Detailed
Lebanese & Lebanese Related LCCC English New Bulletin For October 04/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/newselias18/english.october04.18.htm
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Bible
Quotations
Who
speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven; but whoever
blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven
Luke 12/10-12: And everyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man will be
forgiven; but whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be
forgiven. When they bring you before the synagogues, the rulers, and the
authorities, do not worry about how you are to defend yourselves or what you
are to say; for the Holy Spirit will teach you at that very hour what you
ought to say.’
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الرابط التالي
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Daily Lebanese/Arabic - English news bulletins on our LCCC web site.Click on
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Titles For The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials
from miscellaneous sources published on October 03-04/18
Beirut residents warned about a Hezbollah site in Whatsapp message/Daniel
Salami/Ynetnews/October 03/18'
Hezbollah's deputy leader says he's 'not threatened' by PM's speech/Daniel
Salami/Ynetnews/October 03/18'
Michael Aoun’s United Nations ethical flop/Makram Rabah//Al Arabiya/October
03/18
Syria’s S-300s are being integrated in Russia’s national nuclear C3 command
and control system/DEBKAfile/October 03/18
Turkey: Erdoğan's International Juggling Circus/Burak Bekdil/Gatestone
Institute/October 03/18
UN illusion and stars of the international clinic/Ghassan Charbel/Al Arabiya/October
03/18
Beyond the pageantry of the UN general assembly/Walid Jawad/Al Arabiya/October
03/18
Nuclear power fits with Saudi energy diversification plans/Dr. Malak Talal
Al-Nory/Al Arabiya/October 03/18
The leftist enemy/Mashari Althaydi/Al Arabiya/October 03/18
Titles For The
Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
October 03-04/18
Beirut residents warned about a Hezbollah site in Whatsapp message/Daniel
Hezbollah's deputy leader says he's 'not threatened' by PM's speech/Daniel
Hezbollah thanks Aoun for stance on Lebanese sovereignty
Hariri Meets Aoun, Says They Agreed to 'Speed Up Govt. File'
Aoun meets Mashnouk, cables Iraqi counterpart
Tinenti to NNA: UNIFIL's area of operations calm, Israeli violations
undermine efforts to reach permanent ceasefire
Aoun largely responsible for govt formation delay: Salam
Report: Netanyahu’s UN Claims Raise ‘Fear of War’
Lieberman Says Israel Has Information About More Missile Sites in Iran and
Beirut
Berri Sees 'Glimmer of Hope' in Govt. Formation Process
Fenianos Says $18M Earmarked for Airport, SITA Malfunction Accidental
Liberation and Development bloc calls for swift government formation
Nasrallah Reportedly Calls Aoun as Raad Stresses 'Relentless Support' for
President
Report: World Bank Tells Berri Economic Situation ‘Worrying’ in Lebanon
Geagea Urges Aoun to Act on Govt., Criticizes Bassil's 'Missiles Tour'
Kataeb's Students and Youth Department Launches New Social Initiative
EU-Lebanon meetings on human democracy, governance and justice
Michael Aoun’s United Nations ethical flop
Titles For The Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on October 03-04/18
Syria’s
S-300s are being integrated in Russia’s national nuclear C3 command and
control system
Russia completes delivery of S-300 system to Syria
What ‘Arab NATO’ would look like?
Pompeo: Iran behind threats directed against our missions in Iraq
Iraqi PM Designate Gets Challenge of Forming Government
Adel Abdel Mahdi, Iraq PM-Designate Shouldering Hopes Home and Abroad
U.N. Court Tells U.S. to Ease Iran Sanctions in Blow for Trump
Iran Says U.N. Court Ruling on U.S. Sanctions Shows Tehran is 'Right'
US slams UN court ruling on Iran ‘humanitarian’ sanctions
Turkey renews mandate for military actions against Kurds in Syria, Iraq
Turkish Troop Convoy Enters Syria Rebel Zone
Turkey Annual Inflation Hits 24.5% in September
Putin: All Foreign Troops Should Leave Syria
Putin Brands Poisoned Spy Skripal a 'Traitor' and 'Scumbag'
Assad Says 'Understanding' Reached with Arab States
Saudi Journalist and Govt Critic 'Missing in Turkey'
Saudi Journalist's Fiancee Seeks News after Disappearance
Amid Trade Spat, US-China Military Tensions Soar
Palestinian teen killed in Gaza border protest
Report: Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait to sign financial support pact for Jordan
ISIS leader Baghdadi’s youngest son killed in Syria, reports claim
Trump: Saudi King Wouldn't Last 'Two Weeks' without US Support
Amnesty International slams ‘sickening’ execution of domestic and sexual
violence victim in Iran
The Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on October 03-04/18
Beirut residents
warned about a Hezbollah site in Whatsapp message
رسائل على الواتساب تحذر أهالي بيروت من مخازن أسلحة
بجانب منازلهم
"إسرائيل" تهدّد أهالي الضاحية وتحذرهم عبر الواتساب!
Hezbollah's deputy
leader says he's 'not threatened' by PM's speech
نعيم قاسم/خطاب نتانياهو لم يهددنا
Daniel Salami/Ynetnews/October 03/18'
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/67850/ynetnews-beirut-residents-warned-about-a-hezbollah-site-in-whatsapp-message-%D9%8A%D8%AF%D8%B9%D9%88%D8%AA-%D8%A7%D8%AD%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%88%D8%AA-%D8%B1%D8%B3%D8%A7%D8%A6%D9%84-%D8%B9%D9%84/
Thousands of Dahieh suburb locals receive
mobile phone notifications warning them that Iranian-backed terror
organization hides weapons storage compound in the area; messages advise
Lebanese residents to 'proceed with caution'; Asharq al-Awsat newspaper
implies Israel is responsible for incident.
Thousands of residents of the Dahieh suburb south of Beirut, an area
controlled by Hezbollah, received anonymous mobile phone notifications
warning them they live in close proximity to a weapons storage compound that
has the potential of exploding at any moment, the Asharq al-Awsat newspaper
reported on Wednesday, implying Israel is responsible for incident.
"Important message, near your home, a Hezbollah site has been established,
proceed with caution,” read the mysterious Whatsapp message. According to
the Arab newspaper, Israeli political sources refused to comment on the
claim that Israeli intelligence is behind the messages.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, speaking at the United Nations last week,
identified three locations near Beirut airport where he said the Shi'ite
group Hezbollah was converting "inaccurate projectiles" into
precision-guided missiles.
Immediately after the prime minister’s speech at the UN General Assembly,
the IDF released video evidence of what it said were Hezbollah rocket
building sites in Beirut.
Netanyahu said in his speech that Hezbollah was acquiring the technical
know-how from Tehran to convert non-precision missiles into precision
missiles to hit Israeli cities with an accuracy level of 10 meters.
The IDF said Hezbollah also has other sites within and outside of Beirut
where its members have been working to create an infrastructure intended to
stockpile precision missiles in the future.
According to the military’s intelligence, one of the sites is located inside
a Hezbollah soccer stadium while another is adjacent to the Beirut–Rafic
Hariri International Airport.
One of the attempts to transfer machines designed to convert precision
rockets from Syria to Lebanon was thwarted by the IDF in an attack on
September 17 in Latakia, which resulted in the downing of the Russian spy
plane by the Syrian army sparking an international crisis due to Russian
military’s claims that the IDF bears responsibility for the incident.
On Monday, Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, spoke to foreign
ambassadors before taking them on a tour of the area mentioned in the prime
minister’s UN speech, where Bassil reiterated that there were "many
statements ... affirming the possession of accurate missiles by Hezbollah.
However, this does not mean that these missiles are present in the vicinity
of Beirut airport." he stressed in an apparent attempt to dismiss
Netanyahu’s claims.
Bassil, a political ally of Hezbollah, said Israel aimed to "falsify facts
concerning Lebanon and to vocalise lies that carry the seeds of a threat
that does not frighten us, and that Netanyahu had used the platform of the
UN General Assembly "to justify another aggression on a sovereign country
like Lebanon,” he vented. *Reuters contributed to
this report.
Hezbollah's deputy leader says he's 'not threatened' by
PM's speech
نعيم قاسم/خطاب نتانياهو لم يهددنا
Daniel Salami/Ynetnews/October 03/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/67850/ynetnews-beirut-residents-warned-about-a-hezbollah-site-in-whatsapp-message-%D9%8A%D8%AF%D8%B9%D9%88%D8%AA-%D8%A7%D8%AD%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%88%D8%AA-%D8%B1%D8%B3%D8%A7%D8%A6%D9%84-%D8%B9%D9%84/
Naim Qassem claims Lebanon's terror group
is prepared to face 'Israeli aggression,' which he adds is unlikely to
happen, and labels prime minister's remarks during UN General Assembly as
'unsuccessful show.Hezbollah's deputy secretary-general, Naim Qassem, said
on Wednesday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's speech at the UN
neither interests nor threatens the terror group.The remarks were made in
response to the claims Netanyahu made during his speech at the UN General
Assembly last Thursday when he identified three locations near Beirut
airport where he said the Shi'ite group Hezbollah was converting "inaccurate
projectiles" into precision-guided missiles.
"We are not interested in or threatened by Netanyahu's unsuccessful show,”
the deputy leader stressed.
“We are fully prepared to deal with the Israeli aggression if it happens,
even though we do not expect it, and it does not affect the hard work we put
in to improve our preparedness and our weaponry," Qassem vented.
Qassem, who spoke at a conference in Beirut, also suggested the terror
group’s resistance is what led to the May 2000 withdrawal of Israeli
military forces from southern Lebanon.
"As we fought on the battlefield, those on the background chanted: ‘No, you
can’t,’ but in the end we achieved victory after victory. It’s proven by the
2000 withdrawal and the 2006 liberation (Second Lebanon War-ed). The victory
of the resistance axis is the victory of Lebanon,” he exclaimed.
Earlier on Wednesday, thousands of residents of the Dahieh suburb south of
Beirut, an area controlled by Hezbollah, received anonymous mobile phone
notifications warning them they live in close proximity to a Shiite terror
group’s weapons storage compound that has the potential of exploding at any
moment, the Asharq al-Awsat newspaper reported on Wednesday, implying also
that Israel is responsible for incident.
"Important message, near your home, a Hezbollah site has been established,
proceed with caution,” read the mysterious Watsapp message.
According to the Arab newspaper, Israeli political sources refused to
comment on the claim that Israeli intelligence is behind the messages.
Immediately after Netanyahu’s speech at UNGA speech the IDF released video
evidence of what it said were Hezbollah rocket building sites in Beirut.
The IDF said Hezbollah also has other sites within and outside of Beirut
where its members have been working to create an infrastructure intended to
stockpile precision missiles in the future.
According to the military’s intelligence, one of the sites is located inside
a Hezbollah soccer stadium while another is adjacent to the Beirut–Rafic
Hariri International Airport.
On Monday, Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, spoke to foreign
ambassadors before taking them on a tour of the area mentioned in the prime
minister’s UN speech, where Bassil reiterated that there were "many
statements ... affirming the possession of accurate missiles by Hezbollah.
However, this does not mean that these missiles are present in the vicinity
of Beirut airport." he stressed in an apparent attempt to dismiss
Netanyahu’s claims.
*Reuters contributed to this report.
Hezbollah thanks Aoun
for stance on Lebanese sovereignty
The Daily Star/October 03/2018/BEIRUT: Hezbollah Secretary-General Sayyed
Hasan Nasrallah thanked President Michel Aoun for the positions he presented
to the international community, which expressed a sense of sovereignty that
"touched the hearts of the Lebanese," Hezbollah MP Mohammad Raad said
Wednesday. Raad relayed his party leader’s comments to Aoun during a meeting
of the Loyalty to the Resistance bloc at Baabda Palace, the state-run
National News Agency reported. “The positions of President Aoun touched the
hearts of the Lebanese and expressed the [convictions] on which we are
based,” Raad said of the president's speech before the United Nations
General Assembly in New York last week, affirming his bloc’s support for
Aoun in efforts that preserve the country’s “strength and sovereignty.”“The
president expressed his views on the sense of national sovereignty felt by
the Lebanese [patriot], who wants his country strong and free, and to not be
pushed over by any ... aggressor,” Raad was quoted as saying after the
meeting. Hezbollah also “notes” the initiative taken by caretaker Foreign
Minister Gebran Bassil, which “rebutted the lies of [Israel] and revealed
the truth to the public opinion,” Raad said. He was referring to a tour lead
by Bassil Monday that took dozens of foreign ambassadors and diplomats to
the Ahed stadium – alleged by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to
be a site for Hezbollah precision missiles. Aoun in turn thanked the bloc
for its stance and conveyed his greetings to Nasrallah, a statement from the
presidency said. Aoun told Hezbollah's bloc that his speech at the U.N.
aimed to confront countries with their responsibility toward "the problems
Lebanon is facing, especially consistant Israeli agressions ... or the
Palestinian cause that still remains without a solution after seventy
years," the statement said. The Daily Star could not reach Raad for
comment
Hariri Meets Aoun, Says They Agreed to 'Speed Up Govt.
