LCCC
ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
June 30/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/newselias18/english.june30.18.htm
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Bible
Quotations
Do not work for the
food that perishes, but for the food that endures for eternal life
John 06/22-27: "The next day the crowd that had stayed on the other side of
the lake saw that there had been only one boat there. They also saw that
Jesus had not got into the boat with his disciples, but that his disciples
had gone away alone. Then some boats from Tiberias came near the place where
they had eaten the bread after the Lord had given thanks. So when the crowd
saw that neither Jesus nor his disciples were there, they themselves got
into the boats and went to Capernaum looking for Jesus. When they found him
on the other side of the lake, they said to him, ‘Rabbi, when did you come
here?’ Jesus answered them, ‘Very truly, I tell you, you are looking for me,
not because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of the loaves. Do
not work for the food that perishes, but for the food that endures for
eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you. For it is on him that God
the Father has set his seal.’
Titles For The
Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
June 29-30/18
Stories of successful Lebanese expats in the U.S./Maria Matar/Annahar/June
29/18
Nasrallah vows to facilitate return of Syrian refugees/Georgi Azar/Annahar/June
29/18
Hariri dismisses rumors of fraying ties with Aoun/Ghinwa Obeid/The Daily
Star/June 29/18
A Village (Arab al-Aramshe) Sliced in Two by the Israeli-Lebanese Border/Aviad
Tal/Haaretz/June 29/18
Trump lets Putin have Syria for a summit, Iranian/Hizballah gain access to
Israel’s border on refugee backs/Debka File/June 29/18
Trump-Putin Understandings on Syria: Regime Returns to South in Return for
Iran Exit/London - Ibrahim Hamidi/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 29 June, 2018
Exclusive: Iran Protests Give Big ‘No’ to Both Turban and Military
Cap/London/Asharq Al-Awsat/ 29 June, 2018
Why Turkey Will Not Be Another Iran/Amir Taheri/Asharq Al Awsat/June 29/18
Putin and Trump Have Nothing to Talk About/Leonid Bershidsky/Asharq Al Awsat/June
29/18
How to Solve the Plastic Crisis/Adam Minter/Bloomberg/June 29/18
Arab Leaders Asked U.S. Not to Reveal Mideast Peace Plan, Palestinians
Say/Jack Khoury/Haaretz/June 29/18
Analysis/ Angela Merkel Is Losing to the Orban-Trump-Netanyahu Camp/Anshel
Pfeffer/Haaretz/June 29/18
Israel Transferred Aid to Syrians Seeking Refuge Near Border in Overnight
Mission/Noa Shpigel, Yaniv Kubovich and Jack Khoury/Haaretz/June 29/18
Replacing Justice Kennedy: What kind of Conservative Will President Trump
Pick/Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute/June 29/18
The Netherlands Approves Burqa Ban/Soeren Kern//Gatestone Institute/June
29/18
Is Trump handing Putin a victory in Syria/David Ignatius/The Washington
Post/June 29/18
Accepting Regime Forces in South Syria Will Only Further Iran’s Goals/Hanin
Ghaddar and Phillip Smyth/The Washington Institute/June 29, 2018
Titles For The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published on June 29-30/18
Aoun Says Tourism Improved 'Thanks to
Security, Stability'
Lebanon: New Government Depends on FPM’s Vetoing Third
Visiting UK Minister Announces New LAF Training Facility
Aoun Says Lebanon to Defend Itself if Israel Attacks
Report: Berri, Hariri Agree LF Success in Elections Must Reflect in Govt.
Ibrahim: More Refugees Will Be Willingly Returning to Syria
Kanaan Affirms Again ‘Christian Reconciliation Unbroken’
Stories of successful Lebanese expats in the U.S.
Hizbullah Denies 8 Fighters Killed in Yemen
Nasrallah Says Trump 'Monster' for Migrant Family Separations
Nasrallah vows to facilitate return of Syrian refugees
Hariri dismisses rumors of fraying ties with Aoun
A Village (Arab al-Aramshe) Sliced in Two by the Israeli-Lebanese Border
Titles For The Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on June 29-30/18
Trump lets Putin have Syria for a
summit, Iranian/Hizballah gain access to Israel’s border on refugee backs
Trump-Putin Understandings on Syria: Regime Returns to South in Return for
Iran Exit
Who are the Rebels in Southern Syria?
Battered South Syria Towns in Talks on Regime Takeover
Canada gravely concerned by situation in southwest Syria
UN Rights Chief Warns of ‘Catastrophe’ in Daraa Battle
UN Criticizes Iranian Missiles: Nuclear Deal at Crossroads
Rouhani Calls on Iranians to Be Prepared to Face US Sanctions
Exclusive: Iran Protests Give Big ‘No’ to Both Turban and Military Cap
Iran Reopens Uranium Plant in Preparation to Boost Enrichment
EU Leaders Seal Migration Deal after Marathon Talks
Gaza Teen Shot Dead on Israel Border
The Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on June 29-30/18
Aoun Says Tourism
Improved 'Thanks to Security, Stability'
Beirut/Asharq Al Awsat/29 June, 2018/President Michel Aoun underlined the
need to build “the new Lebanon” and boost its economy after achieving
security stability in the country. He emphasized ongoing work “to overcome
the economic situation that I have always warned of since I was in Paris
when I said that Lebanon is not broken but stolen.” “Conferences will not
help achieve growth if things continue as they are,” he added. During a
series of meetings held at Baabda Palace on Thursday, Aoun said that thanks
to security and stability the country is witnessing, “this year may be one
of the best years on the tourist level.” The president also disclosed that
Lebanon was about to issue an economic plan and identify the productive
sectors that are favorable for investments. He underlined in this regard
that economic reforms required “people, who do not yield to despair, but
rather exert every possible effort to realize such an end.”
Lebanon: New Government Depends on FPM’s Vetoing Third
Beirut- Youssef Diab/Asharq Al Awsat/29 June, 2018/Ongoing consultations to
form a new Lebanese government have not achieved any tangible progress.
Sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that President Michel Aoun and Foreign Minister
in the caretaker government Gebran Bassil were insisting on guarantying the
vetoing third in their governmental share. However, presidential sources
denied these reports, stressing that Aoun was working to facilitate the
mission of Prime Minister-designate Saad al-Hariri in forming the new
government with a fair representation of all the parties. Aoun and Hariri
met at the Baabda Palace on Thursday to discuss ongoing efforts to form the
new government. “The government will include 30 ministers,” Hariri told
reporters, stressing that some issues still need to be addressed carefully,
but “we will certainly reach a solution.” “The government must be formed as
soon as possible. There are things we could not resolve, but we are close to
reaching solutions, and everyone is cooperating in this regard,” he added.
Meanwhile, sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that the Druze knot would be soon
resolved by giving the three Druze seats to the Progressive Socialist Party
(PSP) and putting MP Talal Arslan, an ally of the Free Patriotic Movement,
outside the ministerial structure. “The new government formation is stalled
by President Aoun, who rejects any formula that does not give him with the
Free Patriotic Movement, the blocking third,” the sources said, adding that
the president “wants 11 ministers for him and the FPM, three for the
Lebanese Forces and one minister for Al-Marada, headed by Suleiman Franjieh.
Any other formula is rejected.” However, presidential sources denied talks
on “the insistence of President Michel Aoun on the blocking
third.”“President Aoun’s position has been announced since the first day of
the consultations when he said that he wanted a government in which everyone
will be represented according to the size of the parliamentary blocs,” they
said.
Visiting UK Minister Announces New LAF Training
Facility
Naharnet/June 29/18/On his second visit to Lebanon in less
than a year, the British Minister of State for Middle East and North Africa,
Alistair Burt, reiterated “the UK’s long standing support to Lebanon.”Burt
met Lebanese officials and visited UK funded security, humanitarian and
education projects, the British embassy said in a statement. In his meetings
with President Michel Aoun, Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri and
caretaker Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil, Burt encouraged “the swift
formation of a government to implement economic policies that will further
stabilize Lebanon,” the embassy said. Burt also reiterated the UK’s “ongoing
support to Lebanon and its host communities to alleviate the burden of
refugees, and discussed with the President, PM-designate and caretaker
Foreign Minister the impact on Lebanon of hosting such significant numbers
of refugees.”Laying the first stone for the new Lebanese Armed Forces Border
Training Center in Bekaa's Riyaq – for which Burt had announced funding at
the Rome Security conference earlier this year – the minister saw the
building of training facilities. And at an Informal Tented Settlement in the
Bekaa, Burt had the opportunity to meet a refugee family benefiting from the
UK-funded cash program delivered in partnership with the U.N.’s World Food
Program. “This program is providing a lifeline to 10,000 of the most
severely vulnerable families living in Lebanon, and is helping them buy
essential items such as food, household supplies and vital medicine for
their families,” the UK embassy said. Burt also took part in a mini-football
game with kids living inside the ITS. The minister's last stop was a visit
to a public school in the Chouf region in which he was “pleased to hear that
Lebanon has launched its child protection policy and is taking steps towards
more inclusive education systems in Lebanon,” the British embassy said.
“Minister Burt also saw first-hand the results of the cooperation between
local NGOs, such as the Youth Association for the Blind, with the Ministry
of Education to promote inclusive learning in classrooms. During the school
visit, Minister Burt met with three blind Lebanese students who are striving
for success at school,” the embassy added. In addition, Minister Burt met
with Joelle Badran, the Chevening scholar who is the first recipient of the
Rebecca Dykes scholarship.
“Joelle will leave this summer to study for her MSc in Children, Youth and
International Development at Birkbeck University in London. The scholarship
was set up in Rebecca’s name to continue her commitment work to support
vulnerable communities,” the embassy said.
At the end of his visit, Burt said: “I am pleased to be back in Lebanon and
see how the UK – as a strong supporter of Lebanon -- is delivering its
commitment to stand shoulder to shoulder with Lebanon now and into the
future, providing impactful support and partnership with Lebanon.”
“I held constructive meetings with President Michel Aoun, Prime
Minister=designate Saad Hariri and caretaker Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil.
I congratulated all three on the recent elections. I said I looked forward
to the swift formation of a government that will deliver much needed
reforms, especially on the economy. I also told them that the UK recognizes
the enormity of the challenges faced by Lebanon, in providing, at no small
cost, shelter, education, and opportunities to work for so many who have
fled appalling violence, fear and destruction in Syria,” Burt added. He said
Britain will continue to ensure that Lebanon receives the international
support it deserves. “And we want to see Syrian refugees return to Syria, as
soon as it is safe for them to do so,” he emphasized. Burt added: “I was
also pleased to hear that Lebanon has launched its child protection policy
and is taking steps towards more inclusive education systems in Lebanon. “It
was also an opportunity to announce the start of construction of the new UK
funded LAF Border Training Center in the Bekaa, and thrilled to see myself
the progress that is being made on building this important training
facility. The center, another example of the UK’s partnership and commitment
to Lebanon, will allow a new and specialized facility to train the Land
Border Regiments, and contribute to the UK’s public commitment to train
11,000 LAF troops for urban and rural operations by 2019, and 14,000 troops
by 2021,” Burt went on to say.
Aoun Says Lebanon to Defend Itself if Israel Attacks
Naharnet/June 29/18/President Michel Aoun has underlined that Lebanon is
“obliged to defend itself” in the event of Israeli aggression, as he denied
that Syrian refugees are being pressured to return home. “I will work with
the new government on improving the economy, continuing the reforms and
combating corruption,” Aoun told visiting British Minister of State for
Middle East and North Africa Alistair Burt. As for the thorny issue of
Syrian refugees, the president said the return of the refugees is taking
place “voluntarily,” denying the presence of any “pressures” on them.
Separately, Aoun emphasized that Lebanon is “committed to the truce and
Resolution 1701” while underscoring that it is also “obliged to defend
itself should Israel attack its territory.”
Report: Berri, Hariri Agree LF Success in Elections Must Reflect in Govt.
Naharnet/June 29/18/A suggestion to form a 24-member Cabinet instead of 30
has been raised in the last few days as a way to find a solution for “the
Christian and Druze representation” that have been reportedly delaying the
Cabinet formation process, the pan-Arab al-Hayat daily said on Friday.
However, the suggestion, which automatically reduces the number of ministers
of the six main political parties, has been dropped under the pretext that
all political parties must be represented in the Cabinet which calls for a
30-portfolio Cabinet, a political source following on the formation process
told the daily. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said
Speaker Nabih Berri supports Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri’s view on
the representation of the Lebanese Forces, noting that “it should reflect
their win in the parliamentary elections.”The LF insists on proper
representation in the new Cabinet in light of the parliamentary elections
outcome, which produced dramatic success for the party almost doubling its
national seats. Furthermore, Berri reportedly agrees with Hariri that Druze
ministers must be strictly named by the Progressive Socialist party chief
Walid Jumblat.
“His position differs with President Michel Aoun on what is now known as the
Christian representation and the Druze representation,” said the daily.
Jumblat insists that PSP ministers allocate the three Druze seats in the new
government. While Druze MP Talal Arsal also demands a share. “Before he
traveled from Beirut, Berri frankly told his visitors that he supports
Hariri’s position on these two points,” said the daily. “It must be
recognized that the Lebanese Forces have made significant progress in the
recent parliamentary elections which must be reflected in the size of their
representation in the government,” Berri was quoted as saying.
Ibrahim: More Refugees Will Be Willingly Returning to Syria
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 29/18/General Security chief Maj. Gen.
Abbas Ibrahim affirmed that more Syrian refugees will be “voluntarily”
returning back to their country after several hundreds left the Lebanese
border town of Arsal to return home a day earlier, al-Joumhouria daily
reported on Friday. “Further voluntary repatriation of syrian refugees will
follow,” in the future, he told the daily, pointing out that some logistical
difficulties have delayed the return of others and that the problem will be
solved in the future. “Those who could not return (on Thursday) was because
of logistical obstacles. They will return at the earliest opportunity,” he
said, explaining that they did not get to the location where the buses have
gathered. Referring to the statements made by the UNHCR representative in
Lebanon Mireille Girard that “90 per cent of the refugees are willing to go
back home,” he said “this desire proves that they are willingly returning
home which will facilitate the mission of the General Security and refugees
alike.”Hundreds of refugees left Arsal on Thursday to return home, as part
of a coordinated operation between authorities in Beirut and Damascus. As
fighting fronts in some parts of Syria have died down, Lebanese authorities
have become increasingly insistent on returns, more of which are expected in
the coming weeks.
