department of
Justice/Office of Public Affairs
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/69714/%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%85%d9%88%d9%82%d9%88%d9%81-%d9%81%d9%8a-%d8%a3%d9%85%d9%8a%d8%b1%d9%83%d8%a7-%d9%82%d8%a7%d8%b3%d9%85-%d8%aa%d8%a7%d8%ac-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%af%d9%8a%d9%86-%d8%aa%d8%a7%d8%ac-%d8%a7%d9%84/
Thursday, December 6, 2018
For Immediate
Release
Kassim Tajideen, the operator of a network of businesses in Lebanon and Africa
whom the U.S. Department of the Treasury designated as an important financial
supporter to the Hezbollah terror organization, pleaded guilty today to charges
associated with evading U.S. sanctions imposed on him.
The announcement was made by Acting Attorney General Matthew G. Whitaker;
Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s
Criminal Division; Assistant Attorney General for National Security John C.
Demers; U.S. Attorney Jessie K. Liu for the District of Columbia; Special Agent
in Charge Raymond Donovan of the Special Operations Division of the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA); Special Agent in Charge Valerie A. Nickerson
of the DEA’s New Jersey Field Division and Commissioner Kevin K. McAleenan of
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
Tajideen, 63, of Beirut, Lebanon, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Court
Judge Reggie B. Walton in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia,
to conspiracy to launder monetary instruments, in furtherance of violating the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). Tajideen was designated by
the U.S. Department of the Treasury as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist
in May 2009 as a result of his provision of significant financial support to
Hezbollah, which was named a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the U.S.
Department of State. This designation prohibited Tajideen from being involved
in, or benefiting from transactions, involving U.S. persons or companies without
a license from the Department of the Treasury.
“This Department of Justice has put a target on Hezbollah,” Acting Attorney
General Whitaker said. “In January, we started the Hezbollah Financing and
Narcoterrorism Team, and in October, former Attorney General Sessions named
Hezbollah one of the five priority organizations for our Transnational Organized
Crime Task Force. The DEA worked for three years to bring this prosecution of a
Treasury Department-designated terrorist for sanctions violations to successful
completion. I want to thank the prosecutors and agents Trial Attorney Joseph
Palazzo and AUSAs Thomas Gillice, Luke Jones, Karen Seifert, Deborah Curtis, and
SAUSA Jacqueline Barkett for helping us achieve this victory today. We are going
to keep targeting Hezbollah and other terrorist groups and their supporters, and
we are going to keep winning.”
“This guilty plea demonstrates our commitment to vigorously investigate and
prosecute violations of U.S. economic sanctions,” said U.S. Attorney Liu.
“Through the efforts of law enforcement here and abroad, this defendant has been
held accountable for violating laws protecting our national security and foreign
policy interests.”“This is the latest example of DEA’s recent successes against
Hezbollah’s global criminal support network and reflects DEA’s determination in
combatting this transnational criminal organization,” said Special Agent in
Charge Donovan. According to the statement of facts signed by Tajideen in
conjunction with his plea, after his designation, Tajideen conspired with at
least five other persons to conduct over $50 million in transactions with U.S.
businesses that violated these prohibitions. In addition, Tajideen and his
co-conspirators knowingly engaged in transactions outside of the United States,
which involved transmissions of as much as $1 billion through the United States
financial system from places outside the United States.
The plea, which is contingent upon the Court’s approval, calls for an
agreed-upon sentence of 60 months in prison. The plea agreement also calls for
Tajideen to pay $50 million as a criminal forfeiture in advance of his
sentencing. Tajideen has been detained since extradition to the United States in
March 2017 after his arrest overseas. Sentencing is scheduled to occur on Jan.
18, 2019. This guilty plea is the result of a three-year investigation by the
DEA’s Special Operations Division (SOD)/Counter Narcoterrorism Operations Center
(CNTOC) and the DEA New Jersey Field Division, with the assistance by CBP.
Assistance was provided by the Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network (FinCEN).
Tajideen’s case falls under DEA’s Project Cassandra, which targets Hezbollah’s
global criminal support network - dubbed by the DEA as the Business Affairs
Component (BAC) - that operates as a logistics, procurement and financing arm
for Hezbollah. This investigation and others are part of the Department of
Justice’s Hezbollah Financing and Narcoterrorism Team (“HFNT”), a component of
the Department’s Transnational Organized Crime initiative (TOC). The HFNT was
formed in January 2018 to ensure an aggressive and coordinated approach to
prosecutions and investigations, including Project Cassandra cases, targeting
the individuals and networks supporting Hezbollah. Comprised of experienced
international narcotics trafficking, terrorism, organized crime, and money
laundering prosecutors and investigators, the HFNT works closely with partners
like the DEA, the Department of the Treasury, and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, among others, to advance and facilitate prosecutions of Hezbollah
and its support network in appropriate cases.
This case is being prosecuted by the Criminal Division’s Money Laundering and
Asset Recovery Section, U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, the
DEA and CPB’s National Targeting Center Counter Network Division, with
assistance from the Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs and the
Counterintelligence and Export Control Section of the National Security
Division.
The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Joseph Palazzo of the Money
Laundering and Asset Recovery Section and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Thomas A.
Gillice, Luke Jones, Karen Seifert and Deborah Curtis and Special Assistant U.S.
Attorney Jacqueline L. Barkett of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of
Columbia.
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/lebanese-businessman-tied-treasury-department-hezbollah-pleads-guilty-money-laundering
Component(s):
Criminal Division
National Security Division (NSD)
Press Release Number: 18-1613
Analysis/Hezbollah's Attack Tunnels Prove Nasrallah Has Cracked Israel's DNA
عاموس هاريل من هآرتس: انفاق حزب الله الهجومية تثبت أن حسن نصرالله قد صدع ال دي
ان اي لإسرائيل
Amos Harel/Haaretz/December 07/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/69735/amos-harel-haaretz-hezbollahs-attack-tunnels-prove-nasrallah-has-cracked-israels-dna-%D8%B9%D8%A7%D9%85%D9%88%D8%B3-%D9%87%D8%A7%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%84-%D9%85%D9%86-%D9%87%D8%A2%D8%B1%D8%AA%D8%B3/
Three days after the revelation of the attack tunnels, the military significance
of the discovery is beginning to emerge.
Three days after the exposure of the attack tunnels that Hezbollah dug into
Israeli territory under the Lebanon border, the significance of the discovery is
becoming clearer. After the criticism of the IDF media blitz and the political
leveraging by Prime Minister Netanyahu, it’s best not to lose sight of the
military implications of the events. After years of searching, the army located
a vital component of Hezbollah’s offensive plans in the north.
If the confidence that the intelligence community is expressing in its
information proves to be well-founded, Israel is hoping to deprive the enemy of
an important capability upon which a portion of its preparations for a future
war relied. (This war is not erupting yet because at present is still does not
serve the interests of either side.) Hezbollah’s rocket arsenal and its attempt
to upgrade their level of precision are still its top priority, but the tunnels
were also a critical aspect of its program.
When Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah first began issuing threats about his
organization’s intention “to conquer the Galilee” in the next war, Israel was
initially dismissive. But after Nasrallah kept saying the same thing in public,
Israel’s military intelligence seriously set about trying to decipher his
meaning.
Why would Nasrallah boast in this way when the most his organization could hope
to do was send a few cells of attackers across the border for a surprise attack
on a single community? Even Hezbollah couldn’t turn a few rocket barrages on the
Israeli home front into a victory photo.
The answer gradually became clear only after the 2014 Gaza war. Israel realized
that Hezbollah was aiming to copy the Hamas model of attack tunnels, in a
slightly different form.
The tunnels it dug, which apparently were fewer in number and shorter, were
designed to meet the specific needs of the northern front: the quick and secret
transfer of hundreds of fighters from the outskirts of the villages in southern
Lebanon into Israel, thus to lay the groundwork for a wider ground offensive
that would immediately follow.
The balance of power between the sides is clear. Hezbollah, with no air force,
would not be able to maintain any strongholds it seizes in the Galilee for long,
but the shock that such a surprise attack would have on the Israeli public would
be enough to give Hezbollah an image of victory, and all the Israeli air strikes
and ground incursions that would ensue inside Lebanon would not erase this
impression.
Nasrallah understands Israeli society’s DNA very well, as a member of the IDF
general staff said the other day. The tunnel plan was directed precisely at
this. “This was the cornerstone of Hezbollah’s approach, a move that was
supposed to take us by surprise without us knowing what hit us.”
Asked how critical this operation was at this time, given the criticism in the
media and the questions that have arisen in the political arena, his response
was unexpectedly forceful: Had war broken out and we had left this threat
untreated, the Agranat Commission’s criticisms of the IDF following the Yom
Kippur War would have paled in comparison to what would have happened in this
case, and rightly so. “We could not go on living with this threat for one day.
And this is a genuine answer, not covering our ass.”
The suspicious Lebanese factory
The effort to locate the tunnels, which was coordinated by army intelligence and
the IDF Northern Command with the aid of technology and engineering units,
covered a very extensive area along 130 kilometers of the border fence. It was
some time before a breakthrough was achieved. The teams of experts identified
methods of operation and looked for unusual characteristics. At the same time,
the area was analyzed from what would be Hezbollah’s vantage point: Which roads
and sites are vital to Israel and where are the vulnerable spots that would
allow access to them?
The IDF spent many months searching before it found the tunnel next to Metula,
whose entry shaft on the Lebanese side was dug beneath a cement block factory in
Kafr Kila. When the army noticed that the factory was not receiving materials
but just transporting cargo from the site on trucks, it realized what was really
going on there.
By the summer, conditions were ripe to launch an engineering operation. Brig.
Gen. Dror Shalom, head of Military Intelligence’s research department, felt that
more information was still needed to have the most accurate intelligence and be
certain that the tunnels would be found. Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot, MI chief
Tamir Heyman and Northern Command head Yoel Strick felt it was time to act.
Eisenkot permitted Shalom to present his minority position to the cabinet as
well. Meanwhile, a debate arose over which action was more important. Avigdor
Lieberman, who was still defense minister, felt that the threat in the north was
not as urgent as the ongoing escalation in the south. Lieberman also suspected
that Eisenkot was using the need for an operation in the north as an excuse to
justify avoiding an operation against Hamas in Gaza.
When Eisenkot became chief of staff in February 2015, he cited the removal of
enemy tunnels into Israel as a top priority. The trauma of the tunnels in
Operation Protective Edge was still fresh and the defense establishment had
begun a major project (budgeted at close to 4 billion shekels, or just over $1
billion) to build the tunnel barrier wall and develop technology to locate the
tunnels.
In early 2017, credible information about tunnels on the Lebanon border began to
accumulate as well. Eisenkot pushed to advance the move. We can’t repeat the
mistake of hoping that the tunnels will grow rusty like the rockets, he told his
people, alluding to former IDF Chief of Staff Moshe Ya’alon’s controversial
statement prior to the Second Lebanon War.