File'
Naharnet/October 03/18/Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri on Wednesday met
with President Michel Aoun at the Baabda Palace to discuss the government
formation process. “I'm very optimistic and I agreed with President Aoun on
speeding up the Cabinet file because of the economic situation,” Hariri told
reporters after the meeting. “We will hold a second meeting soon and things
are positive,” the PM-designate added. “Listen to what I will say tomorrow,”
Hariri went on to say, referring to his interview Thursday evening on MTV.
Speaker Nabih Berri had earlier announced that he sees a “glimmer of hope”
in the Cabinet formation process. Noting that there seems to be “a balance
in concessions” regarding the government, Berri said “the response to the
Israeli threats lies in forming the government as so
Aoun meets Mashnouk, cables Iraqi counterpart
Wed 03 Oct 2018/NNA - President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, on
Wednesday welcomed at the Baabda palace caretaker Minister of Interior and
Municipalities, Nuhad Al-Mashnouk. Talks reportedly touched on most recent
developments in the country.
On emerging, Minister Mashnouk voiced support to President Aoun's position
in the face of the recent Israeli enemy's threats against Lebanon. "The
response of the Lebanese State in this regard is excellent and this fact
confirms more and more the need for the presence of an effective State,
which is able to defend Lebanon's sovereignty and stability," Mashnouk said.
On the Cabinet formation process, Mashnouk said President Aoun was still
optimistic about a solution regarding the birth of the new government. On
the other hand, President Aoun cabled congratulations to his new Iraqi
counterpart, Barham Saleh, on his election, wishing him success in his new
mission.
Tinenti to NNA: UNIFIL's area of operations calm,
Israeli violations undermine efforts to reach permanent ceasefire
Wed 03 Oct 2018/NNA - "The situation in the UNIFIL area of operations is
calm and stable," UNIFIL spokesman Andrea Tinenti said in his chat with the
National News Agency correspondent in Tyre. "Despite the statements we hear,
the situation is stable and the mission is acting in full commitment to
maintaining stability and a cessation of hostilities.""The security
environment in southern Lebanon today is strategically different from the
situation that prevailed 12 years ago, thanks to the joint efforts of the
UNIFIL and its strategic partner, the Lebanese Armed Forces, and owing to
the commitment of the parties to a cessation of hostilities," he told the
NNA. On UNIFIL's position over the Israeli air violations, Tenenti said that
"the UNIFIL reports all the violations to the UN Security Council, and all
the Israeli flights are included in the periodic reports.""Condemnation
letters are also addressed by the UNIFIL to the Israeli army over those
aerial violations, with requests for immediate halt," he stressed. "These
violations of Lebanese sovereignty undermine the cessation of hostilities
and the efforts to achieve permanent ceasefire."Asked whether the UNIFIL
feared any military action amidst talks of Israeli border activity, Tenenti
responded: "UNIFIL continues to work closely with all the parties to help
keep the area of operations stable. From the UNIFIL's point of view, and in
the context of our mandate, the most important consideration is the
continued commitment of the parties to a cessation of hostilities and to
full cooperation with the UNIFIL."
Aoun largely responsible for govt formation delay: Salam
The Daily Star/October 03/2018/BEIRUT: Former Prime Minister Tammam Salam
said President Michel Aoun is largely responsible for the delay in
government formation, in remarks published by local daily An-Nahar
Wednesday. Salam said the president must reject having a share in the
Cabinet as long as his political party is represented. Aoun founded the Free
Patriotic Movement, which along with its allies forms the Strong Lebanon
bloc with 29 lawmakers. In the interview, Salam said he is not convinced of
Aoun’s proposal of a majority government to break the deadlock. He said the
country needs a government that attends to people’s concerns and the
economic situation, and not one that pleases political parties. Prime
Minister-designate Saad Hariri is determined to form a national entente
Cabinet that represents all the main political parties.
Salam said the success of a national unity government lies in the
president’s impartiality. However, the president cannot be impartial when
requesting to name ministers while he already has representation, he said.
Salam added that he realizes the pressures Hariri is facing. He said
obstructions by certain political parties are part of their strategy, after
having intentionally disabled the country over the course of two and a half
years to reach the presidency. Salam rejected talks of intentionally
targeting the presidential term to cause its failure. Salam said there is no
intentional targeting of the term. Several politicians have referred to
Aoun’s presidential term as a “failure.” In another report by An-Nahar, on
Monday, caretaker Education Minister Marwan Hamadeh said he had never seen
worse than this presidential term and this caretaker government. Hariri was
tasked with forming a government in May, but his efforts to do so have faced
several hurdles as a result of competing demands from different political
sides. Hariri presented Aoun with a draft formula on Sept. 3, which failed
to break the deadlock when Aoun and the FPM rejected it. Salam’s Cabinet was
formed under the auspices of former President Michel Sleiman on Feb. 15,
2014, about 10n months after his designation on April 6, 2013.
Report: Netanyahu’s UN Claims Raise ‘Fear of War’
Naharnet/October 03/18/Israeli claims that Hizbullah has secret rocket sites
near the Beirut airport have “aggravated fears of an Israeli aggression
against Lebanon,” as Lebanese officials strongly deny the claims describing
them as “baseless,” the Saudi Asharq al-Awsat daily reported on Wednesday.
President Michel Aoun said on Tuesday that Lebanon will confront any Israeli
aggression, and that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's allegations
— made during an address to the U.N. General Assembly last week — were
"baseless," calling them a "new Israeli threat to Lebanese sovereignty."
Lebanese parties share fears of a war that Israel intends to initiate, it
added. Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri raised concerns on Tuesday saying the
claims and escalating rhetoric hide intentions to “shut down Beirut
airport.”Member of the Strong Republic parliamentary bloc (Lebanese Forces
party), MP Antoine Habshi told the daily: “We support the dissociation
policy which can only be applied by distancing Lebanon from the regional
axis policy.” A member of the Development and Liberation bloc, MP Mohammed
Khawaja told the newspaper: “The Israeli threat already exists, although I
do not see a war in the near term by virtue of available data, which
constitute a deterrent elements to the Israeli war, which remains a
permanent hypothesis.” Explaining that Netanyahu's claims “fall within the
framework of a pressure war,” Khawaja said it is dangerous because it came
from the top UN podium, placing them in the framework of “incitement against
Lebanon.”Netanyahu had displayed an aerial shot of Beirut airport with the
three alleged rocket sites labeled. Lebanese officials took ambassadors and
reporters on a tour of some of the alleged sites on Monday, seeking to
dispel the accusations. Netanyahu derided the tour as "propaganda" and said
it skipped a nearby missile factory. Israel and Hizbullah fought a
devastating monthlong war in 2006.
Lieberman Says Israel Has Information About More Missile
Sites in Iran and Beirut
Agencies/Wednesday 03rd October 2018/Israel has information about other
secret Iranian and Hezbollah facilities that have been established in Iran
and Beirut, Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said on Tuesday.
"There's enough information and we will disclose it when the time is right,"
he said. Last week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the UN
General Assembly that Hezbollah had established three missile storage sites
in Beirut, all located in the vicinity of the country's airport. In
response, Lebanon’s Caretaker Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil took foreign
ambassadors and journalists on a tour to the alleged sites in order to
refute Israel’s allegations. “It’s clear this was pure manipulation,”
Lieberman said. “All I would suggest is that next time, they should bring
journalists immediately rather than 72 hours later.”
on as possible.”
Berri Sees 'Glimmer of Hope' in Govt. Formation Process
Naharnet/October 03/18/Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri announced Wednesday
that he sees a “glimmer of hope” in the Cabinet formation process, revealing
that a meeting will be held later in the day between President Michel Aoun
and Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri.
Noting that there seems to be “a balance in concessions” regarding the
government, Berri said “the response to the Israeli threats lies in forming
the government as soon as possible.”
Fenianos Says $18M Earmarked for Airport, SITA
Malfunction Accidental
Naharnet/October 03/18/Eighteen million dollars have been transferred by the
Council for Development and Reconstruction for improvement works at Beirut's
Rafik Hariri International Airport, caretaker Public Works and Transport
Minister Youssef Fenianos said on Wednesday.
At a meeting he held at the Directorate General of Civil Aviation, in the
presence of a senior delegation from the World Bank, Fenianos noted that the
latest baggage registration system failure at the airport was not “deliberate.”“This
is something that happens at all airports in the world,” Fenianos added,
clearing global operator SITA of any intentional misconduct.SITA is a
multinational company providing IT and telecommunication services to the
global air transport industry. Beirut's airport has recently witnessed a
series of problems that involved congestion and an air-conditioning systems
failure. It also witnessed a clash between security agencies over
jurisdiction which forced the delay of several flights.
Liberation and Development bloc calls for swift
government formation
Wed 03 Oct 2018/NNA - "Liberation and Development" parliamentary bloc on
Wednesday underlined the dire need to speed up the formation of the
government, in a bid to protect the country and reinforce its immunity in
the face of recent threats. The bloc's words came in the wake of its
periodic meeting chaired by House Speaker Nabih Berri, devoted to discussing
most recent developments. The bloc stressed that the recent Israeli enemy's
threats against Lebanon necessitate cementing national unity, as the most
effective weapon in the face of these hostile menaces.
Reading out the bloc's statement on emerging, the bloc's Secretary General,
MP Anwar Al-Khalil, said the recent hostile statements of the Israeli enemy
officials aim to take advantage of the disintegrated Arab situation at this
political juncture to attack Lebanon and avenge its victories, achieved
thanks to resistance against occupation and aggression. MP Al-Khalil said
that Israeli threats require the consolidation of national unity, being the
most effective weapon against Israeli hostility. The bloc urged the Lebanese
to deal seriously with these threats and to remain alert to confront any
offensive, paved by the recent Israeli hostile statements.As such, the bloc
stressed that these realities require the acceleration of the formation of
the government in order to save the country from these menaces and
consolidate its immunity.
The bloc also broached an array of parliamentary affairs.
Nasrallah Reportedly Calls Aoun as Raad Stresses 'Relentless
Support' for President
Naharnet/October 03/18/President Michel Aoun held a meeting at Baabda Palace
with members of the Loyalty to the Resistance Parliamentary bloc headed by
MP Mohammed Raad, the National News Agency said on Wednesday. NNA said talks
have focused on the most recent local and regional developments. Raad
conveyed Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah’s “utmost appreciation of
the President’s recent stances at the UN General Assembly meeting,” in New
York last week. “The President has expressed stances that emanate from a
national sense of sovereignty, which is equally felt by the Lebanese who
seek a strong and free Lebanon, not a broken one,” Raad said. "The positions
of President Aoun touched the hearts of the Lebanese,” said Raad reiterating
his bloc's relentless support for the President, “especially in all that
preserves the steadfastness, strength, and sovereignty of Lebanon." Later on
Wednesday, LBCI TV reported that Nasrallah had held phone talks with Aoun to
"applaud his latest stances, especially his speech at the U.N."
Report: World Bank Tells Berri Economic Situation
‘Worrying’ in Lebanon
Naharnet/October 03/18/Speaker Nabih Berri said on Wednesday that a World
Bank delegation has raised concerns about the economic situation in Lebanon
describing it as “critical” in light of a government formation delay, al-Joumhouria
daily reported on Wednesday. “Some foreign officials seem worried about
Lebanon. They are more concerned than Lebanese parties, that a government be
formed,” Berri was quoted as telling his visitors. The Speaker said during
his recent meetings with foreign officials, he sensed their “uneasiness
regarding the Lebanese situation. They want us to address it before it
aggravates out of control. Meanwhile we are deep in conflict and
disagreements over (ministerial) shares and sizes,” said Berri. A delegation
from the World Bank that visited Berri on Tuesday, highlighted “the critical
economic conditions in Lebanon,” he stated. “They presented in figures the
repercussions of the electricity file,” and other areas where money is being
spent recklessly, added the Speaker.
