Detailed
Lebanese & Lebanese Related LCCC English New Bulletin For October 24/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias
Bejjani
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Bible
Quotations
See
what love the Father has given us, that we should be called children of God;
and that is what we are
First Letter of John 03/01-10: "See what love the
Father has given us, that we should be called children of God; and that is
what we are. The reason the world does not know us is that it did not know
him.Beloved, we are God’s children now; what we will be has not yet been
revealed. What we do know is this: when he is revealed, we will be like him,
for we will see him as he is.And all who have this hope in him purify
themselves, just as he is pure. Everyone who commits sin is guilty of
lawlessness; sin is lawlessness. You know that he was revealed to take away
sins, and in him there is no sin. No one who abides in him sins; no one who
sins has either seen him or known him. Little children, let no one deceive
you. Everyone who does what is right is righteous, just as he is righteous.
Everyone who commits sin is a child of the devil; for the devil has been
sinning from the beginning. The Son of God was revealed for this purpose, to
destroy the works of the devil. Those who have been born of God do not sin,
because God’s seed abides in them; they cannot sin, because they have been
born of God. The children of God and the children of the devil are revealed
in this way: all who do not do what is right are not from God, nor are those
who do not love their brothers and sisters."
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Titles For The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials
from miscellaneous sources published on October 23-24/18
Place and role of Hezbollah in Syrian war/Ali Hajizade/Al Arabiya/18 october/18
Syrian War Aggravates Weaknesses in Lebanese Economy/Financial Times/October
23/18
With Khashoggi crisis, Trump faces another obstacle to his peace
plan/Michael Wilner/Jerusalem Post/October 23/18
Erdogan’s “Khashoggi speech” is meant to boost his Muslim credentials (and
Turkish lira)/DEBKAfile/October 23/18
Jamal Khashoggi: Erdoğan rejects Saudi account of killing/Bethan McKernan in
Istanbul/The Guardian/October 23/18
Report: Saudi Journalist Khashoggi's Remains Found/Haaretz/October 23/18/
Mossad director warns of Iran's expansionist aspirations/Ynetnews/October
23/18
Iran’s gains in the Khashoggi crisis/Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/
Is the US plan to withdraw from INF treaty ill-advised?/C. Uday Bhaskar/Al
Arabiya/October 23/18
Mission not accomplished: Perfect UN response to departing Nikki Haley/Ramzy
Baroud/Al Arabiya/October 23/18
Khashoggi and another incitement campaign against Saudi Arabia/Mamdouh
AlMuhaini/Al Arabiya/October 23/18
Analysis/Like a Mafia Boss, Erdogan Plans to Milk the Khashoggi
Investigation for All It’s Worth/Anshel Pfeffer/Haaretz/October 23/18
Analysis Saudi Arabia, Reeling From Khashoggi Scandal, Battles a New Front:
Arab Media/Zvi Bar'el//Haaretz/October 23/18
Years of Low Interest Rates Didn't Go Too Far/Noah Smith/Bloomberg/October,
23/18
Palestinian 'Support' for Saudi Arabia/Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone
Institute/
One miscalculation could lead to a major inter-state conflict in Syria/Chris
Doyle/Arab News/October 23/18
Turkey crucial to the success of US sanctions on Iran/Yasar Yakis/Arab
News/October 23/18
Regime’s actions a source of shame for ordinary Iranians/Camelia
Entekhabifard/Arab News/October 23/18
Titles For The
Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
October 23-24/18
Lebanon PM backs Saudi Arabia in
Khashoggi case
IDF (Israeli Army)uncovers Hezbollah post one km from border, defying U.N.
resolution
Hariri Meets Bassil, Promises New Govt. 'within Days'
Strong Lebanon Bloc Stresses President Should Keep Justice Portfolio
Optimism over Cabinet formation seemingly dissipates
Aoun Meets UNIFIL Commander, Says Israeli Missile Site Claims Aim to
Undermine Stability in South
Hariri Says Govt. Formation 'Not Put on Hold', Confirms He'll Travel to KSA
Hariri: Saudi Measures in Khashoggi Case Serve Path of Justice
Riachi Meets Berri, Says LF 'Won't Offer More Concessions'
Hasbani Says LF 'Facilitating' Govt. Formation
Army Deploys at Miyeh Miyeh Entrance, Withdraws for 'Logistic Reasons'
ISF Enforces Security Plan in the North
Place and role of Hezbollah in Syrian war
Syrian War Aggravates Weaknesses in Lebanese Economy
Titles For The Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on October 23-24/18
Saudi Crown Prince Attends Riyadh Investment Forum
Saudi Investment Forum Opens under Khashoggi Shadow
King Salman, MBS Meet Khashoggi Sons as KSA Vows Accountability
Erdogan Wants Istanbul Trial over 'Planned' Khashoggi Murder
Saudi Energy Minister: Saudi Arabia in 'Crisis' in Face of Khashoggi Murder
With Khashoggi crisis, Trump faces another obstacle to his peace plan
Erdogan’s “Khashoggi speech” is meant to boost his Muslim credentials (and
Turkish lira)
Jamal Khashoggi: Erdoğan rejects Saudi account of killing
Report: Saudi Journalist Khashoggi's Remains Found
Bolton, in Russia for Nuclear Talks, Meets Defence Minister
Mossad director warns of Iran's expansionist aspirations
Iran intensifies presence west of the Euphrates River in Syr
Erdogan: 18 suspects should be tried in Istanbul over Khashoggi murder
'Jaish-ul-Adl' Publishes Images of Abducted Iranian Soldiers
Iran Intensifies Militia Presence West of Euphrates
Jordanian King Receives US Treasury Secretary
Jordan Abandons Part of Peace Agreement With Israel
Grand Imam of Al-Azhar: Muslims Are Actual Terrorism Victims
Adel Abdul Mahdi Mission in Iraq Parliament Complicated
Canada/Conservative justice critic Tony Clement says Canada should use
Magnitsky Act sanctions in Khashoggi case
Israel Tells Churches It Does Not Seek to Seize Lands
Torture in Palestinian Jails 'Systematic', Says HRW
The Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
October 23-24/18
Lebanon PM backs
Saudi Arabia in Khashoggi case
AFP, Beirut/Tuesday, 23 October 2018/Lebanon’s premier-designate Saad Hariri
threw his support behind Saudi Arabia Tuesday following the murder of Saudi
journalist Jamal Khashoggi at its Istanbul consulate. “The measures taken by
the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia regarding the case of journalist Jamal Khashoggi...
come within the framework that serves the path of justice and the disclosure
of the whole truth,” a statement from his office quoted him as saying. On
Tuesday, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir pledged a “thorough and
complete” investigation into Khashoggi’s murder. Khashoggi disappeared after
he entered the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2 to collect paperwork
for his marriage. Hariri said the directives of “King Salman bin Abdulaziz
would put things in the right direction and contribute to respond to the
malicious campaigns targeting the kingdom”, the statement said.
IDF (Israeli
Army)uncovers Hezbollah post one km from border, defying U.N. resolution
Anna Ahronheim/Jerusalem Post/October 23/18
Army once again accuses group of violating UNSC Resolution 1701.
The IDF has accused Hezbollah of once again violating United Nations
Security Council Resolution 1701 after uncovering an observation post used
by the Lebanese Shi’ite terrorist group along Israel’s northern border. The
group attempted to conceal the post – located in the al-Adisa village
opposite Kibbutz Misgav Am, about one kilometer from the border – under the
guise of the fictitious environmental NGO “Green Without Borders.” The IDF
says it was the sixth such post discovered in the past couple of years.
Similar to those uncovered last year, this one also acted as a forward
observation post to gather intelligence on IDF troops. “Hezbollah acts as if
the IDF is not aware of its activities,” read a statement by the IDF
Spokesperson’s Unit, adding: “The IDF regularly monitors the activities of
Hezbollah and, as it has shown recently, is aware of this and of other
activities.”The IDF has accused Hezbollah numerous times of violating the UN
resolution, which set the terms to end the 34-day Second Lebanon War fought
between Israel and Hezbollah in the summer of 2006 and which barred any
military presence by Hezbollah south of Lebanon’s Litani River. “There are
no birds or forests there,” a senior official in the Northern Command was
quoted as saying by Israeli media. “Hezbollah is building military
infrastructure along the border with armed men moving there when they are
watching the Israeli border. This is military infrastructure in civilian
guise.”“From inside Israel we can see observation posts and sensor
equipment,” he continued. “Even if the outpost is unarmed, we know that its
goals are not innocent. The objective is to gather intelligence on the
border.”
According to the military, while it has voiced its concerns to the United
Nations about the area, the terrorist group has prevented members of the UN
and United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) from investigating the
area, claiming that it is private land. “This is a blatant, daily violation
of the UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which prohibits any armed
military presence south of the Litani River except for the Lebanese army and
the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon,” the army said. Last year,
Ambassador to the UN Danny Danon condemned Hezbollah’s disguised activity in
a letter to the president of the UN Security Council, presenting photos of
the five other positions and calling on the council to “demand that the
government of Lebanon dismantle these observation posts immediately, and
prevent any future activity of Hezbollah and its affiliates in southern
Lebanon, particularly near the Blue Line” between Lebanon and Israel. While
Israel’s accusations were denied by the UN, the IDF has stressed that the
group continues to use the NGO as a front for intelligence gathering to harm
Israel and that it “is able to maintain the secrecy of its intentions while
avoiding UNIFIL criticism by warnings from the Lebanese army.”In February,
The Jerusalem Post reported that UNIFIL soldiers tasked with keeping the
peace accused Hezbollah and the Lebanese army of hampering their work, which
included spying on the agency. According to a UNIFIL incident report seen by
the Post, troops were denied access to a public location in a southern
Lebanese village by three men dressed in military garb who had left a mosque
bearing a Green Without Borders flag. When the patrol reached the area, the
men signaled to them to stop, the report read. “The patrol leader tried to
negotiate a bypassing route in various ways but got only the same firm and
polite message to leave the area,” according to the report. The report
stated that it was assessed that the three men were working for Green
Without Borders “as their clothing style and appearance is similar to what
has been reported in some of the locations where the GWB are active.”
Hariri Meets Bassil, Promises New Govt. 'within Days'
Naharnet/October 23/18/Free Patriotic Movement chief MP Jebran Bassil
visited Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri Tuesday evening for a meeting
that was held away from reporters' eyes, TV networks said.
Earlier in the day, Hariri told his parliamentary bloc's members that
Tuesday's could be the last bloc meeting he would preside over seeing as the
government is expected to be formed “within days,” several local channels
reported. Wrangling over Christian shares is the main obstacle delaying the
formation of the new government after the so-called Druze hurdle was
resolved. Hizbullah-backed Sunni MPs opposed to
Hariri's al-Mustaqbal Movement have also demanded that they be allocated a
seat in the government but Hariri has played down the issue and noted that
it does not represent an obstacle.
Strong Lebanon Bloc Stresses President Should Keep Justice Portfolio
The Free Patriotic Movement-led Strong Lebanon bloc emphasized Tuesday that
President Michel Aoun has the right to keep the justice ministerial
portfolio. “Our main concern after the parliamentary elections has been to
ensure correct and proportional representation in the government and we have
helped in resolving the obstacles regarding the deputy premier post and the
distribution of portfolios,” MP Ibrahim Kanaan announced after the bloc's
weekly meeting. “The justice portfolio is not the
problem and it has always been part of the president's share. In the absence
of rotation (of portfolios), the president has the right to have a tool for
real reform,” Kanaan added, noting that portfolios essential for running the
state's internal affairs such as finance and interior will remain with the
AMAL Movement and al-Mustaqbal Movement.Turning to the demands of the
Lebanese Forces, the MP said “the new ministerial demands are
not justified.”“We hope the coming days will reflect the
positive atmosphere in a national unity government that represents all
Lebanese,” Kanaan went on to say. Wrangling over
Christian shares is the main obstacle delaying the formation of the new
government after the so-called Druze hurdle was resolved. Hizbullah-backed
Sunni MPs opposed to al-Mustaqbal have also demanded that they be allocated
a seat in the government but Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri has played
down the issue and noted that it does not represent an obstacle.
Optimism over Cabinet
formation seemingly dissipates
Georgi Azar/Annahar/October 23/2018/BEIRUT: Last week's optimism surrounding
the formation of a new Cabinet has yet to yield a positive outcome to the
six months long deadlock, as the tug and pull between the Free Patriotic
Movement and Lebanese Forces continues to hamper Prime Minister-designate
Saad Hariri's efforts. The two Christian rivals have both laid claim to the
Ministry of Justice, currently occupied by FPM affiliate Salim Jreissati,
with the disagreement seemingly unresolved following a meeting between
caretaker Information Minister Melhem Riachi and Hariri at the latter's
Beirut residence Monday.
Riachi, acting as an envoy for LF leader Samir Geagea, did not divulge much
information as he made his way out of the meeting. The LF managed to secure
15 MPs during May's parliamentary elections and have been seeking a bloc of
four ministries, including the position of deputy prime minister and the
Culture and Social Affairs Ministries. With the conflict still the heart of
the power struggle, Hariri reiterated Tuesday the need to "protect Lebanon
before thinking of the size of our blocs."Last week, Hezbollah leader Hassan
Nasrallah poured cold water on the perceived breakthrough in the Cabinet
negotiation process, saying that "certain obstacles remain as it pertains to
the allocation of portfolios."Nasrallah's comments came in reference to the
demands by the pro-Hezbollah Sunni coalition to be represented in the
Cabinet, a request Hariri vehemently rejects. On
Monday, Hariri maintained his unwillingness to include the Sunni bloc,
comprised of 10 MPs, telling reporters that his refusal stems from their
lack of affiliation to a major party. "There are certainly difficulties in
politics, especially after the conclusion of parliamentary elections,"
Hariri said, arguing that the formation of a government is essential in
order to implement reforms and initiate the CEDRE IV infrastructure
projects. Lebanon secured over $11 billion
in soft loans and grants at a conference in Paris in April as the
international community pledged support to help the debt-ridden country
revamp its ailing infrastructure and bolster its economy.
These funds, however, have yet to make their way given the government crisis
which has ostensibly put the whole of Lebanon on standby.
"I assure you that the international community is eager to implement the
projects agreed upon during CEDRE IV," the premier said.
Aoun Meets UNIFIL Commander, Says Israeli Missile Site Claims Aim to
Undermine Stability in South
Naharnet/October 23/18/President Michel Aoun on Tuesday nullified Israeli
allegations that weapons are present near Beirut airport, telling visiting
UNIFIL commander they only aim at keeping tension in South Lebanon. Aoun
told UNIFIL commander Major General Stefano Del Col during a meeting at
Baabda Palace, that Israeli claims that Hizbullah has weapons present in the
vicinity of the Rafik Hariri International Airport only aim at keeping
tension in South Lebanon. During his address
before the U.N. General Assembly in September, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu claimed that Hizbullah has positioned three missile sites
near Beirut's Airport. Netanyahu also held up what he called "a picture
worth a thousand missiles" and titled "Beirut Precision Guided Missile."
Israeli army spokesman Avichai Adrai meanwhile published pictures of the
alleged sites on Twitter. In response, caretaker Foreign Minister Jebran
Bassil led dozens of ambassadors and journalists to said locations,
including a golf course and a soccer stadium, seeking to dispel Israeli
allegations of secret Hizbullah rocket facilities
Hariri Says Govt. Formation 'Not Put on Hold', Confirms
He'll Travel to KSA
Naharnet/October 23/18/Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri on Tuesday
announced that he will travel to Saudi Arabia Wednesday to take part in an
international investment conference boycotted by several politicians and
business leaders in connection with Jamal Khashoggi's case.
Speaking to reporters ahead of an al-Mustaqbal bloc meeting, Hariri also
noted that the government formation process “has not been put on hold.”He
also denied that al-Mustaqbal Movement has decided to give away one of its
portfolios in the new government.
Earlier in the day, Hariri threw his support behind Saudi Arabia, which is
facing global outrage over the murder of Khashoggi -- a Saudi journalist and
government critic -- at its Istanbul consulate. Hariri's comments came less
than a year after he resigned in mysterious circumstances in a televised
address from the Saudi capital, sparking rumors he was being held there
against his will. "The measures taken by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
regarding the case of journalist Jamal Khashoggi... come within the
framework that serves the path of justice and the disclosure of the whole
truth," a statement from his office quoted him as saying. A tough critic of
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Khashoggi disappeared after he
entered the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2 to collect paperwork
for his marriage. A few days later, a Turkish government source said police
believed he was murdered by a team sent to Istanbul, and on October 17, a
Turkish newspaper said he was tortured and decapitated inside the
consulate.The case has tarnished the image of the crown prince, and caused
policymakers and business titans to cancel their planned attendance at a key
investment forum that opened in Riyadh on Tuesday. Hariri said the
directives of "King Salman bin Abdulaziz would put things in the right
direction and contribute to respond to the malicious campaigns targeting the
kingdom," the statement said. Turkey has said the murder of Khashoggi was
"savagely planned."
