LCCC
ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
July 04/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
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Bible
Quotations
I pray therefore that
you may not lose heart over my sufferings for you; they are your glory
Letter to the Ephesians 03/01-13: "This is the reason that I Paul am a
prisoner for Christ Jesus for the sake of you Gentiles for surely you have
already heard of the commission of God’s grace that was given to me for you,
and how the mystery was made known to me by revelation, as I wrote above in
a few words, a reading of which will enable you to perceive my understanding
of the mystery of Christ. In former generations this mystery was not made
known to humankind, as it has now been revealed to his holy apostles and
prophets by the Spirit: that is, the Gentiles have become fellow-heirs,
members of the same body, and sharers in the promise in Christ Jesus through
the gospel. Of this gospel I have become a servant according to the gift of
God’s grace that was given to me by the working of his power. Although I am
the very least of all the saints, this grace was given to me to bring to the
Gentiles the news of the boundless riches of Christ, and to make everyone
see what is the plan of the mystery hidden for ages in God who created all
things; so that through the church the wisdom of God in its rich variety
might now be made known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly
places. This was in accordance with the eternal purpose that he has carried
out in Christ Jesus our Lord, in whom we have access to God in boldness and
confidence through faith in him. I pray therefore that you may not lose
heart over my sufferings for you; they are your glory."
Titles For The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published on July 03-04/18
Aoun, Geagea agree road map to resolve Cabinet stalemate/Ghinwa Obeid/The
Daily Star/July 03/18
Exclusive – Lebanese Security Sources to Asharq Al-Awsat: We Have Cut the
Roots of Terrorism/Thaer Abbas/Asharq Al Awsat/July 03/18
Explosions Reported in Syrian, Iranian Weapons Depots in Southern Syria/Haaretz/July
03/18
Analysis Syria’s Assad Has Become Israel’s Ally/Zvi Bar'el/Haaretz/July
03/18
Once Enemies, Now Refugees: The New Reality Facing Soldiers on the
Israeli-Syrian Border/Anshel Pfeffer/Moshav Keshet/Haaretz/July 03/18
Palestinians Beat Female Journalists; World "Sees No Evil"/Bassam Tawil/Gatestone
Institute/July 03/18
Blasphemy Laws in Pakistan/A. Z. Mohamed/Gatestone Institute/July 03/18
Europe: "The Vision is an Islamic State"/Judith Bergman/Gatestone
Institute/July 03/18
Israeli Defence Forces Appoints First Iran Project Director" As Northern
Tensions Increse/Jerusalem Post/July 03/18
Merkel Engineers a Better Deal on Migration/Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg/Asharq
Al Awsat/July 03/18
Is Trump Handing Putin a Victory in Syria/David Ignatius/The Washington
Post/July 03/18
Does the West Actually Face a Migration Crisis/Ishaan Tharoor/The Washington
Post/July 03/18
Time for Iran to Go back to its Borders/Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al-Awsat/July
03/18
Titles For The
Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
July 03-04/18
Aoun weighs in on Aqoura-Yammouneh spat
Aoun warns against tax evasion, says erodes trust in state
Sami Gemayel calls on Aoun to correct naturalization decree
Aoun Meets Kataeb Delegation, Talks Focus on Citizenship Decree
Riachi Meets Bassil, Agrees with Him on 'Pacification'
Geagea Calls Bassil after Talks with Aoun
Nasrallah Hails Outgoing Iranian Ambassador
Aoun, Geagea agree road map to resolve Cabinet stalemate
Exclusive – Lebanese Security Sources to Asharq Al-Awsat: We Have Cut the
Roots of Terrorism
Titles For The Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on July 03-04/18
Explosions Reported in Syrian,
Iranian Weapons Depots in Southern Syria
Trump Hails North Korea Talks, Says War Averted Because of Him
Pompeo Heads to North Korea Thursday as Doubts Cloud Kim’s Nuclear
Intentions
Netanyahu Criticizes Media in Defense of his Beleaguered Wife
Merkel Last-Ditch Migrant Deal Reopens EU Deep Divisions
Syria Installs Barbwire in Border Area to Prevent Illegal Crossing
HRW Urges Help for Syrians Excavating Raqa Mass Graves
Coalition Hits Yemen Rebels Outside Hodeida as Push for City Paused
Leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador Sweeps to Victory in Mexico Presidential
Elections
The Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on July 03-04/18
Aoun weighs in on
Aqoura-Yammouneh spat
The Daily Star/July 03/18/BEIRUT: President Michel Aoun Monday called for
the residents of two bordering towns in northern Lebanon that have been
locked in a land dispute to “be like one family ... because they have done
so throughout history.” Aoun discussed the disagreement with Military
Prosecutor Peter Germanos, who affirmed that the President would pay special
attention to the matter. Baalbeck’s Yammouneh and Jbeil’s Aqoura have been
in a dispute over a piece of land that separates them. The issue was
resolved in 1967 through a court ruling that defined and demarcated the
municipal borders. However, tensions recently intensified following a string
of security incidents that required the intervention of the Internal
Security Forces and the Lebanese Army on a number of occasions. Yammouneh is
predominantly Shiite while Aqoura is mainly Christian.
Aoun warns against tax evasion, says erodes trust in
state
The Daily Star/July 03/18/BEIRUT: President Michel Aoun warned Tuesday
against tax evasion, saying it negatively impacts trust in state
institutions, according to a statement from the presidency's media office.
"Such practices tamper with citizens’ confidence in all the state
apparatuses," Aoun told a delegation of the newly-elected board of the
Lebanese Association of Certified Public Accountants. Aoun also acknowledged
the current economic crisis in Lebanon is a heavy burden on citizens but
said that progress on this front would not happen overnight. He placed the
onus for the worsening economic situation on conflict in neighboring
countries and the resulting refugee crisis, noting that practical measures
to relieve the burden of the refugee population on Lebanon have started to
materialize.
Sami Gemayel calls on Aoun to correct naturalization decree
The Daily Star/July 03/18/BEIRUT: Kataeb Party MP Sami Gemayel Tuesday
called on the president to correct a naturalization decree passed last month
that granted citizenship to around 400 people, and remove the names of
candidates who didn’t meet the necessary requirements.
“We asked President Michel Aoun to correct the mistakes in the
naturalization decree, for which we do not hold the president responsible,”
Gemayel told reporters after meeting Aoun at the presidential palace in
Baabda. The decree had sparked outcry over the secretive nature of its
passage, and as a result of the controversy, Aoun later tasked General
Security chief Abbas Ibrahim with vetting the individuals named on the
decree. Meanwhile, after the decree was publicized, Gemayel called for a
meeting with officials from the Lebanese Forces and Progressive Socialist
Party over the three parties’ opposition to the order. While the LF and PSP
ended up filing appeals against the decree to the Shura Council, Gemayel
said Tuesday that this was not the best way to move forward. “The easiest
way is for the president to address the issue, by removing the names [of
those who don’t meet the requirements], and in this way it preserves the
powers of the president,” he said. Gemayel also spoke of the economic
situation in Lebanon, which he said was in dire need of solutions. “If
reform steps are not implemented on the economic level, there is a high risk
for the Lebanese people and this phase requires extraordinary measures.”
Aoun Meets Kataeb Delegation, Talks Focus on
Citizenship Decree
Naharnet/July 03/18/President Michel Aoun held talks on Tuesday with Kataeb
delegation, led by its chief MP Sami Gemayel, where talks focused on the
controversial citizenship decree and the general situation in the country,
the National News Agency reported. “We wish the flaws in the citizenship
decree are corrected, the ball is in his (Aoun) court now. We don’t think
the President is responsible for these flaws,” said Gemayel from Baabda. He
said the party chose not appeal the decree before the State Shura Council
because “appeals in this file do not have guaranteed results.”“The easiest
way for us is to speak with Aoun to achieve what we want and eliminate some
(non-deserving) names while at the same time maintaining the powers of the
President,” said Gemayel. Early in June, Lebanon revealed the names of
hundreds of people including an Iraqi vice-president to receive Lebanese
nationality under a controversial presidential decree. Kataeb expressed its
reservations, noting that some 85 names included in the decree are
“non-deserving” and do not meet conditions stipulated in the Constitution.
However, they affirmed the President’s right to sign decrees granting
Lebanese nationality to foreigners. Foreigners can only be naturalised by
presidential decree, signed by the prime minister and interior minister.
Lebanon’s interior ministry published the list after reports of the May 11
decree emerged in June and the names of wealthy Syrians close to the
Damascus regime were leaked to the media. Critics slammed the secrecy of the
decree in a country where thousands of people born to Lebanese mothers but
foreign fathers remain unable to acquire citizenship. Kataeb had planned to
appeal the decree before the Shura Council, but instead saw it better to ask
Aoun to withdraw the citizenship from 85 individuals who have proven
“non-eligible.”
Riachi Meets Bassil, Agrees with Him on 'Pacification'
Naharnet/July 03/18/Caretaker Information Minister Melhem Riachi of the
Lebanese Forces held talks Tuesday with Free Patriotic Movement chief MP
Jebran Bassil after which he announced that they agreed on “full
pacification” between their two parties. “The meeting was to pacify the
atmosphere and create a new one that befits (the LF-FPM relation) and the
needed stability in the Christian arena,” Riachi said after the meeting,
which was also attended by MP Ibrahim Kanaan of the FPM. “We have restored
the channels of communication and agreed on full pacification between the
two parties,” Riachi added. “We have turned the page and forgotten the
distant past while the recent past must be discussed and addressed,” the
minister went on to say. Noting that a meeting between Bassil and LF leader
Samir Geagea “would be decided in due time,” Riachi said he did not pass on
a “specific message” to Bassil.
The LF leader “decided to dispatch me to discuss the points of contention
between the two parties,” the minister added, pointing out that the meeting
was aimed at halting the mutual “provocation” between the two parties.
“Bassil showed great keenness on reconciliation and on the importance of
(the LF-FPM relation) for protecting Christians and the country,” Riachi
said.
Geagea had met Monday with President Michel Aoun and announced that his
party's “communication” with Bassil “will be resumed.” The two Christian
parties are wrangling over shares in the new government and their ties were
also strained during their participation in the previous government despite
the landmark reconciliation agreement they signed in January 2016.Bassil and
the FPM have accused the LF of being against Aoun's presidential tenure
while the LF has stressed that its criticism of some FPM ministers does not
mean that it is opposed to the presidency.
Geagea Calls Bassil after Talks with Aoun
Naharnet/July 03/18/Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea held phone talks
overnight with Free Patriotic Movement chief MP Jebran Bassil, a media
report said. “Geagea called Bassil overnight and asked him if he can
dispatch (caretaker Information Minister) Melhem Riachi to him,” the
FPM-affiliated OTV reported. Geagea had held talks in Baabda with President
Michel Aoun earlier on Monday. After the meeting, Geagea announced that he
agreed with Aoun on a “roadmap,” noting that the LF “differentiates between
President Aoun and the Free Patriotic Movement.” He also revealed that his
party's “communication” with Bassil “will be resumed.” The two Christian
parties are wrangling over shares in the new government and their ties were
also strained during their participation in the previous government despite
the landmark reconciliation agreement they signed in January 2016. Bassil
and the FPM accuse the LF of being against Aoun's presidential tenure while
the LF has stressed that its criticism of some FPM ministers does not mean
that it is opposed to the presidency.
Nasrallah Hails Outgoing Iranian Ambassador
Naharnet/July 03/18/Iranian Ambassador to Lebanon Mohammed Fathali has
visited Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah to bid him farewell after
the end of his tenure in Lebanon, Hizbullah said on Tuesday. Nasrallah
thanked Fathali over his “blessed efforts and kind endeavors throughout the
four years that he spent in Lebanon alongside the Lebanese people, state and
resistance,” the party's media department said in a statement. “He was a
great brother, friend and supporter and he represented the Islamic Republic
in the best way possible, reflecting its principles and stances that are
supportive of the region's peoples in the face of the threats of the
nation's enemies,” Nasrallah added, according to the statement.
Aoun, Geagea agree road map to resolve Cabinet
stalemate
Ghinwa Obeid/The Daily Star/July 03/18
BEIRUT: President Michel Aoun and Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea Monday
agreed to mend fences between the Free Patriotic Movement and the LF and to
expedite the formation of a new Cabinet. The sit-down between Aoun and
Geagea came amid a flurry of activity at Prime Minister-designate Saad
Hariri’s downtown residence after Hariri’s plans to travel for a vacation
were put on hold.