Geagea Urges Aoun to Act on Govt., Criticizes Bassil's 'Missiles Tour'
Naharnet/October 03/18/Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea has urged
President Michel Aoun to “personally intervene” to facilitate the formation
of the new government, as he criticized the tour that caretaker Foreign
Minister Jebran Bassil has recently organized for foreign ambassadors in
Lebanon.
“Overcoming the formation crisis requires the personal intervention of the
president, who should give each party its legitimate right. I personally
call on the president to take this step according to the results of the
elections,” Geagea said in an interview with the Central New Agency
published Wednesday. Commenting on Israel's claims about the presence of
“Hizbullah missile sites” near Beirut airport and the Lebanese response to
the allegations, Geagea warned that “the situation in the region is
explosive and the international conflict is huge on several axes and
fronts.”“Amid all of this, verbal responses and media stunts are not
beneficial. The president and the prime minister must deal very carefully
with what is happening and must warn all parties against taking any step
that would pose the least risk to Lebanon,” the LF leader added, in an
apparent reference to the Bassil-organized tour.Separately, Geagea confirmed
that “the page will be turned on the past and a new chapter will be opened
with the Marada Movement very soon,” describing the relation with the Kataeb
Party as “normal.”
Kataeb's Students and Youth Department Launches New Social Initiative
Kataeb.org/Wednesday 03rd October 2018/The Kataeb's Students and Youth
Department on Monday launched the social initiative project FLEETS, a
carpooling mobile application that is designed for university students
across Lebanon. The application is powered by Kunhadi, an association that
has been striving to introduce a new culture of safe driving habits among
the Lebanese community through road safety awareness among other activities.
The application is mainly aimed at reducing the students' transportation
cost, reducing traffic, saving parking spaces and reducing CO2 emmission.
During the launching ceremony, Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel stressed that such
an initiative alleviates the stress that the students have to endure on a
daily basis due to the absence of a reliable public transportation system in
Lebanon. "This is a practical initiative that we are putting forward to help
solve the same old problem that the Lebanese, especially the youth, are
experiencing," he added. "We have proved that we don't just speak about a
problem, as we take action and don't hesitate to point out mistakes in order
to seek the appropriate solutions."
EU-Lebanon meetings on human democracy, governance and
justice
Wed 03 Oct 2018/NNA - The European Union (EU) mission announced in a
statement issued this Wednesday that "the European Union and Lebanon have
held high-level meetings in Beirut on October 2 and 3 dwelling on various
topics, including human rights, democracy, governance, security and justice,
within the framework of the EU-Lebanon Association Agreement concluded in
2006 and the partnership priorities agreed between the two parties in
November 2016."Both sides agreed to strengthen their partnership so as to
address common challenges, including those arising from conflicts in the
Middle East. The parties undertook a full and frank political dialogue and
committed themselves to strengthening their cooperation.
Michael Aoun’s United Nations ethical flop
Makram Rabah//Al Arabiya/October 03/18
Very few people look towards the United Nations and its various agencies
with much optimism or hope , as this post WWII institution, despite its
noble objectives, have failed time and again to rise to the challenges and
shed its many bureaucratic and political limitations, thus rendering it
futile.
Yet perhaps one of the major reasons for the failure of the UN is the lack
of commitment of many of the member states and their leaders, who take to
the United Nations pulpit ever year preaching morality and
self-righteousness, while in reality adopting policies and measures that are
counterproductive not to say malicious. The
Lebanese President Michael Aoun’s recent excursion to New York to attend the
73rd Session of the UN General Assembly is a case in point. Aoun, born in
1935 ten years before the formation of the UN, addressed his peers last
Wednesday urging them to take concrete measures to reform the UN, which in
his opinion totally lacks transparency and balance.
After distributing his wisdom, Aoun reminded his audience of the
importance of respecting human rights, a matter that to Aoun Lebanon has
upheld through its constitution and its various agencies chiefly amongst
them the newly formed independent National Commission for Human Rights,
Lebanon's National Human Rights Institution (NHRI), which includes a
National Preventive Mechanism (NPM).This finally tuned and humanistic
rhetoric however was merely the preamble to Aoun’s real intention, as he
demanded the immediate return of the Syrian refugees who in his opinion and
that of his allies Hezbollah have no pretext to stay in Lebanon, nor are
they under any threat from the Assad regime, which is essentially
responsible for their predicament. This was rather
normal coming from Aoun who for years, with the assistance of his son-in-law
and political heir Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, led the charge
to normalize relations and whitewash the Assad regime both locally and
abroad. While Aoun stanchly championed
transparency and accountability at the UN, these two concepts are nowhere to
be found at home with many allegations of corruption and cronyism
Xenophobic tactics
Through a combination xenophobic tactics both Aoun and Bassil, use these
refugees as a scare crew to muster populists support from the Lebanese whose
abysmal economic conditions prevent them from sharing what remains of a
decaying failing state. Aoun was clear in his
speech that he simply wants to get rid of the refugees even if this came at
the cost of throwing them back into the fires of the Syrian conflict, which
contrary to what Aoun and his allies Hezbollah peddle is far from over.
Yet Aoun’s refusal to work with the UN and UNHCR is one of the major
factors for the current horrible crisis especially that Bassil has toiled
hard to antagonize and alienate these funding agencies accusing them of
planning to naturalize the refugees and preventing them from willfully
returning home. Realistically however Aoun’s UN
speech leads to two main conclusions, either his speechwriters are out of
touch with reality or simply that they maliciously choose to disregard
Aoun’s abysmal term vis-à-vis all the demands he made throughout his speech.
Despite Aoun’s flaunting the Human rights commission, who is yet to
become active, many Syrian refugees have been subject to unlawful detention,
torture and sometimes death by the Lebanese security agencies, who have yet
to conduct a serious and transparent investigation to refute these
allegations. While Aoun stanchly championed
transparency and accountability at the UN, these two concepts are nowhere to
be found at home with many allegations of corruption and cronyism
surrounding the performance of his parliamentary bloc led by his son-in-law
Gebran Bassil. Both Hezbollah and their main
Christian ally Michael Aoun continue to peddle the Russian initiative for
the return of the Syrian refugees as the only viable and serious plan.
Ironically the Russian plan as well as Aoun political term and career bear
many similarities chiefly amongst them is the fact that they both bequeath
ethics and morals to the public while in fact practicing the opposite.
Aoun heart might perhaps be in the right place, but leadership is
above all measured by ones acts and their consequences, and thus no speech
can whitewash Aoun’s history and what remains of his term, nor save Lebanon
from its gloomy future.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News
published
on
October 03-04/18
Syria’s S-300s are
being integrated in Russia’s national nuclear C3 command and control system
DEBKAfile/October 03/18
When Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said on Oct. 2 that the
“unified” S-300 air defense systems in Syria will be installed in Syria by
Oct. 20, he really meant its integration in the Russian homeland system.
This element of his report to President Vladimir Putin is the key to the
real import of Moscow’s response to the downing of its Il-20 spy plane on
Sept. 17, for which Shoigu blamed Israel. DEBKAfile’s military and
intelligence sources report that Putin seized on the disaster to establish
in Syria an advanced air defense weapons system linked not only to the
Russian Khmeimim Air Base in Latakia, but integrated in Russia’s own C3
command, control and communications system against nuclear attack.
This move is a strategic game-changer for American and Israeli operations in
Syria. They are no longer taxed with staying clear of Russian and Syrian
missile batteries in Damascus, but are facing their first direct contest
with the air defense system which defends Russian cities. Shoigu seemed to
offer details on the S-300s delivered to Syria. He mentioned 49 units of
“radars, basic target acquisition systems, command posts and four
launchers.” But he carefully omitted to reveal how the Syrian and Russian
air defense networks were to be linked to the command and control center in
Russia and exactly how they would function together. A critical question
remains open: Is the Syrian S-300 system fully integrated in the Russian
homeland C-3 or only partially?
The C-3 is pretty much an unknown quantity for Western intelligence since
Russian military engineers have been working tirelessly on upgrades for some
months. Israel military officers have wisely stopped boasting that their air
force can easily handle the S-300s, having realized that the version of this
anti-air system tested in Israeli war games in Greece and other places is
more or less obsolete. It has been has been replaced by a far more
sophisticated S-300 which is the version shipped to Syria in the last two
weeks.
Moscow has therefore substantially raised the stakes of the military contest
between Russia and the United States in Syria to a much higher level. Putin
has chosen this arena to directly test Russia’s air defense capabilities
against the US Air Force’s F-22 stealth plane and Israel’s US-made F-35
“Adir” super plane, to find out which comes out best.
Russia completes delivery of S-300 system to Syria
Reuters, Moscow/Wednesday, 3 October 2018/Russia has delivered an S-300
surface-to-air missile system to Syria, it said on Tuesday, in defiance of
Israeli and US concerns that the arms sale would embolden Iran and escalate
the Syrian war. Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu told President Vladimir Putin
during a meeting broadcast by Rossiya 24 TV: “The work was finished a day
ago,” adding that the system would improve the security of Russian military
personal in Syria. Russia decided to supply the system after Moscow accused
Israel of indirectly causing the downing of a Russian military jet near
Syria in September. Israel voiced regret at the death of 15 Russian air crew
while saying Syrian incompetence was at fault and that it was compelled to
continue taking action against suspected deployments of Iranian-backed
forces across its northern border. “We have not changed our strategic line
on Iran,” Israeli Education Minister Naftali Bennett, a member of Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s security cabinet, said on Tuesday. “We will
not allow Iran to open up a third front against us. We will take actions as
required,” he told Israel Radio. The White House previously said it hoped
Russia would reconsider the move, which US National Security Adviser John
Bolton called a “significant escalation” of Syria’s seven-year-old war.
What ‘Arab NATO’ would look like?
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Wednesday, 3 October 2018/Regional powers
with the dominating projects, especially Iran, which supports militancy in
Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and Yemen, is among the main threats facing “Arab NATO”
alliance, the book by General Michael Flynn reveals. But the moot question
is what “Arab NATO” would actually look like. As the talk about the “Arab
NATO” idea increases, the importance of referring back to Flynn’s book – The
Field of Fight: How We Can Win the Global War Against Radical Islam and Its
Allies – increases.
The book classifies Iran as the Soviet Union in the second half of the 20th
century, describing it as the main cause of all what threatens US. It also
indicates that US alone without any coalition with the Middle East
countries; would not be able to accomplish the mission.
Flynn also suggests establishing of the Arab Gulf and Red Sea coalition (GRSTO).
On the other hand, news about “Arab NATO” suggest that it will be formed in
January 2019 and will include GCC countries as well as Egypt, Jordan and US.
Besides armed radical Islam, the other threats mentioned in the book include
the threat of nuclear weapon, with an explicit indication that the Iranian
agreement with the international community regarding Tehran’s nuclear
weapon; threatens the national US security.
General Flynn remained in the US administration for only 24 days, although
his ideas were clear in the US president’s policy; in reviewing the nuclear
agreement with Iran.
On July 23, 2016, US President Donald Trump tweeted recommending the book.
Flynn suggests that that there is an international alliance hostile to
America, including Russia, China, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and Syria. Flynn
suggests that the new alliance would include all Gulf countries, Egypt,
Jordan and UD, adding that signatory members can invite any other country to
participate.
The base ground of the alliance is to provide security for its members by
signing a joint defense agreement under which all members of the alliance
would take an action in case any member faced military attack. However, he
also believes that this alliance should not be military only, but diplomatic
and economic as well. Besides economic integration among its members it
should launch joint projects in the field of energy. As for US’s
contribution in the alliance, it is represented in the intelligence work,
information, early warning systems, special operations, missile defense, and
the use of air force. Although Michael Flynn was the first one who came up
with the idea of the alliance, but it is not possible to consider what he
suggested as the final vision of the alliance. We can only wait and see its
final structure in January in addition to the fact that Flynn’s ideas became
at stake, according to some analysts, once he signed a contract to work with
Qatar. The contradiction comes from the fact that Qatar’s relations with the
new NATO are now frozen and Flynn’s idea is based on these countries working
together. Yet another contradiction is that Qatar remains the only country,
which is aligned to Iran, which the “Arab NATO” seeks to target.
