Detailed
Lebanese & Lebanese Related LCCC English New Bulletin For October 18/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
lccc Site
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Bible
Quotations
When
you give a banquet, Invite all those who cannot repay you, for you will be
repaid at the resurrection of the righteous
Luke 14/12-15: "He said also to the one who had invited him,
‘When you give a luncheon or a dinner, do not invite your friends or your
brothers or your relatives or rich neighbours, in case they may invite you
in return, and you would be repaid. But when you give a banquet, invite the
poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind. And you will be blessed,
because they cannot repay you, for you will be repaid at the resurrection of
the righteous.’One of the dinner guests, on hearing this, said to him,
‘Blessed is anyone who will eat bread in the kingdom of God!’"
Vote Charbel Bassil for the Catholic Separate French
Trustee Board Schools In Mississauga انتخب شربل باسيل لعضوية مجلس أمناء
المدارس الكاثوليكية الفرنسية في ماسيسوكا
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/68117/vote-charbel-bassil-for-the-catholic-separate-french-council-board-schools-in-mississauga%d8%a7%d9%86%d8%aa%d8%ae%d8%a8-%d8%b4%d8%b1%d8%a8%d9%84-%d8%a8%d8%a7%d8%b3%d9%8a%d9%84-%d9%84%d8%b9%d8%b6%d9%88/
نشرات اخبار عربية وانكليزية مطولة ومفصلة يومية على موقعنا الألكتروني على
الرابط التالي
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Titles For The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials
from miscellaneous sources published on October 17-18/18
I advise the Lebanese
government and the Lebanese who understand that KSA is our ally against
Iran, Assad and Hezbollah, to rationalize/Roger Bejjani/October 17/18
Eisenkot was reported to have discussed Iran with Saudi Arabia’s Chief of
Staff Gen. Fayyad/Jerusalem Post/October 17/18
Khashoggi case could be death of US-Saudi friendship/Simon Henderson/The
Hill/October 16/18
So Much Winning: Why Mahmoud Abbas Thinks He’s Beating Trump—and
Israel/David Makovsky/Haaretz/October 16/18
Turkey: Enabling Mass Illegal Migration into Greece/Uzay Bulut/Gatestone
Institute/October 17/2018
Are Democrats Wasting Their Campaign Cash/Jonathan
Bernstein/Bloomberg/October 17/2018
Big Tech Snuffing Free Speech; Google's Poisonous 'Dragonfly'/Judith
Bergman/Gatestone Institute/October 17/2018
How Is the Saudi Public Likely Responding to the Crisis over Khashoggi’s
Disappearance? The Popularity of Riyadh’s “Reformist Repression/David
Pollock/Fikra Forum & the Washington Institute/October 17/18
Brexit and blatant example of a populist remark/Hazem Saghieh/Al Arabiya/October
17/18
Exploiting the Khashoggi card/Mashari Althaydi//Al Arabiya/October 17/18
Israel’s war planes unlikely to be deterred by Syrian missiles/Mohamed
Chebaro/Arab News/October 17, 2018
Titles For The
Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
October 17-18/18
I advise the
Lebanese government and the Lebanese who understand that KSA is our ally
against Iran, Assad and Hezbollah, to rationalize.
Lebanon’s Hariri: Government Formation Soon
Lebanon: Calls for Army Intervention in Mieh Mieh Camp After Bloody Clashes
Al-Jaafari visits Hariri: Reinforce our bilateral relations
STL: Contempt Case against al-Amin Closed; Enforcement of Sentence against
Akhbar Daily Outstanding
Lebanese Forces 'Demands' Justice Portfolio
Bassil, Jaafari Discuss Bilateral Relations
Kataeb Suggests Cutting Off Lifelong Salaries for Deputies
Berri: Government Formation Talks Progressing, But Not Over
Lebanon Ranked Among Most Corrupt Countries in the World
Riachy after meeting Bassil: Reconciliation is sacred
Bukhari tackles developments with Ambassador of Argentina
Sayegh Says Government Formation Process Is Ominous
Mashnouk, Bukhari tackle local, regional updates
Salameh opens International Investor Week: We seek to enhance confidence
between investor and companies
FAO, Agriculture Ministry sign “Support to Women's Cooperatives and
Associations in the Agro-Food Sector in Lebanon” agreement
UAE Ambassador to Lebanon Addresses Role of Media in Fighting Extremism
Aoun Meets With Iraqi FM, Hopes Boukamal Crossing Would Be Reopened
Titles For The Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on October 17-18/18
Pompeo arrives in Turkey, meets
President Erdogan on Khashoggi case
Trump Expects Truth over Missing Journalist by 'End of Week'
Iran Calls US Sanctions on Paramilitary Force 'Blind Vindictiveness'
Eisenkot was reported to have discussed Iran with Saudi Arabia’s Chief of
Staff Gen. Fayyad.
Saudi Arabia denies Israeli media reports on meeting between chiefs of staff
US Seeks Ridding Syria of Iran's Militias- Official
ICC Prosecutor Issues Warning on Khan Al-Ahmar Demolition
Israel: Charges against Netanyahu Assistants in Biggest Corruption Case
Israel strikes Gaza, closes both border crossings after rocket attack
Trump's Envoy Reveals US Plan to Unite Gaza, West Bank
Palestine to Chair Group of 77 Developing Countries at UN
Syria approves UN aid delivery to camp bordering Jordan
Yemen’s New PM to Tackle Challenging Economic Crises
Libya: UN Ceasefire Collapses As Clashes Erupt in Tripoli
US Boosts Support for Religious, Ethnic Minorities in Iraq
Iraq’s Salih Vows to Maintain Non-Interference Policy on Regional,
International Tensions
Iraq PM-designate to present new cabinet for approval next week
US imposes sanctions on Iraq-based money exchange for ISIS ties
G7 Foreign Ministers’ Statement on Disappearance of Jamal Khashoggi
Cairo Foundation for Development and Law CFD/Solidarity Statement:The
signatories are in solidarity with Mai El Shamy as she is prevented from
going into the institution where she works
The Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
October 17-18/18
I advise the Lebanese government and the Lebanese who
understand that KSA is our ally against Iran, Assad and Hezbollah, to
rationalize.
Roger Bejjani/October 17/18
It goes without saying that abducting a « journalist » or assassinating
him/her in a premeditated manner or by accident, is by all means
inexcusable. It is defined as a crime.
However, when this « journalist » has ties with terrorist groups extending
beyond the profession of journalism, the rules of engagement of the war
against terror provides certain space where terror can be countered by
special op actions such as interrogation and even liquidation.
Those operations have been carried out since the 90´by the western world,
Russia and Israel and have gained momentum post 9/11.
What seems as a plausible reconstitution of what happened at the Saudi
consulate in Istanbul, Jamal Kashoggi, accused of having strong ties with
the Muslim brotherhood’s leader residing in Qatar, was detained against his
will at the Saudi consulate for interrogation. Something went terribly wrong
inside the consulate and Jamal has died. After that a series of bad
decisions aiming for a coverup by a clumsy government that unlike Russia or
Iran is not well versed into political assassination (that’s a fact), took
place leading to this international legitimate outrage.
Having said this and considering that even the mighty USA will show leniency
and understanding in respect with Kashoggi’s matter, and considering that
the only threat to Lebanon is Iran/Hezbollah and considering the 300000
Lebanese breadwinners in KSA, I advise the Lebanese government and the
Lebanese who understand that KSA is our ally against Iran, Assad and
Hezbollah, to rationalize.
Lebanon’s Hariri:
Government Formation Soon
Beirut - Caroline Akoum/Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October,
2018/Lebanon’s Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri announced on Tuesday
that his new cabinet would be formed soon amid intense contacts among
concerned officials to remove the last obstacles. There have been reports
that most obstacles on the representation of Christians and Druze sects in
the government have been resolved. The Free Patriotic Movement and President
Michel Aoun accepted to receive 10 ministries instead of 11, failing to
secure a one third veto. In return, the Lebanese Forces would get four
portfolios. As for the Druze representation, the Progressive Socialist Party
(PSP) would likely receive two portfolios and a third Druze minister would
receive consensual support. MP Talal Arslan, a Druze, met with Aoun Tuesday
and said he was facilitating the formation cabinet process but rejected the
concept of elimination.
Both the PSP and the LF are asking to have the Education Ministry. Informed
ministerial sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that the Marada Movement would get
the Public Works Ministry, “Hezbollah” would receive the Health Ministry
portfolio and the PSP the Education Ministry amid reports that Aoun would
give up the Justice Ministry to the LF. Following his visit to Aoun, PSP
leader Walid Jumblat said: “We insist on (getting) the Ministry of
Education, and we reject any portfolio that has rivalry on it.”He said some
demands are acceptable, stressing that he presented to Aoun "a list of
solutions to the third Druze minister” obstacle. FPM sources said that the
LF and the PSP’s insistence to receive the Education Ministry is considered
a sort of manipulation to delay the formation of the new cabinet.
Lebanon: Calls for Army Intervention in Mieh Mieh Camp After Bloody Clashes
Beirut- Paula Astih/Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October, 2018/An old
conflict between Fatah and Ansarallah in the Mieh Mieh refugee camp in
southern Lebanon broke out late Monday, as a personal dispute between two
armed men led to violent confrontations that lasted until morning.
Palestinian and Lebanese security and political forces mobilized to contain
the developments and succeeded in imposing a ceasefire, followed by
withdrawal of the gunmen from the streets and the formation of a committee
to follow up on the origin of the dispute. The Mieh Mieh refugee camp,
located about 2 km away from Ain el-Hilweh camp, is witnessing a struggle
between Fatah and Ansarallah group over the leadership. According to Fatah
sources, Jamal Suleiman, secretary-general of the opposing group, has been
trying to impose himself as the leader of the camp.Sources told Asharq Al-Awsat:
“Mieh Mieh witnessed more than one assassination in the last period, the
last of which was the death of Bilal Zaidan, a member of Ansarallah whom
Suleiman accused of trying to kill him.”Clashes between the two sides began
on Monday night following a personal dispute that developed into an armed
confrontation during which rockets were used. According to Fatah source, two
members of the movement were killed and 16 civilians and Ansarallah members
were injured. Cautious calm has prevailed over in the camp on Tuesday after
an agreement was reached on a permanent ceasefire, the second after the
failure of the first agreement on Monday evening. The agreement was reached
during an emergency meeting held at the Mohammed Zgheib military barracks in
Sidon between the director of the Lebanese Army intelligence branch in the
south, Brig. Gen. Fawzi Hamadeh, the Palestinian national security chief,
Major General Sobhi Abu Arab, and the Deputy Secretary General of Ansarallah
Maher Awaid, with the participation of Hamas political official in Lebanon
Ahmed Abdel Hadi. Lebanese MPs condemned the recent clashes in the refugee
camp. A member of the Development and Liberation bloc, MP Ali Osseiran,
called for the Lebanese Army’s intervention in the camp to put an end to
such confrontations. “Army intervention in the camp is urgent and necessary
to protect the unarmed and tormented Palestinian people from the chaotic use
of weapons,” he stated.
Al-Jaafari visits Hariri: Reinforce our bilateral
relations
Wed 17 Oct 2018/NNA - Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri received this
evening at the Center House the Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari
and the accompanying delegation. After the meeting Minister al-Jaafari said:
“We discussed with Prime Minister Hariri a number of points and conveyed to
him our wishes to form a government as soon as possible. This coincides with
the formation of the government in Iraq. Therefore, we look forward to the
formation of the two governments soon, and the strengthening of the
relations to achieve the common bilateral interests. We also discussed the
objectives that bring our two countries together and we thanked Lebanon for
its support of Iraq in the face of terrorism, which has achieved an
unprecedented Arab and international consensus, as happened in the Arab
League in the face of Daesh and for the unity of Iraq and its sovereignty,
and Lebanon’s stance was well known.”
He added: “We also look forward to be present in Lebanon at the level of
companies because the economic cooperation can enrich and reinforce the
relations between our countries. We also talked about the Iraqi security
experience that is worth studying. Our country should be proud that it made
a joint Iraqi, Arab and international achievement in defeating terrorism on
its territory, which enable the countries threatened by terrorism to benefit
from this experience through its strong political and security network.”
Question: Did you convey any particular
message to Premier Hariri?
Al-Jaafari: We discussed the contents of several messages including the
ambition to develop the relations between our countries. We also look at
Lebanon’s unity just as we look at Iraq’s unity and we believe the Lebanon
and Iraq’s strength is a strength for all the Arab countries.
Question: Do you think there is real link between the formation of the
Lebanese and the Iraqi governments? And what is the role that Iraq may play
in the process of opening the crossings?
Al-Jaafari: There is no tangible link where one affects the other, but there
is no doubt that the formation of the government in Lebanon and in Iraq is a
source of strength for us. When Lebanon prevails and makes political and
economic achievements, this represents a strength for Iraq and vice versa.
As for the issue of crossings, we are interested in them and we think that
we should overcome this stage and open the crossings between us and the
neighboring countries. This step is civilized and has common interests for
many countries.
Question: Will Iraq play the mediator between Lebanon and Syria in
re-establishing the relations between the two countries?
Al-Jaafari: Iraq is ready to take the initiative to help in everything that
would bring the countries closer and benefit them, and it will spare no
effort in this regard. Iraq has already played this role between Iran and
Saudi Arabia, and between Syria and the other countries. Iraq wants to
spread the atmosphere of harmony because security, politics and economic
exchange are inseparable.
STL: Contempt Case against al-Amin Closed; Enforcement
of Sentence against Akhbar Daily Outstanding
Naharnet/October 17/18/The Special Tribunal for Lebanon said in a statement
on Wednesday that Ibrahim al-Amin, editor-in-chief of al-Akhbar daily, has
satisfied the sentence imposed on him by the Contempt Judge Nicola Lettieri
on 29 August 2016. The fine of €20,000 was received by the Registrar of the
Special Tribunal for Lebanon on 14 August 2018, it said. As a result of
these developments, Judge Lettieri has decided to lift the confidentiality
of the enforcement proceedings against al-Amin. The €6,000 fine imposed on
Akhbar Beirut S.A.L remains outstanding. The Lebanese authorities have the
ongoing obligation to ensure the sentence is enforced, said the statement.