A source close to Baabda Palace told The Daily Star that the meeting was
positive where the two discussed various topics and recent tensions over the
Cabinet formation.
Speaking to reporters after the talks, the LF leader struck an upbeat note
and said that the two men agreed on a road map for the government formation.
“The meeting was good and we spoke about the need for a quick government
formation and this is something that we both agree on,” the LF leader said.
“[We] also spoke in length about our [LF] relationship with the FPM.”
The meeting comes after tensions grew between the LF and the FPM, which was
founded by Aoun, over the former’s share in the new Cabinet.
Since Hariri was tasked in May to form a government, his mission has faced
numerous hurdles, mainly from the LF and Progressive Socialist Party.
The LF has been demanding key ministerial posts, including that of the
deputy premier position, in order to reflect the results of the May 6
parliamentary elections that allowed them to garner 15 seats in Parliament.
However, the LF’s request hasn’t been widely welcomed by Aoun or FPM head
Caretaker Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil.
This issue was believed to have also caused friction between Hariri and Aoun,
as Hariri reportedly supported the LF’s request for wide representation in
Cabinet.
Aoun, on the other hand, had made it clear that it was his right to pick a
deputy prime minister as well as other ministers through whom he monitors
the Cabinet’s work.
“We tackled the Cabinet lineup as a whole and not only the FPM and LF issue,
although it acquired the biggest part of the meeting. I presented Aoun with
my opinion [with regards to] the formation,” Geagea said.
He added that once things calm down, “it will become clear that what we are
suggesting isn’t far away from logic.”
Nevertheless, he refused to go into details on whether he discussed Cabinet
shares with Aoun, saying that tackling this matter in the media will further
complicate things.
“I didn’t veto anyone and at the same time, I don’t like anyone to veto us
because this approach won’t lead anywhere,” he said, adding that he received
assurances from Aoun that looks at both LF and FPM with equal importance.
The LF and FPM were former rivals before the two signed a memorandum of
understanding in 2016 and that paved the way for Aoun to be elected as
president later that year. Yet, since then the relationship between the two
faced ups and downs over different approaches in governance.
The LF, nevertheless, attempted to distinguish its relationship between Aoun
and Bassil.
“Of course, the LF differentiates in the relationship between the president
and the FPM. The president is [no longer] the FPM’s head, rather he is the
president of all Lebanese,” Geagea said. He added that if the LF supports
the presidential reign.
“Contact with Bassil will definitely resume,” he added.
The Baabda source said that preparations for a meeting between Geagea and
Bassil are in the making, which could take place this week.
In conjunction with the meeting that was being held in Baabda, caretaker
Information Minister Melhem Riachi was at Hariri’s residence discussing the
government formation.
Riachi is one of three LF ministers in the caretaker government.
“It seems that there is a positive development in the government formation
process,” a source close to Hariri told The Daily Star. “The premier wants
to follow up on the situation.”
Riachi’s visit was preceded by a Hariri-Bassil meeting Sunday.
“The atmosphere of the sit-down was positive, similar to the meeting between
Geagea and Aoun,” Riachi told reporters after the meeting.
He added that a phone call between Geagea and Hariri was held to inform him
about the Baabda gathering.
Later in the evening, Progressive Socialist Party MP Wael Abu Faour also
discussed the government formation with Hariri, reiterating that Druze
representation in the new Cabinet should reflect the results of the
parliamentary elections.
“The PSP is still on its position toward the results of the parliamentary
elections. The Druze representation, meaning the three Druze ministers,
should be named by the PSP,” he said. “The party insists on that.”
PSP head Walid Joumblatt has insisted his bloc be allocated all three
ministerial posts reserved for the Druze sect in a 30-member Cabinet – the
number of ministers proposed by Hariri.
Joumblatt’s demand appears to be aimed at preventing his Druze rival, Talal
Arslan, from being named minister.
Political sources previously told The Daily Star that Hariri took the lead
in resolving the issue of Druze representation, proposing that the PSP
receive two Druze ministers and the third go to an independent, which would
annul Arslan’s chances of becoming a minister.
Abu Faour said that the PSP didn’t mind if Arslan’s bloc is represented in
the Cabinet by a Maronite minister given that three of his four-bloc members
are Maronites.
Abu Faour also lauded Hariri’s efforts to overcome the barriers in the
Cabinet formation and hoped that the various meetings that have been held
would lead to a positive outcome.
He told reporters that a meeting between Hariri and Joumblatt could be held
at any time and that the two were in constant contact.
Abu Faour also said that Aoun and Joumblatt could hold a sit-down after Abu
Faour last week described PSP’s relationship with the president as “cold.”
“There is no boycott with Aoun, at the end he is the president,” Abu Faour
said. “We are ready for meetings to be held at any minute.”
Exclusive – Lebanese Security Sources to Asharq Al-Awsat:
We Have Cut the Roots of Terrorism
Beirut- Thaer Abbas/Asharq Al Awsat/July 03/18
Last month, Lebanese Army Commander General Joseph Aoun, accompanied by the
Director of Military Intelligence, Brigadier General Antoine Mansour,
conducted separate visits to President Michel Aoun, Speaker Nabih Berri and
Prime Minister Saad Hariri.
In the three visits, the two military officials entered with a black book of
about 15 cm in thickness and left without it. The book represents, in fact,
the summary of the security work of the Directorate of Army Intelligence and
contains thousands of pages detailing terrorist networks that were stopped
and dismantled during 2017.
The “black book” of terrorism in Lebanon is full of details and facts. Each
cell is documented by the number of its members, its missions and
objectives, the confessions of the detainees, their photographs, and often
the pictures of the confiscated items, including weapons, military equipment
and drugs.
Lebanese security sources confirmed to Asharq Al-Awsat that Lebanon has
completely cut the roots of terrorism.
These figures only represent the work achieved by the military intelligence
directorate, the sources said, emphasizing efforts undertaken by other
partners in counter-terrorism operations, especially by the General
Directorate of General Security and the Information Division of the Internal
Security Forces.
The sources, however, admit the possibility of sporadic terrorist acts that
might erupt here or there, but stress that the foundation that the
terrorists used to rely on to acquire their weapons, explosives and
logistical support, was hit hard by the country’s competent institutions.
“They will try, and we will remain vigilant to prevent any breach of
Lebanese security,” the sources said.
“I can assure you that Lebanon is among the safest countries in the world
today,” they added.
The Syrian refugee crisis has put great pressure on the Lebanese security,
according to the sources, which expressed regret that more than 90 percent
of detainees were of Syrian nationality, “which necessitates more work on
this file.”
While the sources acknowledged that political stability was not a basic
condition in the security process, they indicated that incitement should not
be part of the political rhetoric, pointing out that the Lebanese Army and
other security forces were able to control the situation, but politicians
should also contribute to reducing the tensions between the Lebanese people.
The figures mentioned in the “Black Book” showed that ISIS was the “feared
beast” at the media and psychological level, but Al-Nusra Front, led by Abu
Malik al-Tali was the most dangerous, after it turned out that the
organization was responsible for the majority of attacks and attempted
attacks on the Lebanese territory.
The total number of detainees arrested in 2017 by the Lebanese intelligence
reached 3,743, including 1,496 who were referred to the Judiciary.
The number of those involved in terrorism reached 943, in addition to 290
people who entered the country clandestinely from Syrian territory, while 22
were detained on terrorism financing charges and 59 on charges of possession
of arms and ammunition.
The largest terrorist cell was caught on January 3, 2017. It included 11
people associated with Shadi al-Mulawi. The group planned to send car bombs
to the suburbs of Beirut, targeting civilians and current and retired
Lebanese army officers. Large amounts of explosives, explosive belts,
detonators and remote weapons with ammunition, were seized during the
operation.
On January 22, Omar Hassan al-Assi, a member of ISIS, was arrested while
trying to carry out a suicide attack at Costa coffee shop in Hamra, Beirut.
On June 6, the army was able to carry out another significant operation,
arresting Faisal Hussein Mamluk, who was involved in encircling army posts,
storming the building of the Internal Security Forces in Arsal and engaging
with his partners in the events of Arsal in 2013.
The next day, the army arrested Mohammed Badreddine al-Karnabi, an ISIS
member, who participated in the battle of Arsal against the army and was
charged with transferring suicide bombers and booby-trapped cars, in
addition to other crimes.
Ousama Al-Gosaibi revealed that over 400 specialists have been tasked with
ridding Yemen of mines.
He stressed to Asharq Al-Awsat that this humanitarian project aims at
clearing mines throughout the country, without discriminating between one
region and another.
The 40-million dollar one-year project will be implemented over five phases.
It will start with the equipping and training of the personnel, preparing
the specialized demining teams, sending them to the field and later relaying
their expertise to Yemeni cadres. MASAM is being implemented with Saudi and
global expertise, stressed Gosaibi.
Saudi Arabia’s support for Yemen has been one of the Kingdom’s top
priorities for decades, he said, underlining the neighborly, religious,
social and familial ties that bind the peoples of both countries.
MASAM was funded by the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSRelief),
which has been offering and continuing to offer humanitarian projects for
the war-torn country, he remarked. These efforts have exceeded 1.6 billion
dollars.
MASAM seeks to clear the mines that have been arbitrarily planted by the
Iran-backed Houthi militias throughout Yemen, most notably in Marib, Aden,
Sanaa and Taiz, Gosaibi said. It also seeks to help the Yemeni people
overcome the humanitarian tragedy that has resulted from the mines.
Preliminary statistics revealed by Yemeni officials showed that the militias
planted nearly one million mines throughout the country.
Gosaibi highlighted in this regard the efforts of the KSRelief-funded
prosthetics center in Marib that has so far provided prosthetic limbs to
over 195 mine victims, who are often women and children.
MASAM field teams have been in Marib for two months to begin their mine
clearance mission. Thirty-two demining teams consisting of over 400 people
are operating in Yemen.
He underlined the close cooperation between MASAM and the national Yemeni
demining project, saying that each one complements the other.
The Saudi project will focus on sensitive areas that have high populations.
It will tackle the provinces of Marib, Aden, Taiz and Sanaa in its first
phase, he told Asharq Al-Awsat.
After this phase is complete, MASAM will turn to mines planted in desert
regions.
MASAM also boasts rapid intervention experts and others specialized in
defusing explosives, Gosaibi said.
The Saudi project, he reiterated, does not discriminate between Yemeni
regions. It launched its operations to achieve purely humanitarian goals
regardless of the developments in Yemen.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News
published
on July 03-04/18
Explosions Reported in
Syrian, Iranian Weapons Depots in Southern Syria
تقارير عن انفجارات في مخازن اسلحة سورية وإيرانية في جنوب سوريا
Haaretz/July 03/18
Explosions reportedly emanating from weapons' facilities in the southern
Syrian city of Daraa, which was heavily bombarded by the Assad regime last
week
Explosions were heard in weapons depots belonging to the Syrian regime in
Syria and Iranian militias, Al Jazeera reported on Tuesday afternoon.
The explosions were heard in the southern Syrian city of Daraa.
Last week thousands of Syrian refugees fleeing bombardments by the Bashar
Assad regime in southern Syria headed in the direction of the Jordanian
border and Israeli borders. A United Nations report put the number of those
heading towards Jordan at 270,000.
In response to the crisis, the Jordanian government issued a statement
saying that it would block entry to all Syrian refugees coming from Daraa to
the Syria-Jordan border.
The Israeli army said last week that it transferred overnight humanitarian
aid to Syrian refugees and to those currently living in makeshift
encampments not far from the border with Israel.
The shipment was made to camps in the south and center of the Syrian side of
the Golan Heights, the Israel Defense Forces said in a statement.
