Detailed
Lebanese & Lebanese Related LCCC English New Bulletin For November 12/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
To Read The Detailed English
News Bulletin For November 12/2018 Click on the Link below
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/newselias18/english.november12.18.htm
News Bulletin Achieves Since
2006/Click on
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Click Here to enter the LCCC Arabic/English news bulletins Achieves since 2006
Bible
Quotations
Come
now, you rich people, weep and wail for the miseries that are coming to you
Letter of James 05/01-06: "Come now, you rich people, weep and wail for the
miseries that are coming to you. Your riches have rotted, and your clothes
are moth-eaten. Your gold and silver have rusted, and their rust will be
evidence against you, and it will eat your flesh like fire. You have laid up
treasure for the last days. Listen! The wages of the labourers who mowed
your fields, which you kept back by fraud, cry out, and the cries of the
harvesters have reached the ears of the Lord of hosts. You have lived on the
earth in luxury and in pleasure; you have fattened your hearts on a day of
slaughter. You have condemned and murdered the righteous one, who does not
resist you.
نشرات اخبار عربية وانكليزية مطولة ومفصلة يومية على موقعنا الألكتروني على
الرابط التالي
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/
Daily Lebanese/Arabic - English news bulletins on our LCCC web site.Click on
the link below
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Titles For The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials
from miscellaneous sources published on November 11-12/18
Mount Lebanon's resistance during WWI/Dr. Walid Phares/Face Book/November
10/18
Dr. Walid Phares Urges Middle Eastern Americans to Run for Office in
2020/November 10/18
Hezbollah, Iran using card of Lebanese government formation/Mohamed Kawas/The
Arab Weekly/November 11/18
Deputy commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC): Any war
Zionists start will lead to them being erased/Jerusalem Post/November 11/18
Israel Kills Hamas Military Commander in Gaza, Palestinian Officials Say/Haartz/November
11/18/
Facebook’s Nostalgic Mood Isn’t Helping/Shira Ovide/Bloomberg/November,
11/18
German Conservatives Face Off Over Their Party’s Soul/Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg/November,
11/18
Iranian human rights violations show up Rouhani’s empty /Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab
News/November 11/18
Assad's statue stunt betrays regime's skewed priorities/Mohamed Chebaro/Arab
News/November 11/18
A Bloodbath for Christians, No Response from Egypt/Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone
Institute/November 11/18
A disastrous scenario stares Tehran in the face/Nadim Koteich/Al Arabiya/November
11/18
The art of arranging hostilities/Abdullah bin Bijad Al-Otaibi/Al Arabiya/November
11/18
Titles For The Latest
LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
November 11-12/18
Mount Lebanon's resistance during WWI
Dr. Walid Phares Urges Middle Eastern Americans to Run for Office in 2020
Maronite Patriarch Calls on Politicians to Discuss 'Morbid' Situation in
Lebanon
Nasrallah Insists on March 8 Sunnis’ Representation in New Government
Netanyahu to Reportedly Ask Macron to Press Lebanon on Hizbullah
Hariri to Hold Beirut Press Conference on Govt. Formation Developments
Alain Aoun: Hizbullah 'Can Scare', Nasrallah Remarks Indicate Solution Not
Impossible
Hezbollah, Iran using card of Lebanese government formation
Titles For The Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on November 11-12/18
World Leaders Mark 100 Years since WWI Armistice in Paris
Rouhani: US Sanctions Have No Impact on Our Economy
Deputy commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC): Any war
Zionists start will lead to them being erased
Iran Upholds Prison Term for Official Convicted of Spying
Reports suggest Iran executes 22 people in Ahwaz
Trump assures Macron that Saudi Arabia is the cornerstone of stability in
the Middle East
US Grants Iraq 45-Day Waiver Over Iran Sanctions to Purchase Natural Gas,
Electricity
Palestinian Authority Slams Qatar for Encouraging Gaza Separatist Agenda
Netanyahu Says Unaware of Corruption Linked to Submarine Deal
Netanyahu defends Qatari cash infusion to Gaza
Hamas commander killed in Gaza, say Palestinian officials
Israel Kills Hamas Military Commander in Gaza, Palestinian Officials Say
Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham Kills 8 Regime Troops in Hama, Syria
Turkish air strike ‘neutralizes’ 14 Kurdish militants in Iraq
Egypt, Bahrain firm on list of 13 demands to end Qatar crisis
Egypt puts key members of ‘al-Jama’a al-Islamiyya’ on terror list
Clashes Reach Residential Streets in Yemen's Hodeida
The Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
November 11-12/18
Mount Lebanon's
resistance during WWI
Dr. Walid Phares/Face Book/November 10/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/68848/%d9%81%d9%8a%d8%af%d9%8a%d9%88-%d8%b9%d9%86-%d9%85%d8%ac%d8%a7%d8%b9%d8%a9-%d8%a3%d9%87%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%8a-%d8%ac%d8%a8%d9%84-%d9%84%d8%a8%d9%86%d8%a7%d9%86-%d9%81%d9%8a-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%ad%d8%b1%d8%a8/
100 years ago...
Often history books ignore the participation of the people of Mount Lebanon,
the so-called Mutasarrifiah, in World War II. According to Paul Noujaim, the
"minister of foreign affairs" of the Petit Liban, as he wrote and as related
by Fuad Afram Boustani, the autonomous Lebanese mountain was preparing to
move to full independence from the Ottoman Empire, and declare Baabda as its
capital. Secret talks were underway with France one of the guarantors of the
autonomy. Suddenly the explosion of the Great War and Turkey's siding with
the central powers against the allies, destroyed the project. Ottoman forces
invaded Mount Lebanon and a famine was organized, killing almost one third
of its population. Almost one third emigrated. Moreover the Ottomans
persecuted the political activists across the Petit Liban, as well as in
Beirut and other districts outside the Mutasarrifiah. Lebanese have been
celebrating "the martyrs" in May of each year. Though never explaining what
really happened. What was not revealed also, was the existence of a
"Lebanese resistance" in Mount Lebanon between 1914 and 1918, many members
of were former gendarmes from the autonomous Lebanese force under Baabda's
council.
Mount Lebanon's contribution in that Great War was through its political
activists, tortured and murdered by the occupiers, tens of thousands of
civilians who died because of famine and lack of medical attention, and the
patriots who resisted, the memory of some of whom is visible in portraits
hanging on the walls of old houses from Jezzine to Ehden
Let the next Lebanon tell their story to this and future generations
Dr. Walid Phares Urges
Middle Eastern Americans to Run for Office in 2020
د.وليد فارس يحث الأميركيين الشرق أوسطيين الترشح للإنتخابات الأميركية في
العام الفين وعشرين
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/68827/dr-walid-phares-urges-middle-eastern-americans-to-run-for-office-in-2020-%d8%af-%d9%88%d9%84%d9%8a%d8%af-%d9%81%d8%a7%d8%b1%d8%b3-%d9%8a%d8%ad%d8%ab-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a3%d9%85%d9%8a%d8%b1%d9%83%d9%8a/
WASHINGTON, DC, USA, November 10, 2018 /EINPresswire.com/
-- Dr. Walid Phares, senior advisor to the American Mideast Coalition for
Democracy is urging Americans with strong ties to persecuted communities
overseas to run for Congress in 2020. AMCD seeks to provide support for
Yazidis, Assyrians, Syriacs, Chaldeans, Darfuris, Copts, Bahais, Ahmadis and
Sufis who have come to America fleeing persecution in their homelands.
Phares, who helped launch a large coalition of moderate Middle East and Arab
Muslim NGOs during his tenure as a foreign policy advisor for the Trump
campaign in 2016, said, “We also strongly encourage Americans from Egyptian,
Iranian, Lebanese, Syrian, Iraqi and Turkish descent, and who support
democracy and human rights, to consider running in the next congressional
elections in 2020 and 2022, in order to better represent these communities
on the Hill.”
“Both Republicans and Democrats should reach out to these overlooked
communities,” continued Dr. Phares. “Men and women who have actually
experienced ethnic or religious persecution are among the most grateful new
citizens. These people know what it is like to live in unfree societies and
will be zealous in their guardianship of liberty.”“Sometimes Americans take
their freedom for granted,” added AMCD co-Chair Tom Harb, “and they don’t
realize how fragile that freedom really is. We are hopeful that fielding
candidates who know first-hand what it is like to live without basic
freedoms will benefit all Americans because these people know how precious
freedom really is and how easily it can be lost.”AMCD calls its members to
consider running for Congress and all other elected offices. The
organization will provide support for them in the next election cycle.
Rebecca Bynum
American Mideast Coalition for Democracy
+1 615-775-6801
Maronite Patriarch Calls on Politicians to Discuss 'Morbid' Situation in
Lebanon
Kataeb.org/Sunday 11th November 2018, 11/Maronite Patriarch Bechara al-Rahi
on Sunday urged politicians to gather in the Parliament and to "positively"
and "responsibly" discuss the "morbid" situation that the nation is going
through on the political, economic, social and developmental levels. “We
hope that they scrutinize files and seek to find solutions with a sense of
responsibility and impartiality. We hope that they would get ready to mark,
in the most apposite way, the first centennial of the establishment of the
State of Greater Lebanon,” Rahi underlined in his Sunday sermon.
Nasrallah Insists on March 8 Sunnis’ Representation in New Government
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 11 November, 2018/Lebanon’s President
Michel Aoun said he would spare no effort to resolve the current nodes
hampering the formation of the new government. In parallel, "Hezbollah"
Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah insisted on the representation of the
Sunnis of March 8 bloc in the cabinet, few hours after meeting with
caretaker Foreign Affairs Minister Gebran Bassil. In a televised speech on
Saturday, Nasrallah said Hezbollah had informed the concerned parties that
it would not accept a government that did not represent the “independent
Sunni deputies.”He stressed that his party was not against the Free
Patriotic Movement (FPM) having “more than the vetoing third, because we are
allies.” “We were sincere when we spoke of a national unity government.
There is no national logic, or moral logic, or legal logic ... for anyone in
Lebanon to come out and say ‘it is forbidden for the Sunnis of March 8 to be
represented in the Lebanese government,” Nasrallah said. “If it is
forbidden, come let’s talk again from the start,” he added. Saturday’s
meeting between Nasrallah and Bassil focused on the formation of the
government and the means to resolve the nodes impeding the birth of the new
cabinet. Informed sources described the meeting as “good”, pointing out that
there was an exchange of ideas for a solution, awaiting the return of Prime
Minister-designate Saad al-Hariri to Beirut. Meanwhile, Aoun told his
visitors on Saturday that he would exert all possible efforts to overcome
obstacles hampering government’s formation. The president said that he would
spare no effort to “solve the complexities that stand in the way of the
formation of the new cabinet.” “It takes the courage and patience to reach a
happy end, but we will definitely find the solution because waiting is a
waste of time,” he affirmed.