Arsal hosts some 36,000 displaced Syrians according to the United Nations
refugee agency, many of them from Syrian villages just across the border.
Around 370 left Arsal on Thursday afternoon for Syrian territory under an
agreement reached between Lebanon's General Security and Syrian authorities,
said the Lebanese National News Agency. They gathered at the arid
Lebanese-Syrian border before moving together in a convoy across the
frontier. Syrian state media confirmed they had begun arriving into Syrian
territory.
Lebanese authorities had presented to Damascus a list of 3,000 people who
wanted to return, of whom just 450 were approved, NNA said. The UNHCR said
the refugee agency had a team on the ground but was not involved in the
operations, their spokeswoman said. "Our position hasn't changed. We haven't
organised returns and we did not organise this one," said Lisa Abou Khaled.
UN teams in Syria have requested access from Damascus to reach the towns and
villages to which refugees would be returning, most of them in the Qalamun
region, but had yet to receive permission, she told AFP. Lebanon hosts
nearly a million registered Syrian refugees but authorities estimate the
real number is higher. Officials have been increasingly calling for refugee
returns with or without a political solution to Syria's seven-year-old
conflict. Earlier this year, around 500 refugees left southern Lebanon for
Syria in a return organised by both Lebanese and Syrian authorities. Several
thousand have independently gone back to their homeland from towns around
the border in recent years. Lebanese officials have stressed that they are
not forcing returns, and that refugees are doing so voluntarily. Syrians
began seeking refuge in Arsal early in their country's war, setting up tents
along the border and renting homes in the town itself. In 2014, jihadists
overran Arsal and clashed with Lebanese security forces, kidnapping 30 of
them and subsequently killing four.
Kanaan Affirms Again ‘Christian Reconciliation
Unbroken’
Naharnet/June 29/18/Free Patriotic Movement MP Ibrahim Kanaan of the Strong
Lebanon parliamentary bloc affirmed there will be “no turning back” on the
Christian reconciliation with the Lebanese Forces, the National News Agency
reported on Friday. In reference to the disagreements between the LF and
FPM, the most recent over the Cabinet formation, Kanaan said: “The
inter-Christian reconciliation has been achieved and communication is not
broken. “The is no turning back, and communication is ongoing, especially
with (LF ) Minister Melhem Riachi; however, we need to reassess the previous
stage to identify the gaps which shook this agreement in a bid to reach
common political grounds,” said Kanaan. Kanaan’s statement is his second
this week after remarks made by FPM chief Jebran Bassil saying the agreement
with LF (Maarab Agreement) “no longer exists.” The Cabinet formation process
faces some obstacles one of which is the Lebanese Forces representation.
Stories of successful Lebanese expats in the U.S.
Maria Matar/Annahar/June 29/18
Despite succeeding in the U.S., some encourage the Lebanese people to stay
in Lebanon.
BEIRUT: Two flags, two lands, and two homes in one heart; that is the
situation of many Lebanese people who immigrated to the U.S. and embarked on
a journey of success there. Their roots are in Lebanon, but their fruits
flourished in the U.S.
“America is the land of dreams and opportunities. However, to reach the
point where you succeed there, you have to go through a long procedure,”
said Hikmat Brassitos, a young Lebanese who is an immigrant in the U.S.
After receiving a Master’s degree in economics, he found himself a jobless
graduate; which then prompted him to leave to the U.S. in 2013 in the
pursuit of a career.
There, he and his brother, who also immigrated with him, came up with the
idea of serving Frollz, which is a Thai concept of ice cream rolls. After
witnessing their business’ online presence, they decided to establish a shop
to serve it on Square One Mall in Saugus. Ever since, it has been rolling in
success and the shop became popular. Stretching the business to their
homeland, his sister opened a branch in Lebanon.
“One should have a good amount of credit, start a small business and then
expand. It is essential to have the patience to stand until the end, since
it’s a rough road, especially as an immigrant,” he told Annahar.
Similarly, Joseph Bou Khalil immigrated to the U.S. back in 1985, aiming for
a better life.
After settling down, he started his own business, Joseph Jewelry, making
high-end custom design jewelry in a small shop in a building in Bellevue
Washington.
A few years later, he expanded his business and purchased all the retail
spaces in the building. He has also recently established a second location
in Seattle Washington.
“It was exciting to learn and adapt to a foreign culture and expand my
horizon. In the U.S., one can grow personally and economically. With a will
to succeed and unperishable enthusiasm, it’s impossible to fail,” he said.
On the flipside, despite succeeding in the U.S., Chantale Charo encourages
the Lebanese people to stay in Lebanon.
“The grass always seems greener on the other side, until you actually reach
the other side. Both countries have their advantages and disadvantages. But,
in the end, if we all immigrate, Lebanon will no longer exist. It is the
people, not the land, which make a country,” she said.
After studying in the American University of Beirut, she went to the U.S. in
2003, after receiving a scholarship from the MD Anderson cancer center in
the University of Texas.
She was then offered a job as a professor at the University of Miami,
despite being just 24 years old. She soon realized, however, that this job
will hinder her from visiting her family in Lebanon whenever she wants.
So, in 2008, she created the Hottie Detox, providing people with products
that help with weight loss. Her online selling website has reached great
success.
She currently visits Lebanon from time to time, since her business grew in
her homeland too.
“It’s in our blood, as Lebanese people, to fight for what we want and work
hard for it; our ambitions can lead us anywhere. My capital at first wasn’t
money, it was my sweat and hard work. It feels great to make my country
proud, since the foundation of my dreams was laid in it,” she said.
Similarly, though dreaming and studying to become an architect in Lebanon,
Ala Tannir eventually ended up working in the world famous Museum of Modern
Art in NYC. She applied for an internship there, and due to her skills, she
was later offered a job as a researcher.
The Museum of Modern Arts in New York is one of the top museums in the U.S.
and Tannir works there with Paola Antonelli, one of the most successful
designer curators in the world. Tannir believes that New York contains a
huge diversity in terms of interests, backgrounds, and pursuits, which, she
believes, enriches one’s mind. Still, Tannir feels homesick away from her
country and plans to return and contribute to improvement, as she finds it
hard to do that now from afar.
“I no longer live in Lebanon, but it still lives in me,” Tannir told Annahar.
Hizbullah Denies 8 Fighters Killed in Yemen
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 29/18/Hizbullah on Friday denied that any
of its fighters were killed in Yemen after claims by the Saudi-led coalition
that it killed eight of its members there. The coalition battling Shiite
Huthi rebels in Yemen on Monday said its forces killed eight members of
Hizbullah, including a commander, in the northern Maran province. Hizbullah
chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah on Friday hinted that his group may have
experts but not fighters in Yemen while denying any had been killed. "We've
recently said that for certain reasons and interests, we do not say whether
we have a presence in Yemen," Nasrallah said during a televised address.
"But whether we're there or not, I categorically deny that there are
Hizbullah martyrs in Yemen -- not in the last few days nor in recent years,"
he said. Nasrallah has denied sending fighters or weapons to Yemen in the
past. "Is there something else? We do not deny, we do not confirm," he said
on Friday. The Saudi-led coalition has repeatedly accused Hizbullah and its
backer Iran of providing help to Huthi rebels, including ballistic missiles
from Tehran that have targeted Saudi Arabia. Iran denies arming the Huthis.
Monday was the first time the coalition officially announced Hizbullah
deaths in Yemen, although its spokesman Colonel Turki al-Maliki said they
were not the first Hizbullah fighters killed there. Nearly 10,000 people
have died in the Yemen war since 2015, when Saudi Arabia and its allies
joined the government's fight against the Huthis. The United Nations has
called Yemen the world's largest humanitarian crisis.
Nasrallah Says Trump 'Monster' for Migrant Family Separations
Associated Press/Naharnet/June 29/18/Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah
has blasted U.S. President Donald Trump as a "wild monster" over the policy
of separating children from their parents for migrants caught illegally
entering the U.S. Nasrallah said in a televised speech Friday that the
policy shows Trump's "real image." More than 2,300 children have been
separated from their parents in recent weeks as they sought to enter the
U.S. illegally. Some were placed in government-contracted shelters hundreds
of kilometers away from their parents. "Doesn't the image of immigrant
children separated from their fathers and mothers and put in isolated places
clearly express the brutality of President Trump and his administration?"
asked Nasrallah. "Had people been able to see the real image of Trump he
would appear a wild monster," he added.
Nasrallah vows to facilitate return of Syrian refugees
Georgi Azar/Annahar/June 29/18
Nasrallah's comments came during a televised address during which he called
for "equal representation of all political parties based on the recent
parliamentary election results."
BEIRUT: Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah
blamed the delays in forming a new Cabinet on the lack of "standard based on
the parliamentary election results," while casting aside accusations that
his party is seeking a swift formation of the Cabinet due to "fears over
regional developments."
Nasrallah's comments came during a televised address during which he called
for "equal representation of all political parties based on the recent
parliamentary election results.""If the standard is not the parliamentary
results, then we should be aware of that," he said, before maintaining that
his bloc, alongside Amal, will not rule out demanding more than six
ministries. Hezbollah, alongside its Shiite allies Amal, secured 30 seats
during the May 6 parliamentary elections. Touching on the Syrian refugee
crisis, Nasrallah reiterated that those who elected to return did so of
their own accord without any form of pressure while blaming "international
organizations of intimidating them."
On Thursday, dozens of Syrian refugees, who had been living in Arsal,
Baalbek, departed Lebanon after requesting permission from the Lebanese and
Syrian governments.About 470 Syrians crossed the border, making their way
back to Syria after years of exile as result of the bloody civil war.
Nasrallah said his party is willing to play a leading role in facilitating
the return of refugees given its close relationship with the Syrian
government, vowing to form committees in order to draft lists of individuals
seeking to return to be presented to Syrian authorities in coordination with
Lebanon's General Security.
Lebanon has been feuding with the United Nations Higher Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR), with Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil accusing the refugee
agency of attempting to dissuade refugees from returning through
fearmongering. Nasrallah also discussed the recent naturalization decree
that stirred nationwide controversy due to its lack of transparency, saying
that his party "had no prior knowledge of its existence." The bill is laden
with allegations of bribery and corruption as it grants the Lebanese
nationality to a large number of wealthy GCC nationals including
Palestinians and businessmen from the Americas and Europe, as well as Syrian
President Bashar Assad loyalists. Nasrallah did acknowledge however that he
has "information regarding some of the names but will refrain from
discussing them out of respect to Michel Aoun's presidency."
The Hezbollah leader also denied certain media reports alleging that eight
Hezbollah fighters have recently perished in Yemen, labelling the claims a
ludicrous.
"If one day that does happen, we will proudly confirm them," he said.
Hariri dismisses rumors of fraying ties with Aoun
Ghinwa Obeid/The Daily Star/June 29/18
BEIRUT: Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri Thursday dismissed rumors that
ties with President Michel Aoun were fraying, and urged for political calm
to allow the Cabinet formation process to proceed smoothly. Hariri went to
Baabda Palace as part of ongoing consultations aimed at forming a new
government, in a move that dispelled fears of rising tensions between the
two leaders. The sit-down followed a strong statement issued by the
presidential palace earlier this week that appeared to toughen Aoun’s
position against the Lebanese Forces’ demand for key ministerial posts in
the new Cabinet, including that of the deputy premier position.However, Aoun
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. The
statement was also understood to be a message to Hariri, who supposedly
supported the LF’s request for wide representation in Cabinet. “The
constitution is clear regarding the president’s role and my role in the
formation process,” Hariri told reporters after the long meeting. “I hope
that there will be no mistake on this issue because I have an understanding
with the president on all the details.”
The prime minister-designate also underscored that his political settlement
with Aoun is unbroken, noting that it should be protected for the good of
Lebanon’s safety. The political settlement between the two led to Aoun’s
election as president in 2016, in exchange for Hariri’s reappointment as a
prime minister. Touching on the government formation process, Hariri
admitted there were certain hurdles he was still working to overcome.
Nevertheless, he struck a positive tone and assured that the new Cabinet
will be formed soon, but didn’t set a timeframe. “I assure you that we are
going to reach a solution. All political sides are in agreement on the need
for a quick government formation, so we are close to resolving the issue and
every side to getting their share as they should,” Hariri said. He
reiterated that the new Cabinet would be comprised of 30 ministers, after
reports suggested that Hariri might decide to form a 24-member Cabinet.
Political sources, however, told The Daily Star Hariri did not present Aoun
with a Cabinet lineup. “My work is confined to forming a government where
everyone is comfortable with their representation, and in order to reach
this point, we should put an end to tension and escalation. Then, we can see
concessions from all sides,” Hariri added.
Sources said Aoun and Hariri agreed on the need for de-escalation and that
both will make an effort to facilitate the formation process.
Since Hariri was tasked last month to form a government, his mission has
faced numerous hurdles, mainly from the Progressive Socialist Party and the
LF.
PSP leader Walid Joumblatt has insisted his bloc be allocated all three
ministerial posts reserved for the Druze sect in a 30-member Cabinet.His
demand was apparently aimed at preventing his Druze rival, Talal Arslan,
from being named minister. The political sources said that Hariri took the
lead to resolve this issue, offering that the PSP gets two Druze ministers
and the third go to an independent, which would decrease Arslan’s chances of
becoming a minister. As for the LF’s demands, the sources said that it is
now out of the question that the deputy prime minister position will be held
by the party, so it remains to be seen which ministries the LF will gain
control of. Hariri has also been facing demands by Sunni lawmakers, not
affiliated to his Future Movement, to be represented in Cabinet. Hariri was
reported to have said that he would name all six Sunni ministers, rejecting
demands from independent Sunni lawmakers. But after his meeting with Aoun,
Hariri downplayed reports of conflict over Sunni representation and
indicated that it was not a major issue.
Despite the premier’s optimistic attitude in his remarks, PSP MP Wael Abu
Faour noted that his party’s relationship with Aoun has been “cold.”
Joumblatt and several officials from the Free Patriotic Movement – founded
by Aoun – traded barbs earlier this month, reflecting mounting tensions
between the parties.
