LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
December 24/18
Compiled &
Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
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Bible Quotations For today
Glory to God in the highest,on earth peace, good
will toward men
Luke 02/01-14/Now in those days, a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all
the world should be enrolled. This was the first enrollment made when Quirinius
was governor of Syria. All went to enroll themselves, everyone to his own city.
4 Joseph also went up from Galilee, out of the city of Nazareth, into Judea, to
David’s city, which is called Bethlehem, because he was of the house and family
of David, to enroll himself with Mary, who was pledged to be married to him as
wife, being pregnant. While they were there, the day had come for her to give
birth. She gave birth to her firstborn son. She wrapped him in bands of cloth,
and laid him in a feeding trough, because there was no room for them in the inn.
8 There were shepherds in the same country staying in the field, and keeping
watch by night over their flock. Behold, an angel of the Lord stood by them, and
the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were terrified. The angel said
to them, “Don’t be afraid, for behold, I bring you good news of great joy which
will be to all the people. For there is born to you today, in David’s city, a
Savior, who is Christ the Lord. This is the sign to you: you will find a baby
wrapped in strips of cloth, lying in a feeding trough.” Suddenly, there was with
the angel a multitude of the heavenly army praising God, and saying, “Glory to
God in the highest, on earth peace, good will toward men.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News published on December 23-24/18
Hariri: Sometimes Silence is Necessary
March 8 'Blames Bassil' for Adra Hurdle as New Obstacles Emerge
Pro-Hizbullah MPs Withdraw Backing for Adra as Their Representative in Cabinet
Scuffles, Roads Blocked as Beirut Protesters Denounce Living Conditions
Rahi to address Christmas message from Bkirki on Monday
Protesters roam the streets of AlMina on motorcycles
Maronite Patriarch Stresses Need for Government of Neutral Specialists
Ghosn Detention Extended over Christmas and New Year
Syrian Refugees in Lebanon Stay Put despite Hardships
Ignorance, the enemy of Lebanon
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports
And News published on December 23-24/18
Trump, Netanyahu Discuss Iranian Role in Region
US Sanctions Halt New Iran Food Deals
Netanyahu Seeks to Calm Israeli Concerns over Trump's Syria Pullout
Hamas Rejects Abbas Plan to Dissolve Palestinian Parliament
Turkey, Israel in New War of Words
Macron Calls for Order after 'Yellow Vest' Attack on Police
U.S. Envoy to Anti-IS Coalition Resigns after Trump's Syria Decision
Head of U.N. Monitors Arrives in Yemen's Sanaa
Ghosn Detention Extended over Christmas and New Year/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December
23/18
Syrian Refugees in Lebanon Stay Put despite Hardships/Associated Press/Naharnet/December
23/18
Ignorance, the enemy of Lebanon/Khairallah Khairallah/Al Arabiya/December 23/18
Macron Calls for Order after 'Yellow Vest' Attack on Police/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December
23/18
A Multiple-Choice Brexit/John Micklethwait/Bloomberg/December, 23/2018
New Revelation: Previous US Administration Facilitated Christian Genocide in
Nigeria/Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/December 23/18
Can Assad be trusted/Nadim Koteich/Al Arabiya/December 23/18
The curious case of a US government shutdown/Walid Jawad/Al Arabiya/December
23/18
The diplomatic overtures of Jordan and Syria/Shehab Al-Makahleh/Al Arabiya/December
23/18
The Iranian regime this year and next/Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/December
23/18
America showers Tehran, Ankara and Moscow with Christmas gifts/Baria Alamuddin/Arab
News/December 23/18
How ‘America first’ could put America last/Cornelia Meyer/Arab News/December
23/18
Latest LCCC English Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on
December 23-24/18
Hariri: Sometimes Silence is Necessary
Naharnet/December 23/18/Prime Minister-designate
Saad Hariri on Sunday posted a tweet about the stalled government formation
process. “Sometimes silence is necessary so that the others listen,” said Hariri
in a brief tweet. The PM-designate was apparently expressing dismay over the
successive hurdles that have delayed the formation of the new government. The
parties had wrangled for months over Christian and Druze representation in the
new cabinet before the emergence of a new row over the representation of six
pro-Hizbullah Sunni MPs.Other obstacles have also surfaced after some parties
demanded a redistribution of some portfolios.
March 8 'Blames Bassil' for Adra Hurdle as New Obstacles Emerge
Naharnet/December 23/18/The March 8 forces have put the blame on Free Patriotic
Movement chief MP Jebran Bassil for the latest setback in the cabinet formation
process, media reports said. “Bassil insisted on considering the candidate Jawad
Adra as a member of his ministerial bloc, which eventually pushed the
Consultative Gathering to withdraw its nomination of Adra,” sources informed on
the formation process told Asharq al-Awsat daily in remarks published Sunday.
The Consultative Gathering is a grouping of six pro-Hizbullah Sunni MPs. Adra’s
nomination as a consensus candidate came as an attempt to resolve a long-running
standoff over the representation of the aforementioned grouping in the
government. The sources say two new obstacles have emerged. “The second obstacle
is Bassil’s attempt to get a Maronite minister from the Lebanese Forces’ share,
which would leave the LF with a single Maronite seat, something that has been
strongly rejected by the LF,” the sources said. “The third obstacle surfaced
after Bassil tried to swap portfolios in order to get the environment portfolio,
a move that was met by strong rejection from Speaker Nabih Berri,” the sources
added. A member of the Consultative Gathering meanwhile told Asharq al-Awsat
that the grouping is “not in a hurry” to name a new candidate pending solutions
to the two other obstacles. And noting that “Bassil is seeking to get 11
ministers, or a one-third veto power, in the government,” senior March 8 sources
told the newspaper that Bassil has torpedoed the Adra “settlement,” accusing the
FPM chief of “blocking the formation of the government for the past five
months.”
Pro-Hizbullah MPs Withdraw Backing for Adra as Their
Representative in Cabinet
Naharnet/December 23/18/The Consultative Gathering MPs withdrew their support
for nominating Jawad Adra as a representative of the group in the new
government. The announcement came after an urgent meeting the pro-Hizbullah MPs
held following Adra's reported remarks that he can't "exclusively" abide by the
Gathering's "condition.
Scuffles, Roads Blocked as Beirut Protesters Denounce
Living Conditions
Associated Press/Naharnet/December 23/18/Clashes erupted and several Beirut
roads were blocked Sunday as demonstrators took to the streets to denounce the
dire social and economic situations in the country. Carrying Lebanese flags,
protesters in downtown Beirut chanted ‘No Sectarianism, We All Want Health Care
Cards’ and ‘The People Want to Topple The Regime’. Some protesters donned yellow
vests in a move echoing the ‘yellow vest’ demonstrations that have been rocking
France for several weeks now. “Organizers declared that they are not emulating
the protests that are taking place in France but rather asking the Lebanese
state to follow the example of the French state in raising the wages of workers
and employees and slashing taxes and other fees in order to preserve the dignity
of the citizen in his country,” the National News Agency reported. The first
scuffles erupted at the Riad al-Solh Square after some protesters started
removing metallic security barriers outside the Grand Serail while hurling water
bottles at security forces. “The lawyer Abbas Srour from the civil society
movement was lightly injured in the head by a water bottle hurled at security
forces,” NNA said. Some protesters later headed to the nearby Tabaris and
Beshara al-Khoury areas where they blocked roads and clashed with security
forces. In the evening, a number of demonstrators rallied on the capital's Hamra
Street in a demo that soon escalated into a confrontation with army troops and
security forces. "Chanting 'Revolution', some protesters smashed the facades of
some shops and money exchange firms on Hamra Street near Starbucks," the
National News Agency reported. The army eventually intervened in force and
managed to disperse protesters and restore calm in the area. The Army Command
meanwhile issued a statement warning protesters to keep their actions peaceful,
vowing to prevent any attack on public and private property. Ex-minister Wiam
Wahhab meanwhile tweeted that security forces “must realize that the demands of
the protesters are also their demands.”“The corrupts are the rivals of security
forces the same as they are the rivals of the rest of the people,” Wahhab added.
"We want a government," shouted one protester to a TV reporter. "I am here to
fight against the corruption of the state. We are here to bring back our social
services. We need our rights. We need to live as human beings. We need that our
government respects us," said Michel al-Hajj, another protester. Sunday’s
protest comes in the wake of several smaller demonstrations sparked by the death
of an ill child after a hospital reportedly refused to admit him due to his
parents’ failure to pay a fee of $2,000.
Rahi to address Christmas message from Bkirki on Monday
Sun 23 Dec 2018/NNA - Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Beshara Boutros al-Rahi, is
expected to deliver the message of Christmas to all Lebanese at 9:30 a.m. on
Monday from the Patriarchal edifice in Bkirki.
Protesters roam the streets of AlMina on motorcycles
Sun 23 Dec 2018/NNA - Tripoli - A number of young demonstrators on motorbikes
roamed the streets of Al-Mina in Tripoli shouting out revolutionary slogans
against injustice and corruption, amid heavy military presence along Al-Mina
highway, NNA correspondent reported.
Maronite Patriarch Stresses Need for Government of Neutral
Specialists
Kataeb.org/December 23/18/Maronite Patriarch Bechara al-Rahi on Sunday stressed
the need for a small-scale government of non-partisan experts, noting that a
Cabinet that is built on conflicts will only cause further disagreements."We are
convinced of the need to form a miniature government of neutral specialists
because a government that is established on a basis of divergences, even if it's
called a Cabinet of national unity, will only lead to more conflicts and will
submerge the people into more poverty," Al-Rahi said in his Sunday sermon in
Bkirki.
“We wish for our country to be stable and to get out of the political, economic,
social and livelihood crises it is facing," he added.
Ghosn Detention Extended over Christmas and New Year
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 23/18
Former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn will be spending Christmas and the beginning of
2019 behind bars after a Tokyo court on Sunday extended his detention through to
January 1. The court's decision is the latest twist in a rollercoaster saga that
has gripped Japan and the business world since the auto sector titan was
arrested out of the blue in Tokyo on November 19. "Today, a decision was made to
detain (Ghosn). The full term of the detention will expire on January 1," the
Tokyo District Court said in a statement to media. This does not however mean
that Ghosn can expect to taste freedom on New Year's Day, as prosecutors can
apply for a further 10-day extension as they quiz him on allegations of
financial misconduct. Authorities are pursuing three separate lines of enquiry
against the 64-year-old Franco-Lebanese-Brazilian executive. They suspect he
conspired with his right-hand man, U.S. executive Greg Kelly, to hide away
around half of his income (some five billion yen or $44 million) over five
fiscal years from 2010. They also allege he under-reported his salary to the
tune of four billion yen over the next three fiscal years -- apparently to avoid
criticism that his pay was too high. The third allegation is that he shifted a
personal investment loss made at the height of the financial crisis worth more
than $16 million to the Japanese automaker with help from a Saudi acquaintance.
