LCCC
ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
February 02/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/newselias18/english.february02.18.htm
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Bible
Quotations
If the world hates you, just remember that it has hated
me first. If you belonged to the world, then the world would love you as its
own. But I chose you from this world, and you do not belong to it; that is
why the world hates you
John 15/18-26: "If the world hates you, just
remember that it has hated me first. If you belonged to the world, then the
world would love you as its own. But I chose you from this world, and you do
not belong to it; that is why the world hates you. Remember what I told you:
‘Slaves are not greater than their master.’ If people persecuted me, they
will persecute you too; if they obeyed my teaching, they will obey yours
too. But they will do all this to you because you are mine; for they do not
know the one who sent me. They would not have been guilty of sin if I had
not come and spoken to them; as it is, they no longer have any excuse for
their sin. Whoever hates me hates my Father also. They would not have been
guilty of sin if I had not done among them the things that no one else ever
did; as it is, they have seen what I did, and they hate both me and my
Father. This, however, was bound to happen so that what is written in their
Law may come true: ‘They hated me for no reason at all.’“The Helper will
come—the Spirit, who reveals the truth about God and who comes from the
Father. I will send him to you from the Father, and he will speak about me.
And you, too, will speak about me, because you have been with me from the
very beginning".
Titles For
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published on February 01-02/18
Lebanese
president renews warning in gas field dispute with Israel/Najia Houssari
/Arab News/February 02 2018
FPM, Amal call for restraint/Annahar/February 01/18
Middle East's Next Oil War? Israel Threatens Lebanon Over Hezbollah and
Natural Gas/Tom O'Connor/NewsWeek/February 02/18
A War of No Choice for Israel in Lebanon/Israel Harel /Haaretz/February
01/18
With Nuclear Weapons, We’re Getting Too Comfortable Thinking the
Unthinkable/Richard A. Clarke and Steven Andreasen/The Washington
Post/February 01/18
The Real Mystery About Low Inflation/Ramesh Ponnuru/Bloomberg/February 01/18
The World Bank Is Searching for Meaning/Noah Smith/The Bloomberg/February
01/18
The 'Goodness' of Migrants: When Feelings Trump Facts/Douglas Murray/Gatestone
Institute/February 01/18
Trump's SOTU Hit the Right Foreign Policy Notes - Now Comes the Hard
Part/John R. Bolton/Gatestone Institute/February 01/18
The "Fake News" Crusade to "Protect" You from Free Speech/Robbie Travers/Gatestone
Institute/February 01/18
The new Hitler of the Middle East/Dr. Ibrahim Al-Othaimin/Al Arabiya/February
01/18
Getting into the saving habit in the Gulf/Dr. Mohamed A. Ramady/Al Arabiya/February
01/18
On deception and lies within the Iraqi parliament/Adnan Hussein/Al Arabiya/February
01/18
On systematic ignorance during Islamic awakening/Mohammed Al Shaikh/Al
Arabiya/February 01/18
Titles For Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on February 01-02/18
Lebanon Resorting to
‘Diplomacy’ in Oil Exploration Row with Israel
Berri-Bassil Crisis Hampers Government’s Work
Lebanon's Berri says government might stumble over tension
Hariri manages breakthrough through Aoun, Berri
Aoun promises to review road safety proposal
Velayati Says Iran to 'Continue Support' for Hizbullah
Aoun, Berri Agree to Meet, Put End to War of Words
Aoun Warns against 'Creating Atmosphere that Chimes with Israeli Threats'
AMAL, Hizbullah to Run in 'Unified Electoral Lists'
AMAL on Lieberman Remarks: Israeli Aspirations Will be Confronted
AMAL Urges Supporters to Stop Street Protests
Hariri Says 'More Needed from Int'l Community' as 2018 Refugee Plan Launched
Lebanon Says Will Pursue Oil Exploration despite Israeli Criticism
U.S. Defendant Says Slain Lebanese Disliked Him Because He's Gay
Hizbullah Vows to Confront 'Any Attack' on Lebanon's 'Oil and Gas Rights'
Army Affirms 'Situation under Control' after Hadath Shooting
Lebanese president renews warning in gas field dispute with Israel
FPM, Amal call for restraint
Middle East's Next Oil War? Israel Threatens Lebanon Over Hezbollah and
Natural Gas
A War of No Choice for Israel in Lebanon
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on February 01-02/18
Iran Admits to
Backing Terrorism
Trump Zeroes in on Iran’s Threats
New protests erupt across cities and towns in Iran
US may use force after Syria found to have developed new chemical weapons
Syrian Democratic Forces: 15 Turkish troops killed in attack north of Afrin
Syrian opposition: Transitional period needed in Syria led by governing body
Turkey Says France 'Cannot Give Lessons' over Syria
Polish Senate passes Holocaust bill slammed by Israel
Jordan cuts ties with North Korea “in line with the policies of its allies”
Nikki Haley: UN list of firms linked to Israeli settlements a ‘waste of
time’
Macron Focuses on Democracy, Economy in Tunisia Visit
Files of 10 Terrorists Transferred to Egypt's Grand Mufti in Preparation for
their Execution
Tariq Ramadan Remained in Custody over Rape Allegations
Saudi-UAE Military, Security Delegation in Aden
Statement by Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister on escalation of violence in
Afrin, Syria
950 Miners Trapped in S. Africa after Power Outage
Latest Lebanese
Related News published on February 01-02/18
Lebanon Resorting to ‘Diplomacy’ in Oil Exploration Row with Israel
Asharq Al-Awsat/February
01/2018/Lebanese President Michel Aoun said on Thursday that his country was
using "diplomatic means" to counter Israel's stance regarding an offshore
energy block that is disputed in part with Israel. On Wednesday Israeli
Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman described as "very provocative" Lebanon's
offshore oil and gas exploration tender on the countries' maritime border
and suggested that Lebanon had put out a tender to international groups for
a gas field known as Block 9 "which is by all accounts ours." “We should be
aware to what the Israeli enemy is plotting,” Aoun told his visitors,
according to a statement issued by Baabda Palace. "Comments by Lieberman
about Block 9 are a threat to Lebanon and its right to sovereignty over its
territorial waters," the president said on Wednesday. Prime Minister Saad
Hariri also described as “invalid" Lieberman’s claims that Block 9 is
Israeli. It “comes within Israel’s expansionist policies to undermine the
rights of others and threaten regional security,” Hariri said. Lebanon last
year approved the licenses for an international consortium led by France's
Total, Italy's ENI and Russia's Novatek to move forward with offshore oil
and gas development for two of five blocks in the Mediterranean Sea,
including Block 9. Lebanese officials say the country will start exploratory
offshore drilling in 2019 and say Lebanon wants to assert its resource
rights along the length of its maritime territories.
Berri-Bassil Crisis Hampers Government’s Work
Beirut - Nazeer Rida/Asharq Al-Awsat/February 01/2018
Lebanese political officials are seeking to launch mediation efforts to
resolve a dispute that emerged after the leaking of a video in which Foreign
Minister Jebran Bassil, head of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), called
Speaker Nabih Berri a 'thug', stirring street protests by Berri’s
supporters.
A senior ministerial source told Asharq Al-Awsat that Prime Minister Saad
al-Hariri and the head of the Progressive Socialist Party, Walid Jumblat,
were leading mediation to prevent an escalating crisis. The Director-General
of the General Security, General Abbas Ibrahim, is assuming another a
mediating role to prevent the country from sliding into street disputes,
which would threaten stability. President Michel Aoun said on Wednesday that
streets “have never been a place to resolve political differences.”“What
happened in the past two days should not be repeated,” he stressed. In
separate remarks on Tuesday, Aoun called for forgiveness, describing the
recent events in Beirut’s streets as “a huge mistake that was triggered by a
previous mistake.”“I am looking forward to seeing those who traded insults
forgive each other, because the nation is bigger than everybody,” he stated.
In response, MP Ali Bazzi, from Berri’s parliamentary bloc, said the speaker
has the “strength, courage and patriotism that prompted him to offer an
apology to all the Lebanese who were harmed by these protests, even though
everyone knows that neither Speaker Berri nor the Amal Movement had anything
to do with what happened on the ground.”He noted in this regard that the
speaker has been working during the past few days “to prevent movements and
demonstrations and has contacted the security leaders through the security
official in the movement (Amal), in order to preserve the interests of the
country and prevent harming citizens in any region.”Berri also denied all
rumors about the resignation of his ministers from the government and
stressed, according to Bazzi, that such discussions did not take place at
any time. The repercussions of the dispute have affected the government,
which is temporarily “frozen”, according to State Minister for Planning
Michel Pharaon. The minister said the government “in the last few days, has
entered into the storm” but insisted that the disruption was “temporary”.
Lebanon's Berri says government might stumble
over tension
BEIRUT (Reuters) /February 01/2018/Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri
said on Wednesday the work of Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri’s government
work could be obstructed by political tension, al-Manar TV reported, as a
row involving President Michel Aoun showed no signs of abating. Aoun’s
son-in-law, Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, was caught on camera calling
Berri “a thug” earlier this week, causing protests in Beirut and gunfire
near offices of Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) east of the capital on
Monday. “The government will continue but it might stumble because of the
current political tension,” al-Manar, controlled by the powerful Shi‘ite
group Hezbollah, cited Berri as saying. The row has worsened a standoff
between Berri, a Shi‘ite, and Aoun, a Maronite Christian, that threatens to
ignite sectarian tensions in the run-up to a parliamentary election in May.
The FPM said on Tuesday that Bassil had already expressed regret for the
comments and that it regarded the issue as over. But Berri, in comments to
MPs on Wednesday, pressed his demand for an apology “to the Lebanese” for
“the insults that happened”. Berri and Aoun, both in their 80s, were enemies
in the 1975-90 civil war. Berri and Aoun’s parties are two of the most
powerful groups in the coalition government that was formed in 2016. Lebanon
has suffered long periods of paralysis in government as a result of
political tensions in recent years. “The constitutional institutions not the
street are the right venues to resolve political disputes,” Aoun said on his
official Twitter feed on Wednesday. Political tensions between Berri and
Aoun have been rising since December when Aoun signed a decree promoting
dozens of army officers without the signature of Shi‘ite Finance Minister
Ali Hassan Khalil, one of Berri’s closest aides. The row has shattered a
rare moment of national unity that saved Lebanon from strife during the
crisis over Hariri’s shock resignation in November, which he later
rescinded. The tensions have also shaken Aoun’s ties with the Iran-backed
Shi‘ite group Hezbollah, whose links to Berri and Amal run much deeper than
its political alliance with the FPM, which was founded by Aoun and is now
led by Bassil.
*Reporting by Dahlia Nehme; Editing by Tom Perry and Richard Balmforth
Hariri manages breakthrough through
Aoun, Berri
The Daily Star/February 01, 2018/BEIRUT: Prime
Minister Saad Hariri Thursday facilitated a phone call between President
Michel Aoun and Speaker Nabih Berri where the two leaders discussed recent
Israeli threats against Lebanon's oil wealth. Hariri made a phone call to
Berri and then passed the phone to Aoun during a sit-down at Baabda Palace
between the president and the prime minister. Aoun, according to the
presidency's office, told Berri that Israeli threats required the political
parties to turn the page on recent disputes for the sake of national unity.
His remarks came a day comments made by Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor
Lieberman regarding the south Lebanon exclusive economic zone’s Block 9.
Lieberman Wednesday described a Lebanese offshore oil and gas exploration
tender in an offshore block that is partly in disputed territory on the
countries' maritime border as "very provocative." He urged international
firms not to bid. "When they issue a tender on a gas field, including Block
9, which by any standard is ours ... this is very, very challenging and
provocative conduct here," Lieberman said. Speaking to reporters after the
meeting, Hariri said that Lebanon would take necessary measures to protect
any potential oil and wealth following threats by Israel’s defense minister
earlier this week. Hariri also said that the relationship between Aoun and
Speaker Nabih Berri was heading in a positive direction. Earlier in the day,
Aoun said that diplomatic means were already being pursued in face of
Israeli aggression towards Lebanon’s oil and gas wealth. Aoun warned
visitors at the Presidency’s Baabda Palace of the seriousness of the stance
taken by the Israeli defense minister. He also raised concerns over Israel’s
self-claimed “rights” to poach Lebanon’s oil and gas, and said Lebanon is
working to confront these Israeli threats through diplomatic means, while
stressing Lebanon’s right to defend its sovereignty and territorial
integrity by all means available. He pointed out Israel’s moves targeting
Lebanon, warning against both internal and external sources “providing the
right climate for Israeli threats to attack Lebanon,” a statement from the
presidency office said. In December, Lebanon approved a bid by a consortium
of France’s Total, Italy’s ENI and Russia’s Novatek for two of the five
blocks put up for tender in the country’s much-delayed first oil and gas
offshore licensing round. Lebanon has been vocal in asking for the U.N.’s
assistance in designating a triangular, 870-square-kilometer area of
disputed territory on the southern maritime border. However, Israel opposes
the involvement of external mediators in the matter. A small sliver of
Lebanon’s Block 9 sits in the disputed territory, although this does not
mean any drilling would necessarily be carried in the contested area. In
contrast, a large amount of Lebanon’s Block 8, which was not put up for
tender with Block 9, falls inside the disputed territory.
