LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
April 06/2019

Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani

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Bible Quotations For today
So you also, when you have done all that you were ordered to do, say, “We are worthless slaves; we have done only what we ought to have done
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke 17/07-10: “‘Who among you would say to your slave who has just come in from ploughing or tending sheep in the field, “Come here at once and take your place at the table”?Would you not rather say to him, “Prepare supper for me, put on your apron and serve me while I eat and drink; later you may eat and drink”? Do you thank the slave for doing what was commanded? So you also, when you have done all that you were ordered to do, say, “We are worthless
slaves; we have done only what we ought to have done!” ’

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on April 05-06/19
Report: Donor Countries Say Lebanon Government Reforms 'Insufficient'
STL President Meets Lebanese Officials, the Legal Community in Beirut
Serhan Suspends Judge Occupying 'Sensitive Post'
Ministerial Panel OKs Electricity Plan, Cabinet to Meet Monday
Armed Dispute Erupts in Ain el-Hilweh Refugee Camp
Nizar Zakka’s Son Meets Pompeo, Urges Lebanon's Help in Releasing his Father from Iran
Aoun: No Domestic Threat, President Powers Practiced Fully
Berri Rounds Off Iraq Visit, Meets Officials in Baghdad
Bustani Announces Second Licensing for Offshore Oil
Former Presidents, MPs Cost Lebanon $20 Million Annually
Lebanon Announces New Blocks for Offshore Energy Work
Kataeb MP Nadim Gemayel Proposes Draft Law to Help Young Entrepreneurs
Former President Amine Gemayel Calls for Strict, Practical Policy to Fight Corruption
The Trump Administration Is Making Hezbollah Stronger
Weak Links in a Sea of Extremism and Counter-Extremism
Tokyo Court Approves Prosecution's Request to Detain Ghosn for 10 Days

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on April 05-06/19
Netanyahu Calls on Putin to Pressure Iran Out of Syria
Zarif: Iran Will Continue Pressing Europe on Nuclear Deal Commitments
Trumpets, Bugles Sound at Russian Ceremony for Returning Remains of Missing Israeli Soldier
Germany Repatriates ISIS Children from Iraq
Opposition Candidate Says he Remains ahead in Istanbul Vote Recount
UN Chief Flies East to Meet Libya’s Haftar as Security Council to Convene
West, UN Exert Pressure to Avert Battle in Libya’s Tripoli
Eritrea Accuses Qatar, Turkey of ‘Subversive Acts’
Statement on second anniversary of the chemical weapons attacks in Syria
Canada appalled by Brunei’s imposition of severe punishments under its Sharia penal code
Israel’s Arab minority urged to boycott election over divisive law
Armed Clashes Flare South of Libya's Tripoli
Huge Demos as Algerians Urge Bouteflika Allies to Quit Too
Britain, EU Set Out Competing Brexit Delay Dates
Sudan police fire tear gas at protests in the capital: Witnesses

Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on April 05-06/19
The Trump Administration Is Making Hezbollah Stronger/Anchal Vohra/Forign Policy/April 05/19
Weak Links in a Sea of Extremism and Counter-Extremism/Eyad Abu Shakra/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19
The Floods, the Mullahs and the Cinderella in Boots/Amir Taheri/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19
Bouteflika’s Ousting Reminiscent of Mubarak/Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19
Striking the Right Balance: Creating Jobs in a Fast-changing Middle East Business Landscape/Omar Fahoum/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19
CNN, Qatar and the Targeting of Saudi Arabia/Salman Al-dossary/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19
Turkey's Elections: What Do They Mean for Turkey and Erdoğan/Burak Bekdil/Gatestone Institute/April 05/19
Iranian IRGC-Affiliated News Agency Tasnim: Iran's Recent Rains, Flooding Are Caused By Foreign Manipulation – As Part Of U.S. Plan To Control Global Climate/MEMRI/April 05/19
A Lesson for Pope Francis on Walls and Muslims/Raymond Ibrahim/PJ Media/April 05/19
Analysis/Netanyahu Has Cunningly Navigated the Mideast. Israeli Voters Will Reward Him/Amos Harel/Haaretz/April 05/19

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on April 05-06/19
Report: Donor Countries Say Lebanon Government Reforms 'Insufficient'

Naharnet/April 05/19/Authorities in Lebanon are struggling at this delicate economic stage to take various reformative steps in order to reduce the budget deficit, and to promote economic and financial efforts in an attempt to give some positive signals to the international community, the group of donor countries and international institutions, al-Joumhouria daily reported on Friday. However, these countries and institutions, led by France and the World Bank, are unconvinced that the reforms undertaken by the Lebanese authorities are sufficient, according to information obtained by the daily. They believe that the Lebanese government “is trying to circumvent reforms through some reformist headlines,” it added. It said the French government has not encouraged the visit of a senior Lebanese official to Paris to discuss investment and economic affairs, linking it to the need to achieve real reforms approved by the authorities.

STL President Meets Lebanese Officials, the Legal Community in Beirut
Naharnet/April 05/19/The President of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) Judge Ivana Hrdličková visited Beirut this week. Hrdličková and Vice President Ralph Riachi met with Lebanese Minister of Justice Albert Serhan, Minister of Interior and Municipalities Raya el-Hassan and Head of the Beirut Bar Association André Chidiac. President Hrdličková and Judge Riachi also met representatives of the diplomatic community. During the mission, Judge Hrdličková and Judge Riachi also visited Tripoli, where they met with First President of the Court of Appeal Judge Rida Raad and Head of the Tripoli Bar Association Mohammed Mrad. They also participated in two outreach events: a briefing on the work of the Tribunal to lawyers of the Tripoli Bar Association and a presentation on “The STL in the context of International Criminal Justice” at the Mawlawi Cultural Center. “After productive meetings with officials in Beirut, I was delighted to conduct my first visit to Tripoli to meet with the legal community there. I was encouraged by the support and interest the Tribunal enjoys amongst the lawyers, judges, officials and civil society, with whom I discussed the Tribunal’s achievements and progress to date”, said Judge Hrdličková.

Serhan Suspends Judge Occupying 'Sensitive Post'
Naharnet/April 05/19/Justice Minister Albert Serhan on Friday suspended a judge occupying a “sensitive post” after he was previously referred to the disciplinary council of judges. “As part of the investigations being conducted by the Judicial Inspection Commission, the Commission's council issued a resolution on April 4, 2019 to refer a judge to the disciplinary council of judges,” a statement issued by Serhan's office said. “Today, the justice minister, as per his legal jurisdiction (Article 90 of the judiciary's law), has taken a decision to temporarily suspend the aforementioned judge pending a ruling by the disciplinary council, following a recommendation by the Judicial Inspection Commission's council,” the statement added. “Investigations are still ongoing and the Judicial Inspection Commission is following up the case and the appropriate decisions will be taken in due time,” the statement said. LBCI television meanwhile reported that the judge occupies a “sensitive post.”

Ministerial Panel OKs Electricity Plan, Cabinet to Meet Monday

Naharnet/April 05/19/A ministerial panel on Thursday adopted a plan proposed by the energy minister to resolve the country's chronic electricity problem, referring it to the Cabinet. LBCI television said the panel finished its meetings “without resolving a lot of points of contention.”“It decided to postpone them to a Cabinet session that will be held on Monday,” LBCI added. Ministerial sources meanwhile told MTV that President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Saad Hariri will hold consultations ahead of the session. Information Minister Jamal al-Jarrah meanwhile told reporters that the plan seeks to “lower the technical wastage” of electricity, adding that electricity fees will be hiked when power supply reaches the 20-hour threshold. “The plan is comprehensive and it serves the main goal of slashing deficit and boosting production,” Jarrah said. “There are two choices for the tendering process and have left the decision to the government,” he added.

Armed Dispute Erupts in Ain el-Hilweh Refugee Camp
Naharnet/April 05/19/An armed personal dispute erupted overnight in the southern Palestinian refugee camp of Ain el-Hilweh, the National News Agency reported on Friday. Heavy gunfire was heard in al-Tahtani street in Bustan al-Yahudi area, NNA said. The dispute was later contained and no casualties were reported. No further details were obtained.

Nizar Zakka’s Son Meets Pompeo, Urges Lebanon's Help in Releasing his Father from Iran

Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 5 April, 2019/The son of Nizar Zakka, a Lebanese national imprisoned in Iran, appealed on Thursday to Lebanese authorities to exert efforts to release his father. Omar Zakka called on all “capable parties to help and follow the lead of the Donald Trump administration and help in releasing my father.”He made his remarks after meeting in Washington with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at the US diplomat’s invitation. He also met with several senior members of the administration. Zakka’s family said that Omar met with Pompeo and thanked him and his team for their efforts in releasing the detainee.It remarked that Pompeo has been spearheading efforts throughout the world to release Nizar from prison even before he became secretary of state. Omar explained to Pompeo and American officials at the State Department the conditions of his father’s detention. He revealed that he had traveled to Iran in September 2015 where he met Vice President Shahindokht Molaverdi, who had officially acknowledged to him his father’s detention. She also admitted that his imprisonment was a mistake and that it had harmed her country. “I am certain that if Lebanon performed its official duty, then my father would return home,” Omar said. Nizar was arrested after traveling to Iran to attend a state-sponsored conference in the capital, in 2015. At the time of his arrest, he was the secretary-general of IJMA3, an Arab communications organization, and had received an official invitation to visit Iran.

Aoun: No Domestic Threat, President Powers Practiced Fully
Naharnet/April 05/19/President Michel Aoun reassured Friday that the situations in Lebanon have become “very acceptable” following the “acute divisions” that preceded his election as president. “This has preserved Lebanon against all the threats that were surrounding it, because the rift remained at the political level,” Aoun told a delegation from the Maronite League led by its newly-elected president ex-MP Naamatallah Abi Nasr. “Do not fear for national unity and we are not facing a domestic threat. The threats come from the outside but (U.N. Security Council) Resolution 1701 is reining them in,” the president added. Aoun also told that delegation that the president's powers are “preserved” and that he is practicing them “to the fullest extent.”

Berri Rounds Off Iraq Visit, Meets Officials in Baghdad
Naharnet/April 05/19/Speaker Nabih Berri concluded his official visit to Iraq by holding more meetings with Iraqi leaders and political parties at the Prime Minister's Guest House in the Green Zone in Baghdad, the National News Agency reported on Friday. Berri has met with Ahmed al-Jabbouri, a leader in the parliamentary National Axis Alliance, who said after the meeting that “Berri’s visit to Baghdad would have positive results on all files, in terms of completing the formation of the (Iraqi) government and on relations between Lebanon and Iraq and with the countries of the region.”Berri also received a delegation of the political body of the Sadrist Movement headed by Nassar al-Rubaie. Discussions focused on the situation in Iraq and the relations between the two countries. Furthermore, talks between Berri and Iraqi ex-PM Iyad Allawi highlighted the latest developments in the region and cooperation between Lebanon and Iraq. Berri, who arrived in Baghdad on Sunday, earlier met with leading Iraqi officials including Iraqi President Barham Salih. He pushed during talks for the restoration of an oil pipeline between Kirkuk and Tripoli that stopped in 1982 when the war between Iraq and Iran broke out.

Bustani Announces Second Licensing for Offshore Oil
Naharnet/April 05/19/Energy Minister Nada al-Bustani announced in a press conference on Friday the opening of the second offshore licensing for exploration in Lebanon’s oil and gas field blocks number 1, 2, 5, 8 and 10 “in accordance with the modernized procedures placed by the Ministry and the commission.”Bustani said that January 31, 2020 is the deadline for applicants to participate in the licensing course. The Minister’s announcement came one day after the Cabinet approved the project during a meeting held on Thursday. Bustani pointed out that the objectives of the second licensing project aims at intensifying exploration in the Lebanese maritime waters, and increasing the competition between companies. She said exploration in oil field number 4 will launch before the end of 2019, and in block number 9 will start in 2020. "We will issue and publish in turn the decisions that determine all procedures of the second licensing bid in accordance with the laws in force,” added Bustani. "The Ministry and the Lebanese Petroleum Administration are committed to the rules of transparency required during all procedures,” she concluded.

Former Presidents, MPs Cost Lebanon $20 Million Annually
Beirut - Paula Astih/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19/Lebanese deputies and ministers were divided on Thursday over Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil’s proposal to cut their salaries by 50 percent as part of his plan to lower the budget deficit. Some ministers and lawmakers welcomed the move, while others said the issue needed to be studied further.On Wednesday, Khalil submitted his budget proposal to Prime Minister Saad Hariri and later revealed tweeted his plan to lower the salaries of the president, prime minister, speaker, ministers, MPs and former lawmakers.
MP Bilal Abdullah, of the Progressive Socialist Party parliamentary bloc, was the first politician to object the minister’s proposal. “I will not accept a decision to reduce my salary as a deputy. The state must first reduce the wages of some public employees and their compensations that sometimes exceed the salaries of ministers and MPs,” he said. Abdullah’s position contradicted with that of his party leader, Walid Jumblatt, who said earlier this week that the World Bank is making some demands related to lowering expenditure and that some measures should begin by reducing the salaries of former ministers and MPs. Jumblatt revealed that as a former MP, he earns a monthly salary of around $6,000, which he said “is not fair.” Abdullah told Asharq Al-Awsat on Thursday that objecting to Khalil’s proposal was his own personal opinion and had nothing to do with the PSP’s stance. Mohammed Shamseddine, a researcher at Information International told Asharq Al-Awsat that the problem does not lie in the salaries of political figures, but the compensations of former lawmakers and presidents. “A sum of $20 million is allocated every year to pay the compensations of 210 former presidents and former deputies and the families of 104 deceased presidents or lawmakers,” he said. According to the researcher, there are more than 120 jobs in public institutions where employees are paid more than the salaries of deputies, such as the Central Bank Governor, who is paid a salary of more than $26,600 for 16 months every year, in addition to employees at the Casino du Liban and some ambassadors. In Lebanon, the president is paid a monthly salary of $8,300, the prime minister and speaker are each paid $7,883 while a deputy earns a maximum of $7,400. Several deputies have presented draft laws to parliament suggesting lowering the wages of deputies and ministers.