Prosecutors have pressed formal charges over the first allegation but not yet
over the other accusations.
Ghosn reportedly denies all the allegations, saying the transactions were done
legally.
In connection with the third suspicion, local media say Ghosn is not contesting
that payments from Nissan totaling $14.7 million went to the Saudi person, whom
he has known for some three decades.But Ghosn has maintained that the money was
for the person's work to help Nissan in the region.
'Betrayed his role'
Ghosn's case has seen several twists and turns since his stunning arrest on the
night of November 19 as his private jet touched down at Tokyo's Haneda Airport.
On Thursday, observers were caught wrong-footed as the court threw out a request
from prosecutors to extend his detention over the second set of allegations
(under-reporting his salary between 2015 and 2018) in an almost unheard-of move.
This raised his hopes of a release in time for Christmas and he was reportedly
gearing up to hold a news conference to put his side of the story for the first
time. But those hopes were then dashed on Friday when prosecutors sought and
obtained his re-arrest over the new accusations of breach of trust. "The accused
was responsible for managing Nissan's overall operations and for dutifully
fulfilling his role as CEO not to cause damage to Nissan and its subsidiaries...
but he took action that betrayed his role and caused financial damage to
Nissan," prosecutors alleged in a statement on Friday. Since his arrest, the
once jet-setting executive has languished in a tiny cell in a detention centre
in northern Tokyo, where he has complained about the cold and the rice-based
menu. Ghosn has told embassy visitors he is being well treated and sources at
French car giant Renault have described his frame of mind as "combative" as he
fights the charges against him. His lengthy detention -- in Japan, suspects can
be "re-arrested" several times over different allegations -- has sparked
criticism, especially from abroad.
- Fractious alliance
After his arrest last month, Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors promptly sacked Ghosn
as chairman but Renault kept him on and appointed an interim boss as it waited
to assess the legal procedures against him. In addition to charges against Ghosn
and Kelly, prosecutors had also indicted Nissan itself, as the company submitted
the official documents that allegedly under-reported the income. Kelly, who was
also arrested last month, could be released as early as next week. Ghosn's fall
from power at Nissan has exposed a deep rift in the three-way alliance -- which
outsold all of its rival groups last year. The tycoon was once revered for his
role in turning around Nissan and forging the fractious alliance, in which
Renault remains the dominant shareholder. Some executives at Nissan -- which now
contributes more profits than Renault to the group pot -- were said to bristle
at the French company's leadership position.
Syrian Refugees in Lebanon Stay Put despite Hardships
Associated Press/Naharnet/December 23/18
Rozan Qarqour lives with her husband and six children in a tiny room in an
unfinished building, where they share a bathroom with other Syrian refugees. Her
husband sells paper cups of cardamom-flavored Arabic coffee on the streets of
the southern port city of Sidon to earn a few dollars to buy bread and
vegetables. But despite their dismal life in Lebanon, the family, which fled
Syria's central province of Hama six years ago, has no plans to return home. Nor
do the 160 other families who live in the Ouzai compound — or most of the other
1.2 million Syrian refugees who live in Lebanon.
"I will not take my children back to death and hunger," said Qarqour, 32, as she
sat with other women on the floor cutting fresh fava beans that would later be
cooked with rice on a small gas burner. A much touted Russian initiative to
facilitate the return of refugees of Syria's 7-year-old war from around the
region appears to have fizzled out, with only a tiny fraction of the nearly 6
million who fled their country since the start of the conflict in March 2011
returning home.
The Russian military says 114,000 Syrians have returned home since the beginning
of 2018. The U.N. refugee agency says it has verified only 37,000 refugees who
have voluntarily returned this year. Syria's war has displaced half the pre-war
population of 23 million people, of which 5.6 million have fled the country. In
Lebanon, where Syrians make up nearly a quarter of the population, most of the
refugees say they intend to stay put, citing economic concerns, ongoing fighting
and destroyed homes. The Qarqour family's region of Sahel al-Ghab is still in
rebel hands and often gets bombed by the government, and their home has been
destroyed. There are no jobs there, Qarqour says, and she hopes they can
resettle in a third country, although the family has not yet applied. The
fighting has wound down after seven years of brutal war. Using overwhelming
military force, and with the help of Russian airpower and Iranian-backed
militias on the ground, President Bashar Assad has retaken key cities and major
population centers in Syria.
But most refugees say they do not feel safe returning while the government they
fled is still in place. Fighting continues in some areas, while others are in
ruins. Many are worried their sons could be picked up for conscription or
detained, harassed or imprisoned if they go back. Others worry they won't find
jobs.
Meanwhile, many have put down roots across the region and in Europe, and do not
want to risk losing what they built by returning to Syria. Russia, a key ally of
Assad, is eager to show a return to normalcy in Syria and has pushed to
repatriate Syrians who fled. However, the U.N. has expressed concern about a
premature return before the situation stabilizes and without guarantees for
returning refugees. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said in August that
"all conditions are in place" for the return of 1 million refugees, quoting
progress in restoring infrastructure and the fact that hostilities have largely
subsided.
At the height of the conflict, the number of registered Syrian refugees in
Lebanon reached 1.2 million, making the tiny Mediterranean country the biggest
host of refugees per capita in the world. Today there are about 940,000, after
some returned to Syria or were resettled in other countries, according to
Lebanon's caretaker Minister of State for Refugee Affairs Mouein al-Merehbi.
Merehbi said about 12,000 Syrian refugees have returned home from Lebanon since
June. His numbers are much lower than those released by Lebanon's General
Security Directorate, which says more than 87,000 have returned. Merhebi, a
harsh critic of the Syrian government and its Lebanese ally Hizbullah, said some
of those who have been registered as returnees go back and forth between the
neighboring countries. Eager to see Syrians return because of the strain their
presence puts on the struggling economy, the Lebanese government has embraced
the Russian plan and organizes convoys for refugees to return to Syria on almost
a weekly basis. Most will continue to opt out for now, however. At the Ouzai
compound in Sidon, time passes slowly for the refugees. Abu Ahmad, 42, sat in
the yard eating mushabbak, a Syrian sweet consisting of fried pastry dipped in
syrup made by one of the residents. He works in agriculture but his boss has not
called him for a week. "I am not happy in Lebanon, but here there is school for
my children, there is a doctor if I need it and there are hospitals for an
emergency," said the father of five daughters and four sons. "Here I can make
enough money to survive."Ahmad added that he applied years ago for resettlement
in a third country. "I am ready to go to the south pole if I get a job there,"
he said.
Ignorance, the enemy of Lebanon
Khairallah Khairallah/Al Arabiya/December 23/18
Hussam Saad Hariri has made his grandfather proud. Nothing lasts like investment
in education and enrichment of one’s knowledge. This is what Rafiq Hariri, who
insisted on educating thousands of Lebanese people from all sects and all parts
of the country in the best universities of the world at his own expenses, has
accomplished. This persistence was one of the main reasons that he was made a
target by those in Tehran and Damascus, who believe in the culture of death.
These are not random charges against the Iranian and Syrian regimes, but have
been made by the Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL). In its brief, the STL’s
prosecution speaks of 3,000 pieces of evidence about convicts who carried out
the assassination of Rafiq Hariri.
The crime did not simply aim to kill Rafiq but was aimed at assassinating
Lebanon. Perhaps Rafiq’s first crime was that he educated thousands of the
Lebanese people, revived Beirut and put Lebanon back on the map of the Middle
East and the world. He was aware that Lebanon’s future is all about developing
people and not turning them into members of militias.
The problem is that many Lebanese people do not want to be educated. Hence it
was normal that some people did not comprehend the importance of the graduation
of a young Lebanese man from the Royal Military College of Sandhurst
Sandhurst alumni
The problem is that many Lebanese people do not want to be educated. Hence it
was normal that some people did not comprehend the importance of the graduation
of a young Lebanese man from the Royal Military College of Sandhurst, which was
founded in 1801. The military college does not only pass out British military
officers but also graduates those who look forward to a better future. Its list
of alumni includes King Hussein, his son King Abdullah II and his grandson
Prince Hussein who is the current Jordanian crown prince. This is in addition to
Oman’s Sultan Qaboos and plenty of other officials from the Arab Gulf.
There are also other prominent figures who have graduated from this college,
such as a number of Sheikh Zayed’s sons. There is also a good number of Qatari
and Bahraini figures, including Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa, the former emir of
Qatar. As for those who hail from Saudi Arabia, there is Prince Khalid bin
Sultan bin Abdulaziz who can take pride in the fact that he brought back life to
the Lebanese daily ‘Al-Hayat’, when he re-launched it from London in 1988.
The list of Arab graduates is long and it gives an idea about the significance
of this college in terms of preparing young men to confront the most arduous of
circumstances, such as sleeping in the wilderness when the temperature is below
20 degrees. Young men who enroll at the college for 44 weeks do not only learn
how to adapt to grueling weather conditions but also lessons in international
relations. This prepares them to subsequently enroll in the world’s best
universities.
In brief, enrolling at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst does not mean
joining the British army. It’s a unique college that prepares whoever goes there
to be physically, psychologically and mentally prepared and to enroll at
prestigious universities later.
Lebanon’s past glory
Some reactions to the graduation of Hussam Saad Hariri from there reflects the
extent of ignorance that dominates a part of Lebanese society. It simply gives
an idea how backwards Lebanon is after it was one of the most sophisticated
countries in the region or rather among Mediterranean countries. Where were
Greece, Cyprus and Turkey when Lebanon organized the Mediterranean Games during
the era of Camille Chamoun and when there were festivals, as significant as the
Baalbeck Festival?
We don’t need to recount how Lebanon was in the 1950s, 60s and 70s, when
Beirut’s airport was among the most important airports in the world. We also
don’t need to recount what was achieved during the era of Fouad Chehab in terms
of constructing the institutions of modern Lebanese state, and in terms of civil
organization.
The campaign against Saad Hariri and his son was spiteful. It expressed the
extent of hatred towards Lebanon and towards what Rafiq Hariri built to revive
Beirut. Some parties want Lebanon to remain uneducated and distant from the
civilized world. A clear evidence is the situation of the Lebanese University
which is supposed to be one of Lebanon’s civilized fronts. Instead of being a
symbol of co-existence and openness, the Lebanese University has turned into a
farm for a sectarian party that wants to impose its culture on all Lebanese
people.