Pompeo: Iran behind threats directed against our missions in Iraq
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Wednesday, 3 October 2018/US Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo said on Wednesday that Iran is behind threats directed
against the United States diplomatic missions in both Iraqi cities of
Baghdad and Basra. “Iran is the source of the current threat to the
Americans in Iraq... Our intelligence is strong in this regard, we can see
the hand of Ayatollah and his followers supporting these attacks on the
United States,” he told reporters at the State Department. In a related
context, he stressed that Tehran “used its funds to finance terrorism and
militias in Iraq and the Middle East… Iran continues its malicious activity
in the region.” Pompeo hoped that “the Iraqi government is not subject to
Iranian dictates,” stressing that Washington will always stand “side by side
with the Iraqi people,” expressing his hope that the Iraqi Prime Minister
would honor his commitments to the Iraqi people. In another context, Pompeo
considered the UN’s top court ruling to lift US sanctions on humanitarian
goods for the Islamic Republic to be a “defeat for Iran.” Pompeo said his
country had already taken measures to avoid harming Iran’s humanitarian
needs and that the ruling “categorically rejected all unfounded demands by
Iran” to lift US sanctions in a comprehensive way. He stressed that Iran is
exploiting the International Court of Justice for political purposes. On
another development, Pompeo said that the US administration was terminating
a 1955 treaty reached with then ally Iran after Tehran cited Washington in
an international court ruling against America’s sanctions policy, according
to AFP. “I’m announcing that the US is terminating the 1955 Treaty of Amity
with Iran. This is a decision, frankly, that is 39 years overdue,” Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo told reporters, referring to the 1979 Islamic
revolution. The US Secretary of State also considered that “Russia’s
delivery of the S-300 system to the Syrian regime is a dangerous
escalation.”Bolton says US pulling out of an amendment to the Vienna
Convention Meanwhile, national security adviser John Bolton said the
administration also was pulling out of an amendment to the Vienna Convention
on Diplomatic Relations that Iran or others, notably the Palestinians, could
use to sue the US at The Hague-based tribunal. Bolton told reporters at the
White House that the provision violates US sovereignty.“The United States
will not sit idly by as baseless politicized claims are brought against us,”
Bolton said. He cited a case brought to the court by the “so-called state of
Palestine” challenging the move of the US Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem as the main reason for withdrawing, according to the Associated
Press.Bolton, who last month unleashed a torrent of criticism against the
International Criminal Court, noted that previous Republican administrations
had pulled out of various international agreements and bodies over
“politicized cases.” He said the administration would review all accords
that might subject the US to prosecution by international courts or
panels.With Agencies
Iraqi PM Designate Gets Challenge of Forming Government
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/Veteran Iraqi politician and now
prime minister designate Adel Abdel Mahdi Wednesday began the tough task of
forming the next government, seeking to overcome sharp differences and unite
fractious political parties. In a surprise move late Tuesday, new President
Barham Saleh handed Abdel Mahdi -- seen as an independent -- the difficult
responsibility only hours after being elected. It comes as several different
blocs in the Iraqi parliament are jostling for power following the May
elections -- in-fighting which had so far stymied the formation of a new
government. The largest bloc traditionally appoints the prime minister and
presides over the formation of the next government. But the exact contours
of a new governing coalition are yet to be drawn. Outgoing prime minister
Haider al-Abadi threw in the towel last month after deadly unrest in the
southern city of Basra cost his fragile alliance the support of populist
Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr. Sadr's list won the largest share of seats in
the May polls. And after dumping Abadi, it swung behind the pro-Iran bloc
led by Hadi al-Ameri's Conquest Alliance -- a coalition of anti-jihadist
veterans close to Tehran. A spokesman for Conquest Alliance, Ahmad al-Assadi,
told reporters late Tuesday that "the largest coalition resolved the issue
by naming the prime minister" hinting his bloc had supported Abdel Mahdi's
nomination, but without offering up any concrete evidence.
Power-sharing system
Iraq has a proportional system designed to prevent a slide back into
dictatorship following the 2003 ouster of late dictator Saddam Hussein. The
largely ceremonial role of president, now taken by the 58-year-old Saleh,
has been reserved for the Kurds since Iraq's first multi-party elections in
2005. Under the power-sharing deal, the post of prime minister is held by a
Shiite, while the speaker of parliament is Sunni Arab -- a post filled last
month by Mohammed al-Halbusi. The 76-year-old Abdel Mahdi, a former Iraqi
vice president, has proven political credentials and is seen in Iraqi
circles as an independent. In a country long a political battleground
between the United States and Iran as they fight for influence, he is
regarded as a rare figure of consensus. An economist by training, he was
once a senior member of a party close to Iran. But he has also won the
backing of US and European leaders. In 2014, Abdel Mahdi took up the post of
oil minister under Abadi before resigning two years later. Now he has just
30 days to navigate tangled Iraqi politics and form a government. If he
fails, then another candidate will have to be chosen to pick up the baton. A
Shiite and native of Baghdad, he is nonetheless credited with having good
relations with a number of Kurdish leaders. This could be crucial, coming a
year after a disastrous referendum in which Iraqi Kurdistan voted
overwhelmingly for independence.
Kurdish ties
The vote triggered a punishing backlash from Baghdad, which imposed economic
penalties and sent federal troops to push Kurdish forces out of oil fields
vital for the region's economy. Under a tacit accord between the region's
two main factions, the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan, the PUK hold the federal presidency and the KDP the post of Iraqi
Kurdistan president. But the Iraqi Kurdish presidency has been left vacant
since KDP leader Massud Barzani's mandate ended following the September 2017
referendum that he championed. In a bitter dispute for power, Barzani had
backed for president Fuad Hussein, his 72-year-old former chief of staff and
veteran of the opposition to Saddam. But in a blow to Barzani, the post went
to Saleh, a moderate who has served both as Iraqi deputy premier and Kurdish
prime minister. He was part of an interim authority put in place by the
United States following the 2003 invasion that ousted Saddam. He later
became deputy prime minister under Nuri al-Maliki then returned to the
Kurdish regional capital Arbil in 2009 to become head of the Kurdistan
government. Meanwhile, results are also due late Wednesday after Sunday's
polls for the Kurdish parliament.
Adel Abdel Mahdi, Iraq PM-Designate Shouldering Hopes Home and Abroad
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/Adel Abdel Mahdi, the veteran
tapped to become Iraq's next prime minister, is seen as an independent
capable of bringing together rivals on the country's fractious political
scene. A Shiite and native of Baghdad, the 76-year-old has been handed the
difficult task of navigating Iraq's tangled politics to form a government
within 30 days. With a burly physique and a face framed by spectacles and a
thin mustache, Abdel Mahdi is an economist by training who has served as oil
minister. He will be able to call on years of experience as a regular on
Iraq's diplomatic scene for the balancing acts he is expected for perform.
Abdel Mahdi has the blessing of both Iran and the United States, a required
consensus in the country caught between its two major allies who are foes.
He also has good relations with many Kurdish leaders, a major advantage in
normalizing ties with the autonomous region of Kurdistan whose people voted
overwhelmingly to split from Iraq last year. The son of a minister of during
Iraq's monarchy, which met a bloody end in 1958, Abdel Mahdi joined the
Baath party, which brought Saddam Hussein to power in the late 1970s. He
became a leading opponent of the dictator, first as a communist and then as
an Islamist, before fleeing Iraq, only to return after Saddam's overthrow in
the U.S.-led invasion of 2003.
'Heavy responsibility'
Abdel Mahdi later became a senior figure in the Supreme Iraqi Islamic
Council, a Shiite movement close to Iran. A member of the interim
authorities set up by the U.S. military command who briefly served as
finance minister, he became Iraqi vice president after the country's first
multiparty elections in 2005. While he was vice president, he was lightly
wounded in 2007 when a bomb exploded inside the public works ministry. In
2014, he was appointed oil minister under Haider al-Abadi, the man he is set
to succeed as premier. He excelled in the role, deftly negotiating with
Kurds over oil before resigning after two years. A francophone who attended
university in France, he also has an excellent command of English. Abdel
Mahdi will have to deal with many figures whose paths he has already crossed
as he seeks to hammer out a new government. Among them is Hadi al-Ameri, the
head of the Conquest Alliance close to Iran, former prime minister Nouri al-Maliki
and populist Shiite cleric Moqtadr Sadr. Responding to a message of
congratulations from Abadi, he showed he was wary of the task ahead,
referring to it as "a heavy responsibility."
U.N. Court Tells U.S. to Ease Iran Sanctions in Blow for Trump
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/The U.N.'s top court ordered the
United States on Wednesday to lift sanctions on humanitarian goods for Iran,
in a stinging rebuke for the Trump administration which nonetheless made
clear the decision would change nothing.
Tehran hailed its "victory" after the International Court of Justice ruled
that sanctions reimposed after President Donald Trump pulled out of a
nuclear deal put Iranian lives at risk. But the United States insisted it
was already allowing humanitarian exemptions to sanctions and, accusing Iran
of seeking a "propaganda" win, announced it was terminating a treaty on
which the case was based. The judges at the court in The Hague ruled
unanimously that sanctions on some goods breached the 1955 Treaty of Amity
between Iran and the United States that predates Iran's Islamic Revolution.
They called on Washington to "remove by means of its choosing any
impediments arising from the measures announced on 8 May to the free
exportation to Iran of medicines and medical devices, food and agricultural
commodities" as well as airplane parts and services, chief judge Abdulqawi
Ahmed Yusuf said. The court said sanctions on goods "required for
humanitarian needs... may have a serious detrimental impact on the health
and lives of individuals on the territory of Iran." U.S. sanctions also had
the "potential to endanger civil aviation safety in Iran." Trump
slapped a first round of sanctions on Iran in August after pulling out in
May from the 2015 international deal aimed at curbing Tehran's nuclear
ambitions, to the dismay of his European allies. A second round of punitive
measures is due in November.
Iran hails ruling
Iran dragged the United States to the ICJ in July, and during four days of
hearings in late August, its lawyers accused Washington of "strangling" its
economy. Foreign drugs are now a rare commodity in Iran which is also
dealing with a free-falling rial currency and price hikes. Official Iranian
statements acknowledge the shortage and say imports of certain drugs are no
longer subsidized. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif called the
court ruling "another failure for sanctions-addicted U.S. government and
victory for rule of law." The foreign ministry said in a statement that the
ruling was a "clear sign" that "Iran is in the right." But U.S. Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo accused Iran of "abusing the ICJ for political and
propaganda purposes" and noted that the court did not reject U.S. sanctions
more broadly. "The court's ruling today was a defeat for Iran. It rightly
rejected all of Iran's baseless requests," Pompeo told reporters in
Washington. He said that the United States was ending the 1955 friendship
treaty, signed when Iran was ruled by the Western-oriented shah. "This is a
decision, frankly, that is 39 years overdue," Pompeo said, referring to the
time since the 1979 Islamic revolution transformed Iran from one of the
closest U.S. allies to a sworn foe. "Given Iran's history of terrorism,
ballistic missile activity and other malign behaviors, Iran's claims under
the treaty are absurd," he said. The end of the treaty will have little
direct effect but Iran has repeatedly cited it to seek claims against the
United States, including when the U.S. Navy downed an Iran Air civilian
flight in 1988, killing 290 people. Wednesday's ruling is in fact a decision
on so-called provisional measures ahead of a final ruling which may take
several more years, experts said. Decisions by the Hague-based ICJ, which
rules on disputes between United Nations members, are binding but it has no
mechanism through which it can enforce its decisions.
Iran, U.S. ignored rulings
In 1986, Washington disregarded the court's finding that it had violated
international law by supporting the pro-U.S. Contra the ICJ's ruling rebels
in Nicaragua. Iran in turn ignored the ICJ's ruling in 1980 to release
hostages seized when revolutionary zealots took over the U.S. embassy.
Trump has repeatedly voiced disdain for international organizations that he
sees as limiting U.S. sovereignty. Trump's national security adviser John
Bolton recently threatened that the United States would take action against
any judge from the separate International Criminal Court who pursues a case
against U.S. troops in Afghanistan. Negotiated under his predecessor Barack
Obama, Trump argues that the 2015 Iran deal gave Tehran money to support
extremist groups and build nuclear-capable missiles. European allies have
pledged to keep the agreement alive, with plans for a mechanism to let firms
skirt the U.S. sanctions as they do business with Iran. Hearings in a
separate Iranian case against the U.S. freezing of around $2 billion of
Iranian assets to help American terror victims is due to start at the ICJ
next week.