But more time passed until the army had solid and sufficiently detailed
information on the northern tunnels, and other challenges popped up in the
interim. Israel began a campaign to strike Iranian targets in Syria with the aim
of halting the entrenchment of the Revolutionary Guards and the Shi’ite militias
there.
In the summer of 2018, with the tension rising over the incendiary kites and
balloons on the Gazan border, the northern operation was postponed once more,
though Eisenkot insisted that it not be put off as late as winter. It would be
negligent not to start dealing with the tunnels in the north, he argued.
In September, the planned operation was presented to Netanyahu and then, on
November 7, to the cabinet. In the cabinet discussion, Lieberman said again that
the threat was less urgent than portrayed by the army and that the most
necessary move at this time was a ground incursion against Hamas in Gaza.
During the interlude, in October, Eisenkot traveled to the United States and
presented the tunnel threat to the American administration for the first time.
Netanyahu also discussed it early in the week at his meeting with U.S. Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo in Brussels. The prime minister had many topics to discuss
with Pompeo. The operation to locate the tunnels was first on the list.
So what will Hezbollah do now? The defense establishment is somewhat surprised
by the relative quiet with which the Israeli action along the northern border
was received in Lebanon this week. The sense is that Hezbollah genuinely did not
anticipate the Israeli move and is still assessing the impact of its lost
military assets that were exposed. However, Nasrallah is unlikely to let Israeli
propaganda go unchecked for very long.
For now, a military escalation does not seem to be in the offing. And yet, the
continued efforts to locate the tunnels will generate tension on both sides of
the border, with an even more challenging problem for Israel lurking just around
the corner: the Iranian effort to build production lines in Lebanon for systems
that will improve the precision of Hezbollah’s rockets.
Netanyahu and other Israeli spokespeople have stated again and again that Israel
will not allow such factories to be built. The fuse that could ignite the next
war has already been shown to us. At the same time, many voices are still
pressing for restraint. But all signs indicate that 2019 is going to be extra
tense on the security front, regardless of when the next Israeli elections are
held.
Latest LCCC English Miscellaneous
Reports & News published on
December 07-08/18
Netanyahu Told Sultan Qaboos He Is Willing to Cede Some Land
Ramallah - Kifah Zboun/Asharq
Al-Awsat/Friday, 7 December, 2018/A senior Palestinian official said Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Oman’s Sultan Qaboos that he was willing
to give up some land to the Palestinians, but not security control. “The Omani
foreign minister informed us of what Netanyahu told Sultan Qaboos,” said Azzam
al-Ahmad, a member of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) executive
committee. “We were notified that Netanyahu told him that he was ready to cede
some land, but he would not give up security control.”The Israeli premier met
Sultan Qaboos in Muscat in late October as part of an Omani plan to advance
peace talks between Palestinians and Israelis. Ahmad noted that President
Mahmoud Abbas told Omani Foreign Minister Youssef bin Alawi, during a meeting in
Ramallah, that Netanyahu had not come up with anything new and was not serious
about reaching an agreement with the Palestinians. “Abbas told Oman’s foreign
minister that what Netanyahu said is old talk that he often repeats,” Al-Ahmad
said, as quoted by Times of Israel. “He told him that what he said is a form of
deception and that Netanyahu is not serious about peace.” A spokesman for the
Israeli prime minister’s office declined to comment in response to a question on
the PLO official’s remarks. The Sultanate of Oman launched mediation efforts
between Palestinians and Israelis, with Sultan Qaboos receiving Abbas and
Netanyahu, respectively, in Muscat in October. The Omanis tried to bring the
views closer in an attempt to start a new peace process based on the US peace
plan. In this regard, the Omani foreign minister said that his country was
proposing ideas to help the Palestinian and Israeli sides converge, but did not
play the role of mediator. He said his country “counts on the United States and
the efforts of its president, Donald Trump, to work towards the deal of the
century.”
Shin Bet Inspects Qatari Money to Prevent Delivery to Hamas Military Wing
Tel Aviv/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 7 December, 2018/With the arrival of the second
batch of Qatari installment to pay the salaries of Hamas employees in the Gaza
Strip on Thursday, political sources in Tel Aviv said that mechanisms were
adopted to ensure that these funds were properly distributed and would not be
used to finance terrorism. The sources confirmed that all the lists prepared for
the transfer were approved by the Israeli General Security Service (Shin Bet),
to guarantee that the funds would not finance the activities of Hamas’ military
wing. The sources told the official Israeli radio that Hamas employees, who are
entitled to receive salaries, signed in writing documents proving that they have
received their dues at the post office in Gaza and attached a copy of their
identity card. The office of the Qatari delegate, Mohammed al-Emadi, who brought
the $15 million in bags from Doha to Tel Aviv, through the Erez crossing near
Beit Hanoun, handed Israel tens of thousands of documents for inspection. The
first installment stirred controversy in Israel and anger in Ramallah, which has
accused Qatar of supporting plans to separate the Gaza Strip by providing
financial support to Hamas. The two batches are part of a sum of $90 million
Qatar has allocated to pay the salaries of Hamas employees. In remarks on
Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu justified his government’s
decision to allow the transfer of the Qatari funds. He explained that
humanitarian problems in Gaza also impacted Israel. “The money was delivered in
the past through the Palestinian Authority, but Abu Mazen [President Mahmoud
Abbas] chose to suffocate the Gaza Strip,” he said. The Israeli premier stressed
that his country demanded, and received, close supervision of those who collect
the money, including their signatures and fingerprints.
Israeli PM Netanyahu hails UN Hamas vote despite defeat
AFP, Jerusalem/Friday, 7 December 2018/Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
on Friday hailed majority backing in the UN General Assembly for condemning
militant group Hamas even though a draft resolution failed to win enough votes
to pass. The US draft won 87 votes in the General Assembly on Thursday compared
to 58 against but fell short of a required two-thirds majority. Thirty-two
countries abstained. “The draft condemnation of Hamas in the UN General Assembly
received a sweeping majority by countries that stood against Hamas,” Netanyahu
said in an English-language statement. “This is the first time that a majority
of countries have voted against Hamas and I commend each of the 87 countries
that took a principled stand. “I thank the American administration and US
ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley for the initiative.” Haley, who steps down from
her post at the end of the year, has repeatedly accused the United Nations of
having an anti-Israel bias.
Latest confrontation
She has defended Israel in its latest confrontation with Hamas, the group which
has ruled the Gaza Strip since 2007 and has fought three wars with Israel since
then. The United States had won crucial backing from the European Union, with
all 28 countries supporting the draft that would have condemned Hamas for firing
rockets into Israel and demanded an end to the violence. The European Union,
like the United States, blacklists Hamas as a terrorist organization. It was the
first draft resolution condemning Hamas to be presented to the 193-nation
assembly, which has been meeting since 1946. Hamas praised the outcome of the
vote, describing it as a “slap” to President Donald Trump’s administration. “The
failure of the American venture at the United Nations represents a slap to the
US administration and confirmation of the legitimacy of the resistance,” Hamas
spokesman Sami Abu Zahri tweeted, referring to militant groups that oppose
Israel.
American activist tortured, killed in Syria, claims human rights group
Staff writer, Al Arabiya EnglishFriday, 7 December 2018/A US citizen who had
been held in Syria by the regime of Bashar al Assad for nearly three years was
killed while in its custody, according to a human rights group and the State
Department. The Syrian Network for Human Rights said that Layla Shwekani, who
was born and spent her early years in Damascus, but lived in Chicago was a
“humanitarian activist.” In a newly released report, the Syrian Network for
Human Rights said that Shwekani returned to Syria in 2015 and was detained in
February 2016 by regime forces.
“She was registered in civil registry department as dead on December 28, 2016,
and we believe she was executed in Sednaya military prison in the Damascus
suburb ,” the group said. The report released on December 2, details 15 people
killed by torture in Syria in November. The State Department confirmed to ABC
News that they’re “aware of reports of the death of a US citizen in Syrian
regime custody,” but they declined to comment further because of reasons of
privacy. The Syrian civil war has claimed more than 500,000 lives, according to
monitoring groups. An additional 60,000 people have gone missing since the war
began, according to the International Commission on Missing Persons.
US cautions Russia against tampering with suspected chemical attack site in
Syria
Reuters, Washington/Friday, 7 December 2018/The US State Department on Friday
cautioned Russia and Syria against tampering with the site of a suspected
chemical attack in Syria’s Aleppo last month. It also said that it had
information indicating that Russian and Syrian personnel were involved in what
it called a tear gas attack. “We caution Russia and the regime against tampering
with the suspected attack site and urge them to secure the safety of impartial,
independent inspectors so that those responsible can be held accountable,” a
State Department spokesman said in a statement.
Ex-FBI Director Comey Grilled Again in U.S. Congress
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 07/18/Former FBI director James Comey,
sacked by President Donald Trump in 2017, testified Friday before U.S. lawmakers
for the first time in over a year, but this time out of the camera glare. The
hours-long Capitol Hill grilling comes amid turbulence at the White House, and
mounting intrigue over Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into
Russian interference in the 2016 election and possible contacts between Trump's
presidential campaign and Moscow. Comey smiled as he walked past reporters
towards a closed-door House meeting, telling them "maybe later" he would answer
questions. Trump's bete noire had pleaded for a public hearing after he was
subpoenaed by members of the outgoing Congress in November, but House
Republicans including some of Trump's allies insisted on a private session
before the judiciary and oversight committees. Comey was questioned as part of a
Republican-led House inquiry into possible Russian interference in the US
election, and email use by Democrat Hillary Clinton, who lost to Trump in 2016.
Congressman Darrell Issa said he wanted answers about what he called the "fake
dossier," a 2016 intelligence report including opposition research that alleges
misconduct and ties between the Trump campaign and Russia. "We want to know what
he knew and when he knew it," Issa said of Comey. He also complained that
Comey's lawyers were preventing the former FBI chief from answering some
questions from lawmakers. In May 2017 Trump abruptly sacked Comey, who was the
senior official leading a criminal investigation into possible collusion with
Moscow. Three months earlier the president met privately with Comey and urged
him to end the investigation into former national security adviser Michael
Flynn, a move that many Democrats interpreted as an obstruction of justice.
Flynn, who was indicted for lying to investigators, has been cooperating with
Mueller's probe. Mueller was expected to provide court filings Friday related to
Trump's jailed former campaign chairman Paul Manafort and former lawyer and
longtime fixer Michael Cohen. The president has repeatedly blasted Mueller's
probe as a "witch hunt," and on Friday unleashed a Twitter tirade against
Mueller, Comey and other current and former officials tied to the Russia probe.
"Robert Mueller and Leakin' Lyin' James Comey are Best Friends, just one of many
Mueller Conflicts of Interest," Trump tweeted. Comey's testimony will likely be
one of the last sessions conducted by the judiciary and oversight panels this
year. Control of Congress shifts in January to Democrats, who are keen to end or
alter the probe. Incoming House Judiciary Committee chairman Jerrold Nadler said
the probe into FBI behavior was a "waste of time" and that he would shut it
down. "The entire purpose of this investigation is to cast aspersion on the real
investigation, which is Mueller," Nadler told reporters outside Comey's
testimony. Comey had resisted answering questions privately, but struck a deal
with Republicans that will see a transcript of the testimony published 24 hours
after his interview.