Trump Hails North
Korea Talks, Says War Averted Because of Him
Washington- Asharq Al Awsat/Tuesday, 3 July, 2018/US President Donald Trump
hailed on Tuesday "many good conversations" with North Korea as US officials
seek to reach an agreement with Pyongyang over a denuclearization plan
following last month’s summit between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong
Un. Trump tweets Tuesday that "All of Asia is thrilled" that North Korea has
halted missile testing and only the "Opposition Party" Democrats, including
the "Fake News" is complaining. Trump also claims: "If not for me, we would
now be at War with North Korea!" Trump's June nuclear summit with Kim
yielded no specifics on how North Korea would achieve denuclearization. The
White House has characterized ongoing meetings as positive but not commented
on recent news reports of US intelligence assessments saying North Korea has
been expanding its weapons capabilities. Yet, experts say there is no proof
North Korea's halt of nuclear and missile tests means the North will take
concrete steps to give up such weapons. They also say the US has an
unrealistic and risky approach to North Korea's denuclearization. The rapid
timeline proposed by national security adviser John Bolton contrasts with
more measured, methodical strategies that most North Korea experts insist
are needed to produce a lasting denuclearization agreement. On Monday, the
White House said US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo would travel to North
Korea this week to continue talks on denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula. A US delegation met over the weekend with North Korean
counterparts at the border between North and South Korea to discuss the next
steps to implementing the June 12 summit’s declaration, according to the US
State Department.
“Many good conversations with North Korea-it is going well!” Trump said in
his Twitter post, echoing his sentiments following the historic meeting with
Kim in Singapore.
Pompeo Heads to North Korea Thursday as Doubts Cloud Kim’s
Nuclear Intentions
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 3 July, 2018/US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will
embark on a trip to North Korea Thursday to discuss an American plan that
would lead to the dismantling of the Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile
programs in a year. This will be his third visit to the country in three
months and the first since the landmark June 12 Singapore summit between
President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un, during which the North Korean leader
agreed to “work toward denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.” The joint
summit statement, however, gave no details on how or when Pyongyang might
give up its weapons. US officials have since been trying to flesh out
details to produce an agreement that might live up to Trump’s enthusiastic
portrayal of the outcome. Despite Kim’s pledge, doubts have been mounting
about Pyongyang’s willingness to abandon its weapons program. The State
Department said Pompeo would head on Saturday from Pyongyang to Tokyo, where
he would discuss North Korean denuclearization with Japanese and South
Korean leaders. In announcing Pompeo’s travel plans on Monday, White House
spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said the United States was “continuing to make
progress” in talks with North Korea. She declined to confirm or deny recent
media reports of intelligence assessments saying North Korea has been
expanding its weapons capabilities. North Korea has been showering the US
and South Korea with goodwill gestures in recent months, including the
shutdown of its main nuclear testing site and the release of three American
detainees. But many experts say nothing it has done is consequential enough
to be seen as a sign that the country is willing to fully surrender its
nuclear weapons. An NBC News report on Friday quoted US officials saying US
intelligence agencies believe North Korea has increased production of fuel
for nuclear weapons at multiple secret sites in recent months and may try to
hide these while seeking concessions in talks with Washington. The
Washington Post reported on Saturday that US intelligence officials had
concluded that North Korea did not intend to fully give up its nuclear
arsenal and is considering ways to hide the number of weapons it has. A US
official told The Associated Press that the Post's report was accurate and
that the assessment reflected the consistent view across US government
agencies. An analysis of recent satellite photos also indicated that North
Korea is completing a major expansion of a factory in the northeast that
produces key parts of nuclear-capable missiles, two researchers at the
Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, California, said
in a joint post Monday. "The expansion suggests that, despite hopes for
denuclearization, Kim Jong Un is committed to increasing North Korea's
stockpile of nuclear-armed missiles," Jeffrey Lewis and Dave Schmerler said.
Nam Sung-wook, a professor at Korea University in South Korea, said the US
officials or academics speaking out likely aimed to put pressure on both
North Korea and Trump. "First, they would want to say that they have lots of
intelligence on North Korea and that its relations with the US would go back
to the past if it doesn't take practical disarmament steps," Nam said.
"Secondly, they likely targeted (Trump), asking if he was deceived by North
Korea because no progress has been reported in the three weeks after the
summit." Analyst Hong Min at Seoul's Korea Institute for National
Unification downplayed the significance of the new disclosures, saying
Pyongyang and Washington have not yet agreed on detailed disarmament steps
the North is obliged to take. US National Security Adviser John Bolton
refused to comment on intelligence matters, but said the US was going into
nuclear negotiations aware of Pyongyang’s failure to live up to its past
promises.
Netanyahu Criticizes Media in Defense of his
Beleaguered Wife
London, Tel Aviv - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 3 July, 2018/Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivered on Monday an impassioned defense of
his wife ahead of her trial later this month for misusing public funds. He
said she was "heroically" withstanding a media onslaught that has been
"trampling her image."Netanyahu's comments to his Likud faction in
parliament came after days in which unflattering transcripts from police
investigations of Sara Netanyahu have been leaked to the media on a
near-daily basis. "For 20 years, they have been trampling her image in the
media every day and every night," the prime minister said, pounding his hand
on the table. "Sara is an amazing woman, a wonderful mother, she was a
perfect daughter to her parents and the media completely ignores all her
public activity," AP quoted him as saying.
On June 21, the Public Prosecutor's Office of the Magistrate's Court in
Jerusalem filed an indictment against Sara Netanyahu and former deputy
director of operations and property in the premier’s office Ezra Saidoff,
accusing them of manipulating public funds, exploiting state funds for
personal purposes and other corruption charges. She was charged with fraud
and breach of trust for allegedly overspending roughly NIS359,000 (about
$100,000) on private meals at the prime minister's official residence, even
when there was a full-time chef on staff.
According to the public prosecution, the delay in filing the indictment for
five years was due to the difficulty of reviewing all the evidence and
balancing all the circumstances of the case. The indictment said that Sara
and Saidoff deliberately violated the procedures that prohibit the request
of ready meals, forged invoices and prepared mock statements to the ministry
despite the recruitment of cooks in the prime minister's house. Saidoff is
also accused of committing additional acts and charges in the indictment,
including obtaining items through fraud, dishonesty and forgery in regards
to the employment of chefs in private meetings and celebrations and the
recruitment of waiters at the official residence of the prime minister.
Netanyahu slammed the indictment but said his wife was dealing with the
criticism with dignity and was buoyed by public support.
Merkel Last-Ditch
Migrant Deal Reopens EU Deep Divisions
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/July 03/18/German Chancellor
Angela Merkel came under fire Tuesday from EU partners after she agreed to
push back migrants in a last-ditch deal to save her fragile government, a
move that also threatened to unleash a domino effect of European nations
shutting refugees out. In high-stakes crisis talks overnight, Merkel put
down a rebellion by Interior Minister Horst Seehofer with an agreement to
tighten border controls and set up closed "transit centers" to hold migrants
on the Austrian frontier. But the deal, which essentially amounted to an
about-turn in Merkel's liberal refugee policy, immediately sparked
resistance from Germany's neighbors as well as the third member of her shaky
coalition, the Social Democratic Party (SPD). Austria vowed to "protect its
southern borders" while Italy slammed Berlin for adopting the "wrong
attitude that brings no solution" and warned that the plan risked running up
against last week's hard-fought EU deal that sees the bloc working together
to curb migrant arrivals. Vienna is "of course not ready to conclude deals
that harms Austria," said Austria's Chancellor Sebastian Kurz. "Austria
should not have to take on the legacy of a failed welcoming culture that is
in Europe linked to some names," charged the country's far-right Interior
Minister Herbert Kickl, in an attack against Merkel. Earlier Vienna's
right-wing government had warned that if Germany pushes ahead with its
plans, "we will be obliged to take measures to avoid disadvantages for
Austria and its people." And it would be "ready to take measures to protect
our southern borders in particular," it said referring to the frontiers with
Italy and Slovenia. Foreign Minister Karin Kneissl also expressed anger that
Vienna "was not consulted", in remarks quoted by Austrian media.
Erroneous attitude
Vienna's reaction raised the spectre of a domino effect in Europe, with
member states taking increasingly restrictive measures to shut out refugees.
Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis, whose country has flatly refused to take
in migrants under a controversial EU quota, leaped on the chance to urge
Europe to close its borders."Germany has made it very clear that people who
disembark in Italy or Greece do not have the right to choose to live in
Germany. Hopefully Italy and Greece will understand and close their
borders," he wrote in a tweet. Italy's Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte took
aim at Merkel for seeking to tackle movements of migrants within the bloc,
rather than stopping them from arriving in the EU in the first place."If we
concentrate on the resolution of secondary movement, it's an erroneous
attitude that brings no solution," warned Conte.
Internment camps
Under the pact both sides hailed as a victory, Merkel and Seehofer agreed to
hold migrants in "transit centers" on the Austrian frontier to allow the
speedy processing of asylum seekers and the repatriation of those rejected.
They would either be sent back to EU countries that previously registered
them or, in case arrival countries reject this, be sent back to Austria,
pending a now questionable agreement with Vienna. Seehofer is due to travel
Thursday to Vienna, in a bid to push his plan. CSU general secretary Markus
Blume called the hardening policy proposal the last building block "in a
turn-around on asylum policy" after a mass influx brought over one million
migrants and refugees. The number of new arrivals has fallen dramatically
over the last several months. The accord covers about one-quarter of them,
with 18,000 already-registered people crossing the Germany border between
January and May this year. But doubts were voiced quickly by other parties
and groups, accusing Merkel of turning her back on the welcoming stance she
showed toward asylum seekers at the height of the influx in 2015. Refugee
support group Pro Asyl slammed what it labeled "detention centers in
no-man's land" and charged that German power politics were being played out
"on the backs of those in need of protection."Annalena Baerbock of the
opposition Greens party spoke of "internment camps", accusing the
conservatives of "bidding goodbye to our country's moral compass."Crucially,
it remains uncertain if Merkel's coalition partner, the SPD, will
rubberstamp the deal.SPD leader Andrea Nahles said the party still had
"significant questions" on the deal. The Social Democrats are holding joint
party meeting with the CDU/CSU bloc. Ahead of the talks, SPD deputy chairman
Ralf Stegner voiced opposition to the transit centers, writing on Twitter:
"We don't want any refugee families behind guarded fences." One of the SPD's
migration experts, Aziz Bozkurt, was withering, charging that the proposed
holding centers would be "impractical and fully on track with the AfD" --
the far-right party that has been most outspoken against immigrants.
Syria Installs Barbwire in Border Area to Prevent
Illegal Crossing
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/July 03/18/The Syrian army has installed
barbwire along the Lebanese-Syrian border next to the Matrabeh border
crossing and the Lebanese town of al-Qasr, Lebanon's National News Agency
said. NNA said the measure is aimed at preventing individuals from crossing
the border on foot. “The movement of the residents of the neighboring towns
has become restricted to the legal border crossings that are limited to the
Joussiyeh crossing near the town of al-Qaa, which puts burden on Lebanese
citizens residing in Syrian border towns,” NNA said. It noted that the
Lebanese citizens who shuttle between Lebanon and Syria's border towns
include “dozens of employees” who work in Lebanon. According to the agency,
the region's dignitaries have renewed their call for setting up a legal
border crossing in the area.
HRW Urges Help for Syrians Excavating Raqa Mass Graves
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/July 03/18/Human Rights Watch on Tuesday urged
the international community to support Syrians excavating mass graves in
Raqa after US-backed fighters ousted jihadists from the city. Fighters
backed by US-led coalition air strikes expelled the Islamic State jihadist
group from the city in October, leaving the Raqa City Council to run it. The
New York-based group said council workers with little specialised equipment
or experience in forensic analysis were struggling to tackle the mammoth
mission of exhuming the dead. "Raqa city has at least nine mass graves, each
one estimated to have dozens, if not hundreds, of bodies, making exhumations
a monumental task," said HRW's Priyanka Motaparthy. "Without the right
technical assistance, these exhumations may not provide families with the
answers they have been waiting for and could damage or destroy evidence
crucial to future justice efforts."IS jihadists carried out public
executions and detained thousands of people during their rule of the city
from June 2014 to October 2017. But local authorities estimate thousands of
people were also killed in the battle to retake the city, either buried
quickly or left under the rubble. HRW urged the international community,
including the United States, and international organisations to support
local authorities in their task. "International organisations with forensic
expertise should provide technical support, including by sending in forensic
experts," it said. Authorities should set up a civilian authority to liaise
with the families of the missing, and create a digital database including
photographs of those exhumed, HRW said. "Identifying missing people and
preserving evidence for possible prosecutions will have implications for
justice in Syria as a whole," the rights group said. Last month, the Syrian
team finished uncovering 553 bodies from the first of these mass graves in a
football pitch near the city's central hospital, it said. The team -- made
up mostly of volunteers -- then reburied them after logging information such
as hair colour, clothes and shoes, as well as any identifying marks on their
bodies. They said they believed they found the remains of air strike
victims, IS fighters recognised by their clothes and perhaps patients of the
nearby hospital, HRW said. But, it said, "the team needs far more training
and technical assistance in order to exhume the bodies and collect data
without losing information crucial to identifying them". In April, an AFP
correspondent visited the site of the mass grass in the football pitch and
saw a young man step over blue body bags searching for his brother. Workers
wearing white surgical masks and plastic gloves had retrieved around 60
bodies in a week since the grave was discovered, jotting down identifying
details on a notebook. Ten of those remains had been recognised by
relatives.