Saudi Arabia has long been a key ally of Hariri, while Riyadh's regional foe
Iran backs Lebanon's armed party Hizbullah. But in November last year,
Hariri announced he was stepping down in a televised address from the Saudi
capital, causing observers to speculate he was being held against his will.
After French mediation, he rescinded his resignation the following month,
and Saudi Arabia has denied intimidating Hariri into quitting his post.
Hariri was named premier for a third term in May after Lebanon's first
parliamentary elections in nine years, but has since struggled to form a
cabinet.
Hariri: Saudi Measures in Khashoggi Case Serve Path of
Justice
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 23/18/Prime Minister-designate Saad
Hariri threw his support behind Saudi Arabia Tuesday as it faces outrage
over the murder of Saudi journalist and government critic Jamal Khashoggi at
its Istanbul consulate. Hariri stressed that "the measures taken by the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia regarding the case of journalist Jamal Khashoggi...
come within the framework that serves the path of justice and the disclosure
of the whole truth,” said the statement. Hariri's comments came less than a
year after he resigned in mysterious circumstances in a televised address
from the Saudi capital, sparking rumors he was being held there against his
will. On Tuesday, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir pledged a "thorough
and complete" investigation into Khashoggi's murder. A tough critic of Saudi
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Khashoggi disappeared after he entered the
Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2 to collect paperwork for his
marriage. A few days later, a Turkish government source said police believed
he was murdered by a team sent to Istanbul, and on October 17, a Turkish
newspaper said he was tortured and decapitated inside the consulate.
The case has tarnished the image of the crown prince, and caused
policymakers and business titans to cancel their planned attendance at a key
investment forum that opened in Riyadh on Tuesday. Hariri said the
directives of "King Salman bin Abdulaziz would put things in the right
direction and contribute to respond to the malicious campaigns targeting the
kingdom", the statement said. Turkey has said the murder of Khashoggi was
"savagely planned", and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has vowed to reveal
what he has said was the "naked truth" about the killing later Tuesday.
Saudi Arabia has long been a key ally of Hariri, while Riyadh's regional foe
Iran backs Hizbullah. But in November last year, Hariri announced he was
stepping down in a televised address from the Saudi capital, causing
observers to speculate he was being held against his will. After French
mediation, he rescinded his resignation the following month, and Saudi
Arabia has denied intimidating Hariri into quitting his post.
Hariri was named premier for a third term in May after Lebanon's
first parliamentary elections in nine years, but has since struggled to form
a cabinet.
Riachi Meets Berri, Says LF 'Won't Offer More Concessions'
Naharnet/October 23/18/Caretaker Information Minister Melhem Riachi held
talks Tuesday with Speaker Nabih Berri in Ain el-Tineh after which he
stressed that the Lebanese Forces “will not offer more concessions”
regarding its share in the new cabinet. “I put Speaker Berri in the picture
of my latest meeting with Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri,” Riachi
said. “The LF is not seeking certain portfolios and has never sought that,
but injustice against the LF is unacceptable,” the minister added. “The
government is not hinging on us because we are not the ones stopping the
government. It is impossible for the LF to offer more concessions, and this
is what I told Speaker Berri,” Riachi went on to say. Asked who is seeking
to clip the LF's wings, the minister said: “They know themselves. The LF's
influence will not be curtailed.”
Hasbani Says LF 'Facilitating' Govt. Formation
Naharnet/October 23/18/Deputy Prime Minister and caretaker Minister of
Public Health Ghassan Hasbani stressed on Tuesday that the Lebanese Forces
helps facilitate the government formation, stressing that all political
parties should be involved in speeding up the process, the National News
Agency reported.“Everyone is concerned with the formation of the government
and at the forefront are the Premier-designate (Saad Hariri) and the
President (Michel Aoun),” said Hasbani. "It is not permissible for any party
to hold onto any portfolio considering it an exclusive right," said the LF
minister, stressing that the Lebanese Forces is facilitating the formation
process and has provided the PM-designate with an array of options. "The LF
did not adhere to any of the portfolios it used to hold, the Ministry of
Health, for example," he confirmed. "It is, however, the right of the
Lebanese Forces to get proper representation out of respect for the
confidence that was given to the party by the citizens in the
[parliamentary] elections,” he added.
Army Deploys at Miyeh Miyeh Entrance, Withdraws for
'Logistic Reasons'
Naharnet/October 23/18/A Lebanese Army force deployed Tuesday at the
entrance of the Mieh Mieh Palestinian refugee camp in south Lebanon before
withdrawing for “logistic reasons.”The National News Agency said the army
set up a post at a checkpoint belonging to the Palestinian security force in
the western side of the camp, which witnessed deadly clashes last week
between the Fatah Movement and the Islamist Ansarullah faction. The
deployment was “part of the efforts by Palestinian and Lebanese forces to
preserve and control security inside the camp after the latest clashes,” NNA
said. It later reported that the army force had withdrawn from its position
for “logistic reasons.”
ISF Enforces Security Plan in the North
Naharnet/October 23/18/The Internal Security Forces kicked off a
security plan on Tuesday in North Lebanon after a killing incident a day
earlier that took the lives of two individuals.
VDL (93.3) radio station said security members deployed at the entrances to
the northern city of Tripoli and other side routes. On Monday, two people
were shot dead in Tripoli in vendetta incidents. The National News Agency
had said Lebanese citizen R. al-Khodr died after being shot in the Abi Samra
area at the hands of an unknown individual who fled the scene.It later
reported that F. al-Khodr who was also shot in the incident had died of his
wounds. The ISF Intelligence Branch arrested A.
al-Khodr for shooting dead F. al-Khodr to avenge the latter's killing of R.
al-Khodr, the agency added.
Place and role of
Hezbollah in Syrian war
Ali Hajizade/Al Arabiya/18 october/18
One of the pro-Iranian actors involved in the Syrian civil war is Hezbollah.
The organization has been involved in the Syrian war since the very
beginning. Whereas previously Hezbollah could gain favor with a particular
part of the non-Shiite population of Lebanon through confrontation with
Israel, now the participation of Hezbollah in the Syrian conflict was
ambiguously interpreted in Lebanon and affected the sympathies of the
Lebanese. Many Lebanese politicians and public persons condemned Hezbollah
and encouraged not to fight against the Syrian people. It is noteworthy that
Hezbollah has long ceased to be a marginal pro-Iranian group and right now
it has serious control over Lebanon’s domestic and foreign policy. On the
one hand, the war in Syria is a tribute to Iran’s loyalty; on the other
hand, it is a guarantee of their survival. If Assad’s regime falls in Syria,
Hezbollah will be cut off the weapon supplies from Iran.
Militarized groups
Together with the Iranian forces, Hezbollah is also involved in the
development and training of militarized groups, consisting mostly of Shiites
and Alawites. One of such groups is Jayshal-Sha’bi. Although the military
capacity of these groups remains in doubt, Assad’s regime uses them mainly
for security and patrolling. In the Syrian battles, Hezbollah suffers
significant losses. Hezbollah’s commanders, such as Abdel Hamid Mahmoud Shri,
Ali al-Hadi al-Ashiq, Mustafa Badreddine were killed during the war. It is
noteworthy that Hezbollah’s losses in Syria far exceed its losses during the
war with Israel. So if during the 2006 war Hezbollah lost 250-500 fighters,
in Syria their losses are already about 2,000 fighters. In general,
Hezbollah fighters’ discipline and level of preparation are higher and
better than the Shiite militants from Iraq, or certain military units of the
Syrian army have. In certain cases, Hezbollah’s commanders also obtained
tactical control over small units of Syrian military forces during offensive
operations. For example, as it happened in Homs. The American side is of the
view that Hezbollah has deployed up to 7,000 fighters in Syria. Taking into
account Hezbollah’s relatively modest mobilization resources, it is a
massive figure for this organization. Besides participation in the military
actions on the regime’s side and organization of ethnic cleanings in favor
of the regime, Hezbollah took part in a series of systematic abuse of
Sunnis, in particular, when they were passing through checkpoints. It is
noteworthy that Hezbollah has long ceased to be a marginal pro-Iranian group
and right now it has serious control over Lebanon’s domestic and foreign
policy
At first sight
Notwithstanding all success of Hezbollah and the fact that Bashar Assad and
Iran are favorable to them, the organization has quite strain relations with
certain Iraqi militants, close to the Iraqi Shiite leader Muqtada-al-Sadr.
Although, at first sight, all Shiite groups are under the patronage of Iran
and bow to its will, in fact, sometimes, it is not so straightforward.
Sadr’s supporters not only refused to join Hezbollah, but they also started
to act like the Hezbollah’s opponents on a number of issues. Muqtada-al-Sadr
has its position and point of view different from the position of other
Shiite groups and Iran, regarding the Syrian conflict and he has spoken
publicly about it. Sadr is, in fact, the only major Shiite leader, who
called upon Bashar Assad to step down and end the bloodshed. For Sadr it
also an opportunity to show Tehran that he has no intention to become a
puppet in the hands of puppeteers from Tehran.
It is also possible that competing with Hezbollah, Sadr tries to reclaim a
unique role in the post-war architecture of Syria. However, the positions of
Hezbollah in Syria are strong so far. Using the Syrian civil war and many
factors, Hezbollah, which had been fighting only Israel before, could
increase its influence in the region. Recently, Hezbollah’s leader Hassan
Nasrallah said that “no one can force them to leave Syria.” It can suggest
Hezbollah is intended to take root in Syria and subsequently apply in
certain Syrian districts the same scenario as in southern Lebanon.
However, like a coin, Hezbollah’s success has an opposite side. Getting
distracted by Syria, Hezbollah risks being taken by surprise in case of the
Israeli military operation.
Syrian War Aggravates Weaknesses in Lebanese Economy
فايننشال تيمز: الحرب السورية تفاقم الضعف في الإقتصاد اللبناني
Financial Times/October 23/18
https://www.ft.com/content/ace601b2-c888-11e8-ba8f-ee390057b8c9
Lebanon’s builders know how to profit from
a crisis. The job of rebuilding the country after its civil war was a boon
for the construction industry, and contractors were anticipating a similar
bonanza from an end to fighting in neighbouring Syria. But their plans have
been frustrated.
“Everybody thought the Syrian crisis was settled,” said Maroun Helou, head
of a syndicate of Lebanon’s building contractors. But with Syria’s future
far from certain — as international efforts continue to avert a bloody
battle in rebel-held Idlib province — he is now less optimistic. “I think we
are going to be delayed another year or more.”
Instead, Syria continues to be a burden on the Lebanese economy, adding to a
host of problems stifling its growth. The seven-year Syrian war has
disrupted cross-border trade, pushed more than 1m refugees into Lebanon, and
deterred foreign tourists. The IMF said gross domestic product growth that
reached double figures almost a decade ago is set to fall to 1-1.5 per cent
this year. Compounded by rising global interest rates and Lebanon’s own
political deadlock, many economists warn that the country is at risk of
defaulting on its ballooning public debt. At $83bn, this is equivalent to
150 per cent of Lebanon’s GDP, the third highest in the world. “The Syrian
refugee issue has just accelerated Lebanon towards inevitable economic
crisis,” said one western diplomat.
Riad Salamé, Lebanon’s long-serving central bank governor, blamed the
country’s economic woes on “the Syrian refugees and the wars going in the
Middle East”. The World Bank has estimated that the Syrian crisis cost
Lebanon almost 3 per cent of GDP growth in 2014 and that refugees added an
additional $1.1bn to Lebanese state costs between 2012-2014. But Mr Salamé
also cited “political tensions”, in the region as well as in Beirut, where
political impasse over cabinet formation has prevented meaningful reform.
Although national elections were held five months ago, Lebanese politicians
have continued to jockey for cabinet positions. Confidence was also dented
when Saad Hariri, Lebanon’s prime minister, was detained in Saudi Arabia
last year and temporarily resigned.
The IMF has called on Beirut to slash public spending in order to stabilise
its budget deficit. The country spends nearly 40 per cent of government
revenues on public sector salaries, and, according to Moody’s, about 40 per
cent on servicing its debt.
Mr Salamé said: “Lebanon needs a government, to implement reforms to boost
confidence by . . . stopping enlarging the public sector and backing the
private sector.”
One sign of progress was the passing of a government budget in May, which
was the first to be agreed by Lebanon’s parliament since 2005.
Yet the refugee crisis looms large. Lebanon has joined Russia, which played
a decisive role in swinging the civil war in the Syrian government’s favour,
in seeking to persuade European countries to back efforts to return refugees
to Syria and fund their reconstruction drive, according to three western
diplomats and three Lebanese officials.
But their arguments have failed to convince, as potential European donors
balked at unlocking cash for reconstruction until it was safe for refugees
to return and they saw evidence of a political process in Syria.
Mr Salamé also expressed hope that a political solution in Syria could lead
to a lifting of sanctions in Syria, which had presented challenges to banks
regionally.
Lebanon’s banks are already chronically dependent on foreign cash
injections. “Our monetary system is built on continuous inflows of [foreign
direct investments] in the banking sector,” said Mr Khoury, the economy
minister. Keeping this FDI flowing has meant “increasing higher interest
rates . . . to keep this system working”.
Lebanon’s central bank has since 2016 used unorthodox financial engineering
to maintain the Lebanese pound’s currency peg with the US dollar, increase
its foreign currency reserves, and lower the cost of financing Lebanese
government debt.
But these moves, while stabilising the banking sector and the pound, have
increased Lebanon’s level of dollar denominated debt— and as interest rates
on the dollar have risen, more and more treasury revenues are spent on debt
servicing. Lebanon has never defaulted on a sovereign bond, but economists
fear the burden is unsustainable. With a fragile economy dependent on
foreign remittances for 16 per cent of its GDP, according to an IMF study,
shocks can hurt. The World Bank recently halved its GDP growth forecast for
Lebanon this year to 1 per cent, citing the end of a central bank subsidised
lending scheme that helped to prop up the real estate sector since 2012. Mr
Helou, the construction boss, called on Lebanese lawmakers to start the
process that can unlock $11bn of infrastructure loans pledged by the
international community earlier this year.
But without meaningful fiscal and economic reform, many fear Lebanon’s
economy will continue to teeter on the brink. “It is like driving on a
highway and missing the exits,” said Yassine Jaber, a Lebanese MP and former
economy minister. “Before it is too late we must avoid hitting the
dead-end.”
The Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News
published
on
October 22-23/18
Saudi Crown Prince
Attends Riyadh Investment Forum
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 23/18/Saudi Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Tuesday attended a Riyadh investment
conference boycotted by a host of global business leaders and policymakers
over the murder of columnist Jamal Khashoggi.An AFP journalist saw the crown
prince at the Future Investment Initiative along with Jordan's King Abdullah
II. Sitting near the two royals was Saudi billionaire Prince Al-Waleed bin
Talal.
Saudi Investment Forum Opens under Khashoggi Shadow
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 23/18/Saudi Arabia
opened an investment conference on Tuesday despite a wave of cancellations
from policymakers and business titans over the murder of journalist and
government critic Jamal Khashoggi. The three-day Future Investment
Initiative (FII) was meant to project the historically insular petro-state
as a lucrative business destination and set the stage for new ventures and
multi-billion dollar contracts.
But the summit, nicknamed "Davos in the desert", has been overshadowed by
growing global outrage over the murder of Khashoggi inside the kingdom's
consulate in Istanbul on October 2, with a string of leading international
investors pulling out over the case. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
has vowed to reveal what he has called the "naked truth" about the Khashoggi
murder -- a killing Ankara has said was "savagely planned". - Tight security
- The Riyadh conference began amid tight security at Riyadh's Ritz-Carlton
hotel, with Russian Direct Investment Fund chief Kirill Dmitriyev, the CEO
of French energy giant Total Patrick Pouyanne and Pakistani Prime Minister
Imran Khan, among the confirmed speakers listed by organisers for the
opening day. But a growing list of investors and international figureheads
have declined to show up in Riyadh in apparent protest against the Khashoggi
killing.
International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde and US Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin have pulled out. Siemens chief executive Joe Kaeser,
corporate chiefs from JP Morgan, Ford and Uber, and media powerhouses like
Bloomberg, CNN and the Financial Times have also scrapped plans to attend.
Ministers from Britain and France as well as the United States, which have
huge defence deals at stake with Saudi Arabia, have stayed away. Pakistan's
Khan attended however as his government continues to seek funding to plug
its deteriorating finances.
A wider Western boycott of the conference suggests rising political risks in
Saudi Arabia that could hit foreign direct investment, which already plunged
to a 14-year low last year, according to a UN body. "Despite talk of reform,
FDI inflows into Saudi have stayed low and the (Khashoggi) scandal will only
increase investor uncertainty," said research firm Capital Economics. And in
a fresh setback, the forum's website went down on Monday after an apparent
cyberattack. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. It was back up
with reduced content when the conference opened. - 'PR crisis' -This year's
conference contrasts with last year's inaugural FII -- a star-studded event
at Riyadh's glittering Ritz-Carlton hotel, where Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman was lionised as a visionary as he wowed investors with talking robots
and plans for a futuristic mega-city.