The PSP has claimed that it was targeted by the FPM in the May 6
parliamentary elections. “I can say that the relationship with the president
is cold. There has been no relationship after we were targeted by people in
his circle during the parliamentary elections and government formation,” Abu
Faour told reporters after meeting with Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdel-Latif
Derian Thursday morning. Touching on the government formation saga, Abu
Faour said the PSP and Joumblatt support all of Hariri’s efforts in the
Cabinet formation process.
“The prime minister-designate is doing all he should be doing, but
intimidating him by saying that his designation will be withdrawn or setting
unconstitutional deadlines [for the government formation] is constitutional
heresy,” Abu Faour said regarding reported pressures on Hariri.
Separately, Hezbollah’s Loyalty to the Resistance bloc said the current
political phase in Lebanon requires cooperation between all sides and
constituents. “The understanding between Lebanese on a vision for the
government and between all constitutional institutions is a national
necessity in order to resolve internal matters and confront external
challenges ... in a way that achieves social stability and safeguards
national sovereignty,” the bloc said after its weekly meeting. “Based on
this, the bloc sees that the government that guarantees the largest
participation of factions that resulted from the elections ... is the
Cabinet that is mostly capable of confronting the [challenges] of the
current phase.” – Additional reporting by Hasan Lakkis
A Village (Arab al-Aramshe)
Sliced in Two by the Israeli-Lebanese Border
هآررتس: قرية عرب العرمش على الحدود اللبنانية الإسرائيلية المقطعة إلى قسمين
Aviad Tal/Haaretz/June 29/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65651/aviad-tal-haaretz-arab-al-aramshe-village-sliced-in-two-by-the-israeli-lebanese-border-%D9%87%D8%A2%D8%B1%D8%B1%D8%AA%D8%B3-%D9%82%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%A9-%D8%B9%D8%B1%D8%A8-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B9%D8%B1%D9%85/
A shepherd who vanquished the last leopard in the Galilee, a woman
surrounded by white doves and one Snow White. A visit to a village that's
half in Israel and half in Lebanon
I first heard of the Bedouin village Arab al-Aramshe nearly 20 years ago
when I did a year of service working as a tour guide in the Galilee before
joining the army. There were many stories about the isolated village that
sat right on the border with Lebanon, with some of its inhabitants living in
Israel and some on the other side, in Lebanese territory. When I heard about
Abed al-Hamid, the famous shepherd from Arab al-Aramshe who had vanquished
what was thought to be the last leopard in the Galilee with his bare hands
in 1965, and about his daughter, Taljia (“Snow White,” in Arabic), who
walked dozens of kilometers each day with her goats, collecting wild herbs
and spring water – I decided I wanted to go there.
The first time I visited, passing slowly through rocky outcrops dotted with
sparse Galilean vegetation, I felt I had come to a place where the pace of
life is different, slower, almost desert-like. I visited Arab al-Aramshe
several times that year, but my induction into the army and the years I
lived abroad, meant that it was only two years ago, when I returned to
Israel, that I also returned to the village.
Arab al-Aramshe has some 1,600 residents, nearly all of whom live in its
Aramshe neighborhood, on the hill of the same name. The remainder reside on
the Nuwakar and Jordiyyah hills, which are located right next to the border
fence between Israel and Lebanon.
In the mid-1980s, most of the town’s residents lived along the border
itself, but for security reasons the State of Israel decided to move them
away; promises of improved infrastructure and additional development
convinced most of them to relocate. Nevertheless, a few families decided to
remain in their homes. The houses of those who left were demolished in short
order so that residents who agreed to move would not change their minds and
ask to return home. The state’s promises were indeed kept and thanks to
that, the Aramshe quarter is today the beating heart of the entire village,
where most of the important services are located: a school, a clinic, a
kiosk that sells falafel and doubles as a bridal salon, and several bus
stops.
A woman living in the Bedouin village Arab al-Aramshe, which is split in two
by the Israel-Lebanon border. Aviad Tal
In the days of the Ottoman Empire, the people of Arab al-Aramshe were
accustomed to roving freely with their flocks over the hills that are now
divided between Israel and Lebanon. Subsequently, they had to become
flexible, adapting to a dynamic reality on the ground. The broad pastures
that once served them mainly for grazing have dwindled significantly, and
are now confined to relatively small areas close to the village.
In the more recent past, residents on the Israeli side could talk with and
even visit their relatives in Lebanon, but the Israel Defense Forces’
withdrawal from Lebanon in 2000 effectively canceled the security zone that
had existed since 1985 – a 10-kilometer strip of land north of the border
that had allowed contact between the two parts of the split village. Today
contact between the sides is minimal and maintained largely by means of
telephones social media.
Years ago, on one of my first visits to the village, I met someone I will
call Omar, who lived with his sister and his mother in an old stone house
just meters from the border fence, in the Jordiyyah neighborhood. Their
house was one of the few that remained after most of their neighbors moved
away; his family also eventually moved to the main part of town. Having been
away so long, I though that seeing Omar, today in his mid-50s, would be a
good starting point for catching up on developments during the intervening
years.
The drive from the Aramshe quarter to Jordiyyah took about 10 minutes on a
winding road alongside the fence, with a view of southern Lebanon stretching
out to my right. As my car began to climb the hill to Jordiyyah, the road
became narrow and rutted. I parked not far from Omar’s house, next to an old
and neglected stone tomb. Hearing my car approach, Omar came out to welcome
me. His sister, Dalia, who is in her mid-40s, came out, smiling, and then
returned inside to make coffee.
The Bedouin village Arab al-Aramshe, on the Israel-Lebanon border. Aviad Tal
In the meantime, since the visibility was excellent, Omar suggested that we
head to the observation point near his house that overlooks Lebanon. We
walked out of his gate and began to climb up a pile of mostly broken stones,
which Omar said was what remained of the houses demolished during the
resettlement in Aramshe. A clear and impressive view of southern Lebanon
greeted us at the top of the hill. All that separated us from the Lebanese
farmers cultivating their lands and three chatty United Nations soldiers was
about 100 meters and the border fence. We stood in silence for a few minutes
and between the breezes could hear the soldiers talking and giggling on the
other side.
Pointing to the large and well-kept villas on the other side, Omar explained
that they belonged to wealthy Arab al-Aramshe residents from the Lebanese
side. Most of them live abroad most of the year, so the homes stand empty
most the time.
On our way back, we met Omar’s neighbor Amira (also a pseudonym; none of the
interviewees wanted to be identified). Amira, who is in her 40s, is a lover
of cats and white doves. She likes to greet the few tourists who come to
Jordiyyah, usually with a cat in one hand and a thermos of black coffee in
the other, and generally they give her a tip before departing.
In my many conversations with villagers over the years, they have often
voiced frustration about making a living in the area, and from what they say
this problem has only gotten worse recently. For a long time now, herding
sheep has not been a popular pursuit in Arab al-Aramshe: Apart from a
handful of families that raise cattle and sheep, residents have been forced
to find work outside, mainly in the packing houses and factories of nearby
kibbutzim Hanita and Idmit. And as the kibbutzim, in recent years, have
closed factories for financial reasons, they have cut back on workers, and
that has had a direct impact on a substantial number of the Bedouin
villagers.
The Bedouin village Arab al-Aramshe, on the Israel-Lebanon border. Aviad Tal
According to Latif Suweidan, 67, the former principal of the local
elementary school, many residents must now go as far as the cities of
Nahariya, Acre and even Haifa to find work.
The tranquil atmosphere of the Galilee and the fact that the neighboring
moshavim are full of bed-and-breakfasts and other tourism enterprises made
me wonder why there isn’t a single tourism enterprise in the village.
Suweidan said that there have been attempts to develop a local tourism
industry by opening guest houses and restaurants, but they didn’t succeed
because most of the locals lack the economic means required to establish
such projects. Plus, being on the border with an enemy country doesn’t help
either.
It turns out that the pastoral atmosphere around Arab al-Aramshe is somewhat
deceptive. Most of the time, the security situation is fairly calm, but in
2006, during the Second Lebanon War, when a single rocket landed in the yard
of the Juma’a family, it killed the mother and two daughters on the spot. In
the wake of that incident, the state finally decided to build bomb shelters
next to almost every home in the village.
There’s a problem, though, notes Suweidan. Aramshe’s proximity to
rocket-launching sites in Lebanon means that residents will not have
sufficient time to reach the shelters once the missiles are detected. The
Second Lebanon War – and more recent developments – have made perfectly
clear the extent to which the security situation is problematic here, but
every time I mention the subject to villagers, they express faith in
Israel’s strength and in its ability to deal with the threat from the north
in general and to defend Arab al-Aramshe in particular. According to Latif
Suweidan, during the years Israel’s army was involved in activities in
southern Lebanon, local men developed a reputation as outstanding IDF
soldiers. The village was particularly famous for the skilled trackers that
came from there and faithfully served the state, he said. Local men still
serve in the army, but in lower numbers today.
The Bedouin village Arab al-Aramshe, on the Israel-Lebanon border. Aviad Tal
The time had come to find out whether there was any truth to the stories
that initially prompted me to visit the village. Perhaps they were all part
of a kind of local mythology? When I asked Suweidan about the courageous
shepherd who fought the leopard and his daughter Talija, he replied
confidently that it was all completely true. Abed al-Hamid died in 1997, he
explained, adding that I could go to the museum in Hanita, the neighboring
kibbutz, and see the leopard for myself.
There is indeed a stuffed leopard in the little museum at Hanita, and at
least according to the kibbutzniks, it is the very same unfortunate leopard
that fell into Abed al-Hamid’s hands.
As for Talija, he told me that she lives not far from Arab al-Aramshe, in a
small tin shack, in the company of her goats. He also told me that exactly
one month earlier, Talija’s brother, Ali Mahmid, fell to his death as he was
herding his flock of goats near the steep cliffs alongside the Namir Stream
– the same stream where his father had wrestled with the leopard so long
ago.
A short time later, I left Arab al-Aramshe. As I departed the village, the
setting sun had been almost entirely swallowed up by the sea. From the steep
road leading down from the village, it was still possible to make out the
now mostly dried-up stream, leading almost all the way to the main highway.
I could not help but think about Abed al-Hamid and his two children who had
such a fateful connection to the environment in which they lived, and to the
stream itself, which in the twilight looked like a far more palpable
testimony to the heritage of the people of Arab al-Aramshe than the stuffed
leopard in the neighboring kibbutz.
*Aviad Tal is an artist and photographer who is engaged in projects that
focus on environmental and social concerns, in Africa and the Middle East.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News
published
on June 29-30/18
Trump lets Putin have
Syria for a summit, Iranian/Hizballah gain access to Israel’s border on
refugee backs
ترامب يسلم سوريا لبوتين مقايل لقاء قمة معه، وإيران وحزب الله بحصلان على مدخل
إلى حدود إسرائيل من خلال اللاجئين
Debka File/June 29/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65662/debkafile-trump-lets-putin-have-syria-for-a-summit-iranian-hizballah-gain-access-to-israels-border-on-refugee-backs-%D8%AA%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%85%D8%A8-%D9%8A%D8%B3%D9%84%D9%85-%D8%B3%D9%88%D8%B1/
Israel’s armed forces are distributing tents, food, water and
medicines to the tens of thousands of Syrian refugees reaching its Golan
border in flight from the incredibly brutal Russian and Syrian air strikes
on southern Syria. The figures are staggering – 342 air strikes on Thursday
night, June 28, against rebel-held towns near the Israeli and Jordanian
borders – of which 299 were conducted by the Russian air force and 43 by
Syrian pilots. Nawa, a town opposite the Israeli Golan border took the
heaviest bombardment.
Israel’s military correspondents, playing ball with the IDF, are withholding
these horrific figures from the public, and so people don’t understand how
60,000 refugees fleeing from Nawa are suddenly fetching up on Israel’s
northern border and joining the 20,000 already encamped there. While the
IDF’s humanitarian conduct is laudable, the reason for the disaster is not.
This new human catastrophe could have been prevented had the IDF acted in
time to preempt the threat to Israel’s borders, and countered the onslaught
on Daraa mounted by Assad’s army and allies with Russian air support 10 days
ago.
However, Israeli inaction was part of another development not shared with
the Israeli public: President Donald Trump quietly decided to let Syria go
to Russia in the interests of a successful summit with Vladimir Putin in
Helsinki on July 16. Israel, Jordan, the Syrian rebel and Kurdish groups
hitherto backed by the United States were left to fend for their own
security as best they could. As a last concession, the US turned a blind eye
to Putin’s pass for Iranian and Hizballah forces to move in along with the
Syrian army.
The Russian president grabbed the opportunity By unleashing heavy air
bombardments for clearing the rebels still holding out in southern Syria
from the path of Assad’s army – he trampled the pledges he gave Israel and
Jordan and triggered an exodus of Syrian refugees who, finding the Jordanian
border shut against them, headed for Israel’s Golan border.
The tens of thousands settling on Israel’s doorstop could swell, according
to some estimates, to 200,000 or 250,000. Israel finds itself saddled with a
mounting new security and humanitarian burden in the north, on top of the
Gaza Strip in the south. Middle East reality is such that the tent
encampments the IDF is providing as makeshift havens for refugees will in no
time accommodate infestations of dangerous Syrian, Iranian and Hizballah
agents. Desperate refugees will accept a few dollars to support their
families for donning bomb belts and blowing themselves up against Israeli
positions on the border fence.
It is already happening on the Syrian-Jordanian border. Syrian military
intelligence has seized control of the large Rubkan refugee camp in Daraa
and Jordanian security services are helpless to keep Iranian and Hizballah
agents out.
How is the IDF going to prevent this disastrous security calamity from
developing on Israel’s northern border? As word spreads across Syria that
food, shelter and medical treatment are available, the refugee population
sitting on Israel’s border around Quneitra will swell to unmanageable
proportions. For Iran and Hizballah, a large refugee camp is the perfect
lair from which to reach and terrorize northern Israel.
Trump-Putin Understandings on Syria: Regime Returns to
South in Return for Iran Exit
London - Ibrahim Hamidi/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 29 June, 2018
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65662/debkafile-trump-lets-putin-have-syria-for-a-summit-iranian-hizballah-gain-access-to-israels-border-on-refugee-backs-%D8%AA%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%85%D8%A8-%D9%8A%D8%B3%D9%84%D9%85-%D8%B3%D9%88%D8%B1/
The Syrian
regime’s offensive, with Russian aerial cover, on the southern Daraa
province is part of a series of understandings between Washington and Moscow
over the war-torn country, revealed western diplomatic sources to Asharq Al-Awsat.