The culture of life is what made Lebanon play a pioneering role in all fields of
the region. How many Arab leaders and officials graduated from the American
University of Beirut (AUB), which was founded in 1866?
What about the role which Rafiq Hariri played in protecting AUB and other
universities and in keeping the doctors of its hospital in the 1980s in Lebanon,
when every single Lebanese doctor wanted to immigrate to the US, Europe or a
specific Gulf country?
Investing in human capital
No prestigious Lebanese doctor immigrated to Tehran. The reactions to Hussam’s
graduation from the Royal Military College Sandhurst and to his trip to Beirut
to visit his grandfather’s tomb reflect such unprecedented ignorance. There are
some parties that simply want to push Lebanon into the trap of empty
sloganeering. If Lebanon stands today, then it does so thanks to the Lebanese
people who continue to fight and resist.
They resist through the education they have received at prominent schools and
universities and thanks to institutions which were founded by the first three
eras after independence, i.e. the eras of Bechara El Khoury and Riad Al Solh and
of Camille Chamoun and of Fouad Chehab. They are resisting after Rafiq Hariri
restored hope to the Lebanese people and brought many of them back to the
country before a party came to close Downtown Beirut for over a year in 2007 and
2008.
Instead of living in the dreams of oil and gas that have been discovered off the
Lebanese coast, it’s important to get back in touch with reality which says that
no wealth is more important than the human capital and that ignorance is
Lebanon’s first enemy.
It’s no secret that Lebanon is currently passing through a difficult phase. What
makes this stage more difficult is that there are some who insist on the
destruction of “man” by promoting ignorance. Ignorance is the shortest way to
attract youths to sectarian militias so that they serve a project that has
absolutely nothing to do with Lebanon.
Latest LCCC English Miscellaneous
Reports & News published on
December 23-24/18
Trump, Netanyahu Discuss Iranian Role in Region
Tel Aviv - Asharq Al-Awsat/December,23/2018/Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Friday that he had held a telephone
call with US President Donald Trump to discuss maintaining cooperation between
Tel Aviv and Washington on Iran. Netanyahu spoke of American-Russian
understandings based on which the Russian military will work on curbing
Hezbollah and Iran’s influence in Syria, said an Israeli daily that is close to
the premier. These understandings will allow Israel to continue striking
Hezbollah and Iranian targets in Syria with Russia’s blessing. These
understandings were reached with the approval of Trump and Russian President
Vladimir Putin and allowed for the US troop withdrawal from Syria. Political
sources in Tel Aviv described Netanyahu’s statements as “interesting because he
does not seem too disappointed with the US withdrawal. In fact, he is trying to
undermine it.” Israelis in general, however, have expressed deep concern over
the US decision. A senior Israeli minister had said that the move does not serve
Israeli interests, harms the Kurds, empowers Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan and maintains Iranian military forces in Syria. Furthermore, he
criticized Netanyahu for failing to inform his cabinet or national security
council of the US withdrawal, given that he was informed by the Americans of the
decision on Monday. Trump cited what he described as victory over ISIS in Syria
as warranting the US withdrawal. Israel has long tried to persuade Washington
that Iran and its militias, sent to reinforce Damascus, pose the greater threat.
“We will continue to act very aggressively against Iran’s efforts to entrench in
Syria,” Netanyahu said on Thursday. “We do not intend to reduce our efforts. We
will intensify them, and I know that we do so with the full support and backing
of the United States.”
US Sanctions Halt New Iran Food Deals
London - Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 23 December, 2018/Cargill, Bunge and other
global traders have halted food supply deals with Iran because new US sanctions
have paralyzed banking systems required to secure payments, according to
industry and Iranian government sources. “There is no real chance of being paid
using the existing mechanisms and many international traders are unable to do
new business for the moment,” Reuters quoted one European source with knowledge
of the situation as saying. Several western and Iranian trade sources said US
groups Cargill and Bunge, as well as Singapore’s Olam, were among those which
could not conclude new export deals for wheat, corn, raw sugar or other
commodities because Western banks would not process payments with Iran. Under
the earlier round of sanctions, Iran had turned to a dwindling number of foreign
banks that continued to act as a conduit for payments to keep food and other
trade flowing. But this time, many of those foreign banking channels are closing
down. Three Iranian officials told Reuters that banking issues were to blame for
halting food and other trade. An official with Iranian Industry, Mines and Trade
Industry said only a “handful of small European banks” with no or little
interaction with the United States were still doing business with Iran, and they
were only involved in small-scale purchases. “We are in talks with Europeans to
expand this network of banks and financial institutions,” added the ministry
official. He indicated that right now, many companies including Cargill and
Bunge have informed Tehran about banking difficulties that will force them to
stop their dealings with Iran. Washington says its sanctions are part of an
effort to force Iran to curb its nuclear and missile programs, as well as end
Tehran’s support for proxy forces in Yemen, Syria, Lebanon and other parts of
the Middle East. Iran insists its nuclear program is only for peaceful purposes
and its missiles are defensive. US sanctions took full effect on Nov. 5,
although Washington has issued temporary waivers for some of its allies which
depend on imported Iranian oil.Iran, which relies heavily on imported food
staples, has years of experience working around US and other Western sanctions,
which were progressively tightened between 2012 and 2015 until Iran
reached a deal over its nuclear program. Many sanctions were lifted in 2016
after the pact. Bankers reported that for many foreign banks, it is easier to
end any Iranian activity than try to navigate the US sanctions rule book and run
the risk of slipping up and facing penalties. “There is super caution now,” said
a European financial source involved in Iranian transactions in the past, adding
rules on food and other humanitarian dealings were complex. “If goods are
shipped for instance to an Iranian distributor, who then sells them on and not
directly to an end buyer, banks will increasingly look at such a transaction as
commercial rather than humanitarian,” the source said. Data collected on Dec. 21
from global shipping intelligence platform MarineTraffic showed 16 ships had
been waiting to unload cargoes of commodities and goods, including foodstuffs,
for at least two weeks at Iran’s ports of Bandar Abbas and Maashour. Four of the
16 vessels had been waiting since October.
Netanyahu Seeks to Calm Israeli Concerns over Trump's Syria Pullout
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 23/18/Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu sought on Sunday to calm domestic concerns over U.S. President Donald
Trump's decision to withdraw from Syria, saying his country will still act
against Iran there. Trump last week said the Islamic State group had been
defeated and he was withdrawing the United States' 2,000 troops from Syria.
Israel has seen the U.S. presence in neighboring Syria as a bulwark against its
main enemy Iran and a counterweight to Russia. Both Russia and Iran support
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime in the country's civil war. "The
decision to remove the 2,000 U.S. soldiers from Syria won't change our
consistent policy," Netanyahu said at the start of a cabinet meeting."We will
continue to act against Iran's attempt to establish a military presence in
Syria, and if the need arises, we will even expand our activities there." He
added that he wanted to "calm those concerned." "Our cooperation with the United
States continues full-force, and takes place in many fields -- the operational
field, the intelligence field, and many other security fields."Trump's decision
to withdraw from Syria -- as well as reduce forces in Afghanistan -- led U.S.
Defence Secretary Jim Mattis to quit in disagreement.The U.S. special envoy to
the coalition fighting the Islamic State, Brett McGurk, has also resigned. The
withdrawal abruptly ends American influence in the war-ravaged country and gives
Turkey an opening to attack U.S.-backed Kurds in Syria. But Israel is
particularly concerned about the presence of Iran there as well as Lebanon’s
Tehran-backed Hizbullah. Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes in Syria
against what it says are Iranian military targets and advanced weapons
deliveries to Hizbullah. A friendly fire incident in September that led to a
Russian plane being downed by Syrian air defenses during an Israeli strike has
however complicated Israeli operations there. Russia subsequently upgraded
Syrian air defenses with the delivery of the advanced S-300 system, which
Damascus had said would make Israel "think carefully" before carrying out
further air raids.
Hamas Rejects Abbas Plan to Dissolve Palestinian
Parliament
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 23/18/Hamas on Sunday denounced
Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas' plan to dissolve the largely defunct
Palestinian parliament that it controls, calling it a move to "serve his
partisan interests."Abbas said Saturday he intended to dissolve the Palestinian
Legislative Council after a court decision that ordered the move and elections
to be held within six months. The ruling was made by the Palestinian
Constitutional Court in Ramallah, and Hamas said in a statement it rejected the
decision by a court created by Abbas "to legitimize his arbitrary decisions."
"Abbas should have extended his hands to (Hamas leader Ismail) Haniya's
invitation to hold a joint meeting, thereby ending the Palestinian division,"
the statement said. "Rather, Abbas opted to ruin the Palestinian political
system, maintain his unilateralism, and dissolve the legal institutions of the
Palestinian people. All of this is just to serve his partisan interests."It
called on Egypt, which has been seeking to reconcile Hamas and Abbas' Fatah, to
block the measure. Dissolving the parliament would allow Abbas to further
pressure Hamas.Though the parliament has not met since 2007, when Hamas seized
control of the Gaza Strip, Palestinian law allows for its speaker to act
as interim president should 83-year-old Abbas die in office.Hamas won the last
parliamentary elections in 2006 in a landslide, resulting in an electoral
dispute with Fatah. The split between them persists and has defied several
reconciliation attempts. A range of issues have kept the two sides apart,
including Hamas' refusal to disarm its military wing. Abbas, whose Fatah is
based in the occupied West Bank, has sought to pressure Hamas in recent months
by reducing salaries in the Gaza Strip, which is under an Israeli blockade,
among other moves.Abbas' term was meant to expire in 2009, but he has remained
in office in the absence of elections.
Turkey, Israel in New War of Words
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 23/18/Turkey on Sunday hit out at
Israel's "lawless occupation" of Palestinian territory after the Israeli prime
minister accused Turkey of "massacres" against Kurds in a new war of words.
Relations between Turkey and Israel have been tense this year over multiple
issues including a controversial law passed by the Israeli parliament in July
which defined the country as the nation state of the Jewish people. Israeli
leader Benjamin Netanyahu said President Recep Tayyip Erdogan "should not preach
to Israel" after the Turkish leader warned young Turks on Saturday: "Do not kick
the enemy you have brought down to the ground. You are not a Jew in Israel."