On 31 January 2014, al-Amin and Akhbar Beirut S.A.L. were charged with
contempt and obstruction of justice before the STL in relation to media
reports containing information about alleged confidential STL witnesses. The
charges were brought under Rule 60 bis (A) of the Rules of Procedure and
Evidence, which states that the Tribunal may hold in contempt persons who
knowingly and willfully interfere with its administration of justice. Al-Amin
and Akhbar Beirut S.A.L. were each charged with one count of knowingly and
willfully interfering with the administration of justice (STL-14-06). The
trial in STL-14-06 opened before the Contempt Judge Nicola Lettieri on 24
February 2016, with opening statements by the Amicus Curiae Prosecutor and
the Defence. The Amicus presented his case-in-chief from 24 to 26 February
and on 29 February and 1 March 2016. The Defence presented their case from 7
to 8 April. Both parties presented their closing arguments on 13 May 2016.
Contempt Judge Lettieri issued a judgment on 15 July 2016 finding both
Accused guilty of one count of contempt for knowingly and willfully
interfering with the administration of justice by publishing information on
purported confidential witnesses in the Ayyash et al. case, thereby
undermining public confidence in the Tribunal's ability to protect the
confidentiality of information about, or provided by, witnesses or potential
witnesses.
On 29 August 2016, al-Amin was sentenced to a €20,000 fine and Akhbar Beirut
to a €6,000 fine, which neither appealed. The Contempt Judge also ordered
that both fines be paid in full by 30 September 2016. Al-Amin failed to pay
his fine. After a number of measures to enforce the sentence had been taken,
in furtherance of various orders from the Contempt Judge, the full fine of
€20,000 was deposited with the Registry of the Tribunal on 14 August 2018.
The €6,000 fine imposed on Akhbar Beirut S.A.L. remains outstanding. The
Lebanese authorities remain obligated to enforce this sentence, said the
statement.
Lebanese Forces 'Demands' Justice Portfolio
Naharnet/October 17/18/Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri intensifies
efforts to ease obstacles hampering the formation process and has therefore
held series of meetings with related parties. Meanwhile, the Lebanese Forces
reportedly said they had not received any official offer regarding
portfolios, “we are only getting suggestions that keep on changing,” LBCI TV
station quoted LF sources on Wednesday. “We have not received any formal
proposal regarding the ministries. We are only getting suggestions and we
want to get the Justice Ministry,” they reportedly said. The Free Patriotic
Movement also insists on getting the ministry of justice which raises
prospects of a new conflict between the two Christian parties. Progress in
the cabinet formation process loomed on Tuesday raising hopes that the
gridlock is eased six months after the designation of the Premier.
Bassil, Jaafari Discuss Bilateral Relations
Naharnet/October 17/18/Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil held talks on
Wednesday with his Iraqi counterpart Ibrahim al-Jaafari where they discussed
bilateral relations between the two countries. The two men held a joint
press conference during which Bassil replied to a reporter’s question on the
government formation process, expressing hopes that “the rapidly growing
momentum reflecting on the formation in Lebanon would pass on to Iraq.”On
the “positive” formation drive, Bassil said “The justice of representation
is being fulfilled and the rules and standards that unite people are being
realized,” which will pave way for the government to be formed. Highlighting
the benefits of reopening the Nassib border crossing, a key trade route
between Syria and Jordan, he said: “We look forward to the economic benefits
after opening the crossings.”Jordan on Monday reopened its main Nassib
border crossing with war-torn Syria after a three year closure. He said
Lebanon and Iraq have been able to overcome extremism by the cultural and
intellectual capacity of the people. He hoped that there would be stability
in both countries to move towards effective economic relations.
For his part, Jaafari hailed good relations between Iraq and Lebanon saying
the similarities are great between the two peoples, pointing out to serious
endeavors to open the crossings.
Kataeb Suggests Cutting Off Lifelong Salaries for
Deputies
Naharnet/October 17/18/The Kataeb parliamentary bloc has submitted a draft
law suggesting that lifelong salaries for lawmakers be terminated, a move
described as beneficial for Lebanon's treasury. Former MPs in Lebanon
receive lifelong compensation and benefits. When they die, their salaries go
to their families. Kataeb chief Sami Gemayel said: “We have submitted a
scientific approach based on experience in other countries. Instead of
getting a lifelong salary, deputies would get only 75% of their salaries for
a period of one year, as a transitional phase, afterwhich the salaries would
be cut off completely.”Kataeb sources told al-Joumhouria daily on Wednesday
that the proposal is “part of the party’s reformist vision which it seeks to
implement from any official position it assumes.”“We hope the next
government will follow the required reform approach through the development
of austerity policy that contributes to saving the Treasury from escalating
crises,” they added. On a similar note, MP Paula Yaacoubian has also
submitted a draft law aimed at amending the allowances and benefits of
deputies and ministers.
Berri: Government Formation Talks Progressing, But Not Over
Kataeb.org/ Wednesday 17th October 2018/Speaker Nabih Berri on Tuesday said
that the government formation talks are making progress, noting, however,
that the stalemate is not over yet. Speaking at a dinner hosted by the
Lebanese embassy in Switzerland, Berri hoped that a breakthrough would be
reached soon as the formation process is advancing.
Lebanon Ranked Among Most Corrupt Countries in the World
Business Insider/ Wednesday 17th October 2018/The World Economic Forum has
released its annual corruption index as part of its Global Competitiveness
Report. Using a methodology linked to Transparency International's annual
Corruption Perception Index, the WEF ranks 140 countries out of 100 for the
level of corruption within their society. A score of 100 means a country is
entirely without corruption, while 0 is the most corrupt possible. All the
countries featured on this list score 30 or less. The countries seen as most
corrupt tend to be in Africa, Central America, and the Middle East, in
societies with weak legal and governmental systems and widespread poverty.
For instance, Yemen, which is in the middle of a brutal civil war, is ranked
as the most corrupt nation by the Global Competitiveness Report. A handful
of the world's 20 largest economies also make it onto the list, however.
Check out the world's most corrupt nations below.
Iran — 30.0
T29. Ukraine — 30.0
T29. The Gambia — 30.0
T22. Russia — 29.0
T22. Paraguay — 29.0
T22. Mexico — 29.0
T22. Laos — 29.0
T22. Kyrgyzstan — 29.0
T22. Dominican Republic — 29.0
T22. Honduras — 29.0
T19. Guatemala — 28.0
T19. Bangladesh — 28.0
T19. Mauritania — 28.0
T19. Lebanon — 28.0
T19. Kenya — 28.0
T17. Guinea — 27.0
T17. Nigeria — 27.0
T14. Uganda — 26.0
T14. Nicaragua — 26.0
T11. Cameroon — 25.0
T11. Mozambique — 25.0
T8. Haiti — 22.0
T8. Burundi — 22.0
T8. Zimbabwe — 22.0
T5. Democratic Republic of Congo — 21.0
T5. Cambodia — 21.0
T5. Tajikistan — 21.0
4. Chad — 20.0
3. Angola — 19.0
2. Venezuela — 18.0
1. Yemen — 16.0
Riachy after meeting Bassil: Reconciliation is sacred
Wed 17 Oct 2018/NNA - Caretaker Minister of Information, Melhem Riachy, said
after his meeting with the head of the Free Patriotic Movement, Minister
Gebran Bassil, that "the meeting was fruitful and a step towards returning
to the phase that benefited all the Lebanese, and thus restoring a phase
where Christian reconciliation was deemed a red line.""We affirm, on behalf
of Samir Geagea and Gebran Bassil, that reconciliation is sacred and all the
differences in opinion will not lead to a dispute between the two parties,"
he stressed. "Reconciliation is strategic, not circumstantial," said MP
Ibrahim Kanaan, who attended the Riachy-Bassil meeting. "The covenant is for
us all, and we want a productive government, not a government of barricades.
Minister Riachy has sensed that Minister Bassil is cooperating and we must
continue to show this kind of spirit," said Kanaan.
Bukhari tackles developments with Ambassador of
Argentina
Wed 17 Oct 2018/NNA - The Chargé d'Affaires of the Embassy of the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia, Walid Al-Bukhari, received at the Embassy's headquarters in
Beirut the Ambassador of Argentina, Mauricio Alice, with talks featuring
high on the latest political developments at the local and regional levels.
Sayegh Says Government Formation Process Is Ominous
Kataeb.org/Wednesday 17th October 2018/Kataeb's Deputy-President Salim
Sayegh on Wednesday said that the party has decided to opt out of the new
government given that it lacks balance, adding that there is nothing that
motivates the Kataeb to be part of it.
"We are not eager to join the new government after we saw the approach based
on which it is being formed. It's an approach that destroys the upcoming
phase, instead of paving the way for it," Sayegh told Al-Markazia news
agency. Turning to the Kataeb leader's recent visit to the United Arab
Emirates, Sayegh stressed that the party is keen to relay to the
international community the idea that the Lebanese government's decisions
and policy do not mirror the viewpoints of all the Lebanese. "It is normal
for us to reassure our friend countries that not all the Lebanese are with
the government's choices, and that the results of the latest elections were
compelled by the nature of the vote law and local alliances," Sayegh said.
“Those countries must know that the stances of Lebanon's Foreign Ministry,
which have taken ties with the Arab League to the worst level, do not
reflect what the Lebanese people actually thinks and do not serve the
state’s interest," he added.
Mashnouk, Bukhari tackle local, regional updates
Wed 17 Oct 2018/NNA - The Chargé d'Affaires of the Embassy of the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia to Lebanon, Walid Bukhari, welcomed on Wednesday caretaker
Minister of Interior and Municipalities, Nuhad Al-Mashnouk, with talks
touching on the latest developments in Lebanon and the region, as well as
bilateral relations prospects.
Salameh opens International Investor Week: We seek to
enhance confidence between investor and companies
Wed 17 Oct 2018 /NNA - Governor of the Central Bank, Riad Salameh, opened
this Wednesday at the Higher Institute of Business (ESA), the first
international meeting on the "International Investor Week", whereby he
stressed that "Lebanon needs to be more closely aligned with the Lebanese
investor in order to encourage it to buy shares in companies so as to expand
investments and enhance exports.""The mission of the CMA here is to create
confidence between the investor and the companies to invest in," he said,
"next to boosting confidence in stock trading on secondary markets.""Today
we are approaching the launch of the electronic platform which will allow
communication between Lebanon and abroad, enabling it to attract funds from
Lebanese and non-Lebanese. This platform will be operated by a private
company controlled by the Capital Markets Authority. This operation will
increase confidence in the Lebanese economy and contribute to establishing
companies in Lebanon, thus the implementation of the Cedre conference
recommendations," Salameh said.
FAO, Agriculture Ministry sign “Support to Women's
Cooperatives and Associations in the Agro-Food Sector in Lebanon” agreement
Wed 17 Oct 2018/NNA – The Ministry of Agriculture signed an
agreement titled “Support to Women's Cooperatives and Associations in the
Agro-Food Sector in Lebanon”, upon the invitation of the United Nations Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO), with the funding of the Government of
Canada. The ambassador of Canada, Emmanuelle Lamoureux delivered the
following statement at the signing ceremony:
“Excellency Minister Ghazi Zaiter,
Mr. Maurice Saade, FAO Representative in Lebanon,
Officials, ladies and gentlemen
It is a pleasure to be here to witness the signing of the project agreement
related to the Canadian-funded "Support to Women's Cooperatives and
Associations in the Agro-Food Sector in Lebanon" project. Canada and Lebanon
have had a long and distinguished relationship. We share a dedication to the
maintenance of inclusive and diverse societies that are open to people of
many faiths and backgrounds.We also understand the need to support those who
come to our borders in need of shelter and safety. Canada commends the
efforts Lebanon has made over the past seven years to support Syrian
refugees by providing them access to health, education and other essential
services. Canada has high admiration for the hospitality and endurance of
the government and people of Lebanon who continue to help alleviate the
suffering of their conflict-affected neighbours with empathy, encouragement
and support. Canada fully recognizes the strains that have been placed on
Lebanese institutions and communities these past years. Canada has strived
to help Lebanon alleviate some of those pressures. Canada committed over 200
million dollars to Lebanon, supporting a broad spectrum of humanitarian,
security and development assistance in areas such as education, health,
food, protection, livelihoods, conflict prevention and countering violent
extremism. Canada's development programme aims to strengthen local economies
and improve livelihood opportunities in Lebanon. Supporting the agricultural
sector will help the most vulnerable Lebanese living in rural areas to
rebuild their livelihoods affected by the crisis in Syria, while creating
opportunities for Syrians who traditionally work in this sector.
Gender equality is a key priority for Canada.
Canada is proud to improve women's leadership in the agriculture sector and
empower women in the economy.
We are pleased to support the important work of FAO and the Ministry of
Agriculture that we are here today to inaugurate. The "Support to Women's
Cooperatives and Associations in the Agro-Food Sector in Lebanon" project
will work with both agricultural workers and the Ministry of Agriculture in
an effort to comprehensively reform the work of agricultural cooperatives in
Lebanon. Canada welcomes this opportunity to provide support to one of
Lebanon's key economic sectors through this initiative. Canada
believes that when women play a strong and central role in the economic,
social and political activities in a society, that society will only grow
stronger, richer and more secure. Women make up over 40 per cent of the
agriculture labour force in Lebanon. Increasing their access to
technologies, markets, agriculture resources and services is vital for the
growth of the sector. This project will target women as well as
co-operatives managed by women and help address the key challenges facing
them in this sector to help build more sustainable income-generating
cooperatives and enterprises. Furthermore, and perhaps even more
significantly, through this project, the Ministry of Agriculture will
strengthen its capacity to ensure gender-related issues are factored into
its programming and policies. Canada is proud to be partnering with the
Ministry and FAO to help reinforce the capacity of institutions and
organisations in Lebanon to become more gender responsive in their service
delivery and help build a more enabling environment for women. This project
is but one component of Canada's ongoing efforts to help Lebanese hosts and
Syrian refugees to live together in dignity in a stable environment, until
the conditions are in place for safe and voluntary return to Syria.