Aoun promises to review road safety proposal
The Daily Star/February 01, 2018/BEIRUT: President
Michel Aoun Tuesday received a delegation from the Youth Association for
Social Awareness (YASA) road safety NGO to discuss applications of a
national plan to cut traffic accidents. The YASA delegation, headed by its
founder Ziad Ak, presented recommendations and a draft of a national plan to
develop road safety in Lebanon. Akl called for the application of the
traffic law passed in 2015 based on driving exams, especially Article 348
managing the entry of safety standards vehicles into Lebanon. He also
demanded that state vehicles, municipalities and public institutions be
obliged to follow the terms of the new traffic law. Aoun acknowledged YASA’s
efforts, a statement from Baabda Palace said, and promised to follow up on
their list of demands with officials concerned. He stressed the importance
of awareness and the need for genuine willingness to comply with the traffic
law. Aoun said the most crucial thing isn’t to simply add laws, but to
adhere to them, calling on youth to be alert during driving to “avoid family
tragedies that occur from time to time,” the statement added.
NGOs complain that while the new law passed much-needed articles to bring
Lebanon’s traffic laws up to date, authorities have so far failed to
strictly enforce the rules.
Velayati Says Iran to 'Continue Support' for Hizbullah
Naharnet/February 01/18/Ali Akbar Velayati, an adviser to supreme leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Thursday that Iran's influence in the region
is “indispensable” as he stressed that Iran "will continue to support
Hizbullah."“Iran's influence in the region is inevitable. Iran opposes the
United States' policy in the Middle East and will continue to support
Hizbullah and the Palestinians,” the semi-official Fars news agency quoted
Velayati. In his speech to the international conference on supporting
Palestine Intifada, Velayati pointed out that “Hizbullah in Lebanon has been
supported by Iran and we are proud to announce that,” he said. “Hizbullah
today is in a position that makes the Zionist enemy avoid a confrontation
with,” he added. Velayati stressed that “Iran's presence in the region is
indispensable,” stressing that Iran will stay “a decisive element in the
region, we will continue this approach.” He also alleged that “Iran's
presence in Iraq, Syria, Palestine and Lebanon came in coordination with the
governments of these countries.”
Aoun, Berri Agree to Meet, Put End to War of Words
Naharnet/February 01/18/President Michel Aoun held phone talks Thursday with
Speaker Nabih Berri amid an unprecedented row between them and skyrocketing
tensions between their supporters. The phone call was held during Prime
Minister Saad Hariri's meeting with Aoun in Baabda and at the premier's
request, according to MTV. “Hariri called Berri and then gave the phone to
Aoun to discuss with the Speaker the Israeli threats over the oil file and
the need to convene the Higher Defense Council to discuss the matter,” MTV
said. In a statement, the Presidency said Aoun's talks with Berri tackled
“the issue of the repeated Israeli violations against Lebanon.” “The
challenges we are facing require us to turn the page on what happened lately
and to work hand in hand to achieve Lebanon's interest,” the statement
quoted Aoun as telling Berri. The two leaders also agreed to meet on Tuesday
to “mull the steps that should be taken to confront the repeated Israeli
threats and discuss the general situations in the country.”Berri's press
office meanwhile echoed the Presidency's statement and added that the two
leaders agreed to put an end to the war of words between AMAL and the FPM.
According to LBCI television, Berri “appreciated the president's
initiative.” Hariri meanwhile announced after meeting Aoun that “God
willing, things will become positive between President Aoun and Speaker
Berri.” “The dignity of Speaker Berri is part of my dignity, the dignity of
President Aoun and the dignity of the Lebanese people. I'm speaking in my
name and in the name of the president,” Hariri said. “We are facing a major
attack on Lebanon's oil resources, especially in Block 9, and Lebanon will
have bold and clear steps in this regard,” Hariri added. The Aoun-Berri spat
erupted after the president and the premier signed a decree granting
one-year's seniority to a number of officers. Berri and Finance Minister Ali
Hassan Khalil insisted that the decree should have carried the finance
minister's signature. The crisis between the two parties deteriorated
dramatically after the emergence of a leaked video showing Free Patriotic
Movement chief Jebran Bassil – Aoun's son-in-law calling Berri a "thug"
during a closed meeting. The footage drew the ire of Berri's aides and
political allies, who lashed out at Bassil, with Finance Minister Ali Hassan
Khalil calling the foreign minister “lowly” and a “political dwarf.”The
video also sparked three days of unrest and protests that involved gunfire
and sectarianly-charged standoffs between supporters of Aoun and Berri
outside the FPM's headquarters in Sin el-Fil and in the town of Hadath – an
FPM stronghold.
Aoun Warns against 'Creating Atmosphere that Chimes
with Israeli Threats'
Naharnet/February 01/18/President Michel Aoun on Thursday warned against
“creating an atmosphere that chimes with Israeli threats,” a day after
Israel claimed that an offshore gas field belongs to it and not to Lebanon.
Speaking before his visitors, Aoun reiterated his warning of “the dangerous
stance voiced by Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman about Block 9 in
the Exclusive Economic Zone in south Lebanon.”He urged “vigilance over what
the Israeli enemy is plotting against Lebanon, especially that parties
inside and outside the country are working on creating an atmosphere that
chimes with the Israeli threats.”“Lebanon has moved to confront these
Israeli claims through diplomatic means, while stressing its right to defend
its sovereignty and territorial integrity through all means possible,” the
president noted. In December, Lebanon approved a first bid to search for oil
and gas in two blocks off the country's Mediterranean coast, including one
that Israel says belongs to it. Energy Minister Cesar Abi Khalil said
Thursday that Lebanon will sign agreements with the explorers -- France's
Total, Italy's ENI and Russia's Novatek -- next week and would be ready to
begin drilling by 2019.
AMAL, Hizbullah to Run in 'Unified Electoral Lists'
Naharnet/February 01/18/AMAL Movement and Hizbullah officials in Mount
Lebanon and the North held a meeting Thursday and announced they will run in
unified lists in the upcoming parliamentary elections, as they strongly
denounced the foreign minister's remarks about AMAL chief Speaker Nabih
Berri.
The interlocutors, who met at AMAL's headquarters, first “strongly rejected”
remarks made by Free Patriotic Movement chief Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil
about Berri. Bassil had called Berri a “thug” during a closed meeting in
Batroun.
They also hailed the Speaker, saying he showed a “comprehensive and national
role,” as a sort of “safety valve that enabled Lebanon and the Lebanese to
overcome many obstacles and threats.”AMAL and Hizbullah praised the
positions of political forces, social, cultural and civil society officials
for rejecting Bassil's “rhetoric." They stressed keenness on “national
unity,” highlighting the need to stop “sectarian instincts” from affecting
the country's political and national entitlements. They also emphasized that
Lebanon will stage timely polls and that they will wage the elections in
unified lists.
AMAL on Lieberman Remarks: Israeli Aspirations Will be
Confronted
Naharnet/February 01/18/AMAL Movement issued a statement on Thursday
replying to Israel's threats about an offshore gas block, stressing it will
confront the “Zionist aggressive ambitions.”“We pledge our leader Imam Musa
al-Sadr and our leader (Speaker) Nabih Berri that we will always confront
Israel's aggressive aspirations. We will exert strenuous efforts to
consolidate national unity,” a statement titled The Ideological Battle
against the Zionist Entity said. “Israel's greed in Lebanon's strategic
location, natural reserves and marine resources are not new, but Lieberman's
statement is. Israel wants to openly steal Lebanon's marine resources and is
trying to gain an international legislation for that,” it added. AMAL leader
has always warned of “Israel's plans to sabotage peace in the region,” it
said. This is what made the party “insist on cementing the “sovereign” oil
block in the south of Lebanon.”On Wednesday, Israeli Defense Minister
Avigdor Lieberman described as "very provocative" Lebanon's tender on
exploring gas in Block 9. This gas field "is by all accounts ours," the
Israeli minister said. Lebanon in December approved a bid for offshore oil
and gas exploration off its Mediterranean coast -- a vision for years
hampered by political instability and domestic wrangling. That deal was
awarded to the only bidder, an international consortium including France's
Total and Russia's Novatek.Lebanese officials say the country will start
exploratory offshore drilling in 2019. A major finding in Lebanon's
southernmost waters could raise the possibility of a dispute with Israel,
which is developing a number of offshore gas deposits, with one large field,
Tamar, already producing gas, and the larger Leviathan field set to go
online next year. There are over 800 square kilometers of waters claimed by
Lebanon and Israel, which are technically in a state of conflict. Israel and
Hizbullah fought a fierce, monthlong war in 2006.
AMAL Urges Supporters to Stop Street Protests
Naharnet/February 01/18/The AMAL Movement on Thursday urged its supporters
not to organize any street protests, after the Free Patriotic Movement
accused AMAL supporters of firing weapons in the air overnight in the town
of Hadath, an FPM bastion.“The movement thanks all those who have expressed
their condemnation and solidarity after the insulting remarks that were
voiced against Speaker Nabih Berri,” AMAL said in a statement. And noting
that “spontaneous motorized protests have led to some altercations that do
not reflect the movement's image and stance,” AMAL called on its supporters
to “halt any street action in order not to give an alibi to those seeking to
deviate attention from the main iss. Several protests some of which involved
road-blocking and rioting were organized across Lebanon over the past three
days after the emergence of a leaked video showing FPM chief Jebran Bassil
calling Berri a "thug" during a closed meeting in Batroun. The footage drew
the ire of Berri's aides and political allies, who lashed out at Bassil,
with Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil calling the foreign minister “lowly”
and a “political dwarf.” The video comes amid an escalating dispute between
Berri and President Michel Aoun over a decree granting one-year's seniority
to a number of army officers.
Hariri Says 'More Needed from Int'l Community' as 2018
Refugee Plan Launched
Naharnet/February 01/18/The Government of Lebanon and its national and
international partners appealed for USD 2.68 billion to provide critical
humanitarian assistance as well as invest in Lebanon’s public
infrastructure, services and local economy. “As we are entering the 8th year
of the Syria conflict, Lebanon remains at the very forefront of this crisis.
This unfortunately continues to have a profound humanitarian,
socio-economic, security and political impact on Lebanon and its people.
Also, the country continues to host the highest number of refugees per
capita in the world which is placing unprecedented strain on the country’s
infrastructure and public services,” Lazzarini said. He hailed Lebanon and
the Lebanese for having shown “an outstanding solidarity with their Syrian
neighbors.” Lazzarini added: “Also, the international community has
supported Lebanon generously. In 2017, the Lebanon Crisis Response Plan
received more than 1 billion dollars, making Lebanon the second-best funded
response in the world – and this impressive international mobilization has
enabled us to implement a multifaceted response serving both refugees and
host communities.” Noting that “much has been achieved,” the U.N. official
pointed out that “this has not been enough to reverse the tide of growing
needs and deepening vulnerabilities across the country.”He warned that the
situation is gradually eroding and humanitarian and development needs are
growing: “76% of Syrian refugee households live below the poverty line and
more than 50% of Syrian households live in extreme poverty.”“And we should
not forget that 1.5 million Lebanese live below the poverty line,” Lazzarini
added. “These are not just numbers and statistics, but human beings
suffering daily. These people have names and faces, they have shattered
dreams and fears – and they have hopes and dreams, - just like the rest of
us. Among them, Riad Dibo, a Syrian refugee, father of 4 children who
immolated himself in front of UNHCR office in Tripoli few weeks ago. This
out of despair after he was dropped from the list of refugees eligible for
assistance. Riad’s action was a direct consequence of the limited resources
available. In these difficult times, agencies are forced to make impossible
decisions to prioritize among those who need critical assistance,” Lazzarini
went on to say.
He added: “Today we are launching the 2018 Lebanon Crisis Response Plan
which is our key plan to support Lebanon overcome its challenges. The plan
targets vulnerable Lebanese as well as Syrian and Palestine refugees. The
Lebanon Crisis Response Plan appeals for USD 2.68 billion and focuses on
integrated and innovative humanitarian and stabilization interventions. It
brings lifesaving assistance to families, while supporting the delivery of
public services all over Lebanon.”Hariri meanwhile noted that Lebanon “has
shown hospitality like no other country.” “We are a small country, four and
a half million people, four and a half million Lebanese who had the
compassion, who had the honor to host those refugees and we will keep on
doing that because we believe in human rights, we believe in humanity, we
believe that those Syrian refugees ought to go back home one day soon,” the
premier said. He added: “A lot has been said about the return of the
refugees. My government's position is very clear, nobody is going to force
anyone to go back if they do not want to go back.” “We will respect
international law, we believe they should go back as soon as the conditions
are right, we will work with the U.N. for that because it is the right thing
to do,” the PM said. “I want to thank all the donors but I have to say that
we need more from the international community... The international community
has a responsibility towards these refugees and this responsibility has to
be shown every year until this conflict is resolved,” Hariri stressed.
Lebanon Says Will Pursue Oil Exploration despite
Israeli Criticism
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/February 01/18/Lebanon on Thursday pledged to
do "everything in its power" to pursue oil and gas drilling off its coast,
in response to Israeli accusations that such explorations were
"provocative."In December, Lebanon approved a first bid to search for oil
and gas in two blocks off the country's Mediterranean coast, including one
that Israel says belongs to it. On Wednesday, Israeli Defense Minister
Avigdor Lieberman said awarding such bids amounted to "provocative behavior"
by Lebanon's government. "They issue a tender on a gas field -- including a
bloc which by all accounts is ours -- to international groups that are
respectable companies, which to my mind are making a serious mistake since
it's against all rules and protocol in cases like this," Lieberman said.