Trump Nominates ex-Fox News Anchor Nauert as U.N. Envoy
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 07/18/U.S. President Donald Trump
nominated State Department spokeswoman and former Fox TV news anchor Heather
Nauert Friday as ambassador to the United Nations. Trump told reporters that
Nauert, who is in line to take over from Nikki Haley, had done well at the State
Department. "She's very talented, very smart, very quick, and I think she's
going to be respected by all," Trump said. Nauert, 48, had been touted for the
post since October when Haley, a former governor of South Carolina seen as
entertaining future political ambitions, announced that she was stepping down.
Nauert -- a former anchor of "Fox and Friends," among the television-loving
Trump's favorite shows -- became the spokeswoman of the State Department with no
foreign policy experience. Unlike Haley, she is not expected to have cabinet
status, meaning that foreign policy decisions will remain firmly with Trump's
hawkish national security adviser John Bolton, and Nauert's current boss,
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.She will need confirmation by the Senate, where
Trump's Republican Party enjoys a majority. Early praise for the appointment
came from Israel, which has long counted on the United States to veto unfriendly
resolutions on the U.N. Security Council. "Ms. Nauert has stood by the State of
Israel in her previous positions, and I have no doubt that the cooperation
between our two countries will continue to strengthen as ambassador to the
U.N.," Israel's ambassador to the United Nations, Danny Danon, said in a
statement. Haley, in what could be a final diplomatic push, on Thursday failed
in a bid for the U.N. General Assembly to condemn the Palestinian Islamist
movement Hamas for firing rockets at Israel. But for the United States, the vote
also succeeded in reinforcing its stance that the world body is allegedly biased
against Israel.
Iran mass-executes 12 prisoners of drug-related
cases
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Friday, 7 December 2018/News based on judicial
Iranian sources spread on Friday about Iranian authorities committing mass
prisoner executions in “Karman” prison. A minimum of 12 prisoners were executed,
most of whom remain anonymous. The judicial sources said that most of the
executed are charged with drug-related cases, according to the prison’s
authorities. Meanwhile, Hrana News Agency said that human rights activists were
able to identify six of the executed prisoners. Hrana’s report added that
Iranian authorities delivered the dead bodies to the prisoners’ families. Iran
has the highest record of executions worldwide, especially when calculating the
ratio between the executed and the population. Political monitors have often
confirmed Iran’s execution of political enemies as well. Children rights
organizations list Iran as one of the countries that execute children under the
age of 18, with the last case being Zeinab Sekaanvand who was accused of killing
her husband when she was 17 and was later executed by Iranian authorities.
Shirin Ebadi, the Iranian lawyer who won the nobel peace prize in 2003, said
that the Iranian code of criminal procedure does not allow a fair trial. Also,
Shahindokht Molaverdi, Rouhani’s special assistant to citizenship rights, was
heavily criticized by the Iranian regime less than two years ago, when she
leaked news on the Iranian authorities executing an entire village’s men after
accusing them of drug dealing.
Report: Iran Nuclear Program has Cost over $500
Bn
Dubai - Asharq Al-Awsat/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 7 December, 2018/A report issued
by the Arab Strategy Forum in Dubai has estimated the total cost of Iran’s
nuclear program to have exceeded more than $500 billion since 2006. The report
titled ‘The Economic Costs and Consequences of Iran’s Nuclear Program’, found
that international economic sanctions have cost Iran more than $500 billion to
date. The costs of developing and operating infrastructure and facilities for
the program have added some US$50 billion to the bill, it said. The Arab
Strategy Forum is set to take place on Dec.12 in Dubai. Its report was issued at
a panel discussion on Wednesday in collaboration with Al-Ahram Center for
Political and Strategic Studies. Led by Dr. Sultan Mohammed Al-Nuaimi, Associate
Professor at Abu Dhabi University and Expert on Iranian Affairs, the discussion
drew the participation of prominent academics and media personalities. In
addition to the cost of the Iranian nuclear program, the report “examines the
consequences of the program in terms of economic hardship among the population,"
Nuaimi said. According to the report, the adverse economic situation in Iran has
led to frequent protests in various regions across the country throughout the
past years, with protesters citing inflation, unemployment, poverty, and
corruption as their primary concerns. The United States decided in May to
withdraw from the 2015 nuclear deal and reimpose sanctions on Iran, making the
situation worse. The report highlights how the ongoing sanctions on Iran have
limited foreign direct investment, FDI, flow to the country. Moreover, foreign
companies have canceled new investment contracts worth tens of billions of
dollars, especially in the energy sector that needs between $130 billion and
$300 billion of new investments to maintain productivity until 2020. As a
result, unemployment rates in Iran have risen, especially among youth. About
one-third of the country’s young people have no job opportunities, which fuels
their frustration with the local economic situation. The value of the Iranian rial has also plummeted due to sanctions, especially the recent US sanctions,
which led to a surge in the price of the US dollar on the black market to
IRR112,000 in August 2018, compared with IRR36,000 on the official market in
early 2018, before the new sanctions regime. The inflation rate has witnessed
unprecedented levels and is projected to reach an annual average of 203 percent
by end-2018 according to some estimates, said the report. Various economic
sectors in Iran were affected by the sanctions and their consequences, it said.
Notably, the oil sector, which the country’s economy heavily relies on, has seen
production and exports decline. The Iranian industrial sector, another target of
the recent US sanctions, has also suffered. The agricultural industry has borne
the negative impact of insufficient automation and the absence of modern
technologies, and, to make matters worse, the local industrial sector is unable
to provide an alternative. International sanctions have also led to the
deterioration of Iran's infrastructure due to the drop in public revenue from
oil exports and the reluctance of foreign companies to invest in the sector.
Also, the sanctions have restricted knowledge exchange and imports of modern
equipment, which has adversely affected the technology sector. This has resulted
in heavy wear of Iran's infrastructure, especially energy networks, which has
caused significant annual losses due to reduced efficiency and productivity.
Turkey Asks U.S. to Lift Syria Observation Posts
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 07/18/Turkey on Friday asked the U.S. to
scrap observation posts in northern Syria aimed at helping prevent clashes
between Turkish forces and a Kurdish militia backed by Washington. Defense
Minister Hulusi Akar made the demand during a meeting with James Jeffrey, the
U.S. Special Envoy to Syria, his ministry said in a statement. U.S. Defense
Secretary Jim Mattis had said that Washington wanted the observation posts to
help minimise tensions between Turkish forces and Washington's Kurdish allies,
including the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia which Ankara regards as a "terrorist
offshoot" of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).Akar also asked Jeffrey
to stop the American collaboration with the YPG. Syria's long-oppressed Kurdish
minority has established a semi-autonomous region in the north of the country,
which has been wracked by conflict since 2011. Turkey refuses to recognize the
territory on its border, fearing it will stoke the separatist ambitions of Kurds
in its own country. Ankara has carried out two operations against Kurdish forces
since 2016, the last against the border enclave of Afrin, which it seized in
March and is now controlled by pro-Turkish Syrian rebels.
OPEC, Russia Slam Trump's Intervention in Oil Producers’ Policies
Vienna/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 7 December, 2018/The Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) held its meeting in Vienna on Thursday to agree on a
production cut aimed at curbing price declines. The participants did not
hesitate to slam US President Donald Trump's interventions in its policies.
Trump urged OPEC to maintain oil output to keep the pressure on prices.
“Hopefully OPEC will be keeping oil flows as is, not restricted. The World does
not want to see, or need, higher oil prices,” he tweeted. Before Thursday’s
meeting, Saudi oil minister Khalid al-Falih pointedly said Washington should
back off. "We don't need permission from anyone to cut," he said. Russian Energy
Minister Alexander Novak, for his part, said OPEC does not make its decisions
based on "politicians’ appeals on Twitter.”Rebuffing Wednesday’s tweets by
Trump, Novak said the group’s members make decisions based on the market
situation, the balance between oil supply and demand and available reserves. "In
the first place we are focusing on the industry’s objective index," he stressed.
After stressing that his country opposes reducing its oil production due to US
sanctions, Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh complained that it was the
first time a US president was trying to tell OPEC what to do. "They should know
that OPEC is not part of their Secretary of Energy," said Zanganeh. He explained
that the estimated surplus currently on the market amounted to 1.3-2.4 million
barrels per day.
Ideally, "the price would be better to stand at $60-70. That is acceptable for
most OPEC countries."As for OPEC’s future trends, which the market is waiting
for, Falih pointed out that the meeting “seeks enough reduction to achieve
market balance.” OPEC, which pumps one-third of global output, wants to curb a
30 percent fall in prices in the past two months. He said that a cut of a
million barrels per day would be ideal. "Ideally, everyone should join equally.
I think that's the fair and equitable solution," he said.
Sadr Bloc Calls for Dialogue With Amiri to Resolve Interior Ministry Portfolio
Crisis
Baghdad - Hamza Mustafa/Asharq Al-Awsat/December,07/18/The Reform and
Construction bloc, whose one of its prominent figures is head of the Sadrist
movement Moqtada al-Sadr, called for a dialogue with Al-Bina (Construction) bloc
headed by Hadi al-Amiri in order to reach a compromise to avoid a chaos that
might hit the country as protests continue in Basra, south Iraq. This initiative
coincides with Al-Bina endeavor to garner votes in favor of its candidate for
the interior ministry Faleh al-Fayad. In its statement following a meeting for
the leaders on Wednesday, Sadr bloc said that the necessity of resuming the
government cabinet has been underpinned as well as presenting qualified
ministers and abiding by the democratic and constitutional contexts. The
statement, which Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper received a copy from, reported that
the convening members decided to come out with a unified standpoint to hold a
national dialogue with Bina bloc and the Kurdistani blocs, and to persuade the
political blocs and deputies in the necessity of rerunning to the legal and
constitutional contexts in resolving pending topics. The Reform and Construction
bloc values the adequate time to assess the current government performance, its
abidance by the government project, provision of services and implementation of
anticipated development programs. The statement highlighted a fair
representation of the Turkmen and Yazidis components in the government. A
reliable source from Bina, who preferred to remain anonymous, told Asharq Al-Awsat
that the crisis because of Fayad intentional and does not influence the alliance
between Saeroun and Fatah since Bina didn’t impose its nominee. Reform and
Construction bloc MP Nada Shaker Jawdat stated to Asharq Al-Awsat that it is not
right that the bloc rejects Fayad for his person, as a matter of fact, it only
demands that all nominees be subject to the agreed-upon standards. In the same
context, Tasheh Party General Secretary Kamel al-Dalimi told the newspaper that
all indicators show that the political process in Iraq is likely to be hit by a
political tsunami that spares nothing.