I wish every success to FAO and the Ministry of Agriculture as they work
together in the years ahead on this important initiative.”
UAE Ambassador to Lebanon Addresses Role of Media in Fighting Extremism
Beirut- Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October, 2018/UAE Ambassador to
Lebanon Hamad Saeed al-Shamsi announced Tuesday that a seminar organized by
the Embassy in Beirut aimed at examining means of making media effective to
combat extremism instead of being one of its tools. In the seminar, entitled
"The Role of Media in Fighting Extremism," Shamsi stressed that media should
also be protected in order not to transform into a theater for terrorist
acts. “Our policies to address all those who support violence and hatred do
not differentiate between a group or a state,” he added.
"We all agree that extremists have sought and succeeded in turning media
into platforms to promote misinformation and attract young people to carry
out harmful acts, damaging their societies," Shamsi said. “Based on the
foundation established by founder Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan in terms
of showing tolerance, moderation, and openness to others, the wise
leadership took a clear decision to confront extremism on more than one
level,” he explained. “It formed its government to include a Ministry of
Tolerance, in which the main objective is to be an oasis of tolerance,
combating discrimination and hatred and eliminating terrorism.” He
emphasized the importance of media in the fight against extremism and the
significant role played by the youth in providing innovative ideas in this
matter. Shamsi pointed out that youth councils in the UAE play an active
role, in cooperation with advanced research and scientific centers, to hold
conferences and seminars to come up with national ideas within the overall
vision to combat extremism. "The situation is becoming more dangerous as
some people are using media as platforms to incite hatred.”He also stressed
that the UAE was the first to deal with extremism and terrorism. Notably,
the seminar was organized by the UAE Embassy in Beirut along with Issam
Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs (IFI) in the
American University in Beirut (AUB). It was attended by Shamsi, Charge
d'Affaires at the Saudi embassy in Beirut Walid al-Bukhari and a large
number of reporters. The first session discussed violent extremist media,
professional ethics, and media professionalism to combat extremism and
promote a culture of tolerance. The second session addressed the problems of
intellectual extremism in media, the language of extremism in media, and
extremism in religious media.
Aoun Meets With Iraqi FM, Hopes Boukamal Crossing Would Be Reopened
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October, 2018/President Michel Aoun
expressed his relief over the opening of Nassib border crossing between
Syria and Jordan, saying that he hoped that the Boukamal crossing on the
Iraqi border would regain its natural activity.
Aoun met on Tuesday with Iraqi Foreign Affairs Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari
at the Baabda Palace, in the presence of Iraqi Ambassador to Lebanon Ali Al-Ameri.
He reaffirmed during the meeting Lebanon’s desire to strengthen and develop
Lebanese-Iraqi relations. He also congratulated Jaafari on the liberation of
Iraq from terrorists, recalling the victory achieved by the Lebanese Army
and security forces over terrorist groups in Arsal and the uncovering of
dormant cells. Touching on the Syrian refugee crisis, Aoun stressed that his
country provided the displaced with full care and was now working on
organizing their voluntary return to the safe areas in Syria. The meeting
also tackled the situation in the region. The Lebanese president pointed to
Israeli practices that contradict international resolutions, especially UN
Security Council Resolution 1701, in addition to the injustice towards the
Palestinian people in the occupied territories and beyond. “Arab efforts
must focus on the need for a just and lasting peace,” he stated. On a
different note, Aoun expressed relief over the opening of the Nassib border
crossing between Syria and Jordan, hoping that the Boukamal crossing would
be reopened “after its coercive closure as a result of recent military
developments.” For his part, Jaafari, who is on a two-day visit to Beirut,
emphasized the strong fraternal relations between the two countries and the
importance of activating them in various fields. He also highly valued
Aoun’s stances in support of Iraq in regional and international forums.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News
published
on
October 17-18/18
Pompeo arrives in
Turkey, meets President Erdogan on Khashoggi case
Agencies Wednesday,
17 October 2018/US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo met Turkish President
Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on Wednesday following talks with Saudi Arabia’s
king and crown prince about the disappearance of Saudi journalist Jamal
Khashoggi. President Donald Trump, who dispatched his top diplomat to
address the crisis, warned of a rush to judgment in the case and echoing the
Saudis’ request for patience on the investigation. Turkish Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu has said Pompeo would bring information about the case to
Ankara, two weeks after Khashoggi vanished when he visited the Saudi
consulate in Istanbul to collect documents for his planned marriage.After
meeting with King Salman and the Crown Prince on Tuesday, Pompeo told
reporters that Saudi Arabia has committed to conducting a complete
investigation into Khashoggi’s disappearance.
Trump Expects Truth
over Missing Journalist by 'End of Week'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 17/18/U.S. President
Donald Trump said Wednesday that he expects to know within days what
happened to Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, who is alleged to
have been murdered by Saudi agents. "We will probably know that by the end
of the week," Trump said at the White House. The president said he would be
getting a "full report" from Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on his return
from meetings with Saudi leaders.
Iran Calls US
Sanctions on Paramilitary Force 'Blind Vindictiveness'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October
17/18/Iran called new US sanctions against its paramilitary Basij group an
act of "blind vindictiveness" on Tuesday. "America's new sanctions are a
clear insult to international and legal mechanisms and a result of the
American government's blind vindictiveness against the Iranian nation," said
foreign ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi.
Eisenkot was reported
to have discussed Iran with Saudi Arabia’s Chief of Staff Gen. Fayyad.
Jerusalem Post/October 17/18
IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Gadi Eisenkot met with his counterparts from
several Arab countries while in Washington for the Counter–Violent Extremist
Organizations conference for military commanders, Israeli media reported
Tuesday evening. According to a report by Israel’s KAN public television,
Eisenkot met with Saudi Arabia’s Chief of Staff Gen. Fayyad bin Hamed Al-Ruwaili
on Tuesday on the sidelines of the conference about several regional issues,
including Iran, which is a common foe to the two countries. A statement
released by the IDF had said that Eisenkot would meet with military
officials from both the US and other foreign military officials, it did not
specify which military leaders he would meet. While this seems to be the
first publicized meeting between Eisenkot and al-Ruwaili, it is the second
consecutive year that the two officers attended the Counter–Violent
Extremist Organizations conference for military commanders, where the two
are believed to have also spoken about Iran. Last November, following
Eisenkot’s first participation in the conference, he gave an unprecedented
interview to the Saudi Elaph newspaper based in London and offered to share
Israeli intelligence about Iran with Riyadh, telling the newspaper that what
he heard from the Saudis about Iranian expansion was “identical” to Israeli
concerns. “We are ready to exchange experiences with Saudi Arabia and other
moderate Arab countries and exchange intelligence to confront Iran,” he
said, adding that “there are many shared interests between us and Saudi
Arabia.”Calling for a new international alliance in the Middle East,
Eisenkot stated that there needs to be “a large, comprehensive strategic
plan to stop the Iranian threat. This is what should be prevented in the
region,” he said, adding that “in this matter there is complete agreement
between us and Saudi Arabia.”In addition to the meeting with al-Ruwaili,
Eisenkot was seen in a photo released by the Department of Defense of a
dinner during the conference seated at the same table as the Chief of Staff
of the Egyptian Armed Forces Mohamed Farid, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff of Jordan Lt.-Gen. Mahmoud Abdul Halim Freihat, as well as the
Chief of Staff of Bahrain, Lt.-Gen. Dhiab bin Saqr Al Nuaimi. While Israel
has no official ties with Saudi Arabia or Bahrain, the relationship with the
Sunni Kingdom and other Gulf States has grown stronger in recent years, due
in large part to the shared threat of Iran’s expansion across the region.
Relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia are at their worst in years with
both accusing the other of subverting regional security. Saudi Arabia's
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman caused an uproar earlier this year when he
recognized Israel's right to exist. Last November a spokesperson for Yemeni
rebels accused Israel of taking part in the Saudi Arabia led-coalition
against Yemen and warned that Israeli military bases in Africa are within
range of Houthi missiles. The Houthis, which are armed by Iran, have also
fired several ballistic missiles into Saudi Arabia, including one which
targeted the Saudi capital Riyadh a day before US President Donald Trump
visited the Kingdom last May. In September the Emirati news website al-Khaleej
reported that Saudi Arabia had purchased Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense
system to defend itself from Houthi missile attacks. The deal, which was
reportedly mediated by the United States included further plans to reach an
agreement on broad military cooperation between the two countries. Israel’s
Ministry of Defense and Rafael which manufactures the system, denied the
report.
Saudi Arabia denies
Israeli media reports on meeting between chiefs of staff
Arab News/October 17, 2018/JEDDAH: A Saudi defense ministry official has
denied reports circulated on Israeli media claiming that a meeting was held
between the Saudi military Chief of Staff, Gen. Fayyad bin Hamed Al-Ruwaili,
and his Israeli counterpart Gadi Eizenkot.
The official said the correct information is that Al-Ruwaili participated in
an international meeting for Defense Chiefs of Staff held in Washington,
United States at the Andrews Air Force Base. 81 countries took part in the
meeting held between Oct. 15-16 aimed at discussing ways to combat violent
terror groups. The meeting also included an official dinner for all
attendees hosted by the his excellency the Chairman of the US Joints Chief
of Staff, Gen. Joseph F. Dunford. It was followed by a conference at the
Andrews Air Force Base.
The official said no bilateral meeting took place between the Saudi and
Israeli Chiefs of Staff.
US Seeks Ridding Syria of Iran's Militias- Official
London- Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October, 2018/The
United States Secretary’s Special Representative for Syria Engagement,
Ambassador James Jeffrey, has started his tour to Turkey, Qatar and Saudi
Arabia on October 15 to carry out discussions with allies and partners about
Syria. In Turkey, Ambassador Jeffrey will meet with Turkish government
officials, Syrian opposition leaders, and Syrian civil society groups. He
will reaffirm the Administration’s commitment to achieving a political
solution to the conflict in line with UN Security Resolution 2254 that
produces a secure, stable, and pluralistic Syria, that is free of terrorism
and all Iranian-led and Iranian proxy militias. In Qatar and Saudi Arabia,
he will reiterate the US position that any military offensive in Idlib would
be a reckless escalation of the conflict in Syria and the region, risk the
lives of Syrian civilians and destroy civilian infrastructure.
Throughout his trip, he will seek to meet representatives of the Syrian
people and reiterate to them our full support for UN Security Council
Resolution 2254 and UN Special Envoy De Mistura’s efforts to stand up the
Syrian Constitutional Committee as quickly as possible, the statement
explained. On the other hand, Acting President of the Syrian National
Coalition (Etilaf) Abdulrahman Mustafa met Tuesday with Jeffrey in Istanbul.
Mustafa stressed the Coalition’s national commitment in supporting
UN-sponsored political efforts, according to a statement by Etilaf. “We
supported the decision of the Syrian negotiating body to engage positively
in participating in the work of the constitutional commission, which will be
formed by the United Nations,” it added. The statement stressed that the
work of the constitutional commission is an integral part of the integrated
constitutional process. “Its outcomes are in favor of the negotiating path
of the political process and ensure progress in the subjects of governance,
political transition, and elections,” it noted.
ICC Prosecutor Issues Warning on Khan Al-Ahmar Demolition
THE HAGUE, Netherlands- Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17
October, 2018/The International Criminal Court's chief prosecutor issued a
warning Wednesday that if Israel goes ahead and destroys a Palestinian
Bedouin village on the West Bank that could constitute a war crime.
Israel's Supreme Court recently rejected a final appeal against plans to
demolish the village, Khan al-Ahmar. ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said in a
written statement that "evacuation by force now appears imminent." She
added: "It bears recalling, as a general matter, that extensive destruction
of property without military necessity and population transfers in an
occupied territory constitute war crimes" under the Rome Statute treaty that
established the ICC. Israel says Khan al-Ahmar was built illegally and has
offered to resettle its residents a few kilometers away. Palestinians and
other critics say the demolition aims to displace Palestinians in favor of
Israeli settlement expansion. The ICC has been conducting a preliminary
inquiry since 2015 in the Palestinian territories, including Israel's
settlement policy and crimes allegedly committed by both sides in the 2014
Gaza conflict. The investigation is also looking at Hamas rocket attacks
aimed at Israeli civilian population centers. Israel is not a member of the
court and does not accept its jurisdiction. However, Israeli forces could
face charges if they are suspected of committing crimes on Palestinian
territories as the court has accepted the "State of Palestine" as a member.
Bensouda's written statement also said she is "alarmed by the continued
violence, perpetrated by actors on both sides, at the Gaza border with
Israel." There have been weeks of escalating violence along the border. The
European Parliament passed a resolution last month calling the decision to
demolish and transfer Khan al-Ahmar a breach of international humanitarian
law. The resolution also demands compensation from Israel for the
destruction of European Union-funded infrastructure found in the village.
The resolution warns Israeli authorities of the decision's repercussions,
also citing the Fourth Geneva Convention, wherein it is stated that
"forcible transfer of an occupied territory, unless the security of the
population or imperative military reasons so demand," is prohibited and
constitutes a grave breach of international humanitarian law.
Israel: Charges against Netanyahu Assistants in Biggest
Corruption Case
Tel Aviv - Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October,
2018/Sources from the Israeli police affirmed that investigations in case
3000 were concluded. The case is regarding grafts in the purchase of German
navy submarines and was considered the biggest corruption case in the
history of Israel. The police are expected to present to the public
prosecution its recommendations regarding indictments against the suspects –
the majority of them are advisers and assistants of Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu. Sources mentioned that the indictments are the most
critical in corruption topics that were interrogated by the police. Israel
Police's Lahav 433 unit investigations started one year and eight months
ago. Thousands of documents and recordings and on top of them the testimony
of Miki Ganor, one of the major advisers of Netanyahu and the main suspect
in the case, were gathered by Lahav 433.