Coalition Hits Yemen Rebels Outside Hodeida as Push for City Paused
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/July 03/18/Yemeni government
forces backed by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have bombarded
rebel positions outside Hodeida after pausing their push into the strategic
Red Sea port city, government sources said on Tuesday.
Hospital sources said 11 civilians and 43 rebel fighters had been killed on
Sunday and Monday as the rebels came under fire south of Hodeida and in some
cases retaliated. The rebels have held Hodeida since 2014 but in a major
offensive last month government forces backed by the United Arab Emirates
and other coalition troops captured the disused airport on its southern
outskirts -- a major stepping stone for any drive into the city. On
Saturday, the government and the UAE announced a pause in their advance.
This week's deadly bombardment targeted rebel positions in Tohayta, Beit al-Faqiya
and Zabid, to the south of Hodeida, the government military sources said.
Three civilians were killed in their car in a coalition air strike against
rebel military vehicles on a road near Zabid, residents said. Eight
civilians, including four children, were killed by rocket fire in Tohayta,
witnesses said. Residents blamed the rebels.
In both incidents, hospital sources confirmed receiving the bodies. Hodeida
is the latest battlefront in a war that has killed nearly 10,000 people
since 2015, most of them civilians, and pushed the impoverished country to
the brink of famine. Desperately needed relief supplies and three-quarters
of Yemen's commercial imports pass through the city's port. UN envoy Martin
Griffiths arrived in the rebel-held capital Sanaa on Sunday in a new bid to
reach a deal to avert an all-out battle fo Hodeida that could cause major
casualties in the city's streets and damage to its docks. Griffiths has said
a proposal to grant the UN a major role in managing the port is under study.
The government and the UAE have demanded the rebels withdraw unconditionally
from the whole city, not just the port, something the rebels have rejected.
The UAE says the rebels' departure from Hodeida, whether voluntary or by
force, is necessary to stop them smuggling in weapons.
Leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador Sweeps to Victory in Mexico Presidential
Elections
Asharq Al-Awsat/Monday, 03 July, 2018/Leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador
won a landslide victory in Mexico’s presidential elections, vowing to
crackdown on corruption and criminal violence and pursue responsible
economic policies. The sharp-tongued, silver-haired politician known as "AMLO"
won 53 percent of the vote, according to an official projection of the
results. That would be the biggest share of the vote since the early 1980s,
and would give Lopez Obrador a strong platform both to address Mexico’s
internal problems and face external challenges like the threat of a trade
war with the United States. It is the first time in Mexico's modern history
a candidate has won more than half the vote in a competitive election, and a
resounding rejection of the two parties that have governed the country for
nearly a century. Speaking to reporters after his win, Lopez Obrador
identified corruption as the “principal cause” of inequality and the
criminal violence that has bedeviled Mexico for years, and said he would
spare no one in his commitment to root it out. “Whoever it is will be
punished, I include comrades, officials, friends and family members,” the
64-year-old said. “A good judge begins at home.”"This is a historic day, and
it will be a memorable night," Lopez Obrador said in a victory speech in
Mexico City's Alameda park, as thousands of ecstatic supporters flooded the
capital's central district, chanting "Yes we did!" and partying to mariachi
music. He sought to downplay fears of radicalism, after critics branded him
a "tropical Messiah" who would install Venezuela-style policies that could
wreck Latin America's second-largest economy. "Our new national project
seeks an authentic democracy. We are not looking to construct a
dictatorship, either open or hidden," he told cheering supporters, promising
to respect private property, guarantee individual liberties and work to
reconcile a divided nation. The election was a crushing defeat for the
ruling centrist Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which governed
Mexico from 1929-2000 continually and again from 2012. Public anger over
corruption scandals, which have shattered the PRI’s credibility, was a
defining feature of the campaign, alongside nationwide discontent over
soaring levels of violence and years of lackluster economic growth. Lopez
Obrador, a former Mexico City mayor, was greeted with rapturous cheers by
supporters in the capital’s Zocalo central square around midnight, while
friends celebrated in his tiny hometown of Tepetitan, in the poor southern
state of Tabasco. The victory was a vindication for Lopez Obrador, who was
written off by many critics after narrowly failing to capture the presidency
at his first bid in 2006. He paid tribute to the role in the campaign played
by outgoing President Enrique Pena Nieto and the media, both of which have
felt the bite of his scorn in the past.
Mexican presidents are limited by law to a single term.
Lopez Obrador will take office in December facing a US government that has
been openly antagonistic to Mexico over trade and migration under President
Donald Trump. He vowed to pursue a relationship of "friendship and
cooperation" with the US, Mexico's key trading partner -- a change in tone
from some comments during the campaign, when he said he would put Trump "in
his place."The newly elected president has said he wants to make Mexico more
economically independent of the US. At the same time, he also hopes to
persuade Trump to help develop Mexico and Central America in order to
contain illegal migration. Trump, whose anti-trade, anti-immigration
policies have infuriated Mexico, appeared ready to start off on the right
foot. "I look very much forward to working with him," he tweeted. "There is
much to be done that will benefit both the United States and Mexico!"
Canada's Justin Trudeau echoed the congratulations while emphasizing his
country's work with Mexico to renegotiate the NAFTA trade pact -- an effort
that has stalled over attempts to satisfy Trump's demands. "Canada and
Mexico are close friends and longtime partners," Trudeau said in a
statement. "We share common goals, strong people to people ties, and a
mutually beneficial trading relationship that is the envy of the world --
reflected in our joint effort to update the North American Free Trade
Agreement for the 21st century."
The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on July 03-04/18
Analysis Syria’s Assad Has Become
Israel’s Ally
زفي برال من الهآررتس: سوريا الأسد أصبح حليفاً لإسرائيل
Zvi Bar'el/Haaretz/July 03/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65768/zvi-barel-haaretz-syrias-assad-has-become-israels-ally-%D8%B2%D9%81%D9%8A-%D8%A8%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%84-%D9%85%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%87%D8%A2%D8%B1%D8%B1%D8%AA%D8%B3-%D8%B3%D9%88/
Israel wants Assad to remain in power. Both Israel and the Syrian president
now depend on Russia, and when Israel threatens Syria over Iran, it should
know it's threatening Putin, too
Early in 2012, the year after the outbreak of the civil war in Syria, the
Foreign Ministry drafted recommendations on Israel’s position regarding
Syrian President Bashar Assad.
As Haaretz reported at the time, the ministry said Israel should denounce
the slaughter in Syria and call for Assad’s ouster. It argued that Israel
shouldn’t be the only Western country not to condemn Assad, since that would
feed conspiracy theories that Israel preferred the mass murderer to remain
in power.
The Israeli foreign minister at the time, Avigdor Lieberman, accepted this
recommendation, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu opposed it. Netanyahu
denounced the slaughter and the Syrian army and charged that “various
leaders have no moral qualms about killing their neighbors and their own
people as well.” But he never mentioned Assad as the person responsible or
demanded his ouster. Israel’s UN ambassador during that period, Ron Prosor,
said Assad has “no moral right to lead his people,” but that was it.
These diplomatic acrobatics and the Lieberman-Netanyahu dispute only fed the
conspiracy theories, and Syrian rebel leaders were convinced that Israel
wanted Assad to remain in power. They were right.
Now that Assad has regained control of most of Syria and is waging a final
battle against rebels in the south, Israel is acting as if it is now
reformulating its policy and becoming “reconciled” to Assad’s continued
rule. Several weeks ago, Israel reportedly told Russia it wouldn’t oppose
that, as if the decision were in its hands or as if Israel even had any
leverage over what kind of government is in power in Syria after the war
ends.
But Israel isn’t merely “reconciled” to rule by Assad. It also feared the
prospect that the various rebel militias might succeed in ousting him,
sparking a new civil war among the rebels themselves.
Position papers drafted by the Israeli army and the Foreign Ministry over
the past two years didn’t actually voice support for the Syrian president,
but their assessments show that they viewed his continued rule as preferable
or even vital for Israel’s security. Israel’s close cooperation with Russia,
which gave Israeli forces a free hand to attack Hezbollah and Iranian
targets in Syria, added the Israelis to the unofficial coalition of Arab
states that support Assad’s continued rule.
Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sissi, who met with the head of Syrian
intelligence in 2015, said that same year that “Egypt and Syria are in the
same boat.” Egyptian delegations visited Damascus despite Syria’s ouster
from the Arab League, and in a 2017 interview, Al-Sissi even said that
“Egypt supports the armies of states like Iraq, Libya and Syria.”
King Abdullah of Jordan was one of the first leaders to denounce Assad and
demand his ouster. But he later reversed himself, thereby angering Saudi
Arabia. And following conversations between Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
and Russian officials, even Riyadh is no longer publicly opposing Assad’s
continued tenure.
Russia’s military intervention in Syria, which began in 2015, was initially
viewed by Israel as ineffective and doomed to fail. But in reality, it
bolstered Assad’s status domestically, created a coalition with Iran and
Turkey and neutralized the intervention of Arab states such as Qatar, Saudi
Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. And since the United States had
withdrawn from the arena even before that, Israel ostensibly had to make do
with the lesser evil.
But the Russian coalition is no love affair. Tehran and Moscow are at odds
over control of the de-escalation zones. Turkey, which invaded Kurdish areas
of northern Syria, threatens Russia’s desire for a united Syrian state.
Therefore if Israel’s goal is to oust Iran from Syria, Russia — rather than
the United States or the Arab states — is the only power capable of limiting
Iran’s operations there and perhaps even getting it to leave.
Assad is deeply dependent on Russia, even more than on Iran. And that’s
convenient for Israel, because it means Syria’s foreign policy, including
its future policy toward Israel, will be vetted by the Kremlin, thereby at
least ensuring coordination with Israel and a reduction in the threat from
Syria. In exchange, Israel has committed not to undermine Assad’s rule.
Moreover, Israel has insisted that the 1974 Separation of Forces Agreement
that followed the Yom Kippur War remains in effect, meaning Israel won’t
accept Syrian forces in parts of the Golan Heights demilitarized under that
agreement. Officially, UN observers oversee the agreement’s implementation.
But in practice, it was the Assad regime that ensured that Syria upheld the
agreement and that kept the border quiet for decades. Israel, which has a
low opinion of UN observers, also used its military deterrence to persuade
Assad that upholding the agreement served his interests.
Now Russia is effectively joining this supervisory force, and it sees eye to
eye with Israel about the need to keep the border quiet. Therefore Israel
ought to wish Assad sweeping success and a long life. And when Israeli
ministers threaten his continued rule if he lets Iranian forces set up shop
near Israel’s border, they should know they’re also threatening Russia — as
well as Israel’s new strategic partner in the presidential palace in
Damascus.
https://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/syria/.premium-syria-s-assad-has-become-israel-s-ally-1.6240499
Once Enemies, Now
Refugees: The New Reality Facing Soldiers on the Israeli-Syrian Border
هآررتس: الأعداء الآن لاجئين: الحقيقة الجديدة التي تواجه جنود اسرائيل على
حدودها مع سوريا
Anshel Pfeffer/Moshav Keshet/Haaretz/July 03/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65771/haaretz-once-enemies-now-refugees-the-new-reality-facing-soldiers-on-the-israeli-syrian-border-%D9%87%D8%A2%D8%B1%D8%B1%D8%AA%D8%B3-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A3%D8%B9%D8%AF%D8%A7%D8%A1-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A2/
'I still remember fighting the Syrian army in Lebanon and eyeballing them
here on the Golan. Now there are no soldiers in sight – only Syrian
civilians'
MOSHAV KESHET – The Israel Defense Forces maintains dozens of fortified
positions and observation posts the length of the Golan border with Syria.