Egypt Slams UN Rapporteur’s Statement on Cairo’s Housing Policies
Cairo - Sawsan Abu Hussein/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 7 December, 2018/Egypt’s
Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned Thursday a recent report by UN’s Special
Rapporteur on the right to housing, saying that it contained “baseless”
allegations about the state’s housing policies. Egypt has “invited the special
rapporteur to visit the country from September 24 to October 3 as part of the
government’s openness to cooperate with UN human rights bodies and to present
the challenges faced by the government in providing suitable housing,” it said
in a statement. “Egypt was surprised by the special rapporteur’s attempts to
fabricate facts and create problems in her meetings from the very start of her
visit to Cairo even though the state had provided her with all the assistance
needed for her to carry out her duties,” the statement added. The UN
rapporteur’s actions upon arriving in Egypt “raised suspicions that she
deliberately intended to defame the country.” “These doubts were confirmed after
the rapporteur communicated with Qatar’s Al-Jazeera channel – which is known for
its blatant support for terrorist organizations – immediately after the report
was issued,” the ministry pointed out, stressing that the rapporteur’s actions
“proved that the report was intentionally malicious and politicized, hiding
behind human rights and fundamental freedoms.”The UN rapporteur “deliberately
downplayed and concealed the government’s unprecedented achievements in
providing adequate housing for citizens and the progressive and bold decisions
taken by the government to create a shift in housing policies to ensure decent
living standards for citizens without discrimination,” the ministry explained.
It pointed out that the special rapporteur had seen the government’s plan to
build some 600,000 social housing units, with 300,000 units already completed,
given that five percent of the project units has been allocated to the disabled
people. She had also seen the state’s plan to re-develop 46 unsafe slum areas
inside and outside Cairo. The Egyptian foreign office said that the rapporteur’s
“irresponsible and untrusted” actions raised concerns about her neutrality. It
called on the UN Human Rights Council to take a “deterrent action against those
who exploit their posts in politics.”“Egypt strongly rejects this threat to halt
the work of special rapporteurs with Egypt,” the ministry said, stressing that
such decision was “entirely outside the rapporteur’s jurisdiction and is a
violation of her duty”.
Canada Arrests Huawei CFO for Violating US Sanctions on Iran -Report
Beijing, Vancouver/Asharq
Al-Awsat/Friday, 7 December, 2018/Canada has arrested Huawei's global chief
financial officer in Vancouver, where she is facing extradition to the United
States on suspicion she violated US sanctions against Iran, the Globe and Mail
newspaper reported on Wednesday. Meng Wanzhou, who is one of the vice chairs on
the Chinese technology company's board and the daughter of company founder Ren
Zhengfei, was arrested on Dec. 1 and a court hearing has been set for Friday, a
Canadian Justice Department spokesman said, according to the Globe and Mail. The
shock arrest of Meng, 46, raises fresh doubts over a 90-day truce on trade
struck between Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping on Saturday - the day she
was detained. Her arrest, revealed late on Wednesday by Canadian authorities, is
related to US sanctions, a person familiar with the matter said. Reuters was
unable to determine the precise nature of the possible violations. Sources told
Reuters in April that US authorities have been investigating Huawei, the world's
largest telecoms equipment maker, since at least 2016 for allegedly shipping
US-origin products to Iran and other countries in violation of US export and
sanctions laws. The arrest and any potential sanctions on the world's
second-biggest smartphone maker could have major repercussions on the global
technology supply chain.US stock futures and Asian shares tumbled as news of the
arrest heightened the sense a major collision was brewing between the world's
two largest economic powers, not just over tariffs but also over technological
hegemony. Huawei is not listed, but China's second-largest telecom equipment
maker, ZTE Corp <0763.HK><000063.SZ>, sank nearly 6 percent in Hong Kong while
most of the nearby national bourses lost at least 2 percent. MSCI's benchmark
for global stocks <.MIWD00000PUS> declined 0.61 percent, and US markets were on
track to open lower by 1 percent or more. Investors stampeded for the safety of
government debt, pushing the yield on the US 10-year Treasury note back below
2.9 percent to its lowest level in three months.
Huawei is already under intense scrutiny from US and other Western governments
about its ties to the Chinese government, driven by concerns it could be used by
the state for spying. It has been locked out of the United States and some other
markets for telecom gear. Huawei has repeatedly insisted Beijing has no
influence over it. Huawei, which generated $93 billion in revenue last year,
confirmed the arrest in a statement. "The company has been provided very little
information regarding the charges and is not aware of any wrongdoing by Ms. Meng,"
it said.
She was detained when she was transferring flights in Canada, it added. Chinese
foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told a daily briefing on Thursday that
China had asked Canada and the United States for an explanation of Meng's
arrest, but they have “not provided any clarification".
The Chinese consulate in Vancouver has been providing her assistance, he added,
declining further comment. On Wednesday, China's embassy in Canada said it
resolutely opposed the arrest and called for her immediate release.
Yemen Rebels Rebuff Govt. Demand for Hodeida Withdrawal
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December
07/18/Yemen's Huthi rebels will not hand over the key port of Hodeida to the
rival government, a rebel representative said Friday, as the two parties met for
U.N.-brokered talks in Sweden. "This is not on the table," Abdulmalik al-Ajri, a
member of the rebel delegation told AFP after the Yemeni government said it was
seeking a full Huthi withdrawal from the flashpoint port city. The Iran-backed
rebels, locked in a war with the President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi and his allies
in a military coalition led by Saudi Arabia, control the Red Sea city of
Hodeida, a conduit for 90 percent of food imports. The Saudi-led coalition has
for months led an offensive to retake Hodeida. The battle has sparked fears for
more than 150,000 civilians trapped in the city. Saudi Arabia and its allies
accuse the rebels of smuggling arms from Iran through Hodeida as well as the
defunct Sanaa international airport, a charge Tehran denies.U.N. Yemen envoy
Martin Griffiths, who has pushed for months for the Yemen talks, urged both
parties to spare Hodeida as the talks opened on Thursday. Ajri also rebuffed a
government suggestion that the defunct Sanaa international airport be reopened
as a hub for domestic flights. "Sanaa airport is an international airport," Ajri
said, slamming government-imposed restrictions on the airport as "arbitrary."
The airport was shut down in the aftermath of 2014, when the Huthis overran the
capital and a string of Yemeni ports, triggering the intervention of the
Saudi-led alliance on behalf of the embattled government the following year.
Saudi Arabia and its allies have targeted the airport and control Yemeni
airspace. The Sweden talks, which opened Thursday, are the first meeting between
the warring parties since 2016, when more than three months of negotiations in
Kuwait failed to yield a breakthrough in the war. The Yemen war has triggered
what the U.N. calls the world's worst humanitarian crisis and pushed the
impoverished country to the brink of famine, with 14 million people facing
imminent mass starvation.
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on December 07-08/18
5 Steps for America to Retake Global Leadership
James Stavridis/Bloomberg View/December,07/18
As we approach the end of a long and complex year, and a turbulent election that
saw a change of power in the House, it seems an appropriate time to hit pause
and contemplate an approach toward a long-term global strategy for our country.
We live in a highly tactical age, one that often seems categorized by the old
saying, “the carnival moves on.” We seemingly have lost the collective ability
to stop and consider where America needs to set its course.
Strategy is actually simple: it is the rationalization of ends, ways and means.
But in today’s America, we have extreme difficulty staying focused on a single
set of ends (what we want to accomplish); ways (how do we accomplish our
goals?); and means (how do we pay for it?). Having spent a lifetime studying,
developing and executing strategy, I have come to understand that simpler and
shorter are better. Here I offer you a brief teaser on what our global strategy
should encompass as we head toward the end of the second decade of this
turbulent century.
All strategy must be understood and executed in a context, and the outlines of
the global situation faced by the US are at once daunting and promising. On the
dangerous side of the curve, we see the rise of an increasingly nationalistic
China; a resurgent but fundamentally weak Russia; centrifugal forces pulling
apart our greatest pool of partners in Europe; a lack of progress in much of
Africa and Latin America; a Middle East in complete turmoil; a distressing
deterioration of the global natural environment, especially the oceans; rising
levels of cyber-insecurity; potential pandemics; growing numbers of
authoritarian regimes; and a surge in international criminal activity — from
human trafficking to weapons to narcotics.
But these negatives are balanced by what is going surprisingly well: startling
improvements in biotechnology; advances in artificial intelligence and machine
learning; better agricultural production; the rise of India, a huge and
potentially powerful democracy; increasing engagement of women in the workplace
and leadership roles; the resilience of democracy and institutions, in the US in
particular; and better uses of what might be termed smart power: humanitarian
assistance, medical diplomacy, education, strategic communications and the like.
This mixed picture is a good starting point for crafting the outline of a truly
overarching approach for the US. Five crucial points are critical, some of which
appear in this year’s National Security Strategy, largely penned by now-ousted
National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster.
First, we need to maintain a truly international approach to our strategy. The
US cannot simply retreat behind “big beautiful walls.” The slogan America First
makes some sense, but if it leads to America Alone it is foolish. Let’s
coherently include our greatest national advantage — a vast network of allies,
partners and friends — as we decide how to approach the world. We tried
isolationism in the 1920s and 1930s — how did that work out? We built tariff
walls, cracked the global economy, precipitated the Great Depression, and walked
away from the League of Nations - How did that work out? You can drop a plumb
line from those decisions to the rise of fascism and World War II. We can do
better, but only if we stay engaged across the globe.
Next, we must do better at unifying the interagency process of the US government
and bringing the cabinet into the 21st century. Our agencies and cabinet
departments simply do not work well together. We have Departments of Agriculture
and Interior — perfect for the 19th century, when they were founded, and still
relevant — but no one at the cabinet level looking at or overseeing technology
and the cybersphere, the absolute heart of our economy. A coherent national
strategy would seek to unify these disparate organs of government, and along the
way place a premium on bipartisan cooperation. In Washington, we are more famous
for political gridlock than for understanding our electric grid — that must
change.
Third, and most importantly, our national strategy must encompass a new era of
private-public cooperation. If you think about our national ability to influence
events, you should visualize an iceberg — with the tiny tip of visible ice
representing what the government can accomplish. The vast mass underwater —
one-fourth of the global GDP — is the private sector. By linking our government
to the vibrant American public sector — from the biotech belt around Boston to
Silicon Valley to the innovative industrial complexes of our defense industry —
we can achieve so much more.
Next, we should realize that our values matter deeply, and how we communicate
them must be part of our national strategy. Democracy, liberty, freedom of
speech, freedom of religion, freedom of education, gender and racial equality —
we execute them imperfectly, but they are the right values. Unfortunately, we
are less confident in them than we should be, and are losing ground to
authoritarianism, totalitarian capitalism and outright dictatorships.
The key to turning this around is our ability to construct a national focus on
strategic communications — what some have termed public diplomacy. Our values
are the right ones and can compete with other systems. But too often, we cede
the rich communication terrain of the internet to others. We are not in a “war
of ideas;” rather, we are in what John Stuart Mill more than a century ago so
aptly called a “marketplace of ideas.” Our values can compete, but not if we
don’t show up on the field, and above all if we arrogantly believe that they are
so powerful we don’t have to even make the case.