Lebanon Announces New Blocks for Offshore Energy Work
Reuters/Friday 05th April 2019/Lebanon announced on Friday five offshore blocks to be included in its coming bidding round for energy exploration and production licences, including four along disputed maritime borders. Offshore energy development has been a central ambition for successive governments in cash-strapped Lebanon, but political paralysis has caused years of delays. Blocks 8 and 10 both include waters also claimed by Israel, while blocks 1 and 2 include waters claimed by Syria. One of the two blocks for which licences were awarded last year, block 9, is also on the disputed maritime border with Israel. Energy Minister Nada Boustani announced details in a televised news conference of the upcoming licensing round, which she said on Thursday had been approved by the cabinet and would have a bid deadline in early 2020. A consortium of France’s Total, Italy’s Eni and Russia’s Novatek won the first licensing round last year for blocks 4 and 9 and plans to drill its first exploration wells by the end of this year. It has said it will avoid disputed waters. “We expect greater participation in the second round of licensing,” Boustani said, adding that representatives from Russia’s Lukoil, Spain’s Repsol and Britain’s BP had visited Lebanon in the last few weeks. “For sure Total and Eni are still interested,” she added. Lebanon is on the Levant Basin in the eastern Mediterranean where a number of big sub-sea gas fields have been discovered since 2009 in waters off Cyprus, Israel and Egypt. Beirut tried to launch its first offshore exploration in 2013, but domestic political problems delayed it until 2017. For this round, it has merged the prequalification process for licence bidders into the bidding process. Pro-transparency group, the Lebanese Oil and Gas Initiative, urged the government to reconsider the decision, saying it might make the process more opaque.

Kataeb MP Nadim Gemayel Proposes Draft Law to Help Young Entrepreneurs

Kataeb.org/Friday 05th April 2019/Kataeb MP Nadim Gemayel, who also serves as president of the Parliament's Information Technology Committee, submitted a draft Law for a new type of companies, called SAL-T, which can tackle many of the challenges facing young entrepreneurs in Lebanon. The draft law, according to Gemayel, will facilitate the legal environment of start-ups, allowing every new and existing entrepreneur to focus on innovation and creativity instead of wasting time and getting lost in legal procedures.

Former President Amine Gemayel Calls for Strict, Practical Policy to Fight Corruption
Kataeb.org/Friday 05th April 2019/Former President Amine Gemayel voiced concern over the current situation in Lebanon, deploring the quasi-obstructed state institutions, the worrisome economy, the missing development and the incomplete sovereignty. "Despite all that, we are still counting on the will of the Lebanese who still believe in their country and are eager to live in freedom and dignity," Gemayel said upon arriving in Melbourne as part of his Australia tour. Gemayel stressed the need for a strict and practical policy to curb corruption, saying that it must be steered clear of populism. "Corruption is eating the State off to the point of bankruptcy," he warned. "The State institutions need rationalism and transparency."Gemayel was received in Melbourne by the consul of Lebanon in Victoria, Dr. Ziad Itani, along with Kataeb partisans and representatives of different Lebanese political parties.

The Trump Administration Is Making Hezbollah Stronger
Anchal Vohra/Forign Policy/April 05/19
By threatening collective punishment over Lebanon’s most disruptive force, Washington is weakening the rest of its society.
At the press conference that concluded his visit to Lebanon in late March, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo listened with a grin as his Lebanese counterpart, Gebran Bassil, described in the usual diplomatic parlance the importance of the longstanding U.S.-Lebanon relationship. Pompeo, however, didn’t spend much time on ceremonial cliches. Instead, he quickly issued a warning: Contain Hezbollah or else.
Pompeo attacked the group for carrying out Iran’s agenda in the region at the expense of Lebanon’s domestic order and “the prosperity of future generations.” He added that the Lebanese had a choice between Hezbollah—and its backer Iran, which sends hundreds of millions of dollars to the group every year—and the United States, which provided $800 million to Lebanon in assistance just last year. Pompeo concluded by seemingly encouraging an uprising against Hezbollah when he said, “It will take courage for the nation of Lebanon to stand up to Hezbollah’s criminality, terror, and threats.” Pompeo’s threat was clear: If Lebanon fails to limit Hezbollah’s political and military power, it would risk not just losing U.S. aid but also a more severe response, possibly in the form of debilitating national sanctions.
If the United States follows through on this plan to inflict collective punishment on Lebanon over Hezbollah, the results are likely to be the opposite of what administration officials intend.
Lebanon’s politicians reacted to Pompeo’s remarks with the world-weary defensiveness they regularly deploy against Westerners who they believe misunderstand their political system. They tried to explain to Pompeo that Lebanon’s sectarian political system forbids treating Hezbollah, which has a parliamentary faction legitimately elected into office, as an illegal entity. They also pointed out that the military power of Hezbollah, with its Iranian weapons and training, is superior to that of the Lebanese Armed Forces. It has successfully branded itself to the Lebanese public as capable of standing up to Israel in ways that the Lebanese army manifestly cannot. Even Lebanese officials critical of Hezbollah dismissed Pompeo’s calls to directly challenge the group, warning that were they to follow his advice, the country could descend into a second civil war. That assessment may be overly dire. The United States, however, is undoubtedly risking Lebanon’s basic stability in ways that may ultimately benefit Hezbollah.
The United States already has sanctions in place against Hezbollah leaders and Hezbollah-affiliated businesses. To contain the group further, Washington is expected to target banking institutions that facilitate the flow of funds to the group. It may also sanction Hezbollah’s allies in parliament, including Lebanon’s largest Christian party, the Free Patriotic Movement.
Political insiders in Lebanon have been abuzz for weeks about what transpired during Pompeo’s visit, including behind closed doors. At the dinner organized for Pompeo, he allegedly warned multiple officials—including President Michel Aoun and Bassil, the foreign minister, who are the Free Patriotic Movement’s leaders, as well as the speaker of parliament, Nabih Berri of the Shiite Amal Movement, another current Hezbollah ally—that they were potential personal targets of sanctions. Pompeo, in an interview with a local television channel, said that the United States was prepared to sanction “particular individuals”.
Makram Rabah, a history lecturer at the American University of Beirut and a vociferous supporter of sanctions against Hezbollah, said he expected the United States to impose more sanctions under the Hizballah International Financing Prevention Act, which could include Lebanese state institutions if the United States thought Hezbollah was using them to bypass Iranian sanctions. “If Hezbollah bypasses American sanctions on Iran or on itself, then the U.S. will sanction Lebanon, and it can sanction under” the act, he said. “Maybe they will sanction Lebanon’s health ministry, which is under Hezbollah’s control, or maybe all of Lebanon as a country.”
Pompeo left no doubt that U.S. policy had radically changed toward Lebanon and that it had withdrawn what has been famously described as the “Lebanese exception”—the idea that because of its fragile democracy and multi-sectarian identity, the country should be given some leeway despite Hezbollah’s designation as a terrorist entity by Washington. Sami Nader, a Lebanese political analyst, said this shift came as part of U.S. President Donald Trump’s reversal of his predecessor’s Middle East policy toward confronting Iran. “Now the U.S. says, ‘Hezbollah is your problem.’ As in a Lebanese problem that Lebanon must sort out and not America,” Nader said. The Lebanese government isn’t sure how to deliver on Pompeo’s wishes. It can neither take on Hezbollah militarily nor stop it from accessing its share of government resources. According to Aoun, Hezbollah scored two-thirds of Shiite votes in the last elections. That’s make it entitled, under Lebanese convention, to offer services and jobs to its constituents, just as Sunni, Druze, and Christian parties do.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/04/04/the-trump-administration-is-making-hezbollah-stronger/?fbclid=IwAR1YN4U90bOFQb1HdYBME3zeZgWNgB6bKw9pNMdzuQUhvfmsVp2ltQdjeNE

Weak Links in a Sea of Extremism and Counter-Extremism
Eyad Abu Shakra/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19
The outcome of the US Secretary of state Mike Pompeo’s visit last month to Lebanon was more than expected, despite the ‘theatricals’ long mastered by Lebanese politicians, and the widely known ‘esoterism’ of American diplomacy.
The Lebanese ‘stop’ in the ex-CIA director’s Middle East tour came after several significant regional decisions by President Donald Trump; the most important, no doubt, being moving the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and officially recognizing Syria’s occupied Golan Heights as an ‘Israeli territory’!
Interestingly, the two aforementioned decisions were taken as the Trump administration was reiterating that two central targets in its Middle East strategy were defeating ISIS and confronting Iran.
In spite of the ambiguity surrounding the idea of ‘confronting’ Iran, the escalation of the current Republican US administration marks a shift away from the former Barack Obama’s Democratic administration which treated defeating ISIS as something contradictory to confronting Iran. This was why Obama had effectively sought to make the Tehran regime an ally, and had given it a free hand in the region under the pretext that the most vital battle – indeed, the only battle – was that to get rid of ISIS.
Well, these days Washington is celebrating the defeat of ISIS in Syria at the hands of ‘Syrian Democratic Forces’ the Kurdish-dominated militia that was originally founded, sponsored, and supported (militarily, logistically and politically) while shunning and letting down the real nationalist Syrian opposition.
What we now witness is, no doubt, an ‘achievement’; but what are we to expect next?
At the moment there is a vast Syrian area east of the Euphrates, inhabited by an Arab majority population, rich in oil, and constitutes an invaluable geographic location that makes it a vital segment in Iran’s mega-regional plan. This area is now dominated by two players:
- A militia, which is virtually Kurdish, and which may postpone its secessionist plans temporarily, but would most likely keep them alive
- A regime that is going through a period of having to make difficult decisions between being subservient to Tehran or becoming a client of Moscow
The presence of ISIS in that part of Syria confused the situation for a few years. But, perhaps, this was all along the true aim of the powers that aided and abetted ISIS - directly or indirectly-, worked hard to exploit it at various decisive crossroads in the Syrian Crisis, and use it as a cover for its maneuvers and changing priorities.
For the Obama administration, ISIS was the excuse for aligning with Tehran.
For Ankara, it was a cover that helped Turkey enter the Syrian arena as an influential player speaking for ‘political Sunni Islam, and posing as an indispensable agent qualified to check and control ‘extremists’.
For Moscow, it was a reason to save a despotic Syrian regime whose people rose against, and hence, maintain Russian interests in Syria.
For Tehran, it was a golden opportunity to ‘present its credentials’ both as a friend and as a partner in the ‘fight against terrorism’, while it accelerated the process of annexing Syria to its ‘Highway to the Mediterranean’ connecting Tehran and Beirut through Baghdad.
ISIS was all that and more…
It was a ‘requirement’. Indeed, most of those claiming that their priority was to fight, never dealt with it as their top target, simply because it was the excuse, the cover, the reason, and the opportunity.
Now, however, it has been finished off – at least, inside Syria – because it has outlived its usefulness. In light of this development, the next step in Syria would most likely come from Washington. This would gain extra importance, with the increased tension between Moscow and Tehran, the continued disharmony between Washington and Ankara, and the almost complete duplication between Trump’s policies and those of Israel’s Likud.
This is the tense arena where Lebanon finds itself these days. Realistically, it is a prisoner of Iran’s political and military hegemony and is suffering a socio-economic crisis aggravated by Hezbollah’s policies and military adventures. Furthermore, it shares a border with Syria, making it a victim of the complicated problem of Syrian refugees who were displaced through intentional demographic change. It also shares borders with Israel, which in addition to old demographic and water resources calculations is now in open dispute over the division of offshore oil and gas of the eastern Mediterranean.
Western governments, led by Washington, are well aware that the Lebanese political ‘governing’ setup is a fragile and interest-based temporary team. Its political rhetoric merely aims at gaining time and postponing deadlines in the absence of easy choices.
During his visit to Lebanon Secretary Pompeo met several Lebanese leaders. My guess is that he knew beforehand what he would hear; and later, was convinced that what they say in the open differs from what they express behind closed doors. On the other hand, I believe that the wise among Lebanon’s politicians also knew enough what already Washington knows about them, their circumstances, and what it expects from them. Thus, in the absence of firm American positions regarding the future map of the Middle East, it was natural that any wise politician in a small and fragile country, like Lebanon, would keep his/her options open.
Moreover, it is clear to both the Lebanese and the rest of the Arabs, that there are two extremist offensives gathering pace in the Middle East, and each benefitting from the other:
- The first is the Iranian offensive, with all its expansionist military and demographic displacement contents, launched in the name of Islam, and attempting to outbid the Arabs on the issues of protected Islamic shrines in Palestine and “liberating Jerusalem”.
- The Second, in the opposite direction, is the almost daily gratuitous presents gifted by Washington to Iran’s fake propaganda in every shape and form.
There is nothing more precious to Tehran’s propaganda organs than weakening the credibility of any rational and realistic Arab approach to a just and permanent peace. Unfortunately, this is exactly what Washington is doing through fully endorsing Netanyahu’s policies even against the Israeli ‘generals’ bloc’ which is trying to end a ‘state of demagoguery’ long accused of corruption, and well-versed in escaping forward albeit at a high human and political cost.
We do understand that US sanctions against Iran have been proven effective for some time. Proof of that has been Tehran’s political, security, and economic maneuvers with its Arab neighbors as it feels it is strong enough to impose its partnership on them.
However, it is high time Washington political strategists realize that insisting on confronting Iran’s extremism while supporting Israeli extremism is a highly risky strategy.