But many Western firms have too much at stake to abandon the Arab world's
biggest economy, and some are preparing to send lower-level executives to
the summit. Senior investment bankers from HSBC and Credit Suisse are
planning to attend the conference even though their chief executives have
cancelled their attendance, Bloomberg News reported. Companies from China
and Russia have also shown little interest in withdrawing from the event, an
organiser said.
"The high profile withdrawal of so many American CEOs from the conference
certainly presents opportunities for Asian and Russian companies to make a
splash," Ellen Wald, author of the book "Saudi Inc.", told AFP. "But there
is no indication, so far, that companies are shying away from business
opportunities in the kingdom." Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, widely
known as MBS, faces what the risk consultancy Eurasia Group has called "an
acute public relations crisis" over Khashoggi's murder. After more than two
weeks of vehement denials, Saudi Arabia has now admitted Khashoggi was
killed in the consulate. In the past weeks,
Turkish media and officials speaking to international media have said audio
recordings prove Khashoggi was tortured before being decapitated although no
concrete evidence of their existence has emerged. Saudi Foreign Minister
Adel al-Jubeir said Tuesday the killing of a critic must "never happen
again", as he pledged a "thorough and complete" investigation into the
journalist's murder. Khashoggi's killing fits a pattern of a recent
crackdown on dissent in the kingdom, with Prince Mohammed, King Salman's son
and the de facto ruler, arresting clerics, business high-fliers and women
activists. Further stoking investor anxiety, the kingdom is embroiled in an
expensive war in Yemen and is leading an embargo against neighbouring Qatar.
Riyadh has also engaged in diplomatic disputes with Germany and Canada that
have threatened business ties.
King Salman, MBS Meet Khashoggi Sons as KSA Vows
Accountability
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 23/18/Saudi King Salman bin Abdul Aziz
and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman met Tuesday with the two sons of slain
journalist Jamal Khashoggi and offered them condolences over their father's
violent death at the hands of Saudi officials, Saudi state news agency SPA
said. Earlier on Tuesday, Saudi Arabia's cabinet said it would hold
accountable all those behind Khashoggi's murder "no matter who they may be."
The cabinet will "hold accountable all those who have failed in their duties
no matter who they may be," read a statement published by SPA. Khashoggi was
killed after entering the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul on October 2
to pick up papers for his upcoming wedding to Hatice Cengiz, a Turkish
citizen. Saudi Arabia has come under fire from much of the international
community over the murder of Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist and
critic of the kingdom's powerful crown prince. After more than two weeks of
vehemently denying Khashoggi was dead, the Saudi government on Saturday said
he was killed in a fight inside the consulate and said the murder was not
state-sanctioned. Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir subsequently blamed
a "rogue operation" by individuals who "exceeded their responsibilities" and
then "tried to cover up for it," speaking on Fox News. Khashoggi was a U.S.
resident and had lived in self-imposed exile in Virginia since 2017, shortly
after Prince Mohammed was appointed heir to the throne.
Erdogan Wants Istanbul Trial over 'Planned' Khashoggi Murder
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday said that the "savage
murder" of journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul was
meticulously planned, demanding that all those linked to the killing face
punishment. Erdogan had promised that his speech in Ankara would give the
"naked truth" about the killing and he gave a host of new details while
still saying Turkey wanted answers to key questions, including who gave the
orders. Hours before Erdogan delivered his speech to ruling party lawmakers
in Ankara, a major Saudi investment forum opened in Riyadh under the heavy
shadow of the murder after key delegates pulled out.
The murder of the Washington Post contributor has severely dented the
international reputation of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman who has
spearheaded a reform drive in the kingdom. With international pressure
mounting, Saudi Arabia's cabinet on Tuesday said it would hold accountable
all those behind the murder "no matter who they may be." Erdogan outlined
the steps taken by what he said was a 15 person team who came from Riyadh
planning to kill Khashoggi, including carrying out reconnaissance outside
Istanbul and then deactivating security cameras at the consulate. He said
that 18 suspects already detained by Saudi Arabia should be extradited to
Istanbul to face trial over the killing and called for an investigation into
those who have "even the slightest link" to the "savage murder."
'Who gave orders?'
But Erdogan did not confirm or even mention some of the most striking claims
that appeared in the Turkish press over the last days, notably that
Khashoggi's body was cut up into multiple pieces or that there is an audio
recording of the murder. The president himself admitted that several
questions remain unanswered. "These (15) people, from whom did they get
orders and came there? We are seeking answers," he asked. Taking aim at the
inconsistent position of Riyadh in the days after the murder he added: "Why
when the murder was clear, why were so many inconsistent statements made?"
Erdogan did not mention Prince Mohammed by name in the speech. But he said
he was confident of the full cooperation of his father Saudi King Salman in
the probe and vowed full retribution for all the guilty. "The conscience of
humanity will only be satisfied when those who ordered (the murder) and
those who carried it out answer for their actions."He said no Saudi linked
to the murder should enjoy diplomatic immunity as set out by the Vienna
Convention. "The Vienna Convention and other international regulations don't
allow for a savage murder to be protected from investigation by diplomatic
immunity."
'Moderate speech'
Erdogan's statements still appeared to contradict the version of Saudi
Arabia, which only confirmed the killing more than two weeks after the event
and indicated he was killed in a brawl at the consulate. But Jana Jabbour, a
professor at Sciences Po university in Paris, told AFP that Erdogan could
have chosen much sharper rhetoric against Riyadh, indicating the two nations
were talking behind the scenes. "Erdogan's very moderate speech shows that a
deal has been reached," she told AFP. The killing has alarmed even Saudi
Arabia's staunchest Western allies who are also key weapons suppliers of the
kingdom. U.S. President Donald Trump said he was "not satisfied" with
Riyadh's explanations.CIA Director Gina Haspel, meanwhile, headed for
Turkey, although details of her trip were not immediately clear. A former
royal family insider turned critic of the Saudi crown prince, Khashoggi, 59,
disappeared after he entered the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2 to
collect a document for his upcoming marriage.
'Never again'
The case has shone the spotlight on the crown prince, who was credited with
reforms, including giving women the right to drive, but is now accused of
having ordered Khashoggi's murder -- a claim Riyadh denies. The timing of
the controversy could not be worse for Prince Mohammed as a key investment
summit, dubbed "Davos in the desert", began in Riyadh, overshadowed by big
name cancellations. Dozens of executives, including from banks Goldman Sachs
and JP Morgan, ride-hailing app Uber and Western officials such as
International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde have pulled out of the
three-day Future Investment Initiative (FII).
French energy giant Total's head Patrick Pouyanne and Pakistani Prime
Minister Imran Khan however were attending. Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih
admitted: "We are going through a crisis." Despite also pulling out of the
summit, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin met the crown prince behind
closed doors for bilateral talks in Riyadh. Speaking in Jakarta, Saudi
Arabia's Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said procedures would be put in
place to "ensure that something like this can never happen again." The
whereabouts of Khashoggi's corpse is still unknown. Turkish police have
found an abandoned car belonging to the Saudi consulate in an underground
car park in the Sultangazi district of Istanbul and are awaiting Saudi
permission to search it. CNN broadcast images apparently showing a Saudi
official playing a body double for Khashoggi, wearing the journalist's
clothes, exiting the consulate.
Saudi Energy Minister: Saudi Arabia in 'Crisis' in Face of Khashoggi Murder
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 23/18/Saudi Arabia is in "crisis" in
the face of international outrage over the murder of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi, Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said Tuesday at an investment
summit boycotted by a host of global CEOs and policymakers. The three-day
Future Investment Initiative (FII) was meant to project the historically
insular petro-state as a lucrative business destination and set the stage
for new ventures and multi-billion dollar contracts. But the summit,
nicknamed "Davos in the desert", has been overshadowed by the outcry over
the murder of Khashoggi inside the kingdom's consulate in Istanbul on
October 2, with a string of leading international investors pulling out over
the case. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the
king's powerful son whose reform credentials have been heavily damaged by
the scandal despite repeated denials he had any involvement in the killing,
was a no-show at the opening session. "As we know these are difficult days.
We are going through a crisis," Falih said in his speech.. Falih said the
murder of Khashoggi was regrettable, adding that "nobody in the kingdom can
justify it".The comments come as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
demanded to know who gave the order for Khashoggi's killing in his country
and the location of the slain journalist's corpse. -
Tight security - The Riyadh conference opened amid tight security at
Riyadh's Ritz-Carlton hotel, with Russian Direct Investment Fund chief
Kirill Dmitriyev and Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan headlining. Falih
heaped praise on the CEO of French energy giant Total, Patrick Pouyanne, for
standing by Saudi Arabia in this difficult period. "We see what partnership
means when you have difficult times," Pouyanne responded as he shared the
stage with Falih. "This is when you really strengthen a partnership." But a
long list of investors and international policymakers have declined to show
up in Riyadh in apparent protest against the Khashoggi killing. Siemens
chief executive Joe Kaeser, corporate chiefs from JP Morgan, Ford and Uber,
and media powerhouses like Bloomberg, CNN and the Financial Times all
scrapped plans to attend. Ministers from Britain and France and the United
States, which have huge defence deals at stake with Saudi Arabia, have
stayed away. A wider Western boycott of the conference suggests rising
political risks in Saudi Arabia that could hit foreign direct investment,
which already plunged to a 14-year low last year, according to a UN
body."Despite talk of reform, FDI inflows into Saudi have stayed low and the
scandal will only increase investor uncertainty," said research firm Capital
Economics.And in a fresh setback, the forum's website went down on Monday
after an apparent cyberattack. There was no immediate claim of
responsibility.
It was back up with reduced content when the conference opened.
- 'PR crisis' -This year's conference contrasts with last year's inaugural
FII -- a star-studded event at Riyadh's Ritz-Carlton hotel, where Prince
Mohammed was lionised as a visionary by speakers. But many Western firms
have too much at stake to abandon the Arab world's biggest economy, and some
have decided to send lower-level executives.Companies from China and Russia
have also shown little interest in withdrawing from the event, an organiser
said. "The high profile withdrawal of so many American CEOs from the
conference certainly presents opportunities for Asian and Russian companies
to make a splash," Ellen Wald, author of the book "Saudi Inc.", told AFP.
The crown prince, widely known by his initials MBS, faces what the risk
consultancy Eurasia Group has called "an acute public relations crisis" over
Khashoggi's murder. After more than two weeks of vehement denials, Saudi
Arabia has now admitted Khashoggi was killed in the consulate. In the past
weeks, Turkish media and officials speaking to international media have said
audio recordings prove Khashoggi was tortured before being decapitated
although no concrete evidence of their existence has emerged. Saudi Foreign
Minister Adel al-Jubeir said Tuesday the killing of a critic must "never
happen again", as he pledged a "thorough and complete" investigation.
Khashoggi's killing fits the pattern of a recent crackdown on dissent in the
kingdom, in which clerics, business high-fliers and women activists have
been detained.
Further stoking investor anxiety, the kingdom is embroiled in an expensive
war in Yemen and is leading an embargo against neighbouring Qatar.
With Khashoggi crisis,
Trump faces another obstacle to his peace plan
Michael Wilner/Jerusalem
Post/October 23/18
Officials on that team say their plan for Israeli-Palestinian peace does not
rely on Saudi Arabia.
WASHINGTON – As the Trump administration
deliberates when to release its long-awaited Middle East peace plan, the
murder and alleged dismemberment of Jamal Khashoggi, an American resident
and Saudi journalist, has become yet another political dynamic likely to
factor into the timeline of the launch. Khashoggi’s death at the hands of
Saudi Arabian officials has rattled Washington’s alliance with Riyadh,
forcing lawmakers long deferential to and apologetic of the monarchy to
question their fundamental understanding of the relationship. Republicans
and Democrats alike have warned that all options should be on the table as
they reassess US aid and defense contracts with the kingdom, and they have
compelled US President Donald Trump to warn of “severe” consequences if it
is found that Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, Mohammad bin Salman, was
complicit in the killing. That puts the president’s Middle East peace team
in a bind. Officials on that team say their plan for Israeli-Palestinian
peace does not rely on Saudi Arabia – and, to the extent that it does, that
they see the kingdom’s governing structure as wider than the lone crown
prince, heir to the throne but internally opposed in a fractious power
struggle. And yet the entirety of the US-Saudi relationship is currently
under scrutiny, beyond questions specific to Mohammad bin Salman’s
leadership qualities. The administration’s ability to earn buy-in from the
Saudis for their peace plan will be contingent on their response to the
Khashoggi crisis.
It has always been a part of their strategic plan to gain support,
acceptance or acquiescence from the Arab world – led by Saudi Arabia – in
their effort to pressure the Palestinians back into negotiations with
Israel. While Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law leading the effort,
has limited his policy involvement in the Middle East to Israeli-Palestinian
peace, it was this issue that brought him in such close and frequent contact
with the Saudi crown prince – a relationship now at the core of America’s
response to the murder. If the administration, by will or pressure, takes
punitive actions against the kingdom – and if it declines to accept the
Saudi government’s explanation of events, claiming Khashoggi’s murder was a
rogue operation – then it is hard to imagine a Saudi-led Gulf alliance under
domestic pressures agreeing to an American peace plan widely expected to be
unforgiving to the Palestinian cause.
And that is yet another example of how chaotic events in the Middle East
tend to disrupt best-laid plans. “You can’t put something out where
everybody says, ‘Ah, this is dead on arrival,’” one senior administration
official told the Post over the summer. “You can’t do that. And the same
exact document that may be dead on arrival on a Monday might not be dead on
arrival on a Thursday. That sounds kind of counterintuitive, but that’s the
way this works.”
Erdogan’s “Khashoggi speech” is meant to boost his Muslim credentials (and
Turkish lira)
خطاب أردوغان المتعلق بقضية الخاشقجي هدفه تعزيز دوره الإسلامي ودعم الليرة
التركية
DEBKAfile/October 23/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/68353/debkafile-erdogans-khashoggi-speech-is-meant-to-boost-his-muslim-credentials-and-turkish-lira-%d8%ae%d8%b7%d8%a7%d8%a8-%d8%a3%d8%b1%d8%af%d9%88%d8%ba%d8%a7%d9%86-%d8%a7/
Turkish President
Tayyip Erdogan withheld the promised “naked truth” about the Saudi role in
the murder of Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi embassy in Istanbul on Oct. 2 in
his speech to parliament on Tuesday, Oct.23. He failed to produce any of the
audio or video evidence of the crime, which Turkish authorities claimed to
possess during weeks of disseminating sensational leaks to the world media.
His references to Saudi King Salman were deferential: “His denial of prior
knowledge of the crime is sincere.” And he made no mention at all of the
beleaguered Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
The Turkish president noted that the 18 people arrested in Riyadh were those
named by Turkey as the assassins, saying they should be tried in Istanbul.
He also referred to a team of three people, without identifying them, who he
said, arrived in Riyadh the day before Khashoggi’s disappearance and scouted
a forest near Istanbul. This suggested that the Saudis had prepared a hiding
place for the murdered journalist’s remains and therefore knew where the
body was. Erdogan called for an independent inquiry into the affair,
asserting: “This was a political killing!”
DEBKAfile’s analysts make certain inferences from the mildness of the
Turkish president’s accusations. One is that he and the Saudi royal house
have come to a deal to defuse the affair, to which President Donald Trump is
a party. Alternatively, Erdogan himself was short of smoking-gun evidence to
support those accusation. It is also possible that he has learned from his
own record of making political opponents disappear, whether from the Turkish
army, police or intelligence service, that holding back information
increases his bargaining power.
He has already milked international outrage over the assassination of the
Saudi journalist for great personal benefits and can afford to allow it to
die down.
In all 15 years at the helm of Turkish government (11 as prime minister and
four as president), he has never felt stronger or closer to his imperial
ambitions. In the weeks after the Khashoggi episode erupted, he bounced his
fortunes from rock bottom to the pinnacle of world affairs. Before, he was
grappling with a sinking currency, a bitter hate contest with fellow Muslim
rulers, excepting only Qatar, over his support for the Muslim Brotherhood,
one foot out of NATO, and nearly half a million Turks deprived of their
livelihood by his massive purges after the 2016 that nearly toppled him.
After the Khashoggi affair broke, Erdogan is sought after by world leaders,
whether in Washington or hostile Riyadh, and entertains high hopes of
achieving goals that were once out of his reach:
Stabilizing the Turkish lira with US and Saudi financial assistance. Riyadh
may fork out generous sums for removing the Khashoggi affair from
international headlines and agenda.
From being treated like a pariah by mainstream Muslim nations like Egypt,
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, Erdogan’s Turkey may win
acceptance as an ally.
His standing in the Muslim world will be much enhanced, one of his most
coveted ambitions.
This enhancement will pave the way for his appointment as mediator in the
Saudi-UAE feud with Qatar.
Erdogan gains more say in determining Syria’s post-war future.
His clout is seriously strengthened in dealings with Moscow and Tehran.
