LCCC
ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
May 16/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/newselias18/english.may16.18.htm
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Bible
Quotations
Godly grief produces a repentance that leads to salvation and brings no
regret, but worldly grief produces death
Second Letter to the Corinthians 07/04-11: "I
often boast about you; I have great pride in you; I am filled with
consolation; I am overjoyed in all our affliction. For even when we came
into Macedonia, our bodies had no rest, but we were afflicted in every way
disputes without and fears within. But God, who consoles the downcast,
consoled us by the arrival of Titus, and not only by his coming, but also by
the consolation with which he was consoled about you, as he told us of your
longing, your mourning, your zeal for me, so that I rejoiced still more. For
even if I made you sorry with my letter, I do not regret it (though I did
regret it, for I see that I grieved you with that letter, though only
briefly). Now I rejoice, not because you were grieved, but because your
grief led to repentance; for you felt a godly grief, so that you were not
harmed in any way by us. For godly grief produces a repentance that leads to
salvation and brings no regret, but worldly grief produces death. For see
what earnestness this godly grief has produced in you, what eagerness to
clear yourselves, what indignation, what alarm, what longing, what zeal,
what punishment! At every point you have proved yourselves guiltless in the
matter."
Titles For
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published on May 15-16/18
The Word is God but its use for
deceit, hatred and spread of Chaos turns it into an evil instrument of
destruction/Elias Bejjani/May 16/18
Lebanon’s Sunni resurgence/Makram Rabah/Al Arabiya/May 15/18
Shattering the myths of Lebanese elections/Makram Rabah/The Arab Weekly/May
14/18
Lebanese Journalist, Hazem Al-Amin, Warns: Defeat, Exclusion Of Sunnis In
Iraq, Syria, Lebanon Will Give Rise To New ISIS/MEMRI/May 15/18
Explaining Israel’s growing role in the region/Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al
Arabiya/May 15/18
Who Is Moqtada al-Sadr? The Cleric Who Attacked U.S. Troops and Is Iraq's
Likely Next PM/Haaretz/Reuters May 15, 2018
Human Rights: Other Views - Part II/Denis MacEoin/Gatestone Institute/May
15/2018
Turkey Slams Proposed French Changes to Quran/Uzay Bulut/Gatestone
Institute/May 15/2018
Iranian Reactions To The Strategic Change In The U.S.'s Iran Policy And To
Israel's Activity To Eliminate The Iranian Threat To It From Syria/A. Savyon
and Yigal Carmon/MEMRI/May 15/18
Europe should worry about its interests with us/Sawsan Al Shaer/Al Arabiya/May
15/18
Collapse of mullahs’ state to bring down political Islamization/Mohammed Al
Shaikh/Al Arabiya/May 15/18
The Hodeida Campaign (Part 1): Humanitarian and Political Role of Red Sea
Ports/Michael Knights/The Washington Institute/May 15/18
Titles For Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
May 15-16/18
The Word is God but its use for
deceit, hatred and spread of Chaos turns it into an evil instrument of
destruction
U.S. Slaps Sanctions on Hizbullah Official, Iran Central Bank Governor
Aoun, Officials Condemn Israeli Crimes Against Palestinians
Berri Says Meeting with Aoun ‘Excellent’
Geagea Meets Hariri at Center House
Geagea Rejects Bids to Integrate Displaced Syrians in Lebanon
Report: Maarab Agreement Could Be in 'Jeopardy'
PSP Slams Bassil's 'Incitement against Refugees' at Brussels Conference
FPM Says Won’t ‘Renounce’ Social Affairs Ministry
President: Lebanon will not wait for political solution before returning
Syria refugees
President, FM Warn against Integrating Syrian Refugees into Lebanese Society
Deal over election of deputy speaker signals warming Aoun-Berri relations
Lebanon’s Sunni resurgence
Shattering the myths of Lebanese elections
Lebanese Journalist, Hazem Al-Amin, Warns: Defeat, Exclusion Of Sunnis In
Iraq, Syria, Lebanon Will Give Rise To New ISIS
Titles For Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on May 15-16/18
The IDF released information about an
attempted border crossing by a Hamas squad during protests on Monday.
Palestinians Withdraw Envoy to U.S. over Israel Embassy Move
U.N. Security Council Paralyzed over Israel-Gaza Violence
World anger mounts over Gaza deaths
Gazans bury dead after bloodiest day of border protests
Some have flown kites carrying containers of petrol that have spread fires
on the Israeli side.
Arab League calls on ICC to investigate ‘Israeli crimes’
Israeli forces kill two Palestinians near border as Gaza buries dead
UK calls for independent investigation into Gaza violence
Iran Upbeat on Nuclear Deal Hopes after EU Talks
Bodies of 20 victims of 2015 ISIS atrocity in Libya arrive in Egypt
Sadr willing to ally with Iraqi blocs to form technocratic government
Early results place Sadr bloc in lead position to determine next Iraq PM
N. Korea Threatens to Scrap Trump Summit
Father of burnt-alive Jordanian pilot wishes ISIS murderers a crueler fate
Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
May 15-16/18
The Word is God but
its use for deceit, hatred and spread of Chaos turns it into an evil
instrument of destruction
Elias Bejjani/May 16/18
When emotions are not fully under the mind's control they become a means of
suicide and destruction of self and others. Meanwhile if wars could be
gained by empty rhetoric, yelling, shouting, day dreaming and grandiose
delusions the Arab peoples would have occupied the whole world
(John 01/01/In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and
the Word was God)
U.S. Slaps Sanctions on Hizbullah Official, Iran Central Bank Governor
Associated Press/Naharnet/May 15/18/The United States designated the head of
Iran's central bank as a “terrorist” on Tuesday and barred anyone around the
world from doing business with him, escalating financial pressure on Iran in
the wake of President Donald Trump's withdrawal from the nuclear deal.
Al-Bilad Islamic Bank and its CEO and chairman, Aras Habib, were also hit
with U.S. sanctions, as was Muhammad Qasir, who the Treasury said is a
Hizbullah official who has been a "critical conduit" for transferring funds
to Hizbullah from the Revolutionary Guards. Valiollah Seif, the governor of
the Iranian central bank, was named a "specially designated global
terrorist" along with another senior official, Ali Tarzali, who works in the
central bank's international division. The Treasury Department accused the
men of secretly funneling millions of dollars through an Iraqi bank to help
Hizbullah, the Iran-backed Lebanese group that the U.S. considers a
“terrorist” group. The moves come as Trump's administration, after deeming
the 2015 nuclear deal insufficiently tough on Iran, seeks to construct a
global coalition to place enough pressure on Tehran that it comes back to
the negotiating table to strike a "better deal." The sanctions targeting
Iran's central bank executives are some of the first actions by Trump's
administration since pulling out of the deal to start ramping up that
economic pressure. "The United States will not permit Iran's increasingly
brazen abuse of the international financial system," U.S. Treasury Secretary
Steven Mnuchin said. "The global community must remain vigilant against
Iran's deceptive efforts to provide financial support to its terrorist
proxies," he added. The exact ramifications of the sanctions for Iran's
economy were not immediately clear. The U.S. said that the sanctions did not
extend to Iran's central bank itself. Still, the U.S. said it was imposing
so-called secondary sanctions on the Iranian bank officials, which could
significantly increase Iran's isolation from the global financial system.
Typically, when the U.S. punished individuals with sanctions, it prohibits
Americans or U.S. companies from doing business with them. Secondary
sanctions also apply to non-Americans and non-U.S. companies. That means
that anyone, in any country, who does business with Seif or Tarzali could
themselves be punished with sanctions, cutting them off from the U.S.
financial system. There was no immediate comment Tuesday night from Iranian
officials. Iranian media initially reported the decision based on reports in
the foreign media. The U.S. actions send an ominous warning to European
capitals, still reeling from Trump's withdrawal from the deal the U.S., Iran
and world powers struck in 2015. The European members of the deal — France,
the U.K. and Germany — are trying to keep it alive without the U.S. Yet it's
unclear that will be workable, because Trump has vowed to punish European
companies that continue doing business with Iran despite re-imposed U.S.
sanctions. On Tuesday, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was
meeting in Brussels with the top French, British and German diplomats as the
Europeans seek to keep Iran from bailing on the deal.
Seif, as the central bank's governor, has helped guide Iran's economy
through the web of sanctions in place on that country. In the aftermath of
the 2015 deal, in which nuclear sanctions on Iran were lifted, Seif was a
prominent voice complaining that Iran was still being kept out of the global
financial system and not receiving the economic benefits it was promised in
exchange for curtailing its nuclear program. The Treasury said that Seif
undermined the central bank's credibility by routing millions of dollars
from the Quds Force, the expeditionary unit of Iran's hard-line
Revolutionary Guards, to al-Bilad Islamic Bank, which is based in Iraq.
Those funds were then used to "enrich and support the violent and radical
agenda of Hizbullah," Treasury said.
Aoun, Officials Condemn Israeli Crimes Against
Palestinians
Naharnet/May 15/18/President Michel Aoun and
several lawmakers denounced on Tuesday Israel’s criminality against the
Palestinian people in the wake of the inauguration of the United States
embassy in Jerusalem. Aoun took to Twitter and said: “The crimes go one and
the guards continue to be absent...Palestine.”The President’s remarks came
as Palestinians observed a strike Tuesday to mourn dozens killed by Israeli
troops in a mass protest on the Gaza border--the single deadliest day there
since a 2014 war. On Monday, around 58 Palestinians were killed by Israeli
troops on the Gaza border, as the U.S. held a festive inauguration ceremony
for a new U.S. Embassy in contested Jerusalem just a few miles away. Several
Lebanese officials condemned Israel’s aggression and the embassy’s transfer
including Minister of Labor Mohammad Kabbara. “Al-Quds will always be Arab
and the capital of Palestine,” said Kabbara, adding that the transfer of the
US embassy to it cannot change the identity of the holy city. Grand Mufti of
the Republic Abdul Latif Deryan condemned the killings, voicing hopes that
the“struggle of Palestinian people” would once lead to the “liberation of
the occupied land.” MP Mohammed Qabbani said: “The world has known nothing
like the Zionists’ crimes against the Palestinian people. The Palestinian
bloodshed today is a desecration of Jerusalem and a crime against the Arabs,
and the right of Christians and Muslims alike.” MP Kazem al-Kheir denounced
the “massacre,” and said: “Gaza massacre coincided with the ceremony of the
transfer of the American embassy to Jerusalem.What is happening in Palestine
is a result of the absence of Arab and Islamic solidarity."
Berri Says Meeting with Aoun ‘Excellent’
Naharnet/May 15/18/President Michel Aoun held talks on Tuesday with Speaker
Nabih Berri at the Presidential Palace in Baabda where talks touched on
several issues “without dwelling into details,” the State-run National News
Agency reported. “The meeting was more than excellent and we touched on all
future topics without dwelling into details,” Berri told reporters after the
meeting. The Speaker assured that “their visions on a number of issues are
matching,” saying that discussions have touched on the election of a Speaker
and Deputy Speaker without getting into the “names.”On whether Berri was
promised a renewed Speakership mandate, Berri assured that no promises were
made and that he had not asked for any as well.
Geagea Meets Hariri at Center House
Naharnet/May 15/18/Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea held talks Tuesday
evening with Prime Minister Saad Hariri at the Center House in downtown
Beirut. A statement issued by Hariri's office said the meeting was also
attended by Culture Minister Ghattas Khoury, Information Minister Melhem
Riachi and ex-minister Bassem al-Sabaa. “The meeting tackled the general
political situations in the country and the latest developments,” the
statement said. MTV said Interior Minister Nouhad al-Mashnouq did not attend
the meeting although he “shook hands with Geagea before leaving the Center
House.” Relations between the LF and Hariri's al-Mustaqbal Movement were
strained after some Mustaqbal officials accused the LF of encouraging Saudi
leaders to press Hariri to resign in November. The row was also linked to
Geagea's statement following Hariri's shock resignation from Saudi Arabia
that the premier should have resigned earlier and that "no self-respecting
person would stay in the government after all the events of the past few
months."
Geagea Rejects Bids to Integrate Displaced Syrians in Lebanon
Naharnet/May 15/18/Lebanese Forces chief Samir Geagea on Tuesday
categorically rejected any bid to integrate the Syrian refugees in Lebanon,
as the international community reportedly plans to adopt a policy that
integrates them in host countries. “Lebanon is not an empty land without
people. Any thought or step towards keeping the Syrian refugees in Lebanon,
even temporarily, is totally rejected,” said Geagea. “Lebanon has welcomed
the refugees because of the tragedy they are suffering in Syria, but that
does not mean we will relinquish our national sovereignty or our peoples’
rights to their own land and natural resources,” added Geagea. “The first
task before the new government is to set a clear plan for the refugees’
return to safe zones in Syria,” added Geagea. Lebanon hosts around one
million Syrians -- one in four of the Lebanese population. The Lebanese
government says as many as 1.5 million Syrians are in the country.
Report: Maarab Agreement Could Be in 'Jeopardy'
Naharnet/May 15/18/Repercussions of the parliamentary elections reflected
negatively on the relations between the Free Patriotic Movement and the
Lebanese Forces, amid reports that the Maarab Agreement between the
two--which eventually brought the FPM founder Michel Aoun to the post of
presidency--might be in jeopardy. During an electoral ceremony held by the
“Lebanon Strong” parliamentary bloc of the FPM; shortly before parliamentary
candidates entered into election silence; the FPM chief, Foreign Minister
Jebran Bassil lashed out at LF head Samir Geagea.
“Geagea, who chose to adopt a dissociation policy from Bassil’s position,”
broke the silence on Monday and “indirectly hinted at Bassil without naming
him,” accusing him of using the State’s resources for personal interests,
said the reports. “Deal foxes are lurking and moving in all departments of
the State in order to seize money from here or there, while the people
suffer from poor financial and deteriorating economic conditions,” Geagea
said. LF sources told al-Joumhouria they at first “prefered not to respond
to Bassil based on conviction that his positions belong to the stage of
elections, seeing the wide popularity around the LF party.”However, they
stressed that “the President (Aoun), the FPM and LF are keen on maintaining
the Maarab agreement, and keen on maintaining political communication
because both parties have intersecting interests.”Maarab Agreement is a
memorandum of understanding between Aoun and Geagea, who withdrew from the
presidential race in 2016 and endorsed Aoun instead.
PSP Slams Bassil's 'Incitement against Refugees'
at Brussels Conference
Naharnet/May 15/18/The Progressive Socialist Party on Tuesday blasted
Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil's remarks at an international conference that
was held Monday in Brussels. “When the Foreign Minister represents Lebanon
at international conferences, he should speak on behalf of the entire
Lebanese government and he should endorse the spirit of its Policy Statement
and consensual policies, instead of raising existential questions that
reflect the viewpoint of his political group and contradict with the general
atmosphere that formed in Lebanon after the Taef Accord, which confirmed
Lebanon's unity as a final homeland for all its sons,” the PSP said in a
statement. “Promoting outdated isolationist theories strikes the foundations
of partnership and equality in the country and gives the impression that
Lebanon contains native and subordinate citizens, which takes us back to old
ideas and ideologies whose revival would be detrimental,” the party warned.
Also commenting on Bassil's remarks at the Brussels 'International
Conference on the Victims of Ethnic and Religious Violence in the Middle
East', the PSP cautioned against “the Foreign Minister's policy of constant
incitement against the displaced and the refugees in Lebanon.”
This policy “reflects veiled intentions to take arbitrary measures against
them and against their dignity and personal safety, in a manner that
contradicts with all law, norms and human rights,” the party warned. It also
urged the government to “shoulder its responsibilities in this regard based
on the principles of national consensus regarding this file.”Bassil had
warned Monday that “encouraging the movement of refugees strips the societal
fabric of its richness and beauty.”