The two sides agreed to return the regime forces to the South in return for
the departure of opposition factions to Idlib and Iran’s complete exit from
Syria. The understandings on southern Syria will be on the agenda of the
upcoming summit between US President Donald Trump and Russian President
Vladimir Putin in Helsinki on July 16. US National Security Adviser John
Bolton was in Moscow on Wednesday where he met Putin and Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov ahead of next month’s Trump summit, which will be held after a
NATO meeting in Brussels scheduled for July 11 and 12. Trump and Putin are
expected to give priority for the formation of a government, opposition and
civil society committee and for carrying out constitutional reforms to pave
the way for presidential and parliamentary elections in 2021. They will also
voice support for the efforts of United Nations special envoy to Syrian
Staffan de Mistura to form a constitutional committee that can tackle these
reforms. The current American and Russian agreement implicitly means
accepting the continuation of Bashar Assad at the head of the Syrian regime
despite ongoing statements opposed to his rule. The latest of these remarks
came on Wednesday from US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who said that
there can be no peace with Assad and Iran in Syria, said the western
sources. Moreover, they revealed that the European Union and majority of
European countries were not at ease with the understandings reached between
Washington and Moscow. They are likely to remain committed to their stance
that rejects Assad’s presence and refuses to contribute to Syria’s
reconstruction until a political transition is achieved there. Many
countries have also expressed their doubt that Russia was willing or even
capable of weakening Iran in Syria.
Trump was keen to dispatch Bolton to Europe to inform his allies of his
administration’s upcoming approach on Syria. This new policy was a product
of a series of internal consultations, as well as discussions with Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The Israeli official played a central
role in convincing Putin to accept some factors of the understandings, the
essence of which was the need for the Syrian regime to return to the South
and weaken and later end Iran’s role in the country. Netanyahu had paid a
visit to Moscow in early May. His trip was soon followed by a comprehensive
Israeli strike against Iranian positions in Syria, meaning that this move
was approved by the Kremlin and coordinated with the Russian Hmeimim air
base in Syria. Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman declared at the
time that Assad must end Iran’s presence in Syria. Contacts between
Washington and Tel Aviv soon followed. They agreed to launch the regime’s
military offensive on Daraa, reaching all the way to the Nassib border
crossing with Jordan. Attacks on Quneitra and the western part of the
de-escalation ceasefire zone would be postponed. Washington also informed
opposition factions in the South that it will not intervene militarily in
Daraa and Jordan announced it will not receive any Syrians fleeing the
southern offensive. This American message will pressure Moscow to commit to
the de-escalation zone agreement that it signed with the US and Jordan in
July 2017. The message also signifies the abandonment of the opposition and
commitment to arrangements between Washington, Moscow and Amman, possibly
even Tel Aviv, that call for returning the regime to the South and keeping
both Iran and the opposition out of the area.
These American-Russian understandings are part of a wider US strategy on
Syria. The western sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that Trump is still
committed to withdrawing his country’s troops out of northeastern Syria as
soon as the ISIS terrorist groups is defeated. The organization still
controls 2 percent of Syrian territory. Northeastern Syria will also be
tackled by Trump and Putin in Helsinki where they will address the
non-engagement agreement between their troops. Ankara may likely enter the
picture after it returned in Washington’s good favor as demonstrated in the
recent deal on the northeastern Syrian city of Manbij. The sources stated,
however, that question marks still remain over the opposition-held Idlib
province and the fate of Turkish forces there. Ankara has stated that it
wanted to keep its influence there and northern Syria for the long-term.
Who are the Rebels in Southern Syria?
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 29/18/The rebels in southern Syria
targeted by a major government offensive were long supported by Washington
and seen as symbolizing relatively moderate opposition to Damascus. Seven
years after the conflict erupted, they are a constellation of small, mostly
local groups scattered across a highly sensitive region bordering Jordan and
the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights.
- Rise -
A number of factions united in 2014 to form the "Southern Front", a
30,000-strong coalition of 55 brigades that soon seized a string of bases
and positions in Daraa and Quneitra provinces.
The groups had close links with the United States as well as neighboring
Jordan, where many fighters were trained. The United States and Jordan
negotiated directly with Russia in July 2017 when a now defunct so-called
de-escalation deal was reached. "Israel has also provided support to
southern armed factions since either 2013 or 2014 in an apparent attempt to
cultivate local partners and secure a buffer zone on its border," the
International Crisis Group (ICG) said in a recent report.
- Split -
Unity crumbled gradually within the rebel coalition and the south is now
home to myriad separate outfits, unlike the Eastern Ghouta former rebel
bastion near Damascus that long remained ruled by three main groups.
"Southern rebels have no single command, although they continue to
coordinate laterally to some extent," the ICG think tank wrote. According to
Rami Abdel Rahman, who heads the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a
Britain-based war monitor, around 30,000 armed men remain in southern Syria.
He estimated that more than half of them had received U.S. or Jordanian
training, adding that the best staffed and equipped among them were Jaish
al-Thawra and Shahab al-Sunna. The Salafist group Ahrar al-Sham, which has
received backing from Saudi Arabia, also has a presence in Daraa province.
- Jihadists -
According to the Observatory, rebels control about 60 percent of Daraa
province, whose capital is split in four rebel districts and one held by the
government. Rebels control about 70 percent of the neighboring province of
Quneitra, wedged between Daraa and the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights,
while the government holds almost all of Sweida province, further east.
Jihadist groups also have a presence on the southern front, in the form of
Jaish Khaled bin al-Walid, an organization that has pledged allegiance to
the Islamic State group. According to the Observatory, it has around 1,000
men and its bastion is located in the southwest of Daraa province. Its
leaders have been repeatedly targeted in Israeli air strikes. Hayat Tahrir
al-Sham, a group made up mostly of ex-members of the former al-Qaida
affiliate in Syria, also has a few hundred men in the region.
Battered South Syria Towns in Talks on Regime Takeover
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 29/18/Rebels controlling several towns in
southern Syria were on Friday considering a deal for a regime takeover in
exchange for an end to fierce bombing, state media and a monitor said. Since
June 19, Russian-backed government forces have been battering
opposition-held parts of Daraa province with air strikes and barrel bombs,
simultaneously calling on rebels to surrender. Syrian state news agency SANA
has reported that rebels in three towns in Daraa's eastern countryside had
already agreed to a regime takeover over the last two days. On Friday, it
carried preliminary reports that rebels in four more towns had "agreed to
hand over their weapons... and reconcile."Syria's army on Friday organized a
press tour of recently recaptured towns in the south, including Al-Soura. A
military commander, speaking on condition of anonymity, told journalists
that the army's advance left opposition fighters with "no choice" but to
surrender. "The terrorist groups are heading towards settlement and
reconciliation," the commander said. The strategy is one the government and
its Russian ally have used across Syria: bombing, isolating rebel towns with
ground attacks, and ultimately securing their surrender. They have already
divided rebel territory in the south -- which forms a rough U-shape spanning
Daraa and neighboring Quneitra province -- into several chunks.
Lebanon's Hizbullah, which has fought alongside Syrian regime forces in the
south, said on Friday that rebels were "collapsing.""Many of these groups
are reassessing, starting to ask for settlements and entering into
reconciliation deals," Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said. "We are
facing a very big victory in southern Syria," he said. The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, said on Friday
that as many as eight towns were in negotiations over a potential regime
takeover. "There are talks between the Russians on one side and opposition
factions on the other, through local mediators, over the fate of eight towns
in Daraa's countryside," it said. Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said
members of Russia's military police were leading the talks for each town
separately. "Most of them appear willing to reconcile with the regime, which
will see rebel fighters hand over their heavy weapons," he said. Syrian and
Russian warplanes on Friday continued air strikes across Daraa province and
the provincial capital of the same name, the Observatory said. Nearly 100
civilians have been killed since the assault began a week ago, the monitor
said. The United Nations says around 66,000 people have fled their homes,
many of them towards the border with Jordan, which remains closed.
Canada gravely
concerned by situation in southwest Syria
June 29, 2018 – Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
Global Affairs Canada today released the following statement regarding the
ongoing situation in southwest Syria:
“Canada is gravely concerned by the Syrian regime’s offensive in southwest
Syria and unequivocally condemns attacks on civilians, including airstrikes
on hospitals.
“The regime’s actions and those of its ally—Russia—are having a catastrophic
impact on civilians, including the displacement of tens of thousands of
people.
“Canada calls on the Syrian regime to immediately end the violence and to
allow for rapid and unimpeded humanitarian access, and urges all parties to
the conflict to respect their obligations under international humanitarian
law. Canada also calls on Russia to uphold the commitments it made to help
maintain a de-escalation zone in the area.
“Canada continues to pursue accountability for those responsible for war
crimes and crimes against humanity in Syria.
“We will also continue to provide humanitarian assistance for the most
vulnerable people of Syria.’’
UN Rights Chief Warns
of ‘Catastrophe’ in Daraa Battle
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 29 June, 2018/The United Nations human rights chief
warned on Friday that civilians in Syria's southwestern Daraa province may
be trapped in a siege situation and subjected to bombing and shelling that
would lead to a "catastrophe". In a statement, UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein said his office had reports that ISIS
militants trying to control Yarmouk basin in Daraa province are "not
allowing civilians to leave areas under their control". Zeid said that some
regime-run checkpoints were charging people several hundred dollars to pass
through and he appealed to all sides to provide safe passage to those
wishing to flee. On Thursday, a barrage of Russian strikes on towns in
southern Syria killed at least 25 civilians, the bloodiest day yet of the
regime’s offensive in the strategic region. The bombardment has forced more
than 45,000 people to flee in search of safety, according to the United
Nations, while others huddle in their basements to wait out the raids. At
the UN Security Council on Wednesday, Britain, France and the United States
condemned Russia's role in the offensive. French ambassador Francois
Delattre called on "everyone, starting with Russia, to uphold their
commitments so that this offensive ceases immediately". Israel's military
said Friday it has delivered about 60 tons of humanitarian aid and medicine
to thousands of displaced Syrians in the Golan Heights who flocked to the
area, fleeing the heavy bombardment in southwestern Syria. It said it can't
allow Syrians to enter Israel.
UN Criticizes Iranian
Missiles: Nuclear Deal at Crossroads
New York - Ali Barada/Asharq Al-Awsat/ 29 June, 2018/UN Under-Secretary
General for Political Affairs Rosemary DiCarlo alerted members of the
Security Council that the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) on
Iran's nuclear program was "at a crossroads" in light of US withdrawal. This
was the first meeting for the Security Council since US President Donald
Trump announced on May 8 that his country would withdraw from the agreement,
which was signed by the P5+1 (the five permanent members of the United
Nations Security Council—China, France, Russia, United Kingdom, United
States—plus Germany) with Iran. During the session on UN Secretary-General
Antonio Guterres’ latest report on the implementation of sanctions against
Iran, DiCarlo said since the agreement came into force on January 16, 2016,
the International Atomic Energy Agency had consistently reported that Iran
was abiding by its commitments. She reiterated the secretary-general's
regret at the United States' announcement, as well as his call upon Tehran
to carefully consider the concerns of member states about activities
allegedly contrary to the restrictions set out in the resolution. DiCarlo
said the secretariat had received information from two unidentified member
states on the supply, sale, transfer or export to Iran of dual-use items
that might be contrary to Security Council resolution 2231. The UN official
added that “the report reflects information from Saudi Arabia on the launch
of two Iranian missiles in January 2018.” She added: "The conclusions are
consistent with those of the international organization regarding the firing
of ballistic missiles by the Houthis in Yemen at Saudi territories." US
Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, for her part, criticized Tehran ahead of
the UN session. Guterres' report "includes troubling, but not surprising,
evidence that Iran has and continues to violate UN Security Council
resolutions,” said Haley in a statement. “This report lays out the strongest
evidence to date that the Iranian regime continues to send weapons across
the Middle East and blatantly violates Security Council resolutions,” she
stated.
“From the Houthis to ‘Hezbollah’, to Hamas and (Syrian regime leader Bashar)
Assad, the Iranian regime has made a habit of devoting considerable
resources, away from its domestic needs, to supporting terrorism and
destabilizing the region,” she added. She said the US would not allow
“Iran’s violations and destructive actions to go unchecked”, urging Security
Council members “to do the same”. “The evidence in this latest report shows
us all too clearly the consequences of inaction in the face of Iranian
defiance,” she stressed.
Rouhani Calls on Iranians to Be Prepared to Face US
Sanctions
London/Asharq Al-Awsat/ 29 June, 2018/Iranian President Hassan Rouhani
expected Thursday that the sanctions would impose severe pressure on the
Iranians. For the second consecutive day, Rouhani called on Iranians to
renounce internal differences and stand up against the US sanctions. He was
speaking on the sidelines of the opening of a refinery in the south of the
country, a day following the speech in which he announced that he is not
willing to resign or declare the government to step down. “If anyone thinks
the administration will resign, they are mistaken,” Rouhani said during a
speech on Wednesday at a meeting of administration officials. Rouhani has
been facing a number of economic troubles at home as 107 parliamentarians
signed a letter urging the president to change his economic team, and 70
parliamentarians signed a letter asking the Iranian parliament speaker Ali
Larijani to question Rouhani about the economy, specifically the exchange
rate. Rouhani stressed the need to work with parliament and other officials,
saying, “We have to show the world that we can tolerate the difficulties and
the problems, and we will not trade away our independence, we will not trade
away our freedom, we will not trade away our Islamic system, but we will
tolerate the difficulties, standing alongside one another.”Conservative
newspapers responded Thursday to three scenarios proposed by Rouhani for
internal parties to reach an internal agreement on dealing with US
administration policies, particularly the return of nuclear sanctions and
its withdrawal from the nuclear deal. The first option is to submit to the
United States and do exactly as the Donald Trump administration demands. The
second option is to stand up to the USA but continue domestic quarrels, and
the third option is to stand up to the USA, protect “our honor and bring
America to its knees.”For instance, the IRGC mouthpiece, Javan newspaper,
welcomed the "third option" without commenting on the Iranian president's
refusal to resign or change his government team. While Chief Director of the
Revolutionary Guards' economic arm, Khatam al-Anbia, Abadullah Abdullahi
said that "Iran can overcome the current situation with conciliation and
cooperation," expressing the readiness of his forces to cooperate with the
Iranian government in the economic field.