He has opened the door to alliances with parties which are hostile to
Israel, so gaining clout over the Jewish state.
Jamal Khashoggi: Erdoğan rejects Saudi account of killing
Bethan McKernan in Istanbul/The Guardian/October 23/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/68353/debkafile-erdogans-khashoggi-speech-is-meant-to-boost-his-muslim-credentials-and-turkish-lira-%d8%ae%d8%b7%d8%a7%d8%a8-%d8%a3%d8%b1%d8%af%d9%88%d8%ba%d8%a7%d9%86-%d8%a7/
Turkish president calls for ‘highest
ranked’ of those responsible to face justice
The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, has publicly torn down Saudi
claims that the dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi died in a fight in its
Istanbul consulate, making fresh allegations that his “savage” murder was
premeditated and calling for an independent investigation in Turkey.
Erdoğan had billed his hotly anticipated address at the Turkish parliament
in Ankara as the moment he would reveal the “naked truth” about what
happened to Khashoggi. He said he was not satisfied with Riyadh’s suggestion
that the killing was a rogue extradition operation gone wrong, and called
for the “highest ranked” of those responsible to be brought to justice.
“Intelligence and security institutions have evidence showing the murder was
planned … Pinning such a case on some security and intelligence members will
not satisfy us or the international community,” he said. “From the person
who gave the order, to the person who carried it out, they must all be
brought to account.”
Contrary to expectations Erdoğan’s first update on the three-week-old case
did not officially reveal the existence of audio and video evidence
understood to be in Turkey’s possession.
Erdogan did reveal that on the day before Khashoggi was killed, Saudi agents
arrived in Istanbul and began to scout locations, including the Belgrad
Forest nearo Ankara and the city of Yalova to its south. Police have
subsequently searched both areas for evidence of Khashoggi’s remains.
The president did not name the Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, who
it is alleged was probably aware of and possibly even ordered the silencing
of his prominent critic, but observers were in little doubt to who his
repeated mentions of “highest ranked” referred.
The gaps in the speech also suggest Erdoğan has more cards to play in the
evolving diplomatic crisis. Erdoğan’s speech came as the Saudi foreign
ministry released extraordinary photos of Khashoggi’s son, Salah bin Jamal
Khashoggi, meeting the crown prince and King Salman in Riyadh on Tuesday.
Salah bin Jamal Khashoggi shakes hands with Prince Mohammed on Tuesday.
Photograph: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia’s widely derided version of events has created a scandal for
the kingdom. Western allies have expressed scepticism, pulling out of a
large foreign investment conference in Riyadh that began on Tuesday and
triggering calls from the US Congress to reevaluate the close political
friendship between the Trump administration and the crown prince.
Tabling new allegations that Saudi officials scoped out rural areas outside
Istanbul the day before Khashoggi’s murder, Erdoğan said Turkey’s
investigation was ongoing.
“Saudi Arabia has taken an important step by admitting the murder,” Erdoğan
said. “As of now we expect of them to openly bring to light those
responsible – from the highest ranked to the lowest – and to bring them to
justice.”
Erdoğan spoke of the “sincerity” of Saudi Arabia’s King Salman in the
investigation so far but made no mention of his son, the crown prince.
Saudi Arabia must relinquish control of the investigation into the
“political” murder to an independent and unbiased Turkish operation in
Istanbul, Erdoğan said.
The president strongly criticised Saudi Arabia’s “inconsistent statements”
in the case and demanded the kingdom identify the “local collaborator” who
allegedly disposed of Khashoggi’s body.
Riyadh says Khashoggi was accidentally choked during a rendition attempt
that went wrong, and his body was rolled up in a rug and given to a third
party.
Turkish investigators, however, have steadily leaked evidence to the media
that allegedly proves the journalist was tortured, murdered and his body
dismembered within the consulate building. CCTV footage shows a body double
dressed in Khashoggi’s clothes leaving the consulate and touring Istanbul’s
landmarks, undermining the idea that the team interrogating Khashoggi meant
to bring him back alive.
As reported by the Observer on Sunday, Turkish investigators may have
intercepted the hit squad’s communications. Reuters said on Monday that Saud
al-Qahtani, an influential adviser to Bin Salman, participated in a Skype
call to the room in the consulate where Khashoggi was held, telling the team
to “bring me the head of the dog”.
Khashoggi case has put Saudi prince right where Erdoğan wants him
Qahtani and several other senior officials have been fired from their
government positions. Erdoğan said that of the 18 men arrested by Saudi
Arabia in the investigation, 15 were those already identified by Turkish
police as members of the hit squad who flew in and out of Istanbul on the
same day Khashoggi was killed. The suspects should be extradited immediately
to assist with the Turkish investigation, he said.
Other parties, such as Khashoggi’s family, have requested a United Nations
inquiry, fearing the case will otherwise be subject to geopolitical
machinations.
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https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/oct/23/turkish-president-erdogan-rejects-saudi-account-of-khashoggi-killing
Report: Saudi Journalist Khashoggi's Remains Found
Haaretz/October 23/18/
Khashoggi's body was reportedly found in the garden of the Saudi consul
general's home. Sky News reports that his body had been cut up and his face
'disfigured'
The remains of dissident Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi have been found,
Sky News reported on Tuesday, with one source saying remains were found in
the garden of the Saudi consul general's home. Multiple sources suggested
Khashoggi had been cut up and his face "disfigured," Sky News reported. The
report comes after remarks by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who
earlier Tuesday said that Khashoggi's body hasn't been found.
"As it is now clear, there was a murder — and it was clear from the
beginning — then why was there a slurry of incoherent statements? And now
there's official acknowledgement there was a murder, where is the body? Why
do we still not have the body?" Erdogan, speaking before parliament, asked.
Erdogan described Khashoggi's killing as "ferocious" and demanded that Saudi
Arabia extradite those who killed him to stand trial in Turkey. Intelligence
sources told Reuters on Sunday that Saud al-Qahtani, a top aide for Saudi
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, ran Khashoggi's killing at the saudi
consulate in Istanbul by giving orders over Skype. According to one
high-ranking Arab source with access to intelligence and links to members of
Saudi Arabia’s royal court, Qahtani was beamed into a room of the Saudi
consulate via Skype. He began to hurl insults at Khashoggi over the phone.
According to the Arab and Turkish sources, Khashoggi answered Qahtani’s
insults with his own. But he was no match for the squad, which included top
security and intelligence operatives, some with direct links to the royal
court.
A Turkish intelligence source relayed that at one point Qahtani told his men
to dispose of Khashoggi. “Bring me the head of the dog,” the Turkish
intelligence source says Qahtani instructed. Saudi King Salman received
Khashoggi's family members on Monday, with the crown prince in attendance,
according to Saudi state media. A recent stream of leaks to national and
international media has increased pressure on Saudi Arabia, which is hosting
an investment conference this week that many dignitaries have decided to
skip because of the scandal.
After initially denying any knowledge of Khashoggi's fate, the kingdom gave
a new story on Saturday, saying he died in a "fistfight."
Saudi Arabia said 18 Saudis were arrested and that several top intelligence
officials were fired over the killing, but critics alleged that the
punishment was designed to absolve the crown prince, the kingdom's
heir-apparent, of any responsibility.
Turkey's foreign minister, meanwhile, said his country would cooperate with
international bodies if they were to launch an independent probe into the
Khashoggi's killing. U.S. President Donald Trump said Monday he's not
satisfied with the explanations he's heard about the killing of Khashoggi
and is awaiting reports from U.S. personnel returning from the region.
"We're going to get to the bottom of it. We have people over in Saudi Arabia
now. We have top intelligence people in Turkey. They're coming back either
tonight or tomorrow," Trump told reporters at the White House before leaving
for a political rally in Texas.
On Monday, leaked surveillance video showed a man strolling out of the
diplomatic post hours after Khashoggi disappeared into the consulate,
apparently wearing the columnist's clothes as part of a macabre deception to
sow confusion over his fate. The new video broadcast by CNN, as well as a
pro-government Turkish newspaper's report that a member of Prince Mohammed's
entourage made four calls to the royal's office from the consulate around
the same time, put more pressure on the kingdom. Turkish crime-scene
investigators swarmed a garage Monday night in Istanbul where a Saudi
consular vehicle had been parked. Saudi Arabia's foreign minister,
meanwhile, said Tuesday the investigation into the killing of Khashoggi
would produce the truth about what happened and that his country was
committed to ensuring "that the investigation is thorough and complete and
that the truth is revealed and that those responsible will be held to
account." Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir, in Indonesia, also pledged that
mechanisms will be put in place so that "something like this can never
happen again."
Bolton, in Russia for
Nuclear Talks, Meets Defence Minister
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/October 23/18/US National Security Advisor
John Bolton met Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu Tuesday during a
visit to Moscow, after President Donald Trump announced plans to withdraw
from a nuclear arms treaty. "Today, there are a large number of problems in
the world that we could solve through joint efforts," Shoigu said in
comments carried by the RIA Novosti agency. He mentioned "strategic
questions linked to nuclear deterrence as well as to the solution of major,
long-running conflicts."The minister said the first summit between Trump and
Russian President Vladimir Putin this summer had shown ties between the two
countries were gradually being reestablished. Bolton for his part said he
had been sent to Moscow with the task of "deepening and strengthening"
dialogue with Russia, in comments translated into Russian. Bolton is
expected to meet with Putin later Tuesday.
Trump sparked concern globally at the weekend by saying he wanted to
jettison the three-decade-old Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF)
signed by former US president Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev, the last
Soviet leader. Signed in 1987, the INF resolved a crisis over Soviet
nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles targeting Western capitals. In Moscow on
Monday, Bolton said the pact seemed to have run its course, accusing Russia
of violating the treaty. Russia rejects the claims and accuses Washington of
violations. US-Russia ties are under deep strain over accusations Moscow
meddled in the 2016 US presidential election. The two states are also at
odds over Russian support for Bashar al-Assad's regime in Syria's civil war,
and the conflict in Ukraine.
Mossad director warns
of Iran's expansionist aspirations
Ynetnews/October 23/18
The Islamic Republic seeks to create a 'Shiite Crescent' in the Middle East
including Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, Yossi Cohen says, cautioning of
'uncontrolled expansion' of Iranian forces in the region.
Mossad Director Yossi Cohen warned of Iranian expansionist aspirations in
the Middle East in a rare public speech on Monday. One of Israel's main
objectives, he said at a budget conference held by the Finance Ministry, "is
to push Iran out of the (rest of the) Middle East. It has a strong presence
on the Lebanese border thanks to Hezbollah; it has a strong presence on the
Syrian border. And it is establishing its status more and more inside
Iraq—both politically and militarily. Inside Iraq itself, we can see the
Iranians operating exactly as they are in other areas of the Middle East by
turning to the Shiite population."Cohen explained that the Iranian takeover
of Iraq could lead to Tehran's vision of a "Shiite Crescent" from Iran
through Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. "Creating a Shiite territorial contiguity
is possible for them," he said. The Mossad chief cautioned that "if we don't
push Iran out of the Middle East, with the help of all other countries in
the world, we'll reach a situation of uncontrolled expansion of Iranian
forces in the Middle East." In addition to gaining foothold in other
countries in the region, Iran "has considerable long-term artillery
capabilities that could cover large parts of the Middle East," Cohen warned.
He said other countries in the region share Israel's views of the Islamic
Republic, with "some even defining Iran as their central existential threat,
something the world should be aware of and deal with accordingly." The
Mossad director called on other nations to follow the US example in changing
their policy towards the expansionist Iranian regime. "President Trump and
the American State Department have written an entire new doctrine toward
Iran. In it, they take into consideration everything that needs to be done
to put Iran back in its right place in the Middle East," he said.
Iran intensifies
presence west of the Euphrates River in Syria
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Tuesday, 23 October 2018/Iranian militias
intensified their presence west of the Euphrates River in Syria, the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights has said, noting these militias’ presence in
Abu Kamal and Mayadin east of Syria near the borders with Iraq. The
observatory said these militias’ deployment is not only limited to the
military aspect but it also includes other aspects for the purpose of
evading regional and international monitoring. Iran and its militias in
Syria, numbering thousands in several areas, aim to expand their presence to
extend to social and commercial aspects. The Iranians’ deployment in east
Syria has been concentrated in main areas in Mayadin. For instance, Afghan
militias have established a kitchen that distributes meals to residents and
the displaced people. A Sharia’h school in Mayadin has been turned into a
center where Iranian and Shiite militias gather occasionally and hold
sectarian conferences and seminars.
Erdogan: 18 suspects should be tried in Istanbul over Khashoggi murder
Agencies/Tuesday, 23 October 2018/Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on
Tuesday that the 18 suspects should be tried in Istanbul over Khashoggi
murder and called for independent commission to investigate the matter.
Erdogan, who was speaking to members of his AK Party in parliament, also
said he is confident of King Salman’s cooperation in the probe and said he
does not doubt Saudi King Salman’s sincerity. He also said the whereabouts
of Khashoggi’s body were still unknown adding that there were strong signs
that the killing of Jamal Khashoggi was planned.
'Jaish-ul-Adl' Publishes Images of Abducted Iranian Soldiers
Tehran, Dubai – Asharq al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 October, 2018/A militant group
claimed responsibility for the abduction of 12 Iranian security personnel
and soldiers southeast the border with Pakistan, Iran’s semi-official news
agency ISNA reported Monday. "The terrorist group Jaish-ul-Adl has posted
two photos... claiming that those in it are the forces abducted" on October
16, AFP reported. The photo shows seven members of Iran’s Revolutionary
Guard Corps (IRGC) and 15 security personnel in their military garb.
Jaish-ul-Adl, formed in 2012, is a successor to the extremist group
Jundallah which led the bloody rebellion between 2005 and 2010. Poor
Sistan-Baluchestan province, bordering Pakistan and Afghanistan, where a
majority of Sunnis are ethnic Baluchis, has been battling clashes between
regime forces and Baloch separatists or militant groups, according to AFP.
The Sunni Baloch minority accounts for about 2 percent of Iran's population.
The photos also show a haul of automatic weapons and sniper rifles, rocket
launchers, machine-guns, grenades and ammunition, apparently seized from the
Iranian forces. IRGC Ground Force Commander, Brigadier General Mohammad
Pakpour, left for Pakistan on Monday to pursue the case of the kidnapped
Iranians, according to an IRGC statement. Meanwhile, Iranian Oil Ministry
quoted Minister Bijan Zanganeh as saying that Iranian oil output cannot be
replaced by other oil-producing countries if Tehran is hit by US sanctions
in November, Reuters published in a report from Dubai.“As I have repeatedly
said there is no replacement for Iranian oil in the market,” said Zanganeh.
In May, US President Donald Trump pulled out of an international nuclear
deal with Iran and announced sanctions against OPEC’s third-largest
producer. Washington is pushing allies to cut imports of Iranian oil to zero
and will reimpose sanctions on Iranian oil and financial sectors in
November. In June, OPEC agreed to boost supply to make up for the expected
disruption to Iranian exports. But Iran has repeatedly said that its oil
exports cannot be reduced to zero because of high demand levels in the
market. “The market’s knowledge of this inability has raised the prices as
the average price (of crude) ... Rising oil prices have slowed down the
economic growth of most of the consumer countries, which is affecting the
global economy,” Oil Minister noted. Zanganeh advised Trump “to forgo
imposition of sanctions on Iran’s oil exports”, saying that the non-OPEC
producers of oil were also unable “to offset disruptions in the market”. US
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, in an interview with Reuters on Sunday,
dismissed concerns that oil prices could rise, saying the market had already
factored in the losses.
Iran warned that if it cannot sell its oil due to US pressure, then no other
regional country will be allowed to do so either, threatening to block the
Strait of Hormuz, as referred by Reuters.
Under the 2015 nuclear deal, most international sanctions against Tehran
were lifted in 2016 in exchange for Iran curbing its nuclear program.
Iran Intensifies Militia Presence West of Euphrates
London- Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 October, 2018/Iranian
militias have intensified their presence west of the Euphrates River in
Syria, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said, noting these
militias’ presence in al-Bokamal and al-Mayadin east of Syria near the
borders with Iraq. Backed by the US-led coalition against ISIS, Arab-Kurdish
Syrian Democratic Forces are in control of areas east of Euphrates River, a
third of Syria's 185,000 square kilometers area. The Observatory said these
militias’ deployment is not only limited to the military aspect but it also
includes other aspects for the purpose of evading regional and international
monitoring. The sources confirmed that the Iranian forces and militias have
intensified their presence in two main areas, Bokamal and Mayadin, where
they constitute important areas for the Iranians. Battles to take control of
Bokamal had been led by Iranian General Qasim Soleimani, as reliable sources
confirmed to the Observatory that the Iranian Forces control the way of life
within “Bokamal and the security and economic aspects within the city as
well, not to mention their control of the military aspect and the leadership
of forces located at this place. SOHR indicated it monitored Iranians’
positioning at key points in Mayadin area to the west of Bokamal, which is
represented by an Afghani charitable kitchen where Iranian-backed Afghani
militias prepare and distribute meals to the people and the displaced
people. Sharia Secondary School of Mayadin city has been transformed into an
affiliation center for the Iranian and Shiite militias and it sometimes
hosts Shiite-related symposia and conferences. Iranian forces and Asian
gunmen are located in Hawi area as reliable sources confirmed that the
“Iranians set up a shrine in Nabe’ Ayn Ali, which is located between Mayadin
and Mahkan.”