Commenting on a statement that was issued after a Brussels conference on
Syrian refugees, Bassil cautioned that “the international community and the
European Union have touched red lines that threaten our existence and our
entity.”“We want a policy different than the one that demands the settlement
of refugees. Their return has become possible and obligatory, even if it
happens in a gradual manner. It is the responsibility of the international
community and the EU to finance their return, and they must pay attention to
the fact that we will not wait for Lebanon's collapse,” the minister added.
FPM Says Won’t ‘Renounce’ Social Affairs
Ministry
Naharnet/May 15/18/The Free Patriotic Movement on Tuesday said it will not
“renounce the Social Affairs Ministry” to another party, when the new
government is formed, if a “clear” policy on the displacement of Syrians in
Lebanon is not adopted. “The FPM will won’t relinquish the Social Affairs
Ministry like it did before if there was no commitment to a clear policy of
Syrian displacement,” a senior FPM source was quoted as saying. He also
stressed that the Syrian displacement issue should be a “clear clause in the
ministerial statement.” Pierre Bou Assi of the Lebanese Forces is the
current Social Affairs Minister. Lebanon is gearing for a new government
after staging its legislative elections. Lebanon hosts around one million
Syrians -- one in four of the Lebanese population. The Lebanese government
says as many as 1.5 million Syrians are in the country.
President: Lebanon
will not wait for political solution before returning Syria refugees
Middle East Monitor/May 15, 2018/Lebanese President Michel Aoun said that
his country refuses to wait for a political solution before returning the
Syrian refugees to their homeland. “We are surprised by the position of some
parties which obstruct this return or do not encourage it,” Aoun said during
a meeting with foreign delegations in the presidential palace. “Lebanon
faces many challenges with 1.8 million displaced people on its territory
since 2015,” he said. According to the president, nearly 50 per cent of
Lebanon’s population is made up of refugees. In mid-April, 500 Syrian
refugees in Lebanon’s south-eastern town of Shebaa left the area heading to
Syria’s Beit Jinn, which was recaptured by the regime forces from the
opposition in December, media reports revealed. The refugees’ convoy was
accompanied by Lebanese security forces. Human Rights Watch (HRW) condemned
the expulsion of the refugees. “Municipalities have no legitimate
justification for forcibly evicting Syrian refugees if it amounts to
nationality-based or religious discrimination,” Bill Frelick, HRW’s director
for refugee rights and the author of the report, said.
President, FM Warn against Integrating Syrian
Refugees into Lebanese Society
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 15 May, 2018/Lebanese President Michel
Aoun reiterated on Monday his call for “the return of the Syrian refugees to
the safe areas of Syria”, adding that he was surprised with “the position of
some parties that are hindering or discouraging this return.”Aoun also said
he refused to wait for a political solution to allow the Syrian refugees to
go back to their homeland. The president made his remarks during a meeting
with a delegation of the British Royal College of Defense Studies, chaired
by Major General Craig Lawrence, and accompanied by British Ambassador to
Lebanon, Hugo Shorter. Aoun pointed to “the challenges faced by Lebanon with
1.8 million displaced on its territory, based on 2015 figures, adding that
this number “constitutes 50 percent of the Lebanese population.” He also
expressed concern that the proposals made by the international community in
terms of granting the Palestinian refugees work permits in Lebanon -
considering that there is no solution to the Palestinian cause - were a
“prelude” to their settlement in the country. Meanwhile, Foreign Minister
Jebran Bassil warned against the international community’s adoption of a
policy of integrating displaced people in their host countries instead of
repatriating them. Speaking at the International Conference on Victims of
Ethnic and Religious Violence in the Middle East, held in Brussels on
Monday, Bassil said: “The international community’s persistence in adopting
refugee integration policies instead of returning them to their country is a
form of eradicating Lebanon’s pluralism.”“This international policy is a new
form of oppression against outstanding human groups, like the Lebanese, in
the name of humanity,” he stressed. “This cosmic pressure is destructive to
this entity. It only proves the intention to abolish Lebanon’s pluralism in
favor of Israeli unilateralism and ISIS,” he warned.
Deal over election of
deputy speaker signals warming Aoun-Berri relations
Georgi Azar/Annahar 15 May 2018/A meeting between
both leaders was described as “more than excellent” by the Speaker, who
discussed with Aoun “the current local and regional developments.”
BEIRUT: As Lebanon’s major political
parties gear up to form the country’s new Cabinet, a warming of relations
between President Michel Aoun and Speaker Nabih Berri was evident Tuesday
after the Amal Movement leader suggested the president as the leader of the
largest parliamentary bloc should have the final say over who is elected
deputy speaker. A meeting between both leaders was
described as “more than excellent” by the Speaker, who discussed with Aoun
“the current local and regional developments.”
Berri told reporters following the meeting that the tentative discussion
regarding the upcoming Cabinet was fruitful, yet it stopped short from
touching on “specific names and ministerial portfolios.” Despite his rocky
relationship with Aoun, Berri is widely expected to retain his position as
parliament speaker, a seat he’s held since 1992.
Aoun’s bid for the presidency, tying the election of a president to a
comprehensive political deal that includes an agreement over a new
parliamentary electoral law, which was ratified last year, the makeup of the
Cabinet and the distribution of ministerial portfolios. Aoun was elected
President in the second round after failing to secure a two-third majority
due to Berri’s parliamentary bloc casting blank ballots. A touted scenario
is Aoun instructing his own bloc to follow suit this time around during the
election of the speaker, as a reciprocal gesture. Last week, Prime Minister
Saad Hariri endorsed Berri’s bid, telling reporters “if he’s a candidate
then I’ll support him.” The Free Patriotic Movement and Berri have locked
heads on more than one occasion, with the latest feud emanating in the wake
of a leaked video in which Foreign Minister and FPM leader Gebran Bassil
calling the Speaker a “thug.” The country descended into momentary chaos
after clashed erupted between supporters of the FPM and Amal before peace
between both parties was restored. Prior to that, a quarrel broke out
between the president and Berri over a decree granting seniority to army
officers who served under Aoun when he was army commander in the late
1980’s. Berri had insisted that the decree is unconstitutional because it
lacked the signature of Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil, a close aid to
the Speaker. At the core of the feud was Berri’s reluctance to force Aoun to
acknowledge that the post of finance minister, which sources close to Berri
claim the Taif Accord has reserved to Shiites, enjoys veto power in the
executive branch under the current sectarian power-sharing arrangement.
Lebanon’s Sunni
resurgence
Makram Rabah/Al Arabiya/May 15/18
مكرم رباح:
السنة في لبنان يستعيدون نشاطهم من خلال
الإنتخابات
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/64672/makram-rabah-lebanons-sunni-resurgence-shattering-the-myths-of-lebanese-elections-%D9%83%D8%B3%D8%B1-%D8%A3%D8%B3%D8%A7%D8%B7%D9%8A%D8%B1-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A5%D9%86%D8%AA%D8%AE%D8%A7%D8%A8/
The Lebanese Sunni community
has traditionally acquired a reputation of political timidness, usually
preferring to stick to mainstream politics and more often than not shy away
from confrontation.
Naturally, this tendency is attributed to the fact that the Lebanese Sunnis
are predominately an urban coastal community heavily invested in merchant
pursuits, and thus conflict is ultimately counterproductive and destructive
for their economy.
Recently, however, the Lebanese parliamentary elections revealed that this
so-called Sunni sleeping giant has vehemently challenged the aforementioned
paradigm. This Lebanese Sunni resurgence came at the ballot in a number of
ways, but mainly took the form of abstention from voting for the main Sunni
national leader Prime Minister Saad Hariri.
In Beirut’s second district, a predominately-Sunni electoral constituency,
the voter turnout stood at a meager 35 percent, permitting Hezbollah and
other opponents of Hariri to win five seats, with Hezbollah’s candidate
being the top vote getter.
This Sunni apathy in many other areas across Lebanon was brushed aside as
being very typical of earlier elections. In reality, this time around the
Lebanese Sunni inaction is in fact a form of action, forcefully opposed to
the alliances their leadership with President Michel Aoun, Hezbollah’s main
Christian ally as well as the Hariri’s Future Movement’s below par political
performance.
Like many of their compatriots, Sunnis are above all alarmed by Hezbollah’s
unchecked weapons and expansion beyond the border
Steadfast support
Over the last decade, the Sunni majority have supported Saad Hariri, both as
a successor to his late father as well as an ally of the wider Arab front
that opposed the expansion of Iran and its operatives across the region.
Even when Hezbollah and their allies toppled Hariri in 2011 and replaced him
with Najib Mikati, the Sunnis did not falter in their support of their
Hariri who was losing favor with his Saudi allies as well as financially
struggling.
Yet, this Sunni popular and unreserved support soon petered out following
Hariri’s decision to endorse Michel Aoun for presidency, a move perceived by
many as reckless and ultimately solidified Hezbollah’s control over the
Lebanese state.
Initially, Hariri and his advisors mistakenly believed the Sunnis, akin to
other Lebanese factions, could be tamed and ultimately come to accept a
wishful narrative that Aoun would slowly but surely come in from the cold,
and ultimately remove the Christian cover he and his party provided to
Hezbollah.
Hezbollah soon proved Hariri wrong, placing Hariri as well as the Lebanese
at odds with Saudi Arabia as well as other Arab nations who were vexed with
Hezbollah’s continued use of the Lebanese state to promote Iran’s regional
agenda. This standoff soon triggered a crisis with Saudi Arabia that
convinced Hariri to suddenly tender his resignation, and publically condemn
Hezbollah’s actions.
While this chapter ended on a good note for Hariri who went back on his
resignation after French President Macron good offices, it reminded the
Sunnis that Hariri was no longer fully in line with the wider Arab
consensus, thus placing him and his leadership in peril.
As the elections approached, Hariri banked on his personal ability to
mobilize his supporters by going out to different areas across Lebanon and
shaking hands and kissing babies. Amusingly, Hariri fielded “the selfie” as
a weapon to get votes, going as far as to ask his media team to design and
app that allow people to upload thousands of pictures that ostensibly showed
the popular support to Hariri and his political choices.
These selfies however did not translate into votes, or when they did, they
were not sufficient to get all of Hariri’s candidates to Parliament.
Initially Hariri refused to admit to this electoral debacle and rather
choose to take the moral high ground, announcing that he and his party had
altruistically agreed to this new electoral law even though it was clearly
disadvantageous to their interest all for the sake of national interest.
Despite his self-denial, Hariri soon responded to this Sunni resurgence and
the harsh message it entailed. Over the weekend, Hariri in his capacity as
head of the Future Movement issued a number of directives and punitive
measures that placed senior leadership, including his own cousin and
chief-of-staff, out of office.
Many took these measures simply as a response to the disappointing results
and the bad performance of the party’s electoral apparatus, and part of
earlier promises of inter-party reform.
Rude awakening
While these assumptions might be correct, the core reason is that this
election came as a rude awakening to Hariri from the Sunnis who has
supported him and his father before him, that they refuse to commit
political suicide by continuing to support his current political stance.
The Sunnis consequently reject the alliance with Aoun that has led Hariri to
relinquishing part of the constitutional prerogatives of the office of prime
minister, the same powers that Lebanese Muslims with the Taif Accord that
his late father formulated.
Like many of their compatriots, Sunnis are above all alarmed by Hezbollah’s
unchecked weapons and expansion beyond the border, a fact that will surely
translate into further sanctions on an already menacing Lebanese economy as
well as effect the remittances of Lebanese expats in the Arab Gulf.
In the summer of 1982 and during the Israel siege of their city, the Sunnis
of Beirut – while supportive of the Palestinian revolution – informed Yasser
Arafat, the Chairman of the Palestinian Liberation Organization that their
presence was no longer welcome, forcing the PLO to evacuate.
The recent Sunni resurgence and everything that comes with it might not be
injurious for Hariri, who now has the prospect to reclaim his father’s
legacy as a true cross sectarian pan-Arab leader.
__________________________
Makram Rabah is a lecturer at the American University of Beirut, Department
of History. He is the author of A Campus at War: Student Politics at the
American University of Beirut, 1967-1975. He tweets @makramrabah.
Shattering the myths of Lebanese elections
Makram Rabah/The Arab Weekly/May 14/18
كسر أساطير الإنتخابات اللبنانية
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/64672/makram-rabah-lebanons-sunni-resurgence-shattering-the-myths-of-lebanese-elections-%D9%83%D8%B3%D8%B1-%D8%A3%D8%B3%D8%A7%D8%B7%D9%8A%D8%B1-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A5%D9%86%D8%AA%D8%AE%D8%A7%D8%A8/
The results of this supposed democratic election go beyond confirming
Hezbollah’s hegemony over the Lebanese state.
Following a 9-year electoral hiatus, many Lebanese were extremely keen to
cast votes in the May 6 parliamentary elections — at least it seemed so.
Much of the fuss over this supposedly routine activity was because of a new
proportional election law, which, theoretically, offered voters a chance to
either dislodge Lebanon’s political elite or challenge their hegemony.
However, the anticipated excitement never made it as far as Election Day.
Voter turnout was about 49% nationwide, including a measly 34% in Beirut.
The results, given revisions to the law and the gerrymandering that went
into it, were hardly unexpected. Most of the traditional political parties
retained their share of seats, although some factions gained seats in
districts the previous majoritarian electoral law had barred them from
representing.
The main casualty of the election was Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri,
who saw his Future Movement bloc reduced from 33 to 21 seats, as the
distinctly underwhelming Sunni turnout allowed Hezbollah and its pro-Syrian
Sunni allies to win five seats in Beirut, a traditional Hariri stronghold.
More important, Hezbollah, with its Shia ally the Amal Movement, secured
most of the Shia seats in parliament and helped its allies challenge the
hegemony of the Future Movement in the Sunni community.
Hariri’s electoral debacle served as a painful reminder of the bargain he
struck with Lebanese President Michel Aoun and the consequent abandonment of
his father’s legacy he demonstrated by turning his back on traditional
allies Samir Geagea and Walid Jumblatt.
Above all, Hariri and his Future Movement failed to address key grievances
of their constituency, which had sent alarming messages in the latest
municipal elections by essentially boycotting the vote.
In addition to Hezbollah, the other two victorious parties were the Free
Patriotic Movement led by Aoun’s son-in-law and Lebanese Foreign Minister
Gebran Bassil and the Lebanese Forces. Bassil conjured up and gerrymandered
districts to secure his win. The Lebanese Forces surpassed expectations with
15 seats, one of which is deep in the heart of Hezbollah-controlled area in
eastern Lebanon.
Yet the results of this supposed democratic election go beyond confirming
Hezbollah’s hegemony over the Lebanese state. They lay to rest some myths
and misconceptions about reforming the archaic Lebanese political system.
Contrary to the expectations of the political factions, which approved this
diabolical electoral law, the proportional electoral system was not well
received by most of the Lebanese. For evidence, there is the appalling
turnout. Realistically, Lebanese feel uneasy voting for a locked list with
one preferential voting option, something that would entail them publicly
endorsing one faction over the other.
Interestingly, there is something very non-Lebanese about Bassil’s law, at
least from the perspective of the voters. Most Lebanese who are not
affiliated to political factions, either by choice or by tradition, prefer
to divide their votes between opposing candidates, allowing them to petition
either side for favours as circumstances dictate. Such locked lists require
that the parties running present a clear and realistic political and
economic platform, something that none of those running May 6 managed to do.
Funnily enough, even if such a political programme existed, it is highly
unlikely the Lebanese would even consider it, as they would rather continue
voting for their traditional sectarian and tribal leadership, something that
the election results confirmed. Despite the government’s campaign
instructing voters how the system worked, 38,909 void ballots — a large
number for an election in Lebanon — were cast, suggesting the system was too
complex for ordinary electors.