Tokyo Court Approves Prosecution's Request to Detain Ghosn for 10 Days
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 5 April, 2019/A Tokyo court approved on Friday a request by prosecutors to detain Carlos Ghosn for 10 days for further questioning. The ousted Nissan boss will be held until April 14. The decision was widely expected after prosecutors arrested Ghosn for the fourth time at his Tokyo apartment on Thursday. Ghosn’s lawyer, Junichiro Hironaka, told reporters the defense team would file an appeal on Friday against the detention. Authorities are looking into new allegations that Ghosn transferred some $15 million in Nissan funds between late 2015 and mid-2018 to a dealership in Oman. They suspect around $5 million of these funds were siphoned off for Ghosn's use, including for the purchase of a luxury yacht and financing personal investments. Prosecutors say Ghosn "betrayed" his duty not to cause losses to Nissan "in order to benefit himself."In a statement released on Thursday, Ghosn said he was innocent of the “groundless charges and accusations” against him. The once-feted executive, who has said he is the victim of a boardroom coup, also called the latest arrest an attempt to silence him. Stephen Givens, an American attorney practicing law in Japan since 1987, told AFP the latest allegations were the most serious yet. "If the facts are true... that is stealing from the company, that is embezzlement, that is terrible," said Givens, who is not connected with the Ghosn case. The Ghosn scandal has rocked the global auto industry and strained ties between Nissan and its global alliance partner Renault. It has also shone a harsh light on Japan’s judicial system. Thursday’s arrest came some 30 days after Ghosn had been released on $9 million bail from a Tokyo detention center. Legal experts have characterized the move as rare for someone already released on bail. Under Japanese law, prosecutors can seek an extension of another 10 days of detention before they must either bring formal charges against the suspect or let him go.
Justice Minister Takashi Yamashita, a former Tokyo prosecutor himself, hit back at growing criticism of the justice system, sometimes described as "hostage justice" due to long detention periods for suspects aimed at forcing a confession. "I understand that it is being handled appropriately in accordance with the stipulation of the code of criminal procedure. So the criticism is not warranted," Yamashita told journalists. Ghosn launched a counter-attack in an interview with French channel TF1, recorded just before his dawn arrest on Wednesday.
Describing himself as "a combative man and an innocent man", he vowed to "defend myself to the bitter end". And he voiced concern that he would not be given a fair trial, with around 99 percent of trials in Japan resulting in a conviction. "I have doubts over the way the judgment will take place. If there is a fair ruling, I am very confident but if it is not fair, I am worried about what will happen," said Ghosn. He lashed out at the conditions in the detention center, saying he was deprived of his watch, forced to sleep with the light on and forbidden from contact with his loved ones. "I wouldn't wish what I have suffered on my worst enemy," he said. Ghosn spent 108 days in the detention center in northern Tokyo before being dramatically released on bail. He had since lived in a court-appointed apartment in Tokyo without commenting on his situation despite huge international and Japanese media interest in his case that has shocked and surprised from the beginning. However, just as reports began to surface that he could be re-arrested, Ghosn emerged on Twitter to announce plans to hold a news conference on April 11. With this now impossible, his lawyer Hironaka said Ghosn had pre-recorded a video but refused to give details of the contents or when it would be released.

Latest LCCC English Miscellaneous Reports & News published on April 05-06/19
Netanyahu Calls on Putin to Pressure Iran Out of Syria

Moscow - Tel Aviv - Raed Jaber and Nazir Magally/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 5 April, 2019/Russian President Vladimir Putin met Thursday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Moscow to discuss the situation in Syria and ways to foster cooperation. The two leaders also tackled Iran’s role in Syria.An Israeli official said that Netanyahu called on Russia to use its influence in Syria to prevent Iran from securing a lasting presence in the country. Putin stressed the special significance of keeping communication between the two countries. As for Netanyahu, he invited Putin to Israel in May for the unveiling of a monument on Leningrad during World War II. Netanyahu's visit to Moscow was his second this year. Although the two leaders didn’t reveal details of their discussions, Kremlin sources indicated that talks mainly focused on military cooperation in Syria. Putin’s foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov also told journalists that they discussed events in Syria but that Netanyahu did not present any concrete plan to solve the Syrian crisis. Reports said that the Israeli PM called on Putin to warn Lebanon of Iranian and Hezbollah plans to build a secret factory that produces weapons. “We will discuss events in Syria ... and the regular and special coordination between our armies as well as other important issues for Israel,” Netanyahu said before departing to Moscow. The major topic discussed by Netanyahu and Putin was the constant pursuit by Iran to establish a military structure that enables it to open a front in the northeast against Israel, military analyst Ron Ben-Yishai, who accompanied Netanyahu to Moscow, told Yedioth Ahronoth. Iranian Revolutionary Guards Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani has responded to previous Russian pressure and moved Iranian forces away from the border with Israel, Ben-Yishai said. Meanwhile, a senior Kazakh official said the next round of the Astana-format Syrian settlement talks has been planned to be held in the Kazakh capital of Nur-Sultan on April 25-26. Kazakh First Deputy Foreign Minister Mukhtar Tleuberdi said: “I have recently been in Brussels at the Syrian conference organized by the UN and the European Union. The new UN special representative for Syria has expressed interest in participating in the Astana process. His participation is possible, of course.”Further, Russian FM Sergei Lavrov stressed in an interview that the war on terrorism in Syria “hasn’t finished yet”, underlining the necessity of eliminating terrorist organizations completely. “It is important for us to completely crush hotbeds of terrorism, and one of the most important of them which raises concerns is Idlib as there are still several thousands of terrorists in it,” he added. He reminded of Putin’s proposal in his speech at the UN in 2015 on establishing a real international front for combating terrorism.
Lavrov said dialogue against terrorism was resumed with the US after its long attempts to avoid it, adding “we will resume dialogue with the European Union.”

Zarif: Iran Will Continue Pressing Europe on Nuclear Deal Commitments
London - Adil Al-Salmi/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 5 April, 2019/Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif has raised doubts on the ability of European powers to bypass sanctions imposed on Tehran by the US after it withdrew from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal. "The Europeans at first viewed the JCPOA (nuclear deal) as an achievement, but maybe they were not prepared to, and certainly they were not capable of standing up against US sanctions," Zarif said on Thursday in an interview with Khamenei.ir, the official website of Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
"We will continue pressing the Europeans to implement their commitments. Europe must know that they cannot shy away from their responsibilities with a few statements and some unaccomplished plans," he added. Speaking last month on the occasion of the Iranian New Year, Khamenei said: "Once again the Europeans have stabbed us in the back, they have betrayed us.”Although he was slamming Europeans, his words included direct blame to President Hassan Rouhani’s government in dealing with them. Zarif said in the interview on Thursday that Iran would continue to pressure the Europeans to act on their obligations within the nuclear deal. His remarks came hours after slamming three European countries for sending a letter to UN chief Antonio Guterres, asking him to "report fully and thoroughly on Iranian ballistic missile activity" in his next report, which is expected in June. Zarif said the UK, France and Germany would rather seek to appease US President Donald Trump by pressuring the UN to provide the report on Iran’s missile activities than defy Washington’s measures.

Trumpets, Bugles Sound at Russian Ceremony for Returning Remains of Missing Israeli Soldier
Moscow – Raed Jabr/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 5 April, 2019/Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu received a valuable gift from the Kremlin which is meant to boost his standing only days ahead of upcoming Knesset elections. Putin, in his address to Netanyahu, who flew to Moscow five days before the election, revealed that it was Russian soldiers in Syria who had discovered the remains of Staff Sargent Zachary Baumel, which were returned home on an El Al flight. Baumel had been listed as missing in action since Israel’s first war in Lebanon, in 1982. At least 20 Israeli soldiers were killed, dozens wounded and six – including Baumel – went missing in the battle near the Lebanese village of Sultan Yacoub in the Beqaa valley. “Two years ago, I asked you to help us find the bodies of missing Israeli soldiers and you responded in the affirmative,” he said to Putin. “I want to thank you, my friend, for what you have done,” Netanyahu said in gratitude, proclaiming that the two countries have “shared values.” Netanyahu also thanked the Russian defense ministry and soldiers. On Friday, the Russian Defense Ministry had published a video showing footage of the handover ceremony to Netanyahu. The ceremony took place at the Russian Defense Ministry and in the presence of senior military commanders, led by Russian Chief of General Staff Valery Gerasimov. Russian media focused on how important of an achievement this is for Netanyahu, who is fighting hard to defeat his rivals in the April 9 elections. Baumel’s remains aren’t Moscow’s first gift to Tel Aviv. Back in 2016, Moscow returned a Magach tank to which the three missing soldiers had been assigned. It was captured by Syrian forces in the battle of Sultan Yacoub. The tank was gifted to Russia by Syria, and has been housed in a military hardware museum in Moscow Region for several decades. Handing in the Magash was a strong signal for boosting Russian-Israeli cooperation.

Germany Repatriates ISIS Children from Iraq
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 5 April, 2019/Germany has repatriated from Iraq several children of jailed militants, the foreign ministry said Friday, as the war against ISIS draws to a close. "The number of minors already brought back to Germany has reached a high single-digit figure," the foreign ministry source said, adding that the returns were carried out with the consent of the children's parents. They are now in the custody of their relatives in Germany, the source told Agence France Presse. Among the first young returnees to Germany were three children who arrived with their 31-year-old mother at Stuttgart airport on Thursday, their lawyer Mahmut Erdem said in a statement. They were taken into custody immediately, the lawyer said. According to the foreign ministry, at least eight Germans were jailed in Iraq, after they were convicted over their membership of ISIS. The foreign ministry said it was aware of cases of German nationals in custody in northern Syria, but added that it did not have direct consular access to them as the embassy in Damascus has been closed. Nevertheless, the government is looking for ways to repatriate the German nationals, it added. With the collapse of the last ISIS bastion in Syria last month, the fate of foreign militants and their families has become a significant problem for governments. The German interior ministry has said the children are innocent victims, paving the way for their return. France last month took in five orphans and is dealing with returns on a case-by-case basis.

Opposition Candidate Says he Remains ahead in Istanbul Vote Recount
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 5 April, 2019/The main opposition candidate in Sunday’s Istanbul local elections said on Friday he remained ahead after a recount of invalid votes. Republican People’s Party (CHP) mayoral candidate Ekrem Imamoglu told Turkey’s Fox TV that he was leading by 18,742 votes after a recount of 17 of the city’s 39 districts. He added that he did not expect the gap between his party and the AKP to change substantially when the recount in the country’s largest city was completed. “From what I see, it should end this weekend. It will fall into a 18,000-20,000 range, that’s what all the simulations show. These are very tight numbers,” he said. He said 119,652 invalid votes had been recounted, with 2,184 votes added in favor of the AKP and 785 added for the CHP. Late on Thursday, election officials expanded the vote recount in Istanbul, broadcaster CNN Turk said, as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s AK Party pushed its appeal against its shock election defeat there. It was unclear how many districts would ultimately see recounts. The AK Party said it would also demand a wider check on votes across the capital Ankara, which, according to initial results, it also narrowly lost in Sunday’s nationwide municipal vote. Those losses, if confirmed, would be particularly painful for Erdogan, whose party and its predecessor have dominated the two cities for 25 years. He launched his political career in Istanbul and served as the city’s mayor in the 1990s.On Wednesday, Turkey’s High Election Board had ordered a full recount in three of Istanbul’s 39 districts and a recount of just invalid ballots in 15 districts. However, late on Thursday the board decided there would be a full recount in those 15 districts as well, CNN Turk said.