Fifth and finally, the value of education is often underrated in our strategy.
Having spent five years in higher education as dean of a graduate school of
international relations, I understand this realm well, for all its challenges
and frustrations. Education is at the heart of what we must accomplish, and a
few strategic components here would include: cybersecurity at every level,
beginning in preschool; international relations and an understanding of how the
world interconnects; the study of languages, starting with Spanish (we are well
on our way to being a bilingual country); the ability to discern truth from
fiction on the internet; the basics of genomics and the bio-revolution that is
just ahead of us; and an appreciation for the values that are what truly makes
America great.
In short, there are five components that lie at the heart of what an American
strategy for this century looks like: international, interagency,
public-private, strategic communications, education. There are more complex
layers to be added, but an approach that begins with those five elements has a
reasonable chance at success. Pursing them would send set us on course to
achieve our ends: a peaceful, prosperous, democratic world with a secure global
commons.
Finally, in term of means, much of what I have described above is well within
our national budget. We should look at how we allocate resources, particularly
between the Defense Department and national entitlements (between them, the vast
majority of the US budget), and consider how specific resources furthering our
goals could be found. In every case, they are pennies on the dollar compared to
many of the “requirements” in the current budget process.
None of this would be easy, or without controversy — but without a strategy, we
are doomed. As Oliver Wendell Holmes put it: “To reach a port we must sail,
sometimes with the wind, and sometimes against it. But we must not drift or lie
at anchor.”
Without a grand strategy we are adrift. Let’s get underway.
George Bush Sr.: An End of a Generation and a
Political Culture
Eyad Abu Shakra/Asharq Al-Awsat/December,07/18
When I told an Iraqi friend that I was thinking about writing my weekly opinion
column about President George Bush Sr., his reply was a short silence tacitly
reflecting disappointment.
Realizing his true feeling, his short but polite silence allowed me enough time
to explain what I wished to say. In truth, I am neither a political “glorifier”
nor a pro or against activist; but rather a serious analyst who observes
political phenomena, studies them and concludes the outcome, especially, when
the affect our lives and the fate out nations.
Thus, a serious reading of the career of a leader of a great nation must never
be touched by a subjective emotional stance, but link relevant data, and study
causes and repercussions on both the present and the future.
In the Arab world, Bush Sr.’s name is directly connected with the Liberation of
Kuwait in 1991. While, on the global stage, during the Cold War era, his legacy
was his quiet diplomatic approach which was less severe than the “ideological”
approaches of both his predecessor President Ronald Reagan, and later on his son
Pres George Bush Jr. However, what interests me most about this man, after his
passing, is what has become of his political “trend”, and whether common
denominators exist between his “school of thought” and what we see around us on
the global stage.
Does the passing of Bush Sr. mark the end of American and international politics
we knew between the end of WWI and the end of the Cold War? Moreover, does it
point to the end of the American Republican Party of which he, and perhaps, the
late Senator John McCain were the last representatives.
I recall that, as an inquisitive young man who was deeply interested in US
politics, I followed the career of the then Congressman George H. W. Bush of
Texas. I remember his Senate campaign in 1970 when he was defeated by his
Democratic opponent Lloyd Bentsen.
Sure enough, that defeat did not spell the end of the political rise of the
scion of a prominent New England family. Indeed, thanks both to Bush’s personal
qualities, and being a son of the political and financial “establishment” that
fuels the Republican party, that defeat was just a hiccup, after which he
continued his impressive rise. Bentsen, too, did not end his career in the
Senate, Democratic Party’s once powerful “machine” was steadily weakening and
its power base shrinking. The old senator was appointed Secretary of Treasury
under President Bill Clinton, after being a presidential running mate to the
Democratic Presidential candidate Michael Dukakis in 1988. It was actually
ironic that the 1988 resulted in George Bush Sr.’s victory, which not also a
belated electoral revenge for Bush against former old foe Bentsen!
Bush Sr. represented a different kind of “Republican party” which is estimated
is living its final days in the states of New England, its former bastion, and
home to America’s Anglo-Saxon early-immigrants. In fact, if Senator Susan
Collins loses her seat in Maine come next elections after two years, there would
be no Republican in the US Senate from New England’s six states (Massachusetts,
Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine).
In the past, Boston, America’s most venerable city and its cultural and
educational “Athens”, and the city where George Bush Sr. was born, was like its
state Massachusetts, a Republican stronghold. Its rich Republican “Brahmin”
families were busy founding companies, leading schools and great universities.
Those days, the Republican Party – nicknamed the Grand Old Party – was the
natural environment for Bush and those like him. His father, Prescott Bush, the
son of a rich industrialist, served as a US Senator from Connecticut; and before
his Presidents son and grandson, he graduated from the prestigious Yale
University. The Bush family, would later spend summer vacations in Maine,
although its business and political interests took it across America to Texas
and Florida.
Today, however, the GOP is a different party from the one Bush Sr. built his
political career in. Moreover, the “America” known to generations of the Bush
family, from the grandfather Prescott through George Sr. to the grandchildren
George Jr. and “Jeb” – a former Governor of Florida – is also totally different!
In a certain way, the generation of George Bush Sr. is similar to a comparable
generation represented within the UK Conservative Party, by the moderate “One
Nation Tories” wing, which was ruthlessly fought and almost destroyed by
Margaret Thatcher.
When Bush Sr. initially entered the Presidential Election campaign, he was
actually running against the “Reaganite” phenomenon, before calls to unify the
party led to bringing together in one electoral ticket the “hardliner” Ronald
Reagan and “moderate” George Bush.
This was achieved, and thanks to the strategy of a “balanced ticket” the
Republicans managed to win three consecutive Presidential Elections between 1981
and 1993. Indeed, when Bush became the Party’s presidential choice, the
“hardliner” Senator Dan Quayle of Indiana was chosen as his vice presidential
running mate. Despite his distinguished military service during WWII, and his
intelligence service peaking as head of the CIA between 1976 and 1977, George
Bush Sr. always believe in politics through dialogue; and despite his patrician
background and personal wealth he was a flexible statesman who would open doors
and talk even with political opposites, which is why he was appointed as “Chief
of the US Liaison Office” (i.e. ambassador) in China, thus putting the final
touches of opening up to the Communist giant which began under another GOP
President … Richard Nixon.
The rules of the game have now changed, the GOP has changed too, as have both
America and the whole world. Politicians now regard mutual understanding as a
burden, which is why they shun and seek exclusion and blaming others. The World
is not large enough to accommodate even conditional coexistence. The “freedom”
of the “free economy” is checked, and while “racism” is not an accusation to be
ashamed of anymore, even in advanced societies which colonized the globe under
the pretexts of spreading liberty, enlightenment, tolerance and … human rights!
The Contortionist Who Would Bend but Not Break
Amir Taheri/Asharq Al-Awsat/December,07/18
Visitors to the United States these days are struck by the bitterness, not to
say hatred, that pervades the nation’s political debate. From the ringside,
American politics resembles a giant pool of mud where those mired in it aim to
sling as much mud as they can on everyone around.
To be sure, American politics has always had a streak of violence, sometimes
beyond mere words. After all, 22 of the nation’s 45 presidents have been victims
of assassination plots that succeeded in the case of four, and some say, six of
them. (Abraham Lincoln, James Garfield, William McKinley, and John F Kennedy,
plus Zachary Taylor and Warren Harding.) Since the surprise election of Donald
Trump as President, the situation has worsened as trading of accusations and
insults replaces political debate. One friend, a lifelong Republican, has been
so angered by Trump’s election that he has moved to the other end of the
spectrum, starting a new career as a critic of conservatism. Another, a moderate
“one-nation” style conservative has gone in the opposite direction, out-Trumping
Trump in his attacks on “the liberal elite.”So, you can imagine how surprised I
was to scan reactions to the death last week of former President George HW Bush
aged 94. It was as if his death had brought back a kinder, gentler, not to say
more gentlemanly, America. Even when I dug into the dark corners of
Anti-Republican partisanship I failed to find the kind of vitriol used against
President Barack Obama and, now, against Trump. One “Socialist” paper noted that
Bush had come from “a privileged background” but could not deny that he had been
a decent adversary.
Those who tried not to elevate him too much insisted that he had been a
“one-term president” as if that diminished his stature. In fact, of the 12 US
presidents since the end of World War II, three others became “one-termers”:
John F Kennedy, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. Two more inherited half of one
term from their predecessor and won one term on their own: Harry S Truman and
Lyndon Johnson. One, Gerald Ford, inherited a term from his predecessor and
didn’t win a term of his own. Three won the presidency without securing half of
the votes cast: Bill Clinton (in both his terms), George W Bush in his first
term and Trump. Only three won with more than half the votes and served two
terms in full: Dwight D Eisenhower, Ronald Reagan, and Barack Obama. Richard
Nixon, too, won two terms but served only one. George HW Bush’s failure to win a
second term was mainly due to the presence of the populist candidate Ross Perot
who broke with Republicans and split their votes into southern states. Had Perot
not been on the ballot, Bush would have won in any configuration. In his
characteristic disdain for shady shenanigans, Bush refused to make a deal with
Perot in exchange for withdrawing his candidacy. Rectitude was a key feature in
a life dedicated to public service. George HW Bush’s presidency had another
special feature: it was the first time in four decades that one of the two
parties kept the White House for 12 consecutive years.
Both presidents Obama and Trump have praised Bush in almost identical tones of
respect and admiration. One wonders what would happen if they and their
supporters maintained the same tone in debating their clashing visions for
America. I first met George HW Bush, often referred to as “41” because he was
the 41st President of the United States, in 1971 when he was named by President
Nixon as Ambassador to the United Nations. He had forged a friendship with
Fereydoun Hoveyda, then Iran’s ambassador to the UN. Hoveyda called Bush, who
was tall and thin, (the Boneless Valentin) after the figure of a contortionist
in the paintings of 19th Century French painter Toulouse Lautrec.” Like Valentin,”
Hoveyda used to say, “this American can twist and bend but will not break!”
In his spell at the UN, Bush established himself as a credible figure in global
diplomacy. However, fate had traced other paths for him. Two years later he was
named Chairman of the Republican Party at one of its most traumatic moments. A
year later, the political parenthesis closed, Bush was sent as head of the
liaison office in Beijing to oversee a transition to full diplomatic relations
with Washington. Bush’s next move, to become Director of the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA), was away from politics and diplomacy and yet related
to both.
By the end of the 1970s, Bush had decided to bid for the presidency. His first
attempt stopped just short of the final goal and he agreed to become Ronald
Reagan’s vice-presidential running-mate. He kept his own circle of personal
friends, among then James Baker, Brent Scowcroft, Frank Carlucci, Robert Gates
and Robert Mosbacher, and from the mid-1980s, the entrepreneur and
philanthropist Hushang Ansary.