Exclusive: Iran Protests Give Big ‘No’ to Both Turban
and Military Cap
London/Asharq Al-Awsat/ 29 June, 2018
“Who is behind all this?” Iran’s “Supreme Guide” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
reportedly asked on Wednesday when he received several judges in special
audience. The “all this” in his question referred to protests that led to
the closure of Tehran’s Grand bazaar followed by similar shutdowns in at
least 30 other cities.
However, the bazaar protests were not all that was there. Apart from the
Bazaaris, who had their own organization and pursued clear objectives mostly
linked to the dire economic situation, there were other elements pursuing
other strategies. Some clandestine opposition activists, using the protests
as cover, briefly came into the open to set fire to official cars, street
dustbins, and, in at least five occasions, buildings suspected of belonging
to security forces. They were also responsible for emptying a truckload of
rubbish in front of the “Islamic Majlis” (parliament) building, and bringing
in large quantities of pebbles, rocks and stones for people to throw at
security units. Among them were elements clearly trained in street
“hit-and-run” politics. A third group, mostly belonging to the so-called
intelligentsia also joined the protest and provided many of the slogans,
catch phrases and limericks popular in all political demonstrations in Iran.
They were largely responsible for the overtly political profile that the
protests adopted in their third or fourth day. They also set up
communication centers, spreading information, including thousands of
video-documentaries through the social media to heighten the profile of the
revolt.
More worrisome from Khamenei’s point of view was the presence of a large
number of the “urban poor” who joined the protests as eddies pouring into a
river. They had no recognizable leadership and no slogans of their own. They
wished to indicate their unhappiness with a “Revolution” that had promised
to end poverty in Iran but had ended up multiplying it.
At any rate, the “all this” that worried Khamenei evolved into a mass
movement cutting across class, age, education, and other barriers- a truly
popular uprising. It showed that if and when a large number of Iranians
decide to really go for “the kill” against the regime, something that many
experts believe they have not done yet, they would have the manpower, the
method and the means needed for a serious challenge to the authorities. What
the surprise revolt lacked, however, was an overall leadership and a precise
goal that could be summed up in one sentence. Many protesters simply looked
for curbs on corruption, an end to economic crisis, a punishment of
incompetence in high places and plans to relieve the pressure on the
estimated 30 million Iranians who live below-the-poverty-line.
There is doubt that some protesters were sympathizers, or as their opponents
might claim, hired hands of the more radical Khomeinist factions that
believe President Hassan Rouhani and his “New York Boys” are a sort of
Trojan Horse for the United States at least when ruled by the Democrats.
The most outspoken among the protesters, however, could be categorized as
the “regime change” coalition, those who would settle for nothing less than
the dissolution of the “Islamic Republic.” Broadly speaking, the
Iranian opposition could be divided into two big camps: those who want
regime change and those who seek change of behavior. The surprise
announcement by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that the Trump
administration is seeking only behavior of change on a few specific issues
has helped deepen that divide. Those exile opposition groups that have
closely worked with the US and its regional allies, including Israel, for
decades, have been forced to distance themselves from the regime change
narrative, thus giving the regime added space in which to maneuver. Thanks
to its international connections, experience in campaigning and ability to
raise funds, the exiled opposition is still slated to play a major role in
any future national revolt. However, it is unlikely to be in the van if and
when Iran moves towards genuine regime change. A series of recent
conferences held in London, Hamburg and Washington DC ended in acrimony and
chaos as exile groups fought each other over such issues as ethnic rights
and the choice between monarchy and a republican system with classical
right-left fissures apparent in the background.
Waiting in the wings are some members of the military in the ruling elite.
Newspapers and websites controlled by various active or retired officers of
the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) harp on the claim that
successive governments, headed by mullahs or civilians, have failed and that
the military remains the only power capable of leading the nation out of the
impasse created by 40 years of misrule and incompetence. For example, Gen.
Muhammad Hussein Baqeri, Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces, says his men
are ready to “help the government in any difficult situation, to solve
problems and remove hurdles.” The subtext is that the government itself,
headed by a mullah or a civilian, is incapable of doing that. Their senior
officers, among them Gen. Qassem Soleimani who commands the Quds (Jerusalem)
Corps, and the former IRGC chief, Gen. Yahya Rahim Safavi, have already
embarked on a self-promotion drive that resembles the early phases of a
presidential campaign.
One curious fact is that the clergy, who have been the face of the regime
for four decades, are adopting a low profile. This may be because they are
deeply divided with many, perhaps even a majority, anxious to distance the
mosque from government to avoid a tsunami of anger that could sweep them all
away. Whatever happens next, analysts agree that the next “Savior” in Iran
would be wearing neither a turban nor a military cap. The Iranian protest
movement is rich in tactical leadership with hundreds of trade unionists,
association leaders, bazaar elders, feminist mascots, intellectuals and even
religious scholars capable of spearheading uprisings in more than 200
cities, something never seen before in Iranian political history. What is
lacking is an overarching leadership to transform that tactical advantage
into a strategic one. However, necessity is the mother of invention, as the
saying goes.
Iran Reopens Uranium Plant in Preparation to Boost
Enrichment
London/Asharq Al-Awsat/ 29 June, 2018/Iran has reopened a "major" nuclear
plant idle for nine years, its atomic energy agency (AEOI) said on
Wednesday, as Tehran prepares to increase uranium enrichment capacity if a
nuclear deal with world powers falls apart after the US withdrawal.
US-Iranian tensions have resurged since President Donald Trump pulled
Washington out of the 2015 nuclear accord, calling it deeply flawed. Under
the deal, Iran restricted its enrichment program to ease concerns it could
not be put to developing nuclear weapons and in return won relief from
sanctions. European signatories are trying to save the accord, which they
see as crucial to forestalling an Iranian nuclear weapon. However, Iranian
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ordered the AEOI this month to start
preparations to upgrade enrichment capacity in case the European efforts
fail. The AEOI said on Wednesday that in response to Khamenei’s order and
Trump’s renunciation of the deal, a plant for the production of UF6, the
feedstock for centrifuge machines that enrich uranium, had been relaunched
and a barrel of yellow cake has been delivered there. Uranium ore, known as
yellow cake, is converted into a gas called uranium hexafluoride (UF6)
before enrichment. The UF6 factory, which had been inactive since 2009 due
to a lack of yellow cake, is part of the Isfahan uranium conversion
facility, according to AEOI’s statement on its website. “Iran has imported a
huge amount of yellow cake since the nuclear deal” in 2015, and had also
produced some domestically. Iranian comments about the Isfahan plant
appeared aimed at pressuring Europeans and others to come up with a way to
circumvent new American sanctions. Already, many international organizations
are pulling back from promised billion-dollar deals with Tehran and the
country's currency has entered a free-fall against the dollar. The
International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN nuclear watchdog that is policing
Iran’s compliance with the nuclear deal, said on June 5 that the AEOI had
informed it of “tentative” plans to resume production of UF6. The move is
symbolic and permissible under the nuclear deal, which allows Iran to enrich
uranium to 3.67 percent, far below the 90 percent of weapons-grade uranium,
and caps its stock of enriched uranium hexafluoride at 300 kilograms (660
pounds). President Hassan Rouhani has written to counterparts in France,
Germany and Britain, warning that time to salvage the nuclear deal is
running out. Rouhani’s chief of staff, Mahmoud Vaezi, was quoted as saying
on Wednesday by the government’s website that Rouhani had expressed Iran’s
demands “very clearly” in this letter. Washington will start reimposing some
economic penalties on Tehran in August and more in November. The tightening
of US sanctions pressure has set Washington and Tehran, adversaries since
Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution, back on a course of confrontation after a
period of cautious detente under Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama. Rouhani
urged Iranians on Wednesday to “bring America to its knees”.
EU Leaders Seal Migration Deal after Marathon Talks
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 29/18/EU leaders clinched a hard-won
migration deal during all-night talks Friday that Italy's hardline new
premier said meant his country was "no longer alone" in shouldering the
responsibility for migrants. Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, who
heads a month-old anti-immigration government, had vetoed joint conclusions
for the entire agenda of the summit in Brussels until his demands were
finally met before dawn. Italy has turned away a series of migrant boats in
recent weeks, sparking a fresh political row three years after the bloc
faced its biggest ever migration crisis. "Today Italy is no longer alone. We
are satisfied," Conte, a former law professor who until recently was a
virtual political unknown, told reporters following nine hours of talks
described as "virulent". The 28 leaders agreed to consider setting up
"disembarkation platforms" outside the bloc, most likely in north Africa, in
a bid to discourage migrants boarding EU-bound smuggler boats. Member
countries could also set up migrant processing centres -- but only on a
voluntary basis -- to determine whether they returned home as economic
migrants or admitted as refugees in willing states.
'A lot to do' -The leaders also offered a
concession to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who faces a rebellion from
within her own coalition government, with moves to stop migrants registered
in Italy and other EU countries from moving to Germany. Merkel welcomed the
deal, but acknowledged the hard work needed with some hard choices left for
later.
"I am optimistic after today that we can now really continue to work,
although we have a lot to do, even bridging the different views," Merkel
said. She had earlier warned that "migration could end up determining
Europe's destiny" if it failed to reach an agreement. The summit conclusions
called on member countries to take "all necessary" steps to stop migrants
initially arriving in countries such as Italy and Greece from moving on to
Germany. After allowing more than one million asylum seekers into Germany
since 2015, Merkel faces an end-of-month deadline from her own interior
minister to seal pacts to curb so-called secondary migration. Italy's stance
has revived political tensions in the EU, despite the fact that arrivals
have dipped by 96 percent since the peak of Europe's migration crisis in
2015, and sparked warnings that authoritarian movements will take advantage
of any failure to tackle migration.
Conte came to Brussels emboldened by the announcement of an upcoming visit
to US President Donald Trump, who has hailed Rome's tough stance, and who
himself blocked the conclusions of a recent G7 leaders meeting on trade. The
Italian government demanded "concrete action" from other countries to help
in the same way that they had after it refused to admit the rescue ships
Aquarius, which docked later in Spain, and Lifeline, which went to Malta.
- 'Really tough guys' -EU President Donald Tusk issued a fresh warning on
the need for action on migration to stave off rising populism and
authoritarianism, saying that "the stakes are high and time is short". "Some
may think I am too tough in my proposals on migration, but trust me, if we
don't agree on them, then you'll see some really tough proposals from some
really tough guys," the former Polish premier added. But the leaders failed
to agree on long-stalled plans to overhaul the bloc's asylum rules, which
say that migrants must be dealt with by the first country in which they
arrive. The plans include a permanent scheme to share migrants arriving in
Italy and Greece around all other EU countries. Former communist countries
in Eastern Europe, particularly the authoritarian governments of Hungary and
Poland, implacably oppose the plan. Brexit was meanwhile largely relegated
to the sidelines of this summit, with British Prime Minister Theresa May set
to update leaders after admitting the need to make "faster" progress as she
arrived at the venue. EU leaders are expected on Friday to say that talks,
which have stalled on the issue of the Irish border, are running out of time
to get a deal. But in a light-hearted bid to ease tensions, Belgian premier
Charles Michel surprised May with a gift of a Belgian football shirt. A
World Cup clash between Belgium and England coincided with the summit on
Thursday night. Belgium won 1-0.
Gaza Teen Shot Dead on Israel Border
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 29/18/Israeli troops shot dead a
Palestinian youth aged about 13 on Friday in border clashes near the town of
Khan Yunis in the Gaza Strip, the Hamas-ruled territory's health ministry
said. Ministry spokesman Ashraf al-Qudra told AFP the name and exact age of
the boy, who was shot in the head, were not known. The Israeli army could
not immediately confirm or deny the report. Since protests broke out along
the Gaza border on March 30, at least 136 Palestinians have been killed by
Israeli fire. The majority were involved in protests but others were seeking
to breach or damage the border fence. No Israelis have been killed. On
Thursday, Abdel Fattah Abu Azoum, 17, was hit in the head by fire from an
Israeli tank near Rafah in southern Gaza. The Israeli army said he and a
companion were trying to breach the border fence.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on June 29-30/18
Why Turkey Will Not Be Another Iran
Amir Taheri/Asharq Al Awsat/June 29/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65655/%D8%A3%D9%85%D9%8A%D8%B1-%D8%B7%D8%A7%D9%87%D8%B1%D9%8A-%D9%84%D9%85%D8%A7%D8%B0%D8%A7-%D9%84%D9%86-%D8%AA%D8%B5%D8%A8%D8%AD-%D8%AA%D8%B1%D9%83%D9%8A%D8%A7-%D8%A5%D9%8A%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%AC%D8%AF/
Is Turkey going to be another Iran? With
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s latest electoral victory the question is
making the rounds in Western political circles. Despite the fact that
Sunday’s election gives Erdogan immense new powers, my short answer to the
question is a firm: no!
In analyzing the nature of political power in any form the first question to
ask concerns the provenance of that power. For where does power comes from
determines where it may go.
In Iran in 1979 power was like a box of jewels thrown in the street, ready
for anyone to pick up. The Shah had left the country and most members of the
Council of Monarchy he had appointed were in the French Riviera, while the
army Top Brass had declared “neutrality” which meant the military wouldn’t
stop anyone from picking up the box of jewels in the street.
By a fluke of fate and a combination of bizarre circumstances, it was
Ayatollah Khomeini who had the nerve and the imagination to pick up the box
after the Shah’s last Prime Minister Shapour Bakhtiar had also gone into
hiding waiting to be spirited out of Tehran to Paris.
However, Erdogan, unlike Khomeini has obtained his box of jewels in the form
of 52 per cent of the votes cast in an election boasting one of the highest
turnouts in Turkish history. Even if we make allowances for abstentions and
real or alleged irregularities in the process, none could deny that Erdogan
enjoys a solid support base from at least 32 per cent of the Turkish
electorate.
In contrast, unlike Erdogan who has been on the Turkish political scene for
almost three decades, including 15 years at the top, Khamenei, when he
seized power, was a largely unknown figure to most Iranians. The best
surveys we had at the time was that the exiled mullah would not collect more
than five to 10 percent of the votes in any free and fair election.