“Iranian Forces are deployed in the area between the sheep market and al-Rahba
castle in Mayadin, where there are military forces preventing the entry and
exit of any non-Iranian whether a civilian or military, amid heavy guarding
and permanent flight of drones over the area,” indicated SOHR. The
Observatory also indicated Iranian forces were present in the countryside of
Salamiyah city at Hama eastern countryside, in training centers and
affiliation centers in al-Sabbura and other areas of the countryside of
Hama. Earlier, the Observatory published that Israeli forces resumed strikes
targeting certain Iranian sites and other sites under their command as well
as sites of Lebanese Hezbollah. It monitored air and missile strikes in the
vicinity of Damascus International Airport as well as a support center of
the Iranian Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) near Neirab airbase at the eastern
outskirts of Aleppo city. Israeli airstrikes have caused significant
casualties in the ranks of the Iranian Forces and their loyal militias,
according to the Observatory which documented the death of over 113 of the
Iranian Forces and their affiliated forces. At least 28 members of the
regime forces and militiamen were killed in explosions at Hama airbase west
of Hama city, indicated the Observatory. Reliable sources informed the
Observatory that the number of Iranian Forces and their affiliated militias
of Lebanese, Iraqi, Afghan, Iranian and Asian nationalities is estimated to
be more than 32000 fighters. SOHR documented that at least 8100 members of
the non-Syrians are mostly fighting under the umbrella of IRGC and their
Afghani, Iraqi, and Asian militias, in addition to 1670 members of Lebanese
Hezbollah.
Jordanian King Receives US Treasury Secretary
Amman- Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 October, 2018/Jordan’s King Abdullah
received on Monday US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin at al-Husseiniya
Palace. The meeting focused on economic cooperation between Jordan and the
United States and means of strengthening them, the German news agency (DPA)
reported. King Abdullah stressed the importance of the bilateral strategic
relations, according to Petra news agency. Mnuchin, for his part, emphasized
the importance of the role played by Jordan in achieving regional security
and stability and hosting Syrian refugees. He pointed out that the US will
continue to support Jordan in various fields. The meeting tackled economic
challenges faced by the Kingdom as a result of the regional crises and
economic plans and programs aimed at stimulating growth rates, creating jobs
and enhancing the ability of the Jordanian economy to deal with various
challenges. It also touched on the great burdens borne by Jordan due to the
crisis of Syrian asylum and the increasing pressure inflicted by the crisis
on the service sectors and infrastructure, DPA said.
Jordan Abandons Part of Peace Agreement With Israel
Tel Aviv- Nazir Majli/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 October, 2018/Jordan's
King Abdullah II on Sunday said he has decided not to renew parts of his
country's landmark peace treaty with Israel. Abdullah released a statement
that he intends to pull out of two annexes from the 1994 peace agreement
that allowed Israel to lease two small areas, Baqura and Ghamr, from the
Jordanians for 25 years. The leases expire next year, and the deadline for
renewing them is Thursday. Abdullah said he informed Israel of his decision.
"We are practicing our full sovereignty on our land," he said. "Our priority
in these regional circumstances is to protect our interests and do whatever
is required for Jordan and the Jordanians." The Israelis received the king's
statement with great shock. They considered it a move that drew the
attention of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the political
demands and interest of Jordan. The lands were leased to Jewish farmers
early last century, but then became part of Jordan after the kingdom gained
independence in 1946. A member of the Israeli opposition said that the
king’s statements revealed a serious crisis between him and the Israeli PM.
He added that if the prime minister was Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres or even
Ehud Olmert, Jordan wouldn’t have reached this level of firmness against the
policy of Israel. Netanyahu said he expected to enter negotiations with
Jordan "about the possibility of extending the existing agreement". Zeev
Elkin, a member of the Knesset for Likud and a minister of Jerusalem affairs
and minister of environmental protection, said that Jordan's King Abdullah
II decided not to renew the leasing agreement with Israel due to internal
pressures practiced by those who have been objecting over peace deals
between the two countries since long.
The minister stated that he doesn’t fear the future of agreements, saying
that both Jordan and Israel benefit from them. He added that Israel will
negotiate with the kingdom on the possibility of extending leasing duration.
The Israeli ministry of foreign affairs expressed frustration in the
announcement but hoped that the dispute might be resolved by next year
through negotiations with Jordan.
Grand Imam of Al-Azhar: Muslims Are Actual Terrorism
Victims
Cairo- Waleed AbdurrahmanAsharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 October, 2018/Al-Azhar's
Grand Imam Dr. Ahmed al-Tayeb said Monday that despite Muslims being
described “by brutality and violence….they are only victims of terrorism,”
explaining that the reasons behind terrorism are not Islam or any other
religion, but global regimes that trade religions, and morals for power.
During his speech in the opening of the Al-Azhar’s international symposium
under the theme “Islam and the West: Diversity and Integration,” Tayeb added
that the eastern civilization respects religion and science regardless of
their source. Tayeb continued that the terrible silence on terrorism enabled
armed political movements to link Islam to other terrorist crimes. In his
speech before the attendees, Belgian former Prime Minister Yves Leterme said
that the West knows that Islam is devoted to democracy and equality,
stressing the importance of dialogue to achieve its goals. Former president
of Montenegro Filip Vujanovic stated that the Islamic culture is based on
rejecting violence and on respecting others. Archbishop of Canterbury Justin
Welby said that believers will work devotedly to lay a common ground through
which risks can be faced and peace attained. The three-day seminar, held at
Al-Azhar Conference Center, will discuss a number of topics related to Islam
and Europe, including tension between Muslims and others in Europe.
Adel Abdul Mahdi Mission in Iraq Parliament Complicated
Baghdad - Hamza MustafaAsharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 October, 2018/Prime
minister-designate Adel Abdul Mahdi is facing a similar scenario to that of
electing president Barham Salih when a huge number of blocs’ deputies
revolted over their leaders, a matter that fell in favor of Salih against
his rival Fuad Hussein, the candidate of Kurdistan Democratic Party.
Mohammed al-Khalidi, head of Tomouh bloc, stated to Asharq Al-Awsat
newspaper that the deputies didn’t receive until this moment any curriculum
vitae of ministers to be voted on and studied. He added that they didn’t
even receive the government's program on which confidence is granted through
voting, which is a matter of great importance. On whether the government
will garner the votes when presented in front of the parliament, Khalidi
said that he expects so but not easily despite the presence of two huge
blocs supporting the prime minister-designate which are: Alliance Towards
Reforms and Fatah Alliance. In the same context, MP Ahmed al-Jabouri
affirmed that Alliance Towards Reforms and Fatah Alliance nominated Adel
Abdul Mahdi and obliged him not to approve any minister or deputy from them
even if successful. Siham al-Moussawi, an MP of the Fatah Alliance, stated
that this government won’t see the light easily in case secret deals or
intentions were imposed. Aliya Nassif, a member of the National Iraqi
Alliance, said that not nominating the members of the parliament to take
part in the executive authority is a humiliation of the Iraqi people
representatives.
Canada/Conservative justice critic Tony Clement says
Canada should use Magnitsky Act sanctions in Khashoggi case
The Canadian Press/October 23/18
OTTAWA — Canada should invoke the new Magnitsky Act to sanction those
responsible for the killing of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi,
the official Opposition said Monday. Conservative justice critic Tony
Clement says that Saudi Arabia has already identified some individuals who
were partially responsible for Khashoggi's death, adding that the Magnitsky
law is a next step the government should consider. "This may be a prime case
for applying the Magnitsky law," said Clement. Last year, Canada
passed the Justice for Victims of Corrupt Foreign Officials Act, known as
the Magnitsky Act, which gives the government the authority to freeze
Canadian assets of foreign individuals who are found to have violated human
rights. Clement's comments follow the same urging by NDP foreign affairs
critic Helene Laverdiere, as well as a similar bipartisan demand in the U.S.
Congress.
Laverdiere said the NDP hopes there will be a United Nations investigation
into Khashoggi's death. "When those responsible are identified, will the
government be prepared to enforce the Magnitsky law?" Laverdiere said in
question period last week.
Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
condemned the murder of Khashoggi on Monday, saying the various Saudi
explanations for his death lacked credibility and consistency. The
government has not yet offered a concrete response on whether it will
consider using the Magnitsky law in this case, saying it's consulting
Canada's allies on this issue. Canada's version of the Magnitsky law
is based on the Global Magnitsky Act, a bill passed in 2016 that allows the
U.S. to sanction foreign human rights violators.
Two weeks ago, long before Saudi Arabia acknowledged its role in Khashoggi's
death, a bipartisan group of Democratic and Republican senators from the
Committee on Foreign Relations wrote to President Donald Trump calling for
sanctions under the act, automatically triggering a requirement that the
president launch an investigation and decide within 120 days whether to take
action. "The recent disappearance of Saudi journalist and Washington Post
columnist Jamal Khashoggi suggests that he could be a victim of a gross
violation of internationally recognized human rights," reads the letter,
signed by a number of prominent Republican and Democratic U.S. lawmakers,
including Tennessee Republican Sen. Bob Corker and South Carolina Republican
Sen. Lindsay Graham, a close congressional ally of the president.
"We request that you make a determination on the imposition of sanctions
pursuant to the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act with
respect to any foreign person responsible for such a violation related to
Mr. Khashoggi."Named for whistleblower Sergei Magnitsky, who was beaten and
denied medical care before his death in Russian custody in 2009, the 2016
law expanded on an earlier version designed exclusively to target Russian
officials. Freeland said she has spoken with her counterparts from Germany
and Turkey in recent days, and is actively engaged with Canada's allies in a
crafting a joint response. "We are working together to press for a
transparent and credible investigation and we are very clear that there must
be an accounting for this murder; those responsible must be brought to
justice and must face the consequences," Freeland told reporters Monday in
Ottawa.
Clement acknowledged Freeland's position, which also came in a written
statement on Saturday, and said the government needs to do its "diligence on
this.""If you want a next step that has been sanctioned by Parliament, our
Parliament, the Magnitsky law...could be something that should be looked
at," said Clement. During a press conference with a visiting Mexican
delegation, Freeland declined to answer questions about whether the
government is considering scrapping the lucrative $15-billion contract to
provide Ontario-made light armoured vehicles Saudi Arabia.
"We have frozen export permits before when we had concerns about their
potential misuse, and we will not hesitate to do so again," Trudeau said
later in the House of Commons. Trudeau also convened a meeting of the
government's new the Incident Response Group, which includes cabinet
ministers and senior government officials, to discuss the Khashoggi affair.
Khashoggi disappeared on Oct. 2 after entering the Saudi consulate in
Istanbul to get paperwork he needed to marry his Turkish fiancee.Turkish
officials say he was tortured, killed and dismembered at the diplomatic
outpost.
"Canada is very mindful of the fact that this murder occurred in Turkey and
it's very important for Turkey to be a part of the conversation," said
Freeland.— with files from James McCarten in Washington/Janice Dickson, The
Canadian Press
Israel Tells Churches It Does Not Seek to Seize Lands
An Israeli cabinet minister on Tuesday assured major churches in Jerusalem
that Israel is not seeking to expropriate their properties. A government
statement said Regional Cooperation Minister Tzachi Hanegbi met leaders of
the Armenian, Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches in response to a
letter they sent last week to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In
it, the churchmen called on Netanyahu to block draft legislation they said
was aimed at expropriating their property. "The government of Israel has no
intention to confiscate church lands or to cause any economic damage to the
churches," the English-language foreign ministry statement quoted Hanegbi as
telling them at Tuesday's meeting. "The goal of
the government is to protect the rights of churches, of investors and of
tenants," he said. Swathes of Jerusalem are held by various churches, in
many cases under long-term leases from the state. In some cases the churches
then sublet the properties on the commercial market.
Israel's parliament is working on a law that would allow the state to
intervene in the resale of residential property leases to commercial
property developers. The religious leaders protested by closing the Church
of the Holy Sepulcher, the site in Jerusalem where Jesus is believed to have
been crucified and buried. Israeli authorities
then froze the legislation, committing to a dialogue with the churches.
The churches appealed to Netanyahu when the draft bill was placed on
the agenda for an October 21 meeting of a government committee on pending
legislation. "We the heads of churches in the Holy Land find ourselves
compelled to approach you," they wrote. "We were
astonished to realize that this disgraceful bill was listed on the agenda of
the ministerial committee for legislation," they said. The discussion was
subsequently postponed for a week.
Listed as a bill for tenants' rights, the draft aims to safeguard residents
of properties assigned to "various bodies" on 99-year leases during the
1950s. It does not specifically mention church holdings. The bill's sponsor,
MP Rachel Azaria of the centrist Kulanu party says it was meant to solve the
problem of "thousands of Jerusalem residents who could lose their homes due
to the demands of developers.""Minister Hanegbi reiterated that the
Christian community is extremely important to the state of Israel,"
Tuesday's statement said. "Throughout the process the government will take
all measures necessary to protect the rights of churches every step of the
way," it added. "Minister Hanegbi also stated that this is not a
church-specific issue."
Torture in Palestinian Jails 'Systematic', Says HRW
The Palestinian security forces "systematically" abuse and torture prisoners
in what could amount to crimes against humanity, Human Rights Watch said
Tuesday. The rival authorities of the Palestinian Authority and Hamas both
used threats, arbitrary arrests and violent abuse against detainees, said
the New York-based group. The report is likely to put pressure on
governments that fund the PA's forces, including the United States, which
has maintained security funding despite cutting aid to the Palestinians.
Omar Shakir, HRW's Israel-Palestine director, said the actions by both sides
amounted to potential war crimes that could be prosecuted in the
International Criminal Court. "Both the Palestinian Authority in the West
Bank and Hamas authorities in Gaza are systematically, arbitrarily detaining
critics and torturing those in custody," he told AFP. "Systematic torture as
part of a government policy is a crime against humanity."
He said the allegations undermined Palestinian criticism of Israeli rights
abuses. "You have Palestinian leaders going around the world speaking about
Palestinian rights at the same time as they are directing a machinery of
oppression to crush dissent," he told AFP. The PA rejected the allegations,
accusing Human Rights Watch of allying with the US government. Hamas did not
respond. The Palestinian territories have been split between rival
administrations since Hamas seized the Gaza Strip in a near civil war in
2007.
In its report, HRW said both sides particularly focused on those allegedly
affiliated with the rival faction. Methods employed by the Palestinian
Authority included beatings, electric shocks and stress positions. On one
occasion PA security forces tied a cord around a detainee's penis for eight
hours, causing it to swell and turn blue, HRW said.
- 'Really serious abuses' -Sami al-Sai, a journalist, was arrested in
2017 on suspicion of relations with Hamas. The 39-year-old was beaten, had
threats made about his family and hanged from a ceiling by handcuffs. He
eventually pleaded guilty to various charges including "creating sectarian
strife" and was jailed for three months. "Every day I expect that they will
rearrest me, and torture me again, but they can't do anything more than they
did." In Gaza, Hamas also beat and systematically abused prisoners. A
Western diplomat said the report was alarming, without suggesting what
action could be taken in response. The United States under Donald Trump has
cut around $500 million in aid to Palestinians this year, but continued to
provide roughly $50 million a year for security coordination with Israel.
"It is noteworthy that at a time when the United States has cut funding for
UNRWA, which provides vital health and education services to Palestinians
and to hospitals in east Jerusalem, the only source of funding remaining is
to security coordination (and) to security forces that are involved in
really serious abuses," Shakir said. He called on Western states to
temporarily suspend funding to the PA security forces. Haitham Arar, head of
human rights at the PA's interior ministry, said the government "rejected
everything in the Human Rights Watch report".
"The report confuses politics and human rights and is consistent with the
(US) Deal of the Century with the aim of weakening the PA," Arar said,
referring to Trump's long-delayed peace plan that Palestinians fear will be
biased towards Israel. HRW said the report was the result of two years of
research and nearly 150 interviews.
The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials
from miscellaneous sources published on October 22-23/18
Iran’s gains in
the Khashoggi crisis
Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/October 23/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/68346/%D8%B9%D8%A8%D8%AF-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B1%D8%AD%D9%85%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B1%D8%A7%D8%B4%D8%AF-%D9%85%D9%83%D8%A7%D8%B3%D8%A8-%D8%A5%D9%8A%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86-%D9%81%D9%8A-%D8%A3%D8%B2%D9%85%D8%A9-%D8%AE/
Ever since the crisis of Jamal Khashoggi’s
murder erupted, Iran has avoided commenting and taking official position
even though its media outlets turned the incident into a daily material,
which millions watch over dinner on the state television.