Iran Says U.N. Court Ruling on U.S. Sanctions Shows
Tehran is 'Right'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/Tehran welcomed on Wednesday a
ruling by the U.N.'s top court ordering Washington to suspend sanctions on
humanitarian goods, as a "clear sign" that "Iran is in the right."The ruling
by the International Court of Justice "once again shows that the U.S.
government... is day by day becoming more isolated," the foreign ministry
said in a statement. The U.S. "must...change into a responsible and normal
country in the international community." The ministry said the crippling
sanctions reimposed by Washington after it abandoned the landmark 2015
nuclear deal between major powers and Tehran were "illegal."As a result of
the court's finding, "world public opinion and all independent countries
will, with peace of mind, strive... to keep and carry out the JCPOA," it
added, using the official acronym for the agreement. Foreign Minister
Mohammad Javad Zarif called the court ruling "another failure for
sanctions-addicted U.S. government and victory for rule of law.""Imperative
for int'l community to collectively counter malign U.S. unilateralism," he
added in a tweet.
US slams UN court ruling on Iran ‘humanitarian’
sanctions
AFP/October 03, 2018/THE HAGUE: The United States criticised a top UN court
decision on Wednesday ordering Washington to ease sanctions on Iran, saying
the case was "meritless" and the court had "no jurisdiction". The court
Wednesday ordered the United States to lift sanctions on “humanitarian”
goods to Iran that President Donald Trump reimposed after pulling out of
Tehran’s nuclear deal. "This is a meritless case over which the court has no
jurisdiction," US ambassador to the Netherlands Pete Hoekstra tweeted,
shortly after a ruling at the International Court of Justice. But Hoekstra
pointed out that the Hague-based tribunal "declined to grant the sweeping
measures requested by Iran" and it was "a narrow decision on a very limited
range of sectors." The International Court of Justice (ICJ) unanimously
ruled that Washington “shall remove by means of its choosing any impediments
arising from the measures announced on May 8 to the free exportation to Iran
of medicines and medical devices, food and agricultural commodities” as well
as airplane parts, judge Abdulqawi Ahmed Yusuf said. The court said
sanctions on goods “required for humanitarian needs... may have a serious
detrimental impact on the health and lives of individuals on the territory
of Iran.” US sanctions on aircraft spare parts also had the “potential to
endanger civil aviation safety in Iran and the lives of its users.”Trump
slapped a first round of sanctions on Iran in August after pulling out in
May of a historic deal aimed at curbing Tehran’s nuclear ambitions, in a
move welcomed by many Arab countries. A second round of punitive measures is
due in November. The ICJ rules on disputes between United Nations member
states. Its decisions are binding and cannot be appealed, but it has no
mechanism to enforce them.
Turkey renews mandate for military actions against Kurds in Syria, Iraq
The Associated Press, Ankara/Wednesday, 3 October 2018/Turkey’s parliament
has voted to extend by another year a mandate that allows the military to
intervene in Iraq and Syria when faced with national security threats. The
mandate approved Wednesday allows Turkey to send troops over its southern
border to battle Kurdish rebels, ISIS group militants and other groups that
Turkey views as terrorists. The vote comes as Erdogan has suggested Turkey
could take steps to create “safe zones” across northern Syria, including in
areas held by Kurdish fighters who are allied with the United States. Turkey
has previously used the mandate, which it has renewed every year since 2014,
for cross-border operations against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party,
or PKK, in northern Iraq and to clear IS militants and Syrian Kurdish
militia from border areas inside Syria.
Turkish Troop Convoy Enters Syria Rebel Zone
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/A Turkish military convoy
entered rebel-held northwestern Syria early on Wednesday, an AFP
correspondent reported, as the deadline for establishing a buffer zone
between rebel and government forces draws closer. At least 40 vehicles,
including trucks and armoured personnel carriers, were seen moving slowly
south along a main highway under the cover of darkness. The troops they were
carrying are expected to be deployed at "observation posts" Turkey has
already set up in rebel-held areas of Idlib and Aleppo provinces. The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, said the vehicles
were heading to Turkish monitoring posts, including in the southwestern
parts of Idlib. There was no word from Turkey on any reinforcements to the
area. It last sent a similar troop column into northern Syria just over a
week ago. Wednesday's convoy entered as the deadline for implementing a
Turkish-Russian accord on the future of Syria's last major rebel bastion
draws closer. Last month, Moscow and Ankara agreed to set up a demilitarised
zone ringing rebel territory to avert a threatened government offensive. All
factions in the zone must withdraw heavy weapons by October 10, and radical
groups must leave by October 15. It will then be monitored by Turkish troops
and Russian military police. The region's dominant armed group, Hayat Tahrir
al-Sham (HTS), an alliance led by jihadists of Syria's former Al-Qaeda
affiliate, has still not officially responded to the accord. Turkey's main
rebel allies, the National Liberation Front, gave the deal a cautious
welcome before objecting to its provisions for a Russian troop presence
inside the zone. The NLF says it is still hammering out the details of the
agreement's implementation with Ankara, and is wary that the current
proposals would eat into their territory too much. In an interview aired
Tuesday, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said he hoped the deal would
prove to be a "step towards the liberation of Idlib."Muallem told Lebanon's
Al-Mayadeen television he was confident in Turkey's ability to fulfil its
side of the deal "because of its knowledge of factions" on the ground.
Fighters from the area would be allowed to stay, he said, while those from
other areas would go home and foreigners would leave through Turkey.
Turkey Annual Inflation Hits 24.5% in September
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/The annual inflation rate in
Turkey rose to nearly 25 percent in September, official statistics showed on
Wednesday, as the Turkish lira remains weak against the US dollar despite a
sharp interest rate hike last month. Consumer prices accelerated to 24.52
percent in September from the same month last year, up from a 17.9 percent
increase recorded in August, according to the Turkish statistics office (TUIK).
The figure was substantially higher than the Bloomberg consensus forecast of
21.1 percent. The Turkish lira weakened to 6.0 against the US dollar, a loss
of 1.5 percent on the day, after the data were released. The lira has lost
over 37 percent in value against the greenback since the beginning of the
year. Furnishings and household equipment saw the biggest gain, to 37.3
percent, TUIK said in a statement. Prices for transport rose 36.61 percent
while those for food and non-alcoholic drinks climbed by 27.7 percent. The
lira was hit hard by a diplomatic row between NATO allies Washington and
Ankara over Turkey's detention of an American pastor for two years on
terror-related charges. Amid continued concerns over domestic monetary
policy and the government's steering of the economy, the lira weakened
dramatically after Washington imposed sanctions on two Turkish ministers and
doubled steel and aluminium tariffs in August. There was a brief reprieve
last month when the bank increased its main policy rate -- the one week repo
auction rate -- from 17.75 percent to 24 percent. After the monetary policy
committee stunned markets with the hike, the bank said a "tight stance in
monetary policy will be maintained decisively until inflation outlook
displays a significant improvement". However, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
has previously railed against interest rates, and said high rates cause high
inflation. He also once described interest rates as "the mother and father
of all evil".
Putin: All Foreign Troops Should Leave Syria
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/Russian President Vladimir Putin
said Wednesday that Russian troops will leave Syria when the war is over if
the Syrian government asks them to. Russia entered the Syrian civil war in
2015 to back its longtime ally President Bashar Assad, helping the
government retake most of the territory held by rebels. Russia currently
operates an air base and a naval base in Syria. The Kremlin has criticized
U.S. military involvement in Syria, saying it is not authorized by the
United Nations or by the Syrian government. Speaking at an energy conference
in Moscow, Putin said that all foreign troops should leave Syria when
hostilities cease. Asked if Russia would be willing to leave as well, Putin
said Russia would withdraw its troops if the Syrian government asks it to.
Putin Brands Poisoned Spy Skripal a 'Traitor' and 'Scumbag'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/Russian President Vladimir Putin
on Wednesday branded former double agent Sergei Skripal "a traitor" and a
"scumbag", saying Moscow knew he had cooperated with foreign intelligence
after his release in a spy swap. "He is just a scumbag," a visibly angry
Putin told an energy forum in Moscow, referring to the ex-spy who Britain
says was poisoned with a Soviet-designed nerve agent by members of Russia's
military intelligence in March. "He is just a spy, a traitor to the
homeland," Putin said in his toughest remarks about Skripal to date. "He was
caught, he was punished, he spent five years in prison, we let him go, he
left and continued cooperating with, providing consultations to (foreign)
security services," Putin said. Skripal, a former Russian military
intelligence colonel, was found guilty of passing state secrets to Britain
and sentenced to 13 years in prison in 2006. He was pardoned and released as
part of a spy swap with the West in 2010. However, Putin once again laughed
off British charges that two members of Russia's GRU military intelligence
service had sought to poison Skripal and his daughter Yulia with Novichok in
the English city of Salisbury in March.
The Skripals survived but a British couple, Dawn Sturgess and Charlie Rowley
came into contact with the same nerve agent near Salisbury months later and
Sturgess died. Putin dismissed the crisis in relations with Britain that led
to the largest expulsion of Russian diplomats from the West since the Cold
War as a "row between security services." "As we know, spying, like
prostitution, is one of the world's most important professions," Putin said,
drawing applause from the audience. He again denied charges Russia was
behind the poisoning, saying: "No one had to poison anyone there (in
Britain)." "Sometimes I look at what is happening around this case and am
simply amazed." Last month, Putin called for the two men suspected by
Britain of seeking to assassinate Skripal to appear on television, and he
claimed that they were civilians. In an eyebrow-raising interview with the
Kremlin-funded RT channel, the two, who gave their names as Ruslan Boshirov
and Alexander Petrov, said they went to Salisbury as tourists, prompting
ridicule in Russia and abroad. Bellingcat, the British-based investigative
group, said last week that "Boshirov" is in fact Anatoly Chepiga, a GRU
colonel decorated with Russia's top award, the Hero of Russia. Moscow
dismissed the report, saying "there is no proof", and the Kremlin said it
would no longer discuss the subject with journalists.
Assad Says 'Understanding' Reached with Arab States
Associated Press/Naharnet/October 03/18/Syrian President
Bashar Assad told a little-known Kuwaiti newspaper that Syria has reached a
"major understanding" with Arab states after years of hostility over the
country's civil war. The interview in the Al-Shahed newspaper, published
Wednesday, is Assad's first with a Gulf newspaper since the war began in
2011. Assad doesn't name the Arab countries but says Arab and Western
delegations have begun visiting Syria to prepare for the reopening of
diplomatic and other missions. Soon the civil war will be over, Assad told
the paper's publisher, allowing Syria to resume its pivotal role in the
region. Syria's membership in the 22-member Arab League was suspended in the
early days of the war and Arab countries later imposed economic sanctions
after they failed to mediate an end to the war. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and
other members of the Gulf Cooperation Council have openly supported
opposition groups fighting to overthrow Assad since. Kuwait hosted a number
of donors' conferences for aid to Syrians, but it also condemned violence
blamed on the Syrian government. The interview comes on the heels of a
surprisingly warm meeting between the Syrian foreign minister and his
Bahraini counterpart on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly
on Saturday. The meeting turned heads because it featured hugs between the
two ministers. The encounter raised questions about whether the Gulf
countries, most of them sworn enemies of Assad's ally Iran, are
reconsidering their relations with Damascus as the war winds down. Assad,
embattled for years, is emerging largely victorious after strong support
from Russia and Iran. He now controls over 60 percent of Syria with strong
Russian and pro-Iranian military support. Khalid bin Ahmed al-Khalifa, the
Bahraini foreign minister, later told Saudi-run Al-Arabiya TV that it was
not the first meeting with "my brother" the Syrian minister. But he said it
was an unplanned meeting, while other planned ones weren't caught on
camera.Al Khalifa said the meeting came at a time of serious Arab efforts to
"reclaim" a role in resolving the Syrian crisis. "This meeting comes at this
period that is witnessing positive transformations toward having an
effective Arab role in the Syrian issue," al-Khalifa said in the Sunday
interview with Al-Arabiya. "Syria is an Arab country. Its people are Arabs
and what happens there concerns us before any other nation. It is not
correct that regional and international countries are looking into the
Syrian issue and not us."Al-Khalifa seemed to recognize that the Syrian
government is here to stay. "The Syrian government is the Syrian
government," he said. "We work with states — even if we disagree with them —
and not with those who bring down those states."Assad praises Kuwait's
position regarding Syria in the interview with Al-Shahed, calling its leader
"a problem solver." Al-Shahed's editor in chief is one of the many members
of the extended Kuwaiti royal family. The paper had been temporarily shut
down twice in 2010, and 2014 for insulting the judiciary and the public
prosecutor and for publishing false news. Its editor in chief was sentenced
to three months in 2010.
Saudi Journalist and Govt Critic 'Missing in Turkey'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/A veteran Saudi journalist who
has been critical of the government has gone missing after visiting the
kingdom's consulate in Istanbul on Tuesday, the Washington Post reported.