Netanyahu to Reportedly Ask Macron to Press Lebanon on Hizbullah
Naharnet/November 11/18/Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has
traveled to France and is likely to ask Paris to intensify pressure on
Lebanon regarding “the precision missile factories that Iran has built on
its soil,” Israeli media reports said. According to the reports, Netanyahu
will meet French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday on the sidelines of the
ceremonies marking 100 years since the end of World War One.
The reports said Netanyahu had considered canceling his trip to France but
eventually decided not to call it off. Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan
Nasrallah warned Israel Saturday against any attack or strike on Lebanon.
President Michel Aoun and caretaker Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil have
denied Israeli accusations that Hizbullah has set up secret missile
facilities near Beirut's airport. On September 27, Netanyahu said in an
address to the U.N. General Assembly that Hizbullah had secret missile
conversion sites there. The Israeli PM showed satellite imagery pinpointing
three alleged sites and accused Hizbullah of using civilians as human
shields. Nasrallah for his part has announced that Hizbullah has already
acquired "precision missiles." Israel has fought several conflicts against
Hizbullah, the last in 2006. The Israeli military believes Hizbullah has
between 100,000 and 120,000 short-range missiles and rockets, as well as
several hundred longer-range missiles.
Hariri to Hold Beirut Press Conference on Govt.
Formation Developments
Naharnet/November 11/18/Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri has decided to
return to Lebanon and voice a stance on the current standoff in the cabinet
formation process, his office said. A statement issued by the office said
Hariri will hold a press conference Tuesday at 1:30 pm at the Center House
to discuss “the developments in the cabinet formation process.”Hariri
traveled to Paris on November 1 and his long stay there is believed to be in
protest at Hizbullah's insistence on representing a grouping of six Sunni
MPs in the new government.
The PM-designate had reportedly said that he prefers to step down rather
than give those MPs a seat from his own share. Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan
Nasrallah threw his support behind the Sunni group on Saturday, insisting
that they should be represented in the government.
“Sectarian incitement will not benefit you and the solution to the Sunni
obstacle lies with you,” Nasrallah said, addressing Hariri. “The decision
belongs to the Sunni MPs and we will accept what they accept,” Nasrallah,
whose party has refrained from providing Hariri with the names of its Shiite
ministers, added.
Alain Aoun: Hizbullah 'Can Scare', Nasrallah Remarks
Indicate Solution Not Impossible
Naharnet/November 11/18/MP Alain Aoun of the Strong Lebanon
bloc noted Sunday that Hizbullah has the ability to “scare” others, as he
said that Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah's remarks on Saturday
indicated that a solution to the so-called Sunni obstacle is not impossible.
“The voice of the independent Sunnis should have been louder from the
beginning and they should not have waited for five months. One of the
weaknesses of the independent Sunni grouping is that they did not go as one
bloc to the (binding parliamentary) consultations (to name the
PM-designate),” Aoun said in an interview with al-Jadeed TV. And warning
that “due to the clash over the independent Sunni MPs the settlement between
al-Mustaqbal Movement and Hizbullah has been dealt a blow,” the lawmaker
said the Free Patriotic Movement and President Michel Aoun will play a
“rescue role.” “We are stuck between PM-designate Saad Hariri's stance and
the remarks Sayyed Nasrallah voiced yesterday. This obstacle has been
approached with very sharp-toned stances and now there is a need to address
it through giving each their right,” Aoun added, stressing that no party
should feel “defeated.”He added: “There is Sunni representation outside of
al-Mustaqbal and the electoral law reflected this. There are also four other
MPs who don't belong to al-Mustaqbal and not only the six MPs have the right
to be represented in the government.”“Hizbullah can 'scare' and Sayyed
Nasrallah re-acknowledged his allies yesterday and his speech indicated that
a solution is not impossible and he is calling for respecting these
parties,” Aoun went on to say.
Hezbollah, Iran using card of Lebanese government formation
Mohamed Kawas/The Arab Weekly/November 11/18
The United States has dealt with Hezbollah issue in Lebanon with
unprecedented swiftness and enthusiasm. US Ambassador to Lebanon Elizabeth
Holzhall Richard had already warned Beirut of the negative consequences of
allocating the Lebanese Ministry of Health to Hezbollah, saying US financial
protocols supporting the ministry and its programmes would be affected. US
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Levant Affairs and Special Envoy for
Syria Joel Rayburn visited Beirut and informed the Lebanese political,
military and economic authorities of Washington’s plans for the region,
especially those related to Iranian presence in the region and Hezbollah in
Lebanon. The rivalry between Washington and Hezbollah has remained within
the context of the basic parameters of the United States’ relationship with
Iran and its proxies.
Hezbollah remains confident that yesterday’s basic rules of coexistence that
prevented major clashes with the United States even after the kidnapping of
US hostages and the bombing of US Marines’ barracks would apply today
despite the changes in the region and even if US President Donald Trump does
not share his predecessors’ dogmas and proclivities.
Hezbollah seems to have decided that the current context no longer favours
setting up a Lebanese government that it can just infiltrate. The pressure
on Iran and its network of international, regional and local proxies
requires the immediate and unambiguous control of the Lebanese government.
Relying on its ally, Lebanese President Michel Aoun, and his movement simply
will not do anymore. The Shia party must get involved directly and heavily
in the new Lebanese government. It’s through this perspective that one can
understand Hezbollah’s keenness on showing its “loyalty” to its Sunni allies
and its insistence that they be represented in the government.
Hezbollah, however, considers the “independent Sunnis” to be merely
instruments of the Syrian guardianship over Lebanon. It is also true that
those “patriots” have benefited greatly from their loyalty to Damascus. They
enjoyed high positions and privileges. Hezbollah never admitted and doesn’t
want to admit that these people have other reasons for joining the Hezbollah
camp besides the former patronage of Damascus and the subsequent patronage
of Iran and Hezbollah later. If they chose to be with Hezbollah in the March
8 alliance, it was because they had no other alternative available to them
to protect themselves from the anger that gripped the country after the
assassination of Sunni leader Rafik Hariri.
By contrast to Hezbollah’s deftness in constructing arguments, it seems the
constants of the memorandum of understanding between it and Aoun’s Free
Patriotic Movement were subjected to an experience not previously witnessed
by their alliance. Aoun was surprised by Hezbollah’s unexpected obstruction
of the formation of the new government but this aspect of Hezbollah’s
behaviour is a fact of life that the Lebanese presidency had to get used to
and even, on previous occasions, reinterpret and reformulate for the benefit
of the party in accordance with its wishes. However, Aoun’s position on this
issue this time, and which weighed on the side of the Prime
Minister-designate Saad Hariri, was a surprise to Hezbollah and was
considered a precedent in the nature of the relationship between the party
and Aoun in the first place, and the party and Aoun’s son in-law Gebran
Bassil in the second place. Considering this development, it seems the
presidency was acting with new facts.
Aoun says that, due to external reasons related to Iran’s whims, Hezbollah
is obstructing the birth of the government. The party’s silence about the
Christian and Druze knots complicating the formation of the government that
have been making headlines is more indicative of Hezbollah’s satisfaction
with having other parties hamper the birth of a government it does not
desire in the first place, rather than of any desire to facilitate the
process. What is even more ironic is that Aoun has felt that the “loyalty”
or “gratitude” manoeuvre by Hezbollah does not target Saad Hariri but
intends to drown the government with Hezbollah’s cronies and to prevent Aoun
from securing a majority in the government, who had seemed to swing in
favour of the presidency in the finer details of the negotiations. However,
the Aoun-Bassil duo, which was cautioned by the United States not to have a
government with Hezbollah in charge of the Ministry of Health, was also
warned by the Americans and the international community against turning
Lebanon into a “Hezbollah state.”It seems that Aoun, who had lent his full
support to Hezbollah’s “resistance” ideology and its weapons and had
defended the group left and right in international forums, allowed himself
this time to expand the boundaries of his interests, even if that meant
contradicting, however circumstantially, Hezbollah’s interests and its
agendas.
Bassil rushed to instruct members and supporters of the Free Patriotic
Movement to stop debating Hezbollah on social media. Hezbollah was taken
aback by Aoun’s turn-about and did not know how to respond without clashing
with him. These aspects are indicative of a crisis in the management of the
presidency-Hezbollah alliance. Hezbollah will not let go of the Lebanese
government. Hariri, the Christian leader Samir Geagea and the Druze leader
Walid Jumblatt received specific messages from abroad prompting them to
accept whatever is available to facilitate the birth of the new government.
While the international community was clamouring for this birth, Iran wants
to delay it during the US sanctions against it. Iran wants to hold on to
formation of a government in Lebanon as a trump card for the next round of
negotiations.
*Mohamed Kawas is a Lebanese writer.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News
published
on November 11-12/18
World Leaders Mark 100
Years since WWI Armistice in Paris
Naharnet/Agence
France Presse/November 11/18/World leaders gathered in the driving rain in
Paris on Sunday to mark 100 years since the end of World War I, with host
Emmanuel Macron warning against nationalism at a time of growing strain
between Europe and Donald Trump's America. Around 70 leaders including US
President Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin marked the
centenary of the 1918 Armistice in the French capital at 11am local time
(1000 GMT). After church bells rang out across France, the leaders sat
together at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the Arc de Triomphe for a
memorial that included a performance by star cellist Yo-Yo Ma and the
reading aloud of letters by WWI soldiers. Macron delivered a 20-minute
speech that called on his fellow leaders not to forget the lessons of the
past and worldwide hopes for peace. "Ruining this hope with a fascination
for isolation, violence or domination would be a mistake for which future
generations would rightly find us responsible," Macron told them. He also
delivered a stinging indictment of nationalism, calling it "the exact
opposite" of the patriotism shown by soldiers. "Nationalism is a betrayal,"
he said.