Khomeini’s support came from Tehran and a few other big cities, notably
Isfahan, while Erdogan’s support base is in rural areas and small and medium
cities. The uprising that brought Khomeini to power was a largely urban
middle class affair while Erdogan depends on the rural population, the
working classes and the petty-bourgeoisie for support.
Khomeini was solidly backed by all shades of leftist parties and ideologies
from social democrats to Maoists to Islamic-Marxists. Erdogan, on the other
hand, is the bete-noire of the Turkish Left.
While Khomeini and his entourage adopted a good chunk of the lexicon of the
left, including such worn-out clichés as “the downtrodden (Mustazafin) and
“Imperialism” (Istikbar), Erdogan’s political vocabulary owes more to
populism than to proto-Marixm.
Khomeini’s entourage featured numerous theologians and so-called Islamic
scholars while a variety of violent Islamist groups, including the Fedayeen
Islam, the Hezbollah (founded in 1975), the Islamic Coalition and the
Hojjatieh Society.
In contrast there are hardly any theologians or religious scholars in
Erdogan’s entourage. Despite his occasional penchant for Islamist
shibboleths, Erdogan faces stiff opposition from a wide range of Islamist
groups, starting with the Hizmet, khidmah in Arabic (Service) movement led
by exiled preacher Fethullah Gulen, not to mention the 100 or so Sufi
fraternities and the crypto-Shiite Alawite community.
In fact, Turkey’s Islamic networks fear the take-over of their organizations
and businesses by the state while Erdogan adopts a pious pose and makes
occasional noises against Kemalist secularism.
To most Iranians, Khomeini was an unknown quantity and his seizure of power
more like a lottery than a rational choice. Warts and all, Erdogan, however,
is well-known to Turks who have had time to see him in action as party
leader, Mayor of Istanbul, Prime Minister and President.
Khomeini showed disdain for economic issues, once declaring that “economics
is for donkeys” and boasting that his revolution was not meant to bring
prosperity but a chance for martyrdom.
In contrast, Erdogan played the card of economic development from the start
when he transformed Istanbul from a decrepit almost bankrupt urban sprawl
into a bustling megapolis with global ambitions.
Under the Khomeinist system, Iran today is at least 40 per cent poorer in
real terms than it was under the Shah, according to surveys by the central
Bank of Iran. Under Erdogan’s stewardship, in contrast, the Turkey has
experienced a doubling of its annual Gross Domestic Product, a performance
better than the so-called “Chinese miracle.”
Right from the start, Khomeini’s message met with thinly disguised hostility
by Iran’s ethnic minorities. Ad for years after seizing power the ayatollah
and his clan had to use utmost violence to crush the minorities through mass
executions, widespread arrests and even full-size military operations
against Iranian-Arabs in Khuzestan, Iranian Kurds in three provinces,
Iranian-Turcomen in Golestan province and Iranian Baluch in Sistan-and-Baluchistan.
In contrast, Erdogan owed his initial access to power to massive support
among Turkey’s Kurdish minority. The subsequent wars he has waged against
armed Kurdish groups, mostly linked to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK),
does not nullify the fact that even in the latest election and his AKP party
did well in most Kurdish-majority areas of Anatolia.
Under Khomeini and his successors more than a million Iranians have died in
foreign wars, war against domestic opponents and ethnic minorities, and mass
executions. The victims of similar deviations under Erdogan, however, run
into thousands, still far too many but nowhere near as bad as the Iranian
mullahs’ record. While at least 40,000 people have been
executed under Khomeini and his successors, Erdogan refuses to bring back
the death penalty in Turkey.
Right now, according to Islamic Chief Justice Ayatollah Amoli Larijani,
there are 15000 Iranians under death sentence in prison, waiting to be
executed.
Khomeini banned all political parties while Erdogan has been prepared, at
least until now, to contest multi-party elections in a pluralist system.
Corruption has been a feature of both the Khomeinist regime and the Erdogan
stewardship. However, there, too, there are differences. Khomeini sized over
165000 private properties and distributed them among his entourage and
supporters and relatives. He also presided over the privatization of
numerous public companies, transferred to his minions at nominal prices.
Under Erdogan, however, corruption has taken a more classical form as
kickbacks, shady contracts and dubious business practices. In Khomeini’s
Islamic Republic, corruption has become structural, affecting all organs of
the state. Under Erdogan, corruption more resembles an ivy sucking
sustenance from a still healthy tree.
Khomeini was an antediluvian fanatic unique in contemporary political
history. Erdogan is a run-of-the-mill populist of the kind now fashionable
in many countries.
Both types could do damage, and often do, but the type to which Erdogan
belongs could still be tolerated, or confronted and opposed within some
rational parameters. The Khomeinist type, however, belongs to a surrealistic
sphere of transcendental pretensions in the service of earthly violence,
corruption and greed.
By most estimates there are 1.5 million Iranian asylum-seekers in Turkey but
not a single Turk seeks asylum in the Islamic Republic in Iran.
Putin and Trump Have Nothing to Talk About
Leonid Bershidsky/Asharq Al Awsat/June 29/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65662/debkafile-trump-lets-putin-have-syria-for-a-summit-iranian-hizballah-gain-access-to-israels-border-on-refugee-backs-%D8%AA%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%85%D8%A8-%D9%8A%D8%B3%D9%84%D9%85-%D8%B3%D9%88%D8%B1/
BloombergThe meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian
President Vladimir Putin, which was confirmed by Trump’s national security
adviser, John Bolton, would serve two purposes: The U.S. president loves
playing the international statesman and Putin likes to look reasonable and
constructive. They will have an opportunity to inhabit those roles. But
there is no agenda for them to discuss, much less a substantive goal for
their talks. And even if they appear to agree on something, it will likely
be dialed back by Trump’s advisers and Congress.
The two leaders could discuss Trump’s suggestion that Russia should rejoin
the G-8.
The agenda could also cover the U.S. president’s reported stance on Crimea,
which he said belonged to Russia because its residents speak that language
(and not because Putin annexed the peninsula in 2014). But Trump doesn’t
have the authority to extend invitations on behalf of the other members of
the group of industrialized nations, which have been explicit about not
wanting Putin in the club. In addition, Putin doesn’t seem eager to rejoin
that group; he appears happy to be part of the G-20 format along with other
non-Western leaders such as Xi Jinping of China, Narendra Modi of India and
Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey.
Nor is Trump authorized to recognize the Crimea annexation even if he wanted
to. It’s up to Congress, which could also lift Crimea-related sanctions, and
there’s no chance either will happen. At a news conference in Moscow after
his meeting with Putin, Bolton said the U.S. didn’t regard Crimea as part of
Russia. Nor did Bolton dangle the possibility of any sanctions being lifted
before the Russian-Ukraine conflict is resolved.
Still, there are other things Putin might want from Trump, including a
pullback of North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces from Russian borders,
a U.S. recommitment to the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, a withdrawal
from Syria, a return to the Iran nuclear deal and the end of U.S. support
for Ukraine. None of those concessions are on the table.
The reason the U.S. can’t concede anything to Putin has little to do with
principles and values, or with Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s
investigation into putative collusion between the Kremlin and the Trump
campaign in 2016. Instead, no give and take is possible because Putin has
nothing to offer the U.S. as there is no part of the Trump agenda that
Russia could help advance.
That meeting wasn’t meant to produce a specific result, just to break the
Cold War ice (though that didn't prevent a multitude of severe clashes over
the subsequent 30 years). Trump and Putin might be able to take some of the
heat out of what the former U.S. ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul has
termed a “hot peace.”
How to Solve the Plastic Crisis
Adam Minter/Bloomberg/June 29/18
Since Jan. 1, when China stopped accepting the rich world's recyclable
plastic waste, it's gotten a ton of criticism for worsening the already deep
crisis of ocean plastic pollution. But China isn't the only culprit here.
This is a crisis made — and growing worse — throughout developing Asia.
Just eight countries in the region are responsible for about 63 percent of
total plastic waste flowing into the oceans. Little of that junk has been
exported by rich economies. Instead, it's almost solely generated by Asia's
newly minted consumer classes, the vast majority of whom lack access to
garbage collection, modern landfills and incineration. Any progress in
reducing ocean plastic will have to start with them.
A boom in garbage is almost always the result of two related phenomena:
urbanization and income growth. Rural dwellers moving to the city shift from
buying unpackaged goods to buying stuff (especially food) wrapped in
plastic. As their incomes rise, their purchases increase. That growth in
consumption is almost never matched by expanded garbage collection and
disposal. In typical low-income countries, less than half of all garbage is
collected formally, and what little is picked up tends to end up in
unregulated open dumps. In 2015, scientists estimated that as much as 88
percent of the waste generated in Vietnam is either littered or tossed into
uncontained dumps. In China, the rate is about 77 percent. By comparison,
the U.S. rate is 2 percent.
Every big city in developing Asia faces this problem. Jakarta's waterways
are choked with plastic trash. In Kuala Lumpur, instances of open dumping
line the high-speed train route to the airport. On the outskirts of any
Chinese city, loose plastic bags and instant-noodle cups litter every road's
shoulder. Much of this junk ends up in waterways — and, eventually, the
ocean. One study found that eight of the 10 rivers conveying the most
plastic waste into the oceans are in Asia. China's Yangtze alone delivers
1.5 million metric tons of plastic to the Yellow Sea each year. Solutions to
all this have proved chronically elusive. China has prohibited retailers
from providing free plastic bags for a decade, to almost no effect. In
Indonesia, longstanding efforts to tax plastic bottles and containers have
run into the reality that few locals have access to piped or uncontaminated
water. Although recycling is common in Asia, plastic presents an often
insurmountable challenge: Technical and environmental factors render much of
it unrecyclable, especially in developing regions. In fact, only about 9
percent of plastics are recycled globally.
Yet there's another, far more promising option: Improve regular old trash
collection. A recent study by the Ocean Conservancy and the McKinsey Center
for Business and Environment found that boosting trash collection rates to
80 percent in just five Asian countries — China, Indonesia, the Philippines,
Thailand and Vietnam — could reduce ocean plastic waste by a whopping 23
percent over a decade. No other solution can promise such an immediate or
lasting impact.
Pulling it off won't be easy. Garbage collection and disposal is often the
most expensive line-item on city budgets in the developing world, and
achieving the study's goal would require $4 billion to $5 billion per year.
But that's not impossible: In the U.K., aid organizations are pushing the
government to spend 3 percent of its annual foreign aid on waste collection
and disposal in the developing world (currently, it spends 0.3 percent). If
that goal were adopted by other rich countries, it could be a game-changer
for ocean plastics.
The private sector could also help. An American advocacy group called Closed
Loop Ocean is raising $150 million from global corporations — including 3M
Co., Coca-Cola Co., and Procter & Gamble Co. — to invest in scalable waste
collection and disposal businesses in India and Indonesia. Petrochemical and
plastics companies should be next to join.
All this is just a start, of course. Developing Asia will eventually need
many more modern landfills, incinerators and self-funding recycling
programs. But for now, one reform could have a bigger global impact than
just about any other: Start picking up the trash.
Arab Leaders Asked U.S. Not to Reveal Mideast Peace
Plan, Palestinians Say
هآررتس/الفلسطينيون يدعون أن القادة العرب قد طلبوا من أميركا عدم الكشف عن خطة
السلام ..صفقة العصر
Jack Khoury/Haaretz/June 29/18
According to Palestinian officials, Arab representatives warned Kushner and
Greenblatt that disclosing a plan that doesn't meet Palestinian expectations
could disturb regional stability.
Arab nations have asked the White House to refrain from revealing its
Mideast peace plan spearheaded by U.S. President Donald Trump's senior
adviser Jared Kushner and Mideast envoy Jason Greenblatt, senior Palestinian
officials told Haaretz.
One senior official said that representatives of Arab countries warned
members of the U.S. delegation to the Mideast of the ramifications of
detailing the plan. The Arab officials cited the fact that their countries
are dealing with internal challenges in a landscape marked by Syria's civil
war and Iranian interference.
Thus, the Arab officials told the Palestinian leadership, any plan which
does not meet Palestinian expectations could just increase tensions in the
Mideast.
"Egypt isn't short on internal issues, along with fighting terror in Sinai;
Jordan is dealing with many difficulties on the home front and repercussions
from the Syrian war don't simplify things and the Saudis with the challenges
in Yemen and the struggle against Iran," a Palestinian official told Haaretz.
"If the (Trump) administration present a plan without Jerusalem and without
the refugees it will be an earthquake whose repercussion will undermine
stability in the entire region and not one is ready for that."
According to the Palestinian official, this explains the focus by the
involved parties on the Gaza Strip, said the official, and the attempt to
promote projects aimed at improving humanitarian conditions, which would
prevent a collapse without presenting a plan without any diplomatic
prospects.
Kushner and Greenblatt have been on a tour of the Middle East in recent
days, visiting Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Egypt.
The duo is reportedly seeking regional approval for their proposed deal.
The U.S. is seeking to raise hundreds of millions of dollars from Gulf
nations to improve conditions in Gaza. The Palestinian Authority expressed
opposition to this plan, saying it was aimed at separating Gaza and the West
Bank.
Analysis/ Angela Merkel Is Losing to the Orban-Trump-Netanyahu Camp
هآررتس: ميركل تخسر في مواجهة فريق اوربان وترامب ونيتانياهو
Anshel Pfeffer/Haaretz/June 29/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65667/anshel-pfeffer-haaretz-angela-merkel-is-losing-to-the-orban-trump-netanyahu-camp-%D9%87%D8%A2%D8%B1%D8%B1%D8%AA%D8%B3-%D9%85%D9%8A%D8%B1%D9%83%D9%84-%D8%AA%D8%AE%D8%B3%D8%B1-%D9%81%D9%8A-%D9%85/
Merkel has gone from leader of Europe to near isolation – and the EU summit
now taking place may be her last chance to stop the forces of illiberal
democracy
In the joint press conference during Benjamin Netanyahu’s fleeting visit to
Berlin three weeks ago, the prime minister warned about Iran’s actions in
Syria. One of the implications, he said, could be another wave of Syrian
refugees arriving in Europe.
“And we all know where they will come to,” he added. Standing beside him,
Chancellor Angela Merkel looked even more mournful than usual. Netanyahu had
hit her weakest spot, and he had learned to do so from his best European
friend – who’s due to arrive in Israel next month.