On Sunday, however, as thousands of Syrian refugees streamed toward the
border, escaping the relentless bombardment of rebel-held Daraa, the IDF
reinforced its units on the Golan Heights, tanks and infantry sections
overlooking the new refugee camps that had sprung up just a few hundred
meters from the border fence on the southern Golan.
Every few seconds on Monday, dull explosions of artillery fire could clearly
be heard from the Israeli side and mushrooms of smoke arose from the low
ridge across the border in Syria.
But it was clear that the Assad regime’s gunners were making sure, as they
shelled the refugees’ escape route, not to risk hitting too near the Israeli
positions. All the shells seemed to be landing at least 3 kilometers (1.8
miles) from the border, and the soldiers in the observation posts confirmed
that none had come close.
And still a steady trickle of refugees continued to arrive. Some on foot,
others on motorbikes, and the occasional car. The United Nations has
assessed that over 250,000 civilians have been displaced in recent days by
the concerted push by the Assad regime and its Russian allies on the Daraa
region.'
The great majority of these have fled either eastward or toward the nearby
Jordanian border. Some, though, have made the longer and more dangerous
journey to the Golan.
The incentive is that once they arrive near the Israeli border, they are
relatively safe. Lt. Col. E., the commander of the IDF’s humanitarian
assistance operation on the Golan, said Israel had not officially created a
safe buffer zone, but that “during the last few years, these villages [on
the border] were attacked less often than other places in Syria.”
The villagers do indeed seem accustomed to life with bombardments on the
near horizon. As refugees milled around the two camps of orange and white
tents transferred across the border by the IDF last Thursday night, local
shepherds continued grazing their sheep, all the way up to the fence.
“We haven’t seen any refugees try and get close to the fence,” said an
armored corps officer, sitting with his tank crew at one of the observation
posts near Moshav Keshet. “I don’t believe they will try. There are
minefields on the border and they won’t take any risks. At least, I hope
they won’t,” he added.
The soldiers’ orders are to prevent any unauthorized breaches of the border
– if necessary by firing warning shots on the ground near the refugees.
Infantry reinforcements are on alert nearby for crowd control, should the
need arise. Unlike the Gaza border, though, no one here expects to be using
deadly force to prevent anyone from crossing.
“The Syrians have been educated their entire lives to see Israel as their
enemy. I think that for many of them that remains a psychological barrier,”
says an officer of the regional Bashan Division.
No risks are being taken, but the operational assessment is that the
refugees will not try to cross the border and instead will make do with
taking shelter near the fence, living for the time being off the food
supplied by the IDF, donated in part by Israeli, American and Arab NGOs.
Another reason for making the journey to the Israeli border is the guarantee
of medical treatment.
Israel has allowed some 4,000 wounded Syrians to pass through the border
over the last five years, where they have received medical aid. And they
continue to arrive at the small locked gateways at the border. “Last night,
a young man who had lost a leg was brought here,” recounts a tank crew
member. “The UN observers let him through and an IDF ambulance took him to
hospital. We were on alert to make sure it wasn’t an ambush, but it all
ended very quietly.”
The Assad regime, with the crucial help of its Russian and Iranian allies,
has now retaken much of the lost territory. Yet despite overwhelming
firepower, much of the Daraa and Golan regions still remain outside of its
grasp.
As the regime’s forces have become bogged down once again, the Russians and
Jordanians are trying to broker an agreement with Daraa’s rebels. But one of
the last strongholds of the civil war that broke out over seven years ago is
reluctant to surrender. Like millions of refugees of this war, those who
have just arrived on Israel and Jordan’s borders have no idea when, if ever,
they will be allowed to return home.
For the last 50 years, the entire topography of the border has been built to
accommodate two large conventional armies, warily watching each other. Every
few hundred meters, the landscape is dotted with military communications
masts, communications trenches, bunkers and tank positions, built from
dark-brown earth and black basalt rocks.
For decades, the Israeli and Syrian armies practiced bringing brigades of
tanks or armored personnel carriers to the frontline. But for the past seven
years, since the civil war broke out, there has been just one army on the
border.
The Syrian military has dwindled and its remnants are now split into regime
forces and rebel groups, busy fighting each other and killing civilians. For
now at least, instead of facing an enemy army, Israel is dealing with the
human detritus of the war.
“It’s a strange sensation,” says a senior officer who arrived from General
Staff headquarters in Tel Aviv to inspect the preparations on the border.
“I still remember fighting the Syrian army in Lebanon and eyeballing them
here on the Golan,” the officer continued. “Now there are no soldiers in
sight and our main operation here is with Syrian civilians.”
Palestinians Beat Female Journalists; World "Sees No
Evil"
Bassam Tawil/Gatestone Institute/July 03/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12634/palestinians-female-journalists
Had an Israeli soldier hit these female journalists, representatives of
Western human rights organizations and major newspapers would have banged on
their doors long ago, demanding that they justify physically abusing
peaceful women who were just doing their job. It is harder, however, to make
sense of the behavior of the foreign media and international human rights
groups, who essentially champion Abbas's fiefdom by ignoring its brutality.
The truth is that the Palestinian Authority is a body that has long been
functioning as a dictatorship that suppresses freedom of speech and imposes
a reign of terror and intimidation on Palestinian journalists and critics.
It is only a question of time before a Western journalist is beaten on the
streets of a Palestinian city. When that happens, the international media
and human rights groups can look to themselves and their own biased and
unprofessional behavior for answers.
Two female Palestinian journalists were beaten during protests in the West
Bank in the past week. The two women, Lara Kan'an and Majdoleen Hassona,
were assaulted by Palestinian Authority security officers while covering
Palestinian demonstrations calling on President Mahmoud Abbas to lift the
economic sanctions he imposed last year on the Gaza Strip.
The physical assaults on Kan'an and Hassona are seen by Palestinians as part
of the Palestinian Authority's continued effort to silence critics and
intimidate journalists who fail to "toe the line." The beatings, which took
place separately in the West Bank cities of Nablus and Tulkarem, mark a new
high in the Palestinian leadership's crackdown on public freedoms:
assaulting an Arab woman on the street is considered a humiliation of the
highest order to her and her clan.
While such assaults spark protests among Palestinians, the international
community and Western correspondents covering the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict continue to play their game of "See No Evil." When the perpetrators
are Palestinians, they can get away with -- literally, murder -- from the
perspective of International human rights organizations and groups
ostensibly concerned about freedom of the media. What would have been the
response on the part of the international community and press, one wonders,
had the two Palestinian women even been roughed up by Israeli soldiers.
Kan'an and Hassona, however, are unfortunate. Their plight will not be
splashed onto the front pages of the New York Times or the Guardian because
the men who beat up them are Palestinian, and not Israeli. Had an Israeli
soldier hit these female journalists, representatives of Western human
rights organizations and major newspapers would have banged on their doors
long ago, demanding that they justify physically abusing peaceful women who
were just doing their job.
Now for the details of the assaults. The first incident took place in
Tulkarem on June 28, when Hassona arrived to report about a Palestinian
demonstration calling on Abbas to lift the sanctions against the Gaza Strip.
Videos posted on social media show Palestinian security officers in civilian
clothes physically assaulting Hassona while attempting to stop her from
recording or filming the anti-Abbas protest.
A Palestinian Authority police officer raises his baton as he approaches
Majdoleen Hassona in Tulkarem. (Image source: Mohamad Kheiry/Facebook video
screenshot)
One of her friends, Ahmed Al-Dabash, described the attackers as "thugs
belonging to [Mahmoud Abbas's presidential compound] the Mukata in
Ramallah."
Hassona later recalled her experience in an interview with a Palestinian
news site:
"At the end of the demonstration, there were some problems between the
protesters and the police. I was among a group of journalists who tried to
approach the area to find out what was going on. A man who I believe was a
police officer in civilian clothes then walked up to me and told me to stop
filming. I told him I'm a journalist and I continued to film. Then another
man came up to me and tried to snatch the camera from my hands. He then
started beating me and threatening me."
Hassona, who is a veteran freelance investigative journalist, said she was
not surprised by the assault. She says that she has been under surveillance
by the Palestinian security forces since June 12, when she was briefly
detained and interrogated upon her return home from a visit to Turkey.
"They questioned me about my journalistic work, they wanted to know why I
was frequently visiting Istanbul. I told them that it was normal for a
journalist to travel and that I was studying in Turkey. But since then I
have been subject to a smear campaign on social media by people associated
with the Palestinian security forces in the West Bank. They have accused me
of participating in the anti-Abbas protests and some even went as far as
claiming that I was a Hamas agent. This, of course, is not true."
The second incident took place in Nablus on June 30, also during a protest
against Abbas's sanctions against the Gaza Strip, Lara Kan'an. Her
experience was not much different than that of her colleague, Hassona.
Videos posted on Facebook showed the moment Kan'an and other protesters were
attacked by men in civilian clothes believed to be security officers or
activists belonging to Abbas's ruling Fatah faction. They also seized her
mobile phone and returned it only after deleting the video and photos she
had taken during the protest.
Kan'an recounted that when she initially refused to hand over her mobile
phone to a security officer, she was approached by a policeman who hit her
on the arm and violently pulled the device out of her hand. She said that
another two men in civilian clothes attacked her from the back, with one
pulling her from the hair and the other hitting her left shoulder. Kan'an
was taken to the local Rafidiyeh Hospital, where x-rays showed she was
suffering from bruises to the neck and shoulder.
Some Palestinian human rights groups were quick to condemn the assaults and
call on the Palestinian leadership to stop targeting journalists.
The Palestinian Center for Development and Media Freedoms (MADA) condemned
the attacks and expressed deep concern over the "increasing assaults on
journalists [by the Palestinian security forces] in a manner that is
particularly alarming and disturbing to women journalists." The group
pointed out that the same scenario has recently been repeated in several
Palestinian cities. "MADA demands all official bodies to investigate all the
attacks and to publish the results thereof and to hold accountable the
perpetrators and those responsible and to take measures to prevent their
continuation," the group said in a statement.
The Palestinian Journalists Syndicate in the West Bank, a body dominated by
Fatah loyalists, also issued a statement condemning the assaults and calling
on the Palestinian leadership to hold accountable the perpetrators.
Palestinian journalists, however, have become used to lip service from this
institution, which is openly supportive of Abbas and his associates and
serves as a mouthpiece for the Palestinian Authority.
The hypocrisy of the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate is easy to
understand.
It is harder, however, to make sense of the behavior of the foreign media
and international human rights groups, who essentially champion Abbas's
fiefdom by ignoring its brutality.
The truth is that the Palestinian Authority is a body that has long been
functioning as a dictatorship that suppresses freedom of speech and imposes
a reign of terror and intimidation on Palestinian journalists and critics.
Today, it is the Palestinian journalists who are victims of the repression
and violence. Tomorrow, it will be foreign journalists, who see these
assaults but refuse to utter a word. It is only a question of time before a
Western journalist is beaten on the streets of a Palestinian city. When that
happens, the international media and human rights groups can look to
themselves and their own biased and unprofessional behavior for answers.
*Bassam Tawil, an Arab Muslim, is based in the Middle East.
© 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.
Blasphemy Laws in Pakistan
A. Z. Mohamed/Gatestone Institute/July 03/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65776/a-z-mohamed-blasphemy-laws-in-pakistan-%D9%82%D9%88%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%8A%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AA%D8%AC%D8%AF%D9%8A%D9%81-%D9%81%D9%8A-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D9%83%D8%B3%D8%AA%D8%A7%D9%86-judith-bergman-europe/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12576/blasphemy-laws-pakistan
Many extremist Muslims are aiming at even more government submission to
sharia through intimidation and terror.
Christians and Ahmadis continue to raise concerns regarding the government's
failure to safeguard minority rights, as well as the government's persistent
discrimination against religious minorities.
Pakistan is also where Muslim militants, such as the Pakistani Taliban,
carry out assassinations and terrorist attacks. It seems no one is there to
stop them.
On May 6, Ahsan Iqbal, Pakistan's Minister of the Interior, was shot during
a rally in his own constituency, in the province of Punjab. Fortunately, he
survived the attack, but the bullet in his abdomen could not be removed.