UN Chief Flies East to Meet Libya’s Haftar as Security Council to Convene

Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 5 April, 2019/UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres flew to eastern Libya on Friday for talks with commander of the Libyan National Army (LNA) Khalifa Haftar, days after he launched a military offensive to capture the capital Tripoli. He will first head to Tobruk, another eastern city, to meet lawmakers of the House of Representatives that is allied to Haftar. The UN chief had arrived in Libya on Wednesday and spent the night in the in the heavily fortified UN compound in a Tripoli suburb. Guterres was in Tripoli to help organize a reconciliation national conference later this month. “My aim remains the same: avoid a military confrontation. I reiterate that there is no military solution for the Libyan crisis, only a political one,” Guterres wrote on Twitter.Late on Thursday, the assembly president, Aguila Saleh, issued a statement welcoming the offensive, a spokesman said. In New York, diplomats revealed that Britain had requested Thursday that the UN Security Council convene to address the Libyan crisis. LNA forces on Thursday took Gharyan, a city some 80 km (50 miles) south of Tripoli. The renewed confrontation is a setback for the United Nations and Western countries which have been trying to mediate between Haftar and Government of National Accord (GNA) head Fayez al-Sarraj , who met in Abu Dhabi last month to discuss a power-sharing deal.
The conference the United Nations is helping to organize is aimed at forging agreement on a roadmap for elections to resolve the prolonged instability in Libya. The Kremlin meanwhile, said it was not involved in the current developments in Libya. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov stated Moscow supported a negotiated political settlement to Libya’s problems that ruled out any new bloodshed. “We are closely following the situation in Libya,” he told reporters. “Of course we consider that the most important thing is that (military) operations there do not lead to bloodshed. The situation should be resolved peacefully.” The General Secretariat of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) expressed its concern about the military escalation in the Libya. It called on all parties to exercise maximum restraint and avoid any armed escalation that could lead to chaos. The OIC urged all parties to exert efforts to safeguard Libya’s security and stability and set as a priority the unity of its people and land. Dialogue is the only way to resolve disputes, it added, stressing its support for UN efforts to achieve comprehensive national reconciliation.

West, UN Exert Pressure to Avert Battle in Libya’s Tripoli

Cairo – Khaled Mahmoud/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 5 April, 2019/France, Italy, the United Arab Emirates, Britain and the United States called on Thursday for an end to the military escalation in Libya, hours after Libyan National Army (LNA) commander Khalifa Haftar announced an operation to march on the capital, Tripoli. “At this sensitive moment in Libya’s transition, military posturing and threats of unilateral action only risk propelling Libya back toward chaos,” they said in a joint statement released in Washington by the State Department. “We strongly believe that there is no military solution to the Libya conflict.”
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who had arrived in Tripoli on Wednesday, expressed his grave concern over the development. “I want to make a strong appeal to stop... the escalation,” Guterres told reporters at the UN compound in Tripoli on Thursday.
Libya needed a political, not a military, solution, he added. The UN chief was in Libya to help organize a reconciliation national conference. Haftar had announced the Tripoli operation on Thursday, saying that his forces had entered the cities of Sorman, to the capital’s south, and Gharyan, to its west. They also advanced on the city of Sirte without facing any resistance from the Government of National Accord (GNA) forces of Fayez al-Sarraj. In an address to his troops, he declared that the operation was aimed at eliminating remaining terrorist groups in the western region. “We are today heeding the call of our people in our valuable capital,” he added, saying that he will remain true to his vow of ridding the country of “oppressors.”The GNA forces went on military alert soon after the LNA announced its operation. Pro-GNA factions in the coastal city of Misrata vowed that they will confront the LNA’s march on Tripoli. Armed groups from Misrata moved to Tripoli to defend it, residents said, according to Reuters. The offensive is a setback for the UN and Western countries which have been trying to mediate between Haftar and Sarraj, who met in Abu Dhabi last month to discuss a power-sharing deal. The conference the UN is helping to organize is aimed at forging agreement on a roadmap for elections to resolve the prolonged instability in Libya.

Eritrea Accuses Qatar, Turkey of ‘Subversive Acts’
Cairo - Jamal Jawhar/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 5 April, 2019/The Eritrean government accused Turkey and Qatar on Thursday of seeking to obstruct and derail the peace process with Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa region. The sporadic acts of subversion conducted by the Turkish Government, (under the auspices of the ruling Justice and Development Party, AKP), against Eritrea are well known to merit elaboration here,” the Eritrean Information Ministry said in a statement published Thursday. It added that these futile acts are perpetrated through the funding and operational services of Qatar, as well as the collusion of the Sudanese regime, which has allowed its territory to be used for the nefarious aims. The Ministry said those acts have been ratcheted up especially in the past year with the singular aim of obstructing the peace process and positive developments in the ties between Eritrea and Ethiopia in particular and the whole Horn of Africa region in general. “The Turkish government has opened, at the beginning of this year, an Office for the Chairman of the obscure “Eritrean Muslim League” under the mantle of “Eritrean Ulama’s League/Eritrean Rabita-i Ulama,” it explained. Mohamed Abdel Qader, Director of the Turkish Affairs Unit at Al-Ahram Center for Regional and Strategic Studies, told Asahrq Al-Awsat that the Turkish-Qatari move aims to expand the specter of their influence in Africa, after having tense relations with Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt, the four countries that have cut ties with Doha. Abdel Qader said the move also aims to exploit the fragile situation in counties such as Libya, Sudan and Somalia. For his part, Dr. Ayman Abdel-Wahab, an expert in African affairs at the center, said: “The reconciliation between Ethiopia and Eritrea restored a lot of balance in the region although it faced some interference from forces such as Qatar and Turkey, partly linked to the situation in Somalia and competition over ports in the Red Sea.”
He described Thursday’s statement by the Eritrean Information Ministry as “daring and very strong.”Last year, Eritrea and Ethiopia signed a peace agreement supported by Saudi Arabia and the UAE after decades of hostility.

Statement on second anniversary of the chemical weapons attacks in Syria
April 4, 2019 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
Global Affairs Canada today issued the following statement on the second anniversary of the chemical weapons attack in Khan Shaykhun, Syria:
“Canada continues to be outraged by chemical weapons attacks in Khan Shaykhun in April 2017 and in Douma (Ghouta) in April 2018, which killed civilians and caused extreme suffering.
“We condemn the Assad regime’s repeated and morally reprehensible attacks on the people of Syria, including through its use of chemical weapons.
“We strongly support efforts to ensure perpetrators of such crimes are held to account. Today, we are announcing $2 million to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to support its work in assigning responsibility for chemical weapons use and its investigative efforts in Syria.
“Canada is committed to upholding the international rules-based order, including the prohibition on chemical weapons, and stands with the international community against those who seek to undermine it.”

Canada appalled by Brunei’s imposition of severe punishments under its Sharia penal code

April 5, 2019 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
Global Affairs Canada today issued the following statement:
Canada is appalled by Brunei’s imposition of severe punishments under its new Sharia penal code, which include corporal punishment and the death penalty. These inhumane provisions will affect women and members of the LGBTQ2 community in particular.
“Human rights are universal. Canada condemns violence and discrimination against any persons based on gender, gender identity or sexual orientation wherever they occur.
“We have raised our concerns directly with Brunei and we urge Brunei to suspend the implementation of its new penal code and to make changes to ensure that it is consistent with international human rights obligations.”

Israel’s Arab minority urged to boycott election over divisive law
Reuters, Haifa/Friday, 5 April 2019/Some of Israel’s young Arab citizens are calling for a boycott of Tuesday’s parliamentary election, dismayed by a recent law which they say reduces them to second-class citizens. The pro-boycott activists, many of whom identify as Palestinian, have tried in the past to persuade others among Israel’s Arab minority not to vote. But this time, they say, they are tapping into anger over the 2018 law that declares only Jews have a right to self-determination in the “nation-state” of the Jewish people. Leaders of Israel’s main Arab parties are pushing for their voters to turn out, fearing a boycott would weaken the 21-percent Arab minority’s representation in parliament, and boost Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s election chances.
Ignoring the party leaders, dozens of activists from the “Popular Campaign to Boycott the Zionist Knesset Elections” have been handing out leaflets in the northern Israeli port city of Haifa, which has a mixed Jewish and Arab population, and in smaller Arab towns and villages. “This is an attempt to boycott the body that actively tries to erase our Palestinian identity,” said Joul Elias, a student from Haifa who turned up to distribute flyers in Wadi Nisnas, a majority Arab neighborhood in the city. Israel’s Arab minority comprises mainly descendants of the Palestinians who remained in their communities or were internally displaced after the 1948 war that surrounded Israel’s creation. According to figures released by Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics, there were 1.9 million Arabs in Israel’s roughly 9 million population at the start of 2019. Most were Muslims, Christians or Druze. Jews made up 74.3 percent of the population.
Wake-up call
Despite holding Israeli citizenship, many Arabs say their communities, from the fertile Galilee in the north to the Negev desert in the south, face discrimination in areas such as health, education and housing. Netanyahu’s ruling Likud party counters that its 15 billion shekel ($4.19 billion) investment plan for the Arab sector “is the largest such commitment in Israel’s history,” according to Eli Hazan, Likud’s foreign affairs director. But Netanyahu rekindled Arab resentment in March when he wrote on Instagram that “Israel is not a state of all its citizens.” It was a reference, he said, to the new law, and the country being the homeland of the Jewish people.Many in the Arab community saw the Instagram post as an echo of divisive comments he made in the 2015 election. Hours before the polls closed on election day that year, Netanyahu said that Arabs were flocking “in droves” to cast ballots. This was an attempt to prod any complacent right-wing supporters to get out and vote for him. “The nation-state law was like a wake-up call for many people, making them realize this country will never be a country for all its citizens,” said Muhannad Abu Ghosh, 42, a pro-boycott activist from Haifa.But Ayman Odeh, an Arab legislator who heads the Hadash party, says that engagement is key to bringing about political changes that will benefit the Arab minority. “Our challenge, number one through five, is to increase the number of people who vote,” he said. He said some Arabs would, as they have in the past, vote for non-Arab center- or left-wing parties, but that even those votes “play a significant role in fighting right-wing extremism in Israel.”
Arab legislators
Arabs have served in Israel’s parliament since the country’s founding, but low turnout and other factors have typically left them under-represented in the 120-seat body.No Arab party has served in a governing coalition, meaning they have little say in shaping Israeli policies. In the 2015 election, Israel’s four Arab-dominated political parties united to form a “Joint List” that won 13 seats - their biggest representation yet. But this time around they are divided, which is likely to further deter an already dismayed electorate from voting, say political analysts. Arab voter turnout is expected to be just 51 percent, down from 64 percent in 2015, according to a recent poll from the Konrad Adenauer Program for Jewish-Arab Cooperation at Tel Aviv University. The poll projects nationwide turnout of 70 percent. “The majority of Palestinians in Israel consider the Knesset election as a practical tool. If it helps them, they will go and vote,” said As’ad Ghanem, a professor of political science at the University of Haifa.“This time, with the collapse of the Joint List and frustration with discriminatory practices, voter turnout will be low.” Ahmad Tibi, a veteran Arab legislator whose Ta’al party has forged an alliance with Odeh, says Arab parties are likely to lose two Knesset seats in this election. But he doesn’t see the nation state law or political division as a reason to boycott the vote.
“You can be a critic, you can have reservations, you can be angry at Arab parties or Arab,” Tibi said. “But to be nonchalant and to sit aside is not the solution,” he added.
Still, the boycott movement’s members, many of whom voted in previous elections, believe that grassroots activism is a more effective agent of change than voting.
Rula Nasr-Mazzawi, 43, a former activist with the Arab party Balad, says she left the faction and joined the boycott out of frustration with Arab parties’ divisions in the face of what she described as Israel’s “racist policies.” “The parties stopped working for the people. They are just clinging onto their own seats and their own power,” she said. Israeli polls forecast Netanyahu win
Meanwhile, Final authorized opinion polls published on Friday just days ahead of the Israeli general elections showed Netanyahu heading for a fifth term in office, leading a right-wing coalition.The polls revealed the rival centrist Blue and White list led by former military chief Benny Gantz was running virtually neck-and-neck with Netanyahu’s Likud ahead of Tuesday’s vote.
But while most polls saw Gantz’s list as scooping slightly more votes than Likud, neither party was predicted to win more than 25 percent of seats in parliament. And the polls were unanimous in forecasting that Likud would be able to build a viable ruling coalition to beat off Gantz’s challenge.
None gave a figure for undecided voters, although the number is reportedly high enough to swing the outcome. “Past polls have shown that nearly one out of every six-seven voters makes a decision only in the last two days before the elections, and it isn’t clear what will be the dynamic of the coming few days,” Maariv daily wrote Friday. A poll by Smith Research for the Jerusalem Post published Friday showed Gantz’s Blue and White, picking up 28 seats in the 120-member Knesset, with the right-wing Likud at its heels with 27, according to AFP.
But it found that overall the right and center-right would control 68 seats compared to 52 from the center and left. Friday is by law the last day on which surveys can be released before the ballot boxes open on Tuesday morning.
A poll published late Thursday by public broadcaster KAN gave the right a narrower, although still decisive, lead of 64 to 56. The daily Yediot Aharonot put the gap as narrower still, at 63-57.

Armed Clashes Flare South of Libya's Tripoli
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 05/19/Armed clashes broke out Friday south of Libya's capital Tripoli between a pro-government alliance and forces loyal to eastern strongman Khalifa Haftar, sources on both sides said.
A unity government source said the fighting struck regions less than 50 kilometers (30 miles) south of the capital. The press office of Haftar's force said there had been "violent fighting on the edge of Tripoli with armed militias."