Netanyahu said Erdogan was "the occupier of northern Cyprus, whose army
massacres women and children in Kurdish villages, inside and outside Turkey" in
a tweet late on Saturday. Erdogan's spokesman and chief adviser Ibrahim Kalin
lambasted Netanyahu, who he said "should end the lawless occupation of
Palestinian lands and the brutal oppression of Palestinian people" instead of
"begging President Erdogan not to speak out the truth." Kalin added in the tweet
on Sunday: "Bashing Erdogan or using Kurds as a political chip will not save him
from his domestic troubles." On December 14, Erdogan also said Palestinians were
subjected to "pressures, violence and intimidation policies no less grave than
the oppression done to the Jews during the Second World War," referring to the
Holocaust. Turkey-Israel ties have been strained since Ankara ordered the
Israeli ambassador to leave Turkey in May over the killing of protesters along
the border with the Gaza Strip. Erdogan, who regards himself as a champion of
the Palestinians, has bitterly criticized Israel previously, calling it in July
"the world's most fascist and racist state."
Macron Calls for Order after 'Yellow Vest' Attack on
Police
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 23/18
French President Emmanuel Macron called for "order" on Sunday after a sixth
weekend of "yellow vest" anti-government protests marked by dwindling
participation and a violent attack on police in Paris. Speaking during a visit
to the central African state of Chad where he was visiting French troops serving
in a counter-terrorism force Macron said: "There must be order now, calm and
harmony. Our country needs it." "It needs harmony, unity, sincere commitment to
strong collective causes and we must heal the divisions," said the 41-year-old
centrist, who has struggled to tamp down the anger of the working poor in
smalltown and rural France over falling spending power and policies seen as
tilted towards the rich. A total of 38,600 people took part in a sixth round of
nationwide protests on Saturday, according to the interior ministry -- around
half the number that demonstrated a week earlier. In Paris, the scene of fierce
clashes and widespread destruction in previous weeks, the protests were mainly
peaceful.
But as evening fell, violence broke out again on the iconic Champs-Elysees
avenue. In one incident that caused widespread outrage, a group of three police
officers on motorbike were forced to make a hasty escape after coming under
attack near the Champs-Elysees from a group of demonstrators, who threw electric
scooters, paving stones and other objects at them. A video of the incident,
which was widely shared on social media, showed one officer pulling his gun and
pointing it at the advancing protesters. He and his two colleagues -- one of
whom had his motorbike knocked to the ground -- then made their getaway. The
video showed that, seconds before the attack, the police had lobbed stun
grenades at a group of protesters, who were some distance away. Speaking to
BFMTV channel Macron said those responsible for the violence would face "the
most severe" legal punishment. Prime Minister Edouard Philippe for his part
denounced the "incredible violence towards the police."He also took aim at
protesters who sang a song by controversial comedian Dieudonne M'Bala M'Bala, a
convicted anti-Semite, outside Sacre-Coeur church in Paris as well as those who
decapitated an effigy of Macron in the western Charente region -- two other
incidents seen as evidence of growing radicalization and the presence of
extremists within the movement. "There can be no trivializing of such gestures
which must draw unanimous condemnation and be punished by the law," Philippe
tweeted. The number of demonstrators has been trending downwards since 282,000
people turned out for the first Saturday protest against planned fuel tax hikes
on November 17. From there the protests quickly morphed into a full-scale revolt
against Macron's policies, aloof, top-down governing style, and the political
class as a whole.
Leader faces charges
Saturday's numbers represented a sharp drop from last week, however, when Macron
announced an income increase for minimum-wage earners and rolled back tax
increases on pensioners, among other measures. Around 2,000 protesters gathered
in Paris, compared to 4,000 last week, police said. A total of 142 people were
detained and 19 taken into police custody in the capital, including one of
leaders of the movement, Eric Drouet. Drouet, a truck driver, was to be brought
before an investigating magistrate Sunday to be charged with carrying an illegal
weapon in the form of a block of wood and "participating in a group formed to
commit violence or destruction". He denies the charges. The protests have dealt
a blow to the French economy, particularly the retail trade. Junior economy
minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher said French stores reported an average drop-off
of 25 percent in sales compared with the same period a year earlier. Ten people
have died in incidents linked to the demonstrations, mostly in accidents at
roadblocks set up by the protesters.
U.S. Envoy to Anti-IS Coalition Resigns after Trump's Syria Decision
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 23/18/Brett McGurk, the U.S. special
envoy to the anti-Islamic State group coalition, has resigned, a State
Department official said, capping a chaotic week that saw the departure of
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Donald Trump's stunning decision to pull troops
from Syria. McGurk's resignation, effective December 31, comes on the heels of
Mattis' decision to quit the Trump administration over key disagreements with
the U.S. president, notably the Syria withdrawal.
Just last week McGurk, a Barack Obama appointee whom Trump kept on, said "nobody
is declaring a mission accomplished" in the battle against IS -- just days
before the president blindsided politicians and allies with his announcement of
victory against the jihadist movement.
Trump on Saturday said that the jihadist group "is largely defeated." "When I
became President, ISIS was going wild," the president tweeted. "Now ISIS is
largely defeated and other local countries, including Turkey, should be able to
easily take care of whatever remains. We're coming home!"
Trump later took aim at McGurk on Twitter, referring to him as a "grandstander"
who was quitting just before his time was up. McGurk, 45, was set to leave his
position in February, but reportedly felt he could no longer continue in the job
after Trump's declaration and on Friday evening informed Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo of his intention to wrap up at year's end. His conclusion mirrored that
of Mattis, who was seen as a voice of moderation in the mercurial Trump White
House and quit after telling the president he could not go along with the Syria
decision. McGurk has served as the U.S. envoy to the Global Coalition to Defeat
ISIS, an acronym for the jihadist group, since 2015. He also served as the
deputy assistant secretary of state for Iraq and Iran, and worked under
Republican George W. Bush as a senior official on Iraq and Afghanistan.
Discussing the U.S. role in Syria this month, he had told journalists that "it
would be reckless if we were just to say, 'Well, the physical caliphate is
defeated, so we can just leave now.'" "I think anyone who's looked at a conflict
like this would agree with that."
- 'Complete reversal of policy' -
McGurk called Trump's move to leave Syria "a shock" and "a complete reversal of
policy that was articulated to us," in an email announcing his decision to
colleagues that was obtained by The New York Times. "It left our coalition
partners confused and our fighting partners bewildered," he said, according to
the newspaper. "I worked this week to help manage some of the fallout but -- as
many of you heard in my meetings and phone calls -- I ultimately concluded that
I could not carry out these new instructions and maintain my integrity."Just
after announcing his Syria decision, Trump again confounded international
partners with plans to slash troop numbers in Afghanistan. The momentous
reversal of years of US foreign policy will leave the war-torn regions at risk
of continued and potentially heightened bloodshed. In typical fashion, Trump
said Saturday that the media was treating him unfairly over the Syria withdrawal
decision. "If anybody but your favorite President, Donald J. Trump, announced
that, after decimating ISIS in Syria, we were going to bring our troops back
home (happy & healthy), that person would be the most popular hero in America,"
he tweeted. "With me, hit hard instead by the Fake News Media. Crazy!"The troop
pullout will leave thousands of Kurdish fighters -- which the Pentagon spent
years training and arming against IS -- vulnerable to Turkish attack.
On Saturday, a senior Kurdish official called on the United States to prevent a
potential Turkish offensive against areas in northern Syria inhabited by Kurds,
calling it America's "duty to prevent any attack and to put an end to Turkish
threats."The U.S. has for years supported the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic
Forces (SDF) in the fight against IS in Syria. Aldar Khalil, a key player in
establishing Syria's semi-autonomous Kurdish region in 2013, said the US and its
partners "must honor their commitments."Heavyweight adviser Mattis -- a
decorated Marine general who was often referred to as "the last adult in the
room" -- made clear in his resignation letter that pulling out of Syria crossed
the line.The departures of Mattis and now McGurk follow those of national
security adviser H.R. McMaster and White House chief of staff John Kelly --
leaving Trump, who has no political, diplomatic or military experience,
increasingly alone.
Head of U.N. Monitors Arrives in Yemen's Sanaa
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 23/18/The head of the U.N. team tasked
with monitoring a fragile ceasefire in Yemen arrived in the rebel-held capital
of Sanaa on Sunday. Retired Dutch general Patrick Cammaert is heading a joint
committee including members of the government and the Huthi rebels, in charge of
monitoring a ceasefire in the port city of Hodeida. He is making a stop in Sanaa
before heading to Hodeida, a lifeline port city that serves as the entry point
for the majority of imports to war-torn Yemen, a U.N. official said, after
holding talks Saturday with Yemen government officials in Aden.
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on December 23-24/18
A Multiple-Choice Brexit
John Micklethwait/Bloomberg/December, 23/2018
Britain is edging toward multiple-choice politics. This may not be a bad thing.
When you have a particularly doltish group of students, unable to pass even the
simplest exam, one well-worn solution is the multiple-choice test. Confronted
with four possible answers to a question, even the least smart student stands a
sporting chance of getting it right. (It was certainly true with me and
physics.)
The shambolic politics of Brexit now seem to be heading toward an exam with
three or four answers to a question. It is unclear whether members of Parliament
or the general public will be the examinee — probably both. Weirdly, this may be
the least worst solution. With less than 100 days until Brexit, it is wrong for
Theresa May to try to stop it.
First, some background. At a time when Westminster needs a Blackadder (the
Machiavellian cynic played by Rowan Atkinson in the eponymous BBC series), it is
stuck with a Baldrick — Blackadder’s useless sidekick who inevitably possesses a
“cunning plan” that is either mad or beyond his ability to carry out. You could
argue that the first Baldrick was Prime Minister David Cameron, whose cunning
promise of a referendum helped him win a slender majority in the 2015 election —
but also enabled Brexit, which he did not want, to happen. The next was Boris
Johnson. His last-minute decision in 2016 to join the Leave campaign was a
tactical wheeze to win support with the Brexit-obsessed Tory faithful,
positioning him to succeed Cameron. Yet when Leave unexpectedly won, Johnson had
no clue what to do next; in the chaos he helped cause, the Tories gave May the
top job.
May was supposed to be a safe pair of hands, but she too had a cunning plan. She
called a snap election in 2017 with the aim of giving herself a large Tory
majority that would bolster her Brexit negotiations with the European Union.
Instead, her ham-fisted campaign caused her to lose her slim majority, forcing
her to rely in Parliament on the Democratic Unionists from Northern Ireland (the
least flexible group of Britons on the issue of the Irish border).