Tehran’s comment was we prefer to wait and see and the Iranians’ response
toward Saudi Arabia was not like the Turks’, hostile, but they left the door
slightly open. Does cornering Saudi Arabia serve Iran? Of course, especially
that the decisions pertaining to dangerous sanctions against Iran, by
boycotting its oil and prohibiting it from making bank transactions using
the dollar, will be implemented in less than two weeks. In Tehran, the
crisis and the Turkish attack on Saudi Arabia is a gift from above, and they
are praying to God it will grant them one of three wishes. The first one is
for Washington to back down on its siege of Iran out of the belief that it’s
difficult to manage the battle and make it succeed in the current tense
circumstances. The alternative wish is for Riyadh to give up supporting the
Trump administration’s project to confront Iran; hence, giving it up and
letting it fail automatically. The third one is for the crisis to change the
balance of regional powers while weakening the Saudi front. Therefore, even
if Iran continues to be besieged, it can resume its project of regional
domination, in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen, and this will eventually
force the Americans to deal with the Khamenei regime.
For Riyadh, the relation with the US is strategic regardless of any weakness
or disputes of which the most recent were the September 11, 2001 attacks and
the Saudis’ rejection to cooperate with the American invasion in Iraq and
which granted Iran a huge opportunity to be an important party and developed
ties between Tehran and Washington at Riyadh’s expense back then. Tehran may
have a desire to fix the relation with the Saudis for reasons that have
nothing to do with the Khashoggi crisis
Storm in a teacup
What Saudi Arabia is passing through now is a storm in a cup because the two
countries’ higher interests are bigger than what’s being written and
broadcast. The Iranians have shown high skills in dealing with crises as
they see that Saudi Arabia has been put in a very critical corner and at the
same time they know that it will be out of it later so they want to make
gains by employing the crisis in a way that’s different than the Turks’, by
either getting closer to Washington or getting closer to Riyadh. What are
the chances of Riyadh’s openness toward Iran? As I have said earlier, the
relation with Washington is strategic while there is zero confidence in Iran
as a peaceful neighbor. However, the margin of maneuver is always available
without jumping over higher interests. Tehran may have a desire to fix the
relation with the Saudis for reasons that have nothing to do with the
Khashoggi crisis as Tehran realized that at the time when it wanted to gain
Syria it became threatened of losing Iraq as shown by the results of the
recent elections. Despite its harshness and costs, the war in Yemen did not
grant Tehran what it attained from Hamas in Gaza or Hezbollah in South
Lebanon. If the Iranians want a solution in Yemen, then maybe this is the
right time without even expecting to get half a victory. Their Houthi ally
may enjoy some sort of partnership in the project of the promised solution
in Yemen.
Usually in politics, crises create opportunities. The besieged Iran knows
that and it has previously benefitted from Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait by
getting closer to Saudi Arabia; however, Saudi Arabia’s ordeal is temporary
and its validity period is limited.
Is the US plan to withdraw from INF treaty ill-advised?
C. Uday Bhaskar/Al Arabiya/October 23/18
The INF (Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces) Treaty signed on December 8,
1987 in Washington by then US President Ronald Reagan and his Soviet
counterpart Mikhail Gorbachev was hailed as a landmark arms control
agreement.
It paved the way for stepping back from global nuclear Armageddon and
enabled the subsequent peaceful implosion of the Soviet Union – which soon
became “former” and consigned to history books. This treaty is to be
scrapped by the Trump led US administration.
The American withdrawal from the INFT (INF Treaty) is expected to be
announced this week by the US National Security Adviser John Bolton when he
visits Moscow. It may be recalled that Mr. Bolton has been a staunch critic
of the INFT in particular and arms control agreements in general. He has
been a visible critic of the Obama-led Iran nuclear deal and had long
recommended a “muscular” approach to North Korea over its WMD (weapons of
mass destruction) and to that extent this development is not a surprise.
The INFT in essence is a bi-lateral treaty arrived at during the height of
the Cold War by the US and the USSR, when both sides were amassing nuclear
weapons and forbade either side from deploying land-based intermediate range
(500 to 5500 km) nuclear tipped missiles.
More sagacious leadership would suggest that the US and Russia review and
improve current INFT to redress bilateral anxieties, as also encourage
compliance by other members of the uneasy nuclear cluster
Strategic step
This was a tentative but huge strategic step towards arms reduction and in
the first instance, it ensured the safety of Europe, which till then was the
most likely theatre for thee exchange of nuclear weapons.
It was an anomalous situation that prevailed at the time, when to ensure
each other’s “security”, the US and Soviet military commanders were planning
for an exigency that would have reduced Germany and large parts of central
Europe to atomic rubble. Millions of citizens would have perished in a
manner more apocalyptic than Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The US decision to withdraw from the INFT follows an earlier decision taken
by the Bush administration in 2002 when Washington unilaterally pulled out
of the bi-lateral ABM (anti-ballistic missile) Treaty and this allowed
Washington to pursue missile defense in a more robust manner.
At the time there was considerable global anxiety about improving defensive
measures against missiles as an offensive weapon and the post 9/11
“insecurity” ambiance heightened the ‘rogue’ element after the enormity of
the Twin Tower attack.
In the current instance, the US has charged Moscow with violation of the
INFT. It is alleged by Washington that Russia is acquiring a new
medium-range missile called the Novator 9M729 (what NATO refers to as SSC-8)
and that this would place American allies in Europe under threat.
Concurrently there is anxiety in the Bolton camp that the INFT as it is
currently framed is purely bi-lateral and that it does not prohibit
countries like China and India from acquiring such a capability – thereby
placing the US at a disadvantage.
While these may be factually correct, the policy inference that American
security is better ensured and protected in the long term by withdrawing
from the INF Treaty is flawed on two counts.
As President Gorbachev had then asserted, given the techno-strategic
characteristics of WMD, global security in the late 20th century had become
“indivisible”; and the only reasonably assured path to a modicum of credible
security was by strengthening the cooperative approach, wherein verifiable
arms reduction was a central pillar. The conclusion of the INFT in December
1987 was a prime example of such cooperation.
End of Cold War
By end 1991, when the Cold War ended – without a shot being fired or a
missile launched – the success of the INF was evident. Almost 2700 nuclear
tipped medium range missiles had been dismantled in a verifiable manner and
both Europe and the US had become a tad safer.
Fast forward to 2018. If the US needs to credibly defend itself from a
Russian or Chinese threat posed by a missile that comes under the INF
category – objective cost-benefit analysis would recommend improving the
existing treaty provisions and holding Moscow’s feet to the fire for
transgression.
Paradoxically Europe which is directly affected by the INF missiles (not the
mainland of the US) has not reacted to Moscow’s opaque missile violations in
the same manner. Germany has actually urged the US to review its decision
for the adverse impact this would have on European security and the very
fragile global nuclear disarmament effort. The latter objective is as
desirable as it is tenuous in the wake of the Trump triggered turbulence.
Medium range missiles – particularly the cruise variant with a nuclear
warhead are inherently de-stabilizing and it is imperative that there be
global consensus on the subject. The number of nations that have either
acquired this capability or plan to do so is increasing and now includes the
nuclear nine – that is the first five (US, Russia, UK, France and China);
the second generation (India and Pakistan); and the gray nuclear powers,
Israel and North Korea.
More sagacious leadership would suggest that the US and Russia review and
improve the current INFT to redress bi-lateral anxieties, as also encourage
compliance by the other members of the uneasy global nuclear cluster.
Policy petulance in matters nuclear couched in questionable certitude augurs
ill for global stability. Will John Bolton find a persuasive interlocutor in
Moscow – one who can interpret the INF Treaty as a larger global umbrella
and not the brittle bi-lateral that it is being made out to be? Or is this
part of the inflexible Trump determination to kill all Obama related
policies?
Mission not accomplished: Perfect UN response to departing Nikki Haley
Ramzy Baroud/Al Arabiya/October 23/18
Whether previously calculated or coincidental, United States Ambassador to
the United Nations, Nikki Haley, just received a confirmation of her
astounding failure at the UN, only days after she pompously detailed her
‘achievements.’On Tuesday, October 16, the UN General Assembly elevated the
Palestinian membership at the UN body with a particular honor: heading the
G77 of developed countries, and acting like a full member in meetings to be
held in 2019. This was not the plan for Haley nor for Israel. For the last
two years, Haley, along with Israeli Ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon,
plotted to ‘punish’ Palestinians at the UN, to disrupt the workings of the
General Assembly, to sway the Security Council using all means available, in
favor of Israel, and to financially boycott smaller UN bodies for supporting
Palestinian rights. Haley, who had recently announced news of her intended
resignation from her post by the end of this year, listed Israel as one of
her three main achievements during her relatively short stint. Haley’s
achievements, according to her own recounting, were: making the US more
respected, saving her country a lot of money and strongly defending Israel
against UN “bias.” “All of those things have made a huge difference in the
US standing,” she proclaimed. “The US is strong again. And the US is strong
in a way that should make all Americans very proud.” But is there any truth
to Haley’s own assessment to her performance? Judging by Palestine’s new
status, it seems that Haley’s perception of “anti-Israeli bias” was, in
fact, accentuated more in her term at the UN than ever before. As for the
supposedly newfound ‘respect’, let’s examine the evidence: During his speech
before the General Assembly on September 25, Trump’s preposterous claims of
having “accomplished more than almost any ... in the history of our
country”, were not met with thundering applause but humiliating
laughter.Palestinians are definitely relieved to see Haley depart her post
at the UN, but they would be truly reassured when they see an international
community that is capable of enforcing international law
Growing contempt
In fact, that single incident epitomizes the increasing contempt and lack of
respect for the US among its peers. However, there is no question that Haley
was ideally suited as Trump’s representative to the international community.
Her aggressive and self-aggrandizing language tallies with the political
discourse emanating from the White House. That aside, considering the
violations of human rights committed by Israel during Haley’s time at the
UN, her relentless defense of Israel is no laughing matter. Haley’s supposed
“achievements” of saving money and supporting Israel are intrinsically
linked. Indeed, the US saved $1.3 billion – as she claimed – by cutting off
funds to organizations that were critical of Israel or supportive of the
Palestinian people.
The UN Palestine refugee’s agency, UNRWA, suffered the most thus far from
the joint US-Israeli attempts at disrupting, and eventually ending the
important role played by this organization.
US government’s decision to slash funds provided to an agency that cares for
millions of Palestinian refugees is part of the new American-Israeli
strategy aimed at redefining the rules of the game altogether.
UNRWA is now experiencing its worst financial crisis yet. The gap in its
budget is estimated at around $217 million and is rapidly increasing as the
US has withheld all $350 million it provided annually to the organization.
The impact of this callous decision by the US is already reverberating in
many refugee camps across the region. Recently, UNRWA has downgraded some of
its services, forcing it to lay off many teachers and reduce staff and
working hours at various clinics. Moreover, for the second month in a row,
UNRWA has cut 40 percent of its employees’ salaries. Expectedly, Israel is
the brains behind the joint operation of targeting UNRWA. “It is time to
remove UNRWA from Jerusalem,” said the Israeli mayor of Jerusalem, Nir
Barkat, early October.
Without any evidence, Barkat claimed that “UNRWA is strengthening terror”
and that “the children of Jerusalem are taught under their auspices, terror,
and this must be stopped.” The targeting of UNRWA is part of an ongoing
Israeli plan to isolate Palestinians completely, thus, strengthening their
ties to the international community. Although Haley, Danon and others
attempted to achieve such an elaborate plan at the UN, so far, they have not
been successful. This is an important fact, considering that no US
ambassador to the UN has been as aggressive and determined in her support of
Israel has Haley has been.
Isolated Israel
Yet, the fact that she has failed to dissuade the UN from supporting
Palestine and condemning Israel should speak volumes about how isolated
Israel remains in the international community.
For a while, it appeared that Nikki Haley was Israel’s conquering hero.
Eager to reassure Israel that it has not been abandoned – following a
December 2016 UNSC vote criticizing illegal Israeli settlements, Haley
launched her pro-Israel campaign at the annual policy conference of the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) in March 2017, using
outlandish and tactless rhetoric.
“There’s a new sheriff in town,” she announced before nearly 18,000
conference attendees, intoxicated with excitement. “I wear heels. It’s not
for a fashion statement,” she declared. “It’s because if I see something
wrong, we’re going to kick ’em every single time.”
Haley was true to her words. She tried to manage the UN from within –
rewarding and punishing as she saw fit – to end what she wrongly perceived
as the organization’s systematic targeting of Israel.
On a visit to Israel in June 2017, she accused the UN in a press conference
held jointly with Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, of ‘bullying’
Israel. “If there’s anything I have no patience for, it’s bullies – and the
UN was being such a bully to Israel because they could,” she said.
In December 2017, the self-proclaimed anti-bullying diplomat threatened
those who voted in favor of an Egypt-sponsored draft resolution that
expressed “deep regret at recent decisions concerning the status of
Jerusalem.” She vetoed the draft which was supported by all other members of
the Security Council, calling the vote an 'insult' that would not be
forgotten.
On May 14, Israeli snipers opened fire at unarmed protesters at the fence
separating besieged Gaza from Israel, killing more than 60 and injuring
thousands. Haley was the only member of the Security Council who could not
comprehend the international outrage over one of the worst Israeli massacres
in years.
“No country in this chamber would act with more restraint than Israel has,”
she told the other ambassadors. While Haley was duly criticized by
Palestinians for impeding international law, she was enthusiastically
celebrated by Israel and its friends in Washington for being a “true friend
of Israel.”
It is important, however, that we do not reduce the discussion of the US
support of Israel at the UN, or the ongoing targeting of UNRWA, among other
UN bodies to Haley, Danon and their botched intrigues. For the international
community to show true support for Palestinians, they must also fight
against Israeli attempts at isolating Palestinians on the ground. Yes,
honoring Palestine with the role of heading the G77 is useful, at least on a
symbolic level, but far more substantial is safeguarding the Right of Return
for Palestinian refugees and ensuring that UNRWA continues with its
historical mission.
Palestinians are definitely relieved to see Haley depart her post at the UN,
but they would be truly reassured when they see an international community
that is capable of enforcing international law.
Khashoggi and another incitement campaign against Saudi
Arabia
Mamdouh AlMuhaini/Al Arabiya/October 23/18
Saudi Arabia announced the details of the unfortunate incident of the murder
of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. The country took strong measures including
relieving some from their positions, arresting those involved, beginning
investigations and rectifying the structure and functioning of the
intelligence apparatus.
Despite that, the media campaign against the country did not calm down – as
expected – because the purpose is Saudi Arabia itself and not punishing the
wrongdoers and those who caused the crime. It is certain that if Saudi
Arabia issues dozens of other statements, they will be met with more doubts
and refusal.
It’s in the interest of Saudi Arabia’s enemies to reject and refuse the
facts to create a state of suspicion and paranoia in order to resume the
campaign in the name of Khashoggi, whose name is being exploited every
minute by those that claim to defend him but actually intend to shake the
image of Saudi Arabia in front of the world over a crime committed by rogue
individuals.It was a tremendous mistake, as Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir
said in his interview with Fox News. No such mistake has happened during 80
years of the history of Saudi Arabia, which did not pursue well-known
opposition figures. On the contrary, they get their space via satellite
channels and on the internet and continue to insult and incite. Saudi
Arabia’s political doctrine performs the more important work, which is
maintaining the region’s stability by confronting terrorist elements and
organizations like al-Qaeda, Hezbollah and the Houthis or rogue regimes like
Iran, which are based on the ideology of assassinations and silencing
opposition voices with bullets and booby-trapped cars. Saudi Arabia is
engaged in an open war on the ground, and in the media sphere, with these
parties, and this is what has made the country the biggest target of these
groups.
This is another attempt to stain Saudi Arabia’s image and blackmail it.
Saudi Arabia has overcome bigger crises such as the September 11 events, and
this crisis will inevitably pass
Ideological level
On an ideological level, Saudi Arabia fights extremist ideas and dark
doctrines like those the Muslim Brotherhood promotes. We still remember
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s famous statement: “We will destroy
extremist ideas today and immediately” and which transformed into a work
program on the ground. The state that fights dangerous mix of extremist
organizations and rogue regimes does not commit the same practices.
Therefore, it’s no coincidence that all these formed one team and exploited
the Khashoggi case from the first hour as the target is Riyadh, their
biggest and strongest enemy.
There’s more than one motive in the media around the Khashoggi case. There
is a rightful motive, which is to know the details of what happened, and
this is everyone’s request including Saudi Arabia itself. Secrecy by those
involved at the beginning and covering up made the matter more mysterious
and complicated. Revealing facts publicly before the world is the right way
and this is what happened. However, in addition to this rightful demand,
there are other voices. We are aware that their purpose is incitement and
the spiteful desire to destroy and distort and not seek the truth. As we
see, there is a clear alliance of these voices in the east and west, and
they are enemies with no masks.