Huge Demos as Algerians Urge Bouteflika Allies to Quit Too
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 05/19/A vast crowd of protestors flooded the streets of Algiers Friday, the first mass demonstrations since the resignation of ailing president Abdelaziz Bouteflika and a show of strength by those pushing demands for reform. Activists chanted slogans demanding key Bouteflika loyalists follow his lead and quit, after social media calls for "joyful demonstrations" to "peacefully bring down a dictatorial regime."
No official figures were immediately available on the size of the rally, but it was at least as big as those held on previous Fridays leading up to Bouteflika's departure, said AFP journalists at the scene. Opponents of the old regime have called for a massive turnout, targeting a triumvirate they dub the "3B" -- Senate speaker Abdelakder Bensalah, head of the constitutional council Tayeb Belaiz and Prime Minister Noureddine Bedoui. The veteran Bouteflika loyalists have been entrusted with overseeing the political transition after the veteran leader finally stepped down at the age of 82. Bouteflika resigned late on Tuesday after weeks of demonstrations triggered by his bid for a fifth term in office. After two decades in power, he had lost the backing of key supporters including armed forces chief Ahmed Gaid Salah.
Bensalah, speaker of the upper house of parliament for 16 years, is to take the reins as interim president for three months until elections are organized.
Belaiz, a minister for 16 years, was named by Bouteflika as head of the Constitutional Council which will regulate the elections. Before his appointment as prime minister, Bedoui had served as interior minister -- or, as the French-language El Watan newspaper put it on Thursday, "chief engineer of electoral fraud".
'Partial victory'
Opponents say all three are tarnished by their long years of service under Bouteflika and should follow his lead and resign. Even hours before the rally started, several hundred demonstrators had gathered outside the main post office in central Algiers, which has been the epicenter of the protest movement. Some shouted "we will not forgive!" in reference to an open letter Bouteflika issued after his resignation, apologising to the Algerian people for "mistakes made." Said Wafi, a bank worker from the nearby city of Boumerdes, had arrived at 5:00 am in hope of being "the first demonstrator against the system." "Bouteflika leaving means nothing if his men continue to run the country," the 42-year-old said. Samir Ouzine, 19, a student, agreed.
"Bouteflika was very sick. He wasn't really governing, and nothing will change if he alone leaves and his men stay." One of the leading voices of the protest movement, lawyer Mustapha Bouchachi, has called for the demonstrations to continue "until they have all gone." "Our victory is partial," he said in a video posted online. "Algerians will not accept that symbols of the regime... lead the interim period and organize the next elections."But protestors expressed hope that the system would see real change.
Zoubir Challal, who like many young unemployed Algerians had considered a dangerous crossing of the Mediterranean to seek a better life in Europe, carried a sign bearing the slogan: "For the first time, I don't want to leave you, my country."
- 'Delicate phase' -
Protesters are calling for new transitional institutions to be set up to implement reforms and organize free elections. "Sticking with the constitution would probably be met with quite a bit of protest, as protesters may be wary of elections not being fair, competitive and free," said Isabelle Werenfels of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs. "One option would be to name an independent and broadly accepted head for a transitional body," she said. Hamza Meddeb, an independent analyst in Tunisia, said Algeria was entering "a very delicate phase, because the street and the institutions are at risk of diverging". The army's intentions are a key question, according to analysts. Despite abandoning his patron Bouteflika who named him army chief in 2004, General Gaid Salah is still seen by protesters as a key defender of the "system."But protestors on Friday chanted: "The army and the people are brothers!"Said Zeroual, 75, said he hoped Algeria would regain "our freedom and our sovereignty.""I hope to live long enough to see democracy in my country," he said.

Britain, EU Set Out Competing Brexit Delay Dates
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 05/19/Prime Minister Theresa May asked the European Union on Friday to delay Britain's departure until June 30 while Brussels suggested that it might be best to postpone the split for up to a year. The competing visions of how to unwind Britain's 46-year involvement in the European project will be hashed out again at an EU summit in Brussels on Wednesday and EU leaders have already reacted sceptically to May's request. The current Brexit deadline of April 12 has already been pushed back once from March 29 because of the UK parliament's repeated failure to back the deal May signed with the other 27 EU leaders in December. May's formal request to EU Council president Donald Tusk said Britain thinks the delay "should end on June 30 2019" -- the same date she asked for and was refused at the last EU summit last month. "If the parties are able to ratify (the withdrawal agreement) this date, the government proposes that the period should be terminated earlier," May wrote in a letter released by Downing Street. A senior EU official said that Tusk's own idea for a "flexible" 12-month extension "will be presented to member states today."
But a source in French President Emmanuel Macron's office said it was "premature" to consider the request without "a clear plan" from May about what she intended to do with the extra time. German Foreign Minister Heiko Mass said May still had "many questions" to clarify. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte -- seen as one of May's closer European allies -- also said the letter "doesn't answer" important concerns.
'Political cover' -
May said Britain would start preparing for European Parliament elections in case it is still a member of the bloc when they begin on May 23.
The idea is deeply unpopular with Britons who voted to quit the EU and chart their own future in a 2016 referendum whose arguments are still being waged to this day. Political analysts in London said May probably knew that her new deadline will be rejected because EU leaders do not think she can get her deal through parliament any time soon. May is under intense pressure from the right wing of her Conservative Party to pull Britain out of the bloc as soon as possible -- with or without a deal. "I think that Theresa May is looking for political cover because she is asking for an extension she knows she can't get," said King's College European politics professor Anand Menon. She wants Brussels to "force her to do something else so that at least she won't get accused of selling out."The first response from leading Conservative euroskeptics to the idea was very critical. "If a long extension leaves us stuck in the EU we should be as difficult as possible," Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg tweeted.
- 'Fight to save Brexit' -
The other 27 EU nations must give unanimous backing to any deadline extension. Some EU leaders fear that Britain's participation in the European Parliament vote will help boost the standing of anti-EU parties due to their popularity among Brexit-backing Britons. UK far-right leader Nigel Farage called on his supporters Friday to vote for his Brexit Party in the European election. "The fightback to save Brexit has begun," Farage tweeted.
Unlikely breakthrough -
May's team is currently negotiating with leaders from the main opposition Labor Party in a bid to find a compromise that can pass parliament in the coming days. Downing Street on Friday called the talks "constructive and an ongoing process." May's letter said the talks' failure would likely see the two parties jointly produce several options that would be put up for a series of parliamentary votes. Labor is pushing May to accept a much closer post-Brexit alliance with the bloc that includes its participation in a customs union.
May had previously dismissed the idea because it bars Britain from striking its own trade deals with global giants such as China and the United States. But analysts said it was not in Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn's political interests to help get May's agreement over the line. "If they come to an agreement, that's quite dangerous for him," University of Nottingham political history professor Seven Fielding said. "I would be surprised if he doesn't walk away."

Sudan police fire tear gas at protests in the capital: Witnesses
AFP, Khartoum/Friday, 5 April 2019/Sudanese security forces fired tear gas at anti-government protesters in Khartoum on Thursday, witnesses said, even after President Omar al-Bashir acknowledged that demonstrators had “legitimate” economic concerns. Protests have rocked Sudan since December, with demonstrators accusing Bashir’s government of mismanaging the economy and causing soaring food prices as well as regular shortages of fuel and foreign currency. Demonstrators chanting “Freedom! Peace! Justice!” have continued to rally despite a state of emergency announced in February, although in recent weeks they have been largely confined to Khartoum and its twin city of Omdurman. On Thursday protesters demonstrated in areas of Khartoum and Omdurman, including in the capital’s districts of Burri and Jabra, where they were confronted by riot police with tear gas, witnesses said. Protesters chanted anti-government slogans and urged residents to join them, a witness told AFP, without revealing his name for security reasons. Late on Thursday, police said they had dispersed “illegal gatherings” in several areas of Khartoum state.
Some policemen and citizens have also been wounded, police spokesman General Hashim Abdelrahim told the official news agency. “Some who threatened public safety and created disturbances have been detained,” he said, adding that some had been jailed by special emergency courts. Protests first broke out on December 19 in response to a government decision to cut vital bread subsidies, but since Bashir imposed a nationwide state of emergency in February to quell the demonstrations, their scale and intensity have shrunk. Bashir told parliament earlier this week that the economic concerns raised by demonstrators were “legitimate”.“The economic crisis has impacted a wide section of our people,” Bashir said on Monday. While the protests were initially focused on bread prices, demonstrators soon began to demand that Bashir resign after three decades in office. Bashir swept to power in an Islamist-backed coup in 1989.
Analysts say has the protest movement has been the biggest challenge ever to his iron-fisted rule. Officials say 31 people have died in protest-related violence, while Human Rights Watch has put the death toll at 51, including children and medics. Protest organizers have called for widespread protests on Saturday.

Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on April 05-06/19
The Floods, the Mullahs and the Cinderella in Boots
Amir Taheri/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/73555/amir-taheri-asharq-al-awsat-the-floods-the-mullahs-and-the-cinderella-in-boots-%D8%A3%D9%85%D9%8A%D8%B1-%D8%B7%D8%A7%D9%87%D8%B1%D9%8A-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%81%D9%8A%D8%B6%D8%A7%D9%86%D8%A7%D8%AA-%D9%88/
It may take weeks if not months before the full facts of the current nationwide floods in Iran are established. But we already know that the floods represent one of the biggest natural disasters Iran has suffered in half a century.
According to provisional data from the Islamic Red Crescent the floods struck in over 300 towns and cities in 22 of Iran’s 31 provinces, affecting 18.5 million people, almost a quarter of the nation’s total population. Some 1.2 million people have been made homeless, at least temporarily.
The damage done to infrastructure across the nation is equally massive. With 141 rivers in flood and some 500 landslides over 3,000 kilometers of roads and highways connecting thousands of villages and 78 medium or large cities have been partly or totally destroyed.
Also destroyed are 87 bridges, 160 dams and over 1,000 kilometers of railway lines. The floods have put over 18,000 factories and workshops out of action while the damage done to farming is described as “incalculable.”
From a broader point of view perhaps, the natural disaster has also revealed some of the fundamental weaknesses of a dysfunctional system that, having devoted its principal resources and much of its energies to promoting a weird ideology, seems to be incapable of coping with basic tasks of a normal nation-state.
It took the parallel authorities that coexist in Tehran more than 48 hours before they realized what was going on, giving the state-controlled media the green light to report on it.
Then it took another two days before the various duplicating organs of the state, decided who was supposed to do what. President Hassan Rouhani, spending a weeklong holiday in the island resort of Qishm appeared beyond reach. “Supreme Guide” Ali Khamenei, too busy with a poetry gathering, was unavailable for days, and found it unnecessary even to comment.
The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), often boasting about its imaginary conquests in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen and promising to hoist the flag of Khomeinism in Washington, was forced to intervene not to save the stricken citizens but to protect some of the infrastructures it has built and runs as businesses.
It was soon revealed that those infrastructures, including railway lines built in traditional flood channels and dams hastily erected in wrong places and wrong rivers massively contributed to the floods.
The IRGC has built over 300 crude dams to divert waters of various rivers to land it had seized and transferred to active and/or retried officers.
In a strategy that recalls that of the Chavista in Venezuela, the IRGC has also helped many peasants, seen as part of the regime’s support base, to cut down large tracts of forests, further raising the risk of flood.
More than a week after the disaster had struck, using thinly veiled words, Rouhani put the blame on IRGC’s cowboy style “social” building projects and profiteering schemes. IRGC chief General Muhammad-Ali Aziz-Jaafari riposted by accusing Rouhani’s Cabinet of incompetence and poor leadership.
The failure of the official government led by Rouhani and the unofficial one led by Gen. Jaafari, both under Khamenei’s ultimate control, at least theoretically, provided a space for other actors to jump in.
The first to do so was the national army which, since the mullahs seized power in 1979, has been treated as a Cinderella in boots.
Iranians watched in amazement as special units of the regular army moved to save lives, prevent floods from spreading further, reopen roads and even start repairing some of the damage. Buoyed by the presence of regular army units thousands of volunteers also poured in to help deal with the disaster. Contacts across Iran describe the solidarity shown by average citizen as “exemplary”, implying that Iran deserves a better government.
The IRGC reacted by ferrying in dozens of ”Madaheen”, professional reciters of religious chants whose patron is Khamenei. The “Madaheen” jumped into flood waters chanting “Suffering makes us strong!” and “We are not afraid of death” while beating their chests the way they do when they mourn the martyr Imam Hussein at Muharram.
In some places they were accompanied by women who attend Muharram mourning sessions as “tear-shedding assistants.”
The parallel governments also spent time debating whether or not to appeal for outside assistance.
While the official foreign ministry awaited instructions regarding contact with the International Red Cross and other aid agencies, the unofficial foreign ministry, located in Khamenei’s office, decided that “those who know how to mourn Hussein” need not humiliate themselves by shaking a begging bowl at ”Cross-Worshippers and Zionists.” In the Bam earthquake in 2003 over 60 countries rushed to help Iran cope with the disaster.
The façade government, led by President Muhammad Khatami had welcomed foreign aid. That had angered the “Supreme Guide”.
“How could we humiliate Islam in the face of the Infidel?” Khamenei had demanded.
This time, however, the façade government, headed by the hapless Rouhani, dared not defy the “Supreme Guide”. Rouhani’s First Assistant Eshaq Jahangiri had this to say: “A country as rich as the Islamic Republic has no need of foreign assistance.”
However, to fool his American apologists, Muhammad Javad Zarif, the man who plays the role of foreign minister, still had to blame the United States for lack of any foreign assistance or even sympathy.
“American sanctions prevent help from reaching Iran,” Zarif’s spokesman said last Monday.
However, everyone knows that humanitarian aid as well as food and medicine and other items of trade with no probable military use are not covered by the US, the European Union and the United Nations sanctions.
In any case there is no sanction against a foreign leader, our dear friend President Vladimir Putin for example, phoning someone in Tehran to express condolences and sympathy.
The problem is that Putin wouldn’t know who to phone in Tehran: Rouhani the mullah who plays as president or Khamenei who may feel insulted if he is told there has been a catastrophe in his “Islamic” paradise?