Lebanese officials have fired back, with Energy Minister Cesar Abi Khalil on
Thursday saying Lebanon would defend its right to drill there. "Israel will
do what it can to block us from taking advantage of our oil wealth, and we
will do everything in our power to defend it," Abi Khalil told a local radio
station. Lebanon will sign agreements with the explorers -- France's Total,
Italy's ENI and Russia's Novatek -- next week and would be ready to begin
drilling by 2019, he said. Lieberman's comments on Wednesday have set off a
firestorm in Lebanon. Hizbullah on Wednesday warned that it would "respond
firmly to any attack on our oil and gas rights."And on Thursday, President
Michel Aoun pledged Lebanon would "defend its sovereignty and territorial
integrity by all available means."Lebanon is looking to tap potential oil
and gas reserves after major offshore discoveries by neighboring Israel and
Cyprus. On December 14, it approved a bid on blocks four and nine -- just
two of the five that were offered.
Block nine is the disputed block with Israel.
U.S. Defendant Says Slain Lebanese Disliked Him Because
He's Gay
Associated Press/Naharnet/February 01/18/A U.S. police officer has testified
that an Oklahoma man charged with a hate crime in the killing of his
Lebanese neighbor said the slain man didn't like him because he is gay.
Testimony resumed Wednesday in the first-degree murder trial of 63-year-old
Stanley Majors for the 2016 shooting death of 37-year-old Khalid Jabara.
Tulsa officer Josh Metcalf testified Tuesday that Majors called Jabara
"creepy" and a terrorist who disliked him because of his sexuality. Defense
attorneys have tried to show that Majors was mentally ill and have said he
feared that Jabara's family targeted him because he's gay. Majors has
pleaded not guilty and was found competent to stand trial. Prosecutors say
Majors shot Jabara after years of harassment that included calling the
family "filthy Lebanese" and "Moo-slems." The Jabaras are Christian.
Hizbullah Vows to Confront 'Any Attack' on Lebanon's
'Oil and Gas Rights'
Naharnet/February 01/18/Hizbullah on Wednesday hit back at Israeli Defense
Minister Avigdor Lieberman over remarks about offshore gas, pledging to
“confront any attack” on Lebanon's “oil and gas rights.”“Lieberman's
statements are a new reflection of the continuous Israeli ambitions
regarding Lebanon's resources, land and waters, and are part of the hostile
policy against Lebanon and its sovereignty and legitimate rights,” Hizbullah
said in a communique. “As we express our support for the stances of the
three presidents and the rest of Lebanese officials against this new
aggression, we reiterate our firm and forthright stance on confronting any
attack on our oil and gas rights, defending Lebanon's installations and
protecting its resources,” the group added. It was referring to stances by
Lebanon's president, parliament speaker and premier and the Lebanese
ministers of foreign affairs, defense and energy.
Earlier in the day, Lieberman described as "very provocative" Lebanon's
tender on exploring gas in Block 9. This gas field "is by all accounts
ours," the Israeli minister said. Lebanon in December approved a bid for
offshore oil and gas exploration off its Mediterranean coast -- a vision for
years hampered by political instability and domestic wrangling. That deal
was awarded to the only bidder, an international consortium including
France's Total and Russia's Novatek. Lebanese officials say the country will
start exploratory offshore drilling in 2019. A major finding in Lebanon's
southernmost waters could raise the possibility of a dispute with Israel,
which is developing a number of offshore gas deposits, with one large field,
Tamar, already producing gas, and the larger Leviathan field set to go
online next year. There are over 800 square kilometers of waters claimed by
Lebanon and Israel, which are technically in a state of conflict. Israel and
Hizbullah fought a fierce, monthlong war in 2006.
Army Affirms 'Situation under Control' after Hadath Shooting
Naharnet/February 01/18/Supporters of AMAL Movement chief Speaker Nabih
Berri opened gunfire shots into the air late on Wednesday in the Beirut's
southern suburbs neighborhood of Hadath in protest to the foreign minister's
remarks about Berri which compelled an intervention on the Lebanese army's
part, the National News Agency reported. NNA said that AMAL supporters in
four-wheel drive vehicles and several motorbikes drove into Hadath square
and started shooting gunfire into the air. Supporters of the Free Patriotic
Movement of Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil soon came to the scene carrying
their own weapons. The Lebanese army intelligence deployed in the area and
controlled the situation, it added. A security source who spoke on condition
of anonymity told al-Joumhouria daily on Thursday: “The matter is very
serious and the perpetrators must be punished particularly that what
happened in Hadath not only targets the town but also targets Lebanon's
stability,” he said. Municipal chief of Hadath, George Aoun, explained what
he saw to the daily, he said: “A group of young men stormed the town
hoisting flags of AMAL Movement and started firing gunshots into the air
prompting people to be alert. We have made several contacts with AMAL
leadership but they disclaimed the incident.”"The army was deployed in the
area, and the young people who came to defend their town retreated after the
army intervened and pursued the shooters” he said. The Lebanese army however
has assured that the situation is totally under control. The unrest and
protests of the past two days were sparked by the emergence of a leaked
video showing Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil – Aoun's
son-in-law – calling Speaker Nabih Berri a "thug" during a closed meeting in
Batroun. The video comes amid an escalating dispute between Berri and Aoun
over a decree granting one-year's seniority to a number of army officers.
The footage drew the ire of Berri's aides and political allies, who lashed
out at Bassil, as supporters of the Speaker's AMAL Movement blocked roads
across the country and encircled the FPM's headquarters in Sin el-Fil.
Lebanese president renews warning in gas field dispute
with Israel
Najia Houssari /Arab News/February 02 2018
BEIRUT: Lebanese President Michel Aoun has renewed his warning against the
“dangerous position” taken by Israel’s defense minister on Block 9, in what
the president described as the “exclusive economic zone in southern
Lebanon.” Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said on Wednesday that
“the gas field in Block 9 is ours by all standards,” describing the Lebanese
tender to explore a gas field in the Mediterranean, including Block 9, as
“very provocative.” Israel’s statement came a week before the Lebanese
Ministry of Energy celebrated gas exploration contracts signed with a
consortium of companies, including French Total, Italian Eni and Russian
Novatek, in Block 9 in the south and 4 in the north of the Lebanese economic
zone. In a statement from his press office, Aoun urged “caution to what the
Israeli enemy is plotting against Lebanon, especially since there are those
who are working at home and abroad to provide a climate which is in harmony
with the Israeli threats to attack Lebanon and its right to develop its oil
and gas wealth on various pretexts.”
Aoun said: “Lebanon is acting to confront these Israeli allegations by
diplomatic means, while reaffirming its right to defend its sovereignty and
territorial integrity by all available means.” In a telephone interview,
Lebanese Energy Minister Cesar Abi Khalil said: “Israeli moves are part of
an attempt to disrupt the work of the companies and intimidate them, but it
will fail and we’ll continue on the path of exploration.”He added: “Drilling
will take place in 2019, and the Israeli threats came on the day after
Lebanon moved on this path to use its oil, which disturbed the Israeli
enemy.” Khalil said: “Lieberman’s claim is erroneous. Lebanon demarcated its
maritime borders in accordance with international law, and will use all
means to protect its oil activities.”
Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea said in a statement on Thursday: “Those
who believe that the Lebanese government is powerless are wrong. It will
take all necessary decisions, and the Lebanese army and the Lebanese people
as a whole stand behind it to defend our interests. The issue is not the
number of tanks and planes; rather, it is an issue of national rights and
international and Arab credibility which is enjoyed by the Lebanese people.
(There is) great Arab and international credibility and great sympathy with
the Lebanese army.”
The Lebanese Foreign Ministry sent a memorandum to the UN
Secretary-General’s office on Jan. 18 about Israeli allegations on the
rights of oil Block 9. The memo responded to a letter from the Israeli
mission to the Office of the Secretary-General on Dec. 21.
The Office of the Minister of Foreign Affairs published the memorandum,
which stated that “the Lebanese Government strongly opposes the Israeli
allegations and affirms that Block 9 is entirely located in the special
economic zone of Lebanon and requests that reference be made to the
geographical coordinates of the maritime economic zone between Lebanon and
Occupied Palestine, which were sent by Lebanon to the Office of the
Secretary-General on 14 July 2010 and on Oct. 19 2011 and clearly specified
that Block 9 is a Lebanese property and is under Lebanese sovereignty. “The
Ministry of Foreign Affairs saw that “Israel ignores our letter sent to the
UN on 20 March 2017, which included our unequivocal declaration that Block 9
falls within the Lebanese territorial waters and affirms the right of
Lebanon to launch the process of accreditation, exploration, and extraction
of oil or gas without prior approval or authorization from any party, and
Israel is not entitled to interfere in any way in Lebanon’s exercise of its
sovereign rights.”The State Department warned Israel and its trading
partners, including Energean Oil & Gas company, if they decide to take
advantage of explorations “in the so-called Israeli field No. 13 and Alon,
where the Karish field is located” not to “take advantage of the Lebanese
oil or gas through horizontal drilling or in any other way.”
FPM, Amal call for restraint
Annahar/February 01/18
Lebanon dipped into a political crisis after a leaked video of FM Gebran
Bassil calling the speaker a “thug” while addressing FPM supporters in his
home district of Batroun was broadcast last week.
BEIRUT: In an effort to
contain tensions that have emanated in recent days, both the Free Patriotic
Movement and Amal Movement released on Thursday separate statements calling
on their followers to exert restraint, highlighting the importance of
maintaining the country's stability.“We thank all those who stood in
solidarity with Speak Nabih Berri in the wake of the derogatory comments
aimed at him, but we call on our supporters to refrain from streets
protests,” the statement from the Amal Movement said. In parallel, the FPM
also released a statement asking their supporters to put an end to street
demonstrations, as it “will have serious implications on our national
stability and unity.”President Michel Aoun sought to quash the dispute as
well, phoning Berri in order to emphasize "on the importance of turning the
page and working hand in hand for the sake of the country."
Aoun also met with Prime Minister Saad Hariri, with both men discussing the
latest political impasse to hit Lebanon.
Making his way out of the meeting, Hariri assured reporters that "the
healthy relationship between President Aoun and Speaker Berri will be
preserved, as we are all working on calming the situation." Meanwhile, the
Lebanese Diaspora Energy Conference in Ivory Coast will go ahead as planned,
according to a statement released by the Foreign Ministry on Thursday,
despite calls from the Diaspora in Abidjan to postpone the conference. “The
first delegation from Beirut has already made their way to Ivory Coast to
join the team from the Lebanese Embassy in Abidjan to prepare for the
conference,” the statement read.
The ministry announced that delegations from across Africa reached the
Ivorian capital, including representatives from businesses and banks
supporting the conference. Thursday's statement from the ministry added that
communication is ongoing with security forces to ensure all necessary
measures are taken for the safety of the event.
"The ministry affirms the need for the Diaspora to dissociate itself from
the internal political arguments in Lebanon, as arguments of this sort is
what led to their emigration from their homeland in the first place," the
statement added. Lebanon dipped into a political crisis after a leaked video
of FM Gebran Bassil calling the speaker a “thug” while addressing FPM
supporters in his home district of Batroun was broadcast by the “Al-Jadeed”
TV station on Sunday. The leaked video sparked outrage among supporters of
the Amal Movement who took to the streets to denounce Bassil’s remarks,
blocking roads and burning tires across Lebanon. In the video, the foreign
minister accused Berri of seeking to derail a diaspora conference in Abidjan
by forcing Shiite businessmen to boycott the gathering. Bassil, President
Michel Aoun's son-in-law, said Berri threatened to have Shiite businessmen
participating in the conference fired from their jobs and the bank funding
the diaspora gathering closed.
Middle East's Next Oil War? Israel
Threatens Lebanon Over Hezbollah and Natural Gas
Tom O'Connor/NewsWeek/February 02/18
Israel has threatened to invade Lebanon amid a recent spat over natural
resources and militant groups that, once again, raised tensions between the
longtime foes.
Addressing the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv
University on Wednesday, Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said
that Lebanon's latest plans to drill in a disputed offshore oil and gas
field known as Block 9 were "very, very challenging and provocative,"
according to Reuters. In the same speech, the far-right minister threatened
to wage a full-scale war against Lebanon if Hezbollah launched any attacks
against Israel. The Iran-backed Shiite Muslim movement warned it would
defend Lebanon's natural resources at any cost. "We reiterate our firm and
unequivocal position in decisively confronting any aggression against our
oil and gas rights, defending Lebanon's assets and protecting its wealth,"
Hezbollah told Newsweek in an email
Lebanon did not recognize Israel's 1948 creation, which caused a mass exodus
of Palestinians and a regional war between the majority-Jewish state and its
Arab, mostly Muslim neighbors. Israel has invaded Lebanon twice, the first
time during the 15-year Lebanese civil war and a second time in 2006 in
response to Hezbollah cross-border raids. In both instances, Hezbollah led
the local resistance against Israel, which ultimately withdrew.
In the latest crisis, Israel has warned foreign companies not to invest in
Lebanese plans to explore the Block 9 offshore oil reserve located on the
maritime border between Israel and Lebanon. Lebanon awarded bids last month
to France's Total Sa, Italy's Eni SpA and Russia's Novatek PJSC to drill for
oil and gas in blocks 4 and 9 within Lebanon's exclusive economic zone, but
Lieberman warned this was a "grave mistake" and "contrary to all the rules"
because Block 9 belonged totally to Israel, Bloomberg News reported, citing
an Israeli Defense Ministry statement.
Lieberman also threatened to respond to Hezbollah aggression with a "full
strength" invasion, Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported. He vowed that "If in
Israel they sit in shelters, then in the next fighting all of Beirut will be
in shelters." These comments have been met with fury back in the Lebanese
capital.