"The bullet lodged in my body... will keep reminding me of the impending
need to remove the seeds of hatred sowed in the country," Iqbal said.
An initial report suggested that the main suspect, Abid Hussain, 21, had
carefully planned the attack; recently, Pakistan's Anti-Terrorism Court
issued an 8-day judicial remand of four possible accomplices.
On May 6, Pakistan's Minister of the Interior, Ahsan Iqbal (pictured at
left), was shot and wounded by an Islamist extremist during a rally in
Punjab. (Image source: USAID Pakistan/Wikimedia Commons)
According to other reports, Hussain is linked to Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan
(TLP) -- also known as Tehreek-e-Labbaik Ya Rasool Allah ("Movement of the
Prophet's Followers"). TLP is a new Sunni extremist party known for
aggressively calling for enforcing Pakistan's blasphemy laws, which can
carry the death penalty, and for opposing any relaxation of these laws.
Many fear that this assault is not an isolated incident and that other
members of the cabinet are on the TLP's hit list. This apprehension,
however, does not mean that the government is against sharia or blasphemy
laws, or is even thinking of reforming them. Many extremist Muslims are
aiming at even more government submission to sharia through intimidation and
terror.
Extremist Muslims in Pakistan have been successful in achieving their
objectives. according to the U.S. Department of State's 2017 Report on
International Religious Freedom:
"The [Pakistani] courts continued to enforce blasphemy laws, the punishment
for which ranges from life in prison to the death sentence for a range of
charges, including 'defiling the Prophet Muhammad.'"
According to reports from civil society organizations, in 2017, there were
at least 50 individuals imprisoned on blasphemy charges, at least 17 of whom
had received death sentences, In addition, the report added, the police
registered at least 17 new cases under the blasphemy laws against still
other individuals.
Pakistan's TLP party activism is just one example of how extremist Muslims
and official complicity combine to perpetuate sharia and blasphemy laws. TLP
itself was apparently inspired by a "blasphemy killer." The party "was born
out of a protest movement supporting Mumtaz Qadri, a bodyguard of the
governor of Punjab who gunned down his boss in 2011 over his call to relax
Pakistan's draconian blasphemy laws," Reuters reported.
In October 2017, Pakistan's president, Mamnoon Hussain, signed into law a
bill that changed an electoral oath which affirmed the belief that the
Prophet Muhammed is the final prophet of Islam to a "declaration" and
abolished separate voter lists for Ahmadi Muslims, whom many Muslims
consider non-Muslim, as Ahmadis regard Mirza Ghulam Ahmad (1835-1908) as
their Mahdi (Messiah). In 1974, a constitutional amendment introduced by the
prime minister at the time, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, had declared the Ahmadiyya
community a non-Muslim minority; and in 1984, President Zia-ul Haq issued
Ordinance XX which makes it a criminal offense for Ahmadis to call
themselves Muslims, and to practice or propagate their faith.
In any event, the law sparked weeks of protests, led by Tehreek-e-Labbaik
Pakistan members, against the government. The TLP accused then-Minister for
Law and Justice, Zahid Hamid, of blasphemy and demanded his resignation. The
government succumbed to pressure by extremist Muslims, and attributed the
change in the oath to "clerical error." Parliament reversed the provisions;
Hamid was forced to resign and the government gave assurances that Asia Bibi,
a Christian mother of five with a highly questionable blasphemy conviction,
would not be sent abroad. Notably, Qadri had apparently also murdered
governor Salman Taseer for speaking against a death sentence on Asia Bibi.
More appalling is what the U.S. Department of State report said: that
government officials -- under pressure from the extremist Muslims' protests
of October 2017 -- and probably to deny any support to Ahmadis -- had
engaged in anti-Ahmadi rhetoric and attended events that Ahmadis said
incited violence against members of their community. The Ahmadiyya Muslim
Community leaders and human rights organizations "continued to express
concerns about the government's targeting of Ahmadis for blasphemy, and
Ahmadis continued to be affected by discriminatory and ambiguous legislation
that denied them basic rights," the report added.
Christians and Ahmadi Muslims are not by any means exceptional: members of
all religious minority communities in Pakistan are distressed that the
government submitted to Tehreek-e-Labbaik party and other Islamists'
pressure. Christians and Ahmadis continue to raise concerns regarding the
government's failure to safeguard minority rights as well as its persistent
discrimination against religious minorities. Authorities have also often
failed to intervene during episodes of violence against religious
minorities, and the police have often failed to arrest perpetrators of these
abuses.
In his condemnation of the assassination attempt of the Minister of
Interior, Rizvi, TLP's leader, emphasized that his party is waging an
unarmed struggle to bring "the Prophet's religion to the throne," in a way
that clearly identifies his party role in achieving Islamists' ultimate goal
of al-hakemyah of Allah (the sovereignty of God and sharia law), a role that
consists in spreading narratives such as the supremacy of Islam, the
supposed religion of truth, over all other world religions (Quran 3:19); the
supposed supremacy of sharia over all man-made laws, and that the Christians
and Jews are supposedly conspiring against Islam and Muslims (Quran 2:109).
Extremist Muslims, like Tehreek-e-Labbaik, have been able to plant seeds of
intolerance, hatred and fear, lionize terrorists and lead protests to impose
sharia and blasphemy laws.
Within this context of Islamists' "unarmed struggle," the goal of bringing
"the Prophet's religion to the throne" is likely to take place in a country
where the government, under religious pressure, was unable to defend an
electoral reform bill enacted by the president last October. The government
also has not followed most of the instructions issued four years ago by
Pakistan's Supreme Court to protect religious minorities after a terrorist
bomber murdered 127 innocent people at a church. Pakistan is also where
Muslim militants, such as the Pakistani Taliban, carry out assassinations
and terrorist attacks. It seems no one is there to stop them.
*A. Z. Mohamed is a Muslim born and raised in the Middle East.
© 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.
Europe: "The Vision is an Islamic State"
Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/July 03/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65776/a-z-mohamed-blasphemy-laws-in-pakistan-%D9%82%D9%88%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%8A%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AA%D8%AC%D8%AF%D9%8A%D9%81-%D9%81%D9%8A-%D8%A8%D8%A7%D9%83%D8%B3%D8%AA%D8%A7%D9%86-judith-bergman-europe/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12619/europe-islamic-state
"The growing religiousness is not an expression of marginalization. We are
talking about people who are well-integrated, but who want to be religious".
— Professor Viggo Mortensen.
"The vision is an Islamic state -- Islamic society... Muslims will prefer
sharia rule. But the vision for twenty years from now is for sharia law to
be part of Germany, that sharia will be institutionalized in the state
itself". — "Yusuf", in a documentary series, False Identity.
"I will pick them one by one -- I will start with people around me... If
every Muslim would do the same in his surroundings, it can happen with no
problem... you don't confront him [the German] with force; you do it
slowly... There will be clashes, but slowly the clashes will subside, as
people will accept reality." — "Yusuf", in a documentary series, False
Identity.
Europe will still exist but, as with the great Christian Byzantine Empire
that is now Turkey, will it still embody Judeo-Christian civilization?
A Dutch government report published in June showed that Muslims in the
Netherlands are becoming more religious. The report, based on information
from 2006-2015, is a study of more than 7,249 Dutch nationals with Moroccan
and Turkish roots. Two thirds of the Muslims in the Netherlands are from
Turkey or Morocco.
According to the report, 78% of Moroccan Muslims pray five times a day, as
do 33% of Turkish Muslims. Approximately 40% of both groups visit a mosque
at least once a week. More young Moroccan women wear a headscarf (up from
64% in 2006 to 78% in 2015) and large majorities of both groups eat halal
(93% of Moroccan Muslims and 80% of Turkish Muslims). 96% of Moroccan
Muslims say that faith is a very important part of their lives, whereas the
number is 89% for Turkish Muslims. The number of Dutch Moroccan Muslims who
can be described as strictly adhering to Islam has increased from 77% in
2006, to 84% in 2015. For Turkish Muslims, the numbers have increased from
37% to 45%. There are few secular Muslims -- 7% among Turkish Muslims, 2%
among Moroccan Muslims.
In Denmark, the trend of Muslims becoming more religious was apparent as
early as 2004, when a poll showed that Muslims were becoming more religious
than their parents, especially "young, well-educated and well-integrated
women". At the time, Professor Viggo Mortensen said, "The growing
religiousness is not an expression of marginalization. We are talking about
people who are well-integrated, but who want to be religious".
A more detailed Danish poll from 2015 showed that Muslims had become more
religious since a similar poll taken in 2006: In 2006, 37% prayed five times
a day, whereas the number had gone up to 50% in 2015. In 2006, 63% believed
that the Koran should be followed to the letter; in 2015, it was 77%. Brian
Arly Jacobsen, a sociologist of religion from the University of Copenhagen,
was surprised by the results. "With time we would expect [that Muslims]
would become more like the rest of the Danes, who are not particularly
active in the religious sphere," he said. Jacobsen thought that a possible
explanation might have been the 20-30 new mosques that were built in the
decade preceding 2015.
The trends expressed by these polls are corroborated by studies and polls
showing that many Muslims in Europe want to live under sharia law. According
to a 2014 study of Moroccan and Turkish Muslims in Germany, France, the
Netherlands, Belgium, Austria and Sweden, an average of almost 60% of the
Muslims polled agreed that Muslims should return to the roots of Islam. 75%
thought there is only one interpretation of the Koran possible, and 65% said
that Sharia is more important to them than the laws of the country in which
they live. A 2016 UK poll showed that 43% of British Muslims "believed that
parts of the Islamic legal system should replace British law while only 22
per cent opposed the idea". In a 2017 study, which included a poll of 400
Belgian Muslims, 29% said they believe the laws of Islam to be superior to
Belgian law, and 34% said they "would definitely prefer a political system
inspired by the Quran".
According to a 2014 study of Moroccan and Turkish Muslims in Germany,
France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria and Sweden, an average of almost
60% of the Muslims polled agreed that Muslims should return to the roots of
Islam, and 65% said that Sharia is more important to them than the laws of
the country in which they live. Pictured: Friday prayers at the IZW Mosque
in Vienna, Austria. (Photo by Thomas Kronsteiner/Getty Images)
The more than two million predominantly Muslim migrants that have arrived in
Europe in recent years are only reinforcing the trend of growing Muslim
religiosity on the continent. A 2017 study of predominantly Afghan asylum
seekers in the Austrian city of Graz showed that the asylum seekers, mostly
men under the age of 30, were all in favor of preserving their traditional
Islamic values with 70% going to the mosque every Friday for prayers. The
women were even more religious, with 62.6% praying five times a day, notably
more than the men (39.7%). In addition, 66.3% of the women wore a headscarf
in public. Half of the migrants said that religion now plays a larger role
in their daily lives in Europe than it did in their native country, and
51.6% of the interviewees said that the supremacy of Islam over other
religions was undisputed.
The tendency of many Muslims to become more religious once they arrived in
Europe was also on display in a new documentary series, "False Identity," by
Arabic-speaking journalist Zvi Yehezkeli, who went undercover to report on
the activities of the Muslim Brotherhood in Europe and the US. In Germany,
he encountered two young Muslims from Syria, who came to Germany via Kosovo,
where they received help from a "British Islamic organization". They had
left Syria as secular Muslims, but on the way to Germany they lived for a
year in Pristina, Kosovo, where, according to Yehezkeli, "Muslim Brotherhood
organizations are active in helping refugees while turning them into devout
Muslims. Ahmed and Yusuf arrived [in Germany] already praying five times a
day".[1]
According to Ahmed:
"When I left Syria, mentally I felt more relaxed. The Islamic charity
organization played an important role in this. Look, the first time you meet
them they start helping you. You sit, you stare at them, they pray in front
of you and here I am a Muslim, studied the Quran, yet don't pray. Suddenly I
find myself alone asking, Why shouldn't I pray like all others?"
Yehezkeli asked them what their dream is. "The vision is an Islamic state --
Islamic society," said Yusuf, "Muslims will prefer sharia rule. But the
vision for twenty years from now is for sharia law to be part of Germany,
that sharia will be institutionalized in the state itself".