Indeed, throughout her negotiations with Europe, May has proved herself more
Baldrick than Blackadder, throwing away the few good cards she had. She declared
Article 50 too early, setting a clock running against her: Britain is now due to
leave on March 29, deal or no deal. And she made virtually no preparations for
the “no deal” she kept telling Britons was “better than a bad deal.” The
Europeans, knowing that “no deal” would in fact grievously hurt the British
economy, smiled and waited until May, running out of time, gave in. She now has
to hawk a Brexit deal with a lengthy transition period and with an especially
poisonous (and possibly indefinite) Irish “backstop.”
You would imagine that British politicians would have had enough of cunning
plans by now. However, two new Baldricks have appeared, both bent on destroying
May, but whose cackhandedness has helped her live on.
The least cunning assassins are the hardline Tory Brexiteers, led by Jacob Rees-Mogg.
They are zealots, who would prefer no deal, despite the damage it would do to
the economy. As an example of their handiwork, recall that a week ago May looked
doomed. She had been forced to postpone the parliamentary vote on her compromise
plan, and she was about to head off to Brussels to beg EU leaders for
concessions they were never going to give. What did the Brexiteers do? They
cluelessly triggered a rapid leadership election. In the end, 117 out of 317
Tory MPs voted against May; enough to hurt her but not enough to win.
Under the Tory party rules, May is now safe from a leadership election for
another year. Had Rees-Mogg and friends waited even a few days for her to return
empty-handed from Brussels (as she did), they might well have ousted her. Now
Brexit will be run by a premier they don’t trust.
The other Baldrick is Jeremy Corbyn, the leader of the Labour Party. His Brexit
plan is so cunning that it is invisible. He has never unveiled it and possibly
does not actually know what it is. You could argue that his ignorance, feigned
or real, makes sense so long as the Tories keep forming circular firing squads.
Eventually, though, Corbyn is going to want to bring down the government and
force a general election — and he has nothing to offer the British people other
than more division. Although many Labour MPs and constituents want another
referendum, Corbyn does not.
New Revelation: Previous US Administration Facilitated Christian Genocide in
Nigeria
ريموند إبراهيم: الكشف عن دور تسهيلي لإدارة أوباما الأميركية السابقة في الإبادة
الجماعية ضد المسيحيين في نيجيريا
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/December 23/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/70319/raymond-ibrahim-new-revelation-previous-us-administration-facilitated-christian-genocide-in-nigeria-%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%85%D9%88%D9%86%D8%AF-%D8%A5%D8%A8%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%87%D9%8A%D9%85-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%83/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13447/obama-christian-genocide-nigeria
"On March 23, 2015, President
Obama himself took the unusual step of releasing a video message directly to
Nigerians all but telling them how to vote. In that video, Obama urged Nigerians
to open the 'next chapter' by their votes." — Goodluck Jonathan, former
president of Nigeria, in his new book, My Transition Hours.
"Christianity is on the brink of extinction in Nigeria." — Bosun Emmanuel, the
secretary of the National Christian Elders Forum, June 23, 2018.
"Hundreds of indigenous Numan Christians in Adamawa state were attacked and
killed by jihadist Fulani herdsmen. When they tried to defend themselves the
Buhari govt. sent in the Airforce to bomb hundreds of them and protect the
Fulani aggressors." — Femi Fani-Kayode, Nigerian lawyer, author and former
Minister of Aviation, Daily Post, December 6, 2017.
In March 2014, after the United States Institute for Peace invited the governors
of Nigeria's northern states for a conference in the U.S., the State Department
blocked the visa of the region's only Christian governor, Jonah David Jang, an
ordained minister.
Goodluck Jonathan, Nigeria's former president, has accused the Obama
administration of meddling with his nation's politics in order to replace him
with its current president, Muhammadu Buhari. Pictured: Goodluck Jonathan in
2012.
In a bombshell revelation, Goodluck Jonathan, Nigeria's former president
(2010-2015), has accused the Obama administration of meddling with his nation's
politics in order to replace him with its current president, Muhammadu Buhari --
whom many blame for facilitating the persecution of Christians. In his new book,
My Transition Hours, Jonathan writes:
"On March 23, 2015, President Obama himself took the unusual step of releasing a
video message directly to Nigerians all but telling them how to vote... In that
video, Obama urged Nigerians to open the 'next chapter' by their votes. Those
who understood subliminal language deciphered that he was prodding the
electorate to vote for the [Muslim-led] opposition to form a new government."
A 2011 ABC News report provides context:
The current wave of [Muslim] riots was triggered by the Independent National
Election Commission's (INEC) announcement on Monday [April 18, 2011] that the
incumbent President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, won in the initial round of ballot
counts. That there were riots in the largely Muslim inhabited northern states
where the defeat of the Muslim candidate Muhammadu Buhari was intolerable, was
unsurprising. Northerners [Muslims] felt they were entitled to the presidency
for the declared winner, President Jonathan, [who] assumed leadership after the
Muslim president, Umaru Yar'Adua died in office last year and radical groups in
the north [Boko Haram] had seen his [Jonathan's] ascent as a temporary matter to
be corrected at this year's election. Now they are angry despite experts and
observers concurring that this is the fairest and most independent election in
recent Nigerian history.
That the Obama administration may have imposed its will on a foreign country's
politics and elections is hardly unprecedented. Recall the administration's
partiality for the Muslim Brotherhood during and after 2012 presidential
elections in Egypt; or its unsuccessful efforts to oust Israeli prime minister
Netanyahu with U.S. taxpayers' money; or its efforts -- with an admittedly
unverified "dossier" (here, here and here) -- to prevent then-presidential
candidate Donald J. Trump from being elected, or by discussing an "insurance
policy" in the event that Trump won. Moreover, texts by Peter Strzok revealed
that Obama "wants to know everything we're doing."
So in Nigeria, the Obama administration, it seems, sought to right the
apparently intolerable wrong of having a duly elected Christian president in a
more than 50% Christian nation.
Two questions arise: 1) Is there any outside evidence to corroborate Jonathan's
allegations against the Obama administration? 2) Is Buhari truly facilitating
the jihad on his Christian countrymen?
The Obama Administration's Pro-Islamic/Anti-Christian Policy
Former Nigerian President Jonathan's newly published accusations appear to
correspond with the former U.S. administration's policy concerning Muslims and
Christians in Nigeria.
To begin with, the Obama administration insisted that violence and bloodshed in
Nigeria -- almost all of which was committed by Muslims against Christians --
had nothing to do with religion. This despite the fact that Boko Haram -- which
was engaging in ISIS type of atrocities: slaughter, kidnap, rape, plunder,
slavery, torture before ISIS was even born -- presented its terrorism as a
jihad. In one instance it even called on President Jonathan to "repent and
forsake Christianity" and convert to Islam as the price for peace. The Obama
administration, however, refused to designate Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist
organization until November 2013 -- years after increasing pressure from
lawmakers, human rights activists, and lobbyists.
For instance, after a Nigerian church was destroyed in an Easter Day 2012
bombing that left 39 worshippers dead -- one of many such deadly church bombings
over the years in Nigeria -- Obama's Assistant Secretary of State for African
Affairs, Johnnie Carson, said, "I want to take this opportunity to stress one
key point and that is that religion is not driving extremist violence" in
Nigeria.
Instead, "inequality" and "poverty" -- to quote Bill Clinton -- are "what's
fueling all this stuff" (a reference to the jihadi massacre of thousands of
Christians).
Apparently to prove that it believed what it was saying, the Obama
administration even agreed to allocate $600 million in a USAID initiative to
ascertain the "true causes" of unrest and violence in Nigeria, which supposedly
lay in the socio-economic, never the religious, realm.
Also telling is that, although the Obama administration offered only generic
regrets whenever Christians were slaughtered by the dozens -- without
acknowledging the religious identity of persecutor or victim -- it loudly
protested whenever Islamic terrorists were targeted. When, for instance,
Nigerian forces under Jonathan's presidency killed 30 Boko Haram terrorists in
an offensive in May 2013, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (who is also
mentioned in unflattering terms in Jonathan's memoirs) "issued a strongly worded
statement" to Jonathan, reported Reuters: "We are ... deeply concerned by
credible allegations that Nigerian security forces are committing gross human
rights violations," Kerry warned the Nigerian president.
In March 2014, after the United States Institute for Peace invited the governors
of Nigeria's northern states for a conference in the U.S., the State Department
blocked the visa of the region's only Christian governor, Jonah David Jang, an
ordained minister. According to human rights lawyer Emmanuel Ogebe:
"After the [Christian governor] told them that they were ignoring the 12 Shariah
states who institutionalized persecution ... he suddenly developed visa
problems... The question remains – why is the U.S. downplaying or denying the
attacks against Christians?"
More recently, Ogebe, of the U.S. Nigeria Law Group based in Washington, told
Gatestone in an interview that the Obama administration "State Department
actually said they preferred a 'Muslim majority' country to explain why Obama
chose to visit Senegal instead of Nigeria. Ironically, Jonathan sided with the
US on Israel in the UN while Buhari voted against the US/Israel in the UN."
Muhammadu Buhari's Role in the Jihad on Christians
Indicators that Muhammadu Buhari -- whom the Obama administration helped make
president of Nigeria, according to Jonathan -- is empowering the genocide of
Christians follow.
After Goodluck Jonathan became president, thousands of Christians living near
Muslim centers in Nigeria were killed. Since getting what they want -- a Muslim
president, Muhammadu Buhari, in 2015 -- Muslims have attacked Christians in ways
that are being characterized as a "pure genocide."
As the Christian Association of Nigeria, an umbrella group of various Christian
denominations, said in a recent statement:
"There is no doubt that the sole purpose of these attacks is aimed at ethnic
cleansing, land grabbing and forceful ejection of the Christian natives from
their ancestral land and heritage."
To begin with, significantly more Christians have been massacred under Muhammadu
Buhari than his Christian predecessor -- mostly by Muslim Fulani herdsmen, who
regularly launch raids on Christian villages. In just the first six months of
this year, 6,000 Christians were slaughtered in the name of jihad. It took three
times as long for the Fulani to kill only 1,484 Christians under Jonathan's
presidency.
Any number of prominent Nigerians have accused Buhari of turning a blind eye to
Fulani atrocities. He "is himself from the jihadists' Fulani tribe," Ogebe told
Gatestone.
According to Rev. Musa Asake, the General Secretary of the Christian Association
of Nigeria:
"Under President Buhari, the murderous Fulani herdsmen enjoyed unprecedented
protection and favoritism... Rather than arrest and prosecute the Fulani
herdsmen, security forces usually manned by Muslims from the North offer them
protection as they unleash terror with impunity on the Nigerian people."