The police mainly stand on the testimony of state’s evidence Ganor, who
worked as an envoy for the German company that produces submarines. In his
testimony to the police, he submitted rich information about the bribes. "We
planned an acquisition of three additional submarines, which cost something
like $1.8 billion, at the price of $2.2 billion," Ganor told police
investigators. He also spoke about his meetings with former National
Security Advisor Avriel Bar-Yosef, and how they plotted to achieve huge
profits. In return for this testimony, the sentence against Ganor will be
alleviated -- he will spend one year in prison and will pay a penalty that
hasn’t been revealed yet.
Israel strikes Gaza, closes both border crossings after rocket attack
Reuters Wednesday, 17 October 2018/One Palestinian was killed after Israeli
jets struck targets in the Gaza Strip early Wednesday following a rocket
fired from thr enclave struck a house in the southern Israeli city of
Beersheba. Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman ordered the closure of both of
Israel's border crossings with Gaza following the rocket attack.Lieberman
ordered the closure of the Kerem Shalom goods crossing and the Erez crossing
for people, and the reduction of the permitted fishing zone along the Gaza
coast to three nautical miles, the defense ministry body responsible for
Palestinian civil affairs, COGAT, said. A medical official told Israel Radio
that three people were taken to hospital after the rocket struck the house.
Residents in the Gaza Strip said jets had targeted eight locations. The
military said another rocket had been launched from Gaza, falling into the
sea.
Health ministry officials in Gaza said three people were wounded in an
Israeli air strike against an armed training camp in Rafah, in the south of
the coastal strip. There were no reports of serious injuries in Israel.
Tensions along the Israel-Gaza border have been simmering for months amid
weekly border protests and the launching by Palestinian militants of
incendiary balloons and kites across the border fence. Israeli leaders have
warned that they are prepared to escalate military action on Gaza to curb
attacks and protests. Israel and Hamas, which controls Gaza, fought a war in
2014. Around 200 Gazans have been killed by Israeli troops since the border
protests began on March 30, according to Palestinian Health Ministry
figures. The Israeli military said the demonstrators last Friday hurled
rocks, explosive devices, firebombs and grenades. Gaza health officials said
seven Palestinians were killed when Israeli troops opened fire on a group
that broke through the fence. Israel has drawn international condemnation
for its use of deadly force, but says it is protecting its borders and
civilian population. After the latest strikes, video footage from Beersheba,
about 40 km (25 miles) from the Gaza Strip, showed extensive damage to a
concrete and stone house in a residential street. Still photos aired on
Israeli Channel 2 showed large black plumes of smoke rising from various
locations in the Gaza Strip. An Egyptian security delegation was visiting
the Gaza Strip to try to restore calm. Israel’s military chief cut short a
visit to the United States and was returning home, and schools were to be
shut in Beersheba for the day, the reports said. Israeli reports said Israel
had closed the commercial and pedestrian crossing in and out of the Gaza
Strip and had cut the fishing limit to three miles.Israel withdrew its
troops and settlers from Gaza in 2005 but maintains tight control of its
land and sea borders, citing security concerns. Egypt also restricts
movement in and out of Gaza on its border.
Trump's Envoy Reveals US Plan to Unite Gaza, West Bank
Ramallah, Tel Aviv- Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October, 2018/Jason
Greenblatt, US President Donald Trump's special envoy to the Middle East,
stressed that the United States plan is to help "all Palestinians, in both
the West Bank and Gaza," and revealed intentions of unification of the West
Bank and Gaza. "Let’s be clear about something: Gaza and the West Bank have
been separated for 10 years, not only physically, but politically—between
the Palestinian Authority and Hamas. It’s absurd to deny that reality," said
Greenblatt. "In contrast, our peace plan intends to bring them together.
Make no mistake; we are in this to help all Palestinians, in both the West
Bank and Gaza. The type of disinformation being spread by some parties who
have not even seen the plan yet wish to be spoilers does nothing to benefit
ordinary Palestinian lives," he continued. "Once our plan is released, all
parties should read it and judge it by its merits. The PLO should be a
positive force to change people’s lives for the better, and not try to sway
people before they have even seen our plan," Greenblatt went on to say.
Commenting on Greenblatt statements, head of Fatah's Information Department
in the Office of Mobilization and Organization Munir al-Jaghoub told Asharq
Al-Awsat newspaper that the Palestinians won't be misled by Greenblatt’s
lies and deceit or his claim of keenness on the people’s interests. The US
plan is under preparation for the past 19 months, and a team was formed for
this purpose including Greenblatt, Jared Kushner, Trump's senior adviser,
and David Friedman, the US ambassador to Israel. Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has thanked Trump for his courageous decisions,
especially regarding recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and
the decision to transfer the US embassy.
Palestine to Chair Group of 77 Developing Countries at
UN
New York– Ali Barada/ Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October,
2018/Palestinians achieved a moral victory on Tuesday after the United
Nations General Assembly voted in favor of appointing Palestine as head of
the G77 and China, a coalition of developing nations at the UN. This move
allows Palestine to act more like a full UN member state during meetings in
2019. While 146 countries voted in favor, only three - Israel, the US and
Australia - voted against, and15 countries abstained from voting.
“Multilateral diplomacy took over with broad support from members for a
resolution allowing the elected presidency of the G77 and China to carry out
its duties effectively,” Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United
Nations Riyad Mansour told Asharq Al-Awsat. He stressed that Palestine would
spare no effort to prove its competence to represent and defend the G77 and
China, while also engaging constructively and transparently nwith all
partners. He added that diplomatic moves continue to convince countries that
do not recognize Palestine it that it is a responsible country that enjoys
political wisdom, enabling it to be a full UN member state." Egypt, the
current chair of the so-called Group of 77, told the assembly before the
vote that because the Palestinians are from a non-member observer state at
the UN, a resolution is required to give it “the rights and capacity
required” to head the 135-nation group that includes China. In the framework
of article 125 of the 73rd session’s agenda of the General Assembly, on
enhancing the UN system, Egypt circulated a draft resolution on the
presidency of G77 and China for 2019, which elected Palestine, an
unregistered member of the UN organization.
Syria approves UN aid delivery to camp bordering Jordan
Reuters, Amman/Wednesday, 17 October 2018/The Syrian government gave
approval for the United Nations to deliver aid next week to thousands of
desperate civilians stranded near a US garrison in southeastern Syria on the
Iraqi-Syrian border, aid workers and camp officials said on Wednesday. A
siege earlier this month by the Syrian army and a block on aid by Jordan has
depleted food in the camp and led to at least a dozen deaths in the last
week among its over 50,000 inhabitants, mainly women and children, residents
and UN sources told Reuters.
Yemen’s New PM to Tackle Challenging Economic Crises
Aden, Riyadh- Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October,
2018/Taking Yemen’s political echelons by surprise, Yemeni President
Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi sacked on Monday night Prime Minister Ahmed Obeid bin
Daghr, who will now be facing investigations. Hadi’s orders, unexpectedly,
accused Daghr of failing to manage the country's economic crisis, as well as
of his lack of delivery on the humanitarian situation in Al Mahra province
which was ravaged by a category 1 tropical storm. Hadi appointed Maeen
Abdulmalik Saeed as the new Prime Minister, referring former PM bin Daghr
for investigation over his government inefficiency concerning Luban cyclone
and the economic collapse. The sacking was due to “negligence in the
government’s performance in the economic and service fields,” a presidential
statement said when addressing reasons behind relieving Daghr from his
duties as Prime Minister.
Hadi appointed Saeed, an architect by education, as the new prime minister.
Saeed, 42, has served as minister of public works and roads since May 2017
and was a member of the government’s team at UN-sponsored talks held in
Geneva and Kuwait for Yemen’s peace, according to Saba news agency. Daghr
showed support to his successor, tweeting that he wishes him luck in
fulfilling his duties, a move that was welcomed by social media activists,
in what they considered an honorable act by a noble statesman. The economic
and living conditions have worsened all over Yemen in recent weeks as the
national currency continues plunging. But Saeed vowed to save no effort in
tackling the economic crises head-on. Public discontent swept across various
Yemeni governorates despite reform attempts and governmental measures to
counter economic challenges, and the central bank trying to regulate
national banking. President Hadi appointed Daghr as prime minister back in
April 2016. Sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that Daghr will remain politically
active and uphold his strong stance against the Iran-backed Houthi coupists.
In the meantime, Hadi's appointment of Abdulmalik was welcomed by UN Special
Envoy to Yemen Martin Griffiths in a tweet that stated the new prime
minister’s rank and professionalism. Griffiths’ office noted that it looks
forward to working closely with PM Abdulmalik to deal with the critical
economic situation and to push the political process forward in the war-torn
country. Abdulmalik said future cabinet portfolios will be handed out to
ministers after holding partisan consultations, sources told Asharq Al-Awsat.
Libya: UN Ceasefire Collapses As Clashes Erupt in Tripoli
Cairo- Khalid Mahmoud/Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October, 2018/A
UN-sponsored ceasefire in Libya has once again collapsed after clashes
erupted between militias in the capital Tripoli, when unknown gunmen killed
an armed militia leader, Khairi al-Kikli, dubbed Hankoura, while other
gunmen cut off the city's drinking water supply line. Security sources and
eyewitnesses told Asharq Al-Awsat that on Tuesday morning, gunmen
assassinated Hankoura, one of the leaders of the so-called Tripoli Brigade,
in front of a hotel in the center of Tripoli. According to observers of the
security situation in the country, these developments mean the collapse of
the ceasefire sponsored by the United Nations. High Representative of the
Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Federica Mogherini, asserted
that “the presidential and parliamentary elections (in Libya) should take
place as soon as possible, but with the right security and political
framework.” She explained that the political framework is the legal
framework that makes it clear for what the Libyans are going to vote.
Speaking at a press conference after the Foreign Affairs Council in
Luxembourg, AKI news agency quoted the EU official as saying that EU’s
presence in Libya had intensified in the past weeks, putting this support at
the disposal of the Libyan people and the UN. “The message that comes out of
the foreign ministers’ meeting on Libya is a message of unity and of
determination to work even more to support a Libyan-found solution to the
situation in the country under UN auspices,” she added. On Tuesday, Libyan
Foreign Ministry was suddenly evacuated for security reasons according to
security sources. However, local residents and eyewitnesses recounted to
Asharq Al-Awsat a massive and sudden deployment of militants in the area. In
spite of the three rockets in the vicinity of the international airport in
Tripoli, flights continued at the only civil airport operating in the city.
Meanwhile, Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG) Ghassan
Salame and Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General (DSRSG)
Stephanie Williams met with newly-appointed Minister of Interior Fathi
Bashagha in Tripoli to hear about his plans for the Ministry and discuss
next steps for the capital's new security arrangements. Salame and Williams
returned from a two-day trip to Egypt where they met with Egypt’s Foreign
Minister Sameh Shoukry, Sec-Gen of the Arab League Ahmed Aboul Gheit, and
Speaker Aguila Saleh and discussed the latest political developments in
Libya. In other news, a group of armed men cut off drinking water from the
capital of Tripoli and the city's municipality announced that the water of
the artificial river was cut off late Tuesday evening after the group in
Tarhona forced the operators at the headquarters to stop pumping water, in
protest against the power outages at the cement plant in Thursday Market and
the plant in Ben Ghashir Palace.The House of Representatives (HoR) in Tobruk
called for questioning those responsible for the deterioration of the
security situation in the south.
US Boosts Support for Religious, Ethnic Minorities in
Iraq
Washington- Muath al-Amri/Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October, 2018/The
United States announced over $178 million in foreign assistance to support
vulnerable communities in Iraq as part of its foreign aid program. This
brings total US assistance for this population to nearly $300 million since
Fiscal Year 2017, implemented by both the State Department and the United
States Agency for International Development (USAID). “The preservation of
Iraq’s rich historical pluralism is critical to reintegrating persecuted
ethnic and religious minority communities into a peaceful Iraq,” US State
Department said in a press statement on Tuesday. “US efforts to meet this
objective span government agencies and are being implemented urgently, in
close partnership with local faith and community leaders,” the statement
said. It showed that in order to meet immediate needs, it has spent over $51
million in life-saving humanitarian assistance to populations from the
Ninewa Plain and western Ninewa, including safe drinking water, food,
shelter materials and household items, medical care and psychosocial
support. The Department pointed out that its efforts also focused on helping
restore communities. Therefore, it has spent nine million dollars in funding
to support early recovery needs and restore access to services like health
and education. It contributed to promoting economic recovery by providing
$68 million in funding to improve access to jobs and markets, support local
businesses and revive the local economy in addition to five million dollars
to prevent future atrocities that address systemic issues affecting minority
populations and prevent future atrocities. In regards to clearing the
Explosive Remnants of War (ERW), the US has spent approximately $37 million
plus survey, clearance, and risk education in and around minority
communities.
This support has enabled the Department to significantly expand the number
of US-funded ERW survey, clearance, and risk education teams across Ninewa
and fulfills the Secretary’s pledge to expand ERW clearance efforts in Iraqi
minority communities made at the July 2018 Ministerial to Advance Religious
Freedom. As for the social, economic and political empowerment, the US
provided $8.5 million in additional assistance to projects that provide
psychosocial services, legal support, and initiatives to help collect
evidence of human rights abuses, increase minority representation in local
and provincial government, increase access to justice for children,
strengthen rule of law and provide livelihoods support and access to
economic opportunities for vulnerable groups bringing the FY 2017 total to
$18.5 million. It also contributed to preserving historic and cultural
heritage sites in Northern Iraq, where they were targeted for destruction by
ISIS and other terrorist groups. The Department spent two million dollars to
safeguard, preserve and restore access to significant cultural heritage
sites of minority communities.