Jamal Khashoggi, who writes opinion pieces for the Post, has not been seen
since entering the consulate in the afternoon, according to his fiance who
accompanied him but waited outside until it closed, the newspaper said.
Khashoggi, a former government advisor who went into self-imposed exile in
the United States last year to avoid possible arrest, has been critical of
some of the policies of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Riyadh's
intervention in the war in Yemen. "We have been unable to reach Jamal today
and are very concerned about where he may be," the Post's international
opinions editor Eli Lopez said in a statement. "We are monitoring the
situation closely, trying to gather more information. It would be unfair and
outrageous if he has been detained for his work as a journalist and
commentator."The US State Department said it was investigating. "We have
seen these reports and are seeking more information at this time," an
official said. Khashoggi has written pieces critical of some of the crown
prince's policies and said that before he left the kingdom the Saudi
government banned him from Twitter "when I cautioned against an overly
enthusiastic embrace of then-President-elect Donald Trump". In a Global
Opinions piece for the Post in September last year, Khashoggi wrote: "When I
speak of the fear, intimidation, arrests and public shaming of intellectuals
and religious leaders who dare to speak their minds, and then I tell you
that I'm from Saudi Arabia, are you surprised?" Saudi Arabia, which ranks
169th out of 180 on an RSF World Press Freedom Index, has promoted a
modernization campaign since the 2017 appointment of Prince Mohammed as heir
to the throne. But the ultraconservative kingdom, which won plaudits in June
for finally lifting a ban on women driving, has drawn heavy criticism for
its handling of dissent.
Saudi Journalist's Fiancee Seeks News after Disappearance
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/The Turkish fiancee of a veteran
Saudi journalist who has been critical of the Riyadh government was
anxiously waiting for news Wednesday after his disappearance. Jamal
Khashoggi, who writes opinion pieces for the Washington Post, has not been
seen since entering the Saudi consulate building in Istanbul on Tuesday
where he was to receive an official document for the couple's marriage. "I
haven't received any news from him since 1 pm (1000 GMT) on Tuesday,"
36-year-old Hatice said outside the consulate, which was sealed off by
barricades. She said Khashoggi had left his mobile phone with her. "We want
to know his whereabouts. Where is Jamal?" Hatice said, constantly looking at
her phone, as journalists from local and international media also waited
outside the consulate. Khashoggi, a former government adviser who went into
self-imposed exile in the United States last year to avoid possible arrest,
has been critical of some of the policies of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman and Riyadh's intervention in the war in Yemen. "We want him to come
out of the consulate safe and sound," Hatice, who declined to give her
family name, told AFP. "The same way as he came to Turkey."
Very concerned'
The Washington Post's international opinions editor Eli Lopez said in a
statement on Tuesday that the newspaper was "very concerned" about Khashoggi.
"We are monitoring the situation closely, trying to gather more information.
It would be unfair and outrageous if he has been detained for his work as a
journalist and commentator." The U.S. State Department said it was
investigating the matter. Hatice appealed to the Turkish government to use
all diplomatic channels to find her fiance. "It is a problematic country,"
she said, referring to Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia, which ranks 169th out of
180 on the World Press Freedom Index issued by Reporters Without Borders (RSF),
has embarked on a modernization campaign since the 2017 appointment of
Prince Mohammed as heir to the throne. But the ultra-conservative kingdom,
which won plaudits in June for finally lifting a ban on women driving, has
drawn heavy criticism for its handling of dissent. "He is a well-known
writer, an internationally recognized writer not only in the United States
but in Germany, Britain and the European Union," said Hatice. Khashoggi once
said that before he left the kingdom, the Saudi government banned him from
Twitter "when I cautioned against an overly enthusiastic embrace of
then-president-elect Donald Trump."
Amid Trade Spat, US-China Military Tensions Soar
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 03/18/The bitter trade dispute between
China and the US is increasingly spilling into the military domain, with a
risky incident in the South China Sea highlighting the dangers of souring
relations. In what the US Navy has called an "unsafe and unprofessional"
encounter, a Chinese warship sailed within just 45 yards (41 meters) of a US
destroyer Sunday as it passed by Chinese-claimed features in the South China
Sea, forcing the American vessel to take evasive action. The close call
capped days of tit-for-tat military moves that came as President Donald
Trump ramped up his trade war with China. "The close encounter between the
Chinese destroyer and the USS Decatur was the closest one yet," Timothy
Heath, senior international defense research analyst at the RAND
Corporation, told AFP. It "may reflect in part the growing US-China
tensions. But it also appears to reflect a growing willingness by Beijing to
test the Americans in the South China Sea," he added. Beijing reacted
furiously after the incident, saying America's "freedom of navigation"
operation threatened China's sovereignty and security, and damaged military
relations between the two powers. The encounter followed a string of other
military incidents. Last week, plans for a Beijing meeting between US
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and his Chinese counterpart General Wei Fenghe
fell through after China declined to make Wei available. Days earlier, China
nixed a planned port visit of a US warship to Hong Kong, and canceled a
meeting between the head of the Chinese navy and his American counterpart.
That all came around the time US B-52 bombers took part in a combined
operation with Japan over the East China Sea, and flew through international
airspace over the South China Sea.
The Chinese defense ministry denounced the flyovers as "provocative"
actions. Mattis this week acknowledged "tension points" between the US and
China, but told reporters he did not "see it getting worse."
Code of conduct
The US and Chinese militaries in 2014 agreed on a code of conduct for
unplanned encounters at sea, aimed at helping the two navies avoid mishaps.
It was unclear whether Sunday's manoeuver came at Beijing's request -- or
was initiated by the Chinese ship's captain --- but political motivations
were likely a factor in forcing a close call. "With tensions elevated, China
seems motivated to risk a possible collision as a means of intimidation.
There is a real risk of miscalculation," Heath said. Trump's trade war has
infuriated Beijing, as did his authorization of a $1.3 billion arms sale to
Taiwan, which China considers a rebel province. Washington last week enacted
new tariffs against China covering another $200 billion of its imports. And
Washington has placed financial sanctions on China for its recent purchase
of Russian Sukhoi Su-35 fighter jets and S-400 surface-to-air missile
systems.
Earlier encounters
US-China military relations have been strained before. Military exchanges
between the countries, including port calls, were temporarily suspended
following a mid-air collision between a US EP-3 spy plane and Chinese
fighter in 2001 off the south China coast that sparked a major diplomatic
row. The Chinese fighter pilot was killed in the collision and the EP-3 was
forced to make an emergency landing in China's Hainan Island, with the crew
detained for 11 days before being released. Current military tensions are
likely to persist, said Bonnie Glaser, a senior adviser at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies, as they suit Trump's political
objectives. The president last week slapped $200 billion in tariffs on
Chinese goods and has accused Beijing of interfering in the upcoming US
election. "This looks like a strategy from the president," Glaser told AFP.
"He just wants to double down on putting as much pressure on China as
possible."Noting that such actions violated established rules, Glaser added
the encounter in the South China Sea represented a "different level of
interfering" in a US freedom of navigation operation.
Palestinian teen killed in Gaza border protest
The Associated Press, Gaza City, Gaza Strip/Wednesday, 3 October 2018/Gaza’s
Health Ministry says a 15-year-old Palestinian has been killed by Israeli
troops during a protest near a border crossing into Israel. The ministry
said the boy died of a head injury after Israeli troops stationed at the
Erez crossing shot him. An AP cameraman who witnessed the incident said the
boy was hit by a tear gas canister. There was no immediate comment from the
Israeli military. Thousands protested on Wednesday near the border as part
of a months-long campaign organized by Gaza’s Hamas rulers demanding an end
to an Israeli-Egyptian blockade. The militant group, which has controlled
Gaza since 2007, has intensified protests recently as cease-fire efforts
faltered. Israeli troops have killed 145 Palestinians during the
demonstrations, including 31 children. A Gaza sniper killed an Israeli
soldier in August.
Report: Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait to sign financial support pact for Jordan
Reuters, Dubai/Wednesday, 3 October 2018/The finance ministers of Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE will sign on Thursday an agreement to provide
credit guarantees and grants to Jordan, state-run Kuwait News Agency
reported on Wednesday. The agreement, which also provides for deposits by
the Gulf Arab nations in the Jordanian central bank, will be signed in
Amman, the agency said. The three Gulf nations in June pledged $2.5 billion
to help the Jordan implement austerity measures, which had sparked massive
protests. The protests have worried conservative Gulf states who fear
instability in staunch US ally Jordan that has long backed their foreign
policy positions could have repercussions on their own security. Jordan’s
key role in protecting geopolitical stability in the Middle East already
makes it one of the highest per capita recipients of foreign aid in the
world, according to figures from USAID, the US aid agency.
ISIS leader Baghdadi’s youngest son killed in Syria, reports claim
Staff writer, Al Arabiya EnglishWednesday, 3 October 2018/The youngest son
of ISIS mastermind Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi is killed in a Russian airstrike in
Syria, months after another of his sons died fighting for the extremist
group in Syria, claimed media reports. On Sunday IraqiNews.com website
quoted Jabbar al-Mamori, a commander in the paramilitary Popular
Mobilization Forces as saying: “We received certain information that the
youngest sons of ISIS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was killed in an airstrike
conducted by Russia on a terrorist hideout in a Syrian village two days
ago.”According to sources, al-Baghdadi has four sons from one wife and one
son from another wife. The commander did not name Baghdadi’s son or give his
age. The news comes a few months after ISIS said that Hudhayfah al-Badri,
another of Baghdadi’s five children was killed fighting for the extremist
group against Syrian and Russian troops at a power station in central Homs
provinc. Baghdadi himself has been reported killed or injured on a number of
occasions.
No reports about al-Baghdadi have been heard since September, 2017, when he
urged supporters to wage attacks against the west and keep fighting in Syria
and Iraq, according to Iraqinews report. In May an Iraqi intelligence
official said that al-Baghdadi is understood to be hiding in Syrian
territory close to the Iraqi border. ISIS declared a cross-border
‘caliphate’ in Syria and Iraq in 2014, seizing a third of Iraq during a
sweeping offensive. The extremist group have since lost much ground to
separate counter-offensives by Syrian and Iraqi forces as well as US-led
operations, and the extremist presence is now confined to a few holdouts.
Trump: Saudi King Wouldn't Last 'Two Weeks' without US
Support
Al Jazeera and agencies/ Wednesday 03rd October 2018/US President Donald
Trump said close ally Saudi Arabia and its king would not last "for two
weeks" without US military support at a rally in Mississippi on Tuesday. "We
protect Saudi Arabia. Would you say they're rich. And I love the King, King
Salman. But I said 'King - we're protecting you - you might not be there for
two weeks without us - you have to pay for your military,'" the president
said to cheers at the rally.Trump did not say when he made those remarks to
the Saudi monarch, but they come amid increasing oil prices in the US. Saudi
Arabia is the world's top oil exporter and the de facto leader of the oil
producing bloc, OPEC, which has been criticised by Trump for high oil
prices. Trump called King Salman on Saturday to discuss efforts to maintain
supplies to ensure oil market stability and global economic growth,
according to Saudi state news agency SPA. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman traveled to Kuwait last weekend to speak with Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh
Sabah al-Ahmad al-Jaber al-Sabah, reportedly about increasing oil
production. No further developments have surfaced from the Kuwait meeting
but media reports said the Gulf crisis was also on the agenda of the talks.
Speaking at the United Nations General Assembly in New York last month,
Trump said OPEC members were "as usual ripping off the rest of the world".
Oil prices are on the rise. A barrel of oil currently costs about $75,
continuing a steady increase over the past year. The price per barrel was
around $50 in October 2017. The average cost of a gallon (3.78 litres) of
petrol in the US was $3 in May, according to AP. Despite the harsh words,
the Trump administration has had a close relationship with Saudi Arabia,
which it views as a bulwark against Iran's ambitions in the region.
Trump made Saudi Arabia his first stop on his maiden international trip as
president last year, shortly before Bahrain, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates
and Saudi Arabia imposed a blockade on Qatar, alleging support of terror
organisations and decrying what they see as its close relationship with
Iran.
Qatar has denied the allegations. "We defend many of these nations for
nothing, and then they take advantage of us by giving us high oil prices.