Similarly, according to prominent Nigerian lawyer, author and former Minister of
Aviation, Femi Fani-Kayode:
"... the Muslim president [Buhari] has only awarded the murderers with impunity
rather than justice and has staffed his government with Islamic officials, while
doing essentially nothing to give the nation's Christians, who make up half the
population, due representation."
Like the Obama administration, Buhari also attributes Fulani persecution of
Christians to "poverty, injustice and the lack of job opportunities." As the
Christian Association of Nigeria retorts, however:
"How can it be a [secular or economic] clash when one group [Muslims] is
persistently attacking, killing, maiming, destroying, and the other group
[Christians] is persistently being killed, maimed and their places of worship
destroyed?"
The National Christian Elders Forum is more direct concerning the source of
violence:
"JIHAD has been launched in Nigeria by the Islamists of northern Nigeria led by
the Fulani ethnic group. This Jihad is based on the Doctrine of Hate taught in
Mosques and Islamic Madrasas in northern Nigeria as well as the supremacist
ideology of the Fulani. Using both conventional (violent) Jihad, and stealth
(civilization) Jihad, the Islamists of northern Nigeria seem determined to turn
Nigeria into an Islamic Sultanate and replace Liberal Democracy with Sharia as
the National Ideology. ... We want a Nigeria, where citizens are treated equally
before the law at all levels...."
The Buhari government has even been accused of participating in the jihad. For
example, one especially savage Fulani "attack razed several [Christian] villages
in the southern part of the state [leaving 100 dead], and a military jet bombed
a Lutheran church and other targets," says one report, before adding: "Some
people suspect the jets were deployed in collaboration with the terrorists
because their bombs hit villagers."
Fani-Kyode has been even more direct in his accusation against Buhari:
"Hundreds of indigenous Numan Christians in Adamawa state were attacked and
killed by jihadist Fulani herdsmen. When they tried to defend themselves the
Buhari govt. sent in the Airforce to bomb hundreds of them and protect the
Fulani aggressors. Is this fair? WORLD TAKE NOTE!"
It is also worth noting that, although Christians were only recently the
majority of Nigeria's population, the ongoing genocide against them has caused
their population to drop -- to the point that Christianity in Nigeria "is on the
brink of extinction," warns Bosun Emmanuel, the secretary of the National
Christian Elders Forum. Last summer he said that Muhammadu Buhari "is openly
pursuing an anti-Christian agenda that has resulted in countless murders of
Christians all over the nation and destruction of vulnerable Christian
communities." Accordingly, "the Church has been weakened and unable to stand
before its enemies. Realistically speaking, Christianity is on the brink of
extinction in Nigeria. The ascendancy of Sharia ideology in Nigeria rings the
death toll for the Nigerian Church."
*Raymond Ibrahim, author of the new book, Sword and Scimitar, Fourteen Centuries
of War between Islam and the West, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the
Gatestone Institute and a Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
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or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
*N.B: Picture enclosed: Goodluck Jonathan, Nigeria's former president.
Can Assad be trusted?
Nadim Koteich/Al Arabiya/December 23/18
Bashar al-Assad will not reflect much when analysts write about the meaning of
Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir’s visit to Damascus from a human rights
and liberal point of view. He will not look closely into the fact that the
visitor doesn’t have any legitimate status to add to him. He is the first
president in the world to have an arrest warrant issued against him in the
International Criminal Court, even if it was rejected by the Arab League and the
African Union and countries like China and Russia. None of these considerations
matter in Damascus. What the Syrian regime has done against its people belittles
the record of others in similar matters. Assad is aware of all these
contradictions on the Syrian front as he was the reason for the creation of many
of them, transforming the Syrian narrative from a peaceful uprising to an armed
revolution to the fight against terrorism, to finally bringing Syria back to its
traditional norm of investing in the proceeds of its geographical location
Reclaiming Arab support
What Assad will consider is that Bashir is the first Arab president to have
visited Damascus since Syria was suspended from the Arab League in 2011. In this
context, the few words Assad made during the visit focused on the Arabism of
Syria. He said: “Despite everything during the years of war, Syria has remained
faithful to Arabism and held to it.” What this means is that Assad assumes that
the normalization of ties between him and Arab states is just a matter of time
and a mere formality which confers great victory to him, after less than eight
years of the outbreak of the Syrian revolution against him.
Bashir's visit to Syria is the strongest signal of this growing trend, preceded
by a huge media roar, when photographers' pictured the first meeting of its kind
since 2011 between Bahrain's Foreign Minister Sheikh Khalid bin Ahmed al-Khalifa
and his Syrian counterpart Walid al-Moallem on the sidelines of the UN General
Assembly in New York. The Bahraini minister stated that “the meeting was not
arranged in advance, but it comes within the Arab movement to resolve the Syrian
crisis.”
The UAE was the first to begin this review when Minister of State for Foreign
Affairs Anwar Gargash said: “I think it was a mistake to kick Syria out of the
Arab league, it meant we had no political leverage at all, no open channel, we
could not present an Arab prism to how the Syrian issue should be resolved.”
I hereby add what I heard directly from a senior Gulf official, that the Arab
position should not continue to be based on the facts of 2011, since plenty of
changes have occurred in the scene of the Syrian crisis, and on the notion that
the fate of an Arab state is being decided by the Russians, Turks, Israelis,
Iranians and Americans.
All this is true; but the question remains: Can Assad be trusted? Is it possible
to rely on the fact that he will not jump to the assumption that normalization
with him is not only a victory for his policy, position and alliances, but also
a preamble to settle accounts with his opponents?
There are no easy or conclusive answers to these questions. The whole approach
is dominated with adventure and characterized with very rapid changes. The
convergence between Assad and some of his opponents over the negative attitude
towards Turkey's policies does not constitute a solid ground for taking
relations from the space of the situational intersection to building policies
that have a minimum of common orientation or common Arab interest.
New chapter?
Furthermore, Turkey which enjoys significant and growing relations with Sudan,
is capable of finding its own understandings with Assad, especially on the
Kurdish issue. Although Iran is drowning in sanctions, it remains a major player
in Syria since it has a huge presence on the ground, through Shiite militias
from Lebanon, Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Israel, which has
cautiously resumed its strikes against the Revolutionary Guard in Syria, is
facing endless constraints, especially Russian ones, in its confrontation with
Iran.
Israel is also aware that it’s not the time for any decisive confrontation with
Iran yet, and maybe that time will never come, given the anticipated costs of
the war. As for the United States, it seems to be stumbling as it is taking its
Syrian mission from the scope of eliminating ISIS to the scope of confronting
Iran and its militias, while its position regarding the Syrian crisis grows
sour.
As for Russia, it is managing a highly sensitive stance over Syria and is
combining the attempt to meet Arab interests with ensuring Israel's security,
its need for Iran to secure ground and its strategic rivalry with Turkey.
Assad is aware of all these contradictions on the Syrian front as he was the
reason for the creation of many of them, transforming the Syrian narrative from
a peaceful uprising to an armed revolution to the fight against terrorism, to
finally bringing Syria back to its traditional norm of investing in the proceeds
of its geographical location and international intersection on his soil. The
Assad experience suggests that he may be closer to investing in this open
opportunity with retaliation and vendetta in his mind. There have been many
attempts to contain the Syrian regime and to take it out from the crises of its
policies, from the 1980s until the initiative of late King Abdullah bin Abdul
Aziz. Each attempt was doomed to fail. Nothing suggests that we are facing
different givens today, and the most dangerous thing at this moment is the hasty
answers to how to deal with Assad’s Syria.
The curious case of a US government shutdown
Walid Jawad/Al Arabiya/December 23/18
Shutting down the government is not an option considered anywhere in the world,
except in the US. It is mind-boggling to have the US government decide to shut
itself down. Yes, it is a conscious decision not to fund the government.
Typically, this happens when Congress fails to pass a federal funding bill or
when the US president decides not to sign the Congressional bill. This latest
government shutdown was triggered by the inability of Congress to come together
to pass a spending bill both Republicans and Democrats can agree to. As a
result, the federal government is forced to shutter its non-essential
operations.
Over the past few decades, elected officials in the White House and Congress
have forced the government to suspend its operations many times over. The
economic losses are far-reaching and inexcusable. Government employees go
without pay, the whole system of government is further fractured inciting the
ire of the American people who typically punish the “responsible” party in the
next election cycle.
Why decide to shutdown the government?
The Republican and Democratic parties were bickering over the border wall slated
to be built along the US-Mexico border. President Trump has announced his
willingness to shutdown the government unless the Democrats agree to fund the
border wall.
Two weeks ago he said in this Oval Office meeting with the Congressional
Democratic leadership that he would be “proud” to shutdown the government if
Congress doesn’t fund the wall. The latest polls show that 51 percent of
Americans blame the president for this partial government shutdown, while 37
percent blame Democrats.
Trump demanded Congress include a $5 billion earmarked to building the border
wall to fulfill a campaign promise he made to his constituency. During the
presidential elections leading to him winning the presidency in 2016, he made
building the wall a cornerstone of his campaign.
Trump’s proposed wall is the singular item on his agenda to guarantee border
security against illegal immigration. Although the Democrats dispute the
effectiveness of the wall, they agree with Trump on the need for border
security.
For no other reason but to score political points the two political parties have
turned this aspect of the greater immigration failure into a fiscal policy
dispute to shutdown the government. The projected cost for a border wall will
run anywhere from $10 to $25 billion. The primary point of disagreement is not
the project cost, but president promise to make Mexico pay for it. In its early
days, the White House attempted to pressure Mexico to build the wall but failed.
Trump quickly turned to the American people demanding Congress fund his wall.
According to Trump, there are two issues at hand: criminal elements illegally
coming into the country to commit violent acts and smuggle drugs, and second,
illegal immigrants burdening the US economy.
American taxpayers suddenly found themselves on the hook for an untold budget.
Die-hard Trump supporters believe the answer lies in building the wall, but not
all Republicans do. Within Congress, upwards of 25 percent of Republican members
are not in favor of funding the wall according to a USA Today poll taken during
the last funding battle. Border security can be achieved by a combination of
surveillance and barriers according to the US Government Accountability Office (GAO),
a trusted non-partisan government agency. What is surprising is the already
built combination of walls and fences covering 580 miles (930km) of the 1,989
miles (3,201km) US-Mexico border.The wall Trump wants to build is part of an
immigration reform challenge, which consecutive US administrations have failed
to address. For no other reason but to score political points the two political
parties, Republicans and Democrats, have turned this aspect of the greater
immigration failure into a fiscal policy dispute to shutdown the government.
What happens when the US government turns off the lights?