"We need to be aware of what the Israeli enemy is plotting against Lebanon,
especially with the support of those who are working internally and
externally to provide a climate of harmony with the Israeli threats to
attack Lebanon," Lebanese President Michel Aoun said Thursday in a
statement, according to Lebanon's official National News Agency.
"Lebanon will counter these Israeli claims by diplomatic means, while
asserting its right to defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity by
all the available means,” he added.
Lebanon was still reeling from a dispute between supporters of Aoun, who
represented the mostly Maronite Christian Free Patriotic Movement, and
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, leader of the Shiite Muslim Amal Movement.
Both former civil war foes were members of the pro-Hezbollah March 8
Alliance, but a new dispute emerged when Aoun promoted dozens of army
officers without the approval of one of Berri's aides. It escalated when
Aoun's son-in-law and party head Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil was caught
on video calling Berri "a thug," as Lebanon's The Daily Star reported.
After massive protests rocked Beirut and beyond, Bassil apologized and Berri
contacted Aoun Thursday in an effort to unite the two leaders in the face of
Lieberman's recent warnings. They agreed to meet Tuesday to discuss the
crisis. A day before, the National News Agency reported three Israeli
gunboats violating Lebanon's southern maritime boundary near Ras Naqoura,
citing an army communique. It would be at least the second such incident in
two days.
Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri, head of the majority-Sunni Muslim Future
Movement that led the opposition March 14 Alliance, was reportedly present
during the phone call between Aoun and Berri. Hariri, who himself was the
subject of an international drama involving Saudi Arabia and his brief
resignation in November, stood by the two.
"We are facing a major aggression with regard to Lebanon's oil wealth,
especially in Block 9, and Lebanon will have clear and decisive steps in
this regard," Hariri said Thursday in a statement.
http://www.newsweek.com/next-middle-east-oil-war-israel-and-lebanon-threaten-spark-next-conflict-797668
A War of No Choice
for Israel in Lebanon
صحيفةهآرتس الإسرائيلية:
لا خيار لإسرائيل بل الحرب مع لبنان
Israel Harel /Haaretz/February 01/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/62238
The quiet on Israel's border with Lebanon
is an illusion of those who prefer to bury their heads in the sand- and as
it continues, Hezbollah stocks up on arms almost uninterrupted
The individuals who were responsible for
the fiasco of the Second Lebanon War, together with most of the people who
are evaluating its results today, make a claim that would appear to be
unassailable: Israel’s military victory in 2006 may have been only partial,
but time has shown that Israel achieved the primary goal of the war, many
years of quiet on the northern border.
Anyone who is being honest with himself,
however, knows that this is an illusion; it’s the quiet of those who prefer
to bury their heads in the sand, and it came at a heavy price.Israel allowed
Hezbollah to smuggle in more than 150,000 missiles and rockets into Lebanon.
These include thousands of precision-guided rockets that, at the stroke of
Iran’s fancy, could hit hundreds of strategic targets throughout Israel.
They could cause thousands of casualties, destroy civilian and military
installations and significantly debilitate the nation’s economy and morale,
to name just a few effects. Most of these projectiles were smuggled in under
Likud governments, that is to say on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s
watch. “Silence is filth” and “give up blood and soul,” wrote Ze’ev
Jabotinsky — (“my teacher and mentor,” Netanyahu calls him) — about this
kind of quiet.
This false quiet on Hezbollah’s part
doesn’t stem (solely) from Israeli deterrence; it is aimed at allowing the
organization to complete its mission undisturbed: that is, to place in
Lebanon strategic weapons aimed at Israel’s inhabitants and wait for the
order.
Hezbollah rightly assumes that Israel,
unlike it, would never indiscriminately hit a civilian population, certainly
not in Lebanon, and would never “send Lebanon back to the Stone Age.”
In addition to Israel’s natural reluctance
to commit such acts, Lebanon has an international layer of defense that
falsely distinguishes between the country of Lebanon, which is ostensibly
innocent of malicious intent, and Hezbollah, before which the state is
helpless.
Hezbollah’s assumption proved Israel’s
policy of containment has turned its citizens into the hostages of a cruel,
unconstrained terror organization that is operated by a power filled with
hatred for Jews which openly threatens to destroy the Jewish state with
impunity. The sporadic bombardments in Syria of Iranian convoys carrying
rockets to Lebanon are just pyrotechnics. They destroy scores of rockets,
while hundreds and thousands continue to reach Hezbollah.
Israeli army headquarters is ready for
D-Day, but refuses to admit, even to itself, the consequences of restraint:
The longer the decision is delayed, the higher and more painful the price
will be. And if we also “grant” our enemy the “right” of first strike, as is
our wont, the price will be unbearable. What would a counterstrike achieve?
After all, Israel has still not recovered from the national trauma of the
1973 Yom Kippur War.
The Israeli government, preferring a
sit-and-do-nothing policy — apart from an occasional slap here and there —
has not gotten any closer to peace. On the contrary, its containment policy
has allowed Iran and Hezbollah to prepare for war.
The moderate, cautious and defensive
general staff — which during the past three wars in the Gaza Strip did not
even pursue a victory — is a partner to this historical and strategic
failure. Only recently, after a critical delay, were there signs of a change
in direction. Statesmen and military figures are beginning to realize that
the price of “and the land had rest [supposedly]” could exact a bloody price
that the nation cannot endure. In such circumstances, everyone among us who
is trying to block the measures that are necessary to avoid another national
trauma by calling such steps “a war of choice” is making a bitter mistake.
If their opposition is accepted, they and those they influence are liable to
cause the nation an eternal tragedy.
https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/a-war-of-no-choice-for-israel-in-lebanon-1.5784461?utm_campaign=newsletter-daily&utm_medium=email&utm_source=smartfocus&utm_content=%2Fopinion%2Fa-war-of-no-choice-for-israel-in-lebanon-1.5784461
Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
February 01-02/18
Iran Admits to Backing Terrorism
Asharq Al-Awsat/February 01/18/The top adviser to Iran’s supreme leader Ali
Khamenei said on Thursday the country's leadership had no intention “to
abandon” its support for Lebanon’s “Hezbollah,” the Syrian regime and Houthi
insurgents in Yemen. "Iran's influence in the region is inevitable and to
remain a key player in the region, this influence will continue," the
adviser, Ali Akbar Velayati, was quoted by Fars news agency as saying. Iran
backs head of the Syrian regime Bashar al-Assad, Houthi rebels and “Hezbollah.”US
President Donald Trump, who sees Iran as a rising threat to regional
stability in the Middle East, has pledged to curb Tehran’s attempts to
extend its influence in the region.
Trump Zeroes in on Iran’s
Threats
Asharq Al-Awsat/February 01/18/President Donald Trump has summoned the
country to a "new American moment" of unity in his first State of the Union
and warned of the dangers from "rogue regimes," like Iran and North Korea.
Trump's address Tuesday night blended self-congratulation and calls for
optimism amid a growing economy with ominous warnings about deadly gangs,
the scourge of drugs and violent immigrants living in the United States
illegally. He also spoke forebodingly of catastrophic dangers from abroad,
warning that North Korea would "very soon" threaten the United States with
nuclear-tipped missiles. “Around the world, we face rogue regimes, terrorist
groups,” the president said. He also upped the ante in his stand-off with
Iran, vowing US support for street protests against Tehran's regime. "When
the people of Iran rose up against the crimes of their corrupt dictatorship,
I did not stay silent," Trump declared. "America stands with the people of
Iran in their courageous struggle for freedom," he promised, to applause
from assembled lawmakers. “I am asking the Congress to address the
fundamental flaws in the terrible Iran nuclear deal,” he added. The
president also highlighted gains made against ISIS in Iraq and Syria, while
warning that "there is much more work to be done" in the war against the
militants.
New protests erupt across cities and towns in Iran
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/February 02/2018/Protests have erupted once
again in scores of Iranian cities and towns on Thursday, according to the
network of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (MEK). According to
the MEK Young people chanted “death to the dictator” and “death to Khamenei”
in Isfahan while people gathered in Enghelab (revolution) Square, and Azadi
(freedom) square in the western city of Sanandaj and chanted “death to
dictator.”Protesters clashed with State Security Forces (SSF) and set an SSF
kiosk on fire, the MEK said. Authorities tried to disrupt the Internet
connection in the city but clashes continued. Water cannons to disperse the
crowd in Sanandaj. In Kermanshah a woman reportedly started the protests.
“Death to Khamenei” was chanted when plain-clothed security officers began
arresting protesters. Anti-riot forces who arrested 7 protesters in
Kermanshah, were overrun by protesters forcing them to release the arrested,
the MEK said. In Tuyserkan at Hamedan province, Zarin Shahr at Isfahan
province and Rasht in northern Iran clashes between people and security
forces also erupted. Despite the cold weather in Zarin Shahr and heavy
presence of security forces, an anti-regime gathering took place at the main
mosque of Masjed Azam where people chanted “Death to Khomeini, death to
Khamenei”.
US may use force after Syria found to have developed
new chemical weapons
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English /February 01/2018/The Trump administration
says that they reserve right to take military action against the Syrian
government if needed to prevent or deter use of chemical weapons. Senior
officials said that the recent chemical attacks in Syria suggest Assad’s
forces may be developing new weapons. The characteristics of recent alleged
attacks suggest Syria is producing chemical weapons despite a 2013 deal to
destroy its program. The officials say it's "highly likely" that Syria kept
a stockpile of weapons. The officials also say Syria may be making new kinds
of weapons, either to improve their military capability or to escape
international accountability. The officials also say the Islamic State group
keeps using chemical weapons such as sulfur mustard and chlorine. The
officials say the militants are using shells or improvised explosive devices
to deliver the chemicals.
The officials weren't authorized to discuss the assessment on the record and
briefed reporters on condition of anonymity. (With The Associated Press and
Reuters)
Syrian Democratic Forces: 15 Turkish troops killed in
attack north of Afrin
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/February 01/2018/The Syrian Democratic
Forces’ media center said its members carried out an attack against Turkish
troops in the town of Buki, north of Afrin, and killed 15 soldiers and
injured others.It added that they launched another attack on the town of
Khalil and killed at least three Turkish soldiers and destroyed two vehicles
loaded with explosives. Neither Turkey nor any other Syrian opposition group
confirmed these reports. Meanwhile, Turkish fighters shelled the People’s
Protection Units in Dermak Mountain in Afrin, the Anadolu Agency reported.
The Turkish army continues to bring reinforcements to its units that are
deployed on the borders with Syria. Turkish army forces and Free Syrian Army
troops also seized control of the Ayn Batman Mountain, in northeast Afrin,
of the Qorna Mountain and of the town of Bak Obasi.
Syrian opposition: Transitional period needed in Syria
led by governing body
Staff Writer, Al Arabiya English /February 01/ 2018/Syria’s High
Negotiations Commission called for a transitional period led by a
transitional governing body with executive power, stressing the importance
of finding a comprehensive solution to the Syrian crisis. “We will continue
to work in this spirit for a democratic State and the eradication of
terrorism,” the commission’s head, Naser al-Hariri, said in a press
conference in Istanbul on Thursday. He added that any dialogue between the
factions of the Syrian people must be at their will, and that “the dialogue
must be away from the criminals and the regime of tyranny, not for its
benefit.”He said that the opposition is ready and willing to discuss all
issues related to UN resolution 2254 which calls for a ceasefire and
political settlement in Syria. Hariri also welcomed statements made by
Stefan De Mistura in the Sochi talks, saying that the outputs of the Sochi
conference should be delivered to the UN and be in line with international
resolutions. He added that the commission did not officially participate in
Sochi, but some opposition individuals participated at their own personal
will, not in the name of the opposition commission. Hariri considered the
Geneva talks as the main platform to solve the Syrian crisis, and the main
problem was to apply a ceasefire. On Thursday, the UN’s Jan Egeland, the
Special Advisor to the United Nations Special Envoy for Syria, said that the
situation in Idlib is “screaming for a ceasefire” and that Russia, Turkey
and Iran need to ensure that there is a de-escalation. He added that Syrian
government cooperation on humanitarian aid is at an all-time low since the
humanitarian taskforce began in 2015. He said that humanitarian diplomacy in
Syria “seems to be totally impotent.”
Turkey Says France 'Cannot Give Lessons' over Syria
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/February 01/18/Turkey on Thursday told France
to refrain from giving "lessons" over its campaign in Syria, where Ankara is
pressing a fierce offensive against Kurdish militia. The warning from
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu came a day after French President
Emmanuel Macron told Ankara that it would be a "real problem" if its
intervention turned into an outright "invasion". "France cannot give us
lessons on this issue," Cavusoglu told reporters in televised comments. "We
are not France, which occupied Africa," Cavusoglu added, referring to
France's colonial past. Turkey launched an offensive on January 20 against
the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG), with President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan last week threatening to expand the operation, straining relations
with Ankara's NATO allies. Turkey says the YPG is a terror organisation
allied to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). But the United States
has backed the YPG as a key secular ally in the fight against the Islamic
State group. "Unfortunately Europeans are two-faced," Cavusoglu said. He
claimed that European leaders had expressed support for Turkey's campaign in
Syria during talks with Ankara, but that they had changed their stance in
subsequent public comments. Reacting to Macron's remarks, Turkish Prime
Minister Binali Yildirim said on Wednesday that any suggestion that Ankara
had broader designs in Syria, beyond pushing the YPG back from the border,
was "totally wrong". "The whole world knows, or should know, that Turkey is
not engaged in an invasion," he said, comparing Ankara's operation "Olive
Branch" with a seven-month cross-border offensive in 2016/2017 against both
Kurdish militia and IS extremists.