Bush’s success in steering towards a peaceful transition at the end of the Cold
War is too well known to need repeating. When the Berlin Wall fell advisers
urged him to fly there and do his own “I am-a-Berliner” number. He refused
because he did not want to humiliate the losers of history towards seeking
revenge. He led the war to expel Saddam Hussein from Kuwait with firmness and
moderation and under a United Nations’ mandate. Victory in Iraq helped attenuate
the dark memory of America’s botched war in Indochina.
Bush had a natural talent for winning friends. He turned Bill Clinton, the rival
who had defeated him, into a friend to the point that First Lady Barbara Bush
quipped that “Bill is one of my sons.” In 2009 I saw Bush at the library named
after him at Texas University sitting at a table with President Obama munching a
hamburger in an informal manner. And yet the deference that Obama showed was
glaring. In the past few days, many adjectives have been showered over Bush’s
casket, among them graceful, humble, compassionate, and patriotic. I think the
adjective he would have preferred is “good”. In 2012 at a dinner in Washington
DC for his Points of Light charity, I asked Bush whether he would back Mitt
Romney as the Republican nominee for the presidency.
“Yes,” he said. “Romney is a good man.”I think Bush took the adjective “good” in
its Greek sense of “Agathon” which means “beneficial”, that is to say,
beneficial to society, a concept that includes but goes beyond the moral sense.
To have a good society one needs “beneficial” men in charge, an old American
concept of politics As Americans bury their longest living president in history
they might do well to revive some of the old concepts, or dare we say values,
which guided the contortionist for nine decades?
Spare a Thought for Libya’s $67 Billion Wealth
Fund
Mark Gilbert/Bloomberg/December,07/18
In a tough environment for asset managers battling with declining stock markets
and still ultra-low benchmark bond yields, spare a thought for Libya’s sovereign
wealth fund. It also has to contend with militia attacks on its staff, competing
claims about who runs the fund, and United Nations sanctions that have frozen
its investments for the past seven years. The Libyan Investment Authority was
created a decade ago, echoing the efforts of other oil-rich nations to build a
nest egg for future generations. The bulk of the LIA’s money, though, is subject
to sanctions imposed by the UN in 2011 designed to safeguard the nation’s wealth
from being pilfered. Ali Mahmoud Hassan was appointed chief executive and
chairman of the LIA in 2017. The UN notes that so-called parallel institutions
have at various times claimed to represent the LIA, but Hassan has the backing
of the Government of National Accord led by Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj,
which in turn is recognized by the UN as Libya’s legitimate government. The fund
has assets of about $67 billion. That includes roughly $8.5 billion invested in
some 84 companies in Europe and the US, including German insurer Allianz AG, UK
telecoms company Vodafone Group Plc and Italian bank UniCredit SpA.
Dividend and interest payments from the investments, which the LIA says aren’t
subject to sanctions, have been transferred via the Brussels-based settlement
system run by Euroclear Plc to the fund’s accounts at Arab Banking Corp. in
Bahrain. Opposition lawmakers in the Belgian parliament earlier this year
questioned whether the funds had been misused to buy weapons for Libyan
militias. In recent weeks, the LIA has ascertained that “there has been no
misuse and no disappearance of money,” Hassan told me, speaking through an
interpreter in an interview in London. Some of the income, which he says amounts
to “a few hundred million dollars,” has been used to cover administrative and
operational expenses, as well as the cost of pursuing legal actions. “But no
third parties have received money,” he said.
As a result of the sanctions, returns on the investments have been miserly,
amounting to about 1.5 percent to 2 percent in the past year. The sanctions that
have frozen the funds limit its room for maneuver, meaning $21 billion is
trapped in deposit accounts. As the portfolio’s bond holdings matured in recent
years, the proceeds had to be transferred to the fund’s cash accounts.
In dollars, the interest rates on cash are negligible. In euros, the negative
interest-rate policy still in force at the European Central Bank means the fund
pays for the privilege of keeping money in its accounts in Belgium — and the
sanctions forbid the fund from swapping currencies.
Ideally, Hassan says no more than 10 percent of the fund’s assets would be in
cash. He’d favor buying US Treasuries as a low-risk, liquid alternative. The LIA
is a member of the International Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds, which
represents more than 30 such funds that have agreed to abide by the so-called
Santiago Principles which outline best practice for governance and risk
management. Hassan acknowledges that his fund currently does poorly versus its
peers in complying with those guidelines and needs to improve.
The LIA’s next step will be to appoint an independent firm to go through several
years of accounts and prepare a full audit that can be presented to the UN.
Hassan says he’s got a short list of proposals from accountancy firms — PwC has
worked for the fund in the past — and expects to select one shortly, making an
audit possible by the middle of next year.
The LIA has been involved in several high-profile lawsuits. It lost a case
against Goldman Sachs & Co. in 2016 after accusing the US firm of pushing the
fund into derivatives trades that lost $1.2 billion. Societe Generale SA has
paid more than $1.7 billion to resolve charges of bribing Libyan officials. In
September, the LIA sued JPMorgan Chase & Co. in London saying the bank paid more
than $6 million in bribes to win a $200 million bond deal more than a decade
ago. With Libya still politically fragmented, it’s probably too soon for the UN
to lift the sanctions on the LIA. A summit in Italy earlier this year that was
meant to pave the way for national elections in 2019 ended with little progress,
although it did host an informal meeting between Al-Sarraj and Khalifa Haftar,
the military commander who controls most of eastern Libya.
But the UN could make a start in preparing the LIA for its future independence
by allowing it to freely invest the proceeds of securities as they mature.
Provided it makes good on its promise to deliver fully audited accounts, the LIA
should be unshackled to invest the proceeds of about $1.5 billion of bonds that
will steadily get repaid in the coming years — a small but significant step
toward normalizing operations at the wealth fund.
Italy Adopts Hardline Immigration Law
Soeren Kern/Gatestone
Institute/December 07/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13392/italy-immigration-law
Under the new law, the Italian government will only grant asylum to legitimate
refugees of war or victims of political persecution. Asylum seekers may now lose
their protection if they are convicted of crimes including: threat or violence
to a public official; physical assault; female genital mutilation; and a variety
of theft charges.
"I wonder if those who contest the security decree have even read it. I do not
really understand what the problem is: it deports criminals and increases the
fight against the mafia, racketeering and drugs." — Deputy Prime Minister and
Minister of the Interior Matteo Salvini.
Italy will not sign the United Nations Global Compact for Migration, nor will
Italian officials attend a conference in Marrakech, Morocco, on December 10 and
11 to adopt the agreement. The Global Compact not only aims to establish
migration as a human right, but also to outlaw criticism of migration through
hate crimes legislation.
Italy, a main European gateway for migrants arriving by sea, has approved a
tough new immigration and security law that will make it easier to deport
migrants who commit crimes. Pictured: Migrants in a wooden boat wait to be
picked up by the Migrant Offshore Aid Station Phoenix vessel on June 10, 2017
off Lampedusa, Italy. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
The Italian Parliament has approved a tough new immigration and security law
that will make it easier to deport migrants who commit crimes and strip those
convicted of terrorism of their Italian citizenship.
Italy's lower house of parliament, the Camera dei Deputati, voted 396 to 99 on
November 28 to approve the new law, which was sponsored by Interior Minister
Matteo Salvini. The law had previously been approved by the Italian Senate on
November 7. The measure was promulgated by President Sergio Mattarella on
December 3.
Also known as the "Security Decree" or the "Salvini Decree," the new law
includes several key provisions:Eliminates Humanitarian Protection. A primary
objective of the new law is to limit the number of migrants granted asylum in
Italy. To achieve this aim, Article 1 of the decree abolishes residence permits
for so-called humanitarian protection, a form of security available to those not
eligible for refugee status.
Under the previous system, the conditions to qualify for humanitarian protection
— one of the three forms of protection granted to asylum seekers, in addition to
political asylum and subsidiary protection — were vague and subject to abuse.
Migrants arriving in Italy were able to claim humanitarian protection, which
lasted for two years and provided access to a job, social welfare benefits and
housing.
Under the new law, the Italian government will only grant asylum to legitimate
refugees of war or victims of political persecution. The new law also introduces
a series of special permits (for health reasons or natural disasters in the
country of origin) with a maximum duration of between six months and one year.
Extends Period of Detention for Migrants. Article 2 of the new law authorizes
Italian authorities to detain migrants held at so-called repatriation centers (Centri
di permanenza per il rimpatrio, CPR) for a maximum of 180 days, up from a
maximum of 90 days. The extension is in line with the period considered
necessary to verify a migrant's identity and nationality.
In addition, Article 3 provides that asylum seekers may be held for a maximum
period of 30 days at so-called hotspots, identification facilities at the EU's
external borders. If identity is not established in the 30 days, asylum seekers
may also be held in repatriation centers for 180 days. In other words, asylum
seekers may be held for 210 days to verify their identity.
Increases Funds for Deportation. Article 6 provides for the allocation of
additional funds for repatriations: 500,000 euros ($570,000) in 2018, 1.5
million euros ($1.7 million) in 2019 and another 1.5 million euros in 2020.
Eases Revocation of Protection. Article 7 extends the list of crimes for which
refugee status or subsidiary protection can be withdrawn. Asylum seekers may now
lose their protection if they are convicted of crimes including: threats or
violence to a public official; physical assault; female genital mutilation; and
a variety of theft charges.
The asylum application may also be suspended if the applicant is in a criminal
proceeding for one of the aforementioned crimes and would result in the refusal
of asylum in the event of a final conviction. Furthermore, refugees who return
to their country of origin, even temporarily, will lose international and
subsidiary protection.
Establishes List of Safe Countries of Origin. Article 7-bis provides for the
establishment of a list of safe countries of origin, namely countries which have
democratic political systems and where "generally and consistently" there is no
political persecution, torture or inhumane or humiliating treatment or
punishment, threat of violence or armed conflict.
At least 12 EU countries already have such lists, which are used to prevent
abuses of EU and national asylum systems.
According to the decree, asylum seekers from countries on the list will be
required to provide proof that they face danger in their home countries. The law
also introduces new categories that qualify an asylum application as "manifestly
unfounded" in the case of: people who have made inconsistent statements; people
who have made false information or provided false documents; people who refuse
to be fingerprinted; people who are subject to deportation orders; people who
constitute a danger to order and security; foreigners who entered Italian
territory in an irregular manner and who did not immediately apply for asylum.
In addition to the list of safe countries of origin, Article 10 institutes the
principle of "internal flight," that is "if a foreign citizen can be repatriated
in some areas of the country of origin where there are no risks of persecution,
the application for international protection is rejected."
Downsizes the Asylum Seeker Shelter System. Article 12 stipulates that
henceforth only unaccompanied minors and those persons who qualify for
international protection will be allowed to use the system for the reception of
asylum seekers and refugees (Sistema di protezione per richiedenti asilo e
rifugiati, SPRAR), the ordinary reception system managed by Italian
municipalities. All other asylum seekers will be processed through the
Extraordinary Reception Centers (Centri di Accoglienza Straordinaria, CAS) and
by Reception Centers for Asylum Seekers (Centri di Accoglienza per Richiedenti
Asilo, CARA). The changes are aimed not only at reasserting central control over
the asylum process, but also at restricting access to all but the most basic
social services.