Iraq’s Salih Vows to Maintain Non-Interference Policy
on Regional, International Tensions
Baghdad- Hamza Mustafa/Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 17 October, 2018/Iraqi
President Barham Salih reiterated on Tuesday a national rejection for taking
sides as regional blocs form.Given its regional position, Iraq has
responsibilities to fulfill including easing tensions and deepening regional
mutual understanding, said Salih. In a statement, Salih said that Iraq views
its relations with all countries based on common interests and
non-interference in the internal affairs of sovereign states. He stressed
that Iraq is entering a new stage as it tries to form a strong and efficient
government, able to overcome obstacles and challenges, and bring peace and
progress to the Iraqi people. The presidential statements came along with
the newly elected Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mehdi urging political blocs to
facilitate his mission and not put spokes in the wheel of cabinet formation.
Rumors suggested the possibility of announcing a cabinet reshuffle next
Saturday. Most parliamentary blocs view ministries as spoils to maintain
during the next four years. A politician involved with cabinet formation
told Asharq Al Awsat, speaking under the conditions of anonymity, that some
blocs named their candidates, but there were ongoing consultations on
portfolio distribution. The source added that the final announcement for
cabinet formation will likely happen by Saturday, but said some ministerial
portfolios will remain vacant to be settled in coming parliamentary
sessions. Abdul Mehdi had repeatedly called for forming a cabinet of
independent competent figures and ruled out accepting independent figures
who are nominated by parties noting that such figures do not remain
independent. Incumbent Vice President Ayad Allawi said that now, more than
ever, Iraq has the chance to form a cabinet distanced from sectarianism and
committed to end corruption and restore the nation’s role as a key player in
regional peace and development. Allawi added that this is the right time to
approve a national government platform for all political forces, academics,
and laborers.
Iraq PM-designate to present new cabinet for approval
next week
Reuters, Baghdad/ Wednesday, 17 October 2018/Iraq’s prime
minister-designate Adel Abdul Mehdi said on Wednesday he would present a new
cabinet to parliament for approval next week. Abdul Mehdi was named by
Iraq’s new President Barham Salih last month, and has until the beginning of
November to form a government. The election of Salih, a Kurd, and his
nomination of Abdul Mehdi, a Shi’ite, has broken months of political
deadlock.in Iraq after an inconclusive May election. “The prime
minister-designate... is carrying out the necessary communications with the
head of parliament and the blocs to set a day” to present the cabinet, his
office said in a statement on Facebook and Twitter. Since a US invasion
toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003, the Iraqi presidency has been traditionally
held by a Kurd, the premiership by a Shi’ite Arab and the parliamentary
speaker has been a Sunni Arab.
Abdul Mehdi, a former vice president, oil minister and finance minister,
faces the tasks of rebuilding much of the country after war with ISIS
extremist group, healing ethnic and sectarian tensions, and balancing
foreign relations with Iraq’s two major allies - Iran and its arch-foe the
United States.
US imposes sanctions
on Iraq-based money exchange for ISIS ties
Reuters, Washington/Wednesday, 17 October 2018/The US Treasury imposed
sanctions on Wednesday on an Iraq-based money services business, Afaq Dubai,
believed to be moving funds for ISIS extremist group. The Treasury’s Office
of Foreign Assets Control added the business to its list of specially
designated global terrorists for “assisting in, sponsoring or providing
financial, material or technical support” for ISIS, the department said in a
statement. The Treasury action followed a Pentagon decision on October, 11
targeting a financial group supporting ISIS. The Treasury said the moves are
part of a broader US effort to target a network of money services businesses
that enable ISIS to carry out operations across the Middle East. In
September, the Treasury took action against ISIS financial facilitators with
ties in the Caribbean and the Middle East. It took action against a money
exchange group in Syria in December 2016. The Treasury said Afaq Dubai is
located in Iraq and does not have branches in the United Arab Emirates,
despite its name. Afaq Dubai is run by two ISIS financiers and as of early
2018 was laundering money for the group and providing money for families in
the group, the Treasury said.
G7 Foreign Ministers’
Statement on Disappearance of Jamal Khashoggi
October 17/18
“We, the G7 Foreign Ministers, of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the
United Kingdom, the United States of America, and the High Representative of
the European Union, affirm our commitment to defending freedom of expression
and protection of a free press.
“We remain very troubled by the disappearance of prominent Saudi journalist
Jamal Khashoggi. Those bearing responsibility for his disappearance must be
held to account.
“We encourage Turkish-Saudi collaboration and look forward to the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia conducting a thorough, credible, transparent, and prompt
investigation, as announced.”
Cairo Foundation for
Development and Law CFD/Solidarity Statement:The signatories are in
solidarity with Mai El Shamy as she is prevented from going into the
institution where she works
October 17/18
The under signatories express their full solidarity with the journalist Mai
El Shamy who was stopped when going into her work and was prevented to go in
by one of the security personnel in the institution where she works. The
incident took place in 2/10/2018 when she turned back from her vacation. So
the signatories see that this procedure paves the way for her termination;
the matter which is considered a discriminatory procedure taken by the
institution as Mai El Shamy accused one of the institution’s heads of
harassing her by the report no. 12599/2018 on 31/8/2018. Yet the report is
not decided in nor the results of investigations which are still reviewed by
the general prosecutor.
What is happening now is punishing the victim and bias to one of the dispute
parties. Hence the victim is punished because she practiced her legal right
to complain and litigation. The incident is considered an intimidation for
all women who confront violence against them in work places using all
peaceful and legal ways and that they will pay the price for reporting any
harassment or violence incident against them. In addition, this
discriminatory procedure dedicates for the culture of disrespecting law
which gives all male and female citizens the right to litigation and
intimidates and forces women to accept violations and violence incidents
against them on the top of which is harassment just for their livelihood and
job.
So the under signatories assure that such arbitrary procedure violates the
Egyptian law of labor, law of media and press organization, journalists
syndicates; the laws which prevents the practice of such procedures by the
employers without investigation and proving legal violations because of
which an employee must be terminated.
Thus the under signatories call the institution’s administration to ‘undo’
such arbitrary and discriminatory procedure against the female complainant
and call the journalists syndicate to immediately interfere to protect the
victim’s rights and to take publicized procedures which may contribute to
not only Mai El Shamy case but also to the future of the Egyptian female
journalists to get their rights and protect them as stated in the Egyptian
constitution.
Organizations:
1- Cairo Foundation for Development and Law.
2- New Women's Foundation.
3- The Arab House for Research and Studies.
4- Association of the Egyptian Fema Aefl.
5- Salameh Foundation.
6- Bint El - Ard Association in Mansoura
7-CEWLA Foundation .
8-Women's Center for Counseling and Legal Awareness
9- Egyptians without borders foundation
10-Digital Museum of Women
Parties:
Women's Secretariat of the Egyptian Democratic Social Party.
Individuals:
- Fadi Mahmoud Medhat – banker.
- Nevin Ebaid – Researcher.
- Dr. Magda Adly.
- Jehan Abu Zeid.-
-Sally Zohny - researcher and feminist activist.
- Rabab Kamal.
- Nada Nashat – physical.
- Hania Mohib – FreeLance journalist.
Dr. Aida Saif Al-Dawla - Professor of passion.
-Dr. Azza Kamel - writer and novelist.
DR. Fatma Khafagy – Researcher.-
-Dr. Amal Abdel Hadi - human rights activist and feminist .
-Dr. Hoda El-Sada - Professor of Comparative Literature at Cairo University.
-Nawla Darwish - feminist activist.
Hadia Abdel Fattah – writer.-
Akram Ismail – Engineer.-
-Dr. Hale Kamal- college professor.
-Elham Eidarous - Vice-President of the Party of Life and Freedom (under
establishment).
Mohamed Abdo – Engineer.
Abdullah Al-Saeed – Photographer.-
-Hussein Abdul Ghaffar – Engineer.
Shaima Hamdi – Journalist .-
Marian Sidhom – Lawyer.-
Ahmed Abdel-Wadood – Researcher.
Reda Aldenboki – lawyer.
Yasmin Ibrahim .
*** Cairo Foundation for Development and Law CFD
The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on
October 17-18/18
Khashoggi case could be death of US-Saudi friendship
Simon Henderson/The Hill/October 16/18
This could be a chaotic week for U.S. policy in the Middle East and for oil.
Responding in advance to expected comments by President Trump on “60
Minutes” last night, Saudi Arabia issued a statement of “total rejection of
any threats and attempts to undermine it.” Al Arabiya News Channel wrote an
editorial warning of 30 potential retaliatory measures against any U.S.
sanctions, including “$100 oil, $200 oil, double that.”
What President Trump actually said, half-buried in his responses to
aggressive questioning about Russia, North Korea, China and other issues,
was that the kingdom could face “severe punishment” if the U.S. confirms
that exiled Saudi journalist and Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi
was killed inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2.
The Saudi response suggests that it is not considering the option of blaming
what Turkish officials claim was the torture, killing, dismembering and
videoing of the whole ghastly affair on rogue elements in the Saudi security
services. Nevertheless, President Trump spoke this morning with King Salman
and later said “rogue killers” could be responsible for Khashoggi’s
disappearance. In the absence of a body (or any body parts), there remains
an element of uncertainty of what happened to Khashoggi, but many may
consider the Saudi response an admission of guilt.
The second-order conclusion by many critics of the kingdom is that Saudi
Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman, known as MbS, is a brutal authoritarian —
one who, though only 33 years old, soon will replace his father as monarch
of the world’s largest oil exporter and, by virtue of the location of the
holy cities of Mecca and Medina in the kingdom, the leader of the Islamic
world.
President Trump has dispatched Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to Riyadh,
presumably with a list of policy recommendations. The odds of the Saudi side
accepting any of them are debatable.
It seems that we may be saying goodbye to at least the gloss, if not the
substance, of the prince’s Vision 2030 plans for economic transformation of
the kingdom. The attendance list for an investment conference, scheduled to
be held Oct. 23 to 25 in Riyadh, is in tatters. JPMorgan CEO James Dimon
pulled out over the weekend; U.S. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin’s
withdrawal is likely at any time.
Social reforms such as cinemas and live entertainment may survive, as will
women driving cars. But don’t forget that many of the women activists who
campaigned for the latter are in jail. It is embarrassingly ironic that,
notionally, Saudi Arabia is a leader of the global coalition against the
Islamic State (ISIS), the extremists whose signature horror has been the
videoed torture and execution of its prisoners.
How could we all have been so wrong in our hopes for MbS? (Perhaps not all
of us. I wrote last year, when he pushed his predecessor to one side by
denying him sleep and diabetes medicine, that, “His greatest strength, or
weakness, may be his ruthlessness.” I cited the example of the “bullet
story,” in which he put a bullet on the desk of a government official who
didn’t want to sign off on one of the young prince’s business deals.)
Until two weeks ago, Western officials could, and did, excuse MbS’s domestic
authoritarianism by citing his apparent reordering of a Saudi Islam as being
moderate rather than the extremist version which produced, via irresponsible
religious education and charitable giving, 9/11 and the Islamic State.
But Khashoggi’s disappearance suggests that we have been seduced by the
smooth words of his retinue and cohorts of echoing public relations firms.
Even Muslim World League Secretary-General Muhammad al-Issa, who this month
hosted a conference on “Cultural Rapprochement between the U.S. and the
Muslim World” in New York City, yesterday issued a statement in support of
MbS: “The animus campaign it now witnesses threatens all dimensions of
international stability.” We will have to see whether the conference’s idea
for a “peace caravan” of Muslim, Christian and Jewish leaders going to
Jerusalem gains any traction.
Old hands will tell you that diplomacy is usually best done quietly, but we
live in a world of Twitter, television-interview sound bites and public
statements. Some statements are being shot from the hip, as happened
yesterday when the kingdom declared an uncompromising defiance and hinted of
measures that would hit the U.S. economy much harder than Saudi Arabia’s.
Today there is a report that the Saudis will at last allow Turkish
investigators into the Istanbul consulate. If Khashoggi died there, it will
have been well-cleaned by now. It is probably too late for a declaration
that the fate of Khashoggi is a mystery.
This coming Thursday, the Saudi embassy in Washington planned to host its
National Day celebrations. Would the host ambassador, Prince Khalid bin
Salman, MbS’s brother, be there or would he still be in Riyadh, where the
White House sent him to find answers to U.S. concerns? Curiously, I was
invited but was not going, and I wondered how many of Washington’s great and
good also would not show up — until the embassy canceled the event.
**Simon Henderson is the Baker Fellow and director of the Bernstein Program
on Gulf and Energy Policy at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
So Much Winning: Why Mahmoud Abbas Thinks He’s Beating
Trump—and Israel
David Makovsky/Haaretz/October 16/18
He’s 83, with no successor and no state, but he still seems to believe that
defiance is a worthwhile end in of itself.
For Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, the U.S. and Israel are two
countries using political and economic leverage to force him to accept policies
that he finds objectionable—or else risk being completely marginalized. Yet,
Abbas believes that he has so far withstood at least three key challenges
presented by the U.S. and Israel in recent months, and thus he believes he is
scoring political victories. He may not be bringing his people an inch closer to
statehood or bringing them major benefits, but he sees himself as a political
survivor. Leading a movement that historically has been about defiance, he sees
survival as its own reward.
While American efforts—and its policy of pressure—could still yield success on
the Palestinian front in resuming meaningful negotiations in the next two years,
it is important to see how Abbas sees the Trump Administration, almost at its
halfway point. Whether one likes Abbas or not, it is important to see how he is
likely to think he is winning when it comes to issues of the last few months.
In looking at his scorecard, it is worth starting with the United Nations. U.S.
ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, who has just announced her retirement, led the
charge of the Trump Administration to put forward a tough position on the issues
of refugees and aid to the Palestinians. That stance is popular among many
Americans who question whether the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA)
is really seeking to solve the Palestinian refugee issue, but rather seeks to
perpetuate it.