Bouteflika’s Ousting Reminiscent of Mubarak
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19
Before his resignation in 2011, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said he was not seeking to extend his presidential mandate, but would still remain in power for more than six months. Similarly, the resigning Algerian President Abdul Aziz Bouteflika also said he was not planning on running for a fifth term.
I would not dismiss the possibility that both presidents were sincerely considering leaving office before the last hour. The problem, however, is no one knows the meaning of the “right time” for leaving. In the Arab world, it is much harder to exit such an arena than enter it.
In both situations, the families of Mubarak and Bouteflika took the blame of planning to pass power on to relatives — the sons in Mubarak’s case and the brothers in Bouteflika’s case. This has provoked massive street protests in Algeria and led to the army’s intervention due to fears over national security and order. Thus, both terms ended in a very tragic way unworthy of both presidents. We are not quite sure if these accounts are true, but both former presidents were initially planning on running in the upcoming elections, despite their poor health. The intervention of family members was common knowledge, and the presidential terms in both cases were extended to more than what was acceptable in republics.
Well, would these ignominious changes have happened had Mubarak and Bouteflika declared their wish not to extend their terms? This is what I and many others believe, along with the possibility that a long term, accompanied by old age, is known historically to end either with deposition or death.
Habib Bourguiba, the historical leader of Tunisia, ruled for 30 years, but his power began to be questioned in the last days of his presidential term. His pictures were even thought by the public to have been modified in order to make him appear in good shape. Eventually, his rule came to an end at the hands of his hand-picked prime minister Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, who ousted him and held him under house arrest for 13 years until his death. However, Ben Ali would later commit the same mistake; ruling for 20 consecutive years until, finally, being ousted by protesters.
On the other hand, we cannot underestimate the dangers of voluntary exits in the third world; where the relatives and entourage of the president may end up paying the price of conflicts and reprisals.
Indeed, we can see that Bouteflika is a political personality close to the hearts of most Algerians, as he took over the presidency of the country during a critical period, and led it from violence and bloodshed to peace. He could have ended his 20-year rule as a national hero — an icon for the present and a role model for the future generations — but, as soon as he announced his wish to run for a fifth term, citizens took to the streets to protest his decision.
Keeping in mind that running for a fourth term in 2014 was also widely criticized; the situation, unfortunately, reached the point where Bouteflika had to be ousted in his wheelchair, semi-helpless. It was probably necessary to save the country from his relatives’ behind-the-scenes “rule,” and the almost certain bloody conflict that would have followed. It is no use crying over spilled milk. All that Algerians can do now is look forward to a better future since the change has — at least — occurred without bloodshed, chaos or bitter conflicts.
It is hoped that the rest of the transition phase will also run smoothly, in an atmosphere of unanimity, so the country will enter a new era.

Striking the Right Balance: Creating Jobs in a Fast-changing Middle East Business Landscape
Omar Fahoum/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19
With the technologies of the Fourth Industrial Revolution raising expectations of efficiency and productivity - along with concerns of constant disruption - no entity can remain competitive with a “business as usual” approach. This applies to governments as well, perhaps even more so, given the critical element of public trust and public sector employment. For countries in the Middle East, this is a particular challenge. As the largest employer (and often the employer of last resort) for a growing and youthful population, governments face a daunting scenario: efficiency gains through automation and artificial intelligence (AI), which will undoubtedly enhance their competitiveness on the world stage, versus the potential shrinking of the government workforce, and employment consequences for a key segment of the population.
The employer of choice
While artificially intelligent robots may not be descending on the Middle Eastern job market just yet, countries in the region are starting to contend with the challenges of automation and innovation brought on by the current global industrial revolution. Technology is rapidly pervading every aspect of the region’s business landscape, from automated immigration clearances to banking services, compliance and media programming. The difference in the Middle Eastern business landscape compared to other regions is the role the public sector plays in the workforce. Government is by far the region’s main employer. Two thirds of Saudi workers are employed by the public sector, and Jordan’s public sector employs 55% of workers. These are two of the highest ratios in the world. What’s more, it is estimated that over two thirds of all young Gulf Arabs still look to governments for jobs.
But as countries are increasingly rated on the efficiency of doing business, an inflated public sector is no longer an option if states wish to compete - among themselves and for foreign direct investment - as well as avoid capital flight. And just as with private entities, governments are now under pressure to become more efficient by using Fourth Industrial Revolution technologies such as AI and automation.
That could mean fewer jobs. Consider what kinds of jobs are at a high risk for automation according to an Oxford University study: data entry, account clerks, inspectors, tax preparers, accountants, title searchers. The study names a range of office work, of the type often used in the public sector.
Add to this the growing population of young people now entering the workforce, and the pressure on the public sector will only increase. According to the International Monetary Fund, about five million workers are entering the Middle East job market annually. And the percentage of the population under the age of 25 ranges from 25% in Qatar to 50% in Oman.
Pivoting to the private sector
Clearly, governments in the Middle East must start finding ways to employ their workforce other than by public sector hiring.
More promising is to encourage workers to seek out employment in the private sector. But as governments turn to the private sector, striking the right balance is key as challenges in this changing business landscape abound.
Educating and upskilling the population is one of these challenges. To pivot successfully to the private sector, education will need not only to emphasize innovation and the right skills for an automated future, it will also need to highlight the advantages of private sector work. Career advancement, creativity, rewards for inventiveness, and the potential to make more money are all possibilities in the private sector that can counteract the perceived stability of public sector work. Another challenge is for governments to keep up to speed with technological innovation so that the private sector can create the jobs needed. The fact that technological advancement is outpacing the promulgation of laws and regulations to govern it is a universal issue, but is even more pronounced in the Middle East. One example is data protection. Current rules that ban enterprise information and data from leaving the physical boundaries of a country are just not tenable when information is stored in the cloud. Businesses need to be able to operate on a trans-regional and global scale without being hampered by outdated rules and regulations.
Ready to rebalance
None of this is to say that the Middle East is not eager to capitalize on advanced technologies. Dubai’s government recently announced its intention to be the world’s first blockchain-powered government by 2020. Vision 2030 in Saudi Arabia and mega-projects such as Neom and Al Qiddiya also point to the fact that the region is gearing up for the Fourth Industrial Revolution. But any next steps in this technological journey must include a focus on how to balance the adoption of innovative technology and the overall welfare of the citizenry. With one of the youngest populations in the world looking for jobs, the region can’t afford not to. This article is part of the World Economic Forum on the Middle East and North Africa 2019, taking place in Jordan 6-7 April.

CNN, Qatar and the Targeting of Saudi Arabia
Salman Al-dossary/Asharq Al Awsat/April 05/19
Since the start of the crisis over Khashoggi’s death, the media targeting of Saudi Arabia reached an unprecedented extent. Six months have passed with tens of thousands of news, reports, analyses, articles and interviews - part of which is a repetition of the same old stories and the other relies on anonymous sources, hundreds of inciting articles and incredible false accounts. It was an unprecedented campaign, clearly aimed at harming the Kingdom and its leadership. As objectivity was lacking, analyses became information and speculations turned into news. Much respected media institutions saw their credibility compromised from within. Perhaps the first person to reveal this reality - despite the world’s reluctance to believe him - was US President Donald Trump, whose relations with a number of US media institutions witnessed a high level of tension. On several occasions, he accused them of lying and even went on to describe them as “the false news media.” Trump, unfortunately, proved to be sincere and did not exaggerate in challenging those institutions.
We all remember how The Washington Post was caught up in a scandal, with the publishing of text messages between Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi and executive director of Qatar Foundation International (QFI), Maggie Mitchell Salem, which revealed how the QFI shaped the columns wrote by Khashoggi in the newspaper. Maggie suggested topics and drafted the articles and pushed the late journalist to adopt a tougher stance against the Saudi government.
Today, a new scandal emerged, but this time in the audiovisual media, on the most popular news network, CNN. “Conservative Review” magazine published names of people working for CNN and are very close to Qatar. It noted that many of the national security experts, who work for CNN, have direct links with the State of Qatar. This prompted Trump’s eldest son, Junior, to tweet that he was “shocked” by the report.
What is important here is the link between the two scandals. Qatar uses dirty money and illegally infiltrates media outlets for one goal - to polish its image and target the Kingdom.
Perhaps only these two scandals became known to the public. But how many media outlets have been soaked with Qatari money and are harming the Kingdom, without being uncovered?
Undoubtedly, anyone who follows the American media is aware that not everything that comes out of it is 100% true. It is no exaggeration to say that there are countries that seek to penetrate some of these institutions. This sometimes leads to a deliberate coverage of the abuse, as in the crisis of Khashoggi's killing. However, despite all attempts to target the Kingdom, whether, with Qatari or other money, the successes of Saudi Arabia have prompted a government like Qatar to use all immoral means to attack the Kingdom repeatedly and wrongly.
However, the bitter truth for Qatar and its allies in media targeting - whether Iran or Turkey - is that the media campaigns have failed to achieve their goals, and turned negatively on those who planned and executed them. Turkey is busy with the huge loss of the sultan’s party in the elections, Iran is facing more painful sanctions, while Qatar has not succeeded in overcoming the social, economic and political losses resulting from the Quartet’s blockade. The successive media scandals confirm that the Arab Quartet was right in boycotting a country that exploited the media in the ugliest way to refine its image and harm that of its neighbors.

Turkey's Elections: What Do They Mean for Turkey and Erdoğan?
Burak Bekdil/Gatestone Institute/April 05/19
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14004/turkey-municipal-elections-results
The election results in Istanbul, now disputed by the AKP, put the opposition candidate into the lead by a margin of 23,000 votes in a city with 10.5 million voters.
"Though Turkey's government and many commentators are blaming the Trump administration and foreign speculators for the country's economic downturn, the reality is that it was already 'baked into the cake' many years ago due to the credit bubble that formed." — Jesse Colombo, Forbes.
Simple religious Islamist conservative and ultra-nationalist populism are still keeping Erdoğan in power, but there are signs that, if the economy keeps getting worse, those forces may not be able to save him. There are signs that this is taking place.
On March 31, the Turks went to the ballot box to elect mayors for their cities. Ostensibly the election results marked President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's 15th consecutive election victory since his (Islamist) Justice and Development Party (AKP) came to power in November 2002. The AKP won the biggest number of votes (44%) nationwide. Its ultra-nationalist ally, the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) won 7% of the vote. That was good news for Erdoğan. In reality, it was good but incomplete news for Turkey's Islamist strongman.
"Who loses Istanbul [in elections] loses Turkey," Erdoğan roared in a 2018 speech, underlying the importance of big Turkish cities in municipal elections.
He may be right. Winning Istanbul and Ankara was how political Islam eventually won Turkey. Precisely 25 years ago, in March 1994, the municipal elections caused a series of seismic events in the then-secular Turkish political landscape: In an altogether shocking election result the (Islamist) Welfare Party (RP) won Ankara and Istanbul, with Erdoğan elected as mayor of Turkey's biggest city. RP's leader, Necmettin Erbakan, Erdoğan's mentor became Turkey's first Islamist prime minister after he won the biggest number of votes in parliamentary elections in 1995, just a year after the party had won two of Turkey's biggest cities.
Ironically, 25 years later, Turkey's Islamists lost Ankara and Istanbul in another municipal election, although Erdoğan's AKP, citing vote rigging and other irregularities, challenged the results. The claim is particularly ironic as in all of past elections Erdogan was accused of vote-rigging, but only now, for the first time, are they complaining about irregularities. According to the Supreme Election Board, so far known to be a pro-Erdoğan rubber-stamp authority, opposition candidates won both Ankara and Istanbul. Ruşen Çakır, a Turkish columnist, said, perhaps prematurely:
"The election today is as historic as the local election in 1994. It's the announcement of a page that was opened 25 years ago and is now being closed".
"While losing Istanbul would be a nuclear defeat for Erdoğan," said Soner Çagaptay, director of the Turkish Research Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, "losing Ankara, which is shorthand for political power and government, is a pretty significant loss".
In addition, the opposition bloc won several big cities that had traditionally voted for Erdoğan's AKP. With Sunday's results, the entire Turkish coastline of the Aegean and Mediterranean seas -- as well as the capital, Ankara, some major cities in Central Anatolia, the entire Thrace region and two provinces in northeastern Turkey -- went to the opposition. The predominantly Kurdish southeast was, as always, divided between the pro-Kurdish People's Democracy Party and AKP.
What do the election results mean for Turkey and Erdoğan? A few observations:
Allegations about Erdoğan's/AKP's vote-rigging have never been unconvincing, but the magnitude was hard to prove. It was anyone's guess: from 1% to 10%. This author has been on the lower end of the wide spectrum. The election results in Istanbul, now disputed by the AKP, put the opposition candidate into the lead by a margin of 23,000 votes in a city with 10.5 million voters.
It was the economy, not politics, that caused the average Turk, otherwise a staunch supporter of Erdoğan, to feel bitter about the government. In 2018, the Turkish lira hit record-low levels against major Western currencies; the unemployment rate hit a nine-year-high; inflation spiked, and the economy shrank by 2.4% in the last quarter of the year and 1.6% in the third quarter. Jesse Colombo of Forbes wrote:
"Though Turkey's government and many commentators are blaming the Trump administration and foreign speculators for the country's economic downturn, the reality is that it was already 'baked into the cake' many years ago due to the credit bubble that formed".
That "baking into the cake" is Erdoğan's worst nightmare. His election defeat, coupled with a new wave of economic and financial crises (a new Turkish lira plunge, surging bond and inflation rates, several conglomerates in the defaulting queue, more jobless voters, price hikes, more taxes and banking restrictions) could force Erdoğan into early presidential and parliamentary elections (now scheduled for June 2023). Erdoğan, relying on his nationalist partner, MHP, has played down the message of the municipal elections, ruling out early national elections at any time. "Please do not be heartbroken with this result," Erdoğan told party loyalists after the March 31 election results came in. "As of tomorrow morning, we will start finding and making up for our shortcomings," Erdogan added.
Ironically, the two "kingmaker" forces in the near future of Turkish politics will be the two camps that have traditionally been most hostile to each other: Turkish and Kurdish nationalists, both of which have around a 10% popularity in nationwide elections. Until 2016, Erdoğan courted the Kurds and deeply antagonized Turkish nationalists, including his best ally, MHP leader Devlet Bahçeli. He then scrapped all peace talks with the Kurds, made a U-turn and allied himself with Bahçeli -- a smart maneuver that earned him votes in the 2018 presidential race. After March 31, Erdoğan can easily calculate that his dependency on Bahçeli has grown even bigger. Bahçeli, for his part, could be tempted to abandon Erdoğan and, before a near-crisis has turned into a perfect storm, call for early national elections, by citing economic mismanagement.
Simple religious Islamist conservative and ultra-nationalist populism are still keeping Erdoğan in power, but there are signs that, if the economy keeps getting worse, those forces may not be able to save him. There are many signs that this is taking place.
Burak Bekdil, one of Turkey's leading journalists, was recently fired from the country's most noted newspaper after 29 years, for writing in Gatestone what is taking place in Turkey. He is a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
© 2019 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.