The US government ran out of money to fund a number of US agencies on midnight
last Friday. Government workers in the Departments of State, Interior, Justice,
and Transportation among others have asked their non-essential workers to stay
home; i.e. be furloughed, unless they are deemed essential.
Essential employees, on the other hand, will have to report to work but would
not get paid for the work they perform during a shutdown, at least not until a
spending bill is passed. Essential and critical functions of government, those
operations pertaining to the safety of human life and the protection of
property, are the only functions to continue through a shutdown.
How will this affect others around the world?
US Embassies around the world will continue to function as normal. Entry points
to the US would continue to welcome travelers. TSA and customs officers will
report to work although none of them will be paid for the duration of the
shutdown. Government to government diplomatic and economic will not cease. The
outside world will not notice any change in US functions particularly if the
shutdown is short. Longer suspension of government operations will force
affected agencies to halt different parts of their operations in a controlled
fashion. Yet internally the effects are felt, during the Obama 16 day shutdown
in October of 2013 around two million government employees were furloughed or
required to work without pay and the economy lost $24 billion. This is a similar
number of employees who are affected by the current shutdown. A political battle
on this scale presumes a winner and a loser. In this case, there are only
losers, bigger losers, and ultimate losers. The Republican Party is already
perceived to have lost by the majority of the American people, but government
workers are losing as they pay in lost wages, while the ultimate loser is the
American people as a whole. They are losing financially by forgoing gains the
nation’s GDP would accumulate. Worse, the people are becoming less trusting in
their government institutions. Whenever the idea of shutting down the
government is kicked around, elected officials must recall why they were sent to
Washington in the first place: to find solutions, not manufacture issues for
political reasons.
If failed states do all that they can to avoid disruption in governance, US
politicians must never consider a government shutdown. When they do, as they’ve
chosen on Friday, they are reneging on another promise: to make America Great
Again.
The diplomatic overtures of Jordan and Syria
Shehab Al-Makahleh/Al Arabiya/December 23/18
Today, after more than seven years of war in Syria and after all the political
tensions that took place between Amman and Damascus, the two countries are
seeking to revive diplomatic ties.The countries share a border and even enjoyed
good economic relations before the events of 2011. The relations have since
undergone strains, as Jordan was forced to reduce its diplomatic representation
in Damascus for several years. Still, Jordan managed to maintain a sliver of
diplomatic ties without compromising on its political stance in order to revive
relations with Syria at a suitable point after the war has ended.
Reviving diplomacy, trade
The visit of the Jordanian parliamentary delegation to Syria on Monday, 19
November 2018, aimed to buttress official Jordanian position towards Syria in
preparation for subsequent political concessions on both sides in the interest
of the Syrian and Jordanian peoples.
The Jordanian parliamentary delegation paid a visit to Damascus and held talks
with Syrian President Bashar Al Assad, the first of its kind since the beginning
of the civil war in Syria. The Jordanian delegation, led by incumbent parliament
member and former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Abdul Karim Al Dughmi,
said that Assad had conveyed a message to King Abdullah II that Syria will not
look back from now but look forward to boosting bilateral relations with Jordan.
The message, conveyed by al-Dughmi from Assad to King Abdullah, came after the
two countries restored trade relations with each other on16 October, with the
opening of Naseeb-Jaber crossing. The letter of Assad to King Abdullah focused
on turning the page and starting a new chapter by resuming diplomatic ties as a
first step. Al Dughmi said to a closed circle: “President Assad received the
Jordanian delegation cordially. He was very positive and transparent with us.
His morale is high.”Assad told the Jordanian delegation: “I do not want to touch
on the past. I look forward to enhancing relations between our two countries”
Assad speaks of the future
The Jordanian monarch appeared to respond to the Assad’s greetings and started
consultations on the next step with the government. However, it is not clear
what it means to look forward to Jordan-Syria relations. Al-Dughmiq noted Assad
as saying to the Jordanian delegation: “I do not want to touch on the past. I
look forward to enhancing relations between our two countries”. Head of the
Jordanian delegation also stressed that Assad did not refer to any negativity or
fallacies made by the Jordanian government against Syria. “Our relationship will
develop further. Greetings to his Majesty, the King,” Al Dughmi said quoting
Assad. The Jordanian delegation also held talks with Syrian foreign minister,
Speaker of the People’s Assembly and Muslim and Christian clerics as well as
minister of justice. The Jordanian delegation grouped senior parliamentary
personalities including amongst others Nidal al-Ta'ani, head of the Jordanian
Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee and Awwad Al-Zawaideh, chair of the
Parliament’s Public Liberties and Human Rights Committee.
Restrained normalization
As history is one of the main pillars in the narrative and analysis of political
efforts, ideas and political movements in the Arab world, nature of
international relations is associated with surrounding circumstances that affect
the future of such ties. Thus, Jordan’s relationship with its neighbours such as
Iraq, Syria, Israel and Saudi Arabia is concomitant with regional and
international considerations. With regard to Jordanian-Syrian relations, what is
expected hinges on many internal stimuli (both in Syria and Jordan politically,
economically and militarily), as well as in countries that support Jordan and
Syria including the United States, the United Kingdom and Russia. The reaction
of the Syrian government to the Jordanian parliamentary move has been
restrained. During the meetings of the Arab Parliament, a prominent member of
the Jordanian Parliament, Khalil Attia, has called for the return of Syria to
the Arab League. This is a new initiative that has been made after Jordanian
parliamentary visit to Syria last month, which indicates that Amman is anxious
to resume political relations with Damascus. Jordanian sources confirm that
contacts with Syria are in progress at various levels. However, Syrian officials
believe these talks are improving but not to the expectations of both countries.
Signals from both capitals reveal that the two sides “are not in a rush” to
restore full diplomatic ties at the level of ambassadors at present due to
various regional and international considerations and hindrances.
People-state perspectives
Jordanian officials close to the Syrian regime were told that the opportunity
was available to appoint a Jordanian ambassador to Damascus and to send a Syrian
ambassador to Amman, while the United States was still pressing other countries
to prevent a normalization of relations between the two sides.
Though the Jordanian embassy in Damascus has kept its activities at the level of
Chargé D'affaires, the foreign ministry hopes to send a “diplomatic delegation”
to Syria soon to pave the way for exchange of ambassadors. On the other hand,
Syria is not rushing to appoint a new ambassador in Amman. At this stage, it is
satisfied with the Chargé D'affaires in its embassy in Jordan, especially with
the increase in number of Syrian refugees returning to their native country on a
daily basis. Humanitarian organizations said some 20,000 Syrians had returned to
their country after the reopening of the Naseeb border crossing with Jordan in
October 16, while the number of Jordanians visiting Syria increased to 70,000 by
the end of November. Meanwhile, Jordanian officials close to the Syrian regime
were told that the opportunity was available to appoint and send a Jordanian
ambassador to Damascus and to appoint a Syrian ambassador to Amman, while the
United States was still pressing with other powers to prevent a comprehensive
normalization of relations between the two sides. Today, as the Syrian army has
expanded its control over most of Syria and restored large parts of the country
that have been under the control of armed and terrorist groups for years,
including areas bordering Jordan, there are signs that the two countries are
normalising ties gradually. In the past, the decision to re-establish
Jordanian-Syrian relations depended on several elements: regional,
international, but today the decision hinges on Jordanian and international
factors.
Backed by big powers
Perhaps the most important element affecting the fate of political relations
between the two countries lies in the satisfaction of international players for
Jordan's convergence with the current Syrian regime. Jordan is a country that is
affected by the policies of world powers because of its reliance on foreign
economic assistance from the United States, China, Japan, the European Union and
the Gulf states. Thus, Amman formulates its policies based on its interests and
the interests of those countries that affect Jordan's debt negatively or
positively. What the United States wants from Jordan is that Amman should not
have the ability to reject Washington's requests because it is the main
supporter of Jordanian economy, security and military, with some observer
believing thatJordan cannot guarantee its stability without American support.
Thus, Jordan has to take all these considerations into account when it comes to
foreign policy. When Amman considers political rapprochement with Syria soon, an
international green light shall be given thereof. In the end, Syrian crisis is
not an internal conflict as many media outlets portray. Any decision to resume
political ties with Syria has to be approved by all countries sponsoring the
Syrian crisis in the presence of Russia and the United States. This was
confirmed by the statement of the Jordanian Foreign Minister a few days ago at a
press conference with UN envoy Staffan de Mistura stating: “A new page must be
opened in dealing with the crisis,” adding there is an unacceptable absence of
the Arab role in the efforts to resolve the crisis.
The Iranian regime this year and next
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/December 23/18
This year has been one of the toughest for Iran in three decades, with the
regime having to deal with political, social, economic and military challenges.
Large-scale protests and strikes erupted in multiple cities — including major
ones such as Isfahan, Tehran, Karaj, Shiraz, Rasht and Tabriz — in what Iranian
activists describe as the continuation of a nationwide anti-regime movement.
While protesters initially took to the streets to express outrage over high
unemployment and currency devaluation, the demonstrations quickly took on a
political tone, with calls for the regime’s ouster. Throughout the year,
Iranians expressed frustration with hardline and moderate politicians alike.
Tehran blamed the West, the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) and
the People’s Mojahedin of Iran (MEK) for the protests. But people did not buy
such narratives, instead blaming the regime, which resorted to brute force to
suppress the uprising.
The human rights situation deteriorated in 2018, according to several watchdogs.
Human Rights Monitor reported an increase in executions, including 32 hangings
in less than a month, as the regime tries desperately to contain the growing
unrest. Human rights groups also report arbitrary murders, deaths in custody,
inhumane treatment and appalling prison conditions. On the international arena,
one of the biggest blows to the regime stemmed from US President Donald Trump’s
withdrawal from the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), also known
as the Iran nuclear deal. Washington re-imposed economic sanctions that hit
Iran’s energy and banking sectors. To salvage the nuclear deal for its financial
gain, Tehran tried to pit the EU against the US, but the renewed sanctions
exacerbated the crisis facing the regime. Many foreign firms became reluctant to
invest in Iran, and some pulled out altogether. Iran’s currency, the rial, lost
nearly 400 percent of its value and is currently trading at more than 100,000 to
the dollar.
Amid a more united Arab front, the Trump administration adopted a tougher stance
against Tehran’s military adventurism and belligerence. Another significant
development was the regime’s increasing attacks in Europe despite the EU
appeasing it and trying to save the nuclear deal. If the regime does not address
people’s grievances, the next uprising could topple the theocracy and achieve
Iranians’ long-sought dream of democracy. Terrorist plots against the MEK in
Albania, France, the US and Denmark were foiled in March, June, August and
September, respectively. An Iranian diplomat was jailed in Belgium, three were
expelled from France and the Netherlands, and the terrorist arrested in Denmark
was exposed as closely linked to the Iranian ambassador in Norway.