Brotherhood everywhere
The media of Doha regime, which supports terrorist organizations like al-Nusra,
Hezbollah and Brotherhood, launched an attack in alliance with the Muslim
Brotherhood everywhere. Even al-Qaeda members like its preacher Majed al-Rashed
are appealing to President Trump via Twitter to punish Saudi Arabia.
The hostility of terrorist groups and organizations and their financers
toward Saudi Arabia is well known. This is why the rare case of the murder
of a Saudi citizen is being exploited and taken outside its criminal, legal
and humanitarian context to transform into a political crime.
Allied with them in the west are those who hate the Saudi state for several
reasons of which the most prominent is the kingdom’s strong stance toward
Iran, which they enthusiastically defend while forgetting the bodies of
children and the horrific massacres Iran is committing in Iraq and Syria and
which thousands have fallen victims to. There is hypocrisy and moral double
standard as there are demands for revenge and penalties over a crime
committed by rogue individuals – who have been detained and will be tried
and punished – at a time when the Iranian regime, which is publicly
committing crimes in Syria under the pretext of protecting holy shrines, is
not being criticized. This is another attempt to stain Saudi Arabia’s image
and blackmail it. Saudi Arabia has overcome bigger crises such as the
September 11 events, and this crisis will inevitably pass and the country
will resume its approach of fighting extremist regimes in Doha and Tehran.
These regimes have found opportunity in an isolated incident to accuse the
Saudi state of something that is actually one of their very own political
principles.
Analysis/Like a Mafia Boss, Erdogan Plans to Milk the
Khashoggi Investigation for All It’s Worth
Anshel Pfeffer/Haaretz/October 23/18
The Turkish president may have only revealed a couple of new pieces of
information in his speech, but the underlying message of his new-found power
over a Middle East rival was clear
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is the leader of a government that
has jailed more journalists than any other in the world. Yet he opened the
section of his speech devoted to the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal
Khashoggi with condolences not just to his family and friends, but to the
“media world” as well. Interestingly, he said nothing on Tuesday about
Khashoggi’s work as a journalist, his criticism of the Saudi leadership and
his support for a brand of political Islam similar to the one Erdogan
himself has championed. Erdogan didn’t show much emotion or outrage and,
despite promising the “naked truth,” didn’t add much to what was already
known.
The two new pieces of information Erdogan supplied during his weekly
parliamentary speech to party members were that an advance team of Saudis
scouted out possible burial sites; and that the hard drive of the
surveillance system at the consulate in Istanbul was removed in advance of
Khashoggi’s murder. These items were specifically picked to blow away what
is now the official Saudi version that Khashoggi’s death was somehow the
result of a rogue operation gone wrong.
He held back, however, on what the Turkish authorities know about what
actually happened behind the consulate’s walls. Was this because Erdogan did
not want to reveal how Turkey has been monitoring goings-on within the
building? Or is he simply keeping the information in reserve to subtly
pressure Riyadh.
The Turkish president didn’t just leave out the grisly details of the murder
itself. He didn’t mention any names either – save that of King Salman, who
he addressed respectfully as a fellow leader. This wasn’t the same Erdogan
who often viciously attacks his rivals with angry slurs. He was speaking
with all the politeness of a mafia don informing his victim, “I know where
you live.” He paid utmost respect to the king, repeatedly using his full
title of Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques. But there was no missing the
menace.
The man everyone has been talking about whom Erdogan didn’t mention was
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. But it was clear to whom he was referring
when he said that the question of who gave the orders would have to be
answered, and that justice would have to done “at the highest levels.”
Erdogan ended the Khashoggi chapter in his speech with a polite but firm
demand of the Saudi king that the 18 men allegedly involved in the murder be
put on trial in Istanbul, where the crime took place.
There is no question of that ever happening. The Saudis, under the terms of
the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, are not obliged to extradite
the alleged perpetrators – and they certainly have no intention of allowing
any foreign authority to question them and reveal who actually gave the
order.
Erdogan’s message to the Saudis, and to the other governments he alluded to
in his speech (Egypt and the United Arab Emirates), is that he plans to milk
the Khashoggi murder for all he can. He has been gifted an unexpected lever
of international pressure over the Saudi-led camp in the Middle East, which
has been defying him since the overthrow of Egyptian President Mohammed
Morsi in 2013. He won’t relinquish that lever anytime soon.
The presidential press office will have informed him of the unprecedented
global attention around his speech Tuesday, and that the direct broadcast by
his government’s English-language TRT World broke its ratings record.
Erdogan may be one of the world’s biggest suppressors of free journalism,
but he now has control of a media cause célèbre. To keep the media
interested, he will make sure to either leak or deliver further speeches
with any more information he holds.
https://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/turkey/.premium-erdogan-plans-to-milk-the-khashoggi-investigation-for-all-it-s-worth-1.6589170
Analysis Saudi Arabia, Reeling From Khashoggi Scandal,
Battles a New Front: Arab Media
Zvi Bar'el//Haaretz/October 23/18
Qatari network Al Jazeera is providing the color and the harsh analysis that
is roiling the Saudi royals.
Over the past two weeks, the nightly news on Al Jazeera has become a fount
of reports on the Khashoggi affair. Evidently the Turkish authorities have
chosen to use the Qatari network to dribble out new sensational bits of
information daily.
Al Jazeera was the first to show pictures of the killers who dismembered
Khashoggi’s body; it knew how they arrived and what they did; it reported on
the Saudi consul’s actions in the room and that Khashoggi was injected with
a drug to stop him from screaming in pain. It almost seems that the
network’s correspondent in Turkey was present at the scene when it all
happened.
While the Turkish government maintains proper restraint, stating that it is
cooperating with the Saudi authorities or announcing that an investigation
has been launched, Al Jazeera is providing the color and the harsh analysis
that is roiling the Saudi royals.
The Saudi regime, which controls most of the major Arabic-language media
outlets, has no answer for the narrative being laid out in the Al Jazeera
reports. All it and its allies can do is attack the network and its owners.
“Qatar crossed all boundaries and its rulers crossed every red line as Doha
ignores the demands of the Qatari people and the country’s internal problems
and has instead become a puppet in the hands of Iran, the Zionists, the
world regime and the terrorist Muslim Brotherhood. All of these are using it
as a tool to achieve their desires… and to minimize the central diplomatic
and security role played by Saudi Arabia for the benefit of the Arab nation
and regional stability,” Egyptian journalist Dina al-Husseini wrote in the
Youm7 newspaper.
Al-Husseini is best known for two particular moments in her journalistic
career: One when she began her interview with deposed Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak by saying “I love you and I’m crazy about you,” and then
congratulated him on his recent vindication in court on corruption charges;
and the other when she posed as a doctor and went undercover in Cairo’s Qasr
Elyni Hospital to report on the corruption and chaos there.
Al-Husseini is certain she knows who is funding the propaganda campaign
designed to blacken the name of Egypt’s close friend, Saudi Arabia, and who
is profiting from Saudi Arabia’s humiliation. And it is equally clear whom
Al-Husseini got her talking points from and who is dictating the media
narrative in some of the Arab papers. Under the headline “The Ugly Arab,”
Saudi publicist Saud Al Rayes wrote a scathing indictment of the Arab
journalists and media outlets, chiefly Al Jazeera, charging that they are
hurting the Saudi kingdom while disregarding the fact that in so doing they
are hurting the entire Muslim world. But Al Jazeera is not the only target
in Al Rayes’ sights. Muslim Turkey, which joined ranks with Qatar and
thereby put itself on a collision course with Saudi Arabia, has also become
an enemy: “Right now it seems that the Turkish state prosecutor is working
as an emissary of Al Jazeera in Turkey,” Al Rayes wrote. And what about the
Western media that have “ganged up” on Saudi Arabia?
Western media
“The West doesn’t care if the controversial reports are correct or not as
long as they can be used to accuse the Arabs and Muslims of savagery and
barbarity.” Al Rayes also has a warning for his readers: “Saudi Arabia will
overcome this crisis and come out of it stronger than before… And mark my
words… What comes after the Khashoggi affair will be nothing like what came
before.” Whoever needs to be wary of the Saudi crown prince’s expected
revenge is quite well aware of that. The message couldn’t be any clearer.
The American media had been quite fond of the Saudi crown prince before the
incident. Last year, Thomas Friedman wrote in The New York Times that the
crown prince was leading the true Arab Spring, but this week he said, “I do
not believe for a second that it was a rogue operation and that Saudi
Arabia’s effective ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is very
hands-on, had no prior knowledge, if not more.”
It’s unlikely that the American press will be treated to an interview with
the crown prince anytime soon, but that doesn’t matter right now. The damage
to the crown prince’s “good” name goes far beyond how he is perceived in
Western media.
Judging by the critical articles that have been written against his
detractors, the problem is Saudi Arabia’s standing vis-à-vis Qatar and the
harm done to “the Arab world” and “the Muslim world” by the stain that has
been collectively imposed on them.
The Arab media paradox is that the need to defend Saudi Arabia’s reputation
as the protector of Arabs and Muslims is making it seem like a collective
offense against them is being committed akin to a caricature of the Prophet
Mohammed that requires them all to wage a holy war against the offenders.
An equally big problem is the message that Arab press outlets and human
rights activists in Arab countries are getting from the West's reactions. If
world leaders, especially the president of the United States, accept the
farfetched story that says Jamal Khashoggi died in the course of a brawl in
the consulate and are satisfied with just seeing some of bin Salman’s top
aides dismissed (though they are sure to be shifted to other top posts), it
will deal another serious blow to those media outlets that still dare to
criticize their countries’ governments.
For just as bin Salman has now come to symbolize the Arab victim who is
attacked by a Western-Turkish-Iranian-Israeli coalition of evil, Jamal
Khashoggi has come to stand for a critical press and human rights activism.
The victor in this symbolic war will determine the standing of his
adherents.
https://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/.premium-saudi-arabia-reeling-from-khashoggi-scandal-battles-a-new-front-arab-media-1.6576209
Years of Low Interest Rates Didn't Go Too Far
Noah Smith/Bloomberg/October, 23/18
The American Economic Association’s new online discussion forum gives the
outside world the occasional glimpse of the way economists talk among
themselves about important policy issues. One example is a recent
conversation thread initiated by Massachusetts Institute of Technology
professor and former International Monetary Fund chief economist Olivier
Blanchard and joined by several other prominent researchers. The topic was
whether low interest rates had led to excessive risk taking.
With rates finally rising, the question might not be of immediate
importance. But it was a crucial question during the recovery from the Great
Recession, and will inevitably be brought up again the next time a recession
strikes.
From the end of 2008 through 2015, the Federal Reserve kept short-term
interest rates at or near zero.
The Fed also engaged in successive rounds of securities purchases, or
quantitative easing, and used other operations to lower long-term rates. At
the time, monetary hawks like Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia President
Charles Plosser and Stanford University economist John Taylor warned that
low rates could encourage investors to “reach for yield,” putting their
money into risky high-return companies and financial products that would
later crash in value, harming the economy.
Some research does show that low rates induce people to put their money into
riskier investments. This tends to lead to higher absolute returns, but
lower risk-adjusted returns.
But as Harvard’s Jeremy Stein points out in Blanchard’s thread -- and as
many others have pointed out before -- this is exactly how lower rates are
supposed to pull an economy out of a recession. There are some projects out
there -- a new office building, perhaps, or an oil-drilling company -- that
are so risky that when interest rates are high, investors would prefer to
avoid these projects and play it safe by investing in government bonds.
When the central bank drives down the rates on government bonds, investors
will tend to look on those marginal projects more favorably and put their
money into things they turned up their noses at before. As a result, new
office buildings will get built, new oil companies will start drilling --
and demand for workers will rise, giving the economy a lift. Some of those
projects will inevitably fail -- some offices will sit vacant, some oil
companies will collapse when oil prices fall. But investors presumably know
that going in. Presumably, they also know that when the Fed eventually
tightens, more of those risky project will fail, since higher rates make it
harder for borrowers to service their debts.
That’s the simple, textbook case. But it’s also at least theoretically
possible that investors aren’t so rational. Instead of measuring the
discounted cash flow from a potential investment, as textbooks say they
ought to, most investors probably use rules of thumb. If those rules of
thumb don’t adjust when interest rates change -- for example, if investors
keep believing that they ought to be able to make a 10 percent return even
when interest rates fall from 5 percent to 0 percent -- then low rates can
induce them to take more risk than would be rational. Claudio Borio of the
Bank for International Settlements basically makes this case in response to
Blanchard.
History, however, doesn’t seem to bear out these worries. Japan has had
extremely low interest rates since its land and stock bubbles burst three
decades ago, and it hasn’t experienced any bubbles or crashes during that
time. As for the US, low rates and quantitative easing might have compressed
credit spreads (the difference between risky bond rates and safe bond rates)
a bit in 2013 and 2014, but those spreads soon rebounded.
As Ricardo Caballero of MIT points out on the AEA discussion thread, US
stocks have risen to historically high earnings multiples during the period
of low rates.
But as Brad DeLong of the University of California-Berkeley notes in
response, the historical earnings used to calculate that long-term
price-to-earnings ratio still include the Great Recession -- if only recent
earnings are used, the ratio still looks a bit elevated, but much less so.
During the recovery, there were in fact a few bubbles. Gold rose in 2010 and
2011, then crashed in 2013. There might have been a very minor bubble in
tech startups in 2013 and 2014. Bitcoin had some small bubbles in 2011 and
2013. And in 2015-16 there was a mild slowdown in economic activity,
probably due to a pullback in the energy industry. But nothing big enough to
justify the worries of people like Taylor and Plosser.
Interestingly, it’s only since the recovery turned into a boom, and interest
rates started to rise, that appetite for risk has really taken off. Credit
spreads, after rebounding in 2015 and 2016, have begun to fall in earnest,
approaching dangerous levels. Stocks look more overvalued now than when QE
was in full swing. Some research also indicates that reaching for yield is
most pronounced during boom times, as irrational exuberance permeates the
national mood.
So the answer to whether low rates encourage excessive risk-taking might
depend on when those low rates happen. It seems clear that keeping rates low
in response to sluggish growth won’t turn an economy into a frenzied bubble.
But during an expansion, it might behoove central banks to be a little less
cautious about raising interest rates.
Palestinian 'Support' for Saudi Arabia
Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/October 23/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13167/palestinians-saudi-arabia
As Mahmoud Abbas was busy praising the Saudis for their "justice, values and
principles," the London-based Action Group for Palestinians of Syria issued
a statement in which it accused the Saudi authorities of preventing
Palestinian refugees from entering the kingdom.
Many Arabs and Muslims can hardly afford to alienate a country as rich as
Saudi Arabia. This is a good example of "money talks." However, this does
not mean that the Saudi money will ever change the hearts and minds of
Palestinians, especially regarding a peace agreement with Israel.
The mistreatment of Palestinians at the hands of their Arab brethren has
never been of concern to Abbas and his leadership. They are silent when
Palestinians are killed and expelled from their homes in Syria. They are
silent when Palestinians face discrimination and apartheid laws in Lebanon.
The Saudi government says they have given the Palestinians $6 billion in aid
since the year 2000. So Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has
good reason publicly to declare his support for Saudi Arabia in the standoff
with the rest of the world over the Jamal Khashoggi affair.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas did not wait for Saudi Arabia
to admit that Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi was killed in its
consulate in Turkey. Days before the Saudi announcement, Abbas decided that
he and the Palestinians have "absolute confidence" in King Salman bin Abdel
Aziz and this son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
As Abbas was busy praising the Saudis for their "justice, values and
principles," the London-based Action Group for Palestinians of Syria issued
a statement in which it accused the Saudi authorities of preventing
Palestinian refugees from entering the kingdom.
"Palestinian refugees fleeing war-ravaged Syria have been denied access into
Saudi territories," the group said. It pointed out that the Saudi ban
excluded Palestinians heading to the kingdom to perform the Islamic hajj, or
pilgrimage. The group also pointed out that Palestinians who fled Syria to
Saudi Arabia "have been shorn of their right to visas, education, and health
care, among other vital services." Saudi Arabia, the group added, "continues
to opt for a closed-door immigration policy regarding Palestinian refugees
seeking asylum in its territories."
This is only one example of Saudi discrimination against the Palestinians.
The group's announcement was published on the same day that Abbas was
heaping praise on the Saudi leaders. In a statement issued by his office on
October 14, Abbas, who described himself as the "President of the State of
Palestine," said he "appreciated the positions of Saudi Arabia, a country
that has always stood, and continued to do so, on the side of our just cause
and the rights of our people." The statement quoted Abbas as expressing
"absolute confidence" in the Saudi monarch and his son and said that
"Palestine has always stood next to Saudi Arabia, and will continue to do
so."
This announcement of blind support for the Saudi king and crown prince came
as the international community was still demanding answers from the Saudi
government concerning the disappearance of Khashoggi. No one knows on what
basis Abbas decided to voice, on behalf of all Palestinians, "absolute
confidence" in the Saudi leaders at a time when the Saudis were still
denying responsibility for the disappearance and murder of the columnist.