Over the last few years, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has been
waging a war of attrition against Merkel over Europe’s future. It may sound
absurd that a modest-sized country with economic problems is taking on
Europe’s superpower. But based on events in recent weeks, Orban looks like
he’s winning – mainly thanks to the immigration issue.
This weekend they’ll both be at the European Union Leaders Summit in
Brussels. The desperate attempt to agree on an EU-wide solution to the
immigration crisis is at the top of the agenda.
Orban, arriving in Brussels, was forthright. “The invasion should be
stopped,” he said of the refugees at the Continent’s borders, “and to stop
the invasion means to have strong border control, and we have that.”
Merkel, in a speech in Berlin before leaving, sounded almost apologetic.
“Our decision to open doors to refugees in 2015 was not unilateral,” she
said. “We acted to help Austria and Hungary.”
Merkel and Orban were both born and raised under Communist regimes. After
the fall of the Iron Curtain, they both learned the rules of democracy and
became all-powerful leaders of their countries.
This is where the resemblances end. The apolitical Merkel who swiftly
reached the leadership of the conservative CDU party is now seen as the last
guarantor of the post-Cold War liberal world order. Orban, who burst onto
the public scene in Hungary as an anti-Communist activist, is the
standard-bearer of “illiberal democracy,” a term he invoked in a speech in
2014.
Mr. Inside and Mr. Outside
George Soros, the Hungarian-American financier now the most hated man in
Orban’s Hungary, said in 2016 that Orban is “challenging Merkel for the
leadership of Europe.” According to Soros, the Hungarian prime minister
“attacks the values and principles on which the European Union was founded.
Orban attacks them from the inside, [Vladimir] Putin from the outside.”
It was a showdown that Merkel, backed up by Germany’s economic might and a
near consensus among EU leaders, was winning. In early 2015, she visited
Budapest and forced Orban to cancel a tax his government had levied on
German companies. But two weeks later, the Russian president visited
Budapest as well, and Merkel should have read the signs. She was about to
make a series of decisions that would lead to her current predicament.
Throughout 2015, she led the EU’s tough line against the cash-strapped
Syriza government in Greece. Merkel insisted on severe austerity measures in
return for a bailout. She broke Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, despite the
referendum in which a large majority of Greek voters rejected the EU’s
terms. The price was bolstering her domineering and coercive image, and that
of the EU. A year later, things would end very differently in another
referendum.
But before that, Merkel would make another fateful decision – in September
2015, when she decided that Germany would open its borders and welcome the
stream of Syrian refugees crossing the Aegean from Turkey to Greece. Despite
the Dublin Treaty that stipulates that refugees will be processed in the EU
member state where they first arrive, she agreed to accept the over 1
million refugees who were reaching Greece and from there crossing the
Balkans into Hungary and Austria.
Merkel had sown the seeds of the current crisis and would begin to counter
growing opposition from other EU members who were asked to take in a quota
of refugees.
In 2016, in a series of meetings with British Prime Minister David Cameron,
Merkel refused to grant any concessions on the EU’s freedom-of-movement
principle for immigrants. Without her support, Cameron had no chance with
the EU, and though he continued to support remaining in the union,
immigration was to become a main issue used by Brexit-supporters, motivating
52 percent of British voters to support leaving on June 23.
Dominoes fall
Brexit was to be the wind in Donald Trump’s sails, who five months later
promised his supporters on Election Day a “Brexit-plus-plus.” With Trump’s
surprising election, Merkel had two alternatives. She could swallow her
pride and try to embrace the vainglorious president, or stand for her
principles. She chose the second option and won glowing headlines as “the
new leader of the free world.” But she also began to lose supporters in
Europe.
The three other members of the Visegrad Group – Poland, the Czech Republic
and Slovakia – rallied to Orban, as did Bulgaria and then Austria under its
new right-wing-populist government, which has taken a much tougher line on
immigration. The most damaging blow was to come last month when Italy’s new
populist government began blocking boats from Libya carrying immigrants. But
the greatest danger lay at home.
Orban has long been building his relations with the CDU’s sister party,
Bavaria’s CSU, and especially its leader, Horst Seehofer. The more
conservative and wealthy Bavarians were much less excited by Merkel’s
friendly welcome to the refugees thronging in their thousands at Munich’s
main train station. Seehofer, who has hosted Orban at CSU meetings where
Merkel’s immigration policy has been criticized, is now demanding that
Germany block at its borders refugees who have passed through other EU
countries.
Merkel refuses to budge, and this weekend’s summit is her last chance to try
to deliver a new EU policy that will not only gain the support of the other
member states but also placate the CSU. She’s on the brink of losing the
party necessary for her tenuous majority in the Bundestag.
In three years, Merkel has gone from leader of Europe to being almost
isolated. Even French President Emmanuel Macron, nominally her ally, has
been discreetly distancing himself. The photograph of Merkel at this month’s
G-7 summit confronting Trump made liberal hearts soar across the Western
world, but it also underlined how the West is now divided into two camps.
And the Orban-Trump-Netanyahu camp is swiftly gaining ground.
Israel Transferred Aid to Syrians Seeking Refuge Near
Border in Overnight Mission
إسرائيل في مهمات ليلية تنقل المساعدات للسوريين الساعين إلى اللجوء قرب الحدود
Noa Shpigel, Yaniv Kubovich and Jack Khoury/Haaretz/June 29/18
Army says it provided tons of food, medicine and clothing to Syrians living
in makeshift encampments on Golan border, but says will not allow them entry
to Israel
The Israeli army said on Friday that it transferred overnight humanitarian
aid to Syrians fleeing fighting in Syria 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. These
camps, the army said, are located along the border and are currently housing
a few thousand Syrians fleeing fighting in the Daraa region. According to
the UN, over 120,000 Syrians have fled the area in recent days.
The army said the living conditions in the camps were dire, with no access
to electricity, water or food. The army also said that recent days have seen
a rise in the number of Syrians living in the encampments.
According to a statement by the IDF, aid was transferred to four different
sites on the Syrian side of the Golan during the operation. They said over
300 tents, 13 tons of food, 15 tons of baby formula and three large
shipments of medical equipment and clothing had been delivered.
Israel is monitoring developments in southern Syria while it is preparing
for various scenarios, including continued humanitarian assistance to
fleeing Syrians. The IDF will not allow Syrians fleeing the country into
Israel and will continue to defend Israel's national security interests, the
army said.
The IDF has been providing life-saving humanitarian assistance, alongside a
non-intervention policy, for a number of years during the international
conflict in Syria, the army said in a statement.
The Syrian media reported that tens of thousands of people have fled the
Daraa region due to heavy airstrikes against the rebels by the Syrian and
Russian air forces. Many residents have headed south to the Jordanian
border, but Jordan isn’t letting them enter.
Haaretz has learned that officers from the Free Syrian Army, that is
operating in the Dara area, have sent messages to Syrian government forces
in recent days saying that they will lay down their weapons if they are
allowed to stay in their villages and homes. A Syrian opposition official
who spoke with Haaretz said refugees from the area were not marching
directly toward Israel and people were leaving through the corridors opened
up by the Syrian army, mostly toward the east and north.
“Some people turned toward Jordan and set up in the border area and a few
hundred made their way in the direction of a [refugee] camp that already
existed in the Quneitra area, not far from the cease-fire lines with
Israel,” the opposition official said. “Some went out to open areas. The
main thing is to be far from the bombing.”
The IDF raised Thursday its alert level in the Golan Heights in light of the
recent escalation in the fighting in southern Syria between the Assad regime
and rebel militias and the Syrian army’s increasing proximity to the Israeli
border.
Israel isn’t expecting a direct confrontation with the Syrian army, but it
is preparing for possibility of spillover effects from the regime’s attack,
with Russian and Iranian assistance, on the Daraa region, which is just
sixty kilometers from the Israeli border.
IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot flew to Washington on Thursday for a quick
meeting with his U.S. counterpart. On Sunday, the security cabinet will meet
to discuss the home front’s preparedness for a war in the north.
Eisenkot’s meeting with the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen.
Joseph Dunford, was arranged over the past few days. The two will mainly
discuss events in Syria, as well as their countries’ joint effort to
restrain Iran’s military intervention in the region.
Replacing Justice Kennedy: What kind of Conservative
Will President Trump Pick?
Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute/June 29/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12615/replacing-justice-kennedy-what-kind
They [potential nominees to the Supreme Court] should be asked about the
criteria they apply in determining whether to be bound by past decisions.
As the late Justice Antonin Scalia frequently pointed out, his oath of
office required him to apply the Constitution, not the decisions of his
predecessors on the bench, if those past decisions were wrong.
The second position is that Roe v. Wade was wrong when decided but it has
been the law for 45 years, and the nation has come to rely on it as
governing law. Accordingly, it should not be overruled, but nor should it be
expanded. This is the most likely position that a successful nominee might
take.
The two key words in assessing the President's nominee to replace Justice
Anthony Kennedy are stare decisis. This ancient Latin phrase, which means
let the decision stand, represents a conservative approach to judging: that
precedent imposes constraints on judicial innovation. Put another way, that
judicial innovation should be balanced against the need to maintain
stability in our legal system. But like most legal terms, stare decisis can
easily be manipulated to benefit both conservatives and liberals.
Traditionally it has been conservatives who have embraced stare decisis,
allowing the dead hand of the law to constrain the living constitution. But
liberals, too, embrace the concept when they seek to preserve old precedents
that are important to them.
Today, liberals want to use stare decisis to preserve Roe v. Wade, gay
marriage and other iconic liberal decisions of the past. Many conservatives
would like to see these decision overruled. When the President interviews
potential nominees, and when the Senate advises and consents on the
nomination, these nominees will be questioned about their positions on
important cases of the past and their likely votes in the future. They will
decline to be specific claiming the need for judicial independence. But one
area of legitimate inquiry will be their institutional views regarding stare
decisis.
All judicial nominees, whether liberal ore conservative, will always throw a
bone to stare decisis. They will claim, quite correctly, their legal system
depends on stability, certainty and predictability. But they will also point
out that the law must sometimes change to suit the times. So the questioning
of these potential nominees must be more probing and substantive. They
should be asked about the criteria they apply in determining whether to be
bound by past decisions.
The Supreme Court, unlike the lower courts, is not technically bound by
stare decisis. As the late Justice Antonin Scalia frequently pointed out,
his oath of office required him to apply the Constitution, not the decisions
of his predecessors on the bench, if those past decisions were wrong.
Just this week liberals applauded when the Supreme Court finally and
decisively overruled the disgraceful Japanese-American cases of the 1940s.
Conservatives applauded when the Supreme Court overruled the old compulsory
dues for public union's case and ruled that public employees could not be
required to pay union dues if they object to the union's political
positions.
Every justice through history has applied stare decisis in many cases and
refused to apply it in some. For some justices, it is difficult to discern a
coherent pattern. They apply precedent when it serves their interests, and
refuse to apply it without articulating why they have done so, in some cases
and not in others.
Among the key issues that may influence President Trump's decision on whom
to nominate will be the candidates' view on Roe v. Wade. These views can
fall into several categories: the first is that Roe v. Wade was wrong when
decided, it is wrong now, and it should be overruled. President Trump has
suggested that he expects his nominee to take that position, but any such
nominee may have difficulty being confirmed, because at least two Republican
Senators opposed reversing Roe v. Wade.
The second position is that Roe v. Wade was wrong when decided but it has
been the law for 45 years, and the nation has come to rely on it as
governing law. Accordingly, it should not be overruled, but nor should it be
expanded. This is the most likely position that a successful nominee might
take.
Then there is the extreme position, hinted at by Justice Clarence Thomas:
Not only is there no right for a woman to have an abortion, but it is
unconstitutional for the state to allow abortion, since abortion violates
the right to life of the fetus. Such a radical view would dramatically
change both constitutional law and politics in America, but the Supreme
Court's decision interpreting the second amendment granting the personal
right to own guns also reversed long standing precedents and changed the
nature of law and politics in our country. It is unlikely that any nominee
with such an extreme view concerning abortion could be confirmed, if he or
she acknowledged that they would vote to prevent states from keeping
abortion legal.
So the next several months may be a civics lesson for all Americans as we
observe the President making his decision about whom to nominate and we
watch Senators make their decision as to whether they confirm the nominee.
We need such a lesson because the vacancy that occurred when Justice Scalia
died provided an object lesson in politics trumping decency and
constitutionality, as Senate Republicans violated their duty to advise and
consent, by refusing even to consider any nominee put forward by President
Obama in his last year. Let us hope that the process of replacing Justice
Anthony Kennedy will provide a more ennobling lesson for all Americans.
*-Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law Emeritus at
Harvard Law School and author of "The Case Against BDS."
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here
do not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone
Institute. No part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be
reproduced, copied or modified, without the prior written consent of
Gatestone Institute.
The Netherlands Approves Burqa Ban
Soeren Kern//Gatestone Institute/June 29/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12614/netherlands-burqa-ban
"People's faces should not be hidden in society, for it is our faces that
give us our identity and our fundamental means of communication with
others." — Geert Wilders, Party for Freedom (PVV).
Dutch Interior Minister Kajsa Ollongren said the new law represents "a fair
balance" between "the freedom to dress as one wishes" and "the general
interest of communication and security." She also said that far from
violating fundamental rights, the ban will enable Muslim women "to have
access to a wider social life" because if they do not cover the face "they
will have more possibilities for contact, communication and opportunities to
enter the job market."
The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) twice has ruled that burqa bans
are legal, making it unlikely that the Dutch ban could be overturned in
court.
The Dutch Senate has approved a law that bans the wearing of "face-covering
clothing" in public buildings, including hospitals, schools and government
offices, as well as on public transportation.
Although the ban does not extend to public streets, the law authorizes
police to ask individuals to remove face-covering clothing to establish
their identity.
Those found flouting the ban — which includes Islamic veils and robes such
as burqas (which cover the entire face) and niqabs (which cover the entire
face except for the eyes), as well as balaclavas and full-face helmets —
will be subject to a fine of 410 euros ($475).
The new law, previously adopted by the Dutch House of Representatives in
November 2016, was approved on June 26 by 44 to 31 votes in the 75-seat
Senate.