"By saying our interests come first and others don't matter we are erasing
what makes a nation precious, what makes it live, what makes it great and
most importantly of all, its moral values," he said, watched by Trump, who
prides himself on being called a nationalist. The service concluded with the
bugle call that was played at 11am on November 11, 1918 to signal the end of
fighting on the Western Front. Elsewhere, ceremonies in New Zealand,
Australia, India, Hong Kong and Myanmar began a day of remembrance services
around the world for a conflict that involved millions of troops from
colonized countries in Asia and Africa. The leaders of Commonwealth nations
-- whose forces were deployed under British command 100 years ago -- also
delivered messages of peace. "This was a war in which India was not directly
involved yet our soldiers fought world over, just for the cause of peace,"
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Twitter. "For our tomorrows,
they gave their today," Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison told people
gathered at a ceremony in Canberra. British Prime Minister Theresa May and
Prince Charles, standing in for Queen Elizabeth, attended a separate
remembrance event in London where thousands of well-wishers also paid their
respects to fallen soldiers.
'A world of rules'
In Paris, German Chancellor Angela Merkel was due to give the opening
address alongside U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres at a peace
conference following the memorial service on the Champs-Elysees. The Paris
Peace Forum, conceived by Macron, is intended to highlight the importance of
international institutions in helping resolve conflicts, avert wars and
spread prosperity. "The aim of the forum is to show that there are lots of
forces in the international system -- states, NGOs, foundations,
intellectuals, companies -- who believe we need a world of rules, an open
world and a multilateral world," chief organizer Justin Vaisse told AFP.
Despite the show of unity at the Arc de Triomphe, tensions lurk beneath the
surface. Trump, whose hardline nationalism has badly shaken the Western
alliance, arrived in Paris on Friday criticizing host Macron for being
"insulting." Trump took umbrage at a recent interview in which Macron talked
about the need for a European army and cited the U.S., along with Russia and
China, as potential security risks. During talks with Trump Saturday Macron
said his remarks had been misinterpreted and that he was merely saying
Europe needed to take greater ownership of its own security.
The "America First" leader, who faced criticism on Saturday for canceling a
trip to an American cemetery because of rainy weather, will snub the Peace
Forum.
A day of remembrance
Other notable attendees of Sunday's Paris memorial service and Forum
included Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Canadian premier Justin
Trudeau and Israel's Benyamin Netanyahu. Despite maximum security in a city
repeatedly targeted by jihadists since 2015, a protester from the radical
feminist group Femen managed to jump over a barricade and got within meters
of Trump's motorcade as he made his way up the Champs-Elysees. She was
hauled away by security along with two others who were stopped on the edge
of the famous avenue. French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner later
said Trump's security had "in no way been threatened." About 70 current-day
nations were involved in WWI, which had six empires and colonial powers at
its heart: Austria-Hungary, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and the Ottoman
Empire.Around 10 million soldiers are estimated to have been killed during
the fighting and more than double that number wounded. Between five and 10
million civilians are estimated to have been killed.
Rouhani: US Sanctions
Have No Impact on Our Economy
London - Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 11 November, 2018/Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani said on Saturday that US sanctions announced recently have had no
effect on Iran’s economy because Washington had already practically
reimposed them earlier. “The sanctions have had no impact on our economy
because America had already used all the weapons at its disposal and there
was nothing new to use against us,” Rouhani said in remarks carried live on
state television. The President stressed that the US just issued a long list
of banks, their branches, and airlines and their planes, which shows that
they are merely trying to affect the Iranian nation psychologically.
Addressing the Iranian nation, Rouhani said, “In providing basic goods, we
have no problem and our warehouses are ready more than any other time to
provide people’s essential needs for many months”. Rouhani asserted that the
country’s current conditions are good and export has risen in the first 7
months of the current year compared to the same period last year, and this
means that “production has increased and people’s business is good.”“It has
now become clear that America cannot cut Iran’s oil exports to zero,”
Rouhani added, speaking after a weekly meeting with the heads of the
parliament and the judiciary, Ali and Sadek Larijani. Iranian officials were
saying from the first day that US officials are not able to reduce Iran’s
oil export to zero, Rouhani noted, but they “kept repeating that they would
do this and they recently admitted that they cannot reduce Iran’s oil export
to zero.”The President also went on to say that their argument was that if
they could reduce Iran’s oil export to zero, the price of oil will rise to
$150 per barrel and this is what “we kept saying from the first day that
either the entire region exports oil or if Iran’s oil export is stopped,
others will face problems too.”The President also said, “In the coming
months, Americans will understand well that the path they have chosen is
wrong. This does not tire the Iranian nation, but makes them ready for more
production and having closer relations with neighbors”. In related news, the
US State Department announced that the Special Representative for Iran Brian
Hook will travel to Israel and the United Arab Emirates between November 12
and 20, where he is expected to meet officials and discuss cooperation on
countering Iranian threats. The trip aims to advance the US President Donald
Trump’s strategy on Iran and increase pressure on the Iranian regime to
cease its destructive policies, including its nuclear and missile
proliferation threats, support for terrorism, and other regionally
destabilizing activities, State Department’s statement read. “The United
States is committed to working with our allies and partners to fully
implement our maximum pressure campaign in order to change Iran's
destructive behavior,” it added. The restoration of sanctions is part of a
wider effort by Trump to force Iran to curb its nuclear and missile programs
as well as its support for “proxy forces in Yemen, Syria, Lebanon and other
parts of the Middle East.”
Deputy commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC): Any war
Zionists start will lead to them being erased
Jerusalem Post/November 11/18
Brig.-Gen. Hossein Salami also claimed that Iran was improving its ballistic
missiles.
The deputy commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in Iran
slammed Israel and warned that the Islamic Republic has bases from the Red
Sea to the Mediterranean.
In comments made public over the weekend, Brig.-Gen. Hossein Salami told a
forum at the University of Damghan in Semnan province in northern Iran that
his forces have bases throughout the Middle East and that Iran was
confronting “the Zionists” and Americans in the region. Speaking at the
National Forum for honoring “mujahideen,” which included “jihadist figures
from Bahrain and Yemen,” according to Iran’s Al-Alam News Network, the IRGC
commander claimed that Iran had emerged victorious from recent conflicts in
the Middle East.
“The Zionists know that today any war they start will lead to their being
erased. We have bases of the Islamic Revolution from the Mediterranean to
the Red Sea,” he said. Hezbollah has become a “nightmare” to Israel,
according to Salami. He also pointed to the war in Yemen and said Iran’s
Houthi allies in Yemen “will never die.”
Salami also claimed that Iran was improving its ballistic missiles, noting
that “our missile capabilities have grown today in all dimensions as we need
high accuracy.” He also said Iran would confront the US economically and
defeat the US sanctions that were reimposed on November 5. As evidence for
Iran’s ability to get around the sanctions he noted that the US had given
eight countries exemptions, allowing them to trade with Iran. This was a
victory for Tehran. “The IRGC is very strong and popular today. It has been
formed in Syria alongside the official army, which is not fighting the
remnants of the United States,” he said according to a Fars News report.
Salami also hinted that in Iraq those who oppose the US presence, including
many Iranian-backed allies among Shi’ite militias that are affiliated with
the government, could “abide the enemy,” indicating they would wait out the
American presence until the US leaves.
The speech charts a course for Iran’s role in the region. It not only shows
that Tehran is seeking to construct a corridor of power stretching from
Tehran to the Mediterranean via Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, but that it also
sees the Red Sea as part of its plan. Over the last two years as the Syrian
civil war continued and the war on ISIS led to Iran gaining increasing
influence in Iraq and Syria, experts warned about Iran’s “road to the
sea.”This is one of the first speeches in which the IRGC has acknowledged
that it has constructed a map of influence and bases across the region, and
that those bases are directed at the US and Israel. Combining these details
with his detailing of the increasing precision of Tehran’s missile programs,
illustrates that Iran is no longer concerned about boasting about the power
it wields.In September and October, Iran launched ballistic missiles at
Kurdish opposition groups in Iraq and at ISIS in Syria, showcasing its
abilities. In Yemen it continues to improve the missiles of the Houthi
rebels that they have been fired at Saudi Arabia.
Iran Upholds Prison Term for Official Convicted of
Spying
Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 11 November, 2018/An Iranian appeals court has
upheld the 10-year prison sentence of a former Foreign Ministry official
convicted of spying. The semi-official Fars news agency on Sunday quoted
judiciary spokesman Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejehi as saying the court upheld
Kamal Amirbeig's sentence and fined him $200,000, AP reported. The report
did not provide further information. According to AP, Iran rarely discloses
the names or occupations of alleged spies. Authorities have jailed several
dual nationals in recent years on espionage charges. Rights groups have
criticized those detentions, suggesting hard-liners in the judiciary are
jailing Iranians with Western passports to use them as bargaining chips.
Reports suggest Iran
executes 22 people in Ahwaz
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 11 November 2018/Unconfirmed
reports have suggested that Iran has allegedly executed more than 22 people,
accusing them of being behind the ISIS-claimed attack on a military parade
in the southwestern Iranian city of Ahwaz last October. The sources said the
authorities of the Revolutionary Court had informed some of the families of
those allegedly executed on Thursday. A relative of the victims said the
Revolutionary Court summoned some of the families of those who were
reportedly executed and handed them death warrants, without any information
about the corpses, and warned them not to hold funerals or risk prosecution.
In the wake of the attack on the military parade, the Iranian security
arrested hundreds of Ahwazi activists, including civil society activists who
do not belong to any extremist groups. Human rights activists say the
Iranian authorities used the attack as an opportunity to attack civil
society activists and intellectuals interested in the national rights of
Arabs in southern Iran.
Trump assures Macron
that Saudi Arabia is the cornerstone of stability in the Middle East
Arab News/November 10, 2018/LONDON: US President Donald Trump assured French
President Emmanuel Macron Saturday that Saudi Arabia is the cornerstone of
stability in the Middle East, a French presidency source reported. Trump
also said that he refuses to allow anything to undermine the Kingdom’s
stability, and emphasized Saudi Arabia’s importance as a partner of the
United States. The two presidents held a meeting at the Elysee Palace on the
eve of the commemoration ceremony for Armistice Day, 100 years after the end
of the First World War, in Paris, France. The US and French presidents are
also keen that a political solution in Yemen is found, and pushed for
foundations of the solution to be laid. Trump assured Macron of the
effectiveness of sanctions on Iran, and called for a new agreement to ensure
that Iran does not obtain nuclear weapons, the presidency source said.
Trump's visit kickstarts two days of events marking the centenary of the end
of World War 1. Some 70 leaders will gather at 11 am Sunday (1000 GMT) at
the tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the Arc de Triomphe, in Paris, to mark
the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I.