Abbas's support for Saudi Arabia could be directed against Qatar, which he
believes is backing his rivals in Hamas. Relations between Abbas's
Palestinian Authority and Qatar have been strained after the emirate decided
to buy Israeli fuel for the power plant in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip as
part of an effort to solve the power shortage there. Abbas's aides have
accused Qatar of "meddling in the internal affairs of the Palestinians" by
helping the residents of the Gaza Strip and Hamas. Last year, Saudi Arabia
and several Arab countries severed diplomatic relations with Qatar over the
emirate's alleged support for terrorism, especially the Muslim Brotherhood
and Hamas.
On the same day the Saudis finally admitted that Khashoggi had been killed
inside their consulate, Abbas released yet another statement in which he
again expressed full support for Saudi Arabia. This time, Abbas went a step
further by publishing the statement on behalf of the "State of Palestine."
Here is what the statement, which was released in Ramallah, said about the
Khashoggi affair and the Saudi admission that the columnist was killed
during a "fight" inside the diplomatic mission in Turkey: "The State of
Palestine affirmed that Saudi Arabia, under the leadership of King Salman
bin Abdel Aziz and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, shall remain the
country of justice, values and principles. The State of Palestine has
praised the decisions taken by the Custodian of the Holy Sites (King Salman)
to implement justice, fairness, truth and law."
First, it is worth noting that Abbas and the Palestinians were not the only
Arabs and Muslims publicly to embrace the Saudi leaders in the wake of the
controversy surrounding the Khashoggi affair. Several Arab and Islamic
countries, including Egypt, Yemen, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates,
Bahrain, Oman, Kuwait, Djibouti, and Mauritania have also issued similar
statements expressing full support for King Salman bin Abdel Aziz and his
son.
The Arab League has also come out in support of the Saudi leadership. A
statement issued by the Arab League praised Saudi Arabia for its "measures
to achieve justice and hold accountable" those responsible for the Khashoggi
killing.
It is not hard to imagine why so many Arab and Islamic countries would rush
to heap praise on Saudi Arabia even before the full details of the Khashoggi
case remain unclear. Many Arabs and Muslims can hardly afford to alienate a
country as rich as Saudi Arabia. This is a good example of "money talks."
However, this does not mean that the Saudi money will ever change the hearts
and minds of Palestinians, especially with regards to a peace agreement with
Israel. Some Palestinians have been suspicious of Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman's intentions.
Earlier this year, Palestinians across the political spectrum launched a
scathing attack on the crown prince after he was quoted as having told
Jewish leaders in New York that Palestinians should accept US President
Donald Trump's upcoming plan for peace in the Middle East or "shut up."
Abbas is not different from the rest of his Arab and Muslim brothers. His
statements of support for the Saudi leadership are in the context of his
wish that the Saudis will give his Palestinian Authority financial aid. The
Saudis claim that they have given the Palestinians $6 billion since the year
2000.
Abbas, therefore, has good reason publicly to declare his support for Saudi
Arabia in the standoff with the rest of the world over the Khashoggi affair.
The $6 billion that the Palestinians received in the past 18 years from the
Saudis are sufficient to make Abbas and other Palestinian leaders declare
their support for the king and his son even if they commit a crime as bad as
demolishing the Al-Aqsa Mosque. The Saudi money also explains why Abbas and
his top aides have been silent over the way Saudi Arabia treats
Palestinians. This is not the sort of treatment that makes the Palestinian
leadership proud. However, when a wealthy country like Saudi Arabia
humiliates your people, it is not a good idea to complain too loudly.
Last month, it was reported that Saudi Arabia has banned Palestinians
holding temporary Jordanian passports from entering the country. The move,
according to the reports, basically affects more than 600,000 Palestinians,
who will not be able to perform the hajj to the holy cities of Mecca and
Medina.
Another report said that Saudi Arabia has issued new directives banning up
to 300,000 Palestinians in Lebanon from performing the pilgrimage. Perhaps
these reports about the Saudi discrimination against Palestinians have not
reached Abbas's ears. Or perhaps they have, but why should he or any other
Palestinian leader care about the plight of his own people if the
perpetrators are so wealthy and influential?
In fact, the mistreatment of Palestinians at the hands of their Arab
brethren has never been of concern to Abbas and his leadership. They are
silent when Palestinians are killed and expelled from their homes in Syria.
They are silent when Palestinians face discrimination and apartheid laws in
Lebanon. This is because Abbas and the Palestinian officials do not seem to
care much about what happens to their people in the Arab countries. Now, it
is also clear that they do not care about what Saudi Arabia does to their
own people (or to a dissident Saudi columnist) -- just let that Saudi cash
keep flowing into the Palestinian coffers.
*Khaled Abu Toameh, an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem, is a
Shillman Journalism Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 2018 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here
do not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone
Institute. No part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be
reproduced, copied or modified, without the prior written consent of
Gatestone Institute.
One miscalculation could lead to a major inter-state
conflict in Syria
Chris Doyle/Arab News/October 23/18
Nowhere in the Middle East is more likely to see a major inter-state conflict
than Syria. Thus far, the region’s major powers have all contributed to the war
in Syria, but the actual fighting has been contained within its borders. Yet, as
the Syrian-Syrian fight nears its last chapter, the inter-state tensions are
dangerously high, as the incident of Sept. 17 highlights in spades.
On that day, Israel bombed a reported Iranian facility at the Syrian port of
Latakia. In the wake of the bombing, Syrian anti-aircraft fire brought down a
Russian military plane, killing 15 Russians. Given the number of air forces
flying over Syria, it is remarkable this does not happen more often.
Since the beginning of 2017, Israel has taken action against supposed Iranian
targets inside Syria more than 200 times. Until this September, complex and
delicate deconfliction mechanisms between Israel and Russia had worked; much the
same as US-Russian ones in eastern Syria had. The danger of the situation is
highlighted by Benjamin Netanyahu and Vladimir Putin having spoken three times
since then, clearly testing their warm relationship.
Russia held Israel responsible, yet one has to question this, given that Moscow
accepts it was Syrian forces that brought the plane down. The two sides dispute
the amount of warning given — Russia claiming that it was given 60 seconds’
notice, Israel saying it was seven minutes. Israel also states that the plane
was shot down 24 minutes after its F-16s bombed the site and were 200 kilometers
away. It does highlight that Syrian forces on the ground could not identify
friend from foe, and that the Russian-made S-200 system did not work, which is
somewhat of an embarrassment for both Russia and Syria. As yet, Russian-designed
anti-air defenses have not deterred Israeli forces at all and they can attack
pretty much at will.
The Russian response was to supply Syria with its more advanced S-300 system. It
will take time to integrate the three batteries of the S-300 and to train the
Syrian operators, yet the intent is clear: Russia feels it has to restrict
Israel’s freedom to operate in the skies of Syria, not least due to Syrian and
Iranian pressures.
On the other hand, Israel remains equally determined. The new defenses might
make Israeli leaders think twice and exercise more caution but, if Iran
continues to build major military sites in Syria, transfer high-tech weapons to
Hezbollah, or move forces close to the Israeli border, it will strike. In the
case of Latakia, Israeli sources state that this facility was devoted to
upgrading primitive Hezbollah rockets, making them more potent and accurate. The
face-off between Israel and Iran, which are backed by rival superpowers, is at
its sharpest ever. One miscalculation, one misstep, and war will ensue. Israel
is alarmed at the 120,000 rockets it claims Hezbollah possesses. We do not know
if Netanyahu was right in his UN General Assembly speech about the militant
group having weapons storage facilities hidden deep in southern Beirut. It took
three days before the Lebanese foreign minister showed diplomats around the area
— more than enough time for Hezbollah to make a decent cover-up.
The face-off between Israel and Iran, which are backed by rival superpowers, is
at its sharpest ever. One miscalculation, one misstep, and war will ensue. Iran
shows no sign of shrinking its military ambitions in Syria. Russia has thwarted
this at certain junctures, even, according to Israeli sources, ensuring it did
not get a naval facility on the Syrian coast. Israel fears a double front if
Hezbollah and Iranian forces are deployed in Syria as well as Lebanon. Any war
would be frightening, and all sides might lose. For a long time, Israeli
spokespeople have stated that defeating Hezbollah in Lebanon would require a
huge onslaught, even in populated urban areas, particularly southern Beirut. The
more potent, heavier of Hezbollah’s missiles cannot be stopped by Israel’s iron
dome, which is designed for lighter, shorter range rockets. As yet, David’s
Sling, Israel’s most advanced anti-missile system, is not fully operational,
though it was used for the first time in July. Israeli urban areas and strategic
assets would be well in range and vulnerable. This could include the offshore
oil rig that is used to supply much of Israel’s electricity. Some Israeli
strategists believe it is in their interest to fight now before Hezbollah’s
arsenal is upgraded even further.
Iran can hardly crave a war. It wants to reap what rewards it can from its
involvement in Syria; not just by developing military assets there but also in
terms of business and lucrative real estate. It cannot win in a confrontation
with Israel, even if it can certainly cause immense suffering. Iran will also
wish to keep Hezbollah as its deterrent against Israel bombing Iran directly.
War is possible, even if not by design, not least if all sides calculate that
their opponents will do everything to avoid a conflict. Key players must try to
calm the atmosphere. Typically this would include the US but, in Syria, it has
been increasingly peripheral and the Trump administration has hardly espoused
the role of cool mediator. Russia has the most to gain by cooling matters and is
well placed given its close relations with Israel and influence over Iran. The
trouble is that it is hard to see how the status quo can be improved in the
years ahead. Iran will always be seeking to expand its military presence and
Israel will always take action to thwart it.
**Chris Doyle is director of the London-based Council for Arab-British
Understanding (CAABU). He has worked with the council since 1993 after
graduating with a first-class honors degree in Arabic and Islamic studies at
Exeter University. Twitter: @Doylech
Turkey crucial to the success of US sanctions on Iran
Yasar Yakis/Arab News/October 23/18
The second set of US sanctions on Iran, which will target oil and gas exports,
are due to enter into force on Nov 4. Washington wants to strangle the Iranian
economy by crippling its energy industries. Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said in August that Turkey would continue to purchase Iran’s natural
gas. This statement was further embellished by Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu
saying last month: “We will not support any sanctions. We continue our trade
with Iran and Russia. We would have joined the sanctions if they were UN
sanctions.”
In order to soften Turkey’s attitude on the sanctions issue, the US is now
trying to create an atmosphere of optimism in the aftermath of the release by
Turkey of the American pastor Andrew Brunson. Turkey has several reasons to be
reluctant to abide by the sanctions. First, it feels it will mainly be the
Iranian people that will suffer from the sanctions. Turkey is reluctant to be
part of an act that will punish the people of a neighboring country.
Second, Turkey does not want to waste the opportunity of trading with a
neighboring country when it is cheaper and more convenient.Third, it invested
huge amounts in the construction of an oil and gas pipeline from Iran. It would
be a considerable economic loss to leave this investment unused. Fourth, the
sanctions are only a unilateral US act that does not legally bind other
countries. Fifth, Turkey and Iran are two neighbors that will need each other in
the future. If Ankara betrays this friendship at a moment when Tehran needs it
most, the roles may change in the future and Turkey may need Iran’s support.
Last but not least, Turkey is over-dependent on Iranian and Russian oil and gas:
All of its pipe-borne gas comes from these two countries. It imports almost half
of its oil from Iran — in 2017 it was 44 percent — and has imported about 10
billion cubic meters of gas from Iran every year for more than 20 years. This
corresponds to roughly one-fifth of Turkey’s gas consumption. So the US will be
punishing the civilian population of one of its NATO allies if it insists on
imposing sanctions on Turkey because of this trade.
Without Iranian and Russian oil and gas, Turkey’s industry will grind to a halt
and the Turkish people will suffer the consequences. In addition, the US also
imposed sanctions on Russia, which is the other major source of Turkey’s oil and
gas imports. Therefore, US embargoes encircle Turkey from two sides. Without
Iranian and Russian oil and gas, Turkey’s industry will grind to a halt and the
Turkish people will suffer the consequences. Furthermore, Ankara is cooperating
closely with Russia and Iran in the Astana process. They were able to obtain
concrete results in Idlib and elsewhere and Turkey would not like to spoil this
relationship.
Another complication can be added to this. Turkey sold the government’s shares
in the biggest state-owned oil refinery company, TUPRAS, which owns four of the
five refineries in the country. Some of these shares were purchased by an
American company, Global Securities (USA). Turkish refineries are geographically
close to Iran, meaning it is cheaper to refine Iranian crude oil in these
facilities. But now TUPRAS, which includes an American company, will negotiate
with Washington as to whether its refineries should abide by the US embargo. It
is an awkward situation because it is not the Turkish state but a foreign
company that negotiates whether refineries located in Turkey should refine
Iranian oil.
The sanctions issue is further complicated by two unrelated problems. One is the
fallout from the Brunson case, as Turkey expects a reciprocal gesture from
Washington in exchange for the pastor’s release. Ankara will be disillusioned if
the US refrains from making such a gesture because of Turkey’s refusal to abide
by the sanctions on Iran. This may destroy the expectations that the release of
Brunson was to lead to a thaw in Turkey-US relations.
Turkey’s role will be crucial to the success of the US sanctions, but it will
also have major impacts on Ankara’s relations with Washington on the one hand
and with Tehran on the other.
**Yasar Yakis is a former foreign minister of Turkey and founding member of the
ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). Twitter: @yakis_yasar
Regime’s actions a source of shame for ordinary Iranians
Camelia Entekhabifard/Arab News/October 23/18
Ahead of what it has described as major sanctions to be imposed on the Iranian
oil industry on Nov. 4, another set of sanctions put in place by the US Treasury
last week came as a big surprise.
The US imposed financial sanctions on the Middle East’s largest steel producer
and largest tractor manufacturer, as well as banks and other business
institutions in Iran, after alleging that they provide financial support to
Iranian paramilitary group the Basij — a militia that acts under the supervision
of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and which, according to the US,
is complicit in the recruitment of children as soldiers. Iran is allegedly
recruiting poor Afghan refugees to fight in Syria. After fleeing the war in
their country and going to Iran for a better standard of living and
opportunities, they have found themselves in Syria fighting Daesh alongside the
Fatemiyoun Division as the best option they have to support their families.
It is hard to say whether these poor Afghans have been forced, brainwashed or
bribed to fight in Syria, but Human Rights Watch reported that children as young
as 14 have been sent to the front lines. The group identified at least eight of
them who had been killed in battle. According to international law, the
recruitment of child soldiers under the age of 15 is a war crime. More than
2,000 Afghan soldiers have reportedly been killed in Syria, some of whose age
and real identities are not known. These people, along with the Iranians who
serve in this militia, were recruited and trained by the Basij from an early
age. They are trained and brainwashed to be used as a secret army whenever the
IRGC needs their services.
Most Basij stations are located in the remote, poor areas of Iran, where
government services are short and undocumented Afghan refugees, who cannot
afford to feed their families, are more easily recruited. The provision of free
classes along with military training and free food or stipends, makes such a
difference for a child or teenager who doesn’t have any access to social
services and lives in poverty. All these services come with ideological training
to make the recruits loyal to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and devoted to
sacrificing themselves when their services are needed. The current regime not
only pushed the nation back, but also spent nothing on developing Iran’s
infrastructure and industry basically because the rulers were busy grooming and
investing in their own internal and external militia.
During the time of the Green Movement in Iran, which protested over the disputed
presidential election of 2009, many of these recruits, under the support and
provision of Basij members, were suddenly called on to serve their duty. They
were told to crack down on those who were protesting against the system, the
establishment and the election results.
The US Treasury described the institutions that have been sanctioned as a
network providing support to the Basij Resistance Force. It also cited the
paramilitary group’s ties to the IRGC, which is well known by ordinary Iranians.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin charged that the sanctioned businesses are
complicit in the Basij’s “efforts to recruit, train and indoctrinate child
soldiers, who are coerced into combat.”For most Iranians, as much as I
understand, it is a source of shame and embarrassment when they hear that their
beloved country is associated with such a crime. Hearing that their government
and associated institutions are engaged in recruiting child soldiers and sending
them to the Syrian battleground, or manipulating children who come from poor
families, is not what ordinary Iranians represent or can see themselves
affiliated with.
What makes Iran unique is its history of civilization and humanitarian
background. Iran was a leading force of change and democracy in the region just
four decades ago. I should say that Iran wasn’t a perfect place during the time
of the late shah, before the revolution in 1979, but its living standards in
comparison with other countries in the region was progressive and promising.
The current regime not only pushed the nation back, but also spent nothing on
developing Iran’s infrastructure and industry basically because the rulers were
busy grooming and investing in their own internal and external militia, without
paying attention to the public’s demands and needs.
The US is seeking to choke off Iran’s economy by expanding its sanctions, but it
is hard to say if it can change the course of the Basij militia and its
recruitment of child soldiers in the short term.
*Camelia Entekhabifard is an Iranian-American journalist, political commentator
and author of “Camelia: Save Yourself By Telling the Truth” (Seven Stories
Press, 2008). Twitter: @CameliaFard