Perhaps one of the most important myths that the election shattered was one
campaigned on by many independent political activists: that electoral reform
was key for political reform. In reality, the Lebanese electorate chose not
to endorse the so-called civil society candidates, who assumed that their
active social media profiles were sufficient to get them to parliament, and
voted for the status quo instead.
Perhaps it is permissible to spend hours analysing and looking for reasons
to justify the election results. However, what cannot be disputed is that,
while they are entitled to celebrate their democratic achievement, the
Lebanese have a long way to go before they can call themselves a democracy.
**Makram Rabah is a lecturer at the American University of Beirut,
Department of History. He is the author of A Campus at War: Student Politics
at the American University of Beirut, 1967-1975.
Lebanese Journalist,
Hazem Al-Amin, Warns: Defeat, Exclusion Of Sunnis In Iraq, Syria, Lebanon
Will Give Rise To New ISIS
MEMRI/May 15/2018/Special Dispatch No.7469
In view of the ongoing victories of Assad's army in Syria and the apparent
defeat of the Syrian opposition forces, on the eve of the elections in Iraq
and Lebanon, Lebanese journalist Hazem Al-Amin, head of investigations and
features at the Dubai-based Al-Hayat daily, published an article titled
"Pessimism," in which he discussed the defeat recently suffered by the
Sunnis in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. He wrote that the Sunnis are excluded
from affecting policy in these countries, which are under the influence of
Iran, and that the defeat of ISIS in Iraq and in Syria is perceived as the
defeat of all Sunnis. This situation, he said, is likely to spawn a new
violent organization similar to ISIS, which will strike at Arab countries,
just as ISIS emerged from the Sunni parts of these countries after the
Sunnis lost their dominant position there.
The following is a translation of the main points of the article:[1]
"Amid the tripartite sectarian conflict in the Mashreq [in Iraq, Syria and
Lebanon], there is a huge vacuum: the Sunni Arabs. ISIS was born out of this
vacuum and was destroyed within it! This sector – the Sunni Arabs – is
absent today from all the alternative plans [for a solution to the crises in
these countries]... because, according to the perceptions of the other
groups, this sector [the Sunni Arabs] has already been defeated...
"Therefore we must anticipate the birth of a new entity: an offspring of
ISIS or something similar, which will remind us again that this vacuum isn't
real and that there is something going on there. [It's true that this new
entity] has no political resonance at the moment, but it will impose itself
soon enough. In Iraq the Sunni Arabs have no influence on the current
political activity, in Syria they are defeated time and again, and in
Lebanon they have been annexed to the 'Hizbullah State' project.
"Today it is said that Bashar Al-Assad will remain in power. This is a
defeat for the sector that he oppressed and that rebelled against him [i.e.
the Sunni Arabs]. In Iraq, parliamentary elections are being held after
ISIS's defeat, and the Sunni Arabs are the weak link in these elections. And
in Lebanon, where sectarianism is a reality that cannot be ignored, the
Sunnis are competing with their rivals in the elections while accepting the
country's identity as the 'Hizbullah State.'
"This is a flawed state of affairs and will lead to wars. Stability is
unlikely in this [situation]. We have [already] begun to hear that ISIS is
regrouping in some areas within the vacuum in Iraq. In Syria the Americans
are expected to withdraw, as their president said, and this withdrawal means
that the Sunni Arabs will be abandoned, [left alone to] face Bashar Al-Assad
and the Iranian [Shi'ite] militias. In no time, this bad situation will
spawn a monster. While the situation in Lebanon is not as bad as the
situation in its sister countries, Syria and Iraq, even Lebanon will not be
spared if the monster reawakens...
"If the political forces that represent this sector [the Sunnis] in these
three countries are prevented from influencing their own future, this will
gradually lead to wars. This is a lesson we have failed to learn from the
civil wars in which we have been wallowing for decades: following the defeat
of a certain civilian sector [the Sunnis], it is impossible to return to
normal life and there will be no stability in these countries.
"The elections in Iraq and Lebanon will seem more like a renewal of the
wars, and in Syria the tragedy is twofold, since the world is preparing to
once again to welcome Assad as president...
"Today, the Sunni Arabs in the three Mashreq [countries, Syria, Iraq, and
Lebanon,] are excluded from the discourse. The competition in the Iraqi
elections will be between Shi'ites and Shi'ites, and between Shi'ites and
Kurds. Neither the Sunni Arabs nor the results of their votes will have any
impact on the future of Iraq... In Lebanon, it is safe to assume that Sa'd
Al-Hariri will win the election, but he has become a different person since
finding himself alone in the fray against Hizbullah, whose [forces] are
arrayed from the ocean to the Gulf... In Iraq the [ISIS] organization has
renewed some of its activity, in Syria we expect an American withdrawal
which will create a tremendous vacuum, and in Lebanon the situation is not
dissimilar from that of its neighbors.
In view of this vacuum, it would be unwise to anticipate anything other than
wars."
[1] Al-Hayat (Dubai), April 2, 2018.
Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on May 15-16/18
The IDF released
information about an attempted border crossing by a Hamas squad during
protests on Monday.
Jerusalem Post/May 15/18/Monday afternoon,
when the IDF confronted violent disturbances on the fence, an intelligence
alert was received that a Hamas squad was planning to place an explosive
charge on the fence to allow to for a mass infiltration into Israel.
Troops belonging to the IDF’s Maglan unit stationed themselves opposite the
expected attack point in the northern Gaza Strip. When the squad of eight
terrorists emerged from amidst the violent demonstration which was taking
place, two armored IDF vehicles drove over the fence and were attacked by
the cell with explosives and light weapons. According to the army the cell
fired at troops from two different locations, one from a hill some 200
meters from the security fence and another point some 30 meters from the
border. Troops then engaged the cell, opening fire at them from Israeli
territory while a tank and IAF aircraft struck the terrorists' position. All
eight terrorists were killed in the exchange of gunfire. "Yesterday, during
a violent riot, which included the burning of tires, throwing of pipe bombs
and throwing of stones, we saw shots fired at our forces and realized that
Hamas operatives were the ones who carried out the shooting. Due to this,
the crowed dispersed and I gave an order to fire. The fighters were
operating professionally, with great courage and precision, and prevented a
significant shooting attack on our forces," a commander in the unit said.
According to the army a pistol, grenade launchers, charges and preparations
for opening the fence were found in the place where the firefight was. The
army believes that the quiet on Tuesday is likely due to Hamas assessing the
situation and calculating their next step.
Palestinians Withdraw Envoy to U.S. over Israel
Embassy Move
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 15/18/Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas withdrew his top representative to the United States Tuesday,
the foreign ministry announced, a day after the U.S. moved its Israeli
embassy to Jerusalem. Husam Zomlot, the head of the Palestine Liberation
Organization's office in Washington, would return to the Palestinian
territories Wednesday, the statement said. It did not say how long Zomlot,
the most senior Palestinian official in Washington, would be withdrawn for.
The Palestinians reacted furiously to President Donald Trump's December
announcement recognizing Jerusalem as Israel's capital and moving his
country's embassy there from Tel Aviv. They consider the eastern part of
Jerusalem their capital and countries have long kept their embassies in Tel
Aviv, saying the future of the holy city was an issue to be negotiated
between the Israelis and Palestinians. The date of Monday's embassy opening
also angered Palestinians, coming the day before they commemorate their mass
displacement in the 1948 war surrounding the creation of Israel. The Israeli
government welcomed the embassy move, which coincided with the anniversary
of the country's independence. The event was overshadowed by mass protests
along the Gaza border in which Israeli fire killed 60 Palestinians. The
foreign ministry statement did not refer to the deaths, only the embassy
move.
U.N. Security Council Paralyzed over Israel-Gaza
Violence
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 15/18/The
U.N. Security Council held an emergency meeting Tuesday on the violence in
Gaza, with Kuwait preparing a draft resolution to protect Palestinian
civilians and the United States defending ally Israel's use of
"restraint."The talks opened at U.N. headquarters in New York with a moment
of silence for the 60 Palestinians who died Monday, the majority killed by
Israeli fire, in the bloodiest day in Gaza since 2014. The deaths
overshadowed the opening of the new U.S. embassy in Jerusalem, relocated
from Tel Aviv in fulfillment of a campaign promise by U.S. President Donald
Trump, whose daughter Ivanka attended the inaugural ceremony. The embassy
move, which dramatically underscored U.S. recognition of Jerusalem as
Israel's capital, infuriated the Palestinians and was widely criticized, but
on Tuesday the Security Council proved unable, once again, to reach
consensus. Arab ambassadors appeared jointly before reporters to call for an
investigation into Israel's "crimes" and for the protection of the
Palestinian people. Kuwait, the only Arab nation with a current seat on the
Security Council, said it would circulate a draft resolution on "providing
international protection to the Palestinian people." Kuwaiti ambassador
Mansour al-Otaibi said the draft would be circulated "most probably
tomorrow." Palestinian envoy Riyad Mansour said negotiations would then
begin to try to get the resolution adopted. But while Britain and Germany
are among those backing an independent investigation, the United States on
Monday blocked the adoption of a U.N. statement that would have called for
an independent probe. U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley on Tuesday launched a
stinging attack on Iranian aggression in the Middle East, deploring a
"double standard," condemning Hamas provocation and said ally Israel had
acted with restraint.
Europeans unite
"No country in this chamber would act with more restraint than Israel has,"
Haley told the council. "In fact the records of several countries here today
suggest they would be much less restrained."To suggest that the violence had
anything to do with the relocation of the U.S. embassy was a smoke screen,
she said. "The Hamas terrorist organization has been inciting violence for
years, long before the United States decided to move our embassy," she said.
"Make no mistake, Hamas is pleased with the results from yesterday," she
added. "The United States deplores the loss of human life," she said.
Britain, France, the Netherlands, Poland and Sweden -- the five European
nations on the council -- joined Belgium, Germany and Italy in a statement
calling on Israel to "refrain from excessive use of force" and on Hamas "to
avoid provocation" and ensure that protests remain non violent. Nickolay
Mladenov, the U.N. special coordinator for the Middle East peace process,
briefed the Security Council by video link from Jerusalem. "This cycle of
violence in Gaza needs to end," he said. "I have repeatedly called on all to
exercise restraint, for all necessary steps to avoid an escalation of
violence and for all incidents to be fully investigated."
Israel lays the blame squarely with Hamas, accusing Gaza's Islamist rulers
of war crimes. Its ambassador urged the Security Council to condemn the
faction. "Only then will justice be served," Danny Danon told reporters.
Israel, he said, regretted "every casualty." "How many Palestinians have to
die before you take action" implored the Palestinian envoy. "Why are we the
exception? Why are you paralyzed?" he asked the Council.
World anger mounts over Gaza deaths
Arab News/May 16/2018/Almost 60 Palestinians were killed in clashes with
Israeli troops during protests to mark the 70th anniversary of Nakba
Saudi Arabia’s Cabinet on Tuesday reaffirmed the Kingdom’s rejection of the
decision to move the US Embassy to Jerusalem
AMMAN: Israel faces mounting regional and international pressure over the
deaths of Palestinian protesters on the Gaza border, with South Africa,
Turkey, Belgium and Ireland withdrawing their ambassadors from Tel Aviv and
the UN Commission on Human Rights calling for an independent inquiry.
Almost 60 Palestinians were killed in clashes with Israeli troops during
protests to mark the 70th anniversary of Nakba — the expulsion of
Palestinians from their homes — and the opening of the US Embassy in
Jerusalem. Saudi Arabia’s Cabinet on Tuesday reaffirmed the Kingdom’s
rejection of the decision to move the US Embassy to Jerusalem, a day after
its official opening. “This step represents a significant bias against the
historical, permanent rights of the Palestinian people in Jerusalem,” an
official statement said. Secretary-General of the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) Saeb Erekat said that the Palestinian leadership would
file a legal case against Israel with the International Criminal Court over
settlement activity on occupied Palestinian territory. Former Jordanian
Deputy Prime Minister Marwan Muasher, now senior vice president for studies
at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told Arab News that the
killing of Palestinian protesters, coupled with the move of the US Embassy
to Jerusalem, shows why “Israel cannot be trusted” to bring about peace in
the region. “I believe Jordan’s preferred course of action is the adoption
of a policy that would keep Palestinians on their soil and that would not
cooperate with Israel in any way,” he said. Nour Al-Emam, a lawyer and
member of the Palestine National Council, said the US was now complicit in
the killings of unarmed Palestinians by the Israeli occupiers. Media
coverage of the killings in Gaza has also been criticized. Writing on his
personal Twitter account, media specialist Mureed Hammad said that the
“world media has shown a different face to dealing with Palestinian blood.”
James Martin, a Jesuit priest and editor-at-large of the Jesuit magazine
America, condemned The New York Times for saying that Palestinians had
“died” rather than Palestinians were “killed.”Some Arab voices are also
objecting to the silence of many Arab leaders. Mohammad Ersan, the host of a
Radio Al-Balad talk show in the Jordanian capital, ended his program on
Tuesday by asking if the Israeli ambassadors in neighboring countries would
be sent home. His comment followed a decision by Turkey to order Israel’s
ambassador to leave.
Veteran Israeli peace activist Gershon Baskin told Arab News that the
opening of the US Embassy in Jerusalem “is harmful to chances of peace and
goes against international accepted positions that the future of Jerusalem
must be decided and resolved by Israel and Palestine together.”
Gazans bury dead after bloodiest day of border protests
Reuters/Arab News/May 15/18/A six-week campaign of border protests dubbed
“The Great March of Return” has revived calls for refugees to have the right
of return to their former lands. In Geneva, the UN human rights office
condemned what it called the “appalling deadly violence” by Israeli forces
GAZA: Palestinians rallied in Gaza on Tuesday for the funerals of scores of
people killed by Israeli troops a day earlier, while on the Gaza-Israel
border, Israeli forces took up positions to deal with the expected final day
of a Palestinian protest campaign. Monday’s violence on the border, which
took place as the US opened its new embassy in Jerusalem, was the bloodiest
for Palestinians since the 2014 Gaza conflict. The death toll rose to 60
overnight after an eight-month-old baby died from tear gas that her family
said she inhaled at a protest camp on Monday. More than 2,200
Palestinians were also injured by gunfire or tear gas. Palestinian leaders
have called Monday’s events a massacre, and the Israeli tactic of using live
fire against the protesters has drawn worldwide concern and condemnation.
Israel has said it is acting in self-defense to defend its borders and
communities. Its main ally the US has backed that stance, with both saying
that Hamas, the group that rules the coastal enclave, instigated the
violence. There were fears of further bloodshed as Palestinians planned a
further protest to mark the “Nakba,” or “Catastrophe.”That is the day
Palestinians lament the creation of Israel in 1948, when hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians were driven from their homes in violence
culminating in war between the newly created Jewish state and its Arab
neighbors in 1948. A six-week campaign of border protests dubbed “The Great
March of Return” has revived calls for refugees to have the right of return
to their former lands, which now lie inside Israel. It was unclear whether
large crowds would turn up at the border for the climax to the campaign
after the heavy fatalities suffered on Monday. Palestinian medical officials
say that 104 Gazans have now died since the start of the protests on March
30. No Israeli casualties have been reported. Israeli troops were deployed
along the border again on Tuesday. The area was relatively quiet early in
the day, with many Gazans at the funerals. Protesters are expected to go to
the border later. In Geneva, the UN human rights office condemned what it
called the “appalling deadly violence” by Israeli forces and said it was
extremely worried about what might happen later. UN human rights spokesman
Rupert Colville said Israel had a right to defend its borders according to
international law, but lethal force must only be used a last resort, and was
not justified by Palestinians approaching the Gaza fence.