US Grants Iraq 45-Day Waiver Over Iran Sanctions to
Purchase Natural Gas, Electricity
Baghdad - Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 11 November, 2018/Iraq confirmed that the
United States gave it an exception to the strict sanctions imposed on Iran
in order to continue to buy Iranian natural gas and electricity, however,
Baghdad has been silent about a US announcement to reduce the grace period.
On Saturday, US Embassy in Baghdad announced that Iraq will be permitted to
purchase energy from Iran until the end of December. “The United States has
given Iraq a temporary relief from the sanctions for 45 days to continue
purchasing natural gas and electricity from Iran,” officials from the
Embassy said in a Facebook video. “This relief gives Iraq time to start
taking steps towards energy independence,” the video said. While no official
statement was issued by Iraqi authorities on the announcement, a source told
Asharq al-Awsat, that Iraq imports 14 million cubic meters of gas from Iran,
as well as 1300 MW of electricity indicating that if the grace period was
not extended, Iraq can do nothing after 45 days. Speaking on condition of
anonymity, the source noted that gas projects need years to address the
crisis and therefore, the time granted is not enough, both on the level of
natural gas and electricity, which he believes, puts Iraq in an impending
crisis. Iraq central bank officials said in August that the country’s
economy is so closely linked to Iran that Baghdad would ask Washington for
exemptions from some of the sanctions, Reuters reported.
Palestinian Authority Slams Qatar for Encouraging Gaza
Separatist Agenda
Ramallah – Asharq Al Awsat/Sunday, 11 November, 2018/Palestinian officials
accused Qatar of funding the Gaza Strip separatist agenda, supporting Hamas
in an attempt to sabotage Egyptian efforts to achieve intra-Palestinian
reconciliation. A member of the Executive Committee of the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO), Ahmed Majdalani, slammed Qatari Ambassador to
Gaza Mohammed Al-Emadi for smuggling funds to Hamas-ruled Gaza without the
Palestinian Authority’s approval.Majdalani told Asharq Al-Awsat that Al-Emadi,
in agreement with Israel and Hamas, “used illicit means to transfer money in
bags to Gaza, widening divisions among Palestinians and sabotaging Egyptian
efforts to achieve reconciliation.”
- A Cheap Price For Blood
Al Emadi transferred some $ 15 million in bags to Gaza, The ambassador is
said to have arranged for moving $15 million in bags into Gaza through
Israel, which was described by the official Palestinian news agency (WAFA)
as “a cheap price” for Gaza residents being exploited by Hamas leadership
hoping to advance US-Zionist plots for separating the Gaza Strip from the
West Bank. The money, with Israeli agreement, was transferred in three
suitcases and entered through the Erez Crossing in the northern Gaza Strip.
“We will continue efforts for countering US-Israeli conspiracies and plots
aimed at separating Gaza from the West Bank, hoping to eventually isolate
the West Bank and Jerusalem,” the PA said in a statement published on Wafa.
The $15 million represents the first installment of $90 million Qatar has
allocated to pay the money of Hamas-employed civil servants. Israel agreed
to Qatar funding Hamas, so long all the names receiving payments get vetted
by Israeli security checks.
- Deprived Employees
Israel had objected to over 2,000 names of Hamas employees getting paid with
the Qatari money, sources told Asharq Al-Awsat. Qatari superintendents
oversaw the handover of dollar-paid salaries, and asked recipients to hand
over identity documents and signatures, as part of a mechanism to reassure
Israel. Funds have been distributed in a remarkable state of calm in Gaza
Strip and coincided with a decline in the momentum of Great Marches of
Return on Gaza border, which began on March 30. At least 220 Palestinians
were killed during Israeli assaults on the marches. It is worth noting that
Hamas has curbed demonstrators at the borders with Israel, adhering to a
treaty struck to allow the entry of Qatari funds and fuel into the Gaza
Strip. West Bank-based Fatah accuses Hamas of trading Palestinian blood for
money. “This farce confirms that Hamas has manipulated the people and
undercut the Palestinian cause, using return marches to secure weapons,” it
said in a statement. Sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that Qatar plans to
improve living conditions in Gaza by improving the power network in Gaza,
building a gas-powered station, building sewage and desalination networks,
and creating job opportunities through small projects. The Palestinian
Authority’s outcry against Qatar’s policy in Gaza set off the alarms on the
latter backing the sector’s separatist ambitions, and undermining the
Palestinian cause.
Netanyahu Says Unaware
of Corruption Linked to Submarine Deal
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 11/18/Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he was unaware of any corruption linked
to a deal to buy German submarines, after police recommended charging his
lawyer in the investigation. "As you know, there are no claims as to my
involvement," Netanyahu said late Saturday in his first comments on the
issue since police issued their findings in the long-running investigation
last week. "Which is not a minute thing since people don't hesitate to blame
me with the most absurd claims." Asked about the alleged offenses committed
by his relative and family lawyer David Shimron, Netanyahu said: "You know I
didn't know.""Secondly, I suggest to wait until the end of the procedures
and not rush to make a judgment," he said before boarding a plane for Paris,
where he will join world leaders in marking the 100th anniversary of the end
of World War I. Police said Thursday there was evidence to charge Shimron
and others with bribery in connection with negotiations for Israel's
purchase of submarines and other vessels from German industrial giant
ThyssenKrupp. The investigation into the deals reportedly worth $2 billion
is one of several cases that have put Netanyahu's long tenure in office
under the spotlight. Besides Shimron, police said the former chief of
Netanyahu's office, David Sharan, is also suspected of bribery, as is the
former head of the navy, Eliezer Marom. Two other navy ex-generals were
named as being suspected of similar offenses, as was a former minister,
Eliezer Zandberg. Netanyahu was questioned as a witness and not a suspect in
the case. The police's findings will now be handed over to the attorney
general, who will decide whether the suspects should be charged. Israeli
opposition politicians have questioned how Netanyahu could be unaware of the
alleged corruption and called for a commission of inquiry. In February,
police recommended Netanyahu be indicted in two other graft probes, though
the attorney general has yet to decide whether to do so. Allegations against
Netanyahu include seeking a secret deal with the publisher of Israel's
top-selling newspaper Yediot Aharonot to ensure positive coverage in return
for pushing forward a law that would have limited the circulation of a
rival. Another case involves suspicions that the prime minister and his
family received luxury gifts from wealthy individuals in exchange for
financial or personal favors.Netanyahu denies all the allegations, calling
them a bid by his political enemies to force him from office.
Netanyahu defends
Qatari cash infusion to Gaza
AFP/11 November 2018/JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
has defended his decision to enable Qatar to bring $15 million into
Hamas-controlled Gaza for salaries, saying it would calm tensions and
prevent a Palestinian humanitarian crisis. Netanyahu’s remarks late Saturday
were his first on the issue since Israel allowed the cash to be transferred
to the enclave controlled by Hamas, considered not only by the Jewish state
but also the United States and European Union as a terrorist movement. “I’m
doing what I can, in coordination with the security elements, to return
quiet to the southern communities, but also to prevent a humanitarian
crisis,” Netanyahu said, referring to Israeli towns near the Gaza border and
deteriorating conditions in the Gaza Strip. Netanyahu said the Israeli
security establishment supported the move and that ministers in his security
cabinet approved it. “We held serious discussions,” he said ahead of his
flight to Paris, where he will join world leaders marking the centenary of
the end of World War I. “I think we’re acting in a responsible and wise
way.” He added: “At this time, this is the right step.” On Friday,
Palestinian civil servants began receiving payments after months of sporadic
salary disbursements in cash-strapped Gaza, with money delivered into the
Palestinian enclave through Israel, reportedly in suitcases. The
Israeli-authorized money transfer appeared to be part of a deal that would
see Hamas end months of often violent protests along the border in exchange
for Israel easing its blockade of Gaza. Border protests have been much
calmer the last two Fridays. The money influx was criticized by the
Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority, which saw it as undermining
reconciliation efforts with rivals Hamas and its attempts to return to power
in the Gaza Strip. Netanyahu has also faced political pressure within
Israel, including from opposition head Tzipi Livni, who called it the
premier’s “submission to Hamas,” which would strengthen the Islamist
movement.Deadly clashes have accompanied the major protests along the Gaza
border with Israel that began on March 30, generating fears of a new war
between the Jewish state and the strip’s militant rulers. Israel and
Palestinian militants in Gaza have fought three wars since 2008.At least 221
Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire, the majority shot during
protests and clashes, since the protests began. Others have died in tank
fire or air strikes. One Israeli soldier has been killed along the Gaza
border in that time.
Hamas commander killed
in Gaza, say Palestinian officials
Reuters, Gaza/Sunday, 11 November 2018/Israeli security forces killed a
commander from Hamas faction in the Gaza Strip on Sunday, Palestinian
officials said. They said a group of Hamas members were fired at from a
passing car. Local witnesses also said that Israeli planes fired over 20
missiles into open areas where the incident took place. The Israeli military
said in a brief statement that: “During IDF (Israel Defense Forces)
operational activity in the Gaza Strip, an exchange of fire evolved.”On
Friday, a Palestinian was killed by Israeli fire Friday during clashes along
the Gaza-Israel border, the health ministry in the Hamas-ruled coastal
enclave said. The border between the blockaded Gaza Strip and Israel has
been rocked by deadly violence since March 30 when major protests backed by
Hamas and clashes broke out along the frontier. But for the last two weeks,
clashes along the border were lower in intensity than in previous weeks,
amid talk of a truce deal between Hamas and Israel.
Israel Kills Hamas
Military Commander in Gaza, Palestinian Officials Say
Haartz/November 11/18/
Israeli forces killed a commander in Hamas' military wing in the southern
Gaza Strip, Palestinian officials in the Strip said Sunday. The Israeli army
confirmed a fire exchange took place, with local reports in Gaza saying that
Israeli planes fired at the open area near the place of the incident.
The Hamas-run Interior Ministry in Gaza said in an official statement that
members of the group were killed and wounded in the incident, which took
place east of Khan Younes. Security forces in Gaza announced a state of high
alert.
The Red Crescent emergency responders reported four to five people were
killed in Khan Younes.
Sirens sounded in Israeli communities near the Gaza border.