In a statement, the government, which has not yet said when the law will
enter into effect, explained its purpose:
"In a free country like the Netherlands, everyone has the freedom and space
to behave and dress as he or she desires. Sometimes, limits can and must be
imposed on that freedom. In the case of face-covering clothing, this applies
in particular if mutual communication is impeded or safety is jeopardized.
"Mutual communication whereby people can look each other in the face is so
important that uniform rules have now been laid down by law. This makes it
clear to everyone what is and is not allowed in those situations."
A Muslim activist group called "Stay away from my Niqab!" said the ban is
unconstitutional. In an open letter sent to Dutch lawmakers, the group,
which has more than 5,000 followers on Facebook, asked:
"Why is it not realized that this law leads to people being isolated from
society? This ban leads to women who wear face-covering clothing, who like
to participate in society, no longer to be able to do this effectively
because they now have a restriction on education, license applications,
travel with public transport, visiting a doctor and much more....
"Is the constitution no longer applicable to women with face-covering
clothing? What about the right that everyone is free to dress how he/she
wants, regardless of race, gender, religion or belief?
"What about Article 6 of the Constitution which sets out freedom of religion
and belief? Is there a problem in which everyone does not have the right
freely to confess their religion or belief, individually or in community
with others?"
The group's spokeswoman, Karima Rahmani, added:
"We feel that we are being wronged with a repressive measure, which is why
we trying to make our voices heard. It is getting harder and harder to be on
the street with a niqab. I myself have been threatened with death, and other
women have even been physically attacked.
"There is a lot of talk about me, but no one comes to me to ask: 'Why do you
actually wear that niqab?' It is part of my religion and I want to be free
to make that choice. It is a spiritual experience that I personally
experience."
The Council of State, an independent advisor to the government on
legislation, said that the ban was unnecessary and potentially
unconstitutional. In a November 2015 report, it said that the Dutch Cabinet
had been guided too much by "subjective feelings of insecurity" that "do not
justify a ban." It added:
"The Council of State points out that the bill primarily seems to have been
motivated by objections to wearing Islamic face-covering clothing....
Insofar as face-covering clothing (for example a burqa) is worn to express a
religious clothing prescription, this falls under the
constitutionally-protected freedom of religion. The ban proposed by the
government does not, according to the Council of State, justify restricting
the right to freedom of religion."
The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), however, twice has ruled that
burqa bans are legal, making it unlikely that the Dutch ban could be
overturned in court.
In July 2017, for example, the ECHR upheld a Belgian ban on wearing the
burqa in public spaces. It said that the government had been responding "to
a practice that it considered to be incompatible, in Belgian society, with
social communication and more generally the establishment of human
relations, which were indispensable for life in society...essential to
ensure the functioning of a democratic society." In July 2014, the ECHR
upheld France's burqa ban, accepting the French government's argument that
it encouraged citizens to "live together."
The Dutch government has repeatedly insisted that the ban is not about
restricting religion but about promoting communication and public safety. It
has described the new law as "religion neutral" because it is not limited
just to the burka and niqab, but also includes the balaclava and full-face
helmet.
Dutch Interior Minister Kajsa Ollongren said the new law represents "a fair
balance" between "the freedom to dress as one wishes" and "the general
interest of communication and security." She also said that far from
violating fundamental rights, the ban will enable Muslim women "to have
access to a wider social life" because if they do not cover the face "they
will have more possibilities for contact, communication and opportunities to
enter the job market."
A complete ban was originally proposed in December 2005 by Party for Freedom
(PVV) leader Geert Wilders, who argued that burqas and niqabs are barriers
to the integration of women in the Netherlands: "We must ban the burqa.
People's faces should not be hidden in society, for it is our faces that
give us our identity and our fundamental means of communication with
others."
The Netherlands is the sixth European country to approve a burqa ban, after
France, Belgium, Bulgaria, Austria and Denmark. Bavaria in Germany,
Catalonia in Spain, Lombardy in Italy and Ticino in Switzerland also have
imposed regional burqa bans, while Norway has tabled a law to ban burqas in
public schools. Latvia has proposed a burqa ban, but it has not yet been
enacted.
*Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here
do not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone
Institute. No part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be
reproduced, copied or modified, without the prior written consent of
Gatestone Institute.
Is Trump handing Putin a victory in Syria?
دايفيد اغناطيوس: هل يهدي ترامب لبوتين انتصاراً في “جنوب” سورياً
David Ignatius/The Washington Post/June 29/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/65671/david-ignatius-the-washington-post-is-trump-handing-putin-a-victory-in-syria-%D8%AF%D8%A7%D9%8A%D9%81%D9%8A%D8%AF-%D8%A7%D8%BA%D9%86%D8%A7%D8%B7%D9%8A%D9%88%D8%B3-%D9%87%D9%84-%D9%8A%D9%87%D8%AF/
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 the Islamic State 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 U.S. experts outlined some likely elements of the
framework. In exchange for U.S. 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, to block any Iranian advance there.
● Russia and the Assad regime will expand their outreach to Syrian Kurdish
forces in northeastern Syria, in areas where the Kurds have partnered
successfully with U.S. Special Operations forces to defeat the Islamic State and
restore stability. U.S. 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 jihadist 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 U.S. 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 U.S. 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 a reputation as an ex-KGB thug. But his Syrian strategy evokes the
subtler Chinese precept of subduing the enemy without fighting. Putin has taken
a decisive position in Syria at minimal cost — with a deferential Trump now
seeming ready to confirm his victory.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/global-opinions/is-trump-handing-putin-a-victory-in-syria/2018/06/28/a853657a-7b14-11e8-93cc-6d3beccdd7a3_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.45d4a8d29ff3
Accepting Regime Forces in South Syria Will Only Further
Iran’s Goals
القبول بقوات نظام الأسد
في جنوب سوريا سوف بالتأكيد يسهل تحقيق الأهداف الإيرانية
Hanin Ghaddar and Phillip Smyth/The Washington Institute/June 29, 2018
Whether openly or in disguise, Hezbollah and other Iranian proxies are deploying
to the south in large numbers, greatly increasing the potential for cross-border
escalation.
When Hezbollah sends its elite Radwan division to a battlefront in Syria, it
usually means that intense fighting is expected, and that the unit’s forces will
be heavily involved. This pattern has been witnessed throughout Hezbollah’s
intervention in the war, from al-Qusayr to Aleppo to Deir al-Zour. Radwan
fighters were also temporarily deployed to the 2017 battle of Deraa before a
de-escalation agreement stopped that offensive. Today, they are returning to
Deraa.
According to sources on the ground, Iran has been redeploying its Shia militia
proxies to south Syria since April, particularly between Suwayda, Deraa, and
Quneitra. In the past, Israel and Jordan have issued warnings against the
presence of Iranian-allied forces so close to their borders, but rather than
withdraw, many of these fighters are simply merging with Assad regime forces.
Hezbollah units have integrated with the army’s 4th Division and Republican
Guard, while fighters from militias such as Liwa al-Fatemiyoun have been spotted
within the Tiger Forces under the leadership of Syrian general Suhail al-Hassan,
even adopting their uniforms and insignia.
Whether hiding within regime units or deployed separately, Iran’s proxies and
partners seem to be heavily involved in the latest Deraa offensive. They are
also deploying around the Deir al-Adas area of Quneitra, located a scant fifteen
kilometers from the Golan Heights. For instance, the pro-Assad Palestinian
militia Liwa al-Quds, which has fought alongside Iranian-controlled forces since
2013, boasted of its large presence near Quneitra in May. Syrian Hezbollah
factions such as Liwa al-Imam al-Mahdi—which are largely controlled by their
Lebanese parent organization—may well be operating in the area as well given
their combat role there in 2016. Even Hezbollah-trained Druze groups might be
involved in the southern campaign, further complicating efforts to sift out
Iranian influence.
Meanwhile, Russian officials have been busy meeting with Jordanian and Israeli
authorities, offering deals and making promises regarding Iran’s withdrawal.
President Vladimir Putin and President Trump are expected to focus on the same
issue during their planned mid-July summit in Paris.
As the battle for Deraa develops, two issues need to be watched closely. First,
can Russia actually guarantee the departure of Iranian forces and proxies from
the south, one of the most strategically important areas in all of Syria?
Second, assuming Bashar al-Assad manages to expel the Syrian opposition from
Deraa, can his forces stop Iranian proxies from infiltrating and controlling the
borders?
WHAT IS HIDDEN IN THE CAMO
Determining whether and how Iranian proxy forces are switching attire to
integrate with Assad’s forces can be difficult given the diversity of uniforms
used in Syria, not to mention the many different ways groups cooperate with one
another. Long before the war, the Syrian army was awash in basic civilian
clothing items, and even units within the same division would sometimes sport
uniforms that did not match. By 2011, the growing militia trend among pro-Assad
forces resulted in many Syrian fighters regularly donning military gear mixed
with sneakers, jeans, and T-shirts.
Since Hezbollah entered the war in 2012, its fighters have been pictured in
similarly mixed gear on a regular basis, making it difficult to differentiate
them from Syrian units. Starting in 2013, some Hezbollah fighters were seen in
modern woodland- and desert-patterned digital camouflage, but most used other
styles until more recently.
In addition, as the group tried to market its image, it emphasized the display
of specialized patches, though fighters have eschewed wearing them on many
occasions. By mid-2013, certain forces on the ground were also wearing different
colored ribbons to denote their origin, according to videos posted online and
comments by former Iraqi Shia fighters who deployed alongside Hezbollah. Yet
some Iraqi Shia fighters and Hezbollah members would regularly wear the same
color ribbons as their Syrian army counterparts.
In other cases, Hezbollah forces and Iraqi fighters were seen wearing a style of
camouflage close to the U.S. 1980s-era M81 woodland pattern—a style also adopted
by the Syrian Republican Guard and some army units. This includes Liwa al-Imam
al-Hussein, a Damascus-based militia that identifies as part of the Syrian
army’s 4th Division, which is now widely deployed in the Quneitra area.
By 2016, digital camouflage had become a more regular addition to Hezbollah
kits, as the group heavily promoted this style on social media to show off its
modern gear and setup. Even so, many fighters still wear mixed gear.
Another Shia militia, the Damascus-based Liwa Abu Fadl al-Abbas (LAFA), has also
been seen wearing the same uniforms as Hezbollah, including modern digital
camouflage. In the past, members of the group were teamed with Ali Jamal Jishi
(aka Hamza Ibrahim Haidar), a late Hezbollah commander who was regularly
pictured wearing the same uniform and insignia as Syrian Republican Guard
officers (the photos have since been removed from accessible social media
sources). LAFA has likewise branded itself as a subsection of the Republican
Guard.
Similar uniform switching has been seen among Iraqi Shia fighters from the group
Liwa Assad Allah al-Ghalib. As early as 2016, they were spotted deploying north
of their Damascus bases wearing patches and clothing from the Desert Hawks (Liwa
Suqur al-Sahara), a Syrian militia. Many LAFA fighters did the same when
fighting in the north.
TRACK RECORD OF BROKEN PROMISES
Besides the difficulty of distinguishing Iranian proxies from Syrian regime
forces, Russia’s general inability or unwillingness to keep its promises in
Syria warrants skepticism about its latest security guarantees in the south. For
example, when Assad used chemical weapons against civilians in 2013 and the
United States was poised to launch military strikes in retaliation, Putin helped
convince Washington to hold off by guaranteeing that the regime would surrender
its chemical arsenal. Yet Assad kept some of that arsenal and has since used it
repeatedly against civilians.
Even more tellingly, Russian forces were rebuffed earlier this month when they
accompanied the Syrian army’s 11th Division to push Hezbollah forces out of
their positions in the border town of al-Qusayr. The plan—which was not
coordinated with Iran or Hezbollah—was to take over the Jusiyah crossing with
Lebanon, then move closer to Syria’s Qalamoun region. Yet Hezbollah forces
refused to leave their positions; instead, Russian and Syrian troops turned
around and left less than twenty-four hours after they arrived, and Hezbollah
soon reinforced its presence around al-Qusayr. This small incident—which was
probably a Russian attempt to test Iran’s reaction—shows that Moscow would
probably be unable to budge Iranian proxies once they become entrenched in south
Syria (or, at least, unwilling to exert heavy enough military pressure to force
the issue).
REGIME PRESENCE MEANS IRANIAN CONTROL
Currently, Israel and Jordan seem willing to allow a Syrian army presence in the
south. Although it is no secret that Iran’s proxies are integrated with regime
forces, this does not seem to bother the two neighbors so long as all such
proxies separate themselves from the army and withdraw after the Deraa
offensive.
Yet the presumed guarantors of this withdrawal do not seem capable of actually
guaranteeing it. Russia has shown that it cannot move Iranian proxies on the
ground. And even if Hezbollah and other militias do withdraw a few kilometers
away from the frontier, this would not resolve broader concerns about Tehran’s
long-term strategic game in Syria. Iranian forces have withdrawn and redeployed
many times in many places in Syria, and any move they make to appease Russia
would no doubt be temporary.
As for the notion that Assad will push Iran out after achieving victory, the
return of his forces to the south means just the opposite. In a major step
toward fulfilling Tehran’s long-term goals, the presence of Syrian forces would
serve as a conduit for Hezbollah and other militias to quietly redeploy in the
south anytime they like, without having to deal with opposition pockets.
Therefore, to avoid escalation in south Syria, Assad’s forces should not be
allowed to reoccupy the area after the battle for Deraa, and Russian forces
should not be trusted to act as guarantors of Iranian withdrawal. The only
guaranteed way of keeping Iran out of the south and far from the Golan and
Jordan would be a third-party buffer zone along Syria’s southern borders.
Formulating the contours of such a force would of course be challenging, since
the Trump administration is set against keeping U.S. troops in Syria, and past
international peacekeeping missions designed to constrain Hezbollah elsewhere
have failed (e.g., the UN Interim Force in Lebanon). Yet the line distinguishing
Iranian and Syria forces grows ever thinner every day, so the need to pursue
such alternatives is urgent.
**Hanin Ghaddar, a veteran Lebanese journalist and researcher, is the Friedmann
Visiting Fellow at The Washington Institute.
*Phillip Smyth is a Soref Fellow at the Institute and author of its 2015 study
The Shiite Jihad in Syria and Its Regional Effects.
http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/accepting-regime-forces-in-south-syria-will-only-further-irans-goals