In contrast to the growing religiousness of Muslims in Europe, Christians
are becoming less religious. In a study of young Europeans, aged 16-29,
published in March and based on 2014-2016 data, the author, Stephen
Bullivant, a professor of theology and the sociology of religion at St
Mary's University in London, concluded:
"With some notable exceptions, young adults increasingly are not identifying
with or practicing religion... Christianity as a default, as a norm, is
gone, and probably gone for good -- or at least for the next 100 years".
According to the study, between 70% and 80% of young adults in Estonia,
Sweden and the Netherlands categorize themselves as non-religious. Between
64% and 70% of young adults consider themselves non-religious in France,
Belgium, Hungary and the UK. The most religious youths were to be found in
Poland, where only 17% of young adults defined themselves as non-religious,
followed by Lithuania with 25%.
Young Muslims like Yusuf and Ahmed from Syria say they want to spread Islam
by converting Europeans, also known as dawa. They are themselves perfect
examples of having been at the receiving end of dawa -- becoming devout
Muslims through the Islamic organization in Kosovo and now engaging in dawa
themselves. "I will pick them one by one -- I will start with people around
me. They will listen. If every Muslim would do the same in his surroundings,
it can happen with no problem," said Yusuf. Asked if the Germans might
resist dawa, he said:
"You don't confront him [the German] with force, you do it slowly... There
will be clashes, but slowly the clashes will subside, as people will accept
reality. There is no escape; every change involves clashes".
Given young Europeans' lack of a religious identity and the vacuum left by
the departure of Christianity from the lives of the majority, one has to
wonder how sturdy their ability will be to withstand such attempts at
proselytizing. Europe will still exist but, as with the great Christian
Byzantine Empire that is now Turkey, will it still embody Judeo-Christian
civilization?
*Judith Bergman is a columnist, lawyer and political analyst.
[1] The quote begins at 21:24 in the documentary. The statements by Yusuf
and Ahmed follow immediately after.
© 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.
Israeli Defence Forces Appoints First Iran Project
Director" As Northern Tensions Increse
Jerusalem Post/July 03/18
The appointment underscores the overwhelming importance that Israel places
on the developing military confrontation between the countries.
IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Gadi Eisenkot has appointed Maj.-Gen. Nitzan
Alon, who recently left his role as head of the military's Operations
Directorate, as the first director of a special IDF project to coordinate
all issues related to Israel's battle against Iran.
Alon accompanied Eisenkot on his recent trip to the United States last
weekend and participated in meetings with American military leaders,
including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Joseph Dunford.
This is the first time that the IDF has appointed a "project director for
Iran issues," who is meant to coordinate all areas of Israel's battle
against the Islamic Republic: with respect to its nuclear program,
coordinating intelligence gathering with other countries, and in countering
Iran's presence in Syria.
In the past, the head of the Mossad Meir Dagan was responsible for the "Iran
file" under Prime Ministers Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert, but at that time
the battle was restricted to intelligence spheres.
Now that the war between Israel and Iran has come into the open and includes
military confrontation, the appointment of a "special project head"
underscores the overwhelming importance that Israel sees for these
developments.
Within the framework of the role, Alon will also be responsible for
coordination between the Israeli and American security establishments. The
United States and Israel are in close contact and, on the Iran issue, the
two countries are not concealing their interest in overthrowing the regime
of the Ayatollahs.
Israeli media recently reported that renewed American pressure on Iran,
especially the enforcement of additional American sanctions, are having a
significant impact within Iran -- much more so than was foreseen.
Part of this effect can be seen in the growing protests in the large Iranian
cities in the face of the worsening economic situation and critical water
shortage.
The appointment of Alon, who is in a cooling-off period and is vying for
appointment as the deputy IDF chief of staff, illustrates the trust that the
IDF leadership places in him, including Eisenkot and Defense Minister
Avigdor Liberman.
Alon was head of the operations division until a little more than a month
ago, and he can take part of the credit for the accruing Israeli successes
on everything related to Israel's "war between the wars" against Iran,
Hezbollah, and Shi'ite militias.
Now, as as a general-in-waiting, he is coordinating the IDF's overall Iran
efforts and reporting directly to the chief of staff. Alon is also charged
with maintaining the connection between the IDF and military intelligence
and the Mossad.
Does this appointment strengthen the position of Alon in the battle over the
next chief of staff, or at least over the appointment of the next deputy
chief of staff? At this point, there is no clear answer to this question.
Alon has been labeled as a "leftist," which has made him a target of
extremist settlers in the West Bank while he served as head of the Central
Command. At the same time, settlers spread a rumor that Alon's wife was an
activist with the Israeli left-wing NGO Checkpoint Watch.
Nevertheless, Alon has won considerable and consensual professional acclaim
that grew over the course of his appointment in the projects division.
The IDF chief of staff and defense minister, who now have only a few weeks
before having to make a decision on the identity of the next chief of staff,
are faced with a glut of options: a clear favorite whose fitness and
readiness for the position cannot be impinged (Deputy Chief of Staff Aviv
Kochavi); another particularly high quality candidate who has failed in
public statements in the past (former deputy Chief of Staff Yair Golan), and
two younger generals, Gen. Nitzan Alon and Gen. Eyal Zamir, who recently
finished a successful stint in the southern command.
Liberman is expected to make his decision after the fall holidays.
https://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Politics-And-Diplomacy/As-northern-tensions-rise-IDF-appoints-first-Iran-project-director-561410
Merkel Engineers a Better Deal on Migration
Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg/Asharq Al Awsat/July 03/18
For all the premature political obituaries, German Chancellor Angela Merkel
has not lost her ability to hammer out compromises that please no one but
somehow work for everyone. The European Union national leaders’ joint
statement on migration, worked out in Brussels in the pre-dawn hours of
Friday, reconciles the interests of countries with the most contradictory of
positions — Germany, Italy and the Eastern European nations — and does just
enough to make further rebellion by Merkel’s Bavarian coalition partners
look unreasonable.
Parties in the migration debate went into the EU summit on Friday with
positions that appeared hard to bridge. Merkel needed agreement from
countries where undocumented immigrants first show up in Europe, such as
Greece, Italy, Spain and, to a lesser extent, Hungary, to take back asylum
seekers who try to move to wealthier Germany while their cases are being
considered. The intra-EU migration of potential refugees is a pet peeve of
German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, whose Bavaria-based Christian
Social Union is part of Merkel’s governing coalition. The CSU faces a tough
election in October, and is trying to draw nationalist voters away from the
anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.
By contrast, Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, who presented his own
European migration solution last Sunday, insisted that intra-EU migration
would cease to be a problem once Europe agreed that the entry countries
shouldn’t bear sole responsibility for the immigrants who land there after
sailing across the Mediterranean from Africa. So far this year, Spain has
received almost 18,000, Italy more than 16,000 and Greece 13,000; it’s only
fair that the rest of Europe should help, Conte has argued.
For their part, the Eastern Europeans, led by Hungarian Prime Minister
Viktor Orban, insisted they shouldn’t be forced to accept refugees from
other countries in the name of solidarity because it was an imposition on
their sovereignty.
In the end, everyone got what they wanted, if not all they wanted.
Conte’s prize involved “controlled centers” set up in EU members states with
“full EU support” to “distinguish between irregular migrants, who will be
returned, and those in need of international protection, for whom the
principle of solidarity would apply.” This is a rather specific promise to
alleviate Italy’s financial and bureaucratic burden, which enabled Conte to
say as he left the talks that Italy was “no longer alone.”
The Eastern Europeans made sure that the “controlled centers” would not be
forced on any countries that don’t want them. The wording, clearly the
result of much heated back-and-forth, is clumsy but unambiguous: “All the
measures in the context of these controlled centers, including relocation
and resettlement, will be on a voluntary basis.”
Merkel got the paragraph she needed, too. It states that “secondary
movements of asylum seekers between member states” undermine the European
asylum system and the Schengen borderless travel accord, so “member states
should take all necessary internal legislative and administrative measures
to counter such movements and to closely cooperate amongst each other to
that end.”
That may appear unspecific at first sight, and the CSU was momentarily
stumped. “We must happily confirm that the common European asylum policy is
moving in the right direction,” Hans Michelbach, a member of the party’s
leadership, said after learning of the Brussels statement. “The question is
what it means for national borders and the admission of people now and in
the next few months.”
Yet the statement means no unilateral action is needed; the prime ministers
of Spain and Greece, who took a conciliatory stance in the talks, have
already agreed informally to take back any of “their” asylum seekers found
in Germany. Conte hasn’t quite said so, but he did sign off on the call for
cooperation in stopping “secondary movements” in exchange for the
“controlled center” promise.
The CSU should also consider the stance of Austrian Chancellor Sebastian
Kurz. With his firm stance on immigration, he is the Bavarians’ political
idol, and the state’s prime minister, CSU member Markus Soeder, even invited
him — and pointedly not Merkel — to help the party campaign ahead of the
October election. But Kurz has clearly come out in favor of negotiated
solutions within the EU and threatened to take countermeasures if Germany
unilaterally tried to push back asylum seekers across the Austrian border.
The Brussels statement presents Seehofer and his party with a good
opportunity to claim victory — after all, “secondary movements” wouldn’t
have been tackled so quickly on a European level had they not put pressure
on Merkel — and climb down. Further confrontation would be
counterproductive. The CSU has failed to gain in the Bavarian polls since it
got into the public fight with Merkel, and though Germans overwhelmingly
support sending back asylum seekers registered elsewhere, a recent
nationwide poll by Infratest Dimap showed that three quarters of Germans
would welcome a European solution to migration issues over a unilateral
German one.
Political divisions appear to have been stitched up, if not healed. The
question is whether the solutions being hammered out under heavy political
pressure will actually work, both from a practical and a moral standpoint.
The EU is now intent on building all kinds of refugee camps — in North
Africa to prevent crossings and in Europe to process asylum applications.
This is essentially a detention system for people whose “crime” is seeking a
better, safer life; it’s hardly likely to help the integration of those who
will ultimately be allowed into Europe. Besides, the North African camps
create an enormous potential for abuses, from corruption to various strains
of inhumanity. Europe could be compromising on its values as it seeks
consensus among its member states, some of which have strong nationalist,
anti-immigrant parties.
Is Trump Handing Putin a Victory in Syria?
David Ignatius/The Washington Post/July 03/18
The catastrophic war in Syria is nearing what could be a diplomatic endgame,
as the United States, Russia and Israel shape a deal that would preserve
power for Syrian President Bashar al -Assad in exchange for Russian pledges
to restrain Iranian influence.
Checking Iranian power has become the only major Trump administration goal
in Syria, now that ISIS is nearly vanquished. President Trump appears ready
to embrace a policy that will validate Assad, an authoritarian leader who
has gassed his own people, and abandon a Syrian opposition that was partly
trained and supplied by the United States.
Trump’s Syria policy has bounced back and forth like a ping-pong ball. The
most consistent feature has been his mistrust of Middle East military
commitments made by his predecessors George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Step
by step, he seems to be undoing them.
The diplomatic discussions about Syria come as Trump prepares for a July 16
summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Foreign diplomats and
administration officials are unsure just what will be on the agenda, but the
Syria package will probably be in play.
An intriguing aspect of the possible Syria deal is that it’s driven by close
cooperation between Russia and Israel. The Israeli agenda, like Trump’s, is
narrowly focused on blocking Iran — and Israelis seem to have concluded that
Putin is a reliable regional partner.
Israeli, European and US experts outlined some likely elements of the
framework. In exchange for US withdrawal of its demands for a political
transition in Syria, Russia will support various measures to contain Iranian
power, including:
● Iranian-backed forces will stay at least 80 kilometers from the Israeli
border on the Golan Heights.
● Israel will have tacit Russian permission to attack threatening Iranian
targets in Syria, so long as Russian troops aren’t harmed. Israel has
exercised this freedom of action in recent weeks to strike secret Iranian
bases and block Tehran’s attempt to open a Syrian “second front” against
Israel that would complement "Hezbollah" in Lebanon.
● Assad’s army, backed by Russian air power, will consolidate control in
southwest Syria and retake posts on the Jordanian border. Jordan favors
Assad’s control of the border because it might allow truck traffic to
resume, boosting the cash-strapped Jordanian economy. Opposition forces in
the southwest apparently will be left to fend for themselves. As thousands
of new Syrian refugees flee toward a closed Jordanian border, a new
slaughter of trapped civilians is possible.