Authorizes Revocation of Citizenship. Article 14 provides for revoking Italian
citizenship from those who are not Italian by birth and convicted of crimes
related to terrorism. Those subject to revocation include: foreigners who
acquired citizenship after ten years of residence in Italy; stateless persons
who acquired citizenship after five years of residence in Italy; children of
foreigners born in Italy who acquired citizenship after the age of 18; spouses
of Italian citizens; and adult foreigners who were adopted by an Italian
citizen.
The revocation of citizenship is possible within three years of the final
conviction for crimes related to terrorism, by decree of the President of the
Republic on the proposal of the Minister of the Interior.
Article 14 also increases the waiting period to obtain citizenship to 48 months
from 24 months.
Boosts Security Measures. The new law also introduces rules aimed at
strengthening measures to guarantee public safety, with particular reference to
the threat of terrorism and the fight against criminal infiltration in public
tenders.
In an effort to prevent vehicular attacks on pedestrians in crowded places,
Article 17 requires car rental agencies to increase controls on individuals who
rent trucks and vans. Article 19 authorizes police in municipalities with
populations above 100,000 persons to use electric tasers, while Article 24
includes measures to strengthen anti-mafia laws and prevention measures. The
Italian mafia has been accused of profiting from the migration crisis.
At a press conference, Interior Minister Salvini said that the new law would
provide order for a dysfunctional asylum system. "With criteria, common sense
and excellent results, we put order, rules, seriousness, transparency and
uniformity in the asylum reception system that had become a commodity, a
business out of control and paid for by the Italian people." He added:
"We must welcome those fleeing wars, but there is no room for economic migrants.
In the era of global communication, a clear message is being sent to migrants in
all countries of origin, and also to smugglers, who will understand that they
need to change jobs. He who escapes from war is my brother, but he who comes
here to sell drugs and create disorder must return to his country."
The new law has been roundly condemned by Italy's mainstream media, left-leaning
political parties, as well as by NGOs and other groups dealing with immigration.
Salvatore Geraci, of Caritas Italia, an Italian charity, described the law as
"the worst in Italian history" and as "pathogenic, useless and harmful." He
added: "The text is largely a result of prejudices and electoral calculations,
simplistic approaches to a complex and articulated phenomenon."
Salvini retorted: "I wonder if those who contest the security decree have even
read it. I do not really understand what the problem is: it deports criminals
and increases the fight against the mafia, racketeering and drugs."
Salvini, leader of the anti-immigration League (Lega) party, formed a new
coalition government with the populist Five Star Movement (M5S) on June 1. The
government's program, outlined in a 39-page action plan, promised to crack down
on illegal immigration and to deport up to 500,000 undocumented migrants.
Italy is a main European gateway for migrants arriving by sea: 119,369 arrived
by sea in 2017, after 181,436 in 2016, according to the International
Organization for Migration (IOM). An estimated 700,000 migrants have arrived in
Italy during the past five years, but since Salvini took office, the number of
arrivals has fallen sharply. During the first eleven months of 2018, only 23,000
migrants arrived, according to the IOM.
Meanwhile, Salvini announced that Italy will not sign the United Nations Global
Compact for Migration, nor will Italian officials attend a conference in
Marrakech, Morocco, on December 10 and 11 to adopt the agreement. The Global
Compact not only aims to establish migration as a human right, but also to
outlaw criticism of migration through hate crimes legislation.
Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, addressing Parliament on November 28, said:
"The Global Migration Compact is a document that raises issues and questions
that many citizens have strong feelings about. Therefore, we consider it right
to put the debate in parliament and subject any final decision on the outcome of
that debate, as Switzerland has done. So, the government will not participate in
Marrakech, reserving the option to adopt the document, or not, only when
parliament has expressed its opinion."
More than a dozen countries have announced they will not sign the agreement.
Western countries include: Australia, Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech
Republic, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Latvia, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia,
Switzerland, and the United States.
*Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Palestinians: No Difference Between Hamas and
Fatah
Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/December 07/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13391/palestinians-hamas-fatah-difference
It is supposedly fine for Mahmoud Abbas and his officials to condemn Hamas on a
daily basis. It is supposedly not fine, however, for the US administration to
condemn Hamas for its terrorist attacks against Israel.
"The proposed [unseen] US resolution is harmful to the Palestinians' right of
resistance." — Emad Omar, Palestinian political analyst.
This is obviously a short-lived honeymoon that will end the day after the UN
General Assembly vote on the anti-Hamas resolution. The morning after the vote,
Abbas will wake up to the realization that Hamas was a strange bedfellow indeed.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas's hatred of Hamas is far from
secret. But Abbas is now defending Hamas because he despises the Trump
administration, which has sponsored a UN draft resolution that condemns Hamas.
Pictured: Abbas (right) meets with Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh on May 30, 2007
in the Gaza Strip. (Photo by Abu Askar/PPO via Getty Images)
Has Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas changed his position toward
his rivals in Hamas? This is the question that some Palestinians have been
asking in the wake of Abbas's opposition to a US-sponsored draft resolution that
asks the United Nations General Assembly to condemn Hamas for repeatedly firing
rockets at Israel and instigating violence.
Abbas's hatred of Hamas is far from secret. For years – and until today – Abbas
has used every available platform to launch scathing attacks on Hamas.
He accused Hamas of foiling Arab efforts to end the dispute with his ruling
Fatah faction.
He accused Hamas of masterminding a series of explosions targeting the homes of
some of his senior Fatah officials in the Gaza Strip.
He accused Hamas of staging a coup in 2007 against his Palestinian Authority
(PA) in the Gaza Strip and seeking to establish a separate Palestinian there.
He accused Hamas of standing behind the botched assassination attempt on his
prime minister, Rami Hamdallah, in the Gaza Strip earlier this year. He even
made a metaphoric remark that, "shoes will be pouring on the heads of Hamas
leaders."
In his last speech at the UN General Assembly, Abbas repeated his charges
against Hamas and threatened to impose new punitive measures against the Gaza
Strip unless Hamas allows his government to assume full control over the
Hamas-ruled coastal enclave.
In the past few days, however, the rhetoric of Abbas and his senior officials in
Ramallah toward Hamas has made a 180 degree turn. What is behind this sudden
change? Has Abbas discovered that he was mistaken about Hamas all these years
and that its leaders, Ismail Haniyeh, Mahmoud Zahar and Yeyha Sinwar are
actually his good buddies?
The US-sponsored UN draft resolution condemning Hamas seems to have brought
Hamas and Fatah closer to each other. Just last week, it seemed that Egyptian
efforts to end the Hamas-Fatah rivalry had once again belly-flopped.
The Palestinian Authority and Fatah are strongly opposed to all the policies of
the US administration. They have already rejected US President Donald Trump's
yet-to-be-announced plan for peace in the Middle East, widely known as the "deal
of the century." They have rejected Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as
Israel's capital. They have rejected and condemned Trump's transfer of the US
Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. They have rejected and condemned Trump's
decision to cut financial aid to the PA and UNRWA.
Now, in line with their refusal to accept anything that emerges from the Trump
administration, the Palestinian Authority and Fatah have also found themselves
in the awkward position of needing to reject and denounce the US initiative to
condemn Hamas for firing rockets at Israel.
It is supposedly fine for Abbas and his officials to condemn Hamas on a daily
basis. It is supposedly not fine, however, for the US administration to condemn
Hamas for its terrorist attacks against Israel. This is the logic of the
Palestinian Authority, which has also been imposing financial and economic
sanctions on the Gaza Strip in the past year. The sanctions include, among other
things, the suspension of salaries to thousands of civil servants, cutting
financial aid to needy families in the Gaza Strip, and refusing to pay for fuel
and electricity supplied by Israel to the residents living under Hamas.
Abbas and Hamas have been working separately to thwart the US draft resolution
at the UN General Assembly. Abbas has instructed his envoy to the UN to make an
effort to foil the anti-Hamas resolution, while Hamas leaders have been urging
Arab and Muslim leaders and governments to help thwart the US initiative.
"Despite all our differences with Hamas, we are categorically opposed to the
American and Israeli attempt to label Hamas a terrorist group," explained Osama
Qawassmeh, a senior Fatah official. We will fight to thwart the US resolution."
Another senior Fatah official, Abbas Zaki, was even more adamant in his defense
of Hamas. "Hamas belongs to us and we belong to Hamas," he said. "If Hamas,
which is practicing resistance, is considered a terrorist organization, this
would mean that all Palestinians are practicing terrorism. Hamas, like all
Palestinian factions, is a national liberation movement."
Abbas and Fatah are defending Hamas not out of love for Hamas, but because they
despise the Trump administration to the extent that they are willing to go to
bat for their arch-rivals in Hamas. Judging from the statements of some of
Abbas's top officials, it is nevertheless clear that they fear that a
condemnation of Hamas would pave the way for similar moves against other
Palestinian factions, including the Palestinian president's own Fatah.
As Palestinian political analyst Emad Omar put it, "The proposed US resolution
is harmful to the Palestinians' right of resistance. As president of the
Palestinians, Abbas is forced to defend Hamas and any other Palestinian
faction."
Hamas, for its part, has expressed gratitude to Abbas and Fatah for their strong
opposition to the US-sponsored draft resolution.
Does all this mean that Fatah and Hamas have agreed to patch up their
differences and open a new page in their relations? The answer, of course, is
no. This is obviously a short-lived honeymoon that will end the day after the UN
General Assembly vote on the anti-Hamas resolution. Abbas wants to score points
on the Palestinian street by showing that he is capable of challenging the US
administration at the UN. For now, Abbas is prepared to swallow the bitter pill
of defending Hamas. The morning after the vote, Abbas will wake up to the
realization that Hamas was a strange bedfellow indeed.
*Khaled Abu Toameh, an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem, is a
Shillman Journalism Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Why the Press Pays Less Attention to the Murder
of Journalists Not Named Khashoggi
Peter Baum/Gatestone Institute/December 07/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13375/journalists-murder
Ironically, the same members of the media who have been obsessed with Khashoggi
and the Saudi-US alliance have devoted little space to the reality that Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government has been imprisoning, torturing and
killing journalists for years.
The ongoing story of Khashoggi's murder at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, more
than being a function of concern for the Saudi journalist, was less important to
Western journalists than attacking the Trump administration.
Raed Fares, who was among the most prominent critics of Syrian President Bashar
Assad's brutal regime, was assassinated on November 23, 2018.
While the October 2 murder of the Saudi journalist, Jamal Khashoggi, continues
to be discussed across the world, the November 23 assassination of a Syrian
journalist, Raed Fares, and his devoted friend and cameraman, Hammoud al-Jneid,
gunned down in Fares's home village of Kafrandel, Syria, does not.