However, by not putting forward an alternative U.S. plan for Palestinian
humanitarian assistance focused on bona fide American non-governmental aid
groups, while withholding all American aid to the Palestinian Authority, it has
made it easier for Europeans and Arabs states to galvanize enthusiasm and
support for UNRWA. This was exacerbated by concerns that Palestinian kids in the
West Bank and Gaza will not be able to go to school this fall. Two rounds of
emergency appeals, including one at the time of the opening of the UN General
Assembly, equaling $320 million in pledges for 2018, has covered the deficit
that UNRWA has faced, according to UN officials.
Of course, the test will be: Will these countries sustain these levels over the
years to come? One senior non-American diplomat confidently declared to me, “The
U.S. withholding of funding from UNRWA has created a new international
equilibrium as other countries have stepped in. UNRWA has not been crippled and
the U.S. has been marginalized” within the organization.
The U.S. hope was that its withdrawal of funds would lead to a shift in UNRWA’s
policy, not least its definition of refugees, but this does not seem to be the
case. Likewise, the U.S. hope that this would pressure Abbas to change his “no
contact” stance vis a vis the Trump administration has not been borne out
either. The U.S. has legitimate reasons to stop funding UNRWA, but the bottom
line is Abbas seems poised to continue to use UNRWA as a political cudgel, at
least for now.
Another development that Abbas must favor is President Donald Trump’s recent
declaration in which he said for the first time that he favors the two-state
solution, after famously refusing to publicly endorse the two-state approach
since the start of his administration.
Over the first year of the Trump Administration, Palestinian officials say that
Abbas was concerned that the U.S. would cajole Gulf states like Saudi Arabia
into pressuring him to accept Trump’s peace deal. Those Gulf states may not much
like or respect Abbas—due to an array of grievances with Abbas personally
(including long-standing Emirati anger over Abbas’s feud with Mohammed Dahlan)—and
subsequently have not been generous donors to the Palestinian Authority.
However, that pressure has simply not materialized—and Abbas has breathed a sigh
of relief.
Ever since the visit of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman (MBS) to the
White House in the spring of this year, the once-fashionable term “outside-in”
has lost its shine. That idea, that parties outside the immediate
Israeli-Palestinian circle can facilitate Arab backing for a Trump peace plan or
even pre-empt them with innovative bilateral ties, has been gradually nixed, as
MBS has made it clear that the U.S. cannot count on the Saudis to twist the arms
of the Palestinians. This may have been the case even if the U.S. had not moved
its embassy to Jerusalem, but certainly Arab officials point to this as a
complicating factor.
Two elements likely to reinforce this dropping of outside Arab pressure on the
PA are the cooling of Saudi-U.S. relations, indicated not least by a public
statement by Trump at a rally to his supporters recently that the Kingdom could
not survive two weeks without the U.S., as well as the recent crisis surrounding
the disappearance and apparent murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
A third area where Abbas feels success is that he has paid no political price
for his indifference to the misery in Gaza. Not only has he not been involved in
securing Qatari funding to increase electricity for Gazans, from four to eight
hours per day until the end of 2018, he has opposed it. He has cut PA aid to
Gaza.
His strategy has been clear: Make the situation in Gaza more severe in order to
press Hamas into a military confrontation with Israel, which would break the
impasse. This would yield dual benefits. It would militarily weaken his rival,
Hamas. And it would allow Abbas to continue to do what he loves, namely,
publicly blaming Israel as the victimizer. Blaming Israel as the bully is what
enables Abbas to reinforce the Palestinian narrative in Europe as the victim. It
is a cynical move, but it has worked.
Abbas has not only not paid a price for his indifference to Gaza, but he has
done so while snubbing Egyptian mediation and attempts to find a way for the
Palestinian Authority to return to Gaza. For Abbas, Gaza is a trap. In his view,
unless Hamas surrenders its guns, he has the authority and they have the
responsibility to improve the miserable living conditions in Gaza. That
understandable position on Hamas disarmament, however, should be met with a
concrete plan by Egypt regarding how to achieve an objective, but this has not
been the case.
So whether the issue is UNRWA, the Arabs and Trump, or Gaza, Abbas believes he
has avoided paying political costs in defying the U.S, even if the U.S. has
indeed cut economic aid. Of course, his political maneuverings have not
necessarily helped the Palestinian people. The two-state outcome seems far off.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition still builds beyond the
security barrier. Moreover, succession for the 83-year-old Abbas is murkier than
ever.
A common thread between the controversies relating to UNRWA, the role of Arab
states and the status of Gaza is that Abbas measures successes by what did not
happen—namely, by his ability to maintain the situation in these distinct arenas
in a bid to foil the U.S. Sadly, in the Mideast, political survival and success
are too often conflated with strategic gains. The two are not the same. In the
twilight of his life, Abbas has no illusions that he is on the cusp of strategic
success, and therefore consoles himself with these acts of non-cooperation. But
even as the head of a movement whose very self-definition over many decades is
inextricably tied to the idea of defiance of outside powers, this organizing
principle has so far proven to be an insufficient catalyst to move closer to the
goal of statehood.
**David Makovsky is the Ziegler Distinguished Fellow at The Washington Institute
and helped created its interactive mapping tool "Settlements and Solutions: Is
It Too Late for Two States?"
Turkey: Enabling Mass Illegal Migration into Greece
Uzay Bulut/Gatestone Institute/October 17/2018
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13127/turkey-greece-migration
Turkish authorities repeatedly have threatened Europe with an influx of
migrants. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's threats should not be ignored.
Ever since the migrant crisis started to escalate in 2011 -- with the onset of
civil war in Syria -- those who were critical of mass, unchecked immigration
have been called "racists," "bigots" or "Islamophobes."
Today, however, the continued chaos in many European countries caused by
immigration, and accompanying increase in crime -- including murder and rape
committed by Islamist extremists -- appear to have proven the critics right.
A recent surge of illegal migrant arrivals has put the Greek city of
Thessaloniki in crisis. "Dozens of migrants have turned Aristotelous square in
the center of Thessaloniki to a makeshift camp," with many "sleeping in the
open." Pictured: The Idomeni migrant relocation camp, near Thessaloniki.
Greece is currently facing a serious surge in undocumented migrant arrivals in
the Evros region, an entry point for migrants illegally trying to enter the
country from Turkey. Arrivals have roughly doubled since 2017, and Athens is
holding Ankara responsible.
The influx from places such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, Iraq, Bangladesh
and African countries into Turkey reportedly has been on the rise in recent
months, with 1.5 million people from Muslim countries waiting on the Iranian
border to enter Turkey. This has sparked fears in Athens that they could be
heading for Greece.
According to a fact sheet released last month by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR),
"Sea arrivals [in Greece] peaked this month with 4,000 people. Land arrivals
through Evros also increased to 1,400."
As a result, the Greek city of Thessaloniki is in crisis. According to a recent
article in The Greek Reporter, "Dozens of migrants have turned Aristotelous
square in the center of Thessaloniki to a makeshift camp," with many "sleeping
in the open."
This situation is likely to deteriorate even further, not only in Greece, but in
the rest of Europe, with the massive number of new arrivals, particularly from
Afghanistan, via Iran, into Turkey.
An investigative report in the Turkish daily Hurriyet, published in April,
describes the way this is accomplished:
"Smugglers leave the Afghans and people from other countries, including
children, on mountains. The illegals walk for kilometers through the border
area... They all aim to go to Istanbul. But they first go to Erzurum, a city
determined as the transit place.... Some then escape to Europe through Greece
and Bulgaria, while others get involved in crimes, such as theft and
prostitution, in Istanbul and are made to work as undocumented workers...
"According to the data of Turkey's Immigration Authority, from the beginning of
this year until March 29, 17,847 illegal Afghans have been caught. 9,426
Syrians, 5,311 Pakistanis, and 4,270 Iraqis have also been caught. The total
number of illegals caught by police including those from other countries is
47,198."
In an interview in April with the Turkish daily Milliyet, Erdal Güzel, head of
the Erzurum Development Foundation, said:
"It has reached the point at which the people entering Turkey illegally from and
returning to Afghanistan has become as easy as [a Turkish citizen's] going from
one Turkish city to another. They have learned the paths.
"...According to their own testimonies, they take buses to Iran at night... They
are kept waiting there... until the time is right. Some families are kept
waiting with no food or water for 15 or 20 days.
"They say they walk through the mountains. They all have the same story. Some
say they walk through mountains for 4 or 5 days. They are told that 'even if one
of you falls off a cliff, you will not make a sound.' ... Among them are
pregnant women and blind people. In recent years, the migration traffic has
escalated incredibly... Thousands of people are coming here... Human smugglers
stuff these people in three-story trucks in which sheep are carried... What is
strange is they come here at the cost of their lives. They enter Turkey and then
want to go to Germany through Greece, Serbia and Hungary. They hit the road so
zealously as if to say, 'Those who will die will die, and those who will stay
alive will be here with us.'"
Human trafficking and people-smuggling are serious crimes and grave violations
of human rights. According to a report by the US State Department:
"People who are smuggled can be extremely vulnerable to human trafficking,
abuse, and other crimes, as they are illegally present in the country of
destination and often owe large debts to their smugglers."
Nevertheless, it appears that a highly organized international network of
various actors -- including smuggling and trafficking groups, international
organizations and even governments, such as that of Turkey -- are involved or
complicit in the mass illegal movement and abuse of a large number of people.
Turkish authorities repeatedly have threatened Europe with an influx of
migrants. In November 2016, for instance, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan openly
stated:
"When 50,000 refugees headed to Kapıkule [at the Turkey-Bulgaria border], you
shrieked: 'What will we do if Turkey opens it border gates?' Look at me! If you
go too far, we will open those border gates. Just know this."
Erdogan's threats should not be ignored. Among the smuggled migrants and
refugees are ISIS supporters and other Islamist radicals. Also, many of the
jihadi terrorists who participated in the deadly attacks in Manchester, Paris,
Brussels, Berlin, Stockholm and St. Petersburg in recent years had connections
to Turkey. Some were apprehended in Turkey; others either traveled there to
cross into Syria to join ISIS or had lived there for a while. Turkey has been
used routinely by Islamists as a route into areas of Syria and Iraq to join
ISIS.
Ever since the migrant crisis started to escalate in 2011 -- with the onset of
civil war in Syria -- those who were critical of mass, unchecked immigration
have been called "racists," "bigots" or "Islamophobes."
Today, however, the continued chaos in many European countries caused by mass
immigration, and accompanying increase in crime -- including murder and rape
committed by Islamist extremists -- appear to have proven the critics right. It
is urgent for European governments to find effective solutions to unfettered
immigration. It is equally imperative for those governments to hold Turkey
accountable for its part in the crisis.
*Uzay Bulut, a Turkish journalist born and raised in Turkey, is a Distinguished
Senior Fellow at Gatestone Institute. She is currently based in Washington D.C.
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Are Democrats Wasting Their Campaign Cash?
Jonathan Bernstein/Bloomberg/October 17/2018
Top-down, formally organized political parties have a presumed advantage over
non-hierarchical ones: It should be easier for them to use their resources
efficiently. And when Senate candidate Beto O’Rourke revealed that he had raised
more than $38 million in the summer quarter, some Democrats immediately started
worrying that the party was wasting its money on a quixotic campaign in very
Republican Texas.
Poppycock! I think the Washington Post’s David Weigel gets this exactly right:
After 2016, Democratic donors are more ready than ever to give money but less
trusting than ever of the national party's strategy. The result is that they're
contesting nearly everything, while party PACs focus on more winnable races. And
so far, that arrangement has kept Republicans under pressure.
We don’t know which way the wind will blow in the last three weeks of the
campaign. What we do know is that very few Democrats in competitive districts —
or even in marginally competitive districts — are complaining that their
campaigns are being underfunded. Which means that if the final breeze helps the
Democrats, the party is primed to take maximum advantage of it. That’s been true
throughout the cycle, whether it’s candidate recruitment, activist involvement
or fundraising. It sure seems like a good strategy to me.
Have the Democrats distributed their resources with perfect efficiency? Of
course not. But a more centralized process probably wouldn’t have done so
either. That’s because the more bureaucratized a party becomes, the more
bureaucratic incentives will tend to drive decisions. The result is often
risk-averse policy: Signing off on a huge investment in an election where the
party has only a one-in-four chance of winning, rather than using that money to
push the probability of victory in a few other races from 75 percent to 90
percent, is the kind of decision that can get someone fired.
Of course, decentralized parties can misuse their resources too. Donors and
activists can make amateurish mistakes about where to spend, perhaps because the
rewards they seek from participation aren’t closely linked to maximizing party
victories, or perhaps because their information simply isn’t as good as what a
centralized party might have. When party-aligned interest groups make their own
decisions about which candidates to support, rather than pooling resources with
a centralized party, they may think more about themselves than about a larger
strategy. Too much of that, and the party fractures.
In other words, just as we can’t assume that huge fundraising totals for
candidates who are likely to lose is necessarily a sign of poor decision-making,
we also can’t assume that any particular party structure is best. We know that
parties are essential to democracy. But we don’t know much about the best way to
put them together — or even what the advantages and disadvantages of various
different structures can be. That’s especially true of our peculiar parties in
the United States.
1. Hans Noel on the Senate.
2. Scott Kastner, Margaret M. Pearson and Chad Rector at the Monkey Cage on
Trump and China.
3. Also at the Monkey Cage: John Sides talks with Jonathan Rodden and Richard
Pildes about partisan gerrymandering.
4. Lynn Vavreck debunks myths about the 2016 election.
5. Elizabeth Drew debunks myths about Watergate. An excellent primer for those
who aren’t familiar with the history.
6. Amy Walter on voter enthusiasm.
7. And Ellen Kurz wants to abolish voter registration and automate the process.
The truth is that the US is an outlier on this; most democracies automatically
register all voters, and the main reason for establishing high hurdles to
registration here was to make it harder for people to vote. Although advocates
for automatic registration sometimes exaggerate the benefits, the case for
making it easy to vote is nevertheless very strong.