Polish Senate passes Holocaust bill slammed by Israel
AFP, Warsaw/February 01/18/Poland’s senate on Thursday passed a
controversial Holocaust bill, which was designed to defend the country’s
image abroad but has instead sparked a diplomatic row with Israel. The bill,
which sets fines or a maximum three-year jail term for anyone who refers to
Nazi German death camps as Polish or accuses Poland of complicity in the
Third Reich’s crimes, was approved by 57 votes to 23 in the upper house of
parliament, with two abstentions. Israel had earlier called for the bill to
be dropped, seeing one of its provisions as an attempt to deny Polish
involvement in Nazi Germany’s extermination of Jews. “We have no tolerance
for the distortion of the truth and rewriting history or denying the
Holocaust,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday. The lower
house of parliament, which like the senate is controlled by the governing
right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party, had passed the bill on Friday --
triggering the protest from abroad. Knesset lawmakers penned a proposed bill
of their own Wednesday amending Israel’s law regarding Holocaust denial, so
that diminishing or denying the role of those who aided the Nazis in crimes
against Jews would be punishable with jail.
Before the vote on the Polish bill, US State Department spokeswoman Heather
Nauert expressed “concern” that “if enacted this draft legislation could
undermine free speech and academic discourse”. “We are also concerned about
the repercussions this draft legislation... could have on Poland’s strategic
interests and relationships -- including with the United States and Israel,”
she added. The bill was approved by 57 votes to 23 in the upper house of
parliament, with two abstentions. (AP)
‘Right to defend’
To take effect, the legislation still needs to be signed by Polish President
Andrzej Duda, who has 21 days to do so. In theory he could veto the bill but
on Monday he said: “We absolutely can’t back down, we have the right to
defend the historical truth.”He added that he was “flabbergasted” by
Israel’s “violent and very unfavorable reaction”. Poland was attacked and
occupied by Nazi Germany in World War II, losing six million of its citizens
including three million Jews.
Muslim World League: Holocaust is a crime that no one can deny or undermine
Helping Jews, even offering them a glass of water, was punishable by death
in occupied Poland. More than 6,700 Poles -- outnumbering any other
nationality -- have been honored as “Righteous Among the Nations”, a title
given to non-Jews who stood up to the Nazis, by Jerusalem’s Holocaust
memorial Yad Vashem. Yad Vashem said it opposes the Polish bill, as it “is
liable to blur the historical truths regarding the assistance the Germans
received from the Polish population during the Holocaust”. But it added that
to refer to the extermination camps the Nazis built in Poland as Polish is
“a historical misrepresentation”. American Jewish Committee CEO David Harris
urged Polish leaders “to withdraw the legislation and focus on education,
not criminalization, about inaccurate and harmful speech”.
Jordan cuts ties with North Korea “in line with the policies of its allies”
AFP, Amman Thursday/February 01/2018/US ally Jordan has cut diplomatic ties
with North Korea “in line with the policies of its allies”, a government
source said on Thursday. The decision comes months after similar moves by
Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, who are also key regional allies of the
United States. In November, the US called on all countries to cut off trade
and diplomatic ties with North Korea after it carried out a series of
weapons test, including intercontinental ballistic missiles that brought the
US mainland into range. The Jordanian government source acknowledged that
relations between Pyongyang and Amman were “never very strong” but said ties
were cut “in line with the policies of Jordan’s allies”. The decision was
ratified by a royal decree, according to the government’s website. Jordan is
a key recipient of American financial and military aid. Last year, the
United States allocated $470 million to Jordan’s army and air force, the
American embassy said. Three years ago, Washington said it would increase
overall US assistance to Jordan from $660 million to $1 billion annually for
between 2015 and 2017. In October the United Arab Emirates said it had
stopped issuing visas to North Korean nationals and downgraded relations
with Pyongyang, following similar moves by Qatar and Kuwait.
Nikki Haley: UN list of firms linked to Israeli
settlements a ‘waste of time’
AFP, United Nations/February 01/2018/US Ambassador Nikki Haley on Wednesday
slammed a UN report on 206 companies with ties to Israeli settlements as “a
waste of time and resources” that showed an “anti-Israeli obsession.”The
office of the UN high commissioner for human rights released the report that
did not name the companies but could pave the way to a “blacklist” of
businesses that Israeli officials fear would be targeted for an
international boycott. “This whole issue is outside the bounds of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights office’s mandate and is a waste of time and
resources,” Haley said in a statement. The report was in response to a
resolution adopted in 2016 by the UN Human Rights Council that called for
the creation of database of all companies doing business with the Israeli
settlements, which the United Nations considers illegal under international
law. “While we note that they wisely refrained from listing individual
companies, the fact that the report was issued at all is yet another
reminder of the Council’s anti-Israel obsession,” said Haley.
Anti-Israel bias
“The United States will continue to
aggressively push back against the anti-Israel bias, and advance badly
needed reforms of the Council,” she added.
Of the 206 companies under review, 143 are based in Israel or in the
settlements, 22 in the United States, seven in Germany, five in the
Netherlands and four in France. The report had been due to be released last
year but was repeatedly delayed. Israel’s UN Ambassador Danny Danon strongly
condemned the report, calling it a “shameful act, which will serve as a
stain on the UNHRC forever.” “We will continue to act with our allies and
use all the means at our disposal to stop the publication of this
disgraceful blacklist,” he vowed. Israeli settlements are seen as illegal
under international law and a major obstacle to peace as they are built on
land the Palestinians see as part of their future state.
Macron Focuses on
Democracy, Economy in Tunisia Visit
Tunis - Al Munji Al Saidani/Asharq Al-Awsat/February 01/18/French President
Emmanuel Macron arrived in Tunisia on Wednesday to “support the democratic
transition” of the country, which is weakened by economic and social
problems. Macron landed in Tunis a few weeks after demonstrations, some of
which escalated into night riots, rocked several Tunisian cities. He is
scheduled to sign a series of economic, security, academic and cultural
agreements during talks with President Beji Caid Essebsi and Prime Minister
Youssef Chahed. “France must support the young Tunisian democracy”, Chahed
stressed in remarks to France 24. “We are a true democracy, with a freedom
of press, freedom of speech, and you won’t find that in many countries.” In
an interview with the French-speaking daily La Presse, Macron said he would
announce during his visit “an additional effort in ... the reduction of
inequalities and unemployment of youth, and increased investment in future
sectors, including renewable energies and new technologies.” While praising
the “positive signals” sent by the government, he said that “the Tunisian
state also has reforms to carry out so that Tunisia becomes a more
attractive destination for foreign investments.”In his visit to Tunisia,
which follows trips to Morocco in June and Algeria in December, the French
President is accompanied by his wife Brigitte along with several officials
including Minister of Foreign Affairs Jean-Yves Le Drian, Minister of
Education Jean-Michel Blanquer, and businessmen like Stéphane Richard and
Xavier Niel. A call is launched to French companies to “reinvest massively
in Tunisia,” said the Elysee. “The Tunisian government wants to take
advantage of this visit to find a solution to the debt of Tunisia to
France,” asserted the Tunisian newspaper, Assabah, referring to the
conversion of 30 million euros of debt into investment projects, an amount
that Paris has not confirmed, according to AFP. The outstanding Tunisian
public debt to France amounted to 2.380 billion dinars, or about 800 million
euros as of December 31, 2016, according to Tunisia. An agreement will also
be signed to better collaborate in the fight against terrorism while the
state of emergency remains in force in Tunisia two years after being
instituted in the wake of bloody terrorist attacks.
Files of 10 Terrorists Transferred to Egypt's Grand Mufti in Preparation for
their Execution
Cairo - Walid Abdul Rahman/Asharq Al-Awsat/February 01/18/Giza Criminal
Court has referred Wednesday the case of 10 terrorists to the Grand Mufti of
Egypt for a consultative non-binding opinion on whether they can be
executed, as per Egypt’s penal code. The court charged them with joining an
outlawed group that aims to obstruct state institutions from carrying out
their duties, as well as attacking state institutions from 2013 to March
2015. They were also charged with targeting Christians in terrorist attacks,
destabilizing society and planning to attack police and military personnel.
The court set the verdict on March 10 to sentence the 10 accused in addition
to five others on the same case. The case involved 16 accused, but one died
during the trial. Notably, the verdict can be appealed, and the judge can
also rule independently of the Mufti. On the other hand, the Public
Prosecution in Suez decided to renew the detention of elements from ISIS
cell, which have been in prison for 45 days on pending investigations, and
were accused of planning to carry out terrorist attacks. The National
Security Service in Suez arrested the members of the cell and seized
documents confirming their links with ISIS and their preparation to carry
out terrorist operations. Meanwhile, an Egyptian court on Wednesday gave 15
Muslim people one-year suspended jail sentences over a December attack on an
unlicensed Coptic Church in a village south of Cairo. The Giza misdemeanor
court also fined the owner of the building, a Christian man, 360,000
Egyptian pounds ($20,500) for turning his residency into a church without a
license. Dozens of Muslims from the village of Kafr al-Waslin attacked the
church after Friday prayers on Dec. 22, smashing windows and breaking
everything inside. The prosecution had charged the defendants with inciting
sectarian strife, damaging national unity, showing force and destroying
private properties.
Tariq Ramadan Remained in
Custody over Rape Allegations
Paris - Asharq Al-Awsat/February 01/18/Academic Tariq Ramadan, grandson of
the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood movement in Egypt, remained in custody
in Paris on Thursday over rape allegations. Ramadan was taken into custody
by French police following accusations of rape, a judicial source said on
Wednesday. The source said a preliminary investigation was opened in October
after two complaints were filed against Ramadan claiming he violently
attacked them. Ramadan denies allegations that he raped two women last year
as feminist activist Henda Ayari said she was assaulted by him in a Paris
hotel room in 2012. The second woman, name undisclosed, reported Ramadan to
police alleging that he had raped and violently assaulted her in a hotel
room in Lyon in 2009. Ayari, 40, former salafist, detailed the alleged
attack in her book, "I Chose to Be Free," published in France in November
2016, but gave her attacker a false name. However, last October and after
the sexual scandals and #MeToo campaign, Ayari named the attacker as Ramadan
and made a formal police complaint. On his Facebook page on Oct. 28, Ramadan
described the allegations as a "campaign of lies" carried out by his "longtime
enemie.""It is sad to see our opponents reduced to supporting deception….
The law must now speak, my lawyer is in charge of this file. We expect a
long and bitter fight. I am serene and determined," he added. In November,
Oxford University announced that Ramadan, 55, took a leave of absence from
his post as professor of contemporary Islamic studies "by mutual agreement".
Ramadan said in a statement in November: “Contrary to reports in the
French-language press, I have taken leave of absence upon mutual agreement
with Oxford University, which will permit me to devote my energies to my
defence while respecting students’ need for a calm academic environment.”
Saudi-UAE Military,
Security Delegation in Aden
Asharq Al-Awsat/February 01/18/A high-ranking military and security
delegation from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates has stressed the
importance of abiding by a ceasefire decision in the southwestern Yemeni
city of Aden. The delegation, which arrived in Aden on Wednesday night,
highlighted the need to abide by the ceasefire decision of the Arab
Coalition to return to normalcy, the UAE's official WAM news agency reported
on Thursday. The delegation called for restoring security and stability,
providing services to citizens and continuing with re-development as the
situation was before the latest events. It also called for “refocusing
efforts on the front lines against the Houthis", saying what had happened
did not serve the task of legitimacy and the Coalition in completing the
liberation of the Yemeni territories, WAM reported. The Coalition delegation
toured the streets of Aden to ensure the return of normalcy and security to
the interim capital. The members of the delegation stressed the unity of the
position of Saudi Arabia and the UAE, saying they will support Yemen until
the full liberation of its territories, noting that the mission of the
Coalition is to restore legitimacy, security and stability to Yemen.
Statement by Canadian
Foreign Affairs Minister on escalation of violence in Afrin, Syria
February 1, 2018 -
Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Honourable Chrystia Freeland, Minister of Foreign Affairs, today issued
the following statement on the security situation in Afrin, Syria:
“Canada is deeply concerned by the escalation of hostilities in northwest
Syria, and is closely monitoring the situation, including its impact on
civilians.
“Canada recognizes Turkey’s legitimate security concerns. However, we urge
restraint and call for every possible effort to be made to protect civilians
and fully respect international humanitarian law.
“Our focus must continue to be on defeating Daesh. This requires a
collective and concerted effort with all our friends and allies in the
region, whose roles and sacrifices in attaining this common objective we
recognize and value immensely.”
950 Miners
Trapped in S. Africa after Power Outage
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/February 01/18/About 950 gold
miners were stuck underground in South Africa on Thursday after a power cut,
the mine's owner said, though the workers were not reported to be in
immediate danger. The Sibanye-Stillwater mining company said a massive power
outage had prevented lifts from bringing the night shift to the surface at
the Beatrix gold mine, near the central city of Welkom. "We sent rescue
teams down, accounted for all the people and obviously are trying to get
them out of there as soon as possible," James Wellsted, spokesman for
Sibanye-Stillwater, told ENCA television. "All employees appear to be fine.
We are supplying food and water," Wellsted added in a telephone message to
AFP. About 65 people were rescued during the day, with 950 remaining trapped
underground by early evening, the company said. Wellsted said that engineers
were struggling to get emergency generators to operate and re-start the
lifts. "We are busy working on that issue at the moment," he added. The
Beatrix mine is in Free State province, 290 kilometers (180 miles) southwest
of Johannesburg.