Not good. We want them to stop raising prices, we want them to start
lowering prices," Trump said. The US military was stationed in Saudi Arabia
from the first Gulf War against Iraq in 1990 to 2003, when then Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld announced pullout. The presence of the US military
in Saudi Arabia, home to the two holiest sites in Islam – Mecca and Medina –
was strongly objected to by most of the world’s Muslim population, according
to opinion polls published by Gallup in 2009. Qatar hosts the largest US
military base in the region. Trump has also pressed other US allies, such as
Japan, South Korea and Germany, to take more of the financial burden of
their defence.
Amnesty International slams ‘sickening’ execution of domestic and sexual
violence victim in Iran
Arab News/October 03/2018/LONDON: Amnesty International have responded to
reports that a 24-year-old Kurdish woman was executed on Wednesday morning
in Urumieh central prison in the country’s West Azerbaijan province, calling
it “sickening.”Zeinab Sekaanvand was sentenced to death under ‘qesas’
(retribution in kind) in October 2014 after a trial before a criminal court
in West Azerbaijan province, which convicted her of the murder of her
husband. Amnesty International said the trial was “grossly unfair.”She was
arrested in February 2012 at a police station where she confessed to the
murder of her husband. She was held in the police station for the next 20
days where she said she was tortured by male police officers through
beatings all over her body. She confessed that she stabbed her husband after
he had subjected her to months of physical and verbal abuse and had refused
her requests for divorce. She was only provided with a state-appointed
lawyer at her final trial session, at which point she retracted her
confession, telling the judge that her husband’s brother, whom she said had
raped her several times, had committed the murder. She said that the judge
told her that, if she accepted responsibility, he would pardon her.
Philip
Luther, Amnesty International’s Research and Advocacy Director for the
Middle East and North Africa, said in a statement: “The execution of
Sekaanvand is a sickening demonstration of the Iranian authorities’
disregard for the principles of juvenile justice and international human
rights law. Zeinab was just 17 years old at the time of her arrest. Her
execution is profoundly unjust and shows the Iranian authorities’ contempt
for the right of children to life. The fact that her death sentence followed
a grossly unfair trial makes her execution even more outrageous.
“Sekaanvand said that, soon after she was married at 15, she sought help
many times from the authorities about her violent husband and alleged that
her brother-in-law had raped her repeatedly. Instead of investigating these
allegations, however, the authorities consistently ignored her and failed to
provide her with any support as a victim of domestic and sexual violence.
“After the murder of her husband, Zeinab Sekaanvand said she was
interrogated under torture by male police officers without a lawyer present.
During her final trial session, where she was allowed a lawyer for the first
time, she retracted her earlier ‘confession’ that she had murdered her
husband, saying that she had been coerced to make it. Despite this, the
judge refused to order a further investigation and instead sentenced her to
death.
“It appears the Iranian authorities are increasingly scheduling the
execution of people who were children at the time of the crime at very short
notice to minimize the possibility of effective public and private
interventions. We are horrified by their continuous use of the death penalty
against people who were under the age of 18 at the time of the crime, which
is a violation of international human rights law. This is the fifth
execution of a juvenile offender that we have recorded this year and we fear
that it will not be the last unless urgent action is taken by the
international community.
“We continue to urge the Iranian authorities to immediately establish an
official moratorium on executions, commute all death sentences with a view
to abolishing the death penalty, and prohibit the use of the death penalty
against people below the age of 18 at the time of the crime.”
Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases without
exception regardless of the nature of the crime, the characteristics of the
offender, or the method used by the state to kill the prisoner.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on
October 03-04/18
Turkey: Erdoğan's International Juggling Circus
Burak Bekdil/Gatestone Institute/October 03/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13064/turkey-alliances-russia-china
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Chinese President Xi Jinping are
discussing more trade -- and in their local currencies, rebuffing the
dollar.
As of now, Turkey sees the United States as an ungrateful ally and Russia is
Turkey's new love affair. For Erdoğan, it is still "Russia time."
Germany needs Turkey's cooperation in halting the flow of Islamic jihadists
currently stationed in Syria but who may always use Turkish territory to
reach the EU. Turkey needs German technology, investment and money.
The continuous decline of democratic values and civil liberties in Turkey
will remain a problem between Ankara and most Western capitals, including
Berlin. During the recent state visit to
Turkey's President does it all the time. In 2009, then-prime minister, Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan accused China of genocide for the deaths of hundreds of
Uighur Turks. Less than a decade later, with his newfound "Eurasianism,"
Erdoğan's Turkey and President Xi Jinping's China are discussing more trade
-- and in their local currencies, rebuffing the dollar .
In 2015, the Turkish Air Force shot down a Russian Air Force fighter jet
along Turkey's troubled border with Syria. Russia responded strongly in 2016
by imposing punishing sanctions on Turkey. At the time, Erdoğan was courting
Washington. In fear of further -- and even military -- punishments from
Moscow, Erdoğan described Turkey's relations with Washington as a "strategic
partnership."
A Turkish apology for the downed Russian plane eventually ended sanctions in
2016 and Erdoğan, once again, rediscovered his anti-Western, pro-Eurasian
self. This time, Erdoğan described Turkey's relations with Russia as a
strategic partnership. This strategic partnership will probably survive
until Erdoğan will have to turn to his NATO partners after potential -- and
possibly serious -- divergences with Russia over the future of Syria.
As of now, Turkey sees the United States as an ungrateful ally and Russia is
Turkey's new love affair. Earlier this year, the Trump administration
imposed tariffs on Turkish steel and aluminum at a time when Turkey's
national currency had lost 40% of its value since the start of the year. The
nominal NATO allies had found themselves in a multitude of geostrategic and
other disputes, including Turkey's arrest of an America pastor on bogus
terrorism and espionage charges (he is now under house arrest in Turkey).
For Erdoğan, it is still "Russia time." In August, Russia joined Turkey in
shunning the dollar as the two countries formally opened talks for trade in
their local currencies. In September, Erdoğan said that the reign of the
dollar as global trade currency should come to an end.
Enter Germany. As recently as 2017, Erdoğan urged Germans of Turkish origin
(of which there are about three million) not to vote for Chancellor Angela
Merkel, and branded her governing coalition "enemies of Turkey." Erdoğan
also accused Merkel's Germany of resorting to "Nazi practices". The
piecemeal menu of Turkish-German disputes is in no way smaller than the
Turkish-U.S. list; they just differ in their nature. Among these differences
are Turkey's widening democratic deficit, Erdoğan's arbitrary one-man rule
and the activities in Germany of a Turkish government-sponsored Muslim
organization often accused of radicalization and anti-Semitism at some of
its mosques. A German government decision earlier this year to suspend arms
deliveries and technologies to Turkey only soured relations further.
In short, relations between two NATO allies could hardly have been worse.
What would the Turkish sultan do with such a hostile, Christian country,
which he often accuses of racism? Quickly put together an official visit and
fly to Germany, a country with "Nazi practices" and an "enemy" of Turkey, of
course.
"We want to completely leave behind all the problems and to create a warm
environment between Turkey and Germany just like it used to be," Erdoğan
said ahead of his September 2018 state visit. Why such restraint and
pragmatic behavior from a man better known for his temper and crowd-pleasing
nationalist, anti-Western, Islamist rhetoric? The Turkish economy is
teetering; Erdoğan needs a steady flow of Western currencies (which he
hates) into the economy before serial bankruptcies further cripple Turkish
finances and risk his government ahead of local elections next March. He
also needs German diplomacy to fix the turbulence in Turkey's relations with
the U.S.
But Erdoğan is Erdoğan, and the political trajectory on which he wants
Turkey to remain is too Islamist, too undemocratic and too harmful to
Western interests. On his visit to Germany last month, he inaugurated a new
Turkish mosque in Cologne. In Berlin, he accused the German government of
harboring "hundreds, thousands of terrorists". The continuous decline of
democratic values and civil liberties in Turkey will remain a problem
between Ankara and most Western capitals, including Berlin. Erdogan's German
host, President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, said:
"As we discussed this morning in detail, I am, as president of this country,
concerned about German citizens who are imprisoned in Turkey for political
reasons, and I am also concerned about Turkish journalists, trade unionists,
lawyers, intellectuals and politicians who remain behind bars ... today, a
worryingly large number of people from Turkey are seeking refuge here in
Germany from the growing pressure on civil society."
Turkey's relations with Germany will remain largely transactional. Germany
needs Turkey to stick to a refugee deal it reached with the European Union
in 2016. It also needs Turkish cooperation in halting the flow of Islamic
jihadists currently stationed in Syria but who may always use Turkish
territory to reach the EU shores. There are thousands of German companies in
Turkey, and Germany is Turkey's biggest trading partner. Turkey needs German
technology, investment and money. None of that, however, eliminates the
conspicuous incompatibility between the democratic cultures of the two
countries.
*Burak Bekdil, one of Turkey's leading journalists, was recently fired from
the country's most noted newspaper after 29 years, for writing in Gatestone
what is taking place in Turkey. He is a 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.
UN illusion and stars of the international clinic
Ghassan Charbel/Al Arabiya/October 03/18
Small nations are mistaken if they come to the United Nations with an
illusion that the international clinic has supernatural medicine to heal
their diseases. This is what experiences have proven.
But the Organization’s inability to end all the conflicts in the
cosmic village does not mean that it has lost its purpose. It is no secret
that the health of the clinic itself depends on the consensus of its senior
surgeons - the major states - to diagnose diseases and find means of
treatment. As in any hospital, the conflict
between doctors complicates the patient’s recovery and extends the
sufferings. Despite the mix of successes with failures, the United Nations
remains a reference, a haven and a platform. The presence of states in the
United Nations is often a reflection of their presence on the international
scene. The international organization has only the weapon of legitimacy to
read through open crises. In the end, it is gathering the strong and the
weak. This is why it can make wrong and correct
decisions, it can hurt sometimes and be thoughtful other times. The United
Nations cannot simply be an echo of the voices of the powerful. But it
cannot ignore them either because it needs them whenever it wants to impose
its prestige and obtain respect for its decisions. It borrows their strength
and later suffers from their power.
With the holding of the 73rd session of the United Nations General Assembly,
talks renewed about the organization and its effectiveness, crises which it
has successfully resolved, and those that it failed to contain. The UN was
born out of the rubble of World War II and out of a dream that the world
would not fall again in a similar experience that could take the form of a
destructive nuclear calamity. Experts in monitoring the performance of the
visitors of the international organization considered Trump’s appearance as
successful in terms of stealing the spotlight
Cuban missile crisis
Fortunately, the world did not fall into the big trap and acted with panic
when the Cuban missile crisis almost exposed a frightening American-Soviet
confrontation. Those familiar with that era insist that UN Secretary-General
U Thant has helped resolve that crisis, although the spotlight has been
directed towards other cooks. Diplomats, who have been addicted to following
up the General Assembly sessions, remember that the United Nations went
through difficult exams and succeeded, not only in staying alive, but also
in emphasizing that it was needed.
Even those who are angered by the international organization because they
have different views ultimately concede that there is no alternative in
sight to the safety valve the organization represents or is trying to
represent. It has witnessed the Cold War, intermediate wars through
explosions of maps and civil strife. When it failed to solve the problems,
it tried to limit the losses and ease the suffering. If the role of the
international organization is to seek solutions, international tensions have
sometimes turned it into an arena for attacks and counter-attacks. The long
speeches of Fidel Castro were never lost in the memory of that generation.
These speeches were the reason for the decision to reduce the period
dedicated to each speaker to only a quarter of an hour, after which a light
signal is initiated to remind him/her of the time limit. But there was
always a rebel, including Margaret Thatcher. The marathon speeches began
with Krishna Menon, Nehru's foreign minister. The minister spoke so long
that he fainted and collapsed; and when he woke up, he insisted on
continuing his speech. There were other exciting
shows. The General Assembly has seen Muammar al-Gaddafi exceed the time
limit, then become angry and tear apart of the Charter of the United
Nations. Idi Amin also claimed in one of his speeches that he was good at
talking to crocodiles and making jokes with them. One should not also forget
when Nikita Khrushchev began to riot and hit the table in front of him with
his shoes. Until now, visitors ask about the place where the Soviet Prime
Minister committed this precedent in the history of the UN.
General Assembly platform
Many stars have passed on the General Assembly platform, including Nelson
Mandela, whose centennial was commemorated by the International Organization
this year and welcome his effigy as a symbol of liberation and the end of
racial discrimination... Also, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat addressed
the UN General Assembly and called on the world not to let the olive branch
fall from the hands of Palestinian resistance. In
this year’s session, the stardom has been decided since the opening.