وكالة انباء إيرانية تابعة للحرس الثوري تقول بأن الفيضانات في إيران سببها تلاعب اجنبي من ضمن خطة أميركية للسيطرة على الطقس في العالم
Iranian IRGC-Affiliated News Agency Tasnim: Iran's Recent Rains, Flooding Are Caused By Foreign Manipulation – As Part Of U.S. Plan To Control Global Climate
MEMRI/April 05/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/73552/%d9%88%d9%83%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a9-%d8%a7%d9%86%d8%a8%d8%a7%d8%a1-%d8%aa%d8%b3%d9%86%d9%8a%d9%85-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%aa%d8%a7%d8%a8%d8%b9%d8%a9-%d9%84%d9%84%d8%ad%d8%b1%d8%b3-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%ab%d9%88%d8%b1/

In light of recent heavy rains and major flooding in northern and western Iran, in which dozens have died so far, the Iranian news agency Tasnim, which is affiliated with Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), published a special report titled "Are the Recent Heavy Rains in Iran Happening Intentionally?" According to Tasnim, the catastrophic rains and flooding are caused by manipulation of the weather by Iran's enemies – hinting at the U.S. and Israel – causing a drastic change in the weather and flooding unprecedented in the country's history.
This is not the first Iranian accusation of weather manipulation. In January 2010, the Kayhan daily, a regime mouthpiece, claimed that the "United States of Zionism" had caused that month's devastating earthquake in Haiti as well as that winter's severe cold across Europe, and that it was using sophisticated weapons disguised as the Alaska-based U.S. High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) with the aim of bringing down regimes.[1]
According to the Tasnim report, which is presented in the form of several episodes, the Jewish-American Warner Bros. company produces its futuristic films, such as the 2017 movie Geostorm, based on information it has about "the U.S.'s secret plans", a U.S. plan to control global climate. It added that senior IRGC official Brig.-Gen. Gholamreza Jalali, director of Iran's Passive Defense Organization, was correct when he stated, in the summer of 2018, that Israel had stolen clouds, rain and snow from Iran. It noted further that the timing of the current flooding, which began on the eve of Nowruz (Persian New Year) celebrations and the annual vacation taken by regime officials was no coincidence – proving intervention by a foreign hand.
The following is the translation of the main points of the Tasnim report:
"There are reasons for the heavy rains and flooding impacting Iran in recent days: They are the fruit of foreign climate manipulation.
"Episode A" – Warner Bros. Films Reflect America's Organized Plans For Climate Manipulation
"In recent days, we closely reviewed the 2017 American film Geostorm produced by Warner Bros. This company was founded 101 years ago, in 1918, by four Polish Jewish brothers – Harry, Sam, Albert, and Jack – who immigrated to the U.S. Most of this company's films are in the style of 'investigating the future' or 'predicting the future.' In truth, this company's network of researchers and producers know about many of the U.S.'s secret plans; they proceed in accordance with them, and they create the films with specific aims. The film presents an international plan launched by the U.S. under pressure from the international community. This plan includes the construction of a space station to impact the climactic system of the entire earth...
"Beyond the style and content, the film conveys a special message: 'America has organized plans for climate manipulation that will be extremely destructive in light of their very extensive impact.' It is enough to use various types of accelerators or stimulators to influence some of the climate factors, and to make them extreme, in order to produce destructive results such as freezes, very high temperatures, torrential rains, [hailstorms with] huge hailstones, uncontrollable flooding, and unbalanced phenomena such as those caused by climate disruption."
"Episode B" – Passive Defense Organization Director Jalali: Israel Stole Iran's Clouds And Snow
"Gholamreza Jalali, director of Iran's Passive Defense Organization, is undoubtedly one of the most prominent and sharpest [members of] the top regime echelons in the sphere of Iranian strategic defense. We recall dozens of instances in which he protected the people from various disasters when all the other similar organizations were not [even] updated or were incapable of doing so. As an example of his successful efforts, we can point to his pioneering [role in warning] about matters such as genetic engineering of agricultural produce, [the dangers inherent in] the use of smartphones by senior regime officials, and [the need to] reinforce urban buildings against earthquakes. In light of this, we should look at his statements about climate and reactions to them as presented on the news:
"On July 2, 2018, Jalali said at the third national rally for passive defense in agriculture, held at the Institute for the Production and Improvement of Seeds and Seedlings: 'Changes in the climate in Iran are suspect, and it is feared [that they are caused by] foreign intervention. Studies conducted in Iran's scientific centers confirm this... Israeli teams, in collaboration with one of the neighboring countries are neutralizing the clouds headed for Iran. Likewise, we are encountering theft of our clouds and theft of snow'... The same day, Ahad Vazifeh, director-general of the forecast and warning division of the Iran Meteorological Organization, responded to this by saying, 'There is no way, according to meteorological [science], that a certain country can steal clouds or snow,' and added that he did not know what Jalali had based this statement on. He continued: 'Perhaps he found some document in the matter and I have not been brought up to date. But according to meteorological [science], there is no way that any country can steal clouds or snow'...
"It should be noted that this point of view pleased the foreign media, which gave it full coverage. The next day, July 3, 2018, [Iranian Environmental Organization director] Isa Kalantari, among the opponents of the 'climate war' [idea], responded to Jalali's statements, saying sarcastically: 'One [person] cannot speak on all subjects... The decrease in rainfall is not a political or an economic matter; it is a sheer technical and scientific issue.' On July 4, 2018, Davood Parhizkar, [then-] director-general of the meteorological organization, emphasized that '[Jalali's] statements have no scientific basis, because manipulating the weather cannot be done by man. Therefore, those who claim that there was theft of clouds need to prove their statements at a conference of experts.' [But] the Special Investigations Team of the Economic Division of the Tasnim news agency has proved, in the framework of a large project [launched] by Tasnim, called 'The Global Food War,' the reality of the 'climate war,' citing American scientist and meteorologist [Jim Lee].[2] This American expert on climate manipulation explained, 'We [Americans] have prevented rainfall on several occasions, such as during the Vietnam War, on the Cuban sugarcane fields, in China, and in the USSR. In light of this, if you think that there is no way to manipulate climate, you are simply naive.'
"Following the publication of this Tasnim investigation, there were two important developments: One was that the political and media discussions by opponents to the 'climate wars against Iran' theory stopped. The second was that [Environmental Organization director] Isa Kalantari admitted in an interview that he had no knowledge of this professional field and that he was only reflecting statements by experts'...
"This episode [of our report] raises three questions:
Why do experts from [Iran's] meteorological organization lack knowledge about such an important matter as the 'climate war?'
Why did [Iran's] meteorological organization conduct a media campaign in the days after Jalali made his statements, instead of verifying [whether there was] proof for them? It should be noted that the media uproar about Jalali's statements was fully covered by foreign media, and that they were pleased at this.
The Shiraz flooding took place around noon on March 25, 2019 and killed 19 Iranians. Assuming that [Iran's] meteorological organization is the body that is expert in the climate field, why wasn't Shiraz named in the warnings it issued before the recent heavy rains began?... "
"Episode C" – The Floods Happened Because Of Climate Manipulation By Iran's Enemies
"There is an important point regarding the recent heavy rains that was ignored. Let us examine things from the very beginning: Anyone who has had the occasion to visit Shiraz knows that during Nowruz [the Iranian New Year celebrations] there is a long line [of vehicles] at the city's entrance, and people are occasionally held up for up to two hours. They are stuck with no way to get out. In these particular circumstances, if huge quantities of rainfall for twenty minutes, causing a flood, what can [these] people do?
"The floods in Golestan province were the result of a [storm] system that formed in the Gulistan region around Sunday, March 17, 2019. But the peak precipitation, especially in the city Aqqala, was on March 19-20, 2019 [on the eve of the New Year's vacation]. The IRNA news agency in Golestan wrote that 'heavy rainfall in eastern Golestan has caused the Golestan dam, located 15 km from the city of Gonbad-e Kavus, to overflow, and the region's rivers... to overflow their banks. As the recent winter storm began, more than 300mm of rain fell in Golestan province and the snow in the province's mountainous regions reached a height of 1.5 meters. The overflow from the Golestan 2 and Bustan dams, located in the higher regions, caused flooding along the Gorganrud river and in all cities and villages in the area.' Likewise, according to a report on the Tabnak website, 'over 315 mm of precipitation [were measured] in some [weather] stations [during the storm], although average annual rainfall in the district is 450 mm. In other words, 60% of the annual quantity fell in just 24 hours.'
"By March 25, 2019, the floods that continued in various parts of the country claimed the lives of 19 people in the city of Shiraz. These floods, the worst in 100 years, occurred precisely when two conditions prevailed:
All government offices were shut [for the New Year's vacation]. The president was vacationing on Qeshm Island and the governor of Golestan was abroad. Those who remained at work in the meteorological forecast department of the meteorological organization were inaccurate [in their forecasts].
The citizens were in a maximal state of defenseless in the face of these weather changes, such as those stuck in traffic at Shiraz's Quran Gate.
"The meaning of these two points is that, under these circumstances, when the state was at its weakest in terms of defense, a 'climate manipulation' could sow widespread destruction. It is noteworthy that the two aforementioned conditions are unique to these days of the year.
"Using a simple calculation based on the principles of probability, let us work out the probability of such rainfall occurring precisely during these days. Assuming that weight of the other variables, such as precipitation dispersion and past rain data, approaches zero, the probability of this unprecedented climatic imbalance occurring precisely on these seven days, when the country is at its most defenseless, is the following:
"The meaning of these numbers is that the probability of [such] unprecedented rainfall during these seven consecutive days in the week of March 19-25 is less than one to 160 billion. Experts call this zero.
"In conclusion:
"1. Even admitting that there is some chance that these rains were natural – by one calculation, a chance of 1 to 160 billion, i.e. zero – it is more plausible and reasonable [to assume] that this was climate manipulation [perpetrated] by the enemies, and the relevant authorities must, at the very least, put an investigation into the matter on their agenda.
"2. Whether or not we accept that these rains were enemy actions, the important point is that the arena of battle has long ago shifted from hard war – weapons and rockets on the battlefield – to the economic arena. In the future the shape of war will change [further] and will occur in arenas such as climate war [and] genetic war, and soft and semi-soft war will be waged by artificial intelligence, in [the fields of] politics, security, society and culture.
"Therefore, it seems that all the important bodies [tasked] with the issue of state security – the IRGC, the army, the Passive Defense Organization, the Intelligence Ministry, the Supreme National Security Council and the rest of the strategic national defense organizations – must take these types of war more seriously and attain the peak of scientific [knowledge] in these fields. True, there are signs that these bodies are already taking this approach, but they are still in the beginning of the road and they are not doing enough.[3]
[1] See MEMRI Special Dispatch No. 2782, Conspiracy Theories in Iranian Dailies: Al-Qaeda, Taliban Are Operational Wing of the U.S.; U.S. Caused Haiti Earthquake, January 31, 2010.
[2] See Tasnim (Iran), December 16, 2018.
[3] Tasnim (Iran), March 30, 2019.