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis &
editorials from miscellaneous sources published on February 01-02/18
With Nuclear Weapons, We’re Getting Too Comfortable
Thinking the Unthinkable
Richard A. Clarke and Steven Andreasen/The Washington Post/February 01/18
A dangerous disconnect is emerging between the horrific impacts of even the
limited use of nuclear weapons, and leaders and policymakers who seem intent on
threatening nuclear use in an ever-expanding range of scenarios. If this
continues, the risk that a nuclear weapon will be used for the first time in
more than 70 years — deliberately or otherwise — will grow. We must return to a
more sober dialogue and approach to policy.
The Trump administration appears poised to expand the circumstances under which
the United States might use nuclear weapons, including in response to a
cyberattack. The time when leaders and policymakers in the United States, Russia
and other countries had anything close to a personal connection with the effects
of even a single nuclear weapon is becoming more distant. Memories of a
smoldering Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the stark fear generated by the Cuban missile
crisis or the massive protests sparked in the early 1980s by the deployment of
US and Soviet intermediate-range nuclear missiles in Europe no longer drive or
even inform policy. As former secretary of state George P. Shultz told Congress
last week, “I fear people have lost that sense of dread.”
When nuclear theory or war-gaming moved from the Pentagon to the White House
during the Cold War, it was more often than not met by a skeptical president and
civilian leadership, who rightly recoiled from risking nuclear catastrophe. That
is not the case now.
Five years ago, the Pentagon’s Defense Science Board published a report equating
the impact of Chinese and Russian capabilities to launch an “existential cyber
attack” against the United States with the impact of a nuclear attack — and
recommended that the United States be prepared to threaten the use of nuclear
weapons to deter cyberattacks. When the board’s recommendation was exposed to
the light of day by the two of us and others in 2013, it was publicly rebuked
and, as a matter of policy, quietly discarded.
But just last month, the board’s proposal became US policy. In December, the
Trump administration’s National Security Strategy quietly expanded the role of
nuclear weapons in US defense plans, stating they are “essential” to prevent
“non-nuclear strategic attacks” — i.e., cyberattacks.
This week, the Trump administration is expected to release its “Nuclear Posture
Review.” A leaked pre-decisional draft reaffirms the policy of threatening
nuclear use to prevent cyberattacks, but goes even further — expanding the role
of US forward-deployed nuclear weapons in NATO’s European defenses.
For decades, the United States has been moving to reduce the relevance of
forward-deployed nuclear weapons in Europe, and for good reason: US nuclear
weapons in Europe have virtually no military utility, and their storage at bases
in multiple countries presents a serious security risk. Removing them would
reduce the risk of terrorism and instability, and would free up resources across
NATO for other urgent defense tasks.
Moreover, as NATO has repeatedly stated, “The supreme guarantee of the security
of the Allies is provided by the strategic forces of the Alliance.” With three
nuclearized member states — the United States, Britain and France — NATO has a
robust nuclear deterrent capable of being employed anywhere in defense of NATO
interests.
The Trump Nuclear Posture Review not only rejects this logic, it ties our
forward-deployed forces to NATO’s strategic forces as part of the bloc’s
“supreme guarantee.” So rather than move in the direction of reducing nuclear
risks by removing nuclear weapons from vulnerable sites, we will instead further
cement them in place — when there is ample evidence of terrorist interest in
nuclear facilities and, as is presently true in Turkey, evidence that the
security of US nuclear weapons reportedly stored there can change literally
overnight.
Raising the profile of nuclear weapons in our defense plans comes at a time when
the disastrous consequences of even limited nuclear use is becoming even more
apparent. Alan Robock and his colleagues at Rutgers University — using newly
updated climate models and the much greater computing power now available — have
concluded that even a limited nuclear exchange (50 to 100 weapons) could create
a “mini-nuclear winter” whose effects could last two to three years and create
tens of millions of deaths from starvation because of the collapse of grain
crops brought on by climate change.
Nuclear weapons present a unique threat of national devastation and global
extinction. They are good for only one purpose: deterring nuclear attacks.
Policies equating cyberthreats to nuclear threats, or raising the profile of
nuclear weapons in our conventional defenses, undermine the credibility of
nuclear deterrence by threatening use for lesser contingencies and makes nuclear
use more likely.
The Real Mystery About Low Inflation
Ramesh Ponnuru/Bloomberg/February 01/18
Where’s that inflation we were promised? That’s the question Senators Elizabeth
Warren and Sherrod Brown asked economist Marvin Goodfriend during contentious
hearings over his nomination to the Federal Reserve Board.
In 2011, Goodfriend had said that inflation would grow more severe. But
inflation, as the senators noted, has been relatively low since then.
The Fed says it wants a measure of inflation called the PCE deflator to rise by
2 percent a year. Since the economic recovery began, the measure has almost
always been below that target.
While Goodfriend was particularly vocal, he’s hardly alone in having expected
higher inflation than we have seen. The Fed itself has routinely projected that
inflation will soon hit the 2 percent target. It keeps moving the date we are
going to hit it into the future.
A lot of financial commentary has puzzled over the “mystery of the missing
inflation.”
Unemployment is low, interest rates are low, and during the early years of the
recovery the Fed made large-scale asset purchases to ease credit. Many people
associate each of these things with rising inflation. Yet it keeps failing to
materialize.
Low inflation may sound like a happy surprise, but economists express concern
about it for a number of reasons. Most of all, they worry that if the Fed has
lost the ability to raise the inflation rate, it may not be able to take
effective action to counter the next recession.
There are convincing explanations for the Fed’s failure to hit its 2 percent
target: a complicated one and a simple one.
The complicated one observes that monetary policy has not been as accommodative
as it might seem. Low interest rates have reflected a low natural rate of
interest more than they have reflected Fed easing. The asset purchases were
advertised and understood to be temporary, blunting their inflationary impact.
Perhaps most important, the Fed has been paying banks interest on excess
reserves -- IOER -- that is above the corresponding market interest rate.
George Selgin, a monetary economist at the libertarian Cato Institute, explained
the effects of this last policy in recent congressional testimony:
By keeping its IOER rate above corresponding market interest rates, as it has
done since November 2008, the Fed has prevented additions to the supply of bank
reserves from resulting in any general increases in the supply of credit.
Instead, increases in total bank reserves were matched by roughly equal changes
in banks’ excess reserve holdings.
Even during the early years of the recovery, the Fed’s policies have worked at
cross purposes with each other, with the interest on excess reserves
counteracting the Fed’s asset purchases.
The deeper explanation for why the Fed hasn’t hit its target is the simpler one:
It doesn’t really want to hit it. Or, at least, it doesn’t want to hit it as
much as it wants other things.
It has become easier to see this in recent years, as the Fed has taken multiple
steps that unequivocally reduce inflation. From December 2015 onward, the Fed
has raised the federal funds rate five times, and it was talking about raising
it long before it acted. The Fed has also slowly moved to reduce its asset
holdings. The Fed wouldn’t have done either of these things if higher inflation
were its top priority.
It has given other goals – such as “normalizing” interest rates by bringing them
closer to historical averages – precedence over higher inflation. And it has
decided that it would rather keep paying interest on excess reserves, a policy
that it believes gives it more control over interest rates, than lower its
payments in a way that might increase inflation. Goodfriend overestimated how
inflationary the Fed was willing to be. So have a lot of other people. The real
mystery, at this point, is why so many people find low inflation mysterious. The
Fed isn’t hitting its target because it doesn’t take its target seriously.
The World Bank Is Searching for Meaning
Noah Smith/The Bloomberg/February 01/18
Paul Romer’s departure last week as chief economist of the World Bank isn’t an
event about just one man and his former job. His exit was undoubtedly influenced
by individual factors, but it also illustrates broad challenges for the Bank as
an institution.
Romer is, to put it bluntly, a contentious man. A celebrated researcher of
economic growth, he has spent years vigorously attacking the ideas of his
doctoral adviser, macroeconomist Robert Lucas, and the very field of
macroeconomics itself. At the World Bank, his tenure has been marked by heated
disputes, including one over how many times the word “and” should be used in
official communications.
That sort of approach can be very useful in an academic setting. Indeed, many of
Romer’s criticisms of macroeconomics were truths that others in the field had
been afraid to speak (though I’m not so sure about his grammatical advice). But
when it comes to navigating the complex bureaucracy of an institution like the
World Bank, perfectionism, bluntness and prickly precision are not necessarily
the most endearing traits.
But the bigger question concerns the Bank itself. The immediate cause of Romer’s
departure probably had to do with a public clash over the widely cited Ease of
Doing Business rankings. This index, which the World Bank updates frequently, is
intended to measure how easy it is to start a business in a particular country.
An accommodating business environment is assumed -- both by the Bank and by many
economists -- to be a good thing. It’s believed to result in more creative
destruction -- the constant churning of industries and businesses that improves
the economy through competition that eliminates inefficient producers. It also
reduces monopoly power, by making it easier for new companies to enter a market
and compete.
That’s the abstract theory, anyway. In reality, the ease of doing business is
hard to measure -- the Bank’s criteria might not capture the factors that are
most important in encouraging business dynamism, or the rankings might weight
the factors incorrectly. Rich countries tend to be ranked higher, but this might
just be because countries make it easier to do business once they get rich.
Romer made headlines earlier this month when, speaking to reporters from the
Wall Street Journal, he accused the Bank of changing its rankings unfairly.
Romer noticed that changes in the factors used to construct the index had the
effect of raising Chile’s ranking under conservative governments and lowering it
under socialist ones. Romer later clarified that he didn’t mean to assert that
politics was a factor in the Bank’s decisions, but nevertheless the damage to
the reputation of the rankings, and of the Bank itself, could be long-lasting.
Though Romer’s tenure as chief economist had been marked by many clashes, this
battle was probably the last straw.
Political motivations or no, however, the overall usefulness of the Ease of
Doing Business rankings is highly questionable. Many free-market enthusiasts,
such as John Cochrane of the Hoover Institution, believe that if countries up
their position in the World Bank’s rankings, growth will follow as a matter of
course. But the evidence says otherwise. In 2016, economics student and blogger
Evan Soltas measured whether large increases in a country’s position in the
rankings were followed by growth. He found no measurable effect, even in the
long term, and that taking the World Bank’s advice on structural issues seems to
do very little if anything for economic growth.
If Soltas’s result holds -- and given the poor performance of other rankings of
business conditions, it seems likely it will -- it means that the World Bank has
been recommending policies based more on faith and assumptions than on real hard
evidence. Since countries often work hard to improve their position in the
rankings, this means that the Bank has probably been squandering its policy
clout. And if reforms intended to climb up the rankings end up making societies
less equal, the Bank could even have been having a negative impact on the
world’s poor. That would be a mistake along the same lines as the one made by
the Bank’s sister organization, the International Monetary Fund, which
recommended fiscal austerity policies that it later admitted had hurt the
countries they were designed to help.
If true, this would be bad for the World Bank, which has been suffering an
identity crisis in recent years. Global growth means that few countries need or
want the Bank’s development loans, leaving it searching for a reason to continue
existing. Many had envisioned the Bank, which employs a large number of
academically trained economists, functioning as a think tank to advise countries
on how to boost growth. No one needs or wants a think tank that is known for
giving bad advice.
So although Romer’s exit will take the World Bank out of the headlines for a
while, the deeper questions about its future remain. Its problems are much
bigger than one contentious chief economist.
The 'Goodness' of Migrants: When Feelings Trump Facts
Douglas Murray/Gatestone Institute/February 01/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/11817/migrants-goodness-facts
No one asked what in the hearts of the migrants of Calais is so very "good", and
what "goodness" is so lacking in the hearts of the British people that it needs
topping-up from the camps of Calais.
It is worth reflecting on just two recent terrorist plots, by people who did not
bring only "goodness" when they came from Calais.
The question fails to get asked: "What exactly did we gain from their presence
in our country? And what exactly was the 'goodness' that you think they
brought?"
In Western Europe, there is still only an overwhelming political and social
price a price to pay for appearing to be against mass immigration. Public
opinion polls may consistently show the public to be opposed to mass migration.
But in public, it remains most acceptable, and indeed commonplace, to continue
to utter bromides about the benefits that migration brings, including the
advantages from any and all illegal immigration.
Recently on the BBC's main political discussion programme, Question Time, the
panel were asked about immigration and, as so often in the British immigration
debate, the subject of the situation in Calais, France came up. Over recent
years Calais has repeatedly become the place for illegal camps of illegal
migrants to congregate, in the hope of moving from France to the UK. Some of
these migrants attack lorries and disable vehicles to try to climb aboard them.
Others attempt other ways to get through the Channel Tunnel, either on a vehicle
or on foot.
A group of migrants gather near a truck depot in Calais, France, on January 19,
2018. Calais is a central hub for illegal migrants to congregate, in the hope of
moving from France to the UK. Some of the migrants attack UK-bound lorries and
disable vehicles, to try to climb aboard them.
Of course, if these people were genuine asylum seekers with genuine asylum
claims, they have already passed through several countries in which they could
and should have claimed asylum. That they are congregating around the entrance
to the Channel Tunnel in Calais is a demonstration not that they are legitimate
asylum seekers in search of safety, but illegal migrants seeking to get into
Britain.
Like everything else in the immigration debate, and often life, feelings most of
the time trump facts. The discussion on the BBC's Question Time was, in that
sense, utterly typical. One of the guests on the panel was the Hollywood
scriptwriter Dustin Lance Black. A social and political liberal, Black used his
time there to make one extraordinary claim in particular:
"Understand that some of these people who are in Calais trying to get here.