The regime continued its cyberattacks against its rivals, and was caught playing
a major role in misinformation campaigns and propagating fake news. Tehran also
employed Iranians posing as journalists to do the bidding of the Ministry of
Intelligence and Security. In September, Facebook closed 652 accounts and
Twitter closed 770 accounts linked to the regime, declaring them as fake and
disseminating fake news. Some of them were used to smear the Iranian opposition.
In 2019, Tehran will likely continue to try to drive a wedge between the US and
Europe, while marching onward in Syria, Iraq, Yemen and elsewhere. Domestic
protests, strikes and clashes will most likely continue nationwide, as
demonstrators have proven willing to push back against repression. Tehran’s
violent suppression and misinformation will only energize the protesters. If the
regime does not address people’s grievances, the next uprising could topple the
theocracy and achieve Iranians’ long-sought dream of democracy. If the US and
its European and Gulf allies present a united front against Tehran and support
the Iranian people and opposition, the increased pressure could threaten the
regime’s hold on power unless it moderates its domestic and foreign policies.
• Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated Iranian-American political
scientist. He is a leading expert on Iran and US foreign policy, a businessman
and president of the International American Council. Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh
America showers Tehran, Ankara and Moscow with Christmas gifts
Baria Alamuddin/Arab News/December 23/18
“We cannot protect our interests… without maintaining strong alliances and
showing respect to those allies.” This was the damning indictment with which US
Defense Secretary James Mattis resigned last week, immediately after learning of
President Donald Trump’s plan to withdraw militarily from Syria.
The withdrawal is a betrayal of Kurdish recruits who bled on the frontlines
against Daesh, as Turkey is now free to dominate northern Syria. Furthermore,
Arab and Western allies depended on US commitments in eastern Syria as a bulwark
against Iranian expansionism.
Our foes are predictable in their enmity. An ally who betrays you at a time of
encroaching threats is 100 times more dangerous. This betrayal grows more
painful after realizing how cheaply it was sold for. Under mounting legal
jeopardy and threats of impeachment, with Congress refusing to fund his
ridiculous wall, all Trump wanted was a cheap Christmas victory to tout to his
alt-right, lunatic-fringe political base.
Yet the Syria withdrawal represents an infinitely larger Christmas gift to
others. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is licking his lips in
readiness to swallow Syria’s Golan Heights in its entirety.
Russian President Vladimir Putin ecstatically thanked Trump, proclaiming that
“Donald is right” that Daesh has been defeated. We have yet to hear the full
story from Robert Mueller’s investigation into how Putin obtained Trump’s
unswerving loyalty.
Trump’s horrifying announcement followed a phone call during which Turkey’s
president threatened and cajoled him into a withdrawal commitment, sweetening
the deal by promising to buy a couple of shiny US missile batteries.
But by far the biggest beneficiary of Trump’s generosity is Iran, which will now
deploy its proxies to consolidate its control over the rest of Syria, further
entrenching its dominance in Baghdad, Beirut and all the way to the
Mediterranean.
Trump’s Syria withdrawal announcement will embolden Iran’s allies in Iraq to
escalate their demands for Cabinet seats.
Iran-sponsored paramilitaries from Al-Hashd Al-Shaabi are already preeminent in
the Syria-Iraq border region. They will waste no time in linking up with
associated militia forces in Syria and with Hezbollah to create a contiguous
belt of territory under Iranian hegemony from which to go on the offensive
against their regional and Western enemies.
Trump’s announcement will embolden Iran’s allies in Baghdad to escalate their
demands for Cabinet seats. It also adds fuel to Iranian Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei’s poisonous rhetoric that the US cannot be trusted, having signed a
flawed nuclear deal then ripped it up two years later. Now it is the turn of
Arab and Kurdish allies to discover that Trump’s promises count for nothing.
Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner spent two years promising that if Arab states
reduced their hostility toward Israel and backed his peace efforts — even as his
father-in-law tossed Jerusalem to the wolves — then the US would contain Iran.
Arab Gulf states even silently tolerated boorish demands about lowering oil
prices and bankrolling America’s commitments.
All this today counts for nothing. The US has no Iran policy, excepting some
clumsy sanctions that allow the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to
profit from oil smuggling. America’s Middle East strategy is determined by
Trump’s whims after binge-watching Fox News, with no remaining sane
administration officials to curb his worst instincts.
Trump’s retreat accelerates the countdown to a devastating confrontation between
Israel and Iran’s proxies. Netanyahu, like Trump, has been distracting the
public from all-consuming corruption charges with bellicose rhetoric about a few
pitiful Hezbollah border tunnels. Both sides are now locked on a path of
reciprocal threats and escalation. As America retreats and Iranian proxies
advance, an Israeli invasion becomes a matter of time.
The perception of betrayal was palpable in unprecedentedly robust statements
from Western officials who rebuked Trump’s assertion that Daesh has been
defeated and stressed the need to contain Iran. Britain’s Middle East Minister
Alistair Burt warned: “If allies cannot be relied upon, others are sought to
take their place.”
Trump’s juvenile tweets reveal his dangerous ignorance: “Russia, Iran, Syria and
many others are not happy about the US leaving, despite what the Fake News says,
because now they will have to fight ISIS (Daesh) and others, who they hate,
without us.”
Russia and Iran never lifted a finger to confront Daesh in Syria. They bear
responsibility for the group’s emergence, with the Syrian regime from 2011
facilitating a conveyor belt of terrorists from its jails in order to create a
bogeyman with which to terrorize the West. Tehran and Damascus bankrolled Daesh
by trading in oil, while coordinating attacks against moderate Syrian rebel
forces.
Daesh is coming back strongest in the central Iraqi regions under the control of
Tehran’s Iraqi proxies. Both sides share a fundamentally anti-Western agenda,
while not wanting to allow autonomous and representative governments to emerge
in Baghdad, Beirut and Damascus.
Recent estimates of Daesh’s remaining capacity are around 30,000 fighters —
hardly a spent force. These extremists thrive on instability in societies where
populations have been alienated by brutal, sectarian and unjust governance. We
should commence the countdown now to Daesh re-emerging as a massive regional and
global threat.
There have long been intense policy discussions within Western defense
establishments about which entity represents the greatest threat: Iran and its
allies, or Daesh and the extremist movement? Trump has decisively solved this
strategic conundrum once and for all: America will pull out its troops and allow
both these menaces to thrive and proliferate.
The Middle East has been pounded by successive crises and conflicts over recent
decades, but tighten your seatbelts — it is about to get 100 times worse.
• Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaster in the Middle
East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has
interviewed numerous heads of state.
How ‘America first’ could put America last
Cornelia Meyer/Arab News/December 23/18
US President Donald Trump’s withdrawal of US troops from Syria and scaling down
its military presence in Afghanistan has led to the resignations of Defense
Secretary Jim Mattis and anti-Daesh coalition envoy Brett McGurk, the former
sending a scathing letter of resignation in which he argued strongly in favour
of honoring international commitments.
As far as Syria is concerned, there are clear winners and losers from the
withdrawal of US troops. The pullout is unconditional, which means that instead
of allies having their positions ring fenced, they are now exposed to enemy
forces.
Russia has been playing its cards well. Its support for Bashar Assad secured it
a naval base in Tartus, an airbase in Khmeimim and several forward bases. The
first is of particular importance because Russia had lost access to the
warm-water ports of the Mediterranean in the aftermath of the Cold War. This had
been a thorn in the side of the country’s generals for a long time. It did not,
then, come as a surprise when President Putin praised Trump’s decision during
his mammoth end-of-year international press conference. Iran is the other big
winner from Trump’s move. It can now develop its land bridge to the Hezbollah
militia in Lebanon without any impediment. This will not bring joy to Israel,
which is probably the strongest and most important US ally in the Middle East.
Russia and Iran are the allies of President Assad. The latest US move will speed
up his army regaining control over much of the remaining territory he had lost
in seven years of civil war.
Trump’s move in the Middle East and the resignations of senior security
officials go well beyond that particular geography.
Turkey is happy too. It opposes the Assad regime, but looked beady-eyed at the
support the US and other Western powers gave the YPG Peshmerga Kurds. For the
Turkish regime the YPG are related to the banned PKK. They are classed as
terrorists by the government of Turkey, which views ideologies propagating an
independent Kurdish state as an existential threat. They fear that such
ideologies could eventually undermine the territorial integrity of their
country. President Erdogan had held back on a full-scale assault on the YPG,
because it would have been tantamount to a blue-on-blue assault — one NATO
country, Turkey, in direct conflict with the allies of another NATO country, the
US. Erdogan also praised Trump’s decision and promised not to invade northern
Syria for the time being. It is questionable, however, how long the Turkish
restraint will last. In the end fighting will resume in northern Syria with no
regard for the civilian population, who are probably the biggest losers from
Trump’s announcement.
The French and the British voiced concern. France’s Armed Forces Minister,
Florence Parly, made a particularly good point when she countered President
Trump’s assertion that the fight against Daesh was over. While the caliphate
controls only about 1 percent of the territory it held at the height of its
power, Daesh has not been beaten. It has merely retreated and will remerge
somewhere else, possibly in a different incarnation. Such is the nature of
asymmetric warfare with non-state actors.
Trump’s announcement on Afghanistan left US allies bewildered. Only 7,000 US
troops will remain if the US presence is halved. This prompts the question, what
can 7,000 soldiers achieve when peace and stability eluded 100,000 US troops?
Again, the announcement comes at a critical stage when the government of
Afghanistan needs to come to some sort of modus operandi with the Taliban. A
strong presence of allied forces would be beneficial to such talks.
Trump’s move in the Middle East and the resignations of senior security
officials go well beyond that particular geography. It indicates that the US is
no longer the reliable ally that had shaped the post-Second World War
international architecture. The president’s open criticism of NATO and one-sided
cancellation of military exercises on the Korean Peninsula in the summer were
further examples in the military theater — as is exiting the Paris Accord on
Climate Change on the civilian front.
Democracies have at their disposal arsenals that go well beyond arms; soft
power, diplomacy and reliable partnerships work to the benefit of all concerned.
In that sense, a strict “America first” policy threatens to undermine the very
foundation that American influence is built on.
Cornelia Meyer is a business consultant, macro-economist and energy expert.
Twitter: @MeyerResources