More than 2 million people are crammed into the narrow Gaza Strip, which is
blockaded by Egypt and Israel and suffering a humanitarian crisis. At the
Gaza hospital where the body of eight-month-old Laila Al-Ghandour was being
prepared for burial, her grandmother said the child was at one of the tented
protest encampments that have been set up a few hundred yards inside the
border. “We were at the tent camp east of Gaza when the Israelis fired lots
of tear gas,” Heyam Omar said. “Suddenly my son cried at me that Lolo was
weeping and screaming. I took her further away. When we got back home, the
baby stopped crying and I thought she was asleep. I took her to the
children’s hospital and the doctor told me she was martyred (dead).” Most of
the protesters stay around the tent camps, but groups of youths have
ventured closer to the no-go zone along the fence, risking live fire from
Israeli troops to roll burning tires and throw stones.
Some have flown kites carrying containers of petrol
that have spread fires on the Israeli side.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas ordered a general strike across the
Palestinian Territories on Tuesday and three days of national mourning.
Monday’s protests were fired by the opening ceremony for the new US Embassy
in Jerusalem following its relocation from Tel Aviv. The move fulfilled a
pledge by US President Donald Trump, who in December recognized the
contested city as the Israeli capital. Palestinians envision East Jerusalem
as the capital of a state they hope to establish in the occupied West Bank
and the Gaza Strip. Israel regards all of Jerusalem, including the eastern
sector it captured in the 1967 Middle East war and annexed in a move that is
not recognized internationally, as its “eternal and indivisible
capital.”Most countries say the status of Jerusalem — a sacred city to Jews,
Muslims and Christians — should be determined in a final peace settlement
and that moving their embassies now would prejudge any such deal. Netanyhau
praised Trump’s decisions but Palestinians have said the US can no longer
serve as an honest broker in any peace process. Talks aimed a finding a
two-state solution to the conflict have been frozen since 2014.
Netanyahu blamed Hamas for the Gaza violence. Hamas denied instigating it
but the White House backed Netanyahu. “The responsibility for these tragic
deaths rests squarely with Hamas. Hamas is intentionally and cynically
provoking this response,” White House spokesman Raj Shah told reporters.
Trump, in a recorded message on Monday, said he remained committed to peace
between Israel and the Palestinians. He was represented at the embassy
ceremony by his daughter Ivanka and his son-in-law Jared Kushner, US envoy
to the Middle East.
The Trump administration says it has nearly completed a new
Israeli-Palestinian peace plan but is undecided on how and when to roll it
out. The US on Monday blocked a Kuwait-drafted UN Security Council statement
that would have expressed “outrage and sorrow at the killing of Palestinian
civilians” and called for an independent investigation, UN diplomats said.
Arab League calls on ICC to investigate ‘Israeli
crimes’
AFP/Tuesday, 15 May 2018/The Arab League’s Permanent Committee on Human
Rights on Tuesday called on the International Criminal Court prosecutor to
urgently investigate “the crimes of the Israeli occupation” against
Palestinians. “Israel is an oppressive and murderous entity and its
politicians and officers must be taken to the International Criminal Court,”
Amjad Shamout, the committee’s chairman, said in a statement. Shamout was
referring to the killing of dozens of Palestinians by Israeli forces during
clashes and protests on Monday over the deeply controversial opening of a US
embassy in Jerusalem. The ICC chief prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, said Tuesday
she would “take any action warranted” to prosecute crimes. “My staff is
vigilantly following developments on the ground and recording any alleged
crime that could fall within” the tribunal’s jurisdiction, she said in a
statement to AFP, adding: “The violence must stop.” Arab League chief Ahmed
Abul Gheit condemned the “massacres” of Palestinians, which he said resemble
“war crimes”.In a statement he called on the international community to
“protect the Palestinian people, who have chosen the path of peaceful
struggle and have been confronted with brutality, violence and murder”. The
Arab League will hold emergency talks Wednesday to discuss what it has
called Washington’s “illegal” relocation of its embassy to the disputed
city. Jerusalem’s status is perhaps the thorniest issue in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Israel considers the entire city its capital,
while the Palestinians see east Jerusalem as the capital of their future
state.
Israeli forces kill two Palestinians near border
as Gaza buries dead
Reuters, Gaza/Wednesday, 16 May 2018/Palestinians buried the dead on Tuesday
from the bloodiest day in Gaza in years, after Israeli forces killed 60
Palestinians near the Gaza-Israel border during demonstrations against the
opening of the US embassy in Jerusalem. Israeli forces shot dead two more
Palestinians on Tuesday, although protests were quieter than the previous
day. It appeared that many protesters had gone to mourning tents rather than
back to the scene of Monday’s bloodshed. Mourners marched through the strip,
waving Palestinian flags and calling for revenge. “With souls and blood we
redeem you martyrs,” they shouted. Hundreds marched in the funeral of
eight-month-old Leila al-Ghandour, whose body was wrapped in a Palestinian
flag. “Let her stay with me, it is too early for her to go,” her mother
cried, pressing the baby’s body to her chest. The family said she died of
inhaling tear gas.
At Gaza’s hospitals, families crowded the halls and spilled out of rooms as
patients awaited treatment. Bassem Ibrahim, who said he was shot in the leg
by Israeli troops, said at one stage he had feared losing the limb because
of the delays. “There are not many doctors. They are unable to see everyone,
with all the injuries,” said Ibrahim, 23. “The number was unbelievable and
they did not have time.”On the Israeli side of the border, Israeli
sharpshooters took up positions to stop any attempted breach of the fence
should demonstrations break out again. Tanks were also deployed.
International response
But if the violence tapered off, it still had a forceful impact
internationally, with countries criticizing both the Israeli use of deadly
force and the US decision to open its new embassy at a ceremony attended by
President Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner.
Turkey expelled Israel’s ambassador, and Israel expelled the Turkish
consul-general in Jerusalem. President Tayyip Erdogan exchanged heated words
on Twitter with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The Palestinians summoned
home their representative in Washington, citing the embassy decision.
Netanyahu blamed Hamas for provoking the violence. “They’re pushing
civilians - women, children - into the line of fire with a view of getting
casualties. We try to minimize casualties.They’re trying to incur casualties
in order to put pressure on Israel, which is horrible,” Netanyahu told CBS
News
For the past six weeks, Palestinians have been holding Gaza border
demonstrations demanding access to family land or homes lost to Israel when
it was founded in the 1948 Middle East war. Israel rejects that demand,
fearing it would deprive the state of its Jewish majority.
Palestinian medical officials say 107 Gazans have now been killed since the
start of the protests and nearly 11,000 people wounded, about 3,500 of them
by live fire. Israeli officials dispute those numbers. No Israeli casualties
have been reported. Palestinian leaders have called Monday’s events a
massacre, and the Israeli tactic of using live fire against the protesters
has drawn worldwide concern and condemnation.
UK calls for independent investigation into Gaza
violence
AFP/Tuesday, 15 May 2018/Britain on Tuesday called for an “independent
investigation” into the violence on the Israel-Gaza border that left 60
people dead, after the United States blocked a UN Security Council statement
calling for a probe. “The United Kingdom supports an independent
investigation into what has happened,” Alistair Burt, a minister at the
Foreign Office responsible for Middle East affairs, told parliament. He
called on Israel to show “greater restraint” in the use of live fire, and
said that the inquiry should look into why so much was used. However, he
also said it was “deplorable but real that extremist elements have been
exploiting these protests”, adding the government “understands the reasons
why Israel would seek to protect its border and its border fence.”Most of
the 60 Gazans killed Monday were shot by Israeli snipers, Gaza’s health
ministry said. At least 2,400 others were wounded in the bloodiest day in
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict since the 2014 Gaza war, which took place
as the United States Monday unveiled its new embassy in Jerusalem. Burt
repeated Britain’s commitment to a two-state solution to the conflict, and
said it did not agree with the US decision to move its embassy.
He also told parliament that the government had “no information to suggest
UK-supplied equipment” was used against Gazans. On Monday, tens of thousands
had gathered near the border in protest while smaller numbers approached the
fence and sought to break through, with Israeli snipers positioned on the
other side. The death toll led to strong condemnation from rights groups and
concern from a range of countries. But the US, which blamed the Palestinian
Islamist movement Hamas, blocked the adoption of a UN Security Council
statement that would have called for an independent probe into the violence,
diplomats said.
Iran Upbeat on Nuclear Deal Hopes after EU Talks
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 15/18/Iran's foreign minister said Tuesday
that efforts to save the nuclear deal after the abrupt U.S. withdrawal were
"on the right track" as he began talks with European powers in Brussels.
Mohammad Javad Zarif met EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini ahead of
evening talks with his counterparts from Britain, France and Germany -- the
three European signatories to the 2015 landmark accord who are scrambling to
preserve it. Tehran has warned it is prepared to resume "industrial-scale"
uranium enrichment "without any restrictions" unless Europe can provide
solid guarantees that it can maintain the economic benefits it gained from
the nuclear agreement despite the United States reimposing sanctions.
Zarif gave an upbeat assessment after a "good and constructive" meeting with
Mogherini. "I believe we're on the right track to move forward in order to
ensure that interests of all the JCPOA remaining participants, particularly
Iran, will be preserved and guaranteed," he told reporters. The deal's
official name is the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA. Mogherini
said it had been a "very productive" meeting but indicated it was the start
of a long road. "We are working on the measures that we can start to put in
place and we will look at the content of that," she said. "One thing is
absolutely sure is that the European Union is determined to preserve this
deal that is essential to our security and the security of the
region."Zarif's meetings in Brussels cap a whirlwind global tour, including
trips to both Russia and China, the two other signatory nations, in a bid to
bolster support.
'Respect the deal'
Europeans have sought to play down expectations of Tuesday's meeting,
stressing the enormous challenge of finding a way around U.S. sanctions
punishing foreign businesses trading with Iran, which have global reach. The
European Union insists the deal is working, pointing to repeated U.N.
inspections verifying the Islamic republic's compliance with its side of the
bargain. We will make it clear to Zarif "that we stand by the agreements and
also expect Iran to abide by them," said German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas.
EU leaders aim to show a united front on preserving the Iran deal when they
meet for a pre-summit dinner in Sofia on Wednesday, European Council
President Donald Tusk said. "I would like our debate to reconfirm without
any doubt that as long as Iran respects the provisions of the deal, the EU
will also respect it," Tusk said in a letter to the leaders on the eve of
the summit. European firms, especially those from France and Germany, rushed
to invest in Iran following the 2015 accord, under which Tehran agreed to
freeze its nuclear program in return for an end to punishing international
sanctions. German exports to Iran totaled nearly 3.0 billion euros in 2017,
while French exports soared from 562 million euros in 2015 to 1.5 billion in
2017 and oil giant Total has pledged to invest some $5 billion in the South
Pars gas field.
'No illusion'
When he quit the deal last week, U.S. President Donald Trump gave businesses
a maximum of six months to wind up operations in Iran or face swingeing
penalties under American sanctions. "We have to be realistic about the
electrified rail, the live wire of American extra-territoriality and how
that can serve as a deterrent to business," said British Foreign Secretary
Boris Johnson. French President Emmanuel Macron held phone talks with his
Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, according to a Kremlin
statement, which said they had "confirmed Russia and France's commitment to
make the deal work."Zarif was in Moscow to meet Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov on Monday, a day after visiting Beijing. Johnson said the
Europeans were "under no illusion about Iran's disruptive behavior but we
think we can tackle those in other ways outside the JCPOA." Washington has
long complained that the nuclear deal does nothing to stop Iran's ballistic
missile program or its interference in conflicts across the Middle East from
Syria to Yemen. On Sunday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said
Washington still wants to work with Europe to counter Iran's "malign
behavior" and was working hard to thrash out a more wide-ranging deal with
its European partners. However on Tuesday the U.S. hit Iran's central bank
governor with sanctions.
Bodies of 20 victims of 2015 ISIS atrocity in Libya arrive in Egypt
Staff writer, Al Arabiya EnglishTuesday, 15 May 2018/Hundreds of Egyptians
from the village of Aour and neighboring village of Minya gathered on Monday
to receive the remains of 20 Egyptian copts killed by ISIS in Libya in the
year 2015. A shrine has been built for the victims inside the Church of
Shuhadaa al-Watan W al-Eman in the village, to commemorate them. They
carried a picture of each victim to be placed at their burial site, while
prayers were held in the presence of senior priests and parents. The
families of victims were grateful for the persistent efforts made by
President Abdelfattah el-Sisi, the state authorities and the Church to bring
back the bodies of their family members after after they had lost hope of
burying them with their own hands. Eileen Ibrahim, mother of one of the
victims, said she is happy the body was retrieved but it does not make her
pain and grave loss any better. Family members who spoke to Al Arabiya said
they would trade places with their sons who lost their lives at the hands of
ISIS. Their village is now referred to as “Martyer’s village” after their
death. Earlier, an Egyptian official at Cairo airport announced the arrival
of the remains of Egyptian Copts who were killed in February 2015 near Sirte,
the former stronghold of the organization in Libya. The Pope of Alexandria,
Coptic Patriarch Tawadros II was present at Cairo airport to receive the
bodies that were transferred from Misrata. Dr Osman al-Zantani said that the
identification of the bodies was not easy because of decomposition.
Authorities at Cairo International Airport announced, on Monday, a state of
emergency in preparation for receiving the remains of the victims of terror.
Sadr willing to ally with Iraqi blocs to form technocratic government
Hassan al-Saeedi, Baghdad – Al Arabiya.netTuesday, 15 May 2018/Shiite cleric
Muqtada al-Sadr and his cross sectarian Sairoon coalition (On the move), who
are set to win Iraq’s elections after preliminary results showed they were
in the lead, seek to form a technocratic cabinet. Meanwhile, some media
reports said the Iranian embassy is interfering in the cabinet formation
process by attempting to bring some political blocs together.Sadr announced
the shape of his next alliances to form a cabinet via Twitter. He excluded
any alliance with Al-Fatah Alliance which is affiliated with the Popular
Mobilization Militia, with the Alliance of the State of the Law that is
headed by former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and with the Patriotic Union
of Kurdistan that is affiliated with late president Jalal Talabani. “We are
‘on the move’ in ‘wisdom’ and ‘nationalism,’ to meet our people’s ‘will,’
build a ‘new generation’ and witness ‘change’ towards reform so the
‘decision’ is Iraqi and we can raise the ‘banners’ of ‘victory,’ so
‘Baghdad,’ the capital, is our ‘identity’ and ‘our democratic efforts’ are
(directed) towards forming a parental government that consists of technocrat
‘cadres’,” Sadr said on Twitter. His tweet voiced his intent to ally with
the National Wisdom Movement led by Ammar al-Hakim, the National Coalition
headed by Ayad Allawi and the Eradaa (Will) Movement led by Hanan al-Fatlawi.
It also voiced his intent to ally with the New Generation political platform
led by young Kurdish businessman Shaswar Abdulwahid, the Kurdish Change bloc
(Gorran) and the Decision Bloc led by former parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi.
He also intends to include Bayariq al-Kheir (the banners of benevolence)
bloc led by former defense minister Khaled al-Obeidi, the Victory Alliance
led by Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, the Baghdad Coalition led by Mahmoud
al-Mashhadani, the Kurdistan Democratic Party led by Masoud Barzani and the
Competencies bloc led by Haitham al-Jubouri.