Wherever Donald Trump is, the spotlight follows. The Twitter general masters
the rules of the game. An experienced boxer, he does not leave the ring. He
strikes and receives blows. His Tweets are awaited daily in the world. The
world has never seen a head of state running the most complex battles and
crises through short sentences that quickly invade screens and social
platforms.
From the General Assembly and the Security Council, Trump addressed the
Americans and the world. It is a whole new way of dealing openly with
international relations… A new way and a new dictionary. Using expressions
suitable for Twitter, Trump spoke about the trade war with China, his
achievements with North Korea, and the sanctions imposed on Iran over its
nuclear and missile ambitions and its policy of destabilizing the Middle
East. He used a whole new rhetoric even when addressing his European and
Atlantic allies.
Experts in monitoring the performance of the visitors of the international
organization considered Trump’s appearance as successful in terms of
stealing the spotlight and confirming the continued presence of the United
States in the first place. They said his performance has reminded them of
Ronald Reagan’s appearance on the same platform. They also saw Trump succeed
in imposing the actual agenda and make the Iranian issue at the forefront
both in the assembly and its corridors. Washington’s warnings to the
Europeans against easing Iran’s encroachment on sanctions suggested that the
coming months would be rich with stances and tweets.
Trump’s stardom does not eliminate the glamor of Vladimir Putin and
his policy that made Sergei Lavrov’s interventions remind the world of the
days of Andrei Gromyko, with some differences of course. Stardom itself does
not negate the fact that any escalation in the trade war with Mao Zedong’s
heirs will be greater than the ability of the international clinic to
provide treatments.
Beyond the pageantry of the UN general assembly
Walid Jawad/Al Arabiya/October 03/18
In September of every year, the Oscars of International Relations is held at
the UN Headquarter in New York. The whos-who of global leaders wants to see
and be seen by other heads of state. All converging here like clockwork.
This is where the 120 leaders who once played follow-the-leader as children
get to realize their sandbox games as adults. Each standing tall on the
shoulders of their nation’s status in the world propped by national
achievements, economic status, and military arsenal. Each of them projecting
more than what their country is entitled to yet less than what they think
they deserve. They are all stars in their own nations, but here they hope to
rub elbows with the superstars. The powerful soak up the attention and
relish their rockstar status amongst their peers.
The Game
In 1648, over long and arduous months in Westphalia, Europeans signed
treaties to bring peace the religious wars of the day. It did, but more
importantly, it was the moment of inception of the current international
system. The Peace of Westphalia advanced the concept of sovereignty, in
essence putting in motion the system of sovereign nation-states, which Trump
reminded us of mere days ago. The Peace of Westphalia advanced the concept
of sovereignty, in essence putting in motion the system of sovereign
nation-states, which Trump reminded us of mere days ago. In his UNGA (United
Nations General Assembly) address, the American president emphasized
sovereignty as his guiding principle in rebuffing multinational
collaborations “We reject the ideology of globalism and we embrace the
doctrine of patriotism.” Nationalism under the justification of sovereignty
has negative consequences, including marginalizing the role of the UN.
Conversely, French president Francois Macron spoke to sovereignty saying, “I
shall never stop upholding the principle of sovereignty ... even in the face
of certain nationalism which we’re seeing today, brandishing sovereignty as
a way of attacking others.” A diverging stance, one to harken back to the
past while Macron recommits to forward movement. The failure of the treaties
of Westphalia to keep the peace in Europe is not surprising. As war broke
out within Europe during and after the Peace of Westphalia, so it did in the
20th century beyond the boundaries of the European continent. It is those
two great wars that gave rise to the United Nations. The UN in its current
form is the second iteration of the failed League of Nations – WWI gave us
the League of Nations, and WWII rendered it obsolete. Sovereign nation
states entered into an agreement to create the UN for the higher purpose of
avoiding the next all-out global war. Resolving conflicts and keeping the
peace are enshrined in the UN charter. But, the UN doesn’t have an inherent
enforceable authority other than what the members assign to it. Member
states continue to predominantly operate outside the narrow limitations of
the UN rendering it ineffective as a proactive measure to stave off
destructive conflicts.
MADness
The concept of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) is the current reality
holding back a WWIII. The potential outcome of such a war, should it happen,
is the self-annihilation of the human race. For the moment, citizens of the
world can breathe nervously in the shadows of that real threat, no thanks to
the UN.
Yet, the UN offers a platform for nuclear nations to present their concerns
on the global stage, limiting the power struggles within the margins of the
UN and its Security Council (UNSC). The effectiveness of the busy work and
ensuing resolutions is in question. UN resolutions don’t achieve peace nor
does it resolves conflicts. Many times, UN resolutions only create a pause
in the conflict, this is in part due to the lack of enforcement capabilities
within the UN structure. It is relying on the member states to send
peacekeepers to the affected areas without any legal authority to use its
full capabilities. As a result, conflicts are prolonged, and the status quo
of unacceptable levels of violence and suffering persist. The list of
intractable conflicts the UN is attempting to address through resolutions is
long. We need not dig too far into the past to observe these effects. Good
examples can be found in Iran, Syria, and Palestine to name a few relevant
conflicts to the Middle East. Conflict resolution is such a lofty goal for
the UN to guarantee in this era of weapons of mass destruction. An era where
death is a result of pushing buttons in virtual reality shielded from
experiencing the agony of ending a life and the stench of death.
Courage is not a quality that comes with fighting today’s wars, on the
contrary cowardice is the prerequisite. Being too afraid to face one’s enemy
makes a preemptive strike a more appealing choice.
Seeing eye-to-eye
Initial face-to-face interactions between leaders have caused transformative
outcomes. “I looked the man in the eye. I found him to be very
straightforward and trustworthy.” said former president George W. Bush in
2001 after meeting Russia’s Vladimir Putin. “We had a very good dialogue. I
was able to get a sense of his soul; a man deeply committed to his country
and the best interests of his country,” he concluded. Trump said of the
North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un “A worthy negotiator ... a very worthy,
very smart negotiator. We had a terrific day and we learned a lot about each
other and our country’s.” Lavishing accolades onto the young leader in a
press conference after their Singapore summit last June. These are examples
of the power of personal connection in altering powerful geopolitical
dynamics, which brings us back to the pageantry of the UNGA. The
personalities of the leaders attending the annual UN spectacle play a much
more decisive factor than meets the eye. Typical diplomatic channels between
nations are advanced or hindered by the personal dynamics between the top
decision makers. Gestures and demeanors, charm and charisma all come into
play. Here is where the annual event offers a critical opportunity to leards.
Some leaders lean toward the theatrical. Not surprising as the gathering
inherently feeds a sense of flair for the dramatic. Some leaders are
inspired to make fashion statements and on occasions toss papers in protest.
Leaders walk away at the end of the annual assembly with a simple judgment;
can I trust this person? Agreement doesn’t factor into this equation. Having
trust is a prerequisite for any negotiation to take place particularly over
serious disagreements. When trust is lacking, mediators and facilitators are
charged with holding the parties honest during negotiations.
When trust is personal and organic between leaders, doubt and suspicion
leading to fear and defensiveness are avoided. Perhaps the UN can advance
its mission by creating more opportunities for world leaders to interact in
an elite club-like atmosphere.
Conflict resolution stands a better chance when decision makers are present
in a calm and relaxed atmosphere working through their nations’ conflicts
trying to see eye-to-eye.
Nuclear power fits with Saudi energy diversification
plans
Dr. Malak Talal Al-Nory/Al Arabiya/October 03/18
Saudi Arabia may be the region’s top hydrocarbon producer, but it is also
one of the largest consumers of energy resources. The situation is such that
the Kingdom is looking to diversify its energy mix in the face of rapidly
growing demand for electricity to meet the country’s mounting energy needs.
Nuclear power has emerged as one of the most viable options at a time when
the Kingdom requires sustainable energy sources to drive its ambitious march
to the future. Currently Saudi Arabia consumes
over one-quarter of its oil production to power its electricity plants,
according to World Nuclear Association estimates. Growing energy needs mean
that much of the Kingdom’s oil production will be consumed domestically by
2030 if alternative options are not in place by then.
Thankfully, Saudi Arabia has taken a step towards self-sufficiency in
nuclear power at the right time as the world is looking to a future beyond
hydrocarbons, and volatility risks associated with this depleting resource
continue to rock global markets. The Kingdom plans to build two large
nuclear power reactors as part of a program to deliver up to 16 nuclear
power plants over the next 20 to 25 years at a cost of more than US$80
billion. Critics may be quick to point out that
there are countries that are shutting down their nuclear energy plants and
shifting towards other alternative energy sources. Before we look at such an
aspect, it is important to understand that these are countries that are in a
self-sustaining position with regards to the renewable energy sector with
adequate technical knowhow and the availability of such resources, and are,
therefore, well placed to replace their nuclear energy assets.
The country is blessed with year-round sunshine, which makes solar energy
viable and fits in with its plans to diversify energy sources
Prioritizing renewable
It must be remembered that Saudi Arabia is also prioritizing its focus on
renewable energy by establishing solar plants in the Kingdom. This country
is blessed with year-round sunshine, which makes solar energy a viable
option that fits in with the Kingdom’s plans to diversify energy sources.
But this is an area with its own limitations as far as Saudi Arabia is
concerned, as the Kingdom faces climatic and weather challenges such as dust
storms and humidity, which could seriously undermine the efficacy of this
seemingly attractive option. Nuclear energy, on the other hand, is best
fitted to meet the current state of urgency as it is capable of meeting the
Kingdom’s energy needs nonstop for the next 50 to 60 years, once a plant is
commissioned. It certainly involves substantial investment but that is
something that will eventually pay for itself. Then there are, of course,
constraints such as those related to infrastructure and regulatory
framework. Since this is an entirely new area that the country is stepping
into, it would be expected that the Kingdom would adopt regulatory
frameworks based on international best practices in these aspects.
At this point of time, Saudi Arabia can learn from the experiences of
countries such as the European nations, the US and Russia, which have well
established and time-tested policies and regulatory frameworks on nuclear
energy. These can be customized to meet the Kingdom’s requirements. The
priority must also be to put in place risk plans, and training and knowledge
enhancement platforms to secure a safe, secure and sustainable civil nuclear
power program in Saudi Arabia.
This article was first published in Saudi Gazette.
The leftist enemy
Mashari Althaydi/Al Arabiya/October 03/18
The warning issued by Britain’s home secretary, who is ironically originally
from Pakistan, against the leader of the leftist populist Labour Party, who
hails from the heart of Britain, Jeremy Corbyn, is rightful even if it’s
marred by the heat of partisan competition between the Conservative and
Labour parties. Sajid Javid had launched a scathing attack on Tuesday
against Corbyn and labelled him a “threat to national security” while
asserting that he is not fit to be a prime minister.
Javid made these statements while delivering a speech at the annual
Conservative Party conference which was held in Birmingham. Conservative
minister Javid said that it would be “downright dangerous” for Corbyn to get
into Number 10, i.e. 10 Downing Street in London.
"Imagine having someone in no.10 who has voted against vital
counter-terrorism legislation. Someone who refuses to condemn the Kremlin
over an attack on our soil. Someone who compared the actions of the US
military, our closest ally, to Daesh. Who voted against banning Al Qaeda,”
Javid added. Actually the threat of leftism in its
sickly state does not only lie in the examples made by Javid against the
leader of British leftism and populism. Corbyn has also staunchly defended
the Iranian Khomeini regime, and he is a bitter enemy of Arab countries that
reject the Iranian project, primarily Saudi Arabia. He also makes frequent
appearances on Arabic-speaking or English-speaking satellite television
channels in support of Iran.
The threat of leftism in its sickly state does not only lie in the examples
made by Sajid Javid against the leader of the British Labour party. The case
of Corbyn heavily sums up a manifold political malaise which “believes” in
the mortality, permanence and support of hostility against the US and
against politically conservative Arab countries, as he will not be himself
if he does not hate. I know there are some politicians and media figures who
make gains out of the Qatari-Brotherhood betrayal, which is considerable
treason, but I am not talking about these. I am talking about the people of
faith and those who hate their countries and their countries’ power. Corbyn
has predecessors who took other paths to express hatred towards the British
self. An example is the most famous traitor and spy of the 20th century, the
Soviets’ agent, the communist, intelligence officer and prominent academic
Kim Philby.Corbyn’s case is also an eye-opener to the global networks of
leftism, even those that are less audacious and public, and which are active
in the entire world in the media, political, artistic and civil spectrums
against Arab interests.
They are enemies like the Brotherhood and Khomeinism.