Palestinian sources told Haaretz that one of the casualties is Nur Barake, a
deputy commander of an elite unit of Iz al-Din al-Qassam, the military wing
of Hamas. Barake and an additional commander were said to be killed in Khan
Younes. Palestinian officials said the group of Hamas men were fired at from
a passing car. According to reports from Gaza, an elite Israeli force
entered the city of Khan Younes and killed the. The reports said that the
force was then exposed. The two sides then began exchanging fire, and
Israeli aircraft accompanied the ground forces. Residents of nearby Israeli
towns were asked to remain in safe areas. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
who is visiting in Paris, is receiving live updates and holding
consultations on the topic. Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman is holding
consolations at the military headquarters in Tel Aviv. Netanyahu said
earlier on Sunday that there is “No political solution exists for Gaza, just
as there isn't one with ISIS" and that he is doing everything he can to
avoid “unnecessary war.” Netanyahu is attending the Paris Peace Forum,
hosted by French President Emmmanuel Macron. Qatar reportedly finished
paying the July salaries of Hamas officials on Saturday. Thousands of
officials who have not received their salaries claim that they are part of
Hamas' military wing. According to the deal, Qatari money will be
transferred to civilian officials only.
Reuters contributed to this report
Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham Kills 8 Regime Troops in Hama,
Syria
Beirut, London – Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 11 November, 2018/Eight regime
troops were killed during an attack led by "Hayat Tahrir al-Sham" in Hama
near a planned buffer zone, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights (SOHR). "An assault by Tahrir al-Sham targeted a Syrian regime
position on the outskirts of the de-militarised zone" and was followed by
clashes in which eight regime forces were killed, Observatory chief Rami
Abdel Rahman told AFP. SOHR reported that the attack happened after members
of Tahrir al-sham were able to infiltrate positions of the regime forces and
militiamen loyal to them and the 5th Legion which "was established by Russia
in al-Tarabea’ area south of Halfaya town in the northern countryside of
Hama within the demilitarized area."Through its infiltration, Tahrir al-Sham
fighters were able to kill and injure 8 members of the regime forces and
militiamen loyal to them. Two Tahrir al-Sham members were killed. Two months
ago, Russian President Vladimir Putin and the Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan agreed on a demilitarized area in Idlib. Syrian forces earlier
attacked Jaysh al-Izza site in the demilitarized are in Hama’s northern
countryside, killing at least 23 of Jaysh al-Izza fighters. Tahrir al-Sham
and other groups control two-thirds of the zone and a large portion of the
demilitarized zone. A military official of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham told
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (DPA) that Tahrir al-Sham fighters attacked the
military operations room in al-Tarabea’ area, killing over 20 fighters of
Syrian regime, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), and Lebanese
Hezbollah, as well as 7 Russian soldiers.
Turkish air strike ‘neutralizes’ 14 Kurdish militants in Iraq
Reuters, IstanbulSunday, 11 November 2018/An air strike by a Turkish
warplane “neutralized” 14 militants of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party
(PKK) in northern Iraq, the military said on Sunday, destroying hideouts and
armories. The Turkish army uses the phrase neutralize when it has killed,
captured or wounded combatants. The air strike carried out on Saturday
targeted the Avasin region, the military said. “Fourteen armed members of
the separatist terror organization, who were in preparation for an attack on
military bases, were neutralized. Weapons, hideouts and armories were
destroyed,” the military said, using its term for the PKK. Turkey regularly
carries out air strikes against PKK targets in northern Iraq, where the
group is based in the Qandil mountains. The PKK, considered a terrorist
organization by the United States, the European Union and Turkey, has waged
a three-decade insurgency in Turkey’s largely Kurdish southeast that has
killed about 40,000 people.
Egypt, Bahrain firm on list of 13 demands to end Qatar
crisis
Ashraf Abdul Hamid, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 11 November
2018/The Egyptian and Bahraini foreign ministries affirmed their firmness on
sticking to a list of 13 demands including six principles the anti-Terror
Quartet issued last year as the basis for resolving ongoing crisis with
Qatar. In a joint statement, the two countries said at the end of a
Bahraini-Egyptian Committee session held in Manama on Sunday that all the
Qatari attempts to circumvent those demands would only prolong the crisis.
The joint statement further applauded Kuwait’s continuous efforts to end the
crisis. The two sides affirmed their keenness to coordinate work and consult
together on regional and international platforms and forums, especially the
Arab League, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and within the United
Nations system, in order to achieve their interests and support joint Arab
action to achieve the hopes and aspirations of their two peoples. Egypt and
Bahrain stressed the centrality of preserving the security and stability of
the countries of the region, preserving their sovereignty and independence,
and the importance of the security of the Arab Gulf and the Arab region as a
whole.
The two sides expressed their strong condemnation of the continued firing of
ballistic missiles on Saudi Arabia from Yemeni territory by the
Iranian-backed Houthi militias as part of their interference in the Yemeni
affairs and their attempts to dominate the region through supporting the
militias by all means. The statement added that this led to prolonging the
conflict.Both countries reiterated their condemnation of terrorism in all
forms, stressing the importance of coordination of bilateral, regional and
international efforts to combat various forms of terrorism and address its
roots and causes.
Egypt and Bahrain also stressed the importance of supporting the Palestinian
cause and following up on its political developments, as the central issue
of the Arab and Islamic nations, and affirmed that a just and comprehensive
solution can be achieved only by safeguarding the legitimate rights of the
Palestinian people and establishing its independent and sovereign state with
East Jerusalem as its capital along the lines of 4 June 1967, based on the
relevant resolutions of international legitimacy and the Arab peace
initiative, stressing that this initiative is the best solution to end the
Arab-Israeli conflict.
Egypt puts key members of ‘al-Jama’a al-Islamiyya’ on
terror list
Ashraf Abdul Hamid, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 11 November 2018/Egyptian
authorities have added several leaders of the extremist group “al-Jama’a al-Islamiyya”
along with 164 of its members to the country’s designated terror lists.
Cairo Criminal Court, headed by Counselor Mohamed Fahmi, ruled to include
164 members of the extremist group known in English as “The Islamic Group”
on the terror list, including Mohammed Showqi al-Islambouli, brother of
Khalid al- Islambouli, the assassin of the late Egyptian president Anwar
Sadat, as well as Tariq al-Zomor and Assem Abdel Majid for five years. The
court said that the decision came after the disclosure of attempts by the
leaders of the group to revive its terror activities, incitement against the
state, recruitment of fighters from the governorates of impoverished Upper
Egypt and its association with foreign parties. Egyptian President Abdel
Fattah al-Sisi issued a law to list terrorist entities and terrorists,
whereas article 2 in the law allows the public prosecution to prepare the
lists and issue rulings in these cases. According to the law, the criminal
court rulings would result in the freezing of assets owned by those members
who would be banned from travel and issuance of travel documents as well as
prohibiting them from any public jobs.
Clashes Reach Residential Streets in Yemen's Hodeida
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 11/18/Fighting for control of Yemen's
rebel-held city of Hodeida reached residential streets on Sunday, as the
Huthi insurgents mounted fierce resistance to government forces backed by
Saudi Arabia, military sources said.
Troops entered residential streets in eastern Hodeida with the aim of
"purging them of insurgents," according to a pro-government military
official. Fears for civilian safety have been rising since the loyalist
forces renewed an operation to take Hodeida, which has been under the
control of Yemen's Iran-backed Huthi rebels since 2014. More than 400
combatants have been killed in 10 days of clashes in the city on Yemen's Red
Sea coastline that is home to the impoverished country's most important
port. Hodeida is a vital lifeline for Yemenis across the war-torn country,
as the majority of imports and humanitarian aid enter through its port. The
docks have been blockaded by the Saudi-led alliance since November 2017 over
what the coalition says is arms smuggling from Iran to the Huthis. Tehran
denies the charge. Aid groups have urged warring parties to keep the port
open. "We cannot predict what will happen in the future, but at the moment
there are no problems," Yahya Sharafeddine, deputy director of Hodeida port,
told AFP. Pro-government fighters moved into the neighborhood between the
May 22 hospital -- the largest in Hodeida -- and Sanaa Road, which links the
port city to inland Yemen. Fighters clashed around the Al-Waha (Oasis)
Resort, closing in on a civilian district located south of the hospital and
north of Sanaa Road. The World Health Organization estimates nearly 10,000
people have been killed since 2015, when Saudi Arabia and its allies joined
the government's war against the Huthis, driving the insurgents from the Red
Sea coastline but failing to retake Hodeida. Other rights groups believe the
toll may be five times as high. The conflict has triggered what the U.N.
calls the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with 14 million Yemenis at risk
of starvation.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published on
November 11-12/18
Facebook’s Nostalgic Mood Isn’t Helping
Shira Ovide/Bloomberg/November, 11/18
Technology companies don’t tend to look backward. Reminiscing is for old
fogy companies; new economy superstars look ahead. Lately, however, Facebook
Inc. has been reaching into its past to inspire outsiders’ confidence in its
future. The company’s historical musings feel forced and off base. In recent
months, Facebook officials and supporters have repeatedly flashed back to
when Facebook overcame an obstacle that could have crippled it. The
company’s 2012 initial public offering coincided with a significant
acceleration of people using the internet on smartphones rather than on
personal computers. Facebook was caught flat-footed by the change. Its
smartphone apps were clunky, and it didn’t have a sound strategy for
generating advertising revenue from users scrolling Facebook on phones. The
mobile shift was the biggest crisis for a young company that had weathered
many.
What happened next is a central thread of Facebook’s history. CEO Mark
Zuckerberg rallied his company to devote its resources and attention to
making Facebook successful in the smartphone boom. It dumped a successful
advertising strategy to create a new one for smartphones. It worked
spectacularly well. Facebook has been among the biggest winners of the
mobile technology age. Now, Facebook wants people to believe its mobile
turnaround is a parallel for its current crises. The company’s lead
independent director, Susan Desmond-Hellmann, told Bloomberg Television that
the board is confident in Zuckerberg’s leadership, which she said he proved
in Facebook’s smartphone conundrum. “The switch from desktop to mobile
required an enormous drive and leadership and a huge change for Facebook,”
she said last month. Don Graham, the former Washington Post CEO and a mentor
to Zuckerberg, also recently used Facebook’s 2012 smartphone turnaround to
illustrate Zuckerberg’s ability to move mountains.