They're not coming to try and steal from you or to ruin your culture. They're
coming here because you're a giant, beautiful beacon of hope for them. And I
hope that the government finds it in their heart to spend some of that money to
make sure that their conditions are liveable there and to let some of them in,
to share their goodness with your greatness."
This speech was greeted with a roar of applause from the audience and audible
approval from other members of the panel including the Conservative cabinet
minister, Margot James. No one asked what there is in the hearts of the migrants
of Calais that is so very "good", and what "goodness" is so lacking in the
hearts of the British people that it needs topping-up from the camps of Calais.
So even in a society as self-delusional and self-forgetting as modern Britain,
it is worth reflecting on just two recent cases of people who did not bring only
"goodness" when they came from Calais.
At the beginning of January, Munir Mohammed of Derby was convicted of an
attempted terrorist attack. It is believed that Mohammed and two collaborators
were planning a Christmas terrorism spectacular involving a bomb attack.
Mohammed was apparently only days away from achieving his aims when he was
arrested by the British police. And where was Mohammed from? Born in Eritrea, he
grew up in neighbouring Sudan. In June 2013, he and his pregnant wife left for
Europe and took the now traditional route into Turkey and from there into Europe
via the Greek island of Samos. Somewhere on the route from Athens through the
Balkans, his wife lost her baby and he promptly dumped her.
By January 2014, Mohammed had reached France and from there he managed to pay a
smuggling gang to get him through the Channel Tunnel. He successfully hid in a
lorry in order to reach the UK, and got out of the lorry on the motorway service
station on the M1. After applying for asylum, he got caught in the long backlog
of cases, met a new girlfriend, and with her and another accomplice plotted to
carry out a mass casualty terrorist attack that was only very narrowly averted.
Also this January, the British courts saw 18-year-old Ahmed Hassan Mohammed Ali.
Born in Iraq, he came to the UK illegally via Calais in 2015. He now stands
charged with leaving a bomb on a London Underground train at Parsons Green tube
station last September during the morning rush hour. The detonating part of the
device went off, causing minor burns to some of the passengers and leading to a
stampede in which a number of schoolchildren on the train were hurt.
Fortunately, however, the device itself failed to go off, so a bomb that would
have led to dozens of body bags being needed again in London resulted instead
only in minor injuries and a lot of terrified children.
Ahmed Hassan Mohammed Ali and Munir Mohammed are both migrants from Calais. Both
were in Britain illegally. Still, the question fails to get asked of people such
as Dustin Lance Black: "What exactly did we gain from their presence in our
country? And what exactly was the 'goodness' that you think they brought?" That
such people would probably have no answer to this question is one thing. That so
few people would even bother to ask such questions publicly is another. But one
day they will ask, and with increasing -- and justifiable -- anger.
**Douglas Murray, British author, commentator and public affairs analyst, is
based in London, England. His latest book, an international best-seller, is "The
Strange Death of Europe: Immigration, Identity, Islam."
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Trump's SOTU Hit the Right Foreign Policy Notes - Now Comes
the Hard Part
John R. Bolton/Gatestone Institute/February 01/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/11819/trump-sotu
President Trump's first State of the Union address was not heavy on national
security issues. It did, however, make one critical point: In reviewing the
international achievements of his first year in office, Trump was abundantly
clear that the Obama era is over. Primarily retrospective assessments like
Trump's are perfectly legitimate for a president finishing his initial year,
especially given what his policies are replacing.
Gone was President Obama's self-congratulatory moral posturing, replaced by a
concrete list of accomplishments that will inevitably increase the power of
America's presence in the world. Trump's policy is not only not isolationist —
as many of his opponents (and a few misguided supporters) contend — his pursuit
of Ronald Reagan's "peace through strength" approach actually demonstrates that
Obama's detached, ethereal retreat from American assertiveness internationally
amounted to the real isolationism.
Donald Trump's 2018 State of the Union address. (Image source: The White House)
Most importantly, Trump again committed to palpably more robust military budgets
and an end to the budget-sequester mechanism, the worst political mistake made
by Republicans in Congress in living memory. Sequestration procedures were
liberal dreams come true, forcing wasteful increases in domestic programs in
order to obtain critical military funding. The sooner this whole embarrassing
exercise is behind us, the better.
As Secretary of Defense James Mattis frequently points out, harking back to
Jeane Kirkpatrick's famous comment, there cannot be an adequate American foreign
policy without an adequate defense policy.
Trump chose to single out the need "to modernize and rebuild our nuclear
arsenal," the bedrock of America's deterrence capabilities. Indeed, Trump went
on, quite rightly, to cast doubt on the "Global Zero" notion of actively working
to eliminate all nuclear weapons. For many of those who pursue "Global Zero,"
the real target is not rogue states like Iran or North Korea, or strategic
threats like Russia or China, but the United States itself. Trump basically said
in response, "When the lions lie down with the lambs, call me." Just so.
I wish the president had also stressed the profound need to rapidly scale up our
national missile defense capabilities, a program that was all but eviscerated
during the Obama administration. Indeed, we must devote far more attention to
capabilities beyond the original Bush program, which focused on addressing the
relatively limited threats of the rogue states, which might have the capability
to launch handfuls rather than hundreds of ballistic missiles at American
targets. It is past time to return to Reagan's original vision of "strategic
defense," so that the United States can have adequate defenses against Russia's
large, newly upgraded and modernized missile arsenals, and also against China's
rapidly increasing capabilities.
Increasing our defense capabilities is not just important: It is urgent. The
global bills accrued because of failures by prior administrations are coming due
on Trump's watch, underlining the gravity of the international threats facing
the United States. With immediate, continuing threats from international
terrorism and nuclear proliferators like North Korea and Iran, plus strategic
threats from Russia and China, America's agenda is full to overflowing.
On radical Islamic terrorism, Trump could point to the military success against
the ISIS caliphate and new rules of engagement for U.S. forces in Afghanistan,
while recognizing that we remain at risk as long as this dangerous political
ideology persists. There was no better manifestation of the president's
commitment to winning the "long war" than his unequivocal statement that our
terrorist prison at Guantánamo Bay would remain open. Trump thereby emphatically
rejected the Clinton and Obama administrations' "law enforcement" paradigm for
handling terrorism, and embraced the "war paradigm," which brings into play a
different mind set, different national powers and different legal authorities
and constraints.
Trump was very clear that he regards the regimes controlling Iran and North
Korea to be the basic problems, and that nuclear weapons in their hands were
unacceptable, a formulation very close to George W. Bush's admonition that we
could not allow "the world's most dangerous weapons" to fall into the hands of
"the world's most dangerous leaders." Trump did not explicitly call for regime
change in Tehran and Pyongyang, but he came close enough that fire bells should
be ringing in the night in both Iran and North Korea. U.S. actions, and those of
other like-minded countries, should now follow, to make it clear that the way to
minimize the chances for the use of force against the rogue states' nuclear
programs is to get new regimes that renounce the existing programs, and quickly
dismantle them.
Trump cited both Russia and China as "rivals... that challenge our interests,
our economy and our values," thereby giving the lie (yet again) to those who say
he is somehow blind to the Russian threat. While the president's comments on
China focused primarily on economic and trade issues, there is no doubt he
understands the strategic nature of the Chinese challenge as well.
In the days following this well-received State of the Union, Trump must now
develop a comprehensive series of policies for dealing with the due bills now
cascading across his desk. Most immediately, the administration must decide on
what it is prepared to do to ensure that, as Trump said to the United Nations
General Assembly in September, denuclearization is the only way forward for
North Korea and Iran. Preventing nuclear-capable rogue states (not accepting
them, as Obama's national security adviser, Susan Rice, said she was prepared to
do) is clearly the right outcome.
What Trump must reject, immediately, is what we have been doing for years, and
which has manifestly failed. In the military context, Gian Gentile has described
what he calls "a strategy of tactics," which purports to be a strategy but is
not one in fact. Under a nonproliferation "strategy of tactics," we have
aimlessly tried a little of this, then a little of that, hoping that something
would work out. It hasn't. And there is not time for persisting in this failed
approach.
Understandably, Trump may not have wanted to address these complex and dangerous
issues in what was already a longer-than-average State of the Union. Fair
enough, but the hard analysis and planning, and the even harder decisions, are
coming very soon.
*John R. Bolton, former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, is Chairman of
Gatestone Institute, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and
author of "Surrender Is Not an Option: Defending America at the United Nations
and Abroad".
*This article first appeared in The Hill and is reprinted here with the kind
permission of the author.
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
The "Fake News" Crusade to "Protect" You from Free Speech
Robbie Travers/Gatestone Institute/February 01/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/11821/fake-news-free-speech
Even if judgements against some of these websites might be overturned in courts,
doing so is clearly an enormous financial burden, as the would-be censors
doubtless know. But what a handy way not to have one's policies questioned --
especially, one assumes, during elections.
Attempts to censor "competing narratives" is probably just a tip-off that
certain individuals are afraid their political ideas will be unable to withstand
the questions asked or the test of time.
"If a person cannot walk into the middle of the town square and express his or
her views without fear of arrest, imprisonment, or physical harm, then that
person is living in a fear society, not a free society." — Natan Sharansky, The
Case for Democracy.
"If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they
do not want to hear," George Orwell wrote in his ant-totalitarian novel, 1984.
He would probably have frowned upon the latest UK Government blueprint to create
a regulatory agency that will ultimately strangle freedom of expression.
Scrutiny against "Fake News," is undoubtedly a positive development. It means
that at least people are questioning the news they are consuming. Yes, it is a
problem that so much disinformation and misinformation exists. It is, however, a
far bigger problem if they do not. The public's resolve should be that
disinformation is not combated by a regulatory body controlled by Government.
Individual arguments, with evidence, is what belongs in a democracy, which can
only survive if it is a marketplace of ideas.
If having a Government body decide what can and cannot be published – thereby
creating a culture of both official censorship and self-censorship -- is not
enough to concern you, the briefest glance at what this newly created British
body would consider "Fake News" should send you running into the street.
This new UK Government body would deem worthy of censorship "Satire or parody
which means no harm but can fool people". According to these geniuses, satire
and parody are "Fake News."
Satire often relies on mixing believability and absurdity -- not necessarily to
fool people but to point out serious problems in a more approachable way. This
can be done to draw people's attention to take a harder look at what they are
consuming, or to make a wider political point humourously. The idea that
satirical publications would be possibly removed and censored because people
might believe them sounds disingenuous at best, and at worst autocratic.
It is easy to see how Governments might be tempted to censor criticism by satire
or any other way. Someone might end up exposing truths that the government would
rather were not made public. Someone high up might, God forbid, even be the butt
of a joke. All jokes, then, will be required to conform to the Government's
opinions, while jokes that mock the opposition will be left untouched? Who
regulates the regulators? Criminalising jokes is the first step toward the end
of freedom. Look at Turkey, where President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has filed over
1,800 cases against cartoonists, and others who dared to make a joke at his
expense.
This new British body, according to a UK Government Spokesperson, will
reportedly be "tasked with combating disinformation" -- but what counts as
"disinformation"?
If "disinformation" is determined by Government, the Government is free to
censor anyone who challenges its opinion, or what it might like its subjects to
believe. Who would you trust to run the bureau that decides which political
opinions are malicious and dangerous. and which should be censored because they
are "fake"?
Even if you agree with the UK Government, that, say, Russia poses a dangerous
geopolitical threat by spreading disinformation, it is the job of the government
to let you hear it, and then tell you why it is not correct. The danger remains
that while the current government might not abuse its powers of censorship, the
next one might. Giving power to a Government you trust only means that, later
on, you may well find out that you have given that power to a Government you may
not trust.
Moreover, does this new body mean that individuals could be challenged for
presenting alternative opinions, or for challenging facts released by a
Government? What if such challenges could be deeply important? How, then, is one
to expose, for instance, wrongdoing by the Government? Sadly, this kind of
policy seems poised not only to become a reality in Britain; it seems to be
setting up shop throughout Europe.
In France, President Emmanuel Macron is leading a crusade against whatever some
judicial official decides is "Fake News." Macron says websites that carry fake
news will be "banned" "in order to protect democracy," supposedly because they
present false narratives. Macron notes that France "needs" "emergency bans," to
silence websites regarded by the French Government as sharing "fake news" --
especially, one assumes, during elections.
Even if judgements against some of these websites could be overturned in court,
doing so would clearly be an enormous financial burden, as the would-be censors
doubtless know. But what a handy way not to have one's policies questioned!
Opposition could be silenced, even if temporarily, while you run your citizens
through a legal gauntlet worthy of Galileo; meanwhile the Government can have
the run of the corral to shape a discourse that favours -- itself. Governments
also usually fight with endless time and endless resources.
Macron claims that he is attempting to "protect democracy." No, one does not
protect democracy by restricting the freedom of speech by the members of that
democracy. Democracy means letting the people (demos) have open access to
information and coming to their own conclusions.
Germany has already passed laws which demand that any "hate speech" or "fake
news," be removed from social networking. Immediately, the political opposition
paid the price. Beatrix von Storch, a prominent member of parliament of the
advancing AfD party, was suspended on January 2, the day after the law went into
effect, for her twitter posts. What a nifty way to silence her and others -- and
their ability to challenge the Government.
Even more dangerous, Ireland's Government is proposing legislation that would
mean individuals could spend up to five years in prison for disseminating
supposedly "Fake News" on internet accounts. How could a threat of imprisonment
not have a chilling effect on open discourse? In a free society, Government
should not be able to jail an individual for sharing opinions with which it
disagrees. As the Soviet dissident Natan Sharansky wrote in his book, "The Case
for Democracy," it is precisely the "The Town Square Test" that determines
whether or not a society can even be considered free:
"If a person cannot walk into the middle of the town square and express his or
her views without fear of arrest, imprisonment, or physical harm, then that
person is living in a fear society, not a free society."