This neglect is noteworthy: Fares was among the most prominent critics of Syrian
President Bashar Assad's brutal regime. According to CBS News:
In 2013, Fares posted a satirical YouTube video depicting cave men repeatedly
killed by the men representing the Syrian government as men wearing American and
European Union flags idly sit by. "This is how the international community
reacted to the genocide committed by Assad against the Syrian people," Fares
wrote.
Fares was also a key voice in the "Arab Spring," and he daily challenged Assad
as well as terrorist organizations operating in Syria, such as the Iranian
proxy, Hezbollah. According to The New Yorker:
Three years before his assassination, to the day, Fares posted a photo on
Facebook of a protest banner lampooning the fact that other countries were
fighting proxy wars in Syria: "BLACK FRIDAY SPECIAL OFFER, WHOEVER WHEREVER YOU
ARE, BRING YOUR ENEMY AND COME FIGHT IN SYRIA FOR FREE (FREE LAND & SKY) LIMITED
TIME OFFER."
"In the absence of peaceful, democratic political voices," Fares noted in an
op-ed for The Washington Post, "terrorists have been able to convince Syria's
vulnerable youth that violence and destruction can somehow pave the way to
stability." One can view his talk to the Oslo Freedom Forum here. In an
interview with NPR, Fares said:
"... Jabhat al-Nusra tried to bomb my car. And I was in it, but I survived. And
December, 2014, Jabhat al-Nusra, they kidnapped me from their checkpoint, and
three days in their jail. They hanged me to the ceiling for six hours. But an
activist in Istanbul, he came and talked to them and convinced them to release
me. And earlier this year, they attacked my Radio Fresh station and attacked the
Women's Center, which belongs to us."
In 2013, Fares established Radio Fresh, where he bravely broadcast support for
the Syrian civilian population, without regard to their religious affinities. In
2014, he escaped being murdered at the hands of ISIS.
From that time on, he was targeted by both the Assad regime and the Islamist
militias whom he constantly criticized and satirized for their human-rights
abuses and totalitarianism.
The US State Department, the British Foreign Office and Syrian human-rights
groups all expressed their horror and sadness at Fares', murder, which took
place during a cease-fire.
Although many mainstream media outlets have reported on the murder, their
coverage of it is so far less than that of Khashoggi, a 9/11 conspiracy theorist
with ties to the Muslim Brotherhood.
What is the difference between the two cases, each of which involved the
targeted killing of an Arab journalist with Arab state involvement?
One probable reason is that Khashoggi not only wrote for the Washington Post,
but was allegedly killed at the behest -- or at least knowledge -- of Saudi
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and Saudi Arabia is an ally of the United
States. The ongoing story of Khashoggi's murder at the Saudi Consulate in
Istanbul, more than being a function of concern for the Saudi journalist, was
yet another opportunity to bash the Trump administration.
Ironically, the same members of the media who have been obsessed with Khashoggi
and the Saudi-US alliance have devoted little space to the reality that Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government has been imprisoning, torturing and
killing journalists for years.
The mainstream media have also not devoted much attention to the October 2017
car-bombing that killed Daphne Caruana Galizia, a Maltese journalist who led the
"Panama Papers" corruption investigation into her government -- a member state
of the European Union.
How come the murders of Fares, al-Jneid and Galizia did not merit as much media
attention as that of Khashoggi? Evidently, calling countries such as Malta and
Syria to task appears to be less important to Western journalists than attacking
the Trump administration.
*Peter Baum, Vice Chair at New Fair reporting, is based in Great Britain.
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Doha and Riyadh summit: What’s new?
Mashari Althaydi/Al Arabiya/December 07/18
The Qatar-Brotherhood propaganda machine has been active, ahead of the GCC
summit that will be held in Riyadh. The propaganda machine wants to create an
illusion that the presence of the Qatari representative, whether it is the emir
or any other figure, is proof that the Arab quartet – and in this case the Gulf
tripartite – has “backed down” on boycotting Qatar’s authorities to punish them
for their evil against the security of these countries. They’re grabbing a
“protocol” related piece of news from here and there and build upon it pyramids
of illusions, wishes and lies which the makers of this loud propaganda has
mastered. They’re supported by a “network” of websites, television channels,
dailies and social media accounts that are operated by those who market Qatar’s
rhetoric either because they believe in it or because they are after making
gains from the money of the burning gas.
The justice of the stance adopted by Riyadh, Abu Dhabi and Manama on the Gulf
level and Cairo on the Arab level is clear. The position is based on the duties
to defend the security and people of these countries. This fairness became more
rooted and credible in the wake of Qatar’s further involvement with the enemies
and haters of the stability of these countries, primarily the Khomeinist Iran
and Erdogan’s Turkey whom the Qatari state melt in their cup like an
effervescent tablet!
Whether Qatar’s authorities go to Riyadh or not, and regardless of who goes,
this will not change the scene and the fact that the reasons behind the
quartet’s boycott regarding Qatar’s behavior continues to exist
Has anything changed?
What has Doha changed so Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, Manama and Cairo change?
Have Qatar’s authorities stopped supporting the Brotherhood? Have they stopped
supporting al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, Al-Houthi and the Popular Mobilization networks?
Have they stopped supporting extremists who call for destruction and undermining
the state like London’s mouthpieces whose public appearances and gossip expanded
on their televisions, mainly on Al-Jazeera network, like al-Massari and Al-Faqih?
Have the Qatari authorities stopped inciting against the Egyptian state and the
Egyptians’ security and supporting the terrorist Brotherhood there? Who went
further in the media campaign against Saudi Arabia regarding the Khashoggi case
both in secret and in public?
The same can be said about the Qatar-Brotherhood media campaigns against the UAE
as we’ve seen in the case of the British Matthew Hedges.
Hence Bahrain’s Foreign Minister Sheikh Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa was right
during his interview yesterday with Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper as he spoke about
the Gulf summit and described the ongoing dispute with Qatar as “unprecedented
and very deep” and noted that “after committing to the enemies of the region
like Iran,” Qatar “has burned the return ships to the GCC.”In brief, whether
Qatar’s authorities go to Riyadh or not, and regardless of who goes, this will
not change the scene and the fact that the reasons behind the quartet’s boycott
regarding Qatar’s behavior continues to exist. The justifications and evidence
to the reasons of this boycott have even increased. The other point is that this
not the first “protocol” occasion linked to Qatar and its “bad” relation with
its neighbors. What has changed?
How Arabs can tackle food security
Shehab Al-Makahleh/Al Arabiya/December 07/18
Arab states are particularly susceptible to food shortages and food-price
shocks. Besides, recent prognoses reveal that Arab countries will be powerless
to meet increasing demand with production. Thus, there is a necessity to
cultivate strategies to ameliorate food security which depends on consolidation
of safety nets, enhancement of home food and management of market
capriciousness. This explains why Arab countries have a wide gap of food due to
lack of agricultural fecund powers to meet the rise in demand for agricultural
produces. This exacerbates into a predicament of food security which threatens
their national security as their decisions are prone to political pressures from
other states. The Arab world is undergoing food deficit that is becoming
progressively critical. The volume of food production is inadequate to meet
consumption, which requires the need to import from other countries to meet the
growing needs and to offset the deficit. This poses excessive threats to Arab
economies; affecting their political sovereignty and independence. Since
dependence on imports to meet basic needs of consumers would develop consumerism
in the Arab countries to be a phenomenon that makes them loyal to imported
products, such pattern would also destroy domestic products as well in favour of
foreign goods. Why Arab states have food security concerns? Arabs should be
self-dependent and determined to improve and execute a rational stratagem for
sustainable agricultural growth and food security
Frail economies
Food scarcities are not only the upshots of feeble Arab economies, but may also
be a foremost factor for keeping such economies frailer. The capitals to import
products to payoff deficits and shortfalls are often those apportioned to
acquire resources needed to bring about sustainable development and progress.
This disparity is primarily mirrored in foodstuff prices, where the majority of
household budget is directed towards purchasing food. Thus, this will have a
negative impact on other sectors such as the industrial, curbing countries’
ability to compete and grow. The issue of food deficit in the Arab world is
strongly attributed to the fragmentation of the Arab world and the lack of
integrated strategic development planning at the national level, especially in
the agricultural sector. Though regional and international economic blocs have
become a tool for economic progress, social development, and political unity,
the Arab states have not yet managed to get rid of the dominion of illicit
foreign countries’ plans and plots through food security. Lack of natural, human
and financial resources are real reasons for this good shortfall for many Arab
states. How to solve food shortfall?
Human resources
Accordingly, solving food shortfall in the Arab world can only be achieved
through optimum utilization of economic potential and human resources. By
increasing agricultural investments and controlling development of agricultural
technologies, food production will increase to meet the growing demand.
To achieve such an objective, Arabs states should first advocate their economic
integration, coordinate their policies and development plans, reduce disharmony
and conflict, and reduce their independence on imported products to encourage
local farmers to produce more as this business will be lucrative and profitable
unlike the current one. When foreign countries extend their assistance to the
developing nations including Arab states, the main objective is to dominate
their economies and to hamper them from producing adequate food supplies to meet
the growing domestic demand. Agricultural assistance programs are used by
developed nations to dominate the economies of the developing countries to
dissuade them not to produce agricultural products. Such food aid programs open
others’ markets to purchase the donor’s products which will gradually replace
all domestic products, including agricultural produce. Such aid programmes take
the form of subsidies for basic commodities. Within few years, food deficit
facing Arab economies will not be solved by depending on foreign subsidies or
donor nations; Arabs should be self-dependent and determined to improve and
execute a lucid rational stratagem for sustainable agricultural growth and Arab
food security.
Determinants of food strategy
Any strategy to accomplish food security in the Arab world must hinge on
sustainable agricultural development to identify fundamental reasons of the
problem of Arab food security to be able to find a drastic and long-term
solution. The aggregate number of population, the inadequate agricultural
natural resources and lack of expertise to develop agricultural produce had
aggravated food dilemma in the Arab world, augmented food gap and economic
dependence of Arab countries. Statistics indicate that the population of the
Arab world has tripled in less than 30 years. The population rose from 122
million in 1970 to 350 million in 2017. The number is expected to hike again to
480 million by 2030. This demographic explosion has put pressure on economic
activities as agricultural produce cannot meet the growing demand for food.
Moreover, the increasing number of population necessitates the development of
limited natural resources. The arable area in the Arab world is estimated at
about 200 million hectares, which constitutes 13.4 percent of the total area of
the Arab states. The percentage of arable land cultivated for the year 2017 is
about 41 percent. The limited and poor utilization of water resources makes it
impossible to cope with the growing demand to meet the needs of the population.
As more than 50 per cent of water resources emanate from non-Arab countries,
food and water security in Arab states will always be in the hands of others.
nless Arab states enhance their efforts to reform their agricultural objectives
and plans by improving their productive capabilities and competitiveness,
developing natural resources and preserving the environment to achieve the
objectives of current generation and generations to come in an integrated
framework that serves the interests of all Arab countries, they will lag behind
in food security and continue depending on other countries. This would always
affect their decision-making process and their sovereignty on the short, medium
and long terms.