Last month, Facebook marketing executive Carolyn Everson said Facebook’s
determination to stop election interference, protect user data and combat
misinformation surpasses Facebook’s mobile resolve. “I have seen us go
through many transitions, and the one that everybody talks about is when we
had to become a mobile company,” Everson said in an interview. “This is a
more important cultural shift at Facebook.” On a conference call with
analysts last week, Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg compared its
growth-challenged transition period to a previous revenue hiccup as the
company shifted its focus to smartphones. These flashbacks to Facebook’s
mobile revolution have the same goal: to remind people that Facebook has
solved an existential problem before, and to plant the idea that Facebook
will overcome its new strategic, social and financial challenges.
“Remember mobile” feels like a mantra for Facebook. But I don’t believe that
galvanizing moment is instructive for Facebook’s current threats on
everything from growth slowdowns and changing internet habits to
misinformation and abuse online. Worse, I fear Facebook’s history of
successfully defying doubters is blinding the company to legitimate
criticism. Facebook deserves credit for figuring out a smartphone strategy
when few believed it would. But Facebook can’t use its mobile history to
instill confidence in everything it’s doing. First, Facebook isn’t a
reliable visionary about online trends. And second, its challenges now run
deeper and are in areas where it hasn’t been traditionally strong.
On Facebook’s oracular abilities, recent history contains episodes of the
company misidentifying or missing changes in online behaviors. I noted
recently Facebook bet big on live web video, as it did with smartphones, but
this time Zuckerberg was wrong. Live video looks like a niche activity, not
a dominant feature of online life. It was also Snapchat, and not Facebook,
that led the way to people interacting online in private chat rooms and in
video-and-photo montages called “stories.” Facebook now says stories are the
future of the internet, and it’s pushing people and advertisers to the
format. If Facebook is right that stories will be a fixture of online
communication in the near future, it will serve as a reminder that Facebook
was late to see a significant internet trend. The smartphone crisis showed
that Facebook was right about a big shift in online activity, but history
has shown that Facebook has been wrong in this area, too. That’s a useful
reminder of the limits of Facebook’s mobile rallying cry. And Facebook’s
2012 smartphone reboot was a cinch compared with its current challenges.
Facebook now wants to protect elections around the world, weed out
misinformation and encourage online behavior that unifies people. Nothing in
Facebook’s history shows it’s up to this set of challenges. The stakes are
simply higher for Facebook today. This moment is different from the time
when users initially revolted against Facebook’s news feed in 2006, or when
people grumbled about a separate app for chats. And this time is different
from Facebook’s reboot in response to the smartphone threat. 1 Facebook was
right in those moments, but that doesn’t make it infallible. I worry that
its past success has made Facebook overly confident. Despite many warning
signs, the company took far too long to acknowledge that foreign-backed
misinformation spread on its social network, that it was too cavalier about
information it collects about users, and that its service could be used to
divide people.
If the lessons Facebook took from its successful navigation of the
smartphone boom is that it’s always right no matter what doubters say, then
that bodes ill for both Facebook and the rest of the world.
German Conservatives Face Off Over Their Party’s Soul
Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg/November, 11/18
The contest to replace Chancellor Angela Merkel as leader of the Christian
Democratic Union when she steps down next month has raised an important
question that is being debated within many conservative parties in Europe:
Which of the two words in “center right” is more important?
The succession contest will be close. On Dec. 7 and 8, the CDU will hold a
party conference in Hamburg and select a new leader among three serious
candidates: Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, often referred to as AKK, who Merkel
picked to be the party’s general secretary; Friedrich Merz, who heads the
supervisory board of the German branch of the asset manager BlackRock and
unexpectedly came out of political retirement; and Health Minister Jens
Spahn. All three have made clear how they would steer the party, and their
differences provide fascinating insights into the political and ideological
currents within German conservatism. Similar debates over ideology are
taking place less openly in conservative parties from Austria to Spain, and
even, though in a different form, in the US Republican Party.
Kramp-Karrenbauer and Merz are the front-runners. In a poll published on
Thursday, 36 percent of Germans said they could imagine Merz as a good
chancellor; 33 percent said the same of Kramp-Karrenbauer. AKK led among
supporters of the CDU and its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social
Union, 52 percent of whom said she’d make a good chancellor, versus 50
percent for Merz and 21 percent for Spahn.
The poll question makes sense: The CDU is Germany’s biggest party, despite a
steep decline in recent polls, and its leader has a strong claim on the
chancellorship — perhaps even before the current legislative period ends —
if Merkel is driven out of office. Most Germans in recent polls say she
should quit ahead of time, though that’s not her intention.
The politics of the choice of leader are complicated. The candidates have
been vying for the support of various lobbies within the party: AKK is
backed by the women’s organization; the powerful Mittelstand group of medium
and small business representatives favors Merz; the youth organization is
for Spahn. The pretenders to the throne must also woo state organizations.
Merz and Spahn come from Germany’s most populous state and AKK from the
second smallest, which puts her at something of a natural disadvantage. But
the final choice will be about the way the candidates see the party’s
future, not their backgrounds.
“We must make it clear again what the CDU is,” Michael Kretschmer, the
minister president of Saxony and a leading CDU member, said in a recent
interview.
The candidates have all been clear about their views. Merz is a
pro-business, pro-American conservative who believes in immigrant
assimilation and traditional Christian values. He once proposed a simple tax
system that would fit an ordinary German’s returns on a beer mat. In recent
years, he has voiced skepticism about the future of the euro. His positions
have been unpopular under Merkel’s leadership, and some people who espoused
similar views defected to the nationalist Alternative for Germany (AfD)
Party, but most stayed: The CDU is the respectable right-wing party with a
powerful tradition of leading the country, and that’s important for members
of the party’s sober business wing.
Spahn doesn’t quite have Merz’s conservative credentials: He’s young,
married to a man (an overwhelming majority of the CDU faction voted against
marriage equality last year), and has minimal private sector experience. Yet
he hews relatively close to Merz’s line, which could be important if he
comes in third and there’s a runoff between Merz and AKK. Spahn wants to
make immigration the central issue as a way for the CDU to compete with
populists on the right and the left (meaning primarily the Greens, to whom
the less conservative CDU voters have been defecting).
Immigration, Spahn wrote in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, is “the
elephant in the room”; the party must say clearly that it opposes the
“disorderly influx of mostly male immigrants” that he says still afflicts
Germany despite official assurances that everything is under control. That
stance wouldn’t be a shift to the right because “the time for reflexive
left-right schemes is gone.” Instead, politicians should rely on common
sense and “a new honesty,” not just about immigration but about the costs
and execution of Germany’s clean energy plans and euro zone rescue efforts.
Iranian human rights violations show up Rouhani’s empty promises
د. ماجد ربيزاده: انتهاكات حقوق الإنسان في إيران تبين أن وعود
الرئيس روحاني هي فارغة من أي مصداقية
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/November 11/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/68838/dr-majid-rafizadeh-iranian-human-rights-violations-show-up-rouhanis-empty-promises-%D8%AF-%D9%85%D8%A7%D8%AC%D8%AF-%D8%B1%D8%A8%D9%8A%D8%B2%D8%A7%D8%AF%D9%87-%D8%A7%D9%86%D8%AA%D9%87/
The human rights situation has been deteriorating to an unprecedented level
in the Islamic Republic of Iran. This highlights the empowerment of the
hard-line judiciary system and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
under the so-called moderate administration of President Hassan Rouhani.
Specifically, several groups have become the Iranian regime’s targets. The
first category is linked to religious and ethnic minorities, including the
Arabs, Kurds, Azeris, Baluchis, Sunnis, Christians and Baha’is. The
situation has become so alarming that the UN Special Rapporteur on human
rights in Iran, Javaid Rehman, recently urged Tehran to “ensure that all
those who reside in the country have equal protection before the law,
regardless of ethnicity, religion or belief.”It is important to point out
that the Islamic Republic is a signatory to the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights. This means that the Iranian authorities ought to
make sure that those defendants who are detained based on criminal charges
have access to lawyers or be able to choose their own attorney if they
desire to do so. The right to have access to a lawyer is one of the most
basic rights guaranteed by international law.
But, unfortunately, the theocratic establishment frequently denies
defendants access to lawyers, stopping them enjoying due process and fair
legal representation. This is because the regime can intimidate, obtain
forced confessions or torture detainees more easily when they don’t have
access to a lawyer, and ultimately sentence the defendants to long terms of
imprisonment or even execution.
When it comes to ethnic and religious minorities, the Iranian authorities
have escalated their crackdown on the Arab population of Ahvaz. According to
a recent report by the Iran Human Rights Monitor: “Reports from Ahvaz, in
southwest Iran, indicate security forces launched a mass arresting campaign
targeting Ahvazi Arab activists. In some districts security forces opened
fire on young activists attempting to flee.” The arrests of Ahvazi Arabs
have been implemented without any warrant or legal justification in various
cities and villages, including Susangerd, Khorramshahr, Kot Abdollah, Kuy
Alavi, and Kot Seyed Saleh.
The Iranian authorities are attempting to impose fear on the Arab population
of Ahvaz in order to subjugate and further tighten its grip on them.
Arbitrary arrests of Christians and Baha’is have also been on the rise.
There are generally four state apparatuses that engage in such heightened
suppression: The IRGC, the Ministry of Intelligence (Ettela’at), the
judiciary system, and local law enforcement.
The Iranian authorities are attempting to impose fear on the Arab population
of Ahvaz in order to subjugate and further tighten its grip on them.
Arbitrary arrests of Christians and Baha’is have also been on the rise. An
August report from Amnesty International indicated that: “Christians in Iran
have been a target of harassment, arbitrary arrest and detention, unfair
trials, and imprisonment on national security-related charges solely because
of their faith.”One recent incident included the sentencing of Pastor Victor
Bet-Tamraz and his wife Shamiram Issavi, ethnic Assyrian Christians, along
with Amin Afshar Naderi and Hadi Asgari, by Iran’s Revolutionary Court in
Tehran. They were sentenced to a combined total of 45 years in prison.
Human rights abuses against Christians have reached such horrendous levels
that Amnesty International had to initiate an “urgent action” appeal. The
pressure group has called on Tehran to “quash the convictions and sentences
of Victor Bet-Tamraz, Shamiram Issavi, Amin Afshar-Naderi, and Hadi Asgari,
as they have been targeted solely for the peaceful exercise of their rights
to freedoms of religion and belief, expression, and association, through
their Christian faith.”In addition, arrests of Baha’is — including elected
officials and a city council member — have increased in various areas,
including Shiraz, Isfahan and Karaj. The Iranian authorities have not
provided any clear charges for these arrests. Michael Page, Deputy Middle
East Director at Human Rights Watch, accurately pointed out that: “The more
than 20 arrests in a month without providing any justification shows how
intolerant the Islamic Republic is toward Iran’s Baha’i community.”