Sabhan's response to Sadr
Saudi minister of state for Arab Gulf affairs Thamer Al Sabhan, the
kingdom’s former ambassador to Iraq, congratulated Iraq for holding the
elections and commented on Sadr’s tweet.“You are truly on the move in
wisdom, patriotism and solidarity. You’ve made the decision for change
towards an Iraq that raises the banners of victory with its independence,
Arabism and identity. I congratulate Iraq for having you,” Sabhan said via
Twitter. Meanwhile, local media outlets quoted a political source as saying
that four lists intend to form an alliance on Tuesday to form the biggest
bloc in parliament. It will include the State of Law Coalition, the Fatah
Alliance and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. The fourth list has not yet
been announced. A source close to the Iranian embassy in Baghdad had told
Al-Arabiya.net that five days before the elections were held, a meeting was
held between Maliki, Hadi Al-Amiri, Allawi, Salim al-Jabouri and the Iranian
ambassador in Iraq to discuss forming a big bloc to announce forming the
cabinet of political majority and which will be cross sectarian.
Early results place Sadr bloc in lead position to determine next Iraq PM
Staff writer, Al Arabiya EnglishTuesday, 15 May 2018/Populist Shiite cleric
Muqtada al-Sadr and his bloc of parties are set to win Iraq’s parliamentary
election and placed into a position to determine the country's next prime
minister after prelimary results showed them in the lead. In the first
election since the defeat of ISIS in the country, Iran-backed Shiite militia
chief Hadi al-Amiri’s bloc was in second place, while current Iraq PM Haider
al-Abadi trailed in third. Sadr and Amiri both came in first in four of the
10 provinces where votes were counted, but the cleric's bloc won
significantly more votes in the capital, Baghdad, which has the highest
number of seats.
Al Arabiya's Shadaan Hammam reports.
N. Korea Threatens to Scrap Trump Summit
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 15/18/North Korea threatened Wednesday to
cancel a much-anticipated and unprecedented summit between its leader Kim
Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump, the South's Yonhap news agency
reported. Pyongyang also canceled high-level talks due Wednesday with Seoul
over the Max Thunder joint military exercises between the U.S. and the
South, Yonhap said citing the North's official news agency KCNA.
Father of burnt-alive Jordanian pilot wishes
ISIS murderers a crueler fate
Ghassan Abu Louz, Amman – Al
Arabiya.netTuesday, 15 May 2018/Abu Jawad al-Kasasbeh, the father of
Jordanian pilot Muath al-Kasasbeh who was burnt alive by ISIS in Syria, said
Saddam Omar al-Jamal, one of those involved in killing Muath and who was
recently captured in Iraq, should suffer a fate worse than that of his son.
In his first interview to Al Arabiya English after the Iraqi authorities
announced the arrest of five ISIS chiefs, including Jamal, Abu Jawad said he
cannot imagine what would happen if he ever comes face to face with his
son’s murderers. “What do you expect from a father who is grieving his son
and whose murder shook the entire world?” Abu Jawad asked. Asked how he felt
when he heard the news that Jamal was among those arrested, he said a fire
raged inside him, adding that Jamal’s punishment must be worse than how
Muath was executed. A Jordanian girl holds a poster of pilot Muath al-Kasaesbeh.
(Reuters). “I see Muath in my prayers, when I put my head on the pillow. I
see Muath every second, and I mourn him every day,” Abu Jawad said. Muath’s
older brother Jawad said: “We hear our father cry all the time when he’s
alone in his room.”Abu Jawad called on the Jordanian government to bring
Jamal from Iraq to Jordan to try him, adding that he was expecting the
interrogation of ISIS officials to reveal more about the secrets of
capturing Muath and executing him. He also said that he has not asked to
meet with Jamal if the Iraqi authorities hand him over to Jordan, adding
that he will consider this if Jamal was handed over. Abu Jawad, who did not
hide his desire to avenge from all those involved in burning Muath to death
and see them die the same way he was killed, said his sons never watched the
video of the killing and never think about watching it.
Latest LCCC
Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on May 15-16/18
Explaining Israel’s growing role in
the region
Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/May 15/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/64676/64676/
The US’s withdrawal from the nuclear deal with Iran is an important
development that will have possible political consequences and
transformations in the region and on the players, the arena and the crisis.
The new developments are dependent on the continuity of the American stance
against Tehran and which may change if the Iranian government makes
concessions to the US. President Donald Trump had promised Iran to go back
to the agreement if it backs down and accepts his conditions to amend the
deal. These amendments include prohibiting Iran from ever transforming its
nuclear program into a military program and withdrawing its forces and
militias from the wars outside Iran. It’s unlikely that Rowhani’s government
will accept these conditions during this current phase.
When sanctions are activated and pressure is increased on Iran, Israel will
have a new regional role that it has never played before. Israel’s
activities regarding its foreign security have been limited to wars and
confrontations with neighboring countries. It’s probable that Israel will
play a new role, the role of the policeman that’s watching and holding Iran
accountable. On one hand, it launched significant military operations
against Iranian sites in Syria and it said it completely destroyed the
infrastructure which the Iranian Revolutionary Guards have built there. If
we assume that half of this estimate is accurate, then Israel will have
diminished Iran’s power for the first time since it got involved in the war
in Syria around five years ago.
Israel has frankly said it intends to eliminate Iran’s presence in Syria,
and this increases the possibilities of more confrontations that will also
be violent. If Israel succeeds in getting Iran and its foreign militias out
of Syria then the balance of power between the warring parties will change.
Who will compensate for Iran? Will the Russians intensify their presence?
Will Arab forces, mostly Egyptians, replace the Iranian ones or will a
political solution sponsored by the UN and supervised by UN peacekeeping
troops be enough?
Thanks to Iran’s expansion, Israel’s regional role is growing
On another hand, Israel said it’s concerned in pursuing Iran’s nuclear
program and it will try to have a role in any military confrontation or
siege. The confrontation is completely unlikely but there might be smaller
military operations targeted against Iran’s presence outside its
territories. The aim is to pressure the regime in Tehran to withdraw its
fighters from Syria, Iraq and Yemen and embarrass it before the Iranians and
the region’s people, like what happened to it last week in Syria.
Thanks to Iran’s expansion, Israel’s regional role is growing. This was not
happening before. The confrontations between Israel and Iran have always
been with the latter’s proxies like the Palestinian Hamas Movement and the
Lebanese Hezbollah Party. The Iranian command, particularly the
Revolutionary Guards, must be extremely embarrassed because it lost the
recent confrontations which resembled a semi-state of war as this is the
first there is a battle of this size between the two countries.
As long as the US administration is assigning this new role to Israel, and
it suits other Arab parties, it will probably expand in the future. Israel
is a relatively small state as it has the approximate area of Kuwait;
however, it has a regionally superior military capability. By exploiting
tensions and the changes in camps, it will create itself a new status.
Israel’s rise synchronizes with the end of a long US abstention to move the
embassy to Jerusalem and with including Egypt in resolving the security
problem of the Gaza Strip as result of protests there.
Who Is Moqtada al-Sadr? The Cleric Who Attacked U.S.
Troops and Is Iraq's Likely Next PM
هآرتس ورويترز: من هو رجل الدين العراقي مقتدى الصدر الذي حارب القوات الأميركية
ومن المحتمل أن يصبح رئيس وزراء العراق المقبل
Haaretz/Reuters May 15, 2018
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/64668/who-is-moqtada-al-sadr-the-cleric-who-attacked-u-s-troops-and-is-iraqs-likely-next-pm-%d9%85%d9%86-%d9%87%d9%88-%d8%b1%d8%ac%d9%84-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%af%d9%8a%d9%86-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%b9%d8%b1%d8%a7/
Sadr is the only Iraqi Shi'ite leader who has
challenged both Iran and the United States, a calculation that appears to have
made him popular with millions of poor Shi'ites
Nationalist Shi'ite Cleric Moqtada al-Sadr took a surprise lead in Iraq's
elections by tapping into public resentment with Iran and what some voters say
is a corrupt political elite it supports.
Sadr is the only Iraqi Shi'ite leader who has challenged both Iran and the
United States, a calculation that appears to have made him popular with millions
of poor Shi'ites who felt they hadn’t benefited from their government’s close
ties to Tehran or Washington.
The nationalist cleric’s success in the election dealt a blow to Iran, which has
steadily increased its influence in Iraq since a U.S.-led invasion toppled
Saddam Hussein in 2003.
His success marks a remarkable comeback for Sadr, who for years had been
sidelined by Iranian-backed rivals. He reached out to dispossessed Shi’ites and
marginalised Sunnis, and restored links with Sunni neighbours while keeping Iran
at bay. As news spread of Sadr's gains in the election, some of his followers
celebrated in Baghdad and chanted "Iran out." "Iraq is rich, the country doesn’t
need Iran, it can stand on its feet and be prosperous it just need good
management," said Mohammed Sadeq, a trader in the city of Hilla who voted for
Sadr's list.
Forty-four year old Sadr will not become prime minister as he did not run in the
election but his almost certain victory puts him in a position to pick someone
for the job. Winning the largest number of seats does not automatically
guarantee that, however. The other winning blocs would have to agree on the
nomination.
Sadr has long been viewed by the U.S. and Iraqi government officials seen as an
unpredictable maverick. But a Western diplomat, who met him in his villa in the
city of Najaf just after he formed a political bloc with communists in March
described Sadr as composed, articulate and a pragmatist. "He didn't come across
as a rabble rouser," said the diplomat. Sadr, usually stern-faced, joked about
the diplomat's ring. "Then he showed me his ring, which had an effigy of his
father," he said.
Fierce nationalist
Sadr was virtually unknown outside Iraq before the 2003 U.S. invasion. But he
soon became a symbol of resistance to foreign occupation, deriving much of his
authority from his family.
He is the son of the revered Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Sadeq al-Sadr, killed for
defying Saddam Hussein. His father’s cousin, Mohammed Baqir, was also killed by
the Iraqi dictator, in 1980.
Sadr was the first to form a Shi'ite militia that fought against U.S. troops
after the liberation of Iraq turned into an occupation. He led two uprisings
against U.S. troops, prompting the Pentagon to call his Mehdi army the biggest
threat to Iraq's security. U.S. officials and Sunni Arab leaders have accused
Sadr's Mehdi Army of being behind many sectarian killings that ravaged Iraq.
Sadr has disavowed violence against fellow Iraqis.
Sadr has always portrayed himself as an uncompromising nationalist. He looked
down on other opposition figures who safely returned from Iran seeking power
after Saddam's demise while others put their lives at risk by staying in the
country.
In 2004, the U.S. occupation authority issued an arrest warrant for Sadr in
connection with the 2003 murder of moderate Shi'ite leader Abdul Majid al-Khoei
who the Americans had brought into the holy Shi'ite city of Najaf during the
invasion. Sadr, who denied any role, was never charged.
His image as a patriot appears to have resonated with those who voted in the
election, which saw a historically low turnout. "We won’t allow the Iraqis to be
cannon fodder for the wars of others nor be used in proxy wars outside Iraq,"
said Jumah Bahadily, a member of the outgoing parliament who belongs to the
Sadrist movement, referring to Syria. “We are proud of our Arab identity.”
Unlikely alliance
With his trademark turban, Sadr can easily mobilise thousands of followers on
the streets of Iraq. In 2016, hundreds of Sadr's supporters stormed parliament
inside Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone after he denounced politicians’ failure to
reform a political quota system blamed for rampant corruption.
Sadr issued an ultimatum.
“If corrupt (officials) and quotas remain the entire government will be brought
down and no one will be exempt." For the election, Sadr formed an unlikely
alliance with communists and other independent secular supporters to demand the
formation of a government of independent technocrats to end corruption. His
bloc, known as “Sairoon” in Arabic, or On The Move, has said it would focus on
rebuilding infrastructure and providing health and education to the poor. "The
importance of this vote is that it is a clear message that the people want to
change the system of governance which has produced corruption and weakened the
state institutions," Raed Fahmy, secretary general of the Iraqi Communist Party,
told Reuters. "It is a message in support of having balanced relations with all
based on the respect of non interference in Iraq’s internal affairs."
Comeback
Sadr has made a notable comeback after being sidelined for years by Shi'ite
rivals backed by Tehran. Two of them were seen as top contenders for prime
minister after the election. Hadi al-Amiri is widely regarded as Iran's man in
Iraq and is arguably the most powerful figure in the country. Amiri's bloc was
in second place in the poll with more than half the votes counted, according to
Reuters calculations.
The other is Nuri al-Maliki, who served as prime minister for a total of eight
years. Maliki's bloc has so far fared poorly. Incumbent Haider al-Abadi had been
tipped to win by a narrow margin. Sadr's growing popularity has not gone
unnoticed in Tehran, where he went into self-imposed exile in 2007.
Ali Akbar Velayati, top adviser to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
said in February that Tehran would prevent Sadr and his alliance from governing
in Iraq. “We will not allow liberals and communists to govern in Iraq,” he said
during a speech at a conference in Iraq in February.
Iraq, which lies in the heart of the Gulf, is critical for Iran. The countries
share a border and Iraq is Iran’s main route for supplying arms and fighters to
Syria to back President Bashar al-Assad in the civil war. Sadr and his allies
"benefited from the weak participation of the other parties and from widespread
popular discontent regarding corruption and the mismanagement of the state, and
also the perception that Iraq is being led from outside, by the Iranians and the
Americans," said Wathiq al-Hashimi, an independent analyst based in Iraq.
Human Rights: Other Views - Part II
Denis MacEoin/Gatestone Institute/May 15/2018
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12296/human-rights-views-other
Palestinian human rights organizations such as Al-Mezan, along with their many
supporters abroad and even within a substantial part of the Jewish diaspora,
have turned the very concept of human rights on its head.
Although genuine and widely praised for their advocacy of human rights
internationally, even Amnesty, Human Rights Watch, the International Federation
for Human Rights and the humanitarian relief body Oxfam International have
reputations of extreme bias against Israel.
What are any of these people doing actually to help the Palestinians -- such as
creating jobs, assuring good governance, establishing schools, hospitals, health
care and dental clinics, safeguarding legal standards, stopping the arrests of
journalists or others who dare to criticize the current governments and so on?
Rather, the issues they address seem more a rationalization to destroy Israel.
We have seen in Part One of this article how far Western standards of human
rights differ from those guaranteed by Islam. One obvious outcome of this
disparity is, of course, that citizens of Muslim countries are accorded fewer
rights than their counterparts in liberal democracies. Thus, women, girls, gays,
members of religious minorities, "blasphemers", bloggers (notably in Bangladesh
and Saudi Arabia) reformers and others may be subjected to partial or total
deprival of what the rest of the world considers to be unquestionable or
God-given rights. Women may be forced to dress in all-encompassing clothing or
hijabs. Minorities may be imprisoned or killed. Women even alleged to have
committed adultery – but often just the victims of rape – may be flogged or else
stoned to death. LGBT individuals may imprisoned or killed, while bloggers,
reformist intellectuals, moderate Qur'an interpreters face flogging and murder
by mobs.
All the while, the UN Human Rights Council does little or nothing to encourage
Muslim member states to rethink these views; it even adopts resolutions that
contradict the Universal Declaration, such as the 2009 resolution to treat
"defamation of religion" as a rights violation. This resolution, launched by
Pakistan on behalf of a group of Islamic states, while purportedly aiming to
protect criticism of all religions, in reality seems aimed at preventing people
worldwide from ever criticizing the Islamic religion.
Meanwhile, writing in 2017, human rights lawyer Anne Bayefsky describes how the
Human Rights Council is actually focused elsewhere:
According to the U.N.'s top human rights body, Israel is the worst human rights
violator in the world today. That's the result of the latest session of the UN
Human Rights Council which wrapped up in Geneva on Friday by adopting five times
more resolutions condemning Israel than any other country on earth.
Bizarre as that may sound, it is, in the UN, normal procedure. In some ways even
more bizarre is the revelation the same year of another Human Rights Council
report, which shows violations by 29 countries that attack people working with
the UN on human rights issues:
It was reported to OHCHR that these people had been abducted, detained, held
incommunicado, or had disappeared, according to Andrew Gilmour, the Assistant
Secretary-General for Human Rights.