A Lesson for Pope Francis on Walls and Muslims
Raymond Ibrahim/PJ Media/April 05/19
https://www.meforum.org/58124/lesson-pope-francis-walls-muslims
"I appeal not to create walls but to build bridges" has long been Pope Francis's mantra.
Most recently, when asked last Sunday "a question about migration in general and about U.S. President Donald Trump's threat to shut down the southern border with Mexico," the pope pontificated in platitudes: "Builders of walls," he said, "be they made of razor wire or bricks, will end up becoming prisoners of the walls they build.... With fear, we will not move forward, with walls, we will remain closed within these walls."Less than a week earlier, Pope Francis lectured the mayor of Rome about the need to be more welcoming to Muslim migrants. "Rome," he declared, "a hospitable city, is called to face this epochal challenge [Muslim migrants demanding entry] in the wake of its noble history; to use its energies to welcome and integrate, to transform tensions and problems into opportunities for meeting and growth."
"Rome," he exulted, "city of bridges, never walls!"The grand irony of all this is that Pope Francis lives in the only state to be surrounded by walls—Vatican City—and most of these bastions were erected to ward off centuries of Islamic invasions.
Most notably, in 846, a Muslim fleet from North Africa consisting of 73 ships and 11,000 Muslims, landed in Ostia near Rome. Muslim merchants who frequently visited Italy had provided them with precise intelligence that made the raid a success. Although they were unable to breach the preexisting walls of the Eternal City, they sacked and despoiled the surrounding countryside, including—to the consternation of Christendom—the venerated and centuries-old basilicas of St. Peter and St. Paul. The Muslim invaders desecrated the tombs of the revered apostles and stripped them of all their treasures.
Pope Leo IV (847-855) responded by building many more walls, including fifteen bastions along the right bank of the Tiber River, the mouth of which was forthwith closed with a chain to protect the sacred sites from further Muslim raids and desecrations. Completed by 852, the walls were in places 40 feet high and 12 feet thick.
Further anticipating the crusades against Islam by over two centuries—and thus showing how they were a long time coming—Pope Leo (and after him Pope John VIII) offered the remission of sins for those Christians who died fighting Islamic invaders.
Such was the existential and ongoing danger Muslims, referred to in contemporary sources as "Sons of Satan," caused for Europe—more than two centuries before the First Crusade was launched in 1095.
Indeed, just three years after the initial Muslim invasion of Rome, "in 849 the Muslims attempted a new landing at Ostia; then, every year from around 857 on, they threatened the Roman seaboard," explains French medieval historian C. E. Dufourcq:
In order to get rid of them, Pope John VIII decided in 878 to promise them an annual payment [or jizya] of several thousand gold pieces; but this tribute of the Holy See to Islam seems to have been paid for only two years; and from time to time until the beginning of the tenth century, the Muslims reappeared at the mouth of the Tiber or along the coast nearby.
Today, many Muslims, not just of the ISIS-variety, continue to boast that Islam will conquer Rome, the only of five apostolic sees never to have been subjugated by jihad (unlike Antioch, Alexandria, Jerusalem, and Constantinople). Similarly, Muslims all throughout Europe continue exhibiting the same hostility and contempt for all things and persons non-Islamic, whether by vandalizing churchesand breaking crosses, or by raping "infidel" women as theirs by right. As for Italy, click here, here, and/or here for an idea of how Muslim migrants behave.
And that is the point Pope Francis misses: walls should only go down and bridges should only be extended when both parties are willing to live in amicable peace—as opposed to making the destructive work of those who have been trying to subjugate Europe in the name of Islam that much easier.
*Raymond Ibrahim, author of the new book, Sword and Scimitar, Fourteen Centuries of War between Islam and the West, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Gatestone Institute and a Judith Friedman Rosen Writing Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

Analysis/Netanyahu Has Cunningly Navigated the Mideast. Israeli Voters Will Reward Him
عاموس هاريل/صحيفة الهآرتس: نيتنياهو ببراعة ومكر توغل في الشرق الأوسط ولهذا سيكافئه الناخبون الإسرائيليون
Amos Harel/Haaretz/April 05/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/73558/%D8%B9%D8%A7%D9%85%D9%88%D8%B3-%D9%87%D8%A7%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%84-%D8%B5%D8%AD%D9%8A%D9%81%D8%A9-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%87%D8%A2%D8%B1%D8%AA%D8%B3-%D9%86%D9%8A%D8%AA%D9%86%D9%8A%D8%A7%D9%87%D9%88-%D8%A8%D8%A8/

Corruption takes a back seat to indisputable diplomatic achievements ■ Israeli fake accounts network takes a page from Soviet propaganda.
The grand finale of the Likud election campaign was held in Moscow on Thursday. It is no wonder that Netanyahu did not adopt the suggestion of his campaign headquarters staff to hold a large rally at Rabin Square before the election – and not only because of the fraught history of the site. In the end, it was decided to hold a small rally in Jerusalem on Sunday.
Why worry that the square in Tel Aviv will be full of supporters when instead there’s the option of holding a joint press conference with the president of Russia in Moscow? As in the past several weeks, it is Netanyahu who is dictating the rules of the game in the election campaign. He has therefore been able in the past few days to launch a blitz of interviews, after four years in which he saw to it not to give interviews to any media outlet that he himself didn’t fully control.
Putin and the election
The invitation from Putin wraps up a triple play for Netanyahu in less that two weeks: a visit to U.S. President Donald Trump, who gave him the gift of American recognition of Israel’s sovereignty in the Golan Heights (but which was somewhat overshadowed when Hamas forced him to cut short his visit to Washington due to the escalation in Gaza). Then Netanyahu hosted of his new friend Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro in Jerusalem, followed on Thursday by the summit in Moscow, just after the return of Baumel’s body.
Russia is going with the likely winner in the election in Israel and it is prepared to help him, within the limits of its own interests. It is not expelling the Iranians and Hezbollah from the Syrian Golan, and it is continuing to prepare for the transfer of the advanced S-300 long range surface-to-air missile batteries to full Syrian control. But if Israel is asking for a little help on a humanitarian issue – why not? We can count on Putin to see to it that he gets a fitting quid pro quo for his generosity at some point.
The message that Netanyahu’s Likud party wants to convey through this series of meetings is transparent. Israeli hospitals are collapsing under the patient load, public transportation is lagging, personal security in Gaza border communities is shaky, but when Israel turns to the international arena, Netanyahu, his experience and his connections have no real competition. Only Bibi can do it.
A similar claim, incidentally, was made towards the end of the terms of office of two of his predecessors, Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert. The later basked in affection of foreign leaders all the way to the courthouse and then prison.
Netanyahu’s record in the diplomatic and security arena is not the total disaster that is described by his rivals. The prime minister was smart enough early on to understand the dangers inherent in the Arab Spring.
He strengthened relations with the Sunni countries considerably, from Egypt to the Gulf. He (usually) managed not to get involved in the civil war in Syria, and for the most part, he took care not to get dragged into unnecessary wars in Gaza. Even in Operation Protective Edge in 2014, he did not cave into pressures from inside his cabinet to invade the entire Gaza Strip.
The international community’s nuclear agreement with Iran, which Netanyahu opposed, was developed by President Barack Obama’s administration to a large extent in response to Israel’s threat to attack Iran’s nuclear installations. And Trump’s withdrawal from the treaty, spurred by his friend in Jerusalem, hasn’t so far led to the disaster that he was warned about. The renewed American sanctions have also affected European companies and have increased the economic pressure on the regime but for the time being, they have not scuttled the agreement itself, as Netanyahu would have liked.
Inaction on the Palestinian issue
The most persuasive claim against Netanyahu in the diplomatic-political area is the total lack of action on the Palestinian issue. The odds of obtaining a final status solution are minuscule (even in the opinion of his rival, Benny Gantz), but the suspension of the peace process, along with extensive construction in West Bank settlements, is gradually putting the kibbosh on the vision of the two-state solution that Netanyahu momentarily adopted under pressure from Obama 10 years ago.
However, the main argument for ending Netanyahu’s long period in office has to do with his conduct on the domestic front, not his handling of foreign affairs. The serious suspicions against him in a string of criminal cases, along with Likud’s orchestrated attacks on public servants and the systematic damage to the rule of law, are sufficient to lead to the conclusion that Netanyahu has played a key role in corrupting Israeli society over the past decade. He has surrounded himself with unworthy people, encouraged an enterprise of flattery over him and his family and has consistently fueled discord and hatred among various segments of society. And all of this has accelerated and intensified, as if in some giant centrifuge, in the run-up to the election.
The figure of Netanyahu has been with us for so many years that it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between the original and the imitation on the satirical television show “Eretz Nehederet,” which doesn’t appear to bother his voters at all. The two merge into a single character: On the television show, Netanyahu is depicted as a smiling and fraudulent schemer, who always has the upper hand even when his efforts at deception are clearly evident to everyone. In “life itself” as he calls it – that is, in the campaign – he acts as if he is the political incarnation of King Midas. Any accusation from his rivals somehow becomes an electoral asset, exploited to his benefit.
In recent months the public opinion polls gone the gamut, from a smattering of hope for a victory by his rivals after the Yair Lapid and Benny Gantz teamed up, and then back a clear advantage for the right-wing bloc. If the public opinion polls aren’t wrong again, they apparently reflect what the majority of Israelis think about their leader: In the Middle East, a manipulator is necessary. The gravity of the criminal acts of which the prime minister is suspected is outweighed by the feeling of security he inculcates in his supporters in facing the dangers from outside. And by this measure, Gantz – dignified, statesmanlike, fair, a bit awkward – who wouldn’t meet even the most elementary threshold of swindling.
A decision on indictments
The left’s hopes of removing him from office will apparently have to again focus on Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit, who is planning on holding a pre-indictment hearing for Netanyahu’s defense lawyers this summer and to make a decision on indicting Netanyahu at the beginning of next year. People who are familiar with investigation material that isn’t being made public before the election, as Mandelblit’s decided would be done, say the material is very damaging to the prime minister’s line of defense.
The recent revelations in the case of company shares that Netanyahu received from his cousin Nathan Milikowsky could complicate his situation further. Waiting in the wings is also Case 3000, involving alleged corruption in Israel’s purchase of submarines and patrol from Germany, into which the attorney general and the police have only conducted a limited inquiry. The stench from the boats and any possible links to the country’s natural gas deals have not yet been fully investigated.
Going by the hints that Netanyahu has been dropping in his recent interviews, the legislative effort to stop the clock on the investigations is expected to be renewed after the election. The results depend on the attorney general’s backbone, the conduct of Netanyahu’s coalition partners and the resoluteness of the Supreme Court justices.
Alleged social media manipulation
In what appears to be inadequate media treatment, this week’s reporting on alleged social media manipulation in service of the Likud campaign has been buried. The pretensions of exposure of a huge digital plot was replaced by public debate over the right to curse and vilify in social media.
The Central Elections Committee hearing on the matter became a farce, mainly revealing the ignorance regarding internet technology on the part of the committee and Kahol Lavan’s representatives. The left and the center came across trying to silent dirty talk, as if that were the most urgent issue in the final weeks of the election campaign.
Are bots being used in more distant circles, as far away as Indonesia and the Philippines, to echo Netanyahu’s messages and those who support them? Possibly. But what was revealed after the publication of the investigation is that at the center of the activity are flesh and blood Likud supporters who see Netanyahu as a last barricade, almost a divine messenger, against the return of what they describe as “the Oslo disaster” – evacuation of settlements and exploding buses.
If indeed someone is operating another, hidden system in support of Netanyahu, he or she was not exposed in the investigative report this week and no connection was found between such a person and those in charge of Likud campaign messages.
In this context, it is interesting to go back to an event that was quickly forgotten,which took place a relatively short time before the announcement of early elections. On November 14th of last year, Avigdor Lieberman announced his resignation as defense minister, in protest against the government’s policy in the Gaza Strip. Lieberman resigned from the government after Netanyahu rejected his recommendation of a harsher response to the firing of about 500 rockets and mortar shells from the Gaza Strip into the Negev.
A false report from Harvard
A few hours after Lieberman’s resignation, Ran Bar-Zik reported a strange story in Haaretz. An internet site that depicted itself as the official site of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, a prestigious research center at Harvard University, published a report of a lecture delivered a few days earlier by former Mossad chief Tamir Pardo.
Pardo, the report claimed, said in the lecture that Lieberman is “a Russian spy” and that this is behind the tension between him and Netanyahu.
Pardo supposedly even anticipated a few days in advance that Netanyahu would fire Lieberman.
A short investigation found that this was fake news of a dangerous sort. Pardo did indeed appear at the Belfer Center, but he never said those things about Lieberman. And although the design of the site was indeed very similar to that of the real Belfer Center, the address was slightly different and promoted a site that distributed a fake news item. Someone put together a fraudulent operation here that certainly must have cost a pretty penny.
On the basis of an old and discredited rumor to the effect that Lieberman’s origins testify to him being a Russian agent, a plot was constructed. To that end, the story was superimposed on a lecture that Pardo indeed delivered, in a closed forum (which required a close knowledge of the Belfer timetable), a site was fabricated and use was made of a (fictitious but long-standing) Twitter account from which tweets were sent to journalists to draw their attention to the “news item” about Pardo’s remarks. The move failed because Haaretz identified the site as counterfeit and also contacted Pardo, who denied the statements entirely.
Whom did this fraudulent, sophisticated and relatively expensive effort serve? It is doubtful that it was the Russians. First of all, Lieberman is not an agent of theirs. And secondly, even if he were (entirely hypothetically), why would they expose him? It seems there was a diversionary action involved here, which if it hadn’t been exposed would perhaps have succeeded in drowning out Lieberman’s criticism of the policy in Gaza. This brings to mind the old diagnosis of Soviet propaganda: They aren’t pursuing a propaganda effort so that we will believe in something. They are using propaganda so that we will not believe anyone or anything.