Environmental activists are another group that has become the target of the
Iranian authorities. In spite of the fact they had a license for their
wildlife projects, eight activists, including two women — Sepideh Kashani
and Niloufar Bayani — could face the death penalty for ridiculous, vague,
ambiguous charges such as “sowing corruption on earth.”Rouhani continues to
make empty promises with respect to promoting citizens’ rights and
individual liberties such as the freedoms of speech, the press and assembly.
Nevertheless, Iran’s latest horrendous human rights record says otherwise.
According to the Death Penalty Information Center, “Iran is the most
prolific executioner of juveniles in the world.” This alarming issue
recently prompted Rehman to tell a UN General Assembly human rights
committee that: “I appeal to the Iranian authorities to abolish the practice
of sentencing children to death, and to commute all death sentences issued
against children in line with international law.”
In sum, under the administration of the so-called moderate Rouhani, the
human rights situation has become alarming in Iran. Rouhani has emboldened
and empowered the IRGC and the hard-line judiciary system.
*Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated Iranian-American political
scientist. He is a leading expert on Iran and US foreign policy, a
businessman and president of the International American Council. Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh
Assad's statue stunt betrays regime's skewed priorities
Mohamed Chebaro/Arab News/November 11/18
Right now, millions of Syrians are busy considering how to spend the winter
in ruined cities with little infrastructure left after seven years of civil
strife, and hundreds of thousands more are preparing their tents in
neighboring countries to withstand yet another wet and icy season ahead.
Meanwhile, the regime in Damascus seems unconcerned and is moving at a
snail’s pace toward meeting international demands for starting a serious
settlement process. Instead, a statue of the late Syrian leader Hafez Assad
has been erected at a key intersection in the ex-rebel town of Deir Ezzor.
Such an act is indicative that all the regime cares about is the symbolic
return of Syria to the authority of Bashar Assad, regardless of reforms,
stabilization efforts, reconciliation or rebuilding of the destroyed country
to better rehouse its displaced citizens.
Forget the Geneva peace process led by the UN and its promises to arrive at
a negotiated settlement that ensures the peaceful return of all Syrian
refugees to their country with guarantees that they will not be arrested or
persecuted. Forget too the Astana process led by Russia, Iran and Turkey and
its mission to bring an end to the armed rebellion by reinvading all cities
that were declared free of regime authority for years. Forget also all
unilateral, bilateral or group efforts to draw up a clear road map that
would end the conflict and broker an agreement for the way forward.
The statue is believed to be a symbolic statement that Ba’ath regime's
authority is back and in full control of the destroyed country, regardless
of what desires there are for a negotiated settlement or a new constitution.
The people of Deir Ezzor were shocked to see that the statue of Hafez Assad
had been re-erected, seven years since it was removed in the late spring of
2011 to prevent its destruction by a rebellious crowd that thought
non-violent change was possible. The statue’s return alludes to the return
of Bashar Assad and his henchmen to controlling Syrians’ lives after the
war.
The people complained that the central government rushed to erect the statue
even though the square where it is mounted is totally destroyed and
unsuitable for civilian living. Regime officers, civilian administrators and
representatives from the loose-knit alliance of forces that have, for seven
years, propped up Assad’s rule attended the ceremony. Among them were
Lebanese Hezbollah militia commanders, Iranian military advisers and Russian
military police. If anything, this represents a blow to all peace and
reconciliation efforts called for by the international community.
The Syrian regime is likely to go on to erect many more statues to
demonstrate who is back in charge in a divided and destroyed Syria in the
hope that European countries and Japan will contribute to the reconstruction
efforts.
In Istanbul recently, the summit of France, Germany, Russia and Turkey
showed the schism between what some Western countries views as the way
forward in Syria and the views held by Russia, Turkey and, indirectly, the
Assad regime and Iran. Everyone in Istanbul discussed the steps required for
a long-term settlement, but all parties’ starting and end points differed.
Though Turkey and Russia reiterated their commitment to lowering tensions
and to continuing their liaison to keep the cease-fire in the northwestern
city of Idlib alive — preventing a government offensive there — Germany and
France were more interested in the peaceful transition to a post-war
stabilization of Syrian towns. This will mean, as President Emmanuel Macron
and Chancellor Angela Merkel said in the four-way press conference, that
several steps need to be taken prior to the return of all refugees and
displaced people to their homes. These steps must include a real,
sustainable, credible and inclusive political process to be started,
culminating in constitutional reforms that will pave the way for UN-backed
free and fair elections.
This political process, or its non-existence, is what will block or pave the
way for regional and international efforts to put Syria back on the path to
peace and help it to meet its reconstruction targets.
But the absence of such decisive will by the regime will prove to frustrate
all efforts to find a negotiated closure of the Syrian crisis. Assad’s
allies, Russia and Iran, who have helped him stay in power, are unlikely to
champion a reform process that could check their long-term alliance.
Equally, Russia and Iran are both bearing the brunt of international
sanctions — the first due to its meddling and wars in Ukraine, and the
second due to its nuclear and ballistic missile ambitions — which will
render any contribution next to impossible.
Hence, the Syrian regime is likely to go on to erect many more statues to
demonstrate who is back in charge in a divided and destroyed Syria in the
hope that European countries and Japan will contribute to the reconstruction
efforts. The US and its Gulf allies, meanwhile, are unlikely to discuss aid
prior to there being clear political steps toward a verifiable process to
put Syria on the path toward stabilization. All indicators so far are that
this is a far-fetched hope for the foreseeable future.
*Mohamed Chebaro is a British-Lebanese journalist with more than 25 years’
experience covering war, terrorism, defense, current affairs and diplomacy.
He is also a media consultant and trainer.
A Bloodbath for
Christians, No Response from Egypt
ريموند إبراهيم: حمام دم مسيحي في مصر دون ردة فعل من حكومتها
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/November 11/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/68852/raymond-ibrahim-a-bloodbath-for-christians-no-response-from-egypt-%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%85%D9%88%D9%86%D8%AF-%D8%A5%D8%A8%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%87%D9%8A%D9%85-%D8%AD%D9%85%D8%A7%D9%85-%D8%AF%D9%85-%D9%85%D8%B3/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13282/egypt-christians-bloodbath
Seven pilgrims were shot to death, "just because they were Christian," said
Pope Francis after the attack.
"The pilgrims were killed in such a savage and sadistic way, as if they were
enemy combatants, when they were just simple Christians come to get a
blessing from a monastery." — Coptic Bishop Anba Makarios of Minya, Egypt.
"The minimum response expected from president El-Sisi is to dismiss the head
of State Security and the governor of Minya, as a clear sign of holding
officials accountable. Furthermore, given the government's continued failure
to protect the Copts, Coptic Solidarity vigorously calls for an independent
inquiry by the UN to evaluate the Copts' situation and to recommend
necessary measures to alleviate their increasingly perilous situation..." —
Coptic Solidarity, Washington, DC.
On November 2, heavily armed Islamic terrorists ambushed and massacred
Christians returning home after visiting the ancient St. Samuel Monastery
(pictured) in Minya, Egypt. (Image source: Roland Unger/Wikimedia Commons)
On November 2, heavily armed Islamic terrorists ambushed and massacred
Christians returning home after visiting the ancient St. Samuel Monastery in
Minya, Egypt.
Seven pilgrims -- including a 12-year-old girl and a 15-year-old boy -- were
shot to death. More than 20 were left injured with bullet wounds or shards
of broken glass from the buses' windows. "I pray for the victims, pilgrims
killed just because they were Christian," said Pope Francis after the
attack.
Pictures posted on social media reveal "bodies soaked in blood and distorted
faces of men and women." In one video posted, a man can be heard crying,
"The gunshot got you in the head, my boy!" and repeating, "What a loss!"
After the first and largest bus had passed the ambush point, the terrorists
emerged in black 4x4s and opened fire with automatic weapons on the second
bus; six pilgrims were injured, including a small child. Fortunately, the
bus driver managed to escape and speed away, at which point the terrorists
fired on the third and smallest bus as it approached. After the driver was
killed, they surrounded the stalled minibus and opened fire on all sides.
The bus carried 20 people -- 14 adults and six children -- all from one
extended family who had visited the monastery to baptize two of the
children.
The terrorists first opened the hatchback and looked to see who was still
alive. They then shot all the men in the head and all the women and children
in the ankles or legs.
One of the female survivors who was shot in the legs recalls, in a video,
only that an explosion of gunfire suddenly opened on all sides of their bus;
by the time she could register what was happening, she saw pieces of her
brother-in-law's brain splattered on her lap.
Another woman, after realizing that her husband and daughter had been
killed, begged the jihadis to kill her, too. They said, "No, you stay and
suffer over your husband and daughter." Then they shot her in the ankles so
she could not move away.
In a separate report, another survivor said the terrorists told her, "We
will kill the men and children and leave you to live the rest of your lives
in misery."
Virtually all of the survivors have "had a nervous breakdown of what they
have seen and they are in the hospital."
Coptic Bishop Anba Makarios of Minya confirmed that "The pilgrims were
killed in such a savage and sadistic way, as if they were enemy combatants,
when they were just simple Christians come to get a blessing from a
monastery."
Reactions among Egypt's Christians echoed those from earlier incidents. "Oh
God, these children were students in my school!" wept one local teacher. "I
can't imagine they are dead now!"
The day after the attack, the Egyptian government created more questions
than answers. It announced that it had killed 19 terrorists believed to be
complicit in the November 2 attack. As one report noted:
"With the suspects now dead, it is impossible to confirm whether they were
indeed involved in Friday's attack. Fear continues to permeate the Christian
community in Egypt."
Another report stated that government photos of the purported slain
terrorists "appear staged in a manner which mirrors past examples of
Egyptian security forces executing suspected terrorists."
The attack was a virtual duplicate of another that occurred on May 26, 2017.
Islamist gunmen ambushed buses full of Christians returning from the same
monastery. Twenty-eight Christians -- ten of whom were children, including
two girls, aged two and four -- were massacred. According to accounts based
on eyewitness testimonies, the terrorists had ordered the passengers to exit
the bus in groups:
"... as each pilgrim came off the bus they were asked to renounce their
Christian faith and profess belief in Islam, but all of them — even the
children — refused. Each was killed in cold blood with a gunshot to the head
or the throat."