Big Tech Snuffing Free Speech; Google's Poisonous 'Dragonfly'
Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/October 17/2018
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13129/google-censorship-china
If the big social media companies choose what to publish and what not to
publish, they should be subject to the same licensing and requirements as media
organizations.
Google has decided it will not renew a contract with the Pentagon for artificial
intelligence work because Google employees were upset that the technology might
be used for lethal military purposes. Yet Google is planning to launch a
censored search engine in China that will empower a totalitarian "Big Brother is
watching you" horror state.
Freedom Watch filed a $1 billion class-action lawsuit against Apple, Facebook,
Google, and Twitter, claiming that they suppress conservative speech online.
A Media Research Center report found that Google, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube
stifle conservative speech and that in some instances staffers have admitted
that doing so was intentional.
Chinese officials prevented a journalist, Liu Hu, from taking a flight because
he had a low "social credit" score. According to China's Global Times, as of the
end of April 2018, authorities had blocked individuals from taking 11.14 million
flights and 4.25 million high-speed rail trips.
Google is reportedly planning to launch a censored version of its search engine
in China, code-named "Dragonfly," which will aid and abet a totalitarian "Big
Brother is watching you" horror state. (Image source:
The internet, especially social media, has become one of the primary places for
people to exchange viewpoints and ideas. Social media is where a considerable
part of the current national conversation takes place.
Arguably, big tech companies, such as Google, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube,
therefore carry a responsibility to ensure that their platforms are equally
accessible to all voices in that national conversation. As private commercial
entities, the social media giants are not prima facie legally bound by the First
Amendment to the US Constitution, and are free to set their own standards and
conditions for the use of their platforms. Ideally, those standards should be
applied equally to all users, regardless of political or other persuasion. If,
however, these companies choose what to publish and what not to publish, they
should be subject to the same licensing and requirements as media organizations.
The current media giants' favoring one kind of political speech over another --
progressive over conservative -- and even shutting down political speech that
does not conform to the views of the directors, certainly skews the national
political conversation in a lopsided way that conflicts with basic principles of
democratic freedom of speech and what presumably should be the obligations of
virtual monopolies.
The question of whether such discrimination against conservative viewpoints
constitutes a breach of law is currently the subject of a number of lawsuits. In
October 2017, PragerU, a conservative educational website, filed a lawsuit
against YouTube and its parent company, Google, for "intentional" censorship of
conservative speakers, saying that they were "engaging in an arbitrary and
capricious use of their 'restricted mode' and 'demonetization' to restrict
non-left political thought."
PragerU claimed that "Google and YouTube's use of restricted mode filtering to
silence PragerU violates its fundamental First Amendment rights under both the
California and United States Constitutions," YouTube, for instance, restricted a
video by a pro-Israel Muslim activist, discussing how best to resist hatred and
anti-Semitism, as "hate speech". The US District Court Judge in the case, Lucy
Koh, however, dismissed PragerU's claims because Google, as a private company,
is not subject to the First Amendment. "Defendants are private entities who
created their own video-sharing social media website and make decisions about
whether and how to regulate content that has been uploaded on that website," Koh
wrote. PragerU has appealed the decision.
In August, Freedom Watch filed a $1 billion class-action lawsuit against Apple,
Facebook, Google, and Twitter, claiming that they act in concert to suppress
conservative speech online. Freedom Watch claims, among other things, that the
four media giants have violated the First Amendment to the Constitution and that
they have engaged "in a conspiracy to intentionally and willfully suppress
politically conservative content."
PragerU and Freedom Watch are not the only conservatives to have experienced
suppression of their voices on social media. In April, the conservative Media
Research Center released a report detailing the suppression of conservative
opinions on social media platforms.
The 50-page report, "Censored! How Online Media Companies Are Suppressing
Conservative Speech," which looked at how conservative political speech fared on
Google, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, found that the tech companies stifle
conservative speech and that in some instances, staffers have admitted that
doing so was intentional. The report found that Google showed a "tendency toward
left-wing bias in its search results", and that Twitter (by admission of its own
employees) had "shadow-banned" some conservative users. ("Shadow banning" means
that their content did not appear to other users, but the account owners
themselves had not been notified of this "banning" of their content).
The apparent leftist bias, however, not only shows itself in the suppression of
conservative speech on social media giants' websites. Censorship and selective
presentation of speech has also led to unfortunate policy decisions by some of
the big tech companies. Google, for example, has decided it will not renew a
contract with the Pentagon for artificial intelligence work when it expires next
year, because Google employees were upset that the technology they were working
on might be used for lethal military purposes.
Yet, according to leaked documents, Google is planning to launch a censored
version of its search engine in China, code-named "Dragonfly," which will aid
and abet a totalitarian "Big Brother is watching you" horror state. China,
according to the Economist, is planning to become "the world's first digital
totalitarian state." The Chinese government is in the process of introducing a
"social credit" system by which to score its citizens, based on their behavior.
Behavior sanctioned by the government increases the score; behavior of which the
government disapproves decreases the score. Jaywalking, for example, would
decrease the score. China is reportedly installing 626 million surveillance
cameras throughout the country for the purpose of feeding the social credit
system with information.
According to Gordon G. Chang, Chinese officials are using the social credit
system for determining everything from being able to take a plane or a train, to
buying property or sending your children to a private school. Officials
prevented a journalist, Liu Hu, from taking a flight because he had a low score.
According to China's state-owned Global Times, as of the end of April 2018,
authorities had blocked individuals from taking 11.14 million flights and 4.25
million high-speed rail trips. "If we don't increase the cost of being
discredited, we are encouraging discredited people to keep at it," said the
former deputy director of the development research center of the State Council,
Hou Yunchun. He added that an improved social credit system was needed so that
"discredited people become bankrupt".
According to a legal expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in
Beijing, Zhi Zhenfeng:
"How the person is restricted in terms of public services or business
opportunities should be in accordance with how and to what extent he or she lost
his credibility.... Discredited people deserve legal consequences. This is
definitely a step in the right direction to building a society with
credibility."
The goal, straightforwardly, is to control citizen behavior by aggregating data
from various sources such as cameras, identification checks, and "Wi-Fi
sniffers" so that Chinese citizens will end up being controlled completely. As
Chinese officials have reportedly put it, the purpose of the score card system
is to "allow the trustworthy to roam everywhere under heaven while making it
hard for the discredited to take a single step."
It is, in other words, an excellent deliberate tool to suppress the human rights
of the Chinese people.
Although Google has refused to comment on the concerns about Dragonfly, the
leaked documents indicate that this censored version of Google's search engine
will help the Chinese government do just that by blacklisting websites and
search terms about human rights, democracy, religion, and peaceful protest. It
will also, reportedly, link users' searches to their personal phone numbers,
thereby making it possible for the Chinese government to detain or arrest people
who search for information that the Chinese government wishes to censor.
"Linking searches to a phone number would make it much harder for people to
avoid the kind of overreaching government surveillance that is pervasive in
China," said Cynthia Wong, senior internet researcher with Human Rights Watch.
Fourteen organizations, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch,
Reporters Without Borders, Access Now, the Committee to Protect Journalists, the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Center for Democracy and Technology, PEN
International, and Human Rights in China, have demanded that Google stop its
plans for a censored search engine. They say that such cooperation would
represent "an alarming capitulation by Google on human rights" and could result
in the company "directly contributing to, or [becoming] complicit in, human
rights violations."
In a recent speech, US Vice President Mike Pence also asked Google to end
Dragonfly: it "will strengthen Communist Party censorship and compromise the
privacy of Chinese customers," he said.
So, while Google claims it has moral qualms about cooperating with the US
government, the company evidently has no moral issues when it comes to
cooperating with Communist China in censoring and spying on its billion citizens
with a view to rewarding or punishing them via opportunities in real life.
Google employees, according to the Intercept, have circulated a letter stating
that the censored search engine raises "urgent moral and ethical issues," and
saying that Google executives need to "disclose more about the company's work in
China, which they say is shrouded in too much secrecy, according to three
sources with knowledge of the matter".
Google is apparently all too eager to work with China on micromanaging its
citizens, and there is plenty to work on, according to a recent Amnesty
International report :
"China has intensified its campaign of mass internment, intrusive surveillance,
political indoctrination and forced cultural assimilation against the region's
Uighurs, Kazakhs and other predominantly Muslim ethnic groups."
Up to 1 million people have been detained in "China's mass re-education drive,"
many of them tortured, according to the report.
Eight years ago, Google co-founder Sergey Brin -- who was born in the highly
repressive Soviet Union -- at least had the decency to hesitate on (if not turn
down) doing business in China if it involved censorship. "[W]e have decided we
are no longer willing to continue censoring our results," Google had announced
two days before "company spokesman Scott Rubin started singing a different
tune."
Perhaps totalitarian Communist repression is of no consequence to Google, so
long as it gets still more market share?
*Judith Bergman is a columnist, lawyer and political analyst.
© 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.
How Is the Saudi Public Likely Responding to the Crisis
over Khashoggi’s Disappearance? The Popularity of Riyadh’s “Reformist
Repression”
David Pollock/Fikra Forum & the Washington Institute/October 17/18
The mysterious and deeply troubling disappearance of noted Saudi political
commentator Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul has refocused
attention on the paradox of Saudi “reformist repression.” Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo’s arrival in Saudi Arabia highlights the seriousness of this
episode, and if Saudi agents were indeed involved, then, in Talleyrand’s famous
phrase, “it was worse than a crime—it was a mistake.” No doubt the Western,
Turkish, and some anti-Saudi regional media, and presumably some government
agencies as well, will surely strive to keep the focus on this shocking
incident.
But a key question, likely to be overlooked or confused in that discussion, is
this: how much do Saudis themselves—as opposed to Western experts, media, or
NGOs—really know or care about such problems? The question is key because it
bears directly on the perennial issue of Saudi stability. Many different factors
figure in that calculation, from individual violence to foreign intervention to
elite factionalism, and more. In the long run, too, an erosion of domestic and
foreign business confidence might outweigh today’s windfall profits from 80
dollars per barrel of oil. But right now, can the latest arrests and
disappearances be a cause, or perhaps a consequence, of some major upheaval
brewing beneath the kingdom’s generally placid surface?
Based on a recent visit to Riyadh, and subsequent conversations with Saudis and
others about Khashoggi and similar cases, my short answer is probably not. Awful
as this episode appears to be, its broader significance is a separate question.
And while such incidents understandably damage Saudi Arabia’s image among some
Western governments, analysts, journalists, and investors, they are of
remarkably little interest to most people inside the country. As a result,
contrary to conventional wisdom, they do not seriously threaten the kingdom’s
government—at least not with the specter of mass protest, or of organized
dissidence by major segments of the society such as the business, clerical,
professional, or military establishments.
One factor behind this judgment is the clear (though little-known) evidence that
the Saudi government is increasingly aware of, interested in, and at least to
some extent receptive to its own public’s views. In July, during my most recent
visit to Saudi Arabia, I spent a day at the King Abdulaziz Center for National
Dialogue, a Riyadh-based institute for assessing popular attitudes and promoting
intra-Saudi discourse. The institute was founded fifteen years ago, but
significantly increased its productivity after Muhammad bin Salman (MbS) was
named crown prince two years ago. It is at least nominally independent; funding,
I was told, comes from renting out two of the three massive office towers it
owns in downtown Riyadh.
Experts at the Center are trying to encourage the Saudi public to participate in
discussion and debate on issues that affect ordinary Saudis, and on the overall
direction of the country. One goal is to foster a sense of unity on behalf of
the common good and national interests. The Center holds workshops, seminars,
and large-scale festivals and gatherings across the country, engaging hundreds
of thousands of Saudis over the past decade and a half.
But another, newer goal of this Center is to keep a finger on the pulse of
public opinion for systematic input on official policies—not just outreach to
promote those policies after the fact. This, one of its top managers readily
acknowledged, is an unfamiliar and challenging concept in Saudi Arabia, but is
currently taken quite seriously at the highest levels of government. So around
the time of MbS’s ascent, the Center established a division dedicated to
conducting opinion polls. Since then, it has fielded over 100 polls, surveying a
total of around 33,000 Saudis.
According to the experts I talked to, the Center’s insights have enabled it to
provide the government with more than 100 specific policy recommendations over
the past two years, 65 of which were accepted and implemented. One striking case
is popular support for the long-awaited decision this year to allow Saudi women
to drive. Other initiatives, the pollsters told me, range across the gamut of
social and economic issues, including the selective but very public crackdown on
corruption.
As a pollster myself, I was both intrigued and reasonably impressed by all this,
though unfortunately unable to obtain further details. From my own polls in
Saudi Arabia, I know that Saudis have been willing to voice very mixed views
even on some especially sensitive issues. For example, asked last year if Islam
“should be interpreted in a more moderate, tolerant, and modern direction,” just
30 percent said yes—though that was double the figure from late 2015. But on
foreign policy issues, my polls confirm that Saudi official policies are largely
in tune with the public. Fear and loathing of Iran and its regional proxies,
from the Houthis to Hezbollah, is nearly universal not just among the Saudi
elite, but on the Saudi street as well.
Much the same is true, albeit with smaller majorities, for other seemingly
provocative moves: the feud with Qatar, the close alliance with the United
States, and even the conditional support for a settlement with Israel. The Saudi
head of the Muslim World League, for example, recently made the astonishing
proposal to march for peace to Jerusalem—along with Jewish and Christian
clerics. Yet he would do so with tacit support from around two-thirds of the
Saudi public, who say that peace with Israel is desirable as long as Palestinian
rights are also respected.
Beyond such statistical support for the Saudi government’s evolving mix of
top-down domestic reform and foreign activism, anecdotal evidence points in the
same direction. For example, when I asked some well-connected but independent
Saudi professionals about Jamal Khashoggi’s unknown fate, they seemed unfazed.