The UK Prime Minister's Spokesperson noted that , "We are living in an era of
fake news and competing narratives." All right, time to compete. Explain to the
public why your narrative is better. Where is it written that narratives should
not compete? Political discourse depends on having differing ideas clashing,
enabling different individuals to test their ideas through talk rather than
through jail. A society with a single narrative is inherently a totalitarian one
-- "Big Brother" -- that does not tolerate anyone questioning its essential
orthodoxies. Attempts to censor "competing narratives" is probably just a
tip-off that certain individuals are afraid their political ideas will be unable
to withstand the questions asked or the test of time.
If Macron, and other European leaders truly want to "defend democracy" -- a
premise that seems open to question -- it is time they made the case for
defending it by supporting freedom of speech, unassisted by the "bear hug" of a
"protective" government. If the values of human rights, democracy and freedom
are as great as many know them to be, then "Fake News" will quickly be exposed
as merely that, and not pose a threat to "True News" for very long.
**Robbie Travers, a political commentator and consultant, is Executive Director
of Agora, former media manager at the Human Security Centre, and a law student
at the University of Edinburgh.
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
The new Hitler of the Middle East
Dr. Ibrahim Al-Othaimin/Al Arabiya/February 01/18
In an interview with The New York Times, Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman,
described the Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as “the new Hitler
of the Middle East”. The Crown Prince said: “We learnt from Europe that
appeasement in such cases will not work. We do not want the new Hitler in Iran
to repeat in the Middle East what was done in Europe.”This assessment by the
Crown Prince of the Iranian situation seems quite apt as, since the revolution,
Iran has adopted a brutal ideology, namely Vilayat-e-Faqih (Guardianship of the
Islamic Jurist), which is the legitimate cover for the continuation of the
revolution and incitement of problems and terrorism in the region and around the
world. The Guardian Jurist, also known as Supreme Leader, is the ultimate
authority in Iran, quite similar to the Papal States of the Middle Ages. The
Papal States regarded the leader as God’s representative on Earth. Article five
of the Iranian constitution expresses that as long as Imam Mahdi remains in
occultation, the absolute guardianship and the leadership of the Ummah in Iran
is given to a Jurist who is decent, pious, informed of the demands of the times,
brave and qualified for leadership.
After decades of Saudi, Gulf and international patience, full confrontation is
the optimal and final solution for dealing with such a regime
Sectarian view
In addition, Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist does not acknowledge nationalism
as it has a sectarian view that claims the loyalty of all Shiites of the world
to Iran. The constitution says that the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution
has the right to rule the “Shiite” nation since the original legitimate leader,
i.e. Imam Mahdi, is in occultation. This suggests that the utmost loyalty of
every Shiite in the world must be to the Supreme Leader of the Islamic
Revolution. Thus, Iran transformed sectarianism into constitutional texts by
turning the Shiites of the world into an agenda under the rule of the Guardian
Jurist. It turned them into armed groups, spy cells, militias and organizations
with utmost loyalty to the Guardian Jurist with no account of their
nationalism.Many Shiite militias are operating on the directions of the Guardian
Jurist including Hezbollah in Lebanon, Popular Mobilization Forces in Iraq,
Houthis in Yemen, and sleeper cells in the Gulf States or around the world.
Referring to its close ties with Shiites in Iraq including Sistani and other
Iraqi Shiite clerics who studied in Qum, the Director of the Gulf and Middle
East Center of the Iranian Foreign Ministry, Hamed Reza Daghani, said that the
Iranian “soft power” in Iraq was the key factor in achieving Iranian ambitions
in Iraq and in the region.
Totalitarian ideology
Therefore, the Crown Prince’s description is profound and precise as the Iranian
totalitarian ideology is no different to Nazi Germany or any totalitarian regime
embracing expansionism, racism and disregard for all international conventions.
Over the past eight decades of its emergence, containment and compromise only
resulted in failure in dealing with the totalitarian ideology. After decades of
Saudi, Gulf and international patience, full confrontation is the optimal and
final solution for dealing with such a regime, a main supporter of terrorism
which continues to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries and to
destabilize their peace and security. Only confrontation can give birth to those
who choose to abandon the totalitarian revolutionary ideology and reject
revolutionary concepts for the concepts of nationalism, national states, respect
for international conventions and refrain from intervening in the internal
affairs of other countries. This is the only way to create a healthy political
atmosphere that may contribute to the stability of the region and change its
current chaotic reality.
Getting into the saving habit in the Gulf
Dr. Mohamed A. Ramady/Al Arabiya/February 01/18
Given the economic uncertainties of higher inflation and the introduction of VAT
taxes, consumer spending in the Gulf has taken a bit of a battering. The choice
is clear – spending more from past saving or controlling budgets and saving
more. For many people, individual reasons for saving are different, whether it
is for retirement, supporting children’s future education needs or to having the
financial freedoms to do as one pleases. What are common though are the
different paths adopted by individuals for building wealth and the manner of
saving. When it comes to savings, there is no right or wrong answer and
ultimately it depends on your needs and what you want your savings to achieve.
For some investors these needs are met by having a mix or multiple saving
vehicles that fulfill short and long term saving objectives, and these are
re-assessed on a regular basis to see if the initial saving objectives are being
met or not. Savers have to be both flexible in readjusting their saving targets
as well being committed to meeting such targets. With so much on offer in the
Gulf, and enticement all around, sometimes such targets seem difficult to meet.
How does one know how much to save and say “enough” has been saved? Again, this
can only be answered by each individual investor who has a clear objective on
why he is saving, the length of time he can maintain a regular saving plan or
time horizon, and the liquidity needs of the individual saver.
These objectives need to be flexible, as individual circumstances might change,
or the state of the economy or government policies o for example. As such it is
important to stick to a target, but one that is sustainable overtime. Putting
aside 50 riyals or dirhams a week is consistently doable, than setting an
ambitious target of 1,000 a week only to drop it after a few weeks. While
economic fluctuations and the changes in government policies are outside the
control of individuals, the commitment to make savings to meet future needs is
within their control
Saving for retirement
For those saving for retirement purposes, the earlier the saving habit and
contributions are made, the better is time on their side in terms of expected
future returns and given that there are not many company sponsored retirement
plans in the Gulf this makes retirement planning even more important. The
difficult aspect of cutting or control of spending is in deciding what one is
willing to give up despite impulse spending temptations.
The above might seem difficulty at first for many people, but on closer analysis
it is achievable as the key aspect is setting a realistic budget and sticking
with it. Once one has had several months of successful experience with one’s
budget, one can go to a next higher level of looking at further control of
spending.
Throughout, some questions need to be answered such as admitting to oneself that
maybe you are spending too much on something and then thinking deeply on why you
spend so much on this item? Does it just make you feel good? Is it compulsive
purchasing?
The culture of saving has a long history in the Gulf, especially amongst the
older generation who passed through harder times than the younger generation,
and the mechanism of saving has also evolved over time with increased investment
channels, education and financial services availability compared with the
favored saving in gold or silver coins in the past. Market research shows that
90 percent of Gulf citizens feel that it is important to have enough money to
live off during retirement. Yet the survey also indicates that only 16 percent
feel well prepared for retirement and furthermore that 84 percent of the
citizens sampled do not know what their retirement income will look like. At the
same time only 39 percent of the survey participants feel that they understood
their short-term finance well, but only 20 percent felt the same about their
long-term finances. This indicates that a culture of long term savings has still
not taken place in the Gulf.
Periods of higher inflation
The savings ratio is affected during periods of higher inflation. Without
exception, the national saving ratios of the GCC countries were affected in 2009
which witnessed some reduction in the national saving levels due to the rise in
inflation in the region. Saving levels rose again from 2010 for all GCC
countries when inflation levels fell back but with recent subsidy cuts and
introduction of VAT taxes, inflation is again rising in the Gulf, and Gulf
borrowing rates also rising as Gulf currencies are tied to dollar interest rate
rises. The security of one’s employment and future job prospects are also
important factors in the ability of an individual to save and with the Gulf
countries embarking on a more localization of employment policies, this puts
expatriates in even a more difficult situation. However, the introduction of
indirect taxes is probably easier to cope with in the short term as individuals
have more control by having a choice in either purchasing that commodity or not,
or reducing their level of purchase of that commodity and saving more. All this
will influence the ability to save. While economic fluctuations and the changes
in government policies are outside the control of individuals, the commitment to
make savings to meet future needs is within their control. One of the major
mistakes for irregular saving is that circumstances change and one should plan
for these circumstances because they do happen. To save successfully, one has to
recognize that one’s choices are vulnerable to these changes and this might
force a change of heart in saving behavior.
To overcome this, put your “smarter” self to be in charge: when choosing to save
money, rely on your most motivated self to make the right decision. Sometimes
the most powerful force is “inertia”, or doing nothing.In a strange way,
financial inertia can be useful if one knows how to handle it, whereby the aim
is having to do as little as possible which leads one to adapt the path of least
action – namely, instituting automatic transfers to effect regular saving. Doing
this makes it out of sight and out of mind and thus acceptable as a habit.
Whatever path is chosen it is time for Gulf residents to seriously re-examine
their saving habits.
On deception and lies within the Iraqi parliament
Adnan Hussein/Al Arabiya/February 01/18
If we were in a country whose government respects itself and which respects its
citizens and looks after them, we would have witnessed a serious uproar
following the recent developments related to the upcoming elections in Iraq.What
Members of Parliaments revealed after it was decided to prohibit anyone who does
not at least have a Bachelor Degree to run for the elections is a serious
scandal. It turned out many members of the higher legislative body in the
country violate the law day and night. Others collude with them and lie and
cheat to serve their personal and partisan interests at the expense of the
public interest which they were entrusted with. Current MPs who do not have a BA
opposed the amendment to the electoral law because they would not be able to run
for the elections again. They went to the federal court to appeal it but the
court rejected the appeal. So they went back to Parliament and demanded altering
the amendment so they can run again. To achieve their objective, some of them
warned that if the Parliament does not eliminate this condition, they will have
to expose other MPs’ lies. Logically speaking, the parliament’s presidential
committee must be aware of all these details but it seems it is twisting facts
as well.
The worst scandal is what hasn’t been exposed yet, and it’s a fact that there
are several violations that have been overlooked and ignored
Violating the law
According to news reports earlier this week, MPs who would be harmed by this
condition said that if the law is not amended again, they will call for
investigating 13 MPs who attained higher degrees while serving as MPs, i.e. they
violated the law which stipulates that a state employee cannot hold his post and
study at the same time. They added that they will also expose 30 others who have
a BA but do not have a Baccalaureate which is mandatory to go to college! The
huge scandal is that legislators have violated the law by serving as MPs and
studying at the same time. What’s worse is that there are other legislators who
are aware of this violation but only decided to take action after they found
themselves in a situation where their personal interests are threatened! They’ve
now adopted the policy of: “If I'm going down, I'm taking everybody with me!”
The worst scandal, however, is what hasn’t been exposed yet, and it’s a fact
that there are several violations that have been overlooked and ignored. And at
the end of the day, they tell you they are busy and occupied with establishing
the state and building a system of governance and they expect you to believe
this.
On systematic ignorance during Islamic awakening
Mohammed Al Shaikh/Al Arabiya/February 01/18
Saudi author Mohammed al-Mahmoud said in a tweet that Saudi Islamic scholar
Safar al-Hawali said in a lecture that when poisonous gas was used against the
Afghans, it cleared like a cloud and the winds then directed it towards the
infidels’ path, adding that the wind was the God’s soldier.
Safar al-Hawali was a master of Sahwa (Islamic awakening) as he significantly
contributed to establishing it and lecturing about its ideas. I am certain that
many people who heard him talk about Afghanistan believed him. This example and
other stories which create faith in myths and legends are what distinguished the
Sahwa rhetoric the most during that phase. You can only imagine the extent of
ignorance which is actually one of the most important factors that hindered
human development in the past three decades. This ignorance controlled youths
back then. Sahwaists, whether they belonged to the Muslim Brotherhood or the
Sururi Movement, knew that this was the best way to control people who cannot
read and who are not well-educated. They made them more ignorant, unreasonable
and illogical and fought all modern cultural phenomena and philosophy that
encourage modern reasonable thinking. Sahwaists, whether they belonged to the
Muslim Brotherhood or the Sururi Movement, knew that this was the best way to
control people who are not well-educated
Fall of Sahwa
Therefore, the fall of the so-called Sahwa, its ideology and preachers was
inevitable as they destroy reason, oppose development, bet on ignorance and
myths and cherish ignorance. They adopted this approach at schools as they
controlled their curricula, at media outlets as they terrorized their employees
and at mosques and preaching workshops. They were never ashamed of opposing
science, philosophy and logic and slamming those who act upon them. A Salafist
once said: He who adopts logic is a non-believer. Those who echo these
statements do not know that all the technological products they use today are
actually the result of reasonable and logical thought.
I am certain that Sahwa collapsed for logical reasons of which the most
important is the rationality that relies on discussions which spread thanks to
the telecommunications revolution. Criticism is no longer supervised as thanks
to technology, it’s widely shared across the world.
Since man is logical by nature, awareness increased in an almost revolutionary
manner - that is when compared with the time when ignorant Sahwa leaders
dominated the scene.
If societies have really learnt anything, then going back to this ignorant phase
of believing myths will be almost impossible if not totally impossible. This is
why I am reassured that the phase of institutionalized and systematic ignorance
has become history in our country.