Other victims lost their jobs, had their homes or offices raided, were targeted
by travel bans and asset freezes, and forced to undergo unwanted psychiatric
"treatment." Many cases involved arbitrary detention and torture, sometimes by
sexual assault or rape.
Israel is, for no apparent reason, on that list of 29. Out of that same number,
however, more than half were Muslim-majority countries: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the
UAE, Algeria, Bahrain, Iran, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Pakistan, Sudan,
Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. That should not be surprising,
given the Islamic human rights standard already examined in Part One.
There is still one more bizarre feature: the insistence in some quarters that
Israel is the leading violator of rights. There seem to be more human rights
organizations in the West Bank than possibly anywhere else in the world,
together with masses of international bodies that support the Palestinians and
condemn Israel -- usually in a distinctly one-sided, ant-Israel way. There are
so many organizations that one can never be sure of an accurate tally, but it
certainly seems disproportionately large for one small pluralistic democracy to
be the target of so much criticism, given the number of genuine abusers of human
rights -- including the Palestinian Authority and Hamas -- across the Middle
East.
Of the 20 organizations, for example, listed as pursuing rights claims against
Israel by the Rachel Corrie Foundation for Peace and Justice to commemorate a
young American woman described as a "peace activist" but who was in reality an
anti-Israel campaigner -- several are international, but the rest are based in
the West Bank, Gaza, and Israel. None is an advocate of Israel's excellent human
rights achievements, but are instead composed of political activists who often
seem to place Palestinian rights -- such as a supposed right to violent protests
-- above those of their fellow Israelis, including the Arab citizens of Israel
-- to defend themselves. Given that Israel is where Jews have lived for more
than 3,000 years -- and which only in the last century became the sole safe
haven for Jews in a world of historically so many antagonists -- this antagonism
seems deeply perverse.
A wider survey shows that in countries such as the United States, the UK, and
Egypt, at least eleven international organizations have a remit to investigate
what are claimed to be Israeli human rights violations in the disputed
territories, even though the Gaza Strip has been long-unoccupied, and is now
ruled by the Islamic group Hamas, a Foreign Terrorist Organization, according to
the U.S. Department of State. No one, it often seems, has a good word to say
about Israel, or a less-than-good word to say, about Palestinian mayhem,
terrorism or internal human rights abuses.
Although genuine and widely praised for their advocacy of human rights
internationally, even Amnesty, Human Rights Watch, FIDH [Fédération
internationale des ligues des droits de l'homme] and the humanitarian relief
body Oxfam International have reputations of extreme bias against Israel.
Amnesty regards Israel as an "apartheid" state, actively supports the
international Boycott, Divestments and Sanctions (BDS) movement that seeks to
strangle Israel economically and academically, accuses Israel of "war crimes",
defends terrorists, and more. Human Rights Watch does much the same. Even its
founder, Robert L. Bernstein, has condemned it for its unjustified attacks on
Israel and its failure commensurately to criticize groups such as Hamas and
Hezbollah. The respected French international organization, FIDH has issued
anti-Israel statements in collaboration with highly politicized Palestinian
NGOs.
Most of these international organizations show genuine concern about human
rights violations elsewhere, including North Africa and the wider Middle East.
Here, for example, is a sample of FIDH's current issues in that region. But when
it comes to Israel, they portray far greater sympathy for Palestinian "victims"
than for the countless Israelis who have been killed or injured by some of these
"victims".
Their bias often seems to originate in exposure to highly propagandistic,
frequently counter-factual claims by the many Palestinian, Israeli, and
left-wing Jewish organizations with whom the international bodies consult and
with whom they periodically act in tandem. Likewise, it is not surprising that
organizations which work on a daily basis to right the wrongs suffered by the
world's genuine victims of human rights abuses find themselves open to
persuasion by Palestinians and their supporters, who often portray themselves as
passive victims of Israeli actions without taking the smallest responsibility
for their own provocative actions. For more, the psychologist Johanna Vollhardt
has examined the role of victim beliefs in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Some of the smaller international organizations focus only on Israel and the
Palestinians. The British Lawyers for Palestinian Human Rights, citing the Al
Mezan Centre for Human Rights and the World Organization Against Torture,
recently delivered a joint written statement to the 37th session of the UN Human
Rights Council. The statement calls for the Council to act on what it calls
"impunity for torture, ill-treatment and related practices in Israel", and
relates to "the Israeli government's policy and practice in regard to torture
and ill-treatment". In Israel, in fact, torture has been completely banned by
Israel's High Court since 1999.
As in the United States, however, moderate physical pressure is not. Israel is a
country under constant terrorist attacks and threats of attacks. By ignoring
these important distinctions and pretending not to know the truth about actual
Israeli law and Israeli practice, such "rights organizations" only serve --
possibly deliberately -- to confuse the international public.
Lawyers for Palestinian Human Rights has an extensive Gaza Accountability
Project which aims "to secure justice and legal accountability for Palestinian
victims of alleged serious violations of international law", even as it says not
a word about Palestinian persecution of Christians or Hamas's abuses against
women, children and Israelis. Even the Palestinian Authority claims that Hamas
are reckless gamblers who sacrifice the lives of Gazan women and children.
Americans United for Palestinian Human Rights, based in Portland, Oregon,
characterizes recent measures taken by Israeli border security as "the Passover
Massacre", when even Hamas and Israel effectively agree that 80% of the
protesters shot were members of terrorist organizations, not civilians. See
here. There was no "massacre" over Passover or any other period. Israel does not
commit massacres. This simple fact, however, seems to make no impact on
activists, the media, so-called human rights groups or the international
community.
As some Americans recently wrote:
"For decades Zionists have blamed the Palestinians for Israel's ongoing colonial
project. 'If only the Palestinians had a Mahatma Gandhi,' many Israeli liberals
have exclaimed, 'then the occupation would end.'"
They then proceed to claim: "But if one truly wished to find Palestinian Mahatma
Gandhis all one needed to do is look at the images of protesters on Friday
night's news broadcasts."
Not surprisingly, they fail to mention that these Palestinian Gandhis belonged
to or were manipulated by terrorist organizations such as Islamic Jihad and
Hamas.
The AUPHR applies the "apartheid" charge even to the situation of Arab Israelis
as well as those on the West Bank. Many authors have used this argument, a claim
unsupported by actual evidence and rejected by several, such as the Rev. Dr.
Kenneth Meshoe, who have had direct experience of South African apartheid.
Of the human rights organizations working in Gaza and the West Bank, three stand
out as spokesmen for anti-Israel propaganda and lawfare. These are Al-Dameer,
Al-Haq, and Al-Mezan, all of which are well funded by a succession of
international so-called human rights and humanitarian bodies. None of them gives
any financial details, but, according to NGO Monitor , Al Dameer has received
donations from Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, the European
Union, the US, and the UN Development Program.
Al-Mezan, in 2014, listed "Core Programme Donors" from the same countries, as
well as Germany, the UK, the EU, Oxfam GB, Save the Children, and several other
humanitarian institutions.
Regarding Al-Mezan itself, a central actor in Palestinian human rights
enterprises incorporating Gaza and the West Bank, there is not room here for an
exhaustive account. But NGO Monitor has provided a valuable summary, from which
useful information can be extracted.
Al-Mezan's activities are truly bewldering. Over the years, it has accused
Israel of war crimes, including Israeli Defence Forces' "massacres" in Gaza,
further "massacres" and "slaughtering civilians" there in 2009, a "despicable
disregard to civilian life" by what they term "the Israeli Occupation Forces" --
years after Israel had ended its occupation of Gaza.
Al-Mezan has, in addition, played an active role in the BDS movement to try to
crush Israel economically. It submits blatantly anti-Israel material to
international bodies such as the European Parliament and the UN. In 2016, along
with another West Bank organization, Badil (Badeel), it hosted a forum at the
European Parliament in Brussels, in which discussions were held about Israel's
alleged violations of international law. These violations included businesses
operating in Israeli settlements (which they considered "illegal", in line with
a recent UN resolution to that effect).
Earlier that year, al-Mezan co-signed a joint statement on supposed infractions
of international law:
For decades, Israel has failed to uphold its duties as Occupying Power and has
instead deepened its occupation and regime of colonialism and apartheid. Human
rights violations rising to the level of international crimes, including
unlawful killings, torture, forced transfer, and other forms of collective
punishment have become the norm.
The rest of the statement advocated smothering Israel economically on the
totally false grounds that no governments or international bodies had the
political will to hold Israel accountable for its "crimes".
This supposed exemplar of human rights activism could not be more opposed to the
state of Israel, about which it perpetuates a large battery of falsehoods and
distortions. It claims, for instance, that Israel is an "apartheid" state;;
accuses it, wrongly, of "ethnic cleansing"; reports purported Israeli "war
crimes"; repeats the historically false narrative of the 1948 Palestinian nakba
[catastrophe - that of losing a war it started] which it characterizes as "a
catastrophe born of discrimination and impunity". In reality, five Arab states
had sent in armies to destroy Israel on the day of its birth, but lost. A flight
of Arab refugees took place because Arab authorities ordered civilians to leave
to allow those Arab armies a freer hand wresting the area from Jews. [1]
Al-Mezan is also highly active in anti-Israel lawfare campaigns. These try, for
example, to use courts and international legal bodies to issue arrest warrants
against Israeli officials, and to lobby against Israel in the International
Criminal Court.
Al-Mezan's "war crimes" accusations use biased and emotive rhetoric alongside
falsified statistics, especially for casualties in Gaza during warfare. Al-Mezan
has gone so far as to allege that "Israel killed more children than fighters"
during the 2014 Gaza conflict. In fact, a later analysis has shown that civilian
figures were grossly inflated and militant casualties hidden:
The IDF's analysis of fatalities demonstrates that while the 2014 Gaza Conflict
did unfortunately result in civilian fatalities, the number and percentage of
Palestinian civilian fatalities is actually much lower than has been reported in
many channels. As discussed below, the IDF's preliminary analysis has determined
that 2,125 Palestinians were killed during the 2014 Gaza Conflict. Of these
fatalities, the IDF estimates that at least 936 (44% of the total) were actually
militants and that 761 (36% of the total) were civilians; efforts are still
underway to classify the additional 428 (20% of the total), all males aged 16-50
These and other accusations, couched in bombastic "human rights" terminology and
made in a parade of reports to the international media, are woefully short of
evidence and context, but Al-Mezan and its associates, using what appear to be
hard facts despite a serious lack of documentary evidence, claim the moral high
ground. Needless to say, Hamas has used civilians as human shields (as openly
admitted in 2008 by Hamas leader Fathi Hammad) and has launched missiles from
inside civilian sites, such as school, hospitals, and mosques – all, according
to Canadian law professor Irwin Cotler, war crimes.[2]
If Al-Mezan's allegations were even moderately true, Israel would deserve the
obloquy that is repeatedly dumped on it. A high-level military group, however,
made up of senior military personnel from many countries declared in 2015 that
the Israeli Defence Force is "the most ethical army in the world". These
experts, presumably vastly more knowledgeable about military affairs than Al-Mezan
and other Palestinian rights groups, also stated in 2016 that the IDF had acted
in combat entirely within the rules of international military law. Needless to
say, Hamas has used civilians as human shields and launched missiles from inside
civilian sites such as schools, hospitals and mosques.
Al-Mezan also declines to focus on what are argued as human rights issues, such
as women's rights, LGBT rights, or basic rights for all Palestinians living
under the rule of the Palestinian Authority or Hamas. Instead, it Al-Mezan
involves itself with overtly political activities that support efforts to
destroy Israel economically. Although such efforts may be interpreted as a
response to others' human rights breaches, they are tightly linked to the untrue
accusations of apartheid and the false claim that the Wall section of Israeli's
security fence is an "apartheid wall", rather than a barrier Israel was forced
to erect to defend itself from countless terrorist attacks. A wall is a passive
form of defence that has proven effective over many years and saved countless
lives.
According to the American politician Scott Walker, Israelis have "seen something
like over a 90% reduction in terrorist acts in that country that they attribute
to having an effective fence."
More is happening here than might at first meet the eye. Palestinian human
rights organizations such as Al-Mezan, along with their many supporters abroad
and even within a substantial part of the Jewish diaspora, have turned the very
concept of human rights upside down. All around the world, a majority of people
and countries slam Israel as a country that violates human rights, when by any
rational measure it does the precise opposite. Israel is the only country in the
Middle East and far beyond to provide full rights, true pluralism, and equal
justice under the law to all its citizens. The security measures Israel has been
forced to take since 1948 can hardly be called -- with few possible exceptions
-- human rights abuses.
What Israel's enemies are doing is to repurpose claims of "human rights abuses"
by turning the world's attention away from their own abuses and trying to
generate instead a fictitious image of Israel as supposedly the world's greatest
abuser. If one examines Freedom House's 2018 report on the Middle East and North
Africa, only one North African country – Tunisia – is listed as fully free, and
only one Middle Eastern state – Israel – is fully free. The rest are mainly not
free at all, with one or two partly free. The West Bank is recorded as not free.
This is partly because the Arabs agreed in the Oslo II accord, also known as the
Oslo Interim Agreement of 1995, that Israel would have "overall responsibility
for external security and for the security of Israelis and settlements
throughout the West Bank and the Gaza Strip".
Since then, however, as Freedom House adds: "The PA itself has grown more
authoritarian, engaging in crackdowns on the media and human rights activists
who criticize its rule." Why then do human rights activists focus on Israel
rather than on the abuses under the Palestinians' own leadership?
There are many abuses in Gaza and the West Bank. Honor killings of girls and
women in the West Bank are a serious concern. After 2014, there was a major
upsurge in such murders, carried out by members of the woman's own family. The
Palestinian Authority remains obstinate in its refusal to intervene in the
matter. Protests are made, but the abuses continue. More generally, women's
rights are violated in both the West Bank and Gaza, as are children's rights. In
the West Bank and Gaza, homosexuality is a capital offence. In Gaza, a recent
report on gay men shows them forced to live double lives out of fear of Hamas
agents. Many head for Israel, where, since 1963, LGBT rights -- made fully legal
in 1988 -- are assured.
Religious minorities, mainly Christians suffer much abuse in Gaza and the West
Bank, where Islamic shari'a law and social attitudes that are profoundly
discriminatory to non-Muslims inform popular and political opinion. Israel is
the only country in the region where religious minorities have full freedom to
worship and live without hindrance. The Baha'is, murdered, imprisoned and
economically oppressed in Iran and banned in all Muslim states, have their
world-famous international headquarters, their holiest shrines, and pilgrimage
centers in Haifa and outside Acco.
The "human rights" bodies in the West Bank, such as Al-Mezan, Al Dameer, and Al-Haq,
never involve themselves in complaints about any of the human rights abuses
listed above. Instead, they do all they can to persuade the rest of the world
that the world's worst offender is Israel.
These organizations and their supporters have been trying, in fact, to repurpose
the very concept of human rights, and in so doing, have turned them upside-down.
These activists appear to have adopted a broad range of attitudes – many with
their roots in an Orwellian ideology that turns white to black and good
intentions to evil conspiracies. Thus, for example, we see how Iran is sending
weapons, including missiles, to Hezbollah under the guise of humanitarian aid,
even while Israel sends tons of genuine aid into Gaza every day, yet \ is
accused of imposing a "crippling blockade".
Similarly, some Western feminists have been claiming that the Islamic veil
supposedly empowers Muslim women. To some, it is seen as a "feminist accessory",
or as a protection against harassment. This sort of thinking, however, seems
based on the assumption that traditional conservative Islamic culture must take
precedence over Western values, and ignores the male domination and repression
that can often accompany it – such as forced obedience to men.