● Russian military police will patrol areas of southwest Syria and perhaps
other regions, in an effort to stabilize those zones. But a European
diplomat cautions that any expectation that Russian power will mean security
is “based on wishful thinking rather than reality.” The United States, for
now, will retain its garrison at al-Tanf, in southern Syria.
● The Assad regime will expand its outreach to Syrian Kurdish forces in
northeastern Syria, in areas where the Kurds have partnered successfully
with US Special Operations forces to defeat ISIS and restore stability. US
commanders hope American troops can remain for 18 more months or so. But
Trump has voiced his impatience with this mission.
Syrian opposition leaders are bitterly disappointed at the deal that’s
taking shape, and one warned me that the American “betrayal” will be an
incubator for future militant movements. European countries, which have been
key covert allies in Syria, are deeply skeptical that the anti-Iran plan
will work. “Britain and France have warned the US that it’s highly
improbable that Russia has the presence on the ground to get the Iranians to
shift out” of areas they now dominate, a European diplomat told me.
Trump’s willingness to accede to Russian power in Syria — and to give up
hard-won US gains — troubles many Pentagon officials, but they seem to be
losing the argument.
As Putin makes his way toward the summit stage, it’s worth pausing a moment
to appreciate how deftly he has played his hand. Russia is becoming the
indispensable regional balancer, playing a role once proudly claimed by the
United States. Russia somehow maintains good relations with both Iran and
Israel; it has growing ties with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates;
it talks with Syrian Kurds and their bitter rivals in Turkey.
Putin has subdued the enemy without fighting. He has taken a decisive
position in Syria at minimal cost — with a deferential Trump now seeming
ready to confirm his victory.
Does the West Actually Face a Migration Crisis?
Ishaan Tharoor/The Washington Post/July 03/18
On Thursday, European leaders will convene in Brussels for a showdown over
migration. The question of how the European Union will handle the migrants
and asylum seekers in its midst has shadowed continental politics since an
influx of Syrian refugees dominated global headlines in 2015. While the
numbers of arrivals steadily dropped in the years since, the right-wing
backlash in Europe has only escalated. Now, even the political future of
German Chancellor Angela Merkel hangs in the balance, with mutinous allies
to the right threatening to end her 13-year rule over what they view as her
soft, permissive stance.
"Immigration policy is the central battleground in Europe’s deepening
political divide," wrote the Wall Street Journal. "A centrist, pro-European
Union establishment is seeking to reassure voters that cooperative measures
can curb migration flows while spreading the burden of taking in refugees
fairly. Anti-establishment political insurgents, particularly on the
far-right, are denouncing EU efforts as a failure and seeking to sweep away
longtime incumbents such as Merkel."
There is general agreement on reinforcing the bloc's frontier security and
working to boost aid to nearby African nations in a bid to curb migrant
flows across the Mediterranean. But beyond that, the fault lines run deep.
"Merkel is seeking a way to redistribute across the continent the migrants
who have already arrived," wrote my colleague Michael Birnbaum. "Italy, a
front-line state to asylum seekers and migrants coming from North Africa, is
more focused on the initial arrivals and on avoiding what it says is an
unfair burden that has been placed on it by countries to its north."
Far-right parties in coalition governments in Italy and Austria are pushing
for all new arrivals to be turned away at the border, while illiberal
nationalists in Hungary, Poland, and other countries in Eastern and Central
Europe balk at Merkel's proposals for all EU members to accept a quota of
asylum seekers. As my colleagues reported, Merkel and other European
centrists are being steadily challenged by more hard-line leadership on the
right, including Austria's youthful chancellor, Sebastian Kurz, and Italy's
new interior minister, Matteo Salvini, a far-right firebrand.
Both Kurz and Salvini have elicited parallels to President Trump, who has
cheered the cracking of Europe's liberal consensus. In his time in power,
Trump has borrowed the talking points of Europe's far right, casting any
influx of migrants as an existential threat, while scare-mongering over
Muslim arrivals from a vast sweep of the globe. While Salvini leaves vessels
carrying hundreds of migrants stranded in the Mediterranean, Trump has
pushed for draconian treatment of migrants illegally entering the country,
and prioritized both an expensive border wall and a travel ban on a number
of Muslim-majority nations — neither of which national security experts
believe is necessary.
While these policies galvanize right-wing sentiment, they don't reflect the
migration trends, as my colleagues note. "New arrivals of migrants and
asylum seekers to Europe via the Mediterranean have dropped by more than
half this year compared with the same period in 2017, according to the UN
migration agency: 40,944 people as of Wednesday. The decline is even starker
compared with 2016: It equals just 19 percent of the same period in that
year." (As has always been the case, the real human crises are outside the
West, whether in squalid temporary camps in the Middle East housing millions
of Syrian refugees, impoverished and gang-dominated corners of Central
America, or the perilous smuggling networks disappearing and brutalizing
myriad migrants in North Africa.)
Trump, argued Wonkblog's Christopher Ingraham, grandstands over a border
crisis that does not exist (see his chart below). The vast majority of
immigrants who enter the United States do so legally. According to one
account, visa overstays comprise two-thirds of those joining the American
undocumented population every year. “The number attempting to get across the
Southern border is probably the lowest it's been since at least the 1970s,”
said Robert Warren, a demographer with the Center for Migration Studies, to
Ingraham. “I'm surprised the [Trump] administration hasn't really focused on
overstays. That's where the action is.” The White House is indeed also
seeking ways to curb legal immigration, but the vision it propagates of a
dangerous horde of barbarians massing at the gates is both inflammatory and
overblown.
Of course, when it comes to questions over immigration, feelings almost
always trump facts. Because it undermined Trump's position on limiting
refugees, the White House rejected a study conducted by the administration
itself last year that found that refugees had brought in $63 billion more in
government revenue over the past decade than they cost. More broadly,
experts warn of the negative economic impact the United States now faces
because of an apparent decline in low-skilled migration. In Europe, too,
demand for low-skilled labor will only increase as the continent's
population ages and, in some cases, shrinks.
Nevertheless, opinion polling in numerous Western societies consistently
finds that significant numbers of people overinflate the size of the migrant
population in their midst and the scale of their demographic impact. "The
overestimates are largest among particular groups: the least educated,
workers in low-skill occupations with lots of immigrants, and those on the
political right," noted the New York Times, citing a recent survey of public
opinion in the United States and other European countries. "They overstate
the share of immigrants who are Muslim and understate the share of
Christians. They underestimate immigrants’ education and overestimate both
their poverty rate and their dependence on welfare. Almost a quarter of
French respondents, as well as nearly one in five Swedes and about one in
seven Americans, think the average immigrant gets twice as much government
aid as native residents do. In no country is this true."
These misunderstandings have real political effects, as the Times reported,
including "eroding support for Europe’s social democratic model as well as
for the United States' more limited social safety net."
Europe's centrists and liberals, including Merkel, French President Emmanuel
Macron and a new center-left government in Spain, call for pragmatism and
calm, urging burden-sharing within the continent and diplomacy across the
Mediterranean to further reduce the numbers attempting to make the dangerous
sea passage. But the passions of the moment do not sit well alongside this
measured approach. Over the weekend, a frustrated Macron called on his peers
to "not forget our values" of openness and tolerance. "We are living through
a political crisis more than a migratory crisis today," he said.
Time for Iran to Go back to its Borders
Ghassan Charbel/Asharq Al-Awsat/July 03/18
Europe has enjoyed decades of stability because it derived the necessary
lessons from bitter experiences. It has recognized that the only way for the
future is for each country to respect the borders of others despite the
differences between their people and affiliations. Europe has accepted
coexistence based on the principle of respecting the differences between
countries. It has also committed to fortifying international borders and
stood against violating them.
In this new Europe, a country no longer has the right to meddle in the
affairs of or destabilize its neighbor. A country no longer has the right to
form a militia on the other’s territory and usurp their decision-making
power. Germany, for example, no longer has the right to consider the fate of
Germans living in abroad as its responsibility and as justification for its
violations of country borders.
Countries now have to pass through legitimate gates and methods that are
approved by international laws and norms. Roles are no longer determined by
the sizes of armies, but by the success of an economy. This is demonstrated
in the prominent role Germany is playing in the European Union.
These countries believe that international borders present opportunities for
cooperation, not walls for isolation. They believe that governments must
prioritize education, job opportunities, the environment, comprehensive
development and the daily lives of the people. A country no longer has the
right to invade the other under the excuse of defending a cause, imposing an
ideology or changing the way of life. In other words, you no longer have the
right to speak on behalf of others and usurp their voice and will.
Over the past decades, the countries of the Middle East were not the arenas
of a destructive world war. However, if we look at the outcomes of the
Iraqi-Iranian war, invasion of Kuwait and Iraq, explosions of the “Arab
Spring,” particularly in Syria, and Palestinian and Kurdish struggles, then
we will find that they are not too dissimilar to a scene out of World War
II.
The turbulence in the Middle East has harmed coexistence between and within
nations. International borders came under terrible violations, at times by
groups that do not even believe in boundaries and at others by countries
whose rulers harbor projects greater than their own borders and who
consequently led armies or militias on to other people’s land.
Despite the political and demographic changes caused by the conflicts in
some countries, it is clear that we are not headed towards the redrawing of
maps or emergence of new nations. Proof of that are Turkey, Syria, Iraq and
Iran, who may all differ on several issues, but always agree, during extreme
moments, to dash the dreams of the Kurds.
Perhaps the first lesson that can be derived from the experiences of the
past few years is that meddling in the affairs of others has exacerbated
ongoing conflicts and led to others, even if it appeared that it may have
temporarily succeeded in saving a regime or stifled a coup.
There is no doubt that any serious step to steer clear from the edge of the
abyss starts with respecting the borders of countries and ceasing policies
that seek to fragment and alter demographics. The “Baghdadi State” is no
more. It was never destined to last. ISIS did, however, increase instability
and sectarian divisions and stoke coup attempts that harmed ties between and
within borders. The necessary and fateful battle to destroy ISIS led to the
launch of the spring of foreign and militia meddling combined.
Now, after everything we have seen in Syria, can the time for respecting
borders begin? Given the Russian military intervention in Syria, the
Trump-Putin summit in Helsinki would not have been scheduled had this
presence been such a source of annoyance to the United States. It is most
likely that the majority of countries prefer to see a Russian Syria than an
Iranian one.
In other words, can Iran go back on the major coup that it staged under the
claim of “exporting the revolution” and which it intensified after the
collapse of the barrier that was the Saddam Hussein regime?
Some believe that Iran is afraid of going back to its border, not because it
prefers to wage conflicts on other people’s lands, but because some of its
own citizens, especially those born after the 1979 revolution, are asking
the regime what it has presented to them. They are wondering why the regime
has invested so much in “exporting the revolution” at the expense of
improving their livelihoods. This was clearly demonstrated in the recent
protests in Iran. It is hard to believe that Trump is behind these
movements.
Can Iran build normal ties with Iraq that are based on mutual respect? Can
it withdraw from Syria and establish normal relations? What about its role
in Lebanon and backing of the Houthi adventure in Yemen? Can General Qassem
Soleimani be persuaded to deploy the Quds Force within Iranian territory
alone and not roam maps and capitals?
There is no doubt that Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Iran nuclear
agreement dealt a heavy blow to Tehran. Iran achieved major gains from the
pact that saw it neutralize the US and avoid sanctions, as well as reap
funds and continue with its agenda to “export the revolution” through
experts, advisors, missiles and a destabilization policy. The greatest
success for Tehran was keeping its regional behavior off the nuclear
negotiations table.
Trump’s decision returned this behavior back to the forefront and Washington
has kicked off a series of pressure moves against Iran, such as targeting
its oil exports.
The news of the Helsinki summit likely did not sit very well with Tehran.
Russia’s interests with the US are ultimately greater and more important
than its interests with Iran. This does not mean that we are approaching a
crossroads between Moscow and Tehran. It is certain, however, that the
imminent end of the Syrian conflict and Syria’s hand over to Russia will
remind Iran that it will soon be faced with having to return to the confines
of its own borders.
The Iranian deployment in the region is too great for its economy to
withstand. It is too great for the region and the world to tolerate. The
region and the world indeed have an interest in seeing a stable and
prosperous Iran that respects the borders of others, while the other option
would be a long and costly conflict.