Indeed, they sounded more concerned about the media firestorm this incident has
provoked than about the man himself—or the cruel limits on personal freedoms his
case exemplifies. As for the minority of truly disgruntled Saudis, Khashoggi’s
shocking example will likely intimidate more than it will alienate, let alone
arouse to action. Indeed, that was probably the overly aggressive motive behind
his apparent abduction in the first place.
More broadly, when I talked to young middle-class Saudis in Riyadh about the
arbitrary nature of the anti-corruption crackdown, most were not just
unconcerned but positively enthusiastic. One typical comment: “After forty years
of ill-gotten gains, those guys at the Ritz got what they deserved.” Others
argued that, even granted some unavoidable unfairness, such autocratic behavior
was a price worth paying for the increased social freedoms that Saudis are
beginning to enjoy. External criticism of this tradeoff, they said, was simply
misguided, if not ill-intentioned.
Similar opinions emerged on the war in neighboring Yemen: while some foreigners
view Saudi intervention there as a needless bloody quagmire, most Saudis I’ve
talked to lately, whether inside or outside their country, still see it as
necessary self-defense. One American defense expert, an experienced veteran with
fluent Arabic who spent the last few years working with Saudi soldiers
in-country, tells me that most of them have long viewed the Houthis in Yemen as
a real threat to themselves. Their chief complaint, he said, is not about the
grindingly slow progress of the Saudi combat effort, but the half-hearted
American support for it.
Other supposed Saudi foreign policy blunders, from the abortive kidnapping of
Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri to the fruitless boycott of Qatar, also tend
to get a nod of approval, a rationalization, or at worst a shrug from most
Saudis I encounter. Of course the Saudi media, including social media, are
tightly controlled, and lately many Saudis are cautious even about private
conversations. To be sure, some sharp criticism does make its way into online
Arabic discourse, despite all the restrictions. Yet there is no sign of any
groundswell of mass popular opposition, nor of concentrated resistance in key
segments of Saudi society.
One last factor behind the approval (or just acquiescence) of so many Saudis is
their sense that Saudi expertise about their own region is at least on a par
with any outside assessments. They have more reason today than ever before to
feel that way. In the past few years, I have come to know and respect bona fide
Saudi academic experts on Iran, on Yemen, on Shia, and even on Israel. They now
have more of the requisite linguistic proficiency, intellectual independence,
and sometimes even the living experience in those areas to offer informed advice
about them. Today, too, there exists a small but growing number of Saudi think
tanks to support this pool of local knowledge and counsel.
Altogether, then, the wisdom and ethics of current Saudi policies and practices,
ranging from the whereabouts of Jamal Khashoggi to the war in Yemen, from the
crackdown on corruption to the crackdown on free speech, appear very different
inside and outside the kingdom. Some outsiders may well question particular
Saudi government choices. They should not, however, confuse their own judgments
with dire, unfounded predictions about Saudi instability. Inside the kingdom,
issues that loom large abroad are outweighed by the Saudi government’s overall
attentiveness to the pulse of its people.
*David Pollock is the Bernstein Fellow at The Washington Institute, focusing on
regional political dynamics and related issues.
*Fikra Forum is an initiative of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
The views expressed by Fikra Forum contributors are the personal views of the
individual authors, and are not necessarily endorsed by the Institute, its
staff, Board of Directors, or Board of Advisors.
Brexit and blatant example of a populist remark
Hazem Saghieh/Al Arabiya/October 17/18
Sometimes a strident behavior or a controversial remark holds such wide-ranging
implications that cannot be fully explained even in a book. Britain has recently
provided a sample of the populist speech. During the annual conference of the
Conservative Party held in Birmingham, British Secretary of State for Foreign
and Commonwealth Affairs Jeremy Hunt compared the European Union to the Soviet
Union!
Before getting into the details of Hunt’s strange statement, we need to deeply
examine the political circumstances, which pushed him to say what he said. It’s
well-known that Britain will leave the European Union in March 2019.
So far, talks about an agreement that would regulate the relationship between
the EU and the UK, after the latter withdraws from the EU, still veers between
‘optimism’ and ‘pessimism’. This has created political and diplomatic tension,
which recently peaked when Europeans rejected the British government’s Chequers
Brexit Plan.
Economic experts fear that the divorce between the UK and the EU without an
agreement would be a disaster for the British economy. Therefore, there is a
need for political and verbal escalation to improve the negotiating position of
the British toward the Union.
Meanwhile there are the hardliner Brexiteers, headed by former Secretary of
State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs Boris Johnson, who have been critical
of British Prime Minister Teresa May’s negotiating strategy with the Europeans.
This is all understandable; however, what is illogical here is going far in
riding this popular wave – or which seems to be popular – by echoing irrational
remarks.
This is where the difference lies between a populist politician who rides the
wave and does not hesitate to continue providing weak justifications and the
responsible politician who tries to control the wave via a rational discourse in
the interest of the people and the nation.
Economic experts fear that the divorce between the UK and the EU without an
agreement would be a disaster for the British economy
Populist stance
By comparing the European Union to the Soviet Union, Jeremy Hunt took a populist
stance that is short on rationality, if not the minimum of knowledge. The
European Union is based on the principles of liberty, free exchange of ideas and
products, open borders and respect for human rights.
It was established via intense democratic deliberations and member countries are
allowed to withdraw from the bloc on the basis of these same democratic
principles and processes. Britain used these very provisions in its Brexit
referendum in June 2016. Thus, the comparison of the EU with the Soviet Union is
clearly untenable, as the latter was a closed totalitarian regime that was run
by a single party and a multitude of detention camps.
The Soviet Union had also confiscated freedom of expression, free elections and
trade among other things. Thus, we can understand the outrage caused by Jeremy
Hunt’s statement.
It is the anger of rational democratic sensibility that is opposed to populist
irrationalism. The most serious reaction to the remark came from the President
of the European Council Donald Tusk, who deemed the phrase to be both insulting
and unwise.
The reaction came from a man who personally spent half of his life in one of the
countries following the Soviet order and after the fall of communism became the
head of the Polish government. Thus, he is obviously aware of the falsity and
danger of the statement that makes such a comparison.
However, we here also realize how immunity against this populism is weak these
days as the British political rhetoric, traditionally famous for its precision
and balance, has not been able to fight it back.
Exploiting the Khashoggi card
Mashari Althaydi//Al Arabiya/October 17/18
What’s certain is that the case of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi whose fate
is unknown to this day has become more of a political and a media blackmail
“card” rather than a criminal case with a political scent.
It’s a card that several parties are tossing and squeezing, a piece of wood who
everyone is hitting anyone they want with and their rivals! It’s a piece of wood
which those swimming in several currents are paddling on!
It’s no longer about Jamal’s fate, what happened to him, who did what to him and
who are “they” or about specifying pure legal responsibility. This is apart from
the mysterious players in the story. This is no longer what’s important because
what’s important has in fact happened in the media and political courts erected
in the global Brotherhood and leftist media as they’ve taken their decision,
issued their verdict, set the sanctions and adjourned the session!
Jamal bin Ahmad bin Hamza Khashoggi, the Saudi journalist who wrote and preached
for a strategic relationship between the Saudi state and the Brotherhood and who
nominated himself as an extraordinary envoy for this great task, was he
expecting in the last turn of his career to become a card that international
actors and groups will fully exploit and use to serve their aims?
The point is, Saudi Arabia as a state, vision and command is greatly and
persistently targeted by manifold international groups and blocs. It happened
that this Jamal incident occurred during an American electoral season amid a
deep rift and hostility between the Republicans, President Trump’s party, and
the Democrats, who are his bitter adversaries. Hostility towards Saudi Arabia -
Trump’s ally - thus became part of targeting Trump himself!
In brief – and unfortunately – Jamal is neither the first nor the last
journalist or political or activist that disappears or gets killed or goes
missing in the world. There are dozens or rather hundreds. Recently, the head of
the Interpol himself went missing in China! Imagine that! His fate remained
unknown for few days and then China said do not ask about him as we’ve detained
him, so you can replace him with someone else. Everyone, international parties
as well as civilians, responded to that in such a strange flexibility and an
alternative was appointed. No global hysterical frenzy happened, like in the
case of Jamal.
The point is, Saudi Arabia as a state, vision and command is greatly and
persistently targeted by manifold international groups and blocs. It happened
that this Jamal incident occurred during an American electoral season amid a
deep rift and hostility between the Republicans, President Trump’s party, and
the Democrats, who are his bitter adversaries. Hostility towards Saudi Arabia -
Trump’s ally - thus became part of targeting Trump himself!
Whatever the result and fate of the investigation are, and which its formation
was commended by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo from Riyadh, many lessons
must be learnt from this crisis on the media, diplomatic and cultural levels.
To those blaming Saudi media in particular or blaming those allied with Saudi
Arabia, we say calm down – I do acknowledge there are real problems, not just on
the media level – as what happened recently is much more worse, malicious and
complicated.
Israel’s war planes unlikely to be deterred by Syrian
missiles
Mohamed Chebaro/Arab News/October 17, 2018
The Russian S-300 surface-to-air missile system that is set to be delivered to
Syria — whether it will be operated by the Syrian military loyal to President
Bashar Assad or by his Russian allies — is unlikely to alter much the free hand
Israel has enjoyed in the skies above Syria and Lebanon, at least for the
foreseeable future.
The delivery of the S-300 system, if it happens, will no doubt give the Syrian
military an advanced weapon system that could check Israeli supremacy, but it
will not be a game-changer that will push Tel Aviv to cease its targeting of
Iranian and Hezbollah military assets that are deemed threats to Israel’s
security.
In the seven years since the start of the popular rebellion against Assad and
his family’s rule, Israel has not attempted to interfere or even encourage the
removal of Assad. Israel has always believed that Assad’s rule in Syria should
continue so that it can maintain the stability of its northern border. Some even
believe that Israel has lobbied through its international diplomatic channels to
veto the removal of the weakened Assad regime, and that all Tel Aviv is
concerned with is that the regime remain weak and that Assad’s boisterous
Iranian and Lebanese allies are banned from having high-tech missile technology
on Syrian soil.
Since the Russian deployment in Syria in September 2015 to prop up the Assad
regime’s forces, the Israeli air force has carried out numerous attacks
targeting Hezbollah militia commanders, ammunition dumps, Iranian missile
development infrastructure, Iranian drone launch sites, and Iranian and
Hezbollah missile convoys in Syria and Lebanon.
In the past three years, military air traffic control in Syria has never been
this busy, but it has been extremely well managed thanks to Russian liaison and
coordination efforts between all parties. Israeli war planes had unhindered
access to strike 200 targets in 2018 alone, while the international coalition
against Daesh flew tens of thousands of sorties and struck hundreds of Daesh
positions. The Russian, Iraqi and Syrian air forces have also carried out
thousands of sorties, and Iran has launched dozens of drones and long-range
missile attacks without any major incident.
But the controversial downing of a Russian military Ilyushin Il-20 plane with 15
personnel on board — most probably by a Syrian military shoulder-operated
surface-to-air missile — in September somewhat spoiled the seamless
Israeli-Russian understanding over Syria. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is
waiting for his next meeting with President Vladimir Putin to clear the air, as
Israel has again rejected Moscow’s attempt to hold it responsible for the deaths
of the Russian servicemen. Israel has disputed the Russian findings and says its
jets were back in Israeli airspace when the Russian plane was hit.
For Israel, it is evident that it wants to continue hitting Iranian and
Hezbollah targets in neighboring Syria despite Moscow’s decision to equip
Damascus with the S-300 system. The S-300 could only limit Tel Aviv’s free hand
over Syria if Russia also supplies the latest radars, advanced counter measures
systems and friendly and enemy plane identification software at the heart of the
incident that saw the Ilyushin plane downed by the Syrian military.
The S-300 is, above all, a politically sensitive weapon system and a strategic
balance of power breaker.
History has shown that, even at the height of the Arab-Israeli conflict in the
1960s and 70s, Moscow refrained from supplying its Arab allies with technology
that threatened Israel’s strategic supremacy, and this sensitive Russian
balancing act continues today.
The S-300 is one of a series of highly capable varieties of long-range
surface-to-air missile first developed and deployed in the USSR in 1979, and
later modified and upgraded by the Russian armed forces. As well as targeting
aircraft, the fully mobile units also have the capacity to engage ballistic
missiles. But the S-300 is, above all, a politically sensitive weapon system and
a strategic balance of power breaker, hence the long Russian hesitation to
supply it to Damascus and Tehran.
Yet the bottom line still depends on Putin. Though his minister of defense has
been keen to protect Russian forces in Syria with electronic warfare systems, as
well as equipping Assad’s forces with tracking and guidance systems to prevent
future mishaps, I tend to believe that the status quo will not be affected. The
Israeli-Russian hotlines established in 2015 will continue to be the medium to
prevent accidents, while Israeli war planes will be allowed to monitor and act
unhindered against what they consider to be enemy targets in Syria.
Putin’s Russia has mastered the act of balancing its interests with those of its
allies, such as Turkey, Iran and Israel. Putin succeeded in pushing the Iranians
back more than 100 kilometers from the occupied Golan Heights border area at the
request of Tel Aviv. He also turned his back on his Iranian allies many times as
Moscow failed to supply Tehran with the S-400 system — a more advanced version
of the S-300. The Russian military stood idle as Israeli war planes neutralized
Iranian weapon systems destined for Hezbollah, assassinated key Iranian and
Hezbollah field commanders, and removed Iran’s advanced drone operation bases in
Syria without the slightest reaction from Tehran or its allies.
In Syria’s many wars, the modus vivendi governing the relations of all the
militaries involved is likely to continue. The only minor adjustments may be for
Israel should Putin decide to cross the strategic threshold and arm Assad’s
military with sensitive weapons that could make its operations more problematic,
but not impossible, in the busy skies above Syria.
*Mohamed Chebaro is a British-Lebanese journalist with more than 25 years’
experience covering war, terrorism, defense, current affairs and diplomacy. He
is also a media consultant and trainer.