In the UK, we have witnessed a traditionally progressive, anti-racist political
party, Labour, become deeply mired in the racism of anti-Semitism. Almost all of
this is due to a well-intended but under-informed obsession with the suffering
of the Palestinians and a deeply corrupt understanding of Israel. What are any
of these people doing actually to help the Palestinians – such as creating jobs,
assuring good governance, ending the corruption of the Palestinian leadership,
protecting human rights in Palestinian courts, establishing schools, hospitals,
health care and dental clinics, adequate electricity and how to care for
drinking water drinking water; upgrading agriculture, safeguarding legal
standards of proof in courts, stopping the arrests of journalists or others who
dare to criticize the current governments, preventing torture in prison, and so
on? Rather, the issues they address seem more a rationalization to destroy
Israel. That attitude also seems linked to a sad ignorance of, wholesale
indifference to, and even hatred of modern definitions of anti-Semitism. The
2016 International Holocaust Alliance Definition includes several clauses
relating to false, bigoted, and extremist views of Israel, including the
following:
Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, e.g., by claiming
that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor.
Applying double standards by requiring of it a behavior not expected or demanded
of any other democratic nation.
Using the symbols and images associated with classic antisemitism (e.g., claims
of Jews killing Jesus or blood libel) to characterize Israel or Israelis.
Drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.
Those are only a few examples of a fatal slip in the Western democracies, where
extreme ideologies on both the left and the right have come to invert the real
values of classic Western liberalism. The Palestinians and their supporters have
taken advantage of this; they seem to know that much of the media, a goodly
section of the political establishment, and people in Christian churches will
swallow their views on human rights to perpetuate a "victimhood" – not to solve
the problem but to perpetuate a modern assault on the Jewish people, whose
rights have never been fully recognized in either the Islamic world or the West.
Israel is not a perfect country -- no country is -- and no country is above
criticism when that criticism is just and based on fact. The United States is
not perfect and is the subject of daily criticism, especially from within. The
UK and Europe are not perfect either. All of that is normal if we bear in mind
that democracies are, by their very nature, subject to changes and shifts.
Freedom of speech is a central value in all genuine democracies, and now even
that is being dangerously eroded in the West.
For all this, autocracies and theocratic regimes fall even shorter when it comes
to human rights. The widespread inability to see the difference between
occasional lapses on the one hand -- with the democratic freedom to repair them
-- has served both to shelter ruthless dictatorships and to expose one of the
most decent countries to unending obloquy. A wake-up call is long overdue.
**Denis MacEoin PhD is a former lecturer in Arabic and Islamic Studies and the
author of numerous books and articles on those and related subjects. He is a
Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Gatestone Institute.
[1] For a thorough explanation, see Efraim Karsh, Palestine Betrayed, London,
2011.
[2] For a more detailed analysis, see here.
© 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.
Turkey Slams Proposed French Changes to Quran
Uzay Bulut/Gatestone Institute/May 15/2018
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12299/turkey-france-quran
"We must revolutionize our religion," — Egyptian President, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi,
December, 2014.
"A Muslim is to hate what Allah hates and love what Allah loves. Allah hates the
Kafir, therefore, a Muslim is to act accordingly." — Dr. Bill Warner, "Sharia
Law for Non-Muslims," a publication of the Center for the Study of Political
Islam.
"The point is not that these things are written in Islamic scripture, but that
people still live by them." — Bruce Bawer, author.
On April 21, the French daily Le Parisien published a "Manifesto against the new
anti-Semitism," written by Philippe Val, a co-founder and former director of the
satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo, the target of the 2015 terrorist attack that
left 12 employees dead.
The declaration -- signed by more than 250 prominent French intellectuals,
artists and politicians, among them former President Nicolas Sarkozy – calls on
Islamic theologians to remove the verses of the Quran that call for the killing
and punishment of Jews, Christians and Muslim non-believers.
The manifesto reads, in part:
"Anti-Semitism is not the business of the Jews. It's the business of all of us.
The French, who have demonstrated their democratic maturity after each Islamist
attack, are living through a tragic paradox. Their country has become the arena
for murderous anti-Semitism.
"We demand that the fight against this democratic failure that is anti-Semitism
becomes a national cause before it's too late. Before France is no longer
France.
"French Jews are 25 times more at risk of being attacked than their fellow
Muslim citizens. Ten percent of the Jewish citizens of the [Paris region],
meaning about 50,000 people, have recently had to change their residence because
they were no longer safe in certain neighborhoods and because their children
could no longer attend government schools. This involves quiet ethnic
cleansing."
During a parliamentary meeting of Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party
(AKP) on May 8, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan railed against the
manifesto and its signatories:
"An impertinent group appeared in France the other day and issued a declaration
asking for some verses to be removed from the Quran. It is so obvious that those
who say that have no idea what the Quran is, but have they ever read their own
book, the Bible? Or the Torah? Or Psalms? If they had read it, they would
probably want the Bible to be banned, as well. But they never have such a
problem. The more we warn Western countries about hostility to Islam, hostility
to Turks, xenophobia, and racism, the more we get a bad reputation. Hey, the
West! Look! ...who are you to attack our sacred [values]? We know how despicable
you are..."
The head of Turkey's main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), Kemal
Kılıçdaroğlu, went even further, accusing the manifesto's signatories of sharing
the views and practice of terrorists:
"What is outdated is not the Quran. What is outdated is you... Your attitude and
opinion is the opinion of al-Qaeda, al-Nusra and ISIS. You support them... If
you want to support ISIS and al Qaeda that terrorize [people] by using faiths,
continue with your rhetoric..."
Islam, Kılıçdaroğlu stated, is a "religion of peace."
Such claims on the part of Turkey's leadership are false. Islamic scriptures do
contain bigotry and even murderous hatred toward non-Muslims and "apostates" --
a fact that has already been addressed by honest Muslims, not only by the French
intelligentsia.
"We must revolutionize our religion," Egypt's president, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi
said in December 2014.
Unbelievers ("kafirs") are described in the Quran as "the vilest of animals" and
"losers," among other insulting epithets. Christians and Jews are "cursed" by
Allah and are destined for suffering in this life, and for an eternity of hell
in the next (Quran: 2:85). According to the Quran (40:35), Allah hates the kafir.
"Hatred for the sake of Allah and love for the sake of Allah is called Al Walaa
wa al Baraa, a fundamental principle of Islamic ethics and Sharia," writes Dr.
Bill Warner in "Sharia Law for Non-Muslims," a publication of the Center for the
Study of Political Islam. "A Muslim is to hate what Allah hates and love what
Allah loves. Allah hates the Kafir, therefore, a Muslim is to act accordingly."
According to the Quran, a kafir can be mocked (83:34), beheaded (47:4), plotted
against (86:15), and terrorized (8:12). A kafir is evil (23:97), disgraced
(37:18) and cursed (33:60). The Quran plainly orders Muslim believers not to
take unbelievers -- Christians, Jews or other non-Muslims -- as friends and
calls for Muslims to make war on the kafir (9:29). And there is no penalty for a
Muslim who kills a non-Muslim.
According to an analysis of the practice of "Killing non-Muslims and Slaves" on
the website "Islamic Virtues":
"It is clear that the majority of our scholars are in agreement that a Muslim
should not be killed for killing a non-Muslim, even if he is a dhimmi (a
protected non-Muslim living in the Muslim state). And nor should a free man be
killed for killing a slave.
"We should always remember that Allaah, the Most High, did not make Muslims
equal to non-Muslims, nor slaves equal to free men, as His divine laws make
perfectly clear."
Sharia law is equally harsh towards free-thinking Muslims. Islamic doctrine
threatens the death penalty for apostasy. According to both the Quran and the
hadith (a collection of Muhammed's sayings), those who leave Islam are to be
executed; there is no freedom of religion, and Islam may not be criticized.
Erdogan appears to hold with this tenet, as his assertion that there is "no
moderate Islam" and repeated crackdown on free speech suggest.
According to Hürriyet Daily News, the Turkish government's first official
response to the French manifesto was to ban new students from admission to the
French departments of Turkish universities "until further notice."
As has been pointed out by the author Bruce Bawer, "The point is not that these
things are written in Islamic scripture, but that people still live by them."
Rather than strengthen the stance of radical Muslims against the French
manifesto, Turkey's reaction serves to illustrate just how relevant and
necessary it is.
*Uzay Bulut is a journalist from Turkey and a Distinguished Senior Fellow at
Gatestone Instititue. She is currently based in Washington D.C.
© 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.
Iranian Reactions To The Strategic Change In The U.S.'s Iran Policy And To
Israel's Activity To Eliminate The Iranian Threat To It From Syria
By: A. Savyon and Yigal Carmon/MEMRI/May 15/18
Introduction
In his May 8, 2018 speech, U.S. President Donald Trump turned the tables on
Iran, on its European partners, and on supporters of the Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA)
worldwide, when he announced that the U.S. was withdrawing from the agreement.
Following this, Iran is now facing two fronts that coordinate with each other –
the political-economic front, led by the U.S., and the military front, led by
Israel, that aims to eliminate the Iranian threat to it from Syria.
Iranian Reactions To President Trump's Withdrawal From The JCPOA – The Political
Level
Despite the U.S.'s move, the Iranian regime does not want to leave the JCPOA –
for the same reasons it accepted it in the first place. The agreement gives Iran
nuclear-state status; it elevates it to the level of a global power; it obliges
the West to upgrade Iran's civilian nuclear program; and it protects the Iranian
regime from being attacked by the West. Therefore, the Iranian regime will
adhere to the agreement even if only Russia and China continue to support it.
The threats issued by Iran prior to Trump's announcement – i.e. that Iran would
also leave the agreement and would resume enriching uranium – have been replaced
with Iran's granting of extensions (that this week was extended from two weeks
to two months) for its demand that the European governments guarantee monetary
compensation for European companies that will be trading with Iran and that will
be subject to punitive measures against them on the part of the U.S. Such
monetary guarantees from Europe are impossible to obtain, and are not carried
out even today, when American sanctions on companies trading with Iran are
already in force because of Iran's human rights violations and support for
terrorism. Thus, there is no possibility that such guarantees will be given by
the governments of Europe after the U.S. has left the agreement.
Therefore, the Iranian regime's policy of negotiating with the Europeans,
Russia, and China should be seen only as an attempt to stall and to look for
formulas for Iran's submission, with regime spokesmen frequently issuing
ambiguous, general threats in order to gain some sort of diplomatic
achievement.[1]
This policy of Iranian President Rohani has won the full backing of Iranian
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who in a speech following the U.S. withdrawal from
the JCPOA did not announce that Iran was withdrawing from the JCPOA, as he had
stated in the past that he would if the U.S. did. Furthermore, he has given
President Rohani increasing room to maneuver in reaching new agreements with the
Europeans.[2] This was also Khamenei's modus operandi when the agreement was
accepted – he spoke against it at the same time as he approved it. Iran has no
real tools to deal with the U.S.'s withdrawal from the agreement, or with the
Europeans' anticipated withdrawal from it as well, which may happen because they
have no option.
This modus operandi, in which the Iranians act like a superpower against weak
rivals but rationally and submissively when facing a dangerous and powerful
rival ready to use economic or military force against them, has for years been
characteristic of the Iranian regime (see MEMRI reports analyzing this and
identifying Iran as a paper tiger: MEMRI Inquiry and Analysis No. 1150, Tehran
vs The Awakening Sunni Arab Camp: Significance And Implications, March 31, 2015,
and MEMRI Special Dispatch No. 6183, Iran Threatens Saudi Arabia: 'The IRGC...
Will Take Vengeance' On The Al-Sa'ud Regime; 'Our Responses Will Be... Harsh And
Decisive,' October 11, 2015).
Since Iran is rejecting any change to the JCPOA, particularly any discussion on
the subject of its missile program or its regional expansion in the Middle East,
and since the European countries – despite their opposition to the U.S.
withdrawal from the agreement – agree with the U.S. that there is a need to
include the Iranian missile program and regional expansion in any agreement with
it, it does not appear that the upcoming meetings between Iranian Foreign
Minister Javad Zarif and his French, German, and UK counterparts will yield any
breakthrough.
There has also been a shift in Iran's position concerning its nuclear program
and the resumption of its uranium enrichment in excess of the percentage
permitted it by the JCPOA. While prior to President Trump's announcement,
Iranian regime spokesmen had threatened to renew uranium enrichment, since the
announcement the regime has taken no steps aimed at doing so, or at resuming
activity in any other areas of its nuclear program.
Iranian Reactions To Israel's Military Activity To Eliminate The Iranian Threat
To It From Syria – The Military Level
At this time, Iran is not ready for a widescale confrontation with Israel, and
the steps it is taking in the hostilities are minimal. It has announced a policy
of restraint, and has responded in measured fashion, one time only, to the
serial Israeli attacks that caused Iranian loss of life and damage to Iranian
battle arrays in Syria.
As on previous occasions, Iran is for the time being refraining from publishing
any reports on the May 10, 2018 widescale Israeli attacks that struck as many as
50 Iranian targets in Syria. The Iranian media reports on the hail of Iranian
rockets on Israeli military targets in the Golan Heights depict this as an
operation carried out by the Syrian army, not by Iran, and in response to an
Israeli attack that preceded it.
Iran also is refraining, in its media, from presenting the Israeli attacks as a
direct Israel-Iran confrontation.
Will The Continuation Of Israel's Activity Against Iranian Forces In Syria Lead
To All-Out Israel-Iran War?
As far as Iran is concerned, any postponement of all-out confrontation with
Israel is preferable, because Iran has not yet completed all steps of its
deployment in the region, and U.S. forces still remain in Syria. But it should
be remembered that pressing ideological, geostrategic, and political factors are
at play here as well, and they are pushing it into such a confrontation with
Israel.
Europe should worry about its interests with us
Sawsan Al Shaer/Al Arabiya/May 15/18
The three European countries, Britain, France and Germany, are racing to
reassure Iran that they are committed to the nuclear agreement and to offer
guarantees that the deal will remain in place because, as they put it, it is
important for their “shared security.”
British Prime Minister Theresa May, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French
President Emmanuel Macron have announced that they agreed to resume implementing
their countries’ obligations as per the nuclear agreement with Iran.
According to the Russia Today, the three leaders said in a joint statement:
“France, Germany and UK voice their concern and regret of the US decision to
withdraw from the joint comprehensive plan of action (JCPOA) for settling the
Iranian nuclear program.”
The statement also emphasized their continued commitment to JCPOA as it remains
important for their “shared security.”
The British, German and French leaders also said that the world has become a
“safer place” as a result of JCPOA and called on the US avoid taking action that
might prevent other parties involved in the deal from implementing it.
Exaggerations
There are some exaggerations in the declared reasons, like the concern about
shared security, just like the case is with exaggerations pertaining to freedom
and human rights that determine European political positions. Iran is on top of
the list of countries that violate human rights, yet Europe overlooks all
reports that convict Iran of such violations, if, for example, the company Total
wants to make a deal!
Commercial deals with Tehran are on top of the priorities behind the decision to
join or withdraw from the nuclear agreement with Iran. These commercial
interests are thus prioritized over any other interest, whether it’s related to
security or to human rights. If they really care about their security, then they
must realize it’s actually threatened by Iran, even when they don’t do anything
and when they don’t link their commercial interests to that shared security. We
must, at least, make them worry about their commercial interests with us and
link them to their position from imposing sanctions on Iran!
If the nuclear agreement with Iran did not deter it from spreading terrorism and
chaos and from entering Arab lands and supplying militias with weapons and
ballistic missiles and if Iran does not trust Europe, then what is the point of
this deal?
Gulf countries, which were harmed by this nuclear deal, believe that the latter
allowed Iran to expand in our region, and it’s thus a must to find a way to
deter it and force it to return to its borders and to convince Europe that they
(Gulf states) also need guarantees for their security and stability.