Discussing the recent massacre with Bishop Makarios, a television
interviewer said, "this is a duplicate of the same event and same place that
happened a year and five months ago -- how can this be? What does it mean?"
Makarios replied, "Honestly, those best positioned to answer this question
are the state authorities.... I add my voice to yours and ask the same
questions."
"That the same attack occurred in the same place only means that, despite
all the talk, protecting Egypt's Christian minority is not on the
government's agenda," Magdi Khalil, Egyptian political analyst and editor of
the Egyptian weekly Watani International, told Gatestone by phone.
Despite Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi's many conciliatory and
brotherly words to the nation's Christian minorities, they have suffered
more under his rule than any Egyptian leader of the modern era, partially
because ISIS arose during his term. In December 2017, a gunman killed 10
worshippers inside a church in Helwan. One year earlier, 29 Christians were
killed during twin attacks on churches. On Palm Sunday in April 2017, a
suicide bombing of two churches killed nearly 50 people and injured more
than a hundred.
Coptic Solidarity, a Washington, DC-based organization dedicated to the
human rights of Egypt's Christians, condemned the Novemnber 2 attack in a
press release:
"Coptic Solidarity reiterates the message published after the May 2017
attack, that the Egyptian government has failed to protect its Coptic
minority. Coptic Solidarity strongly maintains that this violence is not
perpetrated by foreign terrorists as the Egyptian government would like the
world to believe, but is homegrown, one created by a culture of hate and
impunity within Egypt.
"Consequently, Coptic Solidarity holds the Egyptian government fully
responsible and calls for a transparent investigation of these attacks, and
to institute serious measures to prevent future attacks. The minimum
response expected from president El-Sisi is to dismiss the head of State
Security and the governor of Minya, as a clear sign of holding officials
accountable. Furthermore, given the government's continued failure to
protect the Copts, Coptic Solidarity vigorously calls for an independent
inquiry by the UN to evaluate the Copts' situation and to recommend
necessary measures to alleviate their increasingly perilous situation and to
avoid repetition of the tragic situation of Christians in Iraq and Syria."
"Our lives have turned into hell," said one man. "I'm a Copt and I curse
myself every day for bringing [Sisi] to power. He failed us. He sold us."
"Who can accept these incidents?" asked another Christian, discussing the
recent massacre. "Every day, there are many incidents harming Christians. We
must leave our land and get out of here. I'm so exhausted... it's so dull
and dark these days."
*Raymond Ibrahim, author of the new book, Sword and Scimitar, Fourteen
Centuries of War between Islam and the West, is a Distinguished Senior
Fellow at the Gatestone Institute and a Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the
Middle East Forum.
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here
do not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone
Institute. No part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be
reproduced, copied or modified, without the prior written consent of
Gatestone Institute.
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13282/egypt-christians-bloodbath
A disastrous scenario stares Tehran in the face
Nadim Koteich/Al Arabiya/November 11/18
The 4th of November will be remembered as a glorious day of confrontation with
the Iranian regime. The re-imposition of US sanctions is the last thing Tehran
would have wanted to face at the moment when it is going through its largest
“revolutionary” expansion in the region and one of the most critical of its
domestic situations since 1979.Iran's problem with US President Donald Trump
issues from the clarity of the man. He had stated in his presidential campaign
that the nuclear agreement is the worst deal in history, and that he would
revoke it if he won the presidency. He has done exactly as he had promised.
The Trump offensive
Trump is also honest when he says he wants good relations with Iran. His only
demand is actually quite simple: Iran should stop being the way Iran is. Trump
does not know how to use Kissinger’s equations like the phrase “it is necessary
for Iran to transform from being a revolution into becoming a state.” His
advisors do not have the imaginative literary and narrative techniques such as
those possessed by former President Barack Obama's adviser Ben Rhodes, who had
written about Tehran's tight grip and Obama’s open hand to greet the Iranians.
Trump speaks a different language, a simpler and a more interactive one. You
give me something and I give you something back and when this does not work, he
says, as he told the North Korean president: “My nuclear button is bigger than
yours.” Trump really wishes to see an Iran that is different from the one we
know now. He sees in Iran a huge market that needs everything from cotton socks
to oil refineries and all that lies in between. He also sees its tourism
potential and its role for bringing stability in Asia as well as a gateway to
solve other intractable problems in this part of the world — from Israel's
security, to solving the intractable peace crisis, alleviating the climate of
extremism and terrorism and extinguishing many of the wars that have come to
threaten the security of a united Europe because of their displaced victims.
This is the most important transatlantic American security achievement after
World War II. Trump is not an ideological man. What he really wants is to reach
a new agreement that opens the door to a new Iran. He is not seeking to change
the regime, though some inkling of this idea has started to emerge in his
administration via the remnants of the George Bush administration, particularly
through national security adviser John Bolton. It is not his goal to provide
credentials to anyone in the name of America to change its image, as Obama’s
concern was and who thought that the world would change if he just finds the
right words to address it.
Economic slump
Trump’s policy is as simple as the Iranian crisis. He does not have a doctrinal
rhetoric that can be confronted with a doctrinal rhetoric, and he is only asking
the regime the same things that the Iranians themselves are asking of their
regime. It is unfortunate for the regime that these oil sanctions –oil is the
backbone of the Iranian regime as it feeds 80% of the treasury's revenues –
comes at a time characterized by two factors. The first one is a global economic
slowdown and a series of currency crises stretching from Argentina to Turkey.
This means the decline of demand on oil. Second, expectations of surpluses in
oil supplies in the first half of 2019 comes from either a rise in Saudi and
Russian output to protecting prices from harmful hikes, or the introduction of
new producers or barrels from non-traditional producers such as Canada and the
US. The environment surrounding American sanctions guarantees drying up of
Iran's oil revenues and protecting current oil prices and preventing them from
going up and threatening global economic disasters. In addition, there are
temporary exemptions granted by the Trump administration to eight countries to
continue buying Iranian oil, which do not benefit Iran but are placed in special
accounts within the procuring state and in the local currency and are only used
to pay Iranian bills for food, drugs and materials that are not subject to
sanctions.
Iran’s options
A disastrous scenario stares Tehran in the face and it stipulates that Tehran
may resort to escalation in Bab al-Mandeb and the Strait of Hormuz to create a
militarily tense environment threatening oil trade and increasing oil prices in
the hope that the world will turn against the United States. About 12% of the
total international trade passes through Bab al-Mandeb, and in 2016 the strait
was a gateway for 4.8 million barrels of oil per day, of which 2.8 million
barrels of oil per day headed towards Europe. In 2016, the Strait of Hormuz
accounted for more than 30% of the total trade of crude oil and liquid gas
transported overseas. But any untoward incidents in Bab al-Mandeb and the Strait
of Hormuz, or any obstruction of Saudi and UAE transport pipelines in that spot
and striking the bases of the Trump plan, will push Europe into America's lap
and not the other way around and will prove to the world that Iran is indeed the
irrational state that Trump had warned of. Tehran may thus subject itself to a
direct military strike launched against it by the Trump administration. The
second option, which is the most likely one is that Iran will swallow the bitter
pill of sanctions and lick its economic wounds for the next two years in the
hope that the term of Trump will end and he won’t return for a second term.
Tehran will then move on to negotiate with the new US administration by the end
of 2020. Iran believes it has the time, but the reality on the ground indicates
otherwise.
The art of arranging hostilities
Abdullah bin Bijad Al-Otaibi/Al Arabiya/November 11/18
In politics, decision-makers need to re-examine and re-arrange priorities that
serve their vision, goal and country, and this is a natural part of decision
making, which happens whenever certain changes that call for a reevaluation
occur.
We can mimic this rearrangement of priorities when looking into the art of
rearranging hostilities. It is well known that there is no permanent ally in
politics just like there isn’t a permanent enemy.
Failure to adapt
Positions change and develop according to interests, national security and the
desired future. In the Middle East, there are currents, parties, movements and
organizations that have been frozen for more than five decades and could not
re-arrange their priorities or hostilities since then. This deadlock in a speedy
era is like walking against time and it leads to decline in vision and cultural
participation and also affects political status and influence. The region has
witnessed political storms, in fact devastating earthquakes, but none of them
could develop any vision or achieve any change because they believe that
political stances are sacred positions or an ideology that must not be touched.
This is the best recipe for political failure: ignoring flexibility and not
searching for the best while relying on the past as it is. Perhaps this outlook
had some benefits before, but it is extremely harmful when strictly adopted in a
different time with different challenges.
As an example, let’s look at the relationship of the Gulf with the state of
Iraq. The relationship was amicable during the Iraq-Iran war. The Gulf States
continued to support Iraq during the eight years of that war. Iraq came out
victorious, but switched its loyalty and decided to invade the State of Kuwait,
entering it in early August 1990 and annexing it with full military force. All
those rational in the Gulf and in the world thus knew well that relations would
turn upside down so soon from friendship to enmity. Many movements, parties,
currents — whether nationalists, leftists and organizations of political Islam —
have remained stuck in their ideological outlook and have completely ignored the
convulsions in the pool of regional politics. They have failed to develop any
understanding or perception of the events. The international coalition defeated
Saddam Hussein's army and sent it back to Iraq with the imposition of
international sanctions against him. This only resulted in more inertia and
further stubbornness in hanging on to the slogans without any ability to
overcome or rearrange priorities or rearrange hostilities.
Iran’s hostilities
Since Khomeini’s revolution, Iran has through exporting the revolution sought to
interfere in the internal affairs of Arab countries, by launching direct wars
like the one Khomeini fought against Iraq for eight years and lost. This was
followed by Khamenei who adopted another strategy not based on a direct military
confrontation, but on infiltrating Arab societies through proxy movements and
militias. He succeeded in his endeavor to the point that some Iranian officials
proudly claim that the Iranian regime now controls four Arab capitals. This is a
very big change in the region and everyone should have paid attention to that
new, real and imminent danger, but these groups of thinkers, intellectuals and
currents were unable to see the extent of change and thus failed to make any
development to arrange priorities or hostilities. Today, there are two major
hostile schemes working against Arab states and their peoples: one is sectarian
and the other is fundamentalist. Those who failed to see the extent of change
before still lack insight as those who do not consider these two projects as two
hostile projects are ignorant or impotent or an agent to one of them. Finally,
it is the ability of man to develop, understand and change that governs his
position and influence, and the same applies to currents, parties and even
nations.