Europe, which is stuck between two fires, does not know where to set its foot as
one day after the joint statement was issued, British ambassador to Kuwait
Michael Davenport asserted that the nuclear agreement with Iran is “a great
necessity” adding that it needs “to be amended and not cancelled.”
Davenport said on Thursday that the region needs stability and the deal with
Iran aimed to fulfill this goal, thus the British government believes that it is
necessary to remain committed to the agreement even though it does not resolve
all the problems related to Iran, adding it is important to keep the deal and
strengthen it with other issues despite the fact that this is not an easy
mission. He noted that without the agreement, things will not be better.
The envoy added that the British government’s position is clear regarding the
necessity to stop Iranian interferences in the internal affairs of the region’s
countries, such as Syria and Yemen.
As British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Boris Johnson has asked Trump
to provide alternatives to modify the agreement rather than canceling it to
ensure that there are no nuclear weapons, we must ask Johnson for alternatives –
other than words and statements – that can stop Iran’s interferences in Syria,
Lebanon, Iraq and Yemen!
Preserving our security
We too must be ready to abandon some of our commercial interests in exchange of
preserving our security and stability. We should declare that we are committed
to the sanctions that are going to be imposed on the European companies
cooperating with Iran, so that there will be a choice between favoring us or
Iran. This way, European companies that will keep dealing with Iran, will not
feel that our doors will remain open for them. Just like Iran is asking for
guarantees, we too must ask for guarantees.
Iran has actually announced that it is waiting for guarantees from Europe for
its trade deals.
Ali Khamenei bluntly said that he does not trust Europe at all, and said while
addressing Iranian officials: “You should not trust them (France, Britain, and
Germany).”
“If you really want to make an agreement, then we should have practical
guarantees or else they will all do like the US did. If you can get guarantees
this would be good, but I actually think this is unlikely. If you can’t get a
definite guarantee, then the nuclear deal cannot be continued,” he added.
Meanwhile, Rouhani gave orders to the Atomic Energy Organization to prepare for
the next steps, if necessary, to begin industrial enrichment without
restriction.
The commander of the IRGC said that European countries cannot be trusted because
they are followers and not independent.
Tehran said it is too early to voice an opinion regarding the European
companies’ contracts in Iran such as those of Total and Renault, considering the
six-month deadline which the US president talked about.
If the nuclear agreement with Iran did not deter it from spreading terrorism and
chaos and from entering Arab lands and supplying militias with weapons and
ballistic missiles and if Iran does not trust Europe, then what is the point of
this deal?
Collapse of mullahs’ state to bring down political
Islamization
Mohammed Al Shaikh/Al Arabiya/May 15/18
President Trump’s withdrawal from Obama’s nuclear agreement with Iran did not
come as a surprise. On the contrary, it would have been surprising if he had
allowed the agreement to be extended and did not withdraw.
President Trump is a man who does not believe in half-measures. If he says he
will do something, he does it, and this approach is evident in a lot of his
decisions.
Beginning of the end
The question now is what will the reaction of Tehran, which preoccupied the
world with its loud claims of courage that are nothing but a verbal war directed
towards its citizens who suffer from catastrophic social deterioration, poverty
and sickness, be? The regime has choked Iranian citizens ever since Khomeini
took over power in the latter half of the last century.
I assert that on this historical day, May 10, 2018, the countdown has begun, not
just for the collapse of the Vilayat-e-Faqih regime in Iran, but also for the
collapse of political Islamization, both in its Shiite and Sunni manifestation,
which has been instrumental in spreading terrorism in the region and the world.
Iran has nothing but non-Iranian Shiite militias, which it hires to fight on its
behalf. Its end goal is to establish the Persian Empire on the lines of the
Shiite Safavids, as was the case with the empires and kingdoms of the Middle
Ages.
I have been certain – and I have mentioned this is previous articles – that any
theocratic state cannot conform to the conditions of state in the modern times
and that the fate of Vilayat al-Faqih state in Iran will collapse and then
vanish. I believe that we are now witnessing the beginning of its inevitable
end.
I wish from the bottom of my heart that the consequences of the fallout phase do
not last for long and that it happens without bloodshed, unlike what had
happened with similar regimes when they collapsed.
I have been certain that any theocratic state cannot conform to the conditions
of state in modern times and that the fate of Vilayat al-Faqih state in Iran
will collapse and then vanish
The blunder of supporting Assad
I believe that Iran has committed several blunders — the most important one that
would be the most important reason for entering the phase of collapse has been
its unplanned interference in Syria to rescue Assad.
The Israelis felt that the Iranians’ presence at their borders with Syria is a
threat, which they cannot tolerate no matter what the consequences are. It is
known that Israel’s security — as they call it — is a ‘red line.’
The Israelis will thus never allow the Iranians to violate or harm it. The
Persian mullahs’ arrogance, however, made them imagine they are an invincible
power and that they’ve occupied four Arab capitals and are thus closer to
achieving the dream of a Safavid Persian Empire.
However, Syria has been their graveyard as their militias and Revolutionary
Guards leaders have been bombed and killed by Israeli strikes. They are left
with no option but to yield and give up. If they dare take any military
reprisal, the consequences will be dire in every sense of the word.
harmful theocratic state
Trump has re-imposed the economic boycott, not only on the theocratic state but
on anyone who deals or supports the Vilayat-e-Faqih state, which has raised a
lot of questions about the fate of this harmful theocratic state. This storm
might soon spread fire and burn everything down.
All that is needed is a spark and their state will vanish. This might happen
quickly or may take some time; however, the indicators of the inevitable fall,
which I mentioned in my previous articles, had begun to loom in the horizon. The
moment will come when all it would take is a single matchstick.
Khomeini’s politicized revolution encouraged many Sunni opportunists to
replicate a Sunni version of this experience. The failure of their role model,
however, would be a failure of all the spin-offs of this experience.
The Hodeida Campaign (Part 1): Humanitarian and
Political Role of Red Sea Ports
Michael Knights/The Washington Institute/May 15/18
Hodeida and al-Salif will process substantially more food imports after the
Houthis are evicted, so the United States should back some form of
demilitarization of the ports or help liberate them.
This PolicyWatch is the first in a three-part series on the Red Sea campaign
between the Gulf-coalition-backed Yemeni military and Houthi forces, focused on
humanitarian, operational, and escalatory risks. Part 2 looks at the operational
challenges facing the two sides around Hodeida. Part 3 will examine the Houthis'
options for broadening the war if their sea access is threatened.
On May 1, the Permanent Representative of Yemen to the United Nations, Khaled
Hussein Alyemany, called on the United Nations to seek the handover of the
Hodeida port to international supervision. The call came as Yemeni armed forces
began new offensive operations to advance 140 km to Hodeida from the north, with
Saudi Arabian assistance, and 100 km from the south, with United Arab Emirates
support.
CAUSES OF YEMEN'S HUMANITARIAN CRISIS
The parts of Yemen held by the Houthi rebels—also the country's most populous
area—are gripped by a severe humanitarian crisis. Even before the war began in
2015, Yemen was on the brink of a humanitarian meltdown, but an analysis of 2017
World Food Programme (WFP) statistics suggests the war has more than doubled the
number of food-insecure Yemenis to 17.8 million (64% of the population vs. 31.5%
in 2010), including 7 million (25.1% vs. 11.8% in 2010) who are assessed to be
severely food insecure.
Key reasons for the crisis include the collapse of the government payroll inside
Houthi-held areas since 2015; Houthi taxation of food entering its areas, as
documented by the UN Panel of Experts; and a shortfall of food reaching Yemen
via Hodeida, the port closest to the Houthi areas. (As recently as May 2016,
Hodeida imported 543,782 metric tons [MT] per month, and in Q1 2018 the monthly
average was just 151,917 MT). As a battle for Hodeida looms, the key question
for U.S. policymakers is whether the port's liberation will make the
humanitarian situation better or worse.
In an effort to improve data-led understanding of this issue, the author
undertook a survey of Gulf coalition, U.S., and British government as well as
NGO metrics on imports via Houthi-held ports, government-held ports,
government-held land borders, and airports. The coverage period focused on the
first quarter of 2018, including detailed records of 428 vessels unloaded at six
ports (Hodeida, Aden, al-Mukalla, al-Salif, Nishtun, and al-Shihr); land border
inflows via al-Wadiah and al-Khadra (on the Saudi border) and Shahan and Serfit
(on the Omani border); plus aerial deliveries via Marib.
HODEIDA STILL CRITICAL
Food and fuel deliveries to Yemen rely almost entirely on seaports. The Gulf
coalition's Yemen Comprehensive Humanitarian Operation (YCHO) Support Center
data seen by the author suggests that 4,757,797 MT were delivered to Yemen in Q1
2018, but only 158,870 MT (3.3%) came in through land crossings and a negligible
292 MT entered via the civilian air bridge to Marib. (Ship manifests describing
the metric tonnage of inbound ships are often erroneous, in part because a
fraction of food is diverted through corruption before it reaches Yemen.
However, assuming such loss is roughly equivalent across ships heading to all
ports, the proportional balance between the ports should still be meaningful.)
The breakdown of food imports by sea provided by the YCHO underlines the
critical role of the Houthi-held ports.
Houthi ports. Yemen's first deepwater port, Hodeida remains a critical entry
point for food, receiving 455,751 MT in Q1 2018. Al-Salif, the other Houthi-held
port, brought in an additional 182,403 MT in Q1 2018. Combined, the YCHO says
the Houthi ports unloaded 638,154 MT of food during the quarter. As a benchmark,
UN Verification and Inspection Mechanism for Yemen (UNVIM) statistics say that
672,555 MT of food were landed from ships that "discharged and sailed" at
Hodeida and al-Salif, a higher but roughly comparable figure.
Government-held ports. Only two government-held ports bring in considerable
amounts of food: Aden (255,626 MT in Q1 2018) and al-Mukalla (68,310 MT).
Combined, these welcomed 323,936 MT during the quarter, amounting to just 50.7%
of the food imports delivered via Houthi-held ports. Overland import of food by
truck via government-held areas brought in an additional 107,782 MT in the first
quarter, including 72,738 MT through the Saudi border crossing at al-Wadiah.
What this all means is that the YCHO is not yet, as billed, a viable way to
replace Hodeida and al-Salif as a food-import hub. If anything, the
strengthening of government-held ports has benefited fuel imports (751,173 MT in
Q1 2018 vs. 540,964 MT unloaded at Houthi ports) and especially consumer goods
(1,377,501 MT in Q1 2018, according to YCHO, an order of magnitude higher than
the 9,474 MT imported at Houthi-held ports).
BENEFITS OF LIBERATING HODEIDA
At present, therefore, no real prospect exists for replacing food inflows from
Hodeida and al-Salif: other ports like Aden are too distant from Houthi-held
population centers, are importing too little food owing to corruption and
inefficiency, and are themselves vulnerable to local instability. When Red Sea
ports were temporarily closed in November 2017, the WFP recorded a sharp 10%
rise in food prices in December and a subsequent 6% rise the following month due
to price gouging and hoarding, even though the ports were quickly reopened to
shipping. The local food supply in Hodeida itself, a densely populated city that
probably tops 700,000, might fail disastrously during a battle.
However, inaction at Hodeida carries steep costs. As long as the port is under
Houthi control, food merchants and shippers will not return because they fear
onerous paperwork, slow turnarounds, war risks, and Houthi taxes. If liberated,
the port's capacity could quickly be expanded, especially if the liberation is
achieved quickly and carefully. People in government-controlled areas are better
off than people in Houthi-controlled areas precisely because they are
reconnected to functioning ports and, partially, to the government payroll
system. Thus, the people in Hodeida would benefit from being liberated. They
also want to be liberated because the Houthis are not local to their area,
whereas advancing Yemeni forces include large numbers of Red Sea troops.
Finally, the Yemeni government and Gulf coalition are more likely to engage in
good-faith peace talks if they do not fear a Houthi ministate connected to Iran
by sea.
U.S. POLICY ON HODEIDA AND OTHER PORTS
As well as reducing the likelihood of famine, the United States must focus on
ending the war in Yemen, which is a costly and damaging distraction for U.S.
allies in the Gulf. But neither the Yemen-Saudi-UAE alliance nor the Houthis are
likely to abandon their intensifying competition over the ports. The war is
inexorably creeping closer to Hodeida every day. Washington has three options.
Option 1: Freeze Red Sea military movements but offer no solution. The worst
option would be for the United States to continue its behind-the-scenes
opposition to a decisive UAE-led military operation to liberate Hodeida and the
Red Sea coast, while at the same time offering no alternative. This option may
appeal to some because it incurs no direct U.S. costs or obligations, but it is
only likely to prolong the war and humanitarian suffering. Shippers and
merchants will continue to avoid Hodeida until the port's future is resolved.
The Gulf coalition will creep toward the ports, as is occurring now, because it
probably cannot support any peace deal in Yemen that leaves the Houthis as a
proto-Hezbollah entity with direct maritime access to Iran, and because an
offshore inspection regime for shipping has proved unworkable. This "circling
the drain" option has essentially been U.S. policy for much of the last two
years, and it has only served to prevent Hodeida from reemerging as Yemen's
strongest food-import hub. Until the Houthis are removed from Hodeida, where
they extort and mismanage the port, it will never come back online at the
necessary capacity to feed northern Yemen.
Option 2: Demilitarize the Houthi Red Sea ports. The best-case scenario might be
demilitarized Red Sea ports under the control of international agencies and
local Yemenis—the so-called Hodeida initiative, which Yemen once again raised on
May 1. If Hodeida were demilitarized, a range of positive steps could be
attempted. Damage to the port might be avoided entirely; the Gulf coalition
could issue long-term guidance to shipping operators and food merchants
indicating that the port would remain open; insurance costs might decline if the
port's security were underwritten by international actors; and the port might
quickly return to prior import levels—which frequently topped 1.6 million MT per
quarter, according to UNVIM. As long as al-Salif is included, the Gulf coalition
will probably be willing to consider this outcome, because it will allow
more-effective and less-controversial onshore inspections of cargoes, greatly
reducing coalition fears of Iranian missile resupply through the port. The
United States could signal to the international community that this is probably
the last chance to avoid military operations to liberate the port and that
Washington will not be able to dissuade Yemen and the Gulf coalition from
launching a decisive operation absent immediate diplomatic progress on Hodeida.
Option 3: Support rapid liberation of the ports. If the international community
fails to embrace the Hodeida initiative, this summer will witness intensified
military operations near Hodeida and al-Salif. In light of such a development,
U.S. interests will arguably shift: the fighting must be as short, clean, and
decisive as possible. "Scorched earth" sabotage tactics and collateral damage
must be kept to an absolute minimum (as will be discussed in Part 2 of this
series). If a battle is launched for Hodeida, the United States might view the
liberation of the port as the best way to save lives in Yemen by shortening the
war and processing more goods because of the greater efficiencies of inspecting
cargo on shore. Drawing on defensive authorities to protect Gulf allies and
global sea-lanes, the U.S. support could be limited to passive measures such as
the detection of Houthi missile launches plus Houthi naval mines and
antishipping attacks on the Red Sea coast. Support from multinational naval
escorts and merchant ships that carry inbuilt cranes could quickly turn Hodeida
back into a functioning container port. In return for its strong backing,
Washington should extract ironclad "prenuptial" guarantees from Saudi Arabia and
the UAE that upon the liberation of Hodeida and al-Salif, the Gulf coalition
would support an immediate ceasefire with the now-landlocked Houthis and lend
support to the UN mediation process.
Michael Knights, a senior fellow at The Washington Institute, recently returned
from a visit to Yemen and the Gulf coalition states, where he received detailed
data on Yemeni food